{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0431001":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-04-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1958-03-20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0431001\/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":" -I^\nNelson's  Record\n2023\nTraffic  Fatality-Free  Days\nVol. 55\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: Intermittent light rain\nin the valleys and snow along the\nmountains. Little change in temperature. Winds light. Low-high at\nCranbrook 30 and 45. Crescent Valley 32 and 45.\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 20, 1958\nNot More Than 6o Daily, life Saturday\nNo. 278\n24 DIE  IN  NEW YORK FIRE\nBattle Lines Drawn Over\nTeacher Salary Procedures\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia public school teachers\nand their employers, the school\nboards, have squared off in a rousing battle over salary-fixing procedures. \u2022\u25a0\nThe provincial government,\ncaught in the middle, has- been\ntrying to soothe ruffled feelings\nand at the same time frame legislation that would prevent a recurrence of such situations.\nThe most contentious aspect of\nthe issue is the 10,100-member B.C.\nTeachers Federation's blacklisting\n\u25a0 of 26 school districts of a total\nof 102.\nMore than a month ago the federation declared certain districts\n\"no-agreement areas,\" and advised\nits members not to seek employment there. The federation held\nthat the districts refused to negotiate on salaries, or accept arbitration.\nThe school boards, through the\nB.C. School Trustee Association,\nbitterly assailed the blacklisting\nprocedure. They claimed trustees\nwere justified in arbitrarily setting\nsalary schedules in order to keep\ncosts and mill rates down.\nNEW LEGISLATION\nLast week the government introduced legislation in Victoria that\nwould have made blacklisting illegal, but calling for conciliation of\npay disputes. %e teachers federation welcomed the provision for\nconciliation but said it would not\nrescind its blacklist.\nTuesday, Education Minister Leslie Peterson announced a change\nin the proposed legislation, part ot\nthe province's new schools act, to\nremove the amendment outlawing\nblacklisting.\nAt the same time, however, the\ngovernment would suspend compulsory teacher membership in the\nfederation until the federation\nagrees to end blacklisting.\nREACTION VARIES\nReaction to Mr..Peterson's statement varied. J. A. Spragge, executive assistant to the teachers federation, intimated that the blacklist\nwill remain in effect.\n\"Teachers throughout the province are in an angry mood,\" he\nsaid in a statement. \"If. at. this\npoint their officers gave way to\npressure and gave the commitment the minister wants, there is\nno doubt the teachers would repudiate it.\"\nMr. Spragge said: \"The teachers\ndo not wish to take any action\nwhich would close the schools but\nthey must defend their right to\nhave salary scales determined by\nnegotiation.\"\nThe president of the B.C. School\nTrustees Association, Lome C. Aggett, said his organization welcomes anything\" the government\ndoes to stop blacklisting by\nteachers.\n\"We are not applauding the fact\nthat the government intends to\nhold up the 'closed shop' provision.\nWe are merely applauding the fact\nthat the government is doing something to stop blacklisting.\"\nTWO LISTINGS\nMr. Aggett said that if the\nteachers federation stops blacklisting, the association will stop\n\"pinklisting\", under which school\nboards are asked not to hire\nteachers from blacklisted areas.\nDespite the strong stands taken\nby both sides, there was hope that\ntalks might be held at the federation-trustees association level to\nachieve an understanding.\nMr. Sprague described as \"the\nmost constructive .step the minister has taken\" Mr. Peterson's invitation to representatives of the\nfederation and the trustees associa-1\ntion to meet under his auspices for\nthe purpose of seeking a solution.\nThe federation had accepted the\ninvitation.\nFor the school trustees association, Mr. Aggett expressed willingness to meet with the teachers\nfederation at any time.\nVICTORIA (CP) - The government was accused Wednesday\nof using \"union-busting\" tactics\nto force the B.C. Teachers' Federation into submission.\nCCF Leader Robert Strachan was\nreferring' to an announcement by\nEducation  Minister Leslie Peterson Tuesday that the government\nwould  not  proclaim  the  \"closed\nshop\" provisions for the BCTF \u2014\ncontained in a new school reading\n\u2014until it was satisfied there would\nbe   no   more   \"blacklisting\"   of\nbeaching areas.\nMr. Strachan, in adjourning the\ndebate Tuesday, said he wanted\ntime to consider \"a completely\nnew principle about to be written\ninto the Public Schools Act of the\nprovince.\"\n\"That new principle is union-\nbusting\u2014that's what it is,\" Mr.\nStrachan said Wednesday.\nGeorge Gregory (L - Victoria)\nsaid the move \"won't be in the\nbest interests of the children.\"\nThe government is forcing\nteachers to \"give up the freedom\nof speech in order to regain a\nclosed shop.\"    \u2022\nRobert Sommers (SC - Rossland-\nTrail Villa Sod\nTurning Today\nTRAIL \u2014 A public 'sod-turning\nceremony at Shaver's Bench will\nsignal the beginning of work on\na senior citizens' villa this afternoon. Civic officials and members\nof Trai! and District Senior Citizens' Villa Society will attend.\nJ. -D'\u00bb McMynn, society president,\nannounced Wednesday a $143,000\ncontract was signed with Oglow\nBrothers of Castlegar. About 15\nmen would be employed and plans\ncall for part of the work to be done\nby subcontractors. Thirty-two citizens would be accommodated,\nA model of the villa is on display\nat a Trail travel agency. It was\nmade by senior high school art\nclasses of Kenneth Weir using plans\nmade by architects Paul Smith and\nAssociates.\nWorld Wide River\nDevelopment Urged\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)\n-. \u2014An international panel of seven\nexperts recommended Wednesday night that a special office be\nset up here to promote worldwide- harnessing of rivers for\npower, irrigation, navigation,\nflood control and water supply.\nTheir 60-page report on integrated river basin three-quarters\nof the earth's land surface Is\nsusceptible of such development.\nTo Cut Wheat\nAcreage\n.OTTAWA (CP) - Canadian\nfarmers intend to reduce their\nwheat acreage this year to\n20,646,200, down about 400,000\nacres from last year, the bureau\nof statistics said Wednesday.\nTrail), former school principal,\nsaid he was \"amazed at the suggestion left by the leader of the\nopposition that the closed shop\nstatute was brought in to raise the\nlevel of attainment in our schools.\"\nHe said the standards of education \"are set by this legislature\nwhere rightly they belong.\"\nThe closed shop was granted in\nconsideration the teachers would\nnot strike, he said, and \"blacklisting\u2014if you examine it carefully\u2014\nis a form of strike.\"\nKelowna Fruit\nProcessors Plan\n(oncenfralor\nPENTICTON (CP)-The southern Okanagan may soon have a\n$50,000 concentrator. in Kelowna,\nsays Ian Greenwood, assistant\ngeneral manager of B.C. Tree\nFruit Processors.\nSpeaking at the monthly meeting of Penticton local of the\nBCFGA, Mr. Greenwood said the\nconcentrator would be used\nchiefly in the making of apricot\nconcentrate and would be able\nto process up to eight tons of\nfruit an hour.\nOutlining the progress of markets during the last year, Mr.\nGreenwood said one of the drawbacks with processed apricots for\nuse in the East was that companies found it cheaper to ship\nconcentrate in from California\nthan accept the same type of\nfruit in pulp from B.C.\n\"We feel quite sure the market\nis there for concentrates,\" he\nsaid. \"There is no complaint as\nto the quality of our product,\njust that it is cheaper to ship\nconcentrates than it is to ship\nfruit pulp, of which such a large\npercentage has to be. water.\"\nFrost in southern American orange groves might curtail production of a new fruit blend, or-\nangecot, a mixture of orange and\napricot juice.\n\"We may have to halt production for a month unless we can\nfind an alternative source of supply of oranges,\" he said.\nLeeway Given\nIn Drunk Fines\nVICTORIA (CP) . - ' Amendments to the Liquor Control\nBoard Act introduced in the legislature provide for elimination of\nthe $20 minimum fine for drungen-\ness and the institution of a $50\nmaximum instead.\nTbe reason is that regulars were\ngetting the minimum all the\ntime and the first offenders Were\ngetting it too. The maximum will\ngive magistrates a little more\nleeway in fining.\nThe amendments also state that\ncourts can order seizure of cars\nor boats from which liquor is\nsold.\nAMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER John Fecteau\ncaught these dramatic pictured of a mother as\nshe saw her daughter killed on a Toronto, Canada,\nstreet. Left, Mrs. William, Pugh screams as she\nand her husband see two-year-old Donna dash\nacross the street to greet them. Centre, she is\ncomforted by her husband after the child had\nbeen struck by a car and killed. Daughter Linda,\n4, and an aunt, Mrs. Philip Tibano, also register\nshock. Mrs. Pugh finally collapses In her husband's arms.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nRoof To Go on\nHospital Today\nThe roof will go on the $2,-\n000,000 Nelson district hospital\ntoday.\nE. M. Stiles, president of the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nSociety, in his consolidated report   told   the   annual   meeting\nconstruction of the concrete roof\nof the four-storey structure was\nscheduled to start Thursday.\nA total of $448,516 had been expended on actual construction of\nthe new building, Mr. Stiles said.\nMain concrete work was practically complete, the heating plant\nwas installed and had undergone\ntrial runs, and electrical wiring\nwas 39 per cent complete. Plumbing and other basic services were\nwell advanced.\nA Clerk of Works was constantly on the site, giving detailed inspections, said Mr. Stiles, who\nTuesday night was reelected rural\ntrustee for the North Shore and\nchairman of the board.\n\"Throughout all the efforts leading to this point there has been\nthe need of a considerable negotiation and cooperation with the\nHospital  Insurance Service.\n\"There are 16 hospital projects\nunder way in B.C. at a cost of\n$21,285,000, providing 1384 new\nbeds, including 134 chronic beds.\nThere are 26 new projects being\nplanned for a further 1502 beds\nat an estimated cost of $32,200,'\n000.\" ,\nMr. Stiles pointed out the hospital insurance vote in 1956-57 was\n$30,433,952, out of which $28,038,-\n815 was expended, leaving an un-\nder-expenditure of $2,395,137. Estimated cost for 1958-59 was $34,-\n000,000.\nFifty-seven hospitals in B.C. in\nNO  COURT-MARTIAL\nSEOUL (AP)-The American\nmajor who flew a young Korean\nthief 25 miles mailed in a box has\ndecided to accept punishment\nwithout trial. The most he can\nget is a rebuke and loss of a\nmonth's pay. The United States\nArmy gave Maj. Thomas James,\n40, the choice of accepting the\ntoken punishment or seeking an\nacquittal in a general court-martial.\nBulganin Moves to\nHalt Missile Program\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Soviet\nPremier Bulganin in a letter published here today made a direct\nbid to halt the Atlantic Alliance's\nnucleaf missile program at least\nuntil a  summit  conference.\nIn his latest of a series of exchanges with Prime Minister\nMacmillan, he warned that a\nscheduled meeting of NATO defence ministers in Paris next\nmonth and construction of bases\nin Britain for U. S. supplied rockets would \"hinder the convening\nand success\" of a summit meeting.\n1956 had surpluses totalling $220,-\n000 and 22 had deficits totalling\n$160,000. \"In other words, B. C.\nhospitals were in the black by\none-fifth of one percent. Your\nown KLGH measured up to provincial performance.\"\nApproval of a draft of revision\nto the Society's bylaws were in\nVictoria for approval.\nPRAISES MEDICAL STAFF\nMedical staff of the hospital had\nreached its highest peak of organization, assisting in the drive toward a standard for accreditation, Mr. Stiles commented. \"All\nof these things contribute to a\nbetter standard of' patient care\nand the Board is appreciative.\"\nCanada Militia\nTo Be (ul Again\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A new order\nto take effect late this summer will\nfurther reduce the strength of Canada's militia, it was learned Wednesday.\nStrength of the reserve army now\nstands at some 41,000, compared to\n47,000 three years ago.\nThe new order decrees that only\n10 per  cent of  a  militia  unit\nstrength may be over-age or in low\nphysical categories. At present, 25\nper cent of a unit's establishment\nin effect, its manpower ceiling\nmay be over-age or not in A-l physical condition.\nThe navy now is in the process\nof reducing its reserve strength by\nsix per cent. When the reduction is\ncompleted the reserve will number\n4400\u20141100 officers and 3300 men.\nThis number will be set as a manpower ceiling for the naval reserve.\nNo decrease in RCAF reserve\nstrength is planned. It now stands\nat about 5100 or some 500 less than\na year ago.\nMLAs \"Pressured\"\nVICTORIA (CPI - Members of\nthe Legislature are being \"pressured by non-existent people\" to\np'ass a bill dealing with dental technicians, the house was told Wednesday.\nThe bill would allow the technicians, in certain cases, to deal\ndirectly with the public instead of\nthrough a dentist.\nLabor Council\nOffers Help in\nCoasf Dispute\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The Vancouver Labor Council has asked\nfor renewed negotiatins between\nthe B.C. Electric Company and\nits 600 striking electrical workers and has offered to act as\nan intermediary.\nThe council's action, drafted at\na closed meeting, is in answer\nto requests for help from local\n213 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,\nwhich has been on strike against\nB.C. Electric and two sub-contractors for 17 days in support\nof wage increase demands.\nThe IBEW earlier said it was\ncontemplating extension of the\nstrike to include BCE transit and\noffice operationsv But co-operation from the two unions involved\nWednesday seemed unlikely.\nCharles-.-S-tewar t, business\nagent for the Street Railway-\nmen's Union, said public interest\nwould be better served if negotiations were resumed.\n\"No strike has ever been settled without a session around the*\nbargaining^ table,\" he said.\nThe other union, the Office\nEmployees Association,' said its\ncontract with the company prevents it from honoring any pick*\nets erected by the IBEW.\nThe electricians are seeking a\n40-pertcent wage increase. They\nrejected a unanimous conciliation\nboard award of up to 19 per cent\nover two years. Ffesent pay for\nlinemen, the key group affected,\nis $2.41 to $2.49 an hour.\nTrail Provincial\nBuildina Site\nTo Be Chosen Soon\nVICTORIA (CP) - Works Minister W. N. Chant said Tuesday he\nwill visit Trail sometime this year\nwith a view to picking a site for\na new provincial building there.\nRobert Sommers (SC-Rossland<\nTrail) told Mr. Chant provincial\nfacilities in his area are inadequate\nand said there are several possible\nsites for a new building.\nDOLLAR LOWER\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 1-32 lower at a\npremium of 2 11-32 in terms of\nU.S. lunds; a week ago 2 11-32 per\ncent premium. The pound sterling\nwas unchanged at $2.81 19-32.\nFaster Express, Freight Service Asked\nInadequacy of ferry service between Balfour and Kootenay Bay\nfor carrying large tractor-trailer\nunits is one of the mainn problems\naffecting freight service to and\nfrom this area. This comment was\nmade Wednesday by W. H. McDonald of Vancouver,, superintendent, Canadian Pacific Express\nCompany.\nMr. McDonald, W. Riley of Penticton, district representative, I. D.\nNicholson, local express agent, and\nG. L. Phillips, Kootenay division\nsuperintendent, discussed local\nfreight problems with the freight\nand transportation committee, Nelson Chamber of Commerce, and\nalso several businessmen Wednesday.\nThe situation should Improve\nIn the summer when both ferries\nare used, Mr. McDonald said,\nadding Hqn. P. A. Gaglardi, B.C.\nhighways minister, said he would\nconsider the matter.\nBecause of its construction, MV\nAnscomb, the year-round ferry,\ncan only accommodate one of the\nlarge units at a time. Trucks left\nbehind had to wait two or more\nhours. MV Balfour, used during\nthe summer, carries about five of\nthe vehicles. One reason the Balfour was not used during winter\nwas that it does not have radar.\nA delegation of Canadian Pacific\nTransport officials discussed the\nmatter with Mr. Gaglardi. It was\nsuggested the Balfour make one\ndaily return trip during winter\nmonths for large trucks.\nBusiness in this area will continue to grow and the problem become worse unless the government\nacts soon, Mr. McDonald said.\nREMODEL ANSCOMB?\nThe chamber asked Mr. Gaglardi to consider raising the Ans-\ncomb's upper deck to take more\nof the larger trucks and M. B.\nRyalls, past president, asked if\nchamber members could do anything else to speed up action on\nthe matter. Mr. McDonald said he\nwould write if he thought aid-could\nbe given.\nMr. McDonald touched on another sore point with local chambers of commerce and boards of\ntrade; because of the condition of\nsome roads in southeastern B.C.,\ntrucks must go on U.S. roads.\nTrucks cannot travel between here\nand Castlegar via South Slocan and\nway points because of highway\nconditions, he pointed out. Instead,\nthey must go to Trail via Ymir,\nSalmo and other points.\nStudies were being made to see\nif certain articles such as flowers\ncould be carried in baggage compartments of the new rail-diesel\ncars, and Mr. McDonald expected\nthe answer to this question before\nApril 15. The compartments are\nabout 17- feet by five feet. First\npreference must be given to passengers' baggage, he said.\nPresident C. W. Ramsden said\nthe meeting resulted from numerous complaints to the chamber.\nJ. H. Coventry said he had received so many claims against the\nexpress company since last October he was alraid they might\nseek higher rates.\nMain source of supply tor\nflowers was Medicine Hat and\nMr. Coventry said flowers\nshipped from there Monday evening were not available for sale\nhere until Thursday morning.\nThe fact that trucks are not, allowed to operate on Alberta roads\nSundays added to the problem.\nService from the west was better.\nHe also spoke oi difficulty with\nair express and \"lack of co-operation between Canadian Pacific Airlines and Canadian Pacific Express.\"\nNo express was picked up Saturday in Medicine Hat, according to\nJ. W. McClelland. Mr. McDonald\npromised to investigate this.\nMonday was bad for getting deliveries of cakes, buns and similar\nbakery goods, G. M. Davies, Canadian Bakeries manager, added.\nDifficulty of handling stretcher\nand mental patients at present\nwas voiced by R.  H.  Procter,\nadministrator of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.  Buses sometimes had to be used to carry\nblood here from Penticton. Faster\ntransportation of biopsys to Vancouver meant quicker treatment\nof cancer patients. Eyes for the\neye bank at Vancouver should be\ntransported quickly.\nMost stretcher  cases  fly, Mr.\nPhillips said. However, they could\nbe carried in baggage compartments accompanied by one adult.\nMr.  McDonald  promised  to  ask\nCPA officials to investigate transportation of blood and eyes.\nO. C. Odegard had told chamber\noificials he felt lucky to get three\nexpress shipments weekly. This\nsituation would be investigated,\nMr. McDonald said.\nNO LIFELINE\nKaslo would have no lifeline except by road after April 1, when\nSS Granthall would be taken off,\nJ. A. Cochran, president of Kaslo\nBoard of Trade, reported. Arrange\nments for a local truck line to\nhandle freight between here and\nKaslo were being discussed, Mr.\nMcDonald said. These wouid be\nsimilar to arrangements made with\nother truck lines serving points not\non the railway.\nMr. Cochran told of difficulties\nexperienced by Kaslo people who\nship dogs. He said they brought\nsome overseas-bound dogs to Nelson and the express company refused to accept them.\nAir  service  here  was   called\n\"terrible\" since planes could not\nalways land at Castlegar due to\nweather conditions.  Dr.  A.  M.\nBarrera was unable to get several  cases  out  of  Kaslo,  Mr.\nCochran added. The doctor helped save the life of one man by\ndriving straight through to Vancouver. Mr. Phillips pointed out\nthere were through trains from\nhere to Vancouver twice weekly.\nShipment of cherries also worried Mr. Cochran. Fruit made up\na large portion of CPR revenue,\nMr. McDonald said, adding B.C.\nTree Fruits had been assured the\ncompany would get Iruit to markets\nin as good or better condition than\nwhen shipping was done by rail.\n'  Nelson Farmers' Supply had reported  1000 chicks shipped  from\nVancouver by air were landed at\nCranbrook and dead when they got\nhere. In this matter trucks had\npoor ventilation and heating in\nthem could not be controlled as\nwell as in raitway cars, Mr. McDonald answered.\nEconomic reasons forced the\ncompany to change from rail to\nhighway transportation and Mr.\nMcDonald said efforts were made\nto give the same service by truck\nas by train. However, regulations\nlimited the service. A special\ntruck was being run from Vancouver to Calgary once a week to\nhandle livestock, but business\nwoulcj not even pay the drivers'\nwages.\nDIFFERENT PROBLEMS\nService here was patterned after\ntruck operations started on Vancouver Island, but these complaints\nhad not been heard on the island.\nHowever, Mr. McDonald said not\nall places had the same problems.\nNo. 3 highway was open 12\nmonths of the year whereas Wo. 1\nwas only open about six months,\nR. D. Barnes, honorary secretary,\npointed out.\nKaslo and Nelson were the only\npoints represented. Others were invited to send representatives. R. B.\nMorris, chairman of the freight and\ntransportation committee, chaired\nthe meeting.\nMass Hysteria Blamed\nIn Factory Fire Loss\nBy ARTHUR W. EVERETT\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014An explosion started a roaring fir\u00bb\nthat trapped scores of persons Wednesday in a lower Broadway factory building. Twenty-four died in the panic as\nworkers sought to escape the\nflames.\nIt was not until 4% hours after\nthe fire broke out that Fire Commissioner Edward J. Cavanagh\nwas able to say with reasonable\ncertainty that the last victim had\nbeen removed from the smoking\nwreckage.\nCavanagh said there was no evidence of fire law violations on the\npremises and declared:\n\"It would seem that panic played\n\u25a0a most important role in this blaze.\nSome bodies were piled one on\ntop of the other\u2014evidence of mass\nhysteria.\"\nLoft buildings are warehouses or\nbusiness buildings in which the upper rooms usually take up the\nentire floor, often without partitions. There are hundreds of them\nin Manhattan, often ancient and\nrundown, their lofts crammed with\nlittle shops and factories.\nMISSED NETS\nAt least 15 persons were Injured,\nhalf a dozen of them when they\nmissed fire nets while plunging\nseveral storeys to the pavement.\nCavanagh said an explosion in\na processing oven of a third-floor\ntextile firm sent flames racing\nthrough the five \u2022 storey building\nbetween Houston and Bleecker\nstreets.\nAt the height of the 1V4 - hour\nblaze, dozens of women textile\nworkers perched on window sills\nthree or four storeys above the\nstreet, awaiting their turns to leap\ninto fire nets.\nSix of the women missed the\nnets and hit the pavement with a\nsickening impact. One of them\nlanded on a man who was giving\nfiremen a hand with the net, painfully injuring him as,well as herself,     \u25a0   - \/ \/  \u25a0\nFiremen on the nets set up a\ngrim production line mechanism.\nAs fast as one woman hit the nets,\nshe was boosted off to make way\nfor the next.\nOther women were taken to\nsafety down aerial ladders.\nWith the blaze finally under control, grime - besmeared firemen\nrisked possible collapse of the\nwrecked and blackened building to\nsearch for victims.\nMIRACULOUS ESCAPE\nTo their surprise, the rescuers\nfound a man and woman barely\nalive\u2014but alive\u2014in the debris. The\nwoman had taken refuge from the\nflames in a metal storage box.\nTons of water poured in by firemen apparently had kept the box\ncool enough to allow her to live\nthrough the holocaust. The man\napparently shielded himself from\nthe flames in some manner while\nhugging the floor.\nThe scene ol the fire, on the\nsoutheastern fringe of Greenwich\nVillage, is three blocks from where\none of the city's greatest fire disasters  occurred March 25,  1911.\nThat was the Triangle Shirtwaist\nCompany fire that killed 145 persons.\nThe area is one of ancient tex-,\ntile lofts, where women work ma-\ntile lofts, where women work ma-\ntile products, such as hats, shirts\nand underwear. The top t h r e e\nfloors of the building were occupied\nby such firms.\nCommissioner Cavanagh has\ncomplained many firms in the area\nignore fire safety regulations. Last\nmdnth, six firefighters died in a\nsimilar loft blaze nearby.\nThe commissioner Wednesday\nthreatened to close the area\n\"block by block unless the people\nco-operate.\"\nFive alarms eventually wer\u00ab\nsounded for the blaze, bringing 200\nfiremen and 40 pieces of apparatus to the area. >\nIsraeli Embassy\nDenies Story\nOf Stolen Gold\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Israeli\nEmbassy Tuesday formally denied a published allegation that\nstolen Canadian gold finds \"its\nway to Israel and is used there\nto buy guns and other military\nsupplies.\nThe allegation was made in a\nMarch 3 Canadian Press story\nfrom Timmins, Ont., which\nquoted Ontario Provincial Police\ninspector Charles, W. Wood to\nthis effect.\nThe Israeli Embassy said in a\nstatement:\n\"A Canadian Press news item\nof March 3, 1958, datelined Timmins, Ont., quotes an inspector\nof the provincial police as saying\nwas finding its way to Israel\nwhere it was used for the purchase of guns and military supplies.\n\"Following inquiry, both in Israel and Canada, the Israeli Embassy desires categorically to\nstate (A) that no inquiries have\nbeen addressed to Israel police\neither direct from Canada or\nthrough Interpol (International\nPolice Bureau) regarding any\nsuch traffic and (B) that the allegation regarding such a traffic\nis without foundation in fact.\"\nCranbrook Man\nReal Estate Head\nVICTORIA (CP) - M. J. Klinkhammer of Cranbrook was elected\npresident of the Association of Real\nEstate Boards of British Columbia\nat their annual meeting here this\nweek.\nStumping With\nThe Leaders\nTORONTO (CP)-Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker headed for the relative quiet of Northern Ontario\nWednesday night showing little\nsigns of fatigue after a gruelling\n10-hour visit that drew the biggest\ncrowds of his 'Ontario campaign\nto date.\nThe prime minister shook 1700\nhands and exchanged waves with\nmore than 6000 others at afternoon\nand evening coffee-and-cake receptions in the Queen Elizabeth building in the Canadian National Exhibition park.\nAt Wednesday night's reception\nMr. Diefenbaker was flanked by\nPremier Frost who introduced him\nas \"the man from the grassroots\nwho knows Ihe people because he\nis with the people\u2014and the people\nare with him.\"\nDespite the larger crowd \u2014 5500\ncompared with the afternoon's 2300\n\u2014 the Progressive Conservative\nleader stopped shaking hands after\n40 minutes. He gave 1050 handclasps at the afternoon reception\nand another 650 Wednesday night\nbefore his fingers gave out. The\nrest of the crowd filed past, exchanging nods and greetings.\nWednesday afternoon he made an\nappeal for \"the highest percentage\nof voters in Canadian history\" on\nelection day March 31.\n\"If you do that, the outcome\nwill not be in doubt,\" he said.\nCHAPELAU, Ont. (CP)-Lester B. Pearson said Wednesday\ntaxes should be cut at once to\nmeet the critical unemployment\nsituation.\nOpening a two-day swing through\nhis own riding of Algoma East, the\nLiberal leader referred to the latest\ngovernment figures on unempIoy\u00b0\nment which showed that at mid-\nFebruary the number without work\nhad climbed to 555,000 while those\nseeking jobs had increased to\n855,000.\nThe actual number of jobless, h\u00ab\nsuggested, is somewhere between\nthese two figures, more than nine\nper cent of the working force and\na pretty high figure for Canada.\nThe Liberals proposed to cut taxes\nby $400,000,000 or $500,000,000 as\nquickly as possible if they were\nelected to power March 31.\nTax cuts should be made now\nand should be done quickly, he\ntold an ^afternoon tea and cake\ngathering of some 300 in this lumber and rail community of 3100.\nCHILLIWACK, B.C. (CP)-Solon\nE. Low, national Social Credit\nparty leader, says an international\ncommodity clearing house should\nbe established \"for the orderly,\nsensible distribution of unsaleable\nsurpluses of food products.\"\nMr. Low told a public meeting\nhere Wednesday night that this is\none of the \"guiding principles\" of\nthe Social Credit party's farm\npolicy.\nOthers were:\nFarmers are entitled to their fair\ndiare of national income;\nThe principle of parity prices\njustly applied to the marketing of\nfarm products is the main method\nby which the farmer can be assured of his fair share of the national\nincome:\nThe two-price system for the sale\nof farm products is really the\nfoundation upon which parity prices\nare based.\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\nlinillllllllllllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIi\nJoin    TpS   {jrlrlS  (rhi'musoWplanirh'.')\nand see a world of entertainment!\nA tour of amour with three \"live-it-up\"\nshow girls who kiss and tell and tell!\nCINEMASCOPE\u00bbnd METRQCOLOR\nHi\nJACOOESlRGERAC^\nCOMPLETE SHOWS 7.00 - 9.05\nCIVIC\norco%\ngiP#fr\nDRIVE-IN   I\n10 Miles last of Nelson\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY\nComplete Shows at 7:00 and 8:30\nInfants Soon\nInfant polio inoculations will\nbe available for Nelson and\nSalmo children during this\nmonth.\nInoculations will be given in\nNelson March 27 and 28 and in\nSalmo March 20 and 27.\nSalmo youngsters will be inoculated during regular clinic\ndays\u2014Nelson children will receive their vaccine at the Selkirk Health Units under the\nsame alphabetical order practiced during the last series.\nim i mil ii i iiii111in i ii i ii i ill i iiiiiiiiiiii\nFoster Last Rites\nObserved Here\nFuneral services for Albert Clinton Foster, 68, who died Saturday\nin Spokane, were conducted Wednesday by acting chaplain R. R.\nMcCandlish for Nelson Lodge AF\nand AM before a large gathering.\nHymns offered during the service were \"Lead Kindly Light\" and\n\"Abide With Me.\"\nHonorary pallbearers of the Masonic Order were R. H. Dill, H.\nMansfield, C. H. Jones. J. F.\nWaters, J. G. Watson and E. J.\nNicholls.\nCremation followed.\nNELSON CADET Richard Hamakawa, right, is\naddressed by Commodore P. D. Budge during a wing\nparade at Royal Roads, near Victoria. The well known\nNelson boy is studying under the Regular Officer Training Plan at the Canadian tri-service college.\n\u2014National Defence phofo.\nMinister Heads\nForest Meet\nHeading the annual foresters\nconvention in Nelson this year is\nB.C.'s deputy minister of Lands\nand Forests, Dr. C. D. Orchard.\nAttending with him is assistant\nchief forester R. G. McKee, both\nof Victoria.\nThe convention opened Monday\nat the Legion Hall when 22 rangers\nfrom Fernie, Revelstoke, Kettle\nValley, Nelson, Washington and\nIdaho started discussion on topics\nrelative to the Christmas tree industry, watersheds, mineral\nclaims, timber and access roads.\nForestry personnel Monday exchanged views within departmental levels and will hold another\nsuch   meeting  Friday.\nDuring this week panel discussions will take place at the Legion\nHall, headed by district forester\nH. B. Forse, while ranger supervisors R. 0. Christie, C. J. Kettle-\nson and J. P. MacDonald will act\nas day chairmen.\nWives of foresters are being entertained at luncheons and teas\nand will be dinner guests at the\nhome of the District Forester\nThursday evening. Rangers will\nattend a banquet on that night\nand a dance will be held later.\n18 DOCTORS APPOINTED\nTO HOSPITAL STAFF\n5 Communities Represented .. .\nFive communities are represented on the medical staff of Kootenay Lake General Hospital. This\nwas some evidence of the district-\nwide nature of service rendered\nthrough the hospital, Dr. G. R.\nCallbeck told a meeting of the hospital Board of Directors.\nThe medical, staff chairman presented the report of the credentials commiittee to the Board, recommending re-appointment of 18\ndoctors to the hospital staff. The\ndoctors were: Dr. A. M. Barrera\nof Kaslo-Riondel; Dr. Marion Irwin of Kaslo; Dr. H. J. Ruebsaat\nof Castlegar. Dr. J. C. Carpenter\nof Salmo; Dr. S. M. Lebur of Salmo; Dr. G. R. Barrett, Dr. G. R.\nCallbeck,  Dr.  M.  E.  Geissinger,\nFilm Festival\nOpens Here\nIndustry, science, geography and\ntravel films were shown at the\nCapitol Theatre last night in the\nfirst of three nightly programs of\n|f the Kootenay film festival.\n\"The Kitimat Story\" portrayed\nfive stages of development of Kitimat, in fcolor, with scenes of the\ndam, tunnel to Kemano, Kitimat\ntownsite development and the Duke\nof Edinburgh's visit to the town.\n\"Mirror in the Sky\" presented\ngraphic illustrations of how sound\nand light waves are reflected back\nto earth by the stratosphere. Details of air travel and plane tracking services were'shown in \"Song\nof the Clouds.\"\nJudges for the first night were\nA. W. Laine, M. D. Poirer, Mrs.\nR. K. Somerville and Mr. and Mrs.\nGuy Hubbard.\nJudging is based on photography,\ntheme, sound and general commentary. \t\nDr. A. J. Beauchamp, Dr. W. K.\nMassey, Dr. K. G. Benson, who\nis on leave of absence at Toronto,\nDr. J. G. Mcmurchy, Dr. R. B.\nBrummitt, Dr. N, E. Morrison, Dr.\nH. H. Smythe, Dr. R. B, Shaw, Dr.\nA. W. L. Vogelsang of the Selkirk\nHealth Unit, and Dr. R. M. McCullough.\nThe doctors re - appointments\nwere confirmed by the directors.\n$800 NEW EQUIPMENT\nClose to $800 in new equipment\n\u2014all of it transferable and necessary for the new hospital\u2014 was\nauthorized for purchase. The purchase-will include an outlay of\n$364 for the' X-ray department;\n$437 for physiotherapy and orthopedics; and approximately $140\nfor medical and surgery. Government grants will cover, one-third\nof the cost.\nA  tentative  plan   to   supply\nbooks for the new hospital was\noutlined in  a. letter  from   the\nNelson Municipal Library Board.\nThe Board suggested the turning over of discarded books to\nthe hospital, and a Book Cart of\nnew editions 'to be issued on a\nmonthly revolving basis.\nRe-appointment of K. D. McRae,\nGovernment   Agent,   as   government representative to the hospital\nboard was  contained in a letter\nfrom Hon. Eric Martin, minister\nof health.  Mr.  McRae's  appointment is for a two-year term.\nShort month of February resulted in patient days being 35 below the estimates, administrator\nR. H. Procter said in his report.\nThe month topped February, 1957,\nby 88 patient days.\nhospital last month, compared to\n25 in February a year ago. Operations, physiotherapy treatments,\nx-rays and laboratory procedures\nall showed comparative increases,\nMr. Procter reported.\nSWANS SEEN AT\nWILLOW POINT\nWillow Point residents were\npleasantly surprized Wednesday\nmorning when a flight of white\nswans landed to rest on the lake.\nConsidered rare in this area. 13\nswans came in and \"definitely\nslept\" for at least two hours before winging a nostalgic flight\nnorthwards along the lake.\nLast year about 14 of the birds\nwere seen in the district but their\nstay is generally nothing more than\nstop-over \u2014 to recuperate after a,\nI long fiight from southern feeding i\nI grounds.\nNORTH SHORE PARENTS\nPETITION FOR SCHOOL\nCopy of a petition sent by parents of North Shore school children to the B.C. Department of\nEducation was filed Monday night\nby trustees of Nelson School Dis-\nceived from Victoria.\nThe petition stated parents felt\nthe Nelson school board was overlooking the only congested area\nin which a primary school was\nnecessary. It pointed out 20 elementary children now have to\nwalk across the bridge to and\nfrom school.\nProperty for school construction\nwas available near North Shore\nUnited Church hall, the petition\ncontinued, If the building were\nput on this site only four of the\nchildren would not be able to get\nhome for lunch, it was reported.\nParents told S. Ward, North\nShore trustee, they had sent petitions to the board but these were\nnot  acted upon. They  wanted\nTWO JUVENILES\nON PROBATION\nA 17-year-old juvenile was\nplaced on two years' probation\nTuesday and his drivers' licence\nsuspended indefinitely by1 juvii,-\nile court judge William Evans for\n: , theft of hub caps. In addition, the\nAtossionsand^discharge^werei!,^ was told not t? assocjaje with\nboth up over last year, and the\naverage length of stay showed a\nconsiderable reduction from 8.6\ndays in 1957 to 8.2 days, he said.\nThe average number of patients\nin the hospital each day increased\nfrom 80.5 last year to 86.9 this\nyear. There were 48 births in the\nSummer Art School\nHere for First Time\n\\^:>\nGKaKffiUU IDS!? HHfflt \u25a0 MMY W0ES \u25a0 IB K C0SSIA \u25a0 ROM KMCMVI\nInnnh httn.li DntiMi, iwwm\nKVOTISIWII      KB COLDSroU      CHUUS BMtM      WTtD MTOT)\nExpectations are that enrolment\nfor the Summer Arts School to be\nheld for the first time in Nelson\nthis year, will reach between 150\nand 200.\nClasses in this new venture will\nbe held in L. V. Rogers high school\nduring the first two weeks in July.\nArt, music and drama constitute the courses for this first Summer Arts School. Two sets of\nclasses will be taught in each of\nthe three courses, probably three\nhours in the afternoon and three\nhours in the evening.\nInstructor   for   sketching    and\nainting will be Adrian Officer,\nighly qualified art teacher from\nSalmo.\nAlthough publicity for the Arts\nSchool has not yet been disseminated to any great extent, indications point to the art classes being\nfilled up quickly, E. D. Baravalle,\nchairman of the organizing committee, said Wednesday.\nChoral classes will be under Mr.\nBaravalle's direction. If the demand warrants instrumental instruction, an instructor will be\nengaged from the Vancouver\nSymphony  Orchestra.\nFinal word is being awaited as\nto the person who will conduct the\ndrama classes.\nMr. Baravalle explained that the\nEaster\nGREETING\nCARDS\nMAIL NOW\nEaster is Early\nApril 6th\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St .\nPHONE  1203\n40\n.07\n38\n.03\n35\n.11\n22\nTr\n20\n\u2014\n20\n'\u2014\n41\n_\n42\n.02\n42\n.08\n45\n.26\nThe Weather\n'NELSON   33\n| Ottawa   28\n| Toronto   31\nj Winnipeg    11\nSaskatoon    -8\nj Calgary     -3\n(Kimberley    23\nKaslo     32\nGrand Forks   31\nI Vancouver    41\nI    Buy and Sell With Classified!.\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"Ten Thousand  Bedrooms\"\nDean Martin - Eva Bartok\nFirst Show Approx. 6:45 p.m.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday and Saturday\n\"PRIDE AND THE PASSION\"\niVist'-vishn \u2014 i,:rh   ':o!orl\nCary\u00abGrant - Frank Sinatra\nNEWS\ncourses will be open to all interested people of any age.\n\"We are hoping that the Arts\nSchool will attract most of the\ndrama clubs, art clubs and music\ngroups throughout the Kootenay-\nBoundary. and from across the\nborder to as far south of Spokane,\" he added.\nThe deadline for applications\nwill be either May 15 or June 1.\nothers wh.0 were involved in the\ntheft, to be home at a certain time\nevery night and not to leave Nelson without permission of the pro\nbation officer.\nThe boy was charged with steal\ning hub caps from a cat belonging to Dr. B, M. McCullough when\nit was parked on Nelson Avenue\nFeb. 1 or 2. It was one of several\nauto vandalism incidents last\nmonth.\nA 14-year-old was placed on\ntwo years' probation for theft of\na wallet and money belonging to\nGerald Wilson, from the Civic\nCentre March 4. The boy, who\nhas been in court before, was\nordered to repay the money. Special instructions were given as tp\nwhen he was to be home at\nnights, what he was to do with\nhis time, also concerning his future behavious.\nThe boys appeared in court\nMarch 11, admitted the charges\nand were remanded to Tuesday\nfor the probation officer's report.\ndepartment 'official from Victoria\nto inspect the site.\nMembers of the property committee had looked at several North\nShore sites for school purposes.\nChildren who have to walk from\nRosemont to city schools face as\ngreat a hazard as those who have\nto cross the bridge, F. N. Emmott said.\nMr. Ward said he would call a\nmeeting of North Shore parents.\nMARCH 31st\nYOTE_.\nDEWDNEY I*\ni   PAINT UP!\nV\nmmmmimmmiw> \u2022w.^it^\nX\nFIX OP!\nJoin    your    neighbors\nthis worthwhile campaign\nfor all your hardware need\nPatching\nPlaster\n20c - up\nSimply add\nwater and\napply. Makes\na per manent\nwhite patch.\nCan be sanded,\nsized, painted.\nLawn\nBroom\n40c\nHas f 1 e x i ble\nteeth. It's light\nin weight y e t\ntough and\nspringy. Rakes\nwithout tearing\nup grass roots.\nand   the    country    in\n.   superior merchandise\ns at -our store.\nVarnish\nBrushes\nThe finest quality locked - in\nbristles. Hand\nformed and\nshaped.\nHawk number\n5   Oval   lirnsli\n$6.00\nWindow\nSqueegees\nRubber faced\n;for ideal window    cleaning.\n12 in. $1.65\n14 in. $1.90\n16 in. $2.10\nROLLER COATER\n$2.49 and $2.79\nCan be used for oil or water\nbase paints. Covers fast. Ideal\nfor ceilings. Simple to operate.\nComplete with tray.\nStep-\nLadders\n5-Foot Height\nWe have the\nfinest, safest\nstep - ladders.\nSteel trussed\nhard wood construction grooved safety step\ntreads.\n$5.75\nPLUS\nPaint, Steel Wool, Sponges, Scrub Brushes,\nLiquid and  Paste Waxes, Furniture Polish,\nPails, Maps, Brooms, Liquid Soap.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 1530   \u2014 .Wholesale-Retail\nNelson, B.C.\nANOTHER NELSON ELECTRIC\nMTMMN\nYOUR\nBIG\nCHANCE TO\nSAVE\nON A\nGENERAL HI ELECTRIC\nMatchless\nBeauty\n\u2022\nCanada's\nFinest\nAlways\n\u2022    .\nNew\nDifferent\nEASY TERMS\nNo Carrying\nCharges Ever\nEXPERT WATCH\nINSPECTION\nFREE\nCollinson's Jewellery\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nEstablished Slnca 1897\nPhone 120\nNelson, B.C.\nAutomatic\nCLOTHES\nDRYER\nFastest Ever!\nDRIES CLOTHES\nIN 35 MINUTES\nMODEL NO. PDA 620\nJust one dial to set for perfect results on all types of\nfabrics.\nFULL CAPACITY\n10 lbs.\nTHIS WEEK\nONLY\n$\n269\n+ New G-E drying method uses smooth porcelain\nbasket \u2014 speeds warm air directly to clothes,\ndries gently, (aster, saves buttons and wear. .-.\n\u25a0k Conditions as it dries: clothes come out wrinkly-\nfree, seldom need ironing, and they stay new-\nlooking much longer.\n+ Nylon lint trap, easily accessible, gathers up\ndust and fibres, keeps clothes lint-free and\nbright.\n*\u2022 Magnetic door latch: permanent magnets hold\ndoor firmly in place; convenient foot pedal\nopens door wide at touch of the toe.\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\nAUTHORIZED\n574 Baker St.\nDEALER\nPhone 260\n \u2022ii(\nCrestbrook to Close\nPlant at Wardner\nCRANBROOK\u2014Crestbrook Timber Ltd. is closing its Wardner\nplant, formerly property of Crow's\nNest Pass Lumber Company Ltd.\nThis plant has been operated for\nnearly a year principally as a\nshipping centre and air drying\nyard for lumber from the far-flung\noperations of the company through\nEast Kootenay, and a planer has\nalso operated there. Stock from\nthe yard is gradually being shipped. Principal shipping point in\nfuture will be Parson in the Upper\nColumbia Valley which is also a\nmajor producing unit of the company.\nDuring the past two months there\nhas been considerable reorganization in the  directorate of Crest-\nMiracle Cushion\nHolds False Teeth\nTight\nSnug \u00ae brand\nDenture Cushions are a triumph\nsatiorml new plastic re-lining that\ngets rid ol the\nannoyance and\nirritation oi loose,\nbadly fitting tnlsc teeth. Snug cases sore,\nirritated hui]|h due to loose fitting dentures.\nApplied in a lew minutes, makes the\nwobbliest plates (day firmly in place \u2014 giyca\nperfect comfort. Eat anything\u2014talk, laugh\n1 \u2014plates \"stay put\". Harmless to gums or\nI dentures.\nj    Snug re-liners can last from 2 to \u00bb months,\n!8Uys soft and pliable \u2014 does not harden\ns.nd ruin plate. Peels right out when replacement is needed. No daily bother with\n\u25a0dbftsWes. Get Snug brand Denture Cush-\n. loos today! 2 liners lor upper or lower plates\n'$1.50. Money back if not satisfied. At all\n, druggists.\n' Q. T, FULFORD Co., Ltd., Brookvillo, Out\nbrook, which is the interior's largest lumber producer. Resignation\nof J. M. Brown Jr., of Sandpoint.\nIdaho, as company president, was\naccepted and the board named one\nof its original directors, Carl Hall\nof Vancouver as new president.\nRESIGNS\nResignation of V. C. Brown of\nCranbrook as vice-president, general manager and director was accepted in January. E. C. Wert,\npresident of Thompson Falls Lumber Company of Thompson Falls,\nMont., was named new general\nmanager.\nThe long February thaw accompanied by rain closed logging operations at Lamb Creek, principal\nsupplier for Mineral Lake sawmill,\nand the closure will be in effect\nuntil ground is free of frost. This\nnecessitated reduction of operations\nat Mineral Lake to a single daily\nshift which will be continued until\nlogging resumes and the second\nshift can be started again.\nThe annual meeting of Crestbrook Timber Ltd. shareholders is\nscheduled for Vancouver in April.\nOscar Hallgreri\nLogger Many Years\nSALMO \u2014 Oscar Hallgren, who\ndied at Mount St. Francis infirm-\narmy in Nelson on Monday, was\na former employee of the F. R.\nRotter Lumber Company. He came\nto Canada from Sweden and worked at the relief camp near Salmo\nbefore starting to work for Mr.\nRotter in 1931. He worked as a\nlogger and post-maker until he\nentered Mount St. Francis some\nyears ago.\nCKLN TONIGHT\n6:45 P.M.\nHARRY ALMACK\nSOCIAL   CREDIT   CANDIDATE\nSpeaking on the\nNATIONAL SOCIAL CREDIT\nPLATFORM\nThis advertisement paid for by\nKootenay West Social Credit Committee\nAgreement\nReached Wilh\nCity Workers\nCRANBROOK - The City Council has reached agreement with\nthe East Kootenay General Workers; .Union regarding terms of contract renewal with its works department employees.\nThe union has accepted the city's\noffer of 10 cents an hour increase\nacross the board, 10 cents \"dirty\nmoney\" bonus for special cleaning\njobs, and establishment of three\nnew wage categories, carpenter's\nhelper, pipefitter and mechanical\nsweeper operator. The new agreement will be supplemented by some\ntype of medical services coverage,\nbut details of this are still under\ndiscussion.\nThe contract will he retroactive\nto February 1 when renewal of the\n1957 agreement was due.\n102 Births\nLast Monlh in\nEast Kootenay\nCRANBROOK \u2014 East Kootenay\nHealth Unit report for February\nlists 102 births officially recorded\nin the six districts of the Unit the\nprevious month. Of these 56 were\nboys and 46 girls. Cranbrook recorded more than one-third the\ntotal.\nDeaths in the same period numbered 18, with Cranbrook again\naccounting for one-third. Heart\ndisease caused six of the deaths.\nOnly one fatal accident was re\ncorded during the month.\nAttendance at well-baby and preschooler clinics continued to be excellent with 1374 youngsters checked, 200 smallpox vaccinations given\nand 97 immunization series completed.\nEarly spring thaw in Radium\njunction area showed poor ground\nabsorption of runoff, indicating that\nunorganized sewage disposal in this\nrocky area will continue to be a\nproblem this year.\nHACKENSACK, N.J. <AP>-\n\"EJectronic policemen\" have\nbeen credited with eliminating\nschool vandalism here. Board of\neducation members announced\nTuesday that the use of sensitive\nmicrophones in schools after\nhours has cut the cost of vandalism from $50,000 three years ago\nto nothing. The microphonbs are\nhidden in the shutdown schools,\nwith police listening in at the\nother end.\nKOOTENAYS DESERVE\nFAIR SHARE - DEWbNEY\nNAKUSP - Potentialities of the\nSlocan and Arrow Lakes were\ntopics of Peter Dewdney, Progressive Conservative candidate in the\nMarch 31 election, when he and\nsupporters from Nelson, Trail and\nRossland visited Nakusp, Brouse,\nRosebery and Hills Tuesday and\nWednesday.\nMr. Dewdney addressed several\nmeetings attended by between 20\nand 30 people at different times\nduring the days and renewed many\nacquaintances and old friendships.\nHe said he had ,'ived in the Kootenays all his life and was anxious\nthat his children should have the\nopportunity to reside and prosper\nhere when they grow up.\nHe described radio reception in\nNakusp and district as \"totally in-\nadeqaute,\" and said he could not\nunderstand why a CBC booster\nstation for the Slocan had not been\nprovided. He also wondered what\nhad been done about i television\nrepeater station. Mr. Dewdney also\ndeplored removal of the boats from\nthe three lakes and noted that little\neffort had been made to develop\nthe lakes as a tourist attraction.\n\"The natural beauty in the Slocan is as good as or better than\nBanff's,. where millions of dollars\nof federal money has been-spent,\"\nhe said.\n\"There is ample opportunity for\ndevelopment of access roads to\nparks and forests under the national development program for\nCanada. 1 want to see our fair\nshare of government money come\ninto the Kootenays.\n\"We used to go to Halcyon Hot\nSprings some years ago\u2014now it\nis inaccessable. The Kootenays\nmust be considered when the fed'\neral government lays its plans for\nadditional national highways.\" He\nstressed the importance of an ade-\nguate link up with Revelstoke.\n, However, public works are not\nenough, Mr. Dewdney continued.\nTo this proposal he added the plan\nhe is advocating for decentraliza'\ntion of industry in British Columbia.\nHe mentioned aid to the handicapped children, mental health and\ntraining for healthy children as\n\"things more important than pub\nlie works to many people.\"\nTested At Boswell\nInsecticide Controls\nCherry Fruit Fly\nCRESTON \u2014 For many years\nKootenay cherry growers have relied ujpon a mixture of lead arsenate, molasses and water to control cherry fruit fly. This mixture\nhas the advantages of being comparatively inexpensive, easy to apply and, in general, has provided\ngood control of the fly if applied\ncorrectly. However, occasionally\nthe lead arsenate - molasses bait\nhas failed to provide control and,\nif it is applied even one day too\nlate it is ineffective. Now a comparatively new insecticide is proving to be very effective in controlling cherry fruit fly and will undoubtedly prove to be much more\ndependable than the bait. The insecticide is diazinon, a chemical\nwhich has proved effective in controlling many other tree fruit insect pests such as mites, aphids,\nbud moth and codling moth.\nAn experiment conducted in the\nEric Bainbridge orchard at Boswell in 1957 demonstrated the effectiveness of diazinon in controlling cherry fruit fly. Three sprays\nof diazinon applied at weekly intervals provided 100 per cent control\nof the flies, as did three applications of lead arsenate-molasses\nbait.\n.     -\nALL-NEW|HARD GLOSS...\n3 WAXES IN ONE\nNEW PRODUCT! NEW TIN!\nHARDEST, BRIGHTEST, TOUGHEST SHINE OF ALL!\ni\nAI\/L-NEW Hard Gloss Gio-Coat givw yon three waxes in\none... a wax that won't spot... a wax that won't stain...\na wax that won't scuff I It'a made up of millions of tiny,\ngem-like polymer crystals... that literally weld themselves\ntogether to give you a dazzling shine and a rugged shield\nthat's almost Uke another floor to live on, A floor you don't\nhave to pamper... for it's the first shine ever able to stand\nup to your big three floor problems. 1) Water...wipe it\naway, and no water spotting. 2-) Household apiUs... wipe'\nthem away and no stains. 3) Scuffy traffic... this shine\nholds up better than ever before. Try Johnson's ALL-NEW\nHard Close Glo-Coat.   ' tMn\nSeventy-three per cent of the\nfruit on unsprayed frees was infested with maggots. Diazinon 25\nper cent wettable powder was applied at the rate of 12 pound per\nacre in a concentrate spray (two\npounds per 100 gallons of water in\na dilute spray). \u25a0\nSince there is a possibility of unsightly spray dopsit remaining on\nthe fruit at picking time if the\ndiazinon 25 per cent wettable pow\nder is applied too late in the season, it is suggested that the last\nspray be applied not later than\nJune 25. While three sprays of\ndiazinon were applied in the 1957\nexperiment to\" control cherry fruit\nfly, it is quite possible that two\nsprays would be sufficient; the\nfirst about June 7 -10, and the\nsecond June 17 - 20. The effectiveness of two sprays will be tested\nduring the coming season.\nWhere sprays are applied as di\nemulsifiable solution could be used\nat the rate of two pints per\n100 gallons of spray. This emulsl\nfiable material can be ap-\ndanger of an unsightly deposit remaining on the fruit. Diazinon 25\nper cent emulsifiable solution\nshould not be applied in concen\ntrate sprays since severe fruit and\nfoliage injury may result.\n(astlepr Fall\nFair Plans\nGel Under Way\nCASTLEGAR - At the fall fair\nmeeting held in the Legion Hall,\nMrs. C. Bradford presided in the\nabsence of J. Websler.\nMrs. B. Hill reported she and\nMrs. P. Oglow had attended Ihe\nprojects society meeting, regarding the use of the rink for the fair\nThe secretary was asked to write\nto the projects society and ask if\nthe rink would be ready for the\nfair.\nft was decided not to have a fall\nfair queen, as there will be a centennial queen. G. Hughes is to be\nasked to look after the entertainment for the fair.\nThe prize list is to be revised\nMrs. E. A. McDonald, Mrs. J. Scott\nand Mrs. C. Bradford to look after\nthis. It was suggested the large\ncentennial poster be posted in the\nbooth of antiques; also, to ask the\nRussian people if they have any\nolden-day tools or spinning' wheels\nlhat could be displayed at the fair\nin keeping with the centennial year\nCanadian Players\nVisit Arranged\nTRAIL\u2014The business manager\nof the Canadian Players of Stratford, Ont., and a former resident\nof Trail, Dennis Sweeting, recently\nmet with the executive of the Trail\nLittle Theatre.\nMr. Sweeting, who spent some\ntime in Trail,, shortly after the\nwar as an announcer with CJAT,\nwas in the city to arrange a forth\ncoming western tour of the Cana\ndian Players. Although the dates\nhave not been definitely set the\ngroup will be in Trail about the\nlast week of February, 1959. It\nis expected that they will present a\nShakespearean play in Trail, al\nthough they will also be staging a\nshow play. This may be presented\nin Nelson, pending decision of\nsponsors there.\nMr. Sweeting recalled many\n\u25a0memories of Trail, and remarked\nhow things had changed since he\nlast was in the district. He was\nparticularly impressed with the\ndevelopment in the area surrounding Trail, saying \"The Castlegar\nKinnaird district is something\nphenomenal.\"\nTRANSFERRED\nJack Craig, who has been em\nployed at the Overwaitea store for\nthe past several months, has been\ntransferred to Prince Rupert.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Soviet\nshipyards are working on new\nrefrigerator trawlers capable of\nextended fishing trips in Arctic\nand Antarctic waters. The 3.70-\nton vessels will be able to stay\nat sea for two months without\ntouching port, Tass news agency\nsays.\nCampaign Moves\nInto Last Lap\nProceeding to Trail following a\nmeeting at Salmo Wednesday\nnight, H. W. Herridge. CCF candidate for Kootenay West, swings\njnto the last lap of his election\ncampaign.\nDuring eight days spent in the\nNelson-Creston, area, Mr. Herridge\nheld meetings at Kaslo, Meadow\nCreek, Crawford Bay, Boswell\nProcter, North Shore and South\nSlocan.\nAfter the Crawford Bay meet\ning, Mr. Herridge drove to Riondel and met about 80 men coming off the evening shift. Because\nof many activities booked at the\nRiondel Community Hall, it has\nnot been possible to schedule a\nmeeting there, but Mr. Herridge\nspent some time visiting in the\nvillage.\nWith meetings and door-to-door\nvisiting scheduled in the Trail and\nCastlegar areas for the-remainder\nof the campaign, Mr. Herridge\nwill return to Nelson next Wednesday for a meeting in the Nelson\nLegion hall, and then return to\nTrail for the Union-sponsored ap\nTV FILM ON\nKOOTENAY LAKE\nTO BE SHOWN\nARGENTA\u2014Featuring Kootenay\nLake communities and their people,\nthe film \"Quiet Frontier\" will be\nshown at the Argenta-.Iohnson's\nLanding PTA benefit program Sat\nurday night in Argenta.\n\"Quiet Frontier\" was filmed last\nsummer, and includes shots from\nthe air of Nelson, Trout Lake and\nLardeau, the story of the Moyie,\nNasookin and Grant Hall, as weli\nas human interest in such settlements as Riondel, Kaslo, Shutty\nBench, Birchdale, Johnson's Landing, and Argenta.\nOriginally filmed for production\non CBC television, \"Quiet Frontier\" has been seen by thousands\nof people across Canada. Special\npermission was granted the PTA\nto show the film, since Argenta is\nbeyond range of television reception and was one of the communities filmed.\nFeature of the night will be a\none-act play \"Nobody Home\", produced by local talent. The program\nwill open with selections from the\nJunior Orchestra and the Argenta\nCommunity Chorus. A' cake auction, a candy sale and sale of re\n[resiunents will be the money-rais\ning projects for the evening.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\u20143\nWar Relics Collector\nMichel Man Owns\nLusitania Medallion\nNATAL \u2014 One of the rare medallions struck by the Germans 43\nyears ago to commemorate the\nsinking of the British liner, Lusitania, on May 7, 1915, has turned\nup in Michel.\nSam Stephenson of Michel has\ntreasured the medallion for nearly 40 years. A relative of Mr.\nStephenson's, James Kirby of\nMaryport, England, obtained the\nmedallion from a dead German\nsoldier while serving at the front\nwith the British forces during the\nFirst World War. Jle later sent\nthis medallion to Mr. Stephenson\nat Michel, who in turn has been\npearance there of all four candidates at Union hall, and the usual eve-of-the-poll rally at Rossland on, Saturday, March 29.\nMr. Herridge, looking fit, remarked that meetings have been\nlively during the campaign, and\naudiences, particularly in the\ncountry places, interested in many\nissues, with national health, the\neconomic situation, and the Columbia River Basin perhaps taking\nprecedence over others.\nsending' reading material to his\nrelative overseas.\nRecently several of these heavy\nmedallions were reported uncovered in various parts of Canada.\nReports state that when the liner\nwas getting ready to sail from the\nUnited States in 1915, the Germans\npublished warnings that the ship\nwould be sunk, regardless of\nwhether or not it was carrying\nneutral Americans. Following the\nsinking, Germany issued the medallion which on one side shows the\nsinking ship, wreathed in flames,\nand on the other side, passengers\nlining up at a ticket window manned by the figure of death. A German inscription on this side states;\n\"Business above all\".\nIncidentally it was also reported by oldtimers in the district\nthat a Michel couple, Mr. and Mrs.\nTed Lawrenson, were passengers\non the ill-fated liner and were lost\nat sea.\nMr. Stephenson, who is an old-\ntime resident at Michel, is a collector of war souvenirs and badges. He is a veteran of the First\nWorld War.\nFREE DELIVERY\nCool iBoiikd \/B&sM\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Name\n\u2022 Columbia Lager \u2022 fernie Lager\n\u2022 Kootenay * Columbia\nPale Ale Cream Stout\nEMpVv   BOTTLES  COLLECTED  ON   DELIVERY   ONLV\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liq-\nuor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nBallad\nTHE NEW PATTERN IN\nTHC   FINEST   SIIV\u00a3*PLAT\u00a3\nrmAj  CaCfttlrtM\nBeautiful MfiLODY\nCheBt available in choice\nnChnndrubbed fininhcs\u2014\u25a0\nMahogany \u2014 Blond*, \u2014\nCherrywoo*J\nBallad\n9*\n\/\n95\n43    PIECE SERVICE        $\nFOR EIGHT\nvou save $24.40\nREGULAR OPEN STOCK PRICE $114.38   [including crust)\nDon't Forget\n$7.50\nTRADE-IN\nOn New\nREMINGTON\nELECTRIC RAZORS\nOLSON'S CREDIT JEWELLERS\n364 BAKER ST.       NELSON, B.C.       PHONE 1149\nPlease send  me the following:\nNAME     \u201e\t\nADDRESS   \t\nCITY     PROV.\t\n\u25a1 C.O.D. \u25a1 CHARGE MT ACCOUNT\n\u25a1 NEW ACCOUNT Q CASH ENCLOSED\nNew accounts please state employment and\ntwo references.\nOLSON'S\nCredit\nJewellers\nPhone  1149\nNelson,   B. C.\n Nelson lath} News\n' Established April 22. 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Larqest Daily Newspaper   .\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second ClasB Mail. Posl Otlice Department. Ottawa.\nMEMBER Ot   1'HE AUDI!  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER Ub   i'HE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use [or republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it ot to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the Local news published therein.\nThursday, March 20, 19S8\nWhen It's Tea-Time in the Rockies\nTea and coffee urns will be working full time from now until election\nday and politicians will be busy hand\nshaking and head patting from the\nMaritimes to the Pacific. The press will\nbe rebuked many times by politically\nincensed readers who do not agree\nwith editorial policy or front page\ncopy.\nEvery election follows the same\npattern. Headlines blare\u2014people gasp\nat \"the cheek of that editor!\", while\npoliticians make frequent use of throat\nsprays and try to think of newer and\nbetter ways to tell the public what\ngood fellows they really are.\nThe reading public, while sometimes becoming aroused at what seems\nlo them, contrary editorials, can usually be relied on to vote for the party of *\ntheir own choosing without being\npushed into political thinking by the\npress, the radio or party politics. So\nbe it.\nAt times criticism is directed at\nnewspapers who follow a determined\ncourse for the support of a particular\nparty or candidate. Naturally, adherents of the opposing factions think this\nis not quite all it should be and frequently scream loud and long about\n\"unfair taclics\". If these people were\nto stop and consider the position a little\ncloser, they would soon realize that a\nnewspaper which adopts a definite\npolicy is one which can be trusted.\ni The public knows where it stands. It\nknows the paper's views regarding the\nparty of its choice and can govern\nitself accordingly.\nRegardless of its editorial policy,\nhowever, all good newspapers give\nfair treatment of actual political news\nIRRESPECTIVE of party and it is up\nto the reader to assess the value of\npolitical copy displayed on n9ws\npages.\nThen again, readers are quite free\nto express their own views by means\nof letters to the editor; this service, in\nfact, gives readers an opportunity to\nwrite their OWN editorials, which must\nbe considered a good and fair practice.\nAnother thought is that words used\nin an editorial are permanent, they\ncannot be refuted by the editor at a\nlater date and the newspaper must\nessentially stand behind its editorial\ntheme.\nHow different this from the politician who will climb his rostrum, evaluate his audience and deliver the\nspeech he thinks they would like to\nhear. Later, if challenged at another\nmeeting, he can sidle out of a particular point with the ease of long\npractice. Much later, if elected, he can\nblandly profess ignorance of some of\nthe statements attributed to .him when\nplatforming.\nThis election will no doubt follow\nalong similar lines as those that went\nbefore. While politicians are slightly\nchanging their tactics\u2014witness bigger\nand better tea-or coffee parties\u2014the\ncrux of the situation remains the same.\nBecause of time limits, votes-of-no-\nconfidence or too strong an opposition,\nthe people are asked to select a new\ngovernment. They are well briefed by\neach party\u2014they hear political promises, they read in newspapers of pro-\ngrains outlined by each party, they\nare pleaded with, cajoled and sometimes even threatened, to vote this way\nor that, but in the end it is human convictions which govern the voters'\nchoice.\nIf personal convictions are strong,\nno amount of argument will sway the\nbelief. If a person is undecided, then\nit is a good thing if a newspaper or\na . politician can help to clinch the\nmatter.\nThe press does not offer its readers\ntea, handshakes or baby kisses, it\noffers honesty in its belief and tries\nto help its readers to a fair estimate\nof the position.\nSo, if you don't like what you read,\nremember, if you read what you liked\n\u2014others wouldn't!\nThe Ides Have It\nAesop got it wrong, the race was Between the hounds, of spring and a March\nhare, and it was won by a hare. Somehow\nwhen February is over pedple begin to think\nthat spring has begun. Or at least that it is\non the way. What is on the way is the rest\nof March.\nThis turns out to be not a hare at all,\nnot even a lamb, but a sheep in lion's clothing. Or so the folklore has it. But mid-March\ncan bring summer days, even 85 degrees of\nheat and bright sunshine, before descending\non blissfully unexpcctant suburbanites with\nthe year's last (and best) blizzard.\nFor ages mankind has recognized that\nsomething ought to be done about March\u2014\nand particularly about its ides, which one\nschoolboy at examination time'thought were\nmembers of a Senate investigating committee. American tax collectors did do some--\nthing when they moved the date for filing\nincome-tax returns to the ides cf April. But\nthe ides of'March remain notorious and can\nprobably be effectively dealt with only by\nremoving the month itself.\nOh. yes, pussy willows by the river,\nforsythia flaming in the hedges, the dozenth\nfirst robin\u2014all make March a month for\nwould-be human songsters whose rat-tat-tat\non garret, typewriters sounds like nothing\nso much as a woodoecker's search for dinner.\nBut some of the rest of us say you can\nhave March. In fact, you've got it.\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nLetters To Trie Editor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of genuine interest are welcome if th\u00bbv are brief,\naccurate and fair. No letter will be Inserted ln whole, or ln part, except over the signature\nand address of the writer. Unsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nHold the Line\nYear, Urges V\nTo the Editor:\nSir: This letter is directed to you because you are in a position to do much for\nBritish Columbia, also because you are vitally concerned. A copy of this letter is being\nreceived by a large number of people in\nauthoritative positions.\nWe the people of British Columbia have\nenjoyed 100 years of progress, development\nand advancement in all fields and today one\nof our greatest assets is our high standard\nof living. The major factors responsible for\nour present high standard have been our rich\nnatural resources, a system of free competitive enterprise, organization of labor and last\nbut not least adequate world markets for our\ngoods. The sum of this is good profits and\nhigh wages which in turn have had a serious\neffect on our competitive position in world\n, markets. We must export, and in this market\n{Business Spotlight...\nInco Report States\nCopper Outlook Good\nQ Canada\nCanadians who feel any pride in their\ncountry, who attach any value to the sovereignty of its government and the dignity ot\nits institutions, would do well to note a press\nrelease now being circulated from Cleveland,\nOhio.\nThe release, dated March 8, comes from\nIhe Brotherhood of Locomotjve Firemen and\nEnginemen, which has its headquarters in\nlhat United States city. It announces that,\nbeginning April 8, the BLFE \"will hold a\nhigh level policy meeting to deal with a campaign by Canadian railroads to eliminate\nfiremen-helpers from diesel-electric locomotives.\"    .\nThis meeting will be held at Chicago,\nIllinois. On its agenda, says the press release, will be the report of Canada's Royal\nCommission of Inquiry, which studied the\nquestion of whether firemen were needed on\ndiesel locomotives of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway in , freight and yard service\u2014and\ndecided that they were not.\nThe Royal Commission, it will be recalled, was composed of three respecled\nCanadian judges, headed by Mr. Justice Kellock, then a member of Ihe Supreme Court\nof Canada. But Mr. H. E. Gilbert, international president of the BLFE, feels no\nrespect (or them, or for the report which\u2014\nafter exhaustive study and travel\u2014they produced. The press release sent out from Cleveland says that Mr. Gilbert \"has rejected the\nreport as grossly prejudicial, because it\ncompletely ignores the position taken by the\nemployees and follows the company's proposals to an alarming degl-ee.\"   '\nSo much for' the integrity of Canada's\njudges. So much for the authority of Canada's\nRoyal Commissions. So much for the Canadian (repeat, Canadian) Pacific Railway,\nwhich has accepted the commission's findings, and is seeking to implement them. So\nmuch for the Canadian (repeal, Canadian)\nNational Railways, which is seeking to do the\nsame thing. So much, in brief, for Canada.\nCanadians are now engaged in an election campaign to decide who should govern\ntheir country,. Perhaps it is all a farce.\nPerhaps we are really governed from Cleveland. Ohio, and Chicago. Illinois, with Mr.\nGilbert\u2014Prime Minister Gilbert\u2014\"rejecting\"\nthis and that Canadian document, \"dealing\nwith\" this and that Canadian problem. Was\nsomebody saying something about colonialism?\u2014 Toronto Globe and Mail.\nTORONTO (CP) - International\nNicks! Company of Canada Ltd.\nand subsidiaries had net earnings\nin 1957 of $86,141,000 or $5.90 a\nshare, compared with $96,290,000\nor $6.50 a share in 1956.\nThe decreased earnings, the annual report says, resulted primarily from the sharp drop in\ncopper prices. Reduced sales of\nplatinum metals, lower prices for\nplatinum, and an 11-week strike\nat its plant in Huntington, W. Va.,\nalso adversely affected earnings.\nThe factors and continuing cost\nincreases were partially offset by\nincreased sales of nickel and copper, and by the higher prices for\nnickel and mill and foundry products which went into effect in\nDecember,\" 1956.\n1957 TURNING POINT\nNet sales totalled $442,886,000,\ndown $1,854,000, and costs and\nexpenses totalled $276,317,000, up\n$12,005,000. Capital expenoiturcs\ntotalled 43,921.000 - highest of\nany year in the company's history \u2014 compared with $23,021,000\nin 1958.\nAll dollar figures are in United\nStates currency.\nThe report commented that the\nyear 1957 marked a turning point\nfor nickel, and, during the latter\npari of the year, supply, after\nmeeting defence requirements,\nexceeded civilian demand for the\nfirst lime since the Korean War\nbe?an in 1950.\nThe report added, however\n\"The, long - term outlook for\nnickel is excellent. During the\nyears of shortage for civilian\npurposes, nickel has demonslra-\nled that its many properties fit\ninto Ihe pattern of modern technology.\n\"This strengthens our conviction that nickel will have even\ngreater economic value than in\nthe past and that there will be a\nlonit future of upward trend in\nnickel consumption.\nPROGRESS IN  MANITOBA\n\"Our faith in the future of\nnickel is clearly demonstrated\nby the determination with which\nwe are proceeding in the development of our grat new source\nof nickel supply in Manitoba,\nwhich will come into production\nin 1980 as scheduled.\n\"Hand in hand wilh this project, all of the years of experience of the company in market\ndevelopment are being called\nupon to accelerate the uses of\nnickel over a wide base of applications in' all parts of the\nworld.\"\nAt Ihe Manitoba project, favorable progress in the exploration\nprogram at the Thompson Mine\nresulted in a decision to bring\nthat property into production\nfirst. In consequence, the Manitoba project's entire scheduled\noutput of 75,000,000 pounds of\nnickel a year will come initially\nfrom the Thompson Mine.\nDEMAND SOFT\nLong-range development of the\ncompany's mines in Ontarh\nSudbury district also continued\nduring the year. The expansion\nin Manitoba and Ontario would\nincrease the company's annual\nnickel - production caoacity to\n385.000.000 pounds in  1961.\nOf the current situation, the\nreport said: \"Demand is soft for\nour principal products, nickel\nand copper, and the oui'.ook for\n1958 is that our customers will\nnot take as much of our production as they did during the past\nyear.\n\"As the year 1958 opened,\nslocks of nickel available to industry were accumulating in our\nhands as well as in the hands of\nothers, and the production capacity of Ihe nickel producers\nwas higher.\nI Since Ihe report was written,\nthe comnanv announced this\nweek lhat it is curailing output\nof nickel in Canada by about 10\nper cent.)\nRjprtlcw Averse fo Tax Cuftr\nPredict Price Hikes Immediately\nFor Incident\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Capt.\nH. R. Newton, British naval attache in Moscow, was1 held under\narrest for two hours last Sunday\nand forced to walk 'a mile down\na road with an armed escort.\nBritish sources s^\" the incident took place at Tsarilseno, a\npopular skiing resort for Moscow's diplomatic colony about 20\nmiles from Moscow.\nSoviet army officials later apol-\nj ogized  for the behavior of sub-\nI ordinates   who.   they  said,   \"ex-\nI ceeded their duty.\"\nI Newton was taking photographs\nof his son and a friend walking\nup a ski slope when he was detained by an army captain and\nthree soldiers, all armed.\nLONDON (CP) - Direct cargo\nservice from Liverpool to the\nr'\"-eat 'Lakes ports of Toronto,\nHamilton, Cleveland and Detroit\nwill be started March 31 by the\nCunard Steamship Lines, who are\nplanning a service every three or\nfour weeks.\nBy JACK BELL\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Republicans joined Wednesday in stiifen-\ned resistance to immediate tax\ncuts or \"make work\" spending to\ncounter a business recession in\nIhe United States which some administration party members\nclaim is levelling off.\nSenator Harry Byrd (Rep. Va.),\nwho heads the Senate linance\ncommittee, said the government\nis headed toward a $15,000,000,000\ndeficit if Congress cuts taxes. He\nsaid any large-scale red - ink\nspending will \"add fuel to the inflation fire\" and further cut the\nvalue of the dollar.\nEven in February, he said, Inflation cut the buying power of\na dollar by one-third of a cent\u2014\nan annual rale of four cenls.\nLITTLE  HELP\nSenator Everett Dirksen of Illinois, assistant Senate Republican\nleader, said it is exactly that\nthreat of inflation whioh is delaying a decision by President\nEisenhower and his advisers on\npossible tax cuts.\n\"It would do the average family little good to get a tax cut\nand then find the price of everything had advanced.\"\nChairman Styles Bridges\n(N.H.) of the Senate Republican\npolicy committee said he is certain Congress is not going in for\nwhat he called frantic spending\nor tax cutting of the kind that\nwould pile up any $15,000,000,000\ndeficit.\nHe said the administration will\nwait 3 to 6 days for signs of an\n\"unmistakable trend\" in the direction of the economy before deciding on tax cuts.\nEisenhower told Hie annual Republican Women's Conference\nTuesday lhat he is flatly 'opposed\nto what he called the \"make-\nwork approach with its vast,\nslow-moving projects\" because he\nfeels it might \"turn a recession\ninto a long-term economic headache.\"\nSubsequently the federal reserve board reduced the reserve\nrequirements for member banks\nto make a potential $3,000,000,000\navailable for loans.\nThe cut, the second within a\nmonth, reduced the reserve requirements   for   banks'   demand\ndeposits to the lowest levels\nsince the depressibn years of tho\n1930s.\nBut Wall Street reaction indicated surprise only at the small-\nness of the cut\u2014one-half of one\nper cent\u2014and included predictions that still another reduction\nmay be ordered soon.\nBridges said Eisenhower's advisers had found the economic\nsituation spotty, with some signs\nthat the downturn is levelling off.\nN.M. Sights\nVanguard\nCAMBRfDGE. Mass. (AP)-A\nreport that the new Vanguard\nsatellite was sighted this morning by a moonwalch team in\nAlamagordo, N.M., reached the\nSmithsonian Astrophysician Laboratory Wednesdav.\nThe Smithsonian said that data\non the sighting\u2014the first visual\nreport on the new high-flying U.S.\nmoonlel \u2014 indicated '\"a good\nchance\" thai tbe sighting was\nactually of Vanguard I.\nRUSSIAN LEADERS ATTEND\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - Soviet\nleaders Nikita Khrushchev, Nikolai Bulganin and Anastas Mik-\noyan Tuesday night attended the\nopening of an international pianists and Violinists' competition at\nthe Moscow Conservator1' of Music. Tile competition, which will\nrun until April 14, has drawn 80\nyoung artists from 23 countries.\nTONIGHT\n9:45 p.m.\nCBU-TV Vancouver\nChannel 2\nSEE\u00ab HEAR\nPRIME  MINISTER\nJohn Diefenbaker\nPublished by the\nProgressive Conservative Party\nin Centennial\nictoria Writer-\nwe must compete with countries that do nbt\nenjoy a comparable standard of living.\nThis letter is not to acquaint you with\nfacts of which' you are no doubt aware but\nto ask you to make use of them.\nThis is our Centennial year, a year of\ncelebration, but is it. not our greatest opportunity to give thanks to our Maker for past\nand present blessings and show our apnrecia-\ntion by holding the line on costs. To the\nbusiness executive, accept a little less profit\nfor one year. To the wage earner, make no\nwage demands for one year, No cost increases for one year. Everyone in British\nColumbia is vitally concerned, it is our\nprovince, we have built it, now let us get\non the ball and protect it and our future,\n\"One year for one hundred.\"\nLet us all for the Centennial year pull in\nthose outstretched palms and join those hands\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nbt'MrW V, I '#\u25a0.-\u25a0 a\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n'f       HEy.' GIMME TH4T\nWMOOZIS FILE-YOU KNOW-\nTHAT GUy I WAS TALKING\nTO LAST WEEK.' HE'S WITH\nTHAT WHATZIS COMPANV-\nMAKES THOSE DOOHICKEYS-\nLOOK IN THE WH\/VT-CHA-\nMA-CAS.L-IT ENVELOPE!!\nI?EM\u00a3M6EP??WE0EDEI?ED\nTHOSE TWNe\/JMAJieS\nFGOM THEM LAST\nYEAR Of? SO\nPress Comment\nCAUGHT IN MIDDLE\nThe Conservative Government, campaigning for re-election, is caught in the\nmidst of an economic paradox. Though hundreds of thousands are out of work, the cost\nof living, contradictorily, still is rising, the\nprice index having hit a new high once again.\nThe unemployment are naturally bitter\nabout lack of work and wages. The employed\nare unhappy that tlieir work and wages mean\nless and less in purchasing power.\nOn the one hand efforts are made,\nthrough public works, etc., to give a boost\nto the economy to provide work! On the other,\nthrough a continuance of a somewhat relaxed\ntight money policy, to counter inflation! How\ncomplicated can things get?\u2014Windsor Star.\nin building a good foundation under our next\n100 years.\nA. J. SHEPHERD,\nR.R. No. i, Victoria, B.C.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThou shalt have no other\nGods before me. Exodus 20:3.\nWe knew a brilliant financial\nman who gave up his job as Supt.\nof a Sunday School to devote seven days a week to making\nmoney. On his death bed he told\nr-a. h-\\ spent his lite collecting ashes;\n(XiwL dhL\nI kruw you have lo lip in a big\ntown, but it aggravates me to see\nPa give somebody fifty cents for\ndoin' something 1 never get a cent\nfor doin' at horns.\nAli the flavours your dog enjoys...\nAll the known nutrients\nyour dog needs\nto prevent\nD-DEFICIENCY*\nN\n\\\n\\\n\\\nm.      fMvoi\/\u00ab\nYou love your pet.\nIsn't it wise to give him the right food to\nsafeguard his health\u2014and prevent i\n*Diet-Defkiency? With Dr. Ballard's Champion\nDog Food, your dog will benefit from all the\nvital nutrients\u2014proteins, vitamins, minerals\nand carbohydrates\u2014the body-builders and\nenergy foods he needs. And you'll give your pet\nevery flavour he enjoys\u2014Regular, Chicken and\nLiver\u2014prepared from carefully selected meats.\nBalanced nourishment, constant uniformity\nand quality in every can.\nSo, when next you shop,\nfor your pot better get\n\u2022'\/Dfl.BAIiARDS\nCftOMpfab\nDOG FOOD\nf llftllMg |\nChampa\nCHICKEN\nHftV.atf>. g.\n\/\n\/\n\/\n 7'0\nr\nAbout the Town\nPHONE   1844\nMrs. J. A. McDonald, 424 Hoover\nStreet, entertained at tea Monday\nafternoon at the Masonic Temple.\nHonor guests at the tea were\nGrand Guardian Mrs. Rose McKenzie of Courtenay and Associate\nGrand Guardian Mr. Borleske of\nVancouver. Attending also were\nSupreme Grand Guardian Mrs.\nD A Burnett of Rossland and\nProvincial Vice-Grand Guardian\nMrs. Gertrude Williamson of Trail.\nA St. Patrick's Day husband and\nwife party was held Monday night\nin tiie hall of Ihe Fairview United Church by the Naomi Circle.\nGame1;, contests and a potluck\nsupper were features of the evening. Conveners of the party were\nMrs. Len Cutler and Mrs. Earle\nCutler.\nMrs. Slemco of Fernie, who arrived in Nelson Saturday night to\nvisit her uncle in Mount St. Francis, leaves today for her home.\nShe has been a guest of Mr. and\nMrs. Peter Patrick of Silver King\nRoad.\n\u00bb   \u00bb   .\nWilliam Kalyniuk, 1119 Cedar\nStreet, has left to attend a real-\nestate agents' convention in Van\nicouver.\n*   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald\n424 Hoover Street, leave today for\nVancouver where Mr. McDonald\nwill attend a soft drink company\nconvention March 26 to 28. While\nthere Mrs\". McDonald will visit\nher mother Mrs. R. J. Hewitt,\nEn route to the Coast, Mr. and\nMrs. McDonald will be guests in\nTacoma of Mr. and Mrs. E. S.\nPlanta, former Nelson residents.\n*   *   *\nMrs. W. B. Melnecztik, 212 Chatham Street and Mrs. H. J. Bishop,\n115 Nelson Avenue, have returned\nfrom a motor trip to Vancouver in\ncompany with Mrs. Melneczuk's\nson, Peter Melwood, who visited\nShaughnessy Hospital while at the\nCoast.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. W. D. Gordon of\nChilliwack announce the engagement of their daughter, Cecile\nMarie, to John Brooks Glover, son\nol Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Glover of\nNelson, B.C. The wedding will take\nplace in Chilliwack, B.C., on April\n5th, 1958.\nSALMO \u2014 Charles Gordon re\nturned from a wck's trip to Vancouver and Langley Prairie.\nWhile in Langley Prairie he visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Terrain.\nJajyhtiL\n\"Dan River\" Chambray\non Tissue Ginghams\nIn wide assortment. $1.10        $|.19\n36\". YARD  .\u201e\u201e_ I        and    I\n\"Avondale\" Tissue Ginghams\n45\". $1.39\nYARD       I\nBordered Cottons\nIn Drip-Dry quality. $1.29\nYARD _     I\n624 Baker St. Phone 1485\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\u20145\nON THEIR VISIT to Vancouver recently, Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and\nhis wife are pictured with Mrs. Peter Dewdney of Trail, right, wife of the Progressive Conservative candidate in Kootenay West. .    \t\nE to Furnish Ward\new Hospital Here\nKokanee Chapter, IODE, will, quiries into prices of new furniture\nfurnish the IODE ward in the new for the IODE ward, and told of\nNelson and district hospital to the visits to the hospital with reading\nil\nvalue of $1000. Vote on allocation\nof funds for this purpose was passed at the March meeting Tuesday.\nHeld at the home of Mrs. E. S.\nW. Batty, the meeting heard reports on activities of various committees, the hospital report being\npresented by Mrs. G. B. Russell.\nMrs. Russell gave results of en-\n(Bif eZcuUut Itfh&sd&JL\nPRACTICAL\nPRETTIES!\nBy JONATHAN LOGAN\nand TEENA-PAIGE\nBeautiful little dresses with a\nlilting  feeling  of spring  in\nsplash prints, all-over prints,\nand   pastel   stripes. They're\neasy - to - care - for, versati le\nfor so many occasions, and\nwith such lovely fashion\ndetailing   nobody  will   ever\nguess their little price.\nQ&LL LADIES'APPAREL\n\"The Fashion Centre\"\nPhone 775 Nelson, B.C.\nCastlegar WA Plans\nHospital Opening Day\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 At the Women's large juice tins. These   will   be\nAuxiliary to the Castlegar and\ndistrict hospital meeting in the\nHigh Schol cafeteria, Mrs. J. Sherbiko, sewing convener, reported\nthat garments were being made,\nand would be on display in the\nshowcase, in the hospital.\nMrs. St. Richardson, library\nconvener, asked for a bookcase or\nshelves so that the books could be\narranged.\nTentative date for the hospital\nopening is set for April 19, 2 to\n5 p.m. Refreshments will be serv\ned, and a silver collection will be\ntaken to help defray expenses,\nMembers were asked   to   save\nZONE HEAD\nSpring\nCoats\nShould Be *\nChosen Now\/\/   vjff\nEASY TOE-TOASTERS\nGay, young slippers style teen\ners, college crowd adore. Thrifty,\neasy \u2014 make pairs to match a\nrobe, slim slacks.\nTop \u2014 one piece. Use bought\nsole or crochet of rags. Pattern\n764: pattern pieces small, medium, large, extra large included.\nSend THIRTY FIVE CENTS in\n;oins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor tills pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN. 60 Front St.. W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly Pn'.tern Number,\nyour Name and Address.\nAs a bonus, two complete patterns are printed right in our 1957\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Book.\nDozens of other designs you'll want\nto order\u2014easy fascinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts\nbazaar items. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book today!\nmatter for patients.\nFinal arrangements were made\nfor June 4th citizenship ceremonies\nto be conducted on the grounds of\nIhe Court House, announced Mrs\nR. Palmer, reporting as immigration convener, the public being in\nvited. She gave a report on citizen\nship ceremonies held March 12.\nWELFARE COURSE\nMrs. Palmer, as Civil Defence\nconvener, also announced that a\ngeneral welfare' course will be con\nducted during April under the di\nrection of Claude Watson, provincial Civil Defence welfare officer.\nThe course will cover detailed practical training in mass feeding\nclothing, registration and enquiry\nMrs. Palmer stressed that IODE\nmembers should attend the course\nto become familiar with registra\ntion and enquiry methods for Civil\nDefence. Dates of the course will\nbe announced, she said.\nThe Thrift Shop report was presented by Mrs. H. Lakes, who told\nmembers of the necessity for replenishing stock in the shop with\nbooks, trinkets, dishes, kitchen\nutensils and clothing, especially\nmen's. Mrs. Lakes expressed appreciation for long hours of service\nput in by members at the shop.\nShe said, \"It is only in our continuing interest that we can keep\nup the good work and thus be able\nto support our many avenues of\nservice.\"\nEducational secretary Mrs. R. B.\nBrummitt said that during her\nschool visits she had noticed that\na number of fathers take an active\ninterest in their children's schooling. Most of the school displays,\nshe said, were related to the B.C.\nCentennial.\nMrs. G. Schupe, empire and\nworld affairs secretary, read a\npaper on \"Education in Britain.\"\nCorrespondence from Vancouver\ninformed me chapter that many\ncartons of used pocketbooks have\nbeen sent to overseas troops and\nappreciation has been expressed.\nMrs. E. C. Wragge and Mrs.\nHector Mackenzie are the chapter's\nrepresentatives to the Community\nChest and John Howard Society,\nrespectively, and Mrs. Brummitt\nis to be representative to the annual meeting of the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children.\nNew members accepted into the\nchapter are Mrs. W. A. DeFoe and\nMrs. I. M. Horie.\nCo-hostesses at the meeting were\nMrs. P. G. Morey and Mrs. E. W\nCraig.\nSenior Citizens\nHonor Members\nAt Castlegar Meet\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The senior citizens held their meeting in the Legion Hall Friday with 35 present\nand J. Webster presiding. The\nmembers signed a Bon Voyage\ncard, and presented it to Mrs\nAlice Lampard, who is leaving\nnext month lor a trip home to England. Mrs. Lampard was also\ngiven a small cheque to buy some\nflowers for her parents, who will\nbe celebrating their 70th wedding\nanniversary, while Mrs. Lampard\nis home.\nA Bon Voyage ca-.'d was also\nsigned and presented to Colin Fraser, who is leaving for a trip to\nEurope. A Golden wedding card\nwas also presented to Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Duckworth, whose anniversary\nis on March 21. Dr. and Mrs. H.\nRuebsaat entertained the meeting with folk songs oi Europe.\nThe entertainment committee\nhas purchased packs of cards and\nwill hold a card party March 28.\nRefreshments were served by\nthe ladies.\nBoswell Centennial\nDance Draws Crowd\nBOSWELL\u2014Boswell's Centennial\ndance went off in great style with\ntwo orchestras providing music,\nand a big audience in attendance.\nThere were visitors from Creston,\nSanca, Riondel, Crawford Bay,\nRossland, La France and Gray\nCreek.\nMrs. W. Miller and son Jimmy\nof Creston made up one orchestra\nand Mrs. F. D. Cummings, H. B\nBell and Tony Kunst the other.\nSpot dances were won by Mrs\nW. Hewitt and Dave Fowler, Mrs\nCharles Koch and Ray McGregor\nA cake was won by Mrs. Ray McGregor of Crawford Bay. A fishing\nrod and spinning reel was won by\nL.A.C. Denis Bainbridge, who is\nstationed at Edmonton. Refreshments were served and were in\ncharge of Mrs. S. J. Cummings,\nMrs. R. Shell and Mrs. W. Hewitt.\nThe committee plans other\ndances in the coming months.\nChild  Baptized\nROBSON \u2014, Trevor Richard\nwere the names given to the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. W. D\nWebb at. the Sunday morning service of the Robson .Community\nMemorial Church. The baby, who\nwas christened by Rev. A. 0. Me\nNeil, wore the gown his maternal\ngrandmother had worn.\nGrandparents are Mr. and Mrs\nS. Webb of Edmonton and Mrs.\nA. W. Thorp of Robson, at whose\nhome, after the service, lunch was\nserved.\npainted b ythe junior auxixliary,\nand used in the hospital for\nflower vases. The committee for\nthe tea are, convener, Mrs. G.\nGuido, assisted by Mrs. P. Greg\nory, and Mrs. D. W. Brookes.\nJack Chernoff offered to make\nthe service car for the auxiliary.\nSmocks are to be ordered, for the\nuse of auxiliary members when\ngoing around with the cart.\nA cheque for $25 was received\nfrom Mr. and Mrs. K. Popoff of\nVancouver to be used for the\nchildren's ward. Mr. and Mrs.\nPopoff are well known around this\ndistrict.\nIt was decided to give the\nmother of the first baby born in\nthe new hospital a gift suitably inscribed. Mrs. F. Richardson and\nMrs. C. Onions will look after the\npurchase of the gift,\nMrs. J. Chernoff reported that\non March 22, a bake sale and tea\nwill be held in the Robson Community hall, all proceeds for the\nhospital.\nThe I.O.D.E; requested two\nmembers of the auxiliary, to help\nwith the judging of floats, bikes,\netc., May 19, for their Empire\nDay parade. Mrs. W. H. Reed\nand Mrs. W. A. Mackereth will\nassist.\nFolding Chrome\nSTEP STOOLS\nIn All Colors\nAlso\nChrome\nHIGH CHAIRS\nAll Colors\njAaWnank\nMrs. Rapley Gives\nConference Report\nA report on the recent Women's\nFederation presbyterial conference\nat Grand Forks by Mrs. F. Rapley\nwas given at the meeting of Unity\nGroup, St. Paul's-Trinity United\nChurch, at the home of Mrs. J. M.\nStrachan Thursday.\nMrs. B. Broadfoot read the devotional. Sixteen members were\npresent and co-hostesses Mrs.\nBroadfoot and Mrs. H. G. Steed\nserved lunch.\nA STEP XQ:jCHE\nFUTJUffcE\nMRS.\nALLEN\nCASTLEGAR\u2014The Zone Council\nmeeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary\nto the Canadian Legion was held\nin the Castlegar Legion Hall. Ten\nauxiliaries were represented, and\n60 members present, with Presi\ndent Mrs. J. S. Vrooman of Edge-\nwood presiding. Nominations for\npresident were held, and Mrs. A.\n0. Allen of Nelson was elected.\nMrs. Francis Middleton of Trail\nwon a crochet set. Tea was served\nby Branch No. 170 L.A.\nROBSON WA WORKS\nON BAZAAR MATERIAL\nROBSON \u2014 The business meeting of the Robson Evening Group\nWA was' held at the home of Mrs.\nF. Giraud. President Mrs. Giraud\npresided.\nThe sewing committee was voted\nmore money to purchase more materials for the spring print sale be\ning held in May.\nBooster prizes were won by Mrs.\n0. Hubert and Mrs. H. Belbeck.\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostesses, Mrs. 0. Anderson and\nMrs. D. Adshead.\n0M&A, 'Up, UJitk\nTJtcUum, Wxodin.\nPrinted Pattern\nWedding Anniversary\nCelebrated at Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE .\nRowat Hepburn\n- Mr.  and Mrs.\ncelebrated  their\n,\nCHARGE\nACCOUNTS\nINVITED\n63rd wedding anniversary quietly\nat their home overlooking the village March 13.\nThey are the second couple in\nthe history of this valley to have\nreached this goal. The late Mr.\nand Mrs. George Ross were within\na month of their 64th anniversary\nwhen she died. Another couple, Mr.\nand Mrs. William Campbell,\nreached Iheir 61st.\nMr. and Mrs. Hepburn were born\nin Ontario, 86 and 82 years ago\nrespectively, and were married\nthere. They journeyed wesl. when\ntheir family was small, living in\nseveral places and finally settling\nin Fruitvale in 1920, where they\nengaged in ranching until his retirement early in the 1940s.\nThey have two daughters, Mrs.\nFrank Halifax and Mrs. Fred Cullen, both living in Fruitvale. They\nhave six grandchildren and. 10\ngreat grandchildren.\nQUEEN'S BAY - Mrs. Selma\nErickson has returned from Can\ncouver and Newton where she\nhas been visiting relatives and\nfriends.\nEvery corner of our store\nhas put on Easter-airs \u2014\nin fascinating new fashions and new accessoriei\nfor spring '58! They're\nwaiting now for your approval! Come in today.\nI\niiiLckwaE...\nA Lovely\nEaster Hat\nSEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY\nIRENE'S\n569 Ward  St.\nMILLINERY AND\nDRESS SHOP\nPHONE 50\nVERY  EASY  TO  SEW\nModest-but-flattering scooped\nneckline above a graceful skirt\n\u2014 ideal for shorter, fuller figures. Cool in cotton, elegant in\nprint silk . . . you'll love this\nsew-easy Printed Pattern.\nPrinted Pattern 9215: Half\nSizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%,\n24%. Size 16% takes 4% yards\n35-inch fabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please\nprint plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,  STYLE  NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.\nToronto, Ont.\n\u00a7      \u2022*%\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nThis junior deBign will decorate the after-five resort\nscene now and during the Easter holidays. Of dacron,\nthe dress is hand washable. Dainty rows of lace and\nball fringe add glamor to Ihe bodice and a pleated\ncummerbund hugs the waist abo~e the full skirt.\nFROM COAST\nTO COAST\nHere it is!\nThe gayest,\nnewest\nBRA\ntjp\nfor lasting freshness!\nNew Daisy Fresh bandeau gives perfect\nI fit and firm young curves at a price that\nis just right I In broadcloth, embroidered        *\nwith daisies. Sizes 32-40\nCHOOSE YOURS TODAY AT\n556 BAKER ST\nPHONE 1525\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 19S8\nMarch in for Food\n\u2022 TOMATO JUICE\n* CREAM CORN\nPRICES EFFECTIVE\nThurs., Fri., Sat.\nMarch 20th-21 st-22nd\nMalkin's Fancy\n48 oz. tin\ntOMBOV\nStores\nMalkin's Fancy\n15 oi. tin \t\n* STRAWBERRY JAM\n* ANGEL FOOD MIX\n\u2022    fl     I    1 !\u25a0 b !\u25a0 k      Tom-Boy. See it ground\n^M^^F I Li Lb     Know it's fresh\u2014Pound packag\n* TOMATO CATSUP\nLibby's\n11 oz. bottle\n2 for 49c\nCarving Set Winners\nE. Johnson -104 Baker St.\nL. Bacon - Kaslo\nMALKINS\nPEANUT BUTTER\n 89'\n48 oz.\nTin \u201e\nSHIRRIFFS\n9 oz. Jar\nMINT JELLY\n29\nBLUE BONNET\nMARGARINE\nM- pound carton OJ\nSHREDDED WHEAT N\u00abb.*\u00ab, n oz. c\u00abrton\nINSTANT COFFEE eiue Ribbon. 5 oz. sar _\nMILD CHEESE o*ri. ^_\nMACARONI    Creamette,\t\n2 for 39*\n\u2014-- 95*\nCHOICE TOMATOES Hun*. 15.0,. ti\u201e __\nGRAHAM    WAFERS    McCormick..   16  oz. Pkg.\nCORNED    BEEF    Exeter   Brand.   12  oz.   Tin\t\nSPAGHETTI AND MEAT BALLS\nPuritan. 15 oz. Tin.\n\u2014 LB. 55*\n3 Lb.  Ctn. 49*\n- 15*\n- 25*\n- _39<\n :.- 29*\nSTEAKS\nGradeAlb.\u00a9JJ\nT-BONE OR SIRLOIN\nCut from Mature Tender Beef\nTender, Juicy\t\nServe with onions and mushrooms.\nc\nBacon\nSLICED SIDE. RINDLESS\nlb.69c\nSole Fillets \u2122\u00ab.   Ib.55(\nRound Steak GRAdEA-75c\nFresher Produce at Tom-Boy Stores\nONIONS 3 25e\nASPARAGUS   Long lender spears      lb. 29C\nDAFFODILS\nFresh cut\n-    DOZ.\n29c\nROSE BUSHES\nImported, Boxed      EACH qQ.\u00a3\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n.By Fn\nDrake)-\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes, and Jind what\nyour outlook is, according to the\nstars.\nFor Friday, March Jl, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL, 20 (Aries)\n\u2014That just-right attitude will be\ncompletely necessary to get along\nwith people as well as to bring\nabout results and effects you desire now. Start strong with prayer.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Where you find it urgent to make\nchanges do so; but don't permit\nconstant change or a shifting of\ndecisions and processes lo hamp'\ner what can be good progress. Re^\nlax, and enjoy the day.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini )-\nBeing steady, amenable (to and\nwith right sources, of course) and\ngiving without asking in return are\nhealthy always, but definitely\nneeded these days. Don't ask too\nmuch of anyone's enegry.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\nYour Moon has not been in many\nbetter configurations; this is the\nsort of day that stimulates wise in\ncentive and careful planning. Don't\nlet anything urge you to desert\nsound procedures.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\u2014\nIf it is worth doing, it is worth do\ning the best way you know how.\nToday has more underneath qual\nity and vitality than seen on sur\nface; you could set'the spark for\na cheerful time.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgol\u2014Here is a period for some\nartful maneuvering, but for careful speech and action, lest you become involved in something that\nmight cancel out earlier good effects.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra)\u2014Give some extra thought\nto the wholesomeness and good\nspirits that so many celebrate to-\nHave Pictures\nOf Explorer I\nPRETORIA (Reuters)\u2014A four-\nman team Wednesday reported\nhaving taken the world's first\nphotographs of the first American\nearth satellite, Explorer I, in its\norbit.\nAmerican astronomer Robert\nCameron, head of the team,\ncabled his headquarters, the\nSmithsonian Astrophysical Laboratories at Cambridge, Mass., as\nsoon as the series of eight pictures was developed Tuesday\nnight.\nCameron said conditions were\nideal Tuesday night for taking\nthe photographs at 01ifant$fontein\nnear here. The team used one of\nthe $70,000 Baker-Nunn telescopic\ncameras now in operation at satellite tracking stations around\nthe world.\nday. Such attitude could always\nease strained relations, improve\nunderstanding. Join good fun.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 21\n(Scorpio)\u2014Hold back answers or\ndecisions till you have double-\ncheeked to ascertain whettier you\nwill be correct and tactful, too.\nSome matters may be harder resolving: keep trying.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Note Scorpio,\nyour, your aspects and inclinations\nare similar, and you will have to\nhave foresight, discretion and tolerance in adeqaute doses to advance and get along..\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Favorable aspects\ncompared to many now, yet the\nfact that others will have that\n\"off\", and maybe \"down\", feeling\nbehooves you to think well before\nspeaking or acting. Your best will\ndo.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius)\u2014You have better indications from many sources, yet\nwill need tact, understanding.\nWhen you display these at difficult\ntimes, you make the road easier\nall around.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Life for a number ol\npeople this day will not be as pleasant unless you show your mettle,\nwithstand unhappy tendencies and\nlean far to keep good will upper\nmost.\nYOU BORN TODAY - innately\namiable, honest. You like to tit\nneat work and keep things generally tidy. But you may become\nloo fastidious in these very things\nthat should be helpful traits. God\nhas belssed you with a keen, versatile mind; you could be an instructor, language specialist,\nnurse, doctor (especially general\nwork where you can meet and\nsoothe many), sailor or \"finisher\"\nin any undertaking. Have associates of high standards and aims,\nand never allow discouragement,\nPray, enjoy all the wonderful gift\u00ab\\\nGod has put here.\n(King Features)\nBaby's Hot\nLittle Head\nWhen your baby's head feels hot it may\nbe because of simple fever common to soma\nminor baby ailment. If so, Baby's Own\nTablets will promptly help reduce thil\nsimple fever by clearing harmful wastes out\nof ihe system. If baby's fever persists, coiv\nsuit your physician.\nOne Midland. Ontario Mother has this to\nsay: \"My little baby was feverish aad hot.\nI gave her Baby's Own Tablets and by night*\ntime she was up and around again.\"\nBaby's Own Tablets are mild, sweefr\ntasting, easy to take \u2014 and have been used\nby millions of mothers. No \"sleepy\" stuff\n\u2014 no dulling effect. Especially good, too, at\nteething time for restlessness, peevishness,\nconstipation, digestive upsets, colic and\nother minor infant troubles resulting from\nneed of a corrective. Ask your doctor about\nBaby's Own Tablets. Get a package today\nat your druggist.\n\u2022 NEW! BABY'S OWN COUGH SYRUP\nmade, eipociallyfor babies.Soothing,quickly\nrelieving...pleasant...won't upset dig\u00ab\u00bbtioa\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n\u2014by Byrne'Hope Sanders \u25a0'.\u25a0>\u25a0'.\nMONTREAL, Mar. 20th\u2014Want to do a better,\ni more thorough job of Housecleaninfj . . . this\n' Spring? Then choose \"LYSOL\" disinfectant as\nyour willing helper. With \"Lysol\" you can take\ncare of countless cleaning chores with a minimum\nof effort . . . and a maximum of efficiency! And\n\"Lysol\" is economical . . . just one part \"Lysol\"\nto 99 parts of suds or other cleaning solution.\nTriple Threat Lysol, Deep-Cleans, Deodorizes and Disinfects, all\nat the same time. So this Spring be sure to houseclean the \"Lysol-\nway\". You'll thrill to the clean, fresh fragrance ft every room\n... and they'll stay sweet for days and days, with long-lasting\n\"Lysol\"!\nYOU'LL HAVE A HEALTHIER, HAPPIER PET ... if you feed\nyour dog DR. BALLARD'S CHAMPION DOG\nFOOD every day . . . Here is a scientifically ,,_,   ,\nbalanced  diet  which  provides  every  known fgi cjj)\nnutrient he requires. Do beware of careless\nfeeding as it will shorten the life of your dog\n. . . make him sluggish and dull his coat.\nVeterinarians  know  that  Dr.  Ballard's,  the\nquality dog food you can trust, will help your\ndog enjoy a longer, fuller life and prevent diet\ndeficiency. Pick up Dr. Ballard's Champion\nDog Food from now on ... in three taste treats; Chicken, Liver\nand Regular ... and just watch him thrive!\nONLY 280 DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS ... Yet now's the time to\ntake out insurance against those after-\nChristmas bills. The best way I've found to\ndo this is to figure out my Yuletide expenses\nnow. Divide the answer by the number of\npay-days between now and December, and\nthat's the amount I deposit from my allowance each pav-day in my Special Christmas\nAccount at the BANK OF MONTREAL. A\nB of M Gift Fund is the best way I know of\nputting \"merry\" into Christmas. Why not.\nopen yours today at your nearest B of M\nbranch?\nMAYBE IT'S MATERNAL NONSENSE ... but it is pleasant to\nbask in the wide-eyed devotion your family shows\nwhen you set down a flaky pastry\u2014or a luscious ,'%r#3A.;->\npie!   You'll find BLUE BONNET MARGARINE t \"Mr .K\u00ab oH\nis a great ally in winning this welcome appro- Cs^fia '-'IS\/- .j\nbation-and use it to top your vegetables; pop a _^J^-r^T-\u00bb\/\npiece inside hot baked potatoes and oven-fresh-t__^UV_W\nmuffins. Use Blue Bonnet in cookies, cakes and ej*\\~i\npies\u2014they'll ail taste better! Blue Bonnet is now, ijT^Jp2-\nand always has been an all-vegetable margarine,. jp\nwith essential minerals and vitamins added. For\nall your cooking and spreading needs use delicious, all-vegetablo\nBlue Bonnet Margarine.\nI'VE LEARNED A LOT RECENTLY . . . about bronchial sufferers.\nI've seen people gasping for breath with bronchial\nasthma, so they couldn't rest or work properly\n... and I've sympathized with the sleepless,\nnight-long coughing of those suffering from\nchronic bronchitis. It is particularly sad to see a\nIchild in such misery. So I'm thankful to be able\nfto tell you of the quick relief TEMPLETON'S\ni, RAZ-MAH capsules bring . . . easier, natural\n..breathing, resulting in daytime comfort and sound\nuninterrupted sleep. Let RAZ-MAH help you, as\nit has helped thousands of others. It's wonderful for colds and\nhay fever, too!\nALL  OF  MY  FRIENDS  WHO  ARE  GOOD  COOKS  know  that\nBaker's Chocolate gives the best results. When\nit comes to Chocolate Chips, Baker's is again \/\nthe brand that gives you greatest satisfaction. I\nThere  are  so many wonderful  ways to use\nBAKER'S   CHOCOLATE   CHIPS\u2014to   decorate\ncakes ... in cookies . . . quick frostings . . .\ncreamy puddings . . . candies. And Baker's\nChocolate Chips always come to you completely\nfresh. The exclusive new foil package keeps\nBaker's  Chocolate Chips  in perfect  condition\nuntil the last chip is used. I know you'll like\nBaker's Chocolate Chips! Do try the One-Bowl Cookie recipe on\nthe package.\n TO\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\u20147\nat  LIBERTY\nDELTA RICE\nLong Groin\nIC\nFLOUR\nPurity; 25 Ib. bag\n$159\nSponge Pudding Mix   ^Q\nSponge, Monarch; 2 pkgs.     <fe^   Aw\n39\n95\n95\nSponge\nPASTRY FLOUR\n' Monarch; 5 lbs \t\nPEANUT BUTTER\nSquirrel, Crunch Style; 48 oz. tin\t\nPOWDERED MILK\nMilksno;  3 Ib. pkg.\t\nEASTER TREATS\nMail Orders Accepted \u2014 Shop Early \u2014 Finest Selection\nEaster Baskets: 3 to set; up from\nEaster Dyes: aPos; 2 pkgs \t\nEgg Cup and Eggs:  \t\nChocolate Novelties: up from ....\u2014\nLarge Baskets. Made to Order \u2014\n 15c\n 29e\n ._ 29e\n     2e\n39c to $3.50\nPINEAPPLE\nWINNERS of MARGENE, TULIP CONTEST\nDee Cee Doll\u2014Miss Charlotte Skoyen,\nBox 473, Nelson, B. C.\nRoy Rogers Holster-Gun Set\u2014Mrs. J.\nRiley, 610 Cedar St.\nParty Dress\u2014Mrs. R. Kolle, RR2, Nelson\nChildren's Purse\nMrs. G. L. Philips, 420 Railway St.; Mrs.\nJim Ross, 317 Gore St., Mrs. R. J. Patrick, 711 Elwyn St.; Mrs. Ed Varney,\nVallican; Mrs. A. C. Morton, 1623 Fall\nS*-\nRange   Rider Cowboy Outfit\u2014Stewart\nBennett, Riondel.\nBoxing Gloves\u2014Ralph Livingstone, RR2.\nTowel Set\u2014Mrs. R. Nadeau, 615 Victoria St.\nBaseball Gloves\u2014P. W. Marken, 1110\nHoover St.\nBaseball Gloves\u2014W. A. Harrison, RR1.\nBoxing Gloves\u2014Marcla Stevens, 715\nNelson Ave.\nChase the last dreary traces of winter with housekeeping aids from our complete selection of gentle, safe, modern, up-to-date cleaning products. We have everything you'll be needing at the LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN!\nSPIC and SPAN\nGreen, giant   size\t\nSTARCH\nSilver Gloss; pkg.\nBLEACH\nJavex;   64 oz. size .\t\nRECKITT'S BLUE\nTwo  pkgs.\t\nWESTERN STYLE\nBACON\nUnion Brand\nSomething Better\nUnion\nfrozen fresh\n35c Pork Sale\nIce Cream\nPalm; qt\t\nChicken Pie\nLibby's; 3 pkgs\t\nlib Pork Chops\nRib, \"Union\nBrand; Ib. .\nSHOULDER STEAKS\nPork, Union brand; lb\t\nPICNIC SHOULDERS\nFresh, whole or half, Union brand; lb. ..\nBACK BACON\nA Union product; 2 half-pound pkgs\t\nFULLY COOKED HAMS\nUnion, whole, half or quartered; lb\t\nBOLOGNA\nUnion, in piece; lb.   \t\nCauliflower\nFraservale; 10 02.; 1 pkgs\t\nLima Beans\nBroder's fancy; 12 oz\t\nPineapple Chunks\nLibby's; 10 oz\t\ndairy dept.\nCheez Whiz\n16 oz\t\nCheese\nMaple Leaf; 2 lb. box \t\nGrated Cheese\nKraft; 4 oz. .'\t\nButtermilk Biscuits\nPillsbury; 8 oz. tin \t\nCheese Slices\nMaple Leaf; 8 oz. pkg \t\nIjHQjpi\ngroceries\nFINAL WEEK. HOPE CHEST,\nBICYCLE CONTEST\nAll Purchase (3.00 or Over.\nWrite Name and Address en\nCash Register Tape\n39'\nHot Cross Buns\nFresh; dozen \t\nFresh Bread 2.9*\nSliced, white or brown; 16 oz. 2 for\" *\nGarden Supplies\nONION SETS: No. 1; Ib.  29\nGLADIOLA BULBS: Doren top; Pkg. .69\nROSE BUSHES: Root wrapped; each .65\nVIGORO: 10 Ibt.   $1.20 25 Ibi. $2,45\nNABOB COFFEE\nlb. 79'\nsolo Margarine 3'i\u00ab 89c\nMARGARINE\nGood Luck \t\nCOFFEE\nInstant Maxwell House 6 oz. Jar\nTEA\nKadanna \u2014 100 bags\t\nFresh Hawaiian,\nJumbo Size\nCauliflower\nBeautiful Snowhite; lb. .\nPotatoes\nGems; 25 lbs. B.C. No. 1 .\nSpitzenberg Apples\nGrand for Eating or Pies: Approx. 35 lb. box\n(Limit, 1 Box Per Customer)\nSpanish Onions\nGenuine imported , \t\nMushrooms\nFresh money; 6 oz. pkg _\t\nTurnip\nFresh, washed  _ _.\t\nSpinach\nSparkling clean, green; 10 oz. cello .\n25'\n89'\n$1.98\n2 ,,35'\n29'\n5..19'\n25'\nSALAD DRESSING\nMiracle Whip: 16 oz\t\nKAROSYRUP\n2 lb. Un \t\nCORN STARCH\nCanada \u2014 lb. pk\t\nQUAKER OATS\nWith Tumbler \u2014 48 oz. pk.\n$1.09\n79'\n39'\n37'\n19'\n49'\nBLUE SURF\nSilverplate pack; giant pkg.\nBREEZE\nTea towel; giant pkg\t\nLUX LIQUID\nKing Size tin \t\nAEROMIST\nGlass cleaner; 16 oz\t\nAIR DEODORIZER\nWizard; 6 oz, bottle \t\nAEROWAX\nNo rubbing floor wax; Vi gal\t\nSANI FLUSH\n20 oz. tin\t\nLIBERTY\nPRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY TO TUES., MARCH 25th\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\nTh\u00a3 savings\nyou'll see... in our\nSPRING Bargain\n{\u00a7 SB\nSplit Bamboo\nUTILITY BASKETS\nMany Uses for Home and Garden\nIC\nfosr._PR.iMG PRODUCE! J\nFLOOR CLEANER\nJohnson's. Quart Tin \t\nNO RUB LIQUID WAX\nAero. Quart Tin\t\nJOHNSON'S GLO COAT\nHard Gloss. Wax. Pint Tin\t\nSCRUB BRUSHES\nLarge Size. Each \t\nKLEEN-GLO\nAn All Purpose Cleaner. 50 oz. Tin\t\nWINDEX\nWindow Spray. 20 oz. Bottle\t\nPERFEX BLEACH <\n128 oz. Jug \t\nSPIC AND SPAN\nGreen. 41 oz. Package \t\nSTEELWOOL\nBulldog. Package \t\nfor\n55s\n69'\n65'\n49'\n55*\n45'\n89'\n85'\n15'\nCheck These Every Day Low Prices\nEDWARDS COFFEE\nReg. or Drip Grind. Vacuum Packed. 16 oz. Tin\nNOB HILL COFFEE\nRich and Aromatic. Ground Fresh. 16 oz. Bag .\nNABOB COFFEE\nRegular or Drip Grind. LB.\nBUTTER\nSpringhouse. First Grade. LB.\nSTRAWBERRY JAM\nEmpress Pure. 48 Fluid oz. Tin .\nSWIFT'S PREM\n12 oz. Round Tin\nMARGARINE\nRose Quarters. 16 oz. Pkg. .\nPINK SALMON\nSTRAWBERRIES\nCOD FILLETS\nPrince Leo, Fancy.\n15 i  oz.  Tin .\nBel-air Premium.\n12 oi. Pkg. Frozen\nCaptains Choice Frozen\n16 oz. Package ..\nLAST CHANCE\nYou May Be the Winner of a\nCHEVROLET\nBISCAYNE SEDAN\nENTER TODAY\nFinal Contest Ends\nSaturday, March 22\nCottage Cheese\nLucerne Creamed\n16 oz. Carton\neach 25C\nSafeway\nInstant Coffee\nRich and\nAromatic,\n6 oz. Jar.\nCHUCK ROAST\nBlade Bone Removed.\nKAMLOOPS SHOW BEEF\t\nlb.\nCROSS RIB ROAST\nBEEF. Pot Roast.\nKAMLOOPS SHOW BEEF\t\nIb.\nCanadalwWSAFEWAY\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.\n2 ib. block 65c\n$1.36\nMixed Pickles\nNalley's Rainbow\n\u25a0il 49c\n24 oz.\nJar.....\nKamloops Show Beef\nCanada Safeway again offers consumers another fine selection of top quality\nBeef from the Annual Fat Stock Show held in Kamloops. This week we are offering only front quarter cuts that guarantee you eating satisfaction.\n49\nBRISKET BEEF\nBoned and Rolled.\nKamloops Show Beef\n59\nSHORT RIBS\nBeef\nKamloops Show Beef\t\nSMOKED FILLETS\nFor Lenten\nMeals\t\nPrices Effective March 20th, 21st and 22nd\nSliced\nSide\nRindless\n 7^n\nSPORTS\nLegion Backs\nOlympic\nTraining Plan\nBovs and girls interested in .track\nand field are being invited to join\nthe Canadian Olymnic Training\nPlan sponsored by the Canadian\nLegion. ,\nLocal arrangements were made\nat a meeting of the West Kootenay\nzone snorts committee last month\nin Castlegar. Representatives from\nSalmo, Trail, Rossland, Fruitvale,\nNelson and Castlegar attended.\nSteve Cameron, representative of\nBranch 51. said Wednesday he will\ncontact school principals for names\nof boys and girls who might be\ninterested. One day, when the\nweather is favorable, Joe Haley\nof Rossland, Canadian champion\nin the 1935 and 1936 Olymracs who\nrecently took a three-month course\nin latest track and field methods\nat Toronto under a Hungarian\ncoach, will come here to show films\nof training and take the athletes\nhimself. It is hoped to have three\nto five instructors to carry on and\nMr. Haley would come over when\nneeded. .  .   ...       .\nA zone track meet is planned\nher (his summer.\nONE-LEGGED SKIERS are Paul E. Lcimkuchlcr, left, and\nStanley J, Zakas of Cleveland, Ohio, who say that In skiing they\nare better off than those with two legs. \"Two-legged skiers have\nto worry about crossing skis,\" said Leimkuehler. The two are\naided by \"outrigger skis'' attached to elbow crutches. Both men\nlost legs In World War Il.-AP Wirephoto.\nIbbotson to Run in\nB.C. Centennial Games\nVANCOUVER <CP> - Derek\nIbbotson, the world's fastest miler,\nwill definitely be a member of the\nfour-man team Britain will send\nto the centennial games here June\n6-7, the British Columbia Centennial Games Association announced\nWednesday.\nOther members of the team will\nbe George Knight, who ran the\nworld's fastest 10,000 metres last\nyear in Warsaw, half-miler Michael Farrel and 400-metre specialist John Wrighton.\nThe association received confirmation of the team from Ja'ck\nCrump, secretary of the British\nAmateur Athletic Board.\nIbbotson, whose 3:57;2 fof the\nmile is being considered for a\nworld record, will compete in the\ncentennial mile against Stefen\nLewandowski of Poland, Herb Elliott and Merv Lincoln of Australia, and two of Finland's . four-\nminute milers.\nOlympic champion Ron Delany\nUNIVERSITY\nGRADUATES\nElectrical\nMechanical\n& Civil\nEngineering\nGraduates\nare reouired by the\nROYAL\nCANADIAN\nAIR FORCE\nas\nTechnical Officers\nIf you are a graduate in\nany ot the above fields, or\nhave a degree from a university in any other course,\nthere is a place for you in\nthe RCAF.\nWithin one year you\nwill hold the rank of Flying\nOfficer, have a permanent commission, and a\nmonthly salary of $435 if\nmarried.\nIf you are Interested and wish\nfurther   Information:\nWrite, Phone or Visit the\nRCAF   Recruiting   Unit,\n206 - 8th Ave., E.,\nCalgary, Alta.\nPhone AM6-6631\nly American miler to break the\nfour-minute barrier, have also\nbeen invited to compete.\nKnight will compete in the\nthree-mile event against either\nZbzislaw Krzyszkowik or veteran\nOlympic performer Jerzy Chro\nmik, both of Poland.\nFarrell, who finished fifth in the\n1956 Olympic 800 metres, will\ncompete against Zbigniew of Poland, one of Europe's top half\nmilers, and elading American run\nners.\nTerry Tobacco of Courtenay,\nB.C., and Stanislaw Swatowski of\nPoland will take on Wrighton in\nthe 400 metres.\nNHL STANDINGS\nBy The Canadian Press\nP W L T F A Pts.\nMontreal ... 67 42 15 10 236 142 94\nNew York . 68 30 25 13 185 186   73\nDetroit   67 28 27 12 164 194   68\nBoston  68 25 28 15 184 184   65\nToronto    67 21 35 11 186 209   53\nChicago .     67 22 38   7 147 187   51\nGames Thursday;\nToronto at Montreal\nDetroit at Chicago\nPiatt 14th in Giant\nSlalom in Poland\nSAKOPANE, Poland (CP)-John\nPiatt of Trail, B.C., placed 14th\nWednesday in the men's giant\nslalom of the international alpine\nski meet. He was timed in 2:07.8.\nBill Stevens of Rossland, B.C.,\nwas 24th in 2:14.9. Adrien Duvillard\nof France won the evnt in 1:51.3.\nBetsy Snite of Norwich, Vt., won\n\u25a0he women's giant slalom in 1:38.1.\nTwo Fast Warrior Goals\nTie Up WIHL Series Again\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\u20149\nBLUES STUlWVERGir\nAS BRUINS FORCE 1-1 TIE\nROSSLAND\u2014Rossland Warriors\nScored two clever goals within 46\nseconds late in the third period\nhere Wednesday night to-consolidate a 5-2 victory over Spokane\nFlyers and a 2-2 split in the best-\nof-seven Western International\nHockey League final series.\nWith Dave Gordichuk sitting out\na holding penalty, that was somewhat ill-deserved, veteran Leo Lucchini fired a shot to a low corner\non John Sofiak's right side for a\n4-2 margin. Norm Lenardon's goal\nless than a minute later was a\nspectacular thing, but by no means\nnecessary.\nHal Jones, Frank Turik and Don\nFletcher counted earlier for Rossland.\nTick Beattie and Gordichuk scored for the losers.\nFor Sofiak, Jones' tally at 1:34\nof the first period put an end to\na skein of shutout minutes that\nextended over 121 minutes, 34 seconds. Prior to last night, Sofiak\nand his mates had registered successive 6-0 and 5-0 victories.\nThe game was delayed considerably during the final session when\nthe Men of McBride resorted to\nexcessive stalling in protest against\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nFollowing are results of matches\nplayed in Lamb's Trophy competition - final club competition o the\nseason-at Nelson Curling Club\nWednesday night:\nD. Cathcart 10, W. Duckworth 8\nJ Thorn 0, J. Haine 1 (default)\nH. Farenholtz 0, D. M. Sample 1,\n(default) ,  ,\nE  C Hunt 6, H. Ronmark 5\nF. Carmichael 11, R. Wallace 8\nN. Sardich 7, J. Bailey 6\nW. Tozer 7, D. Meakins 3.\nPlayoffs will be held tonight. At\n7 p m , the J. Haines rink meets\nthe S. Cameron rink in the Plugs\nand Colts final. The L. Peerless\nrink meets the A. Waters rink in\nsection   D   playoffs   for   Lambs\nTrophy. At 9 p.m., section E playoffs will match rinks skipped by\nJ. Harvey and R. Palmer.\nBasilio, Robinson\nIn Topnotch Shape\nCHICAQO <AP) - Middleweight\nchampion Carmen Basilio and\nchallenger Sugar Ray Robinson\nWednesday were reported in excellent physical shape for their\ntitle rematch in Chicago Stadium\nnext Tuesday night.\nThe fighters were examined by\ntwo physicians. At a briefing on\nthe. Illinois boxing code a hassle\ndeveloped over use of grease to\ncover cuts in the 15-round title\nmatch.\nGeorge Gainford, Robinson's\nco-manager, complained that Basilio had grease with \"chlorform\nand other stuff\" which smarted\nRobinson's eyes in their Sept. 23\nbout in which Sugar Ray was dethroned.\nBasilio's two managers, John\nde John and Joe Netro, said the\ngrease used to cover a Basilio\ncut had been approved by a New\nYork fight doctor. They called\nRobinson's handlers  \"crybabies.\"\nChairman Frank Gilmer of the\nstate athletic commission said a\ndoctor will check the grease used\nin the fight.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON  (Reuters)  - Results\nof soccer matches played Wednesday in the United Kingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\u2014Division I\nLeeds 1 Arsenal 0\nPreston 2 Newcastle 1 .\nPortsmouth 2 West Brom 2\nDivision II\nMiddlesbrough 2 Leyton 0\nDivision II Northern\nDarlington 1 Southport 2\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\u2014Division I\nCeltic 4 Hibernian 0\nHearts 2 Clyde 2\nKilmarnock 2 Aberdeen 0\nOueen of S 1 Motherwell 2\nThird Lanark 1 East Fife 2\nRangers 3 Falkirk 2\nTim Tam Wins\n$16,850 Stakes\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Calumet\nFarm's Tim Tam came from next\nto last to win easily in the $16,850\nFountain of Youth Stages at Gulf-\nstream Park Wednesday. Grey\nMonarch, owned by E. P. Taylor\nof Toronto, was second.\nMaking his first start since he\nran in the Flamingo Stakes \u2014 in\nwhich he finished second to Jew<\nel's Reward but was moved up to\nfirst when the Maine Chance colt\nwas disqualified \u2014 Tim Tam was\n3-to-5 choice with the crowd of\n16,320.\nHe ran the 11-16 miles in 1:42\n4-5 on a fast track.\nTim Tam paid $3.10, $2.90 and\n$2 60. Grey Monarch paid $19.50\nand $10.50.\nAfter the race Taylor announe\ned Grey Monarch will run in the\n$100.000-added Florida Derby at a\nmile and a furlong March 29.\nCanada Wins Title\nALDERSHOT, England (CP) -\nCanada Wednesday won the Brit'\nish army basketball championship\nfor the fourth time in six years,\ndefeating a British guards training\nregiment team 76-55 in the final\ngame of a three-day tournament.\nThe Canadian team was drawn\nfrom members of the Queen's\nOwn Rifles of Canada stationed in\nGermany with the 4th Canadian\nInfantry Brigade group.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nj or by the Government of British Columbia.\nrrir\n\u25a0  rrr\nI'm Scufflin\nSays Campanella\nGLEN COVE, N.Y; (AP) - A\nfriend visited Roy Campanella in\nhospital and asked the half-paralyzed Los Angeles Dodger catcher\nhow he felt.\nCampanella grinned broadly and\nreplied: \"I'm scufflin'.\"\nThe incident was related Wednesday by Frank Slocum, an aide\nto commissioner Ford Frick. Slocum was the only person except\nCampanella's wife and attending\nphysicians_ allowed in his room.\n\"He is doing much better than\nI expected or even hoped,\" Slocum said. \"I don't mean he is\nlaughing but he has made progress physically and mentally.\"\nCampanella suffered a broken\nneck Jan. 28 in a car crash. There\nwas fear at first he might never\nwalk again.\nThe latest hospital bulletin said\nCampanella has recovered a sense\nof feeling as far down as his lower\nabdomen and added:\n\"This gives rise to hope.\"\nSlocum said that when he visited\nCampanella a therapist was helping the catcher exercise his arms\nand fingers.\n\"He is able to flex his muscles\nnow, which is realiy something,\"\nSlocum' said. \"Also important, of\ncourse, is that his mood is so much\nbetter than it was.\nHEARS YANKEE GAME\n\"For instance, even when he had\nrecovered from the first shock of\nhis injury, they told me, he had\na brooding lack of interest in base-\nbail to a point he not only wouldn't\ndiscuss it but didn't like to have\nanyone else do so.\n\"But when I walked in, he was\nlistening to a Yankee game on the\nradio and he spoke' of some of\ntheir hitters and how he could\nwant them pitched to if he were\ncatching.\n\"But after a few innings he\nseemed to lose interest and asked\nthe nurse to turn it off.\nthe officiating of Al Toikko and\nBing Juckes. When Lucchini scored, Gordichuk bolted from ihe penalty box and promptly returned,\nthis time to remain until the game's\nend as the obstreperous Flyers\nwere tagged with a 10-minute\nbench misconduct.\nEach of the first four goals\u2014two\nto each club\u2014resulted from wild\nscrambles. Jones took his own rebound for the first goal, while\nTurik batted home a rebound off\nthe backboards from a shot by\nYogi Kraiger.\nMOST VALUABLE\nBefore the start of the third\nperiod, Yogi was named most valuable Rossland player of the 1957-58\nseason, and spent the entire frame\nfeuding with opposition skaters.\nBeattie slipped home a loose puck\nto slice the margin in half in the\nfirst period for Spokane and Gordichuk fired across the body of\nReno Zanier to tie it 2-2 early in\nthe second period.\nFletcher's goal was a classic,\nalbeit a hard-earned classic. Spokane buzzed around the Warrior\ncage for nearly five minutes before Fletcher took the puck in the\ncorner,' pivoted around Larry\nPlante and poked the puck into the\nwide open net. Sofiak had made\ntwo consecutive stops and was on\nhis back far out of position.\nFifth and sixth games of the\nseries will be played in Trail's\nCominco Arena Friday and Saturday. '     \u25a0   ,\nLineups'. Spokane-goal: Sofiak:\ndefence: Lancien, Hodges, McLaren, Plante; forwards: Bodman,\nWhittal, Beattie, Nadeau, Kubasek,\nMaxfield, Goodwin, Zahara, Gordichuk.\nRossland\u2014goal: Zanier; defence:\nKraiger, Lofvendahl, Ferguson,\nFletcher; forwards: Jones, Demore, Mclntyre, Lucchini, Birukow, Chorney, Turik, Andrew.s,\nLenardon.\nSummary:\nFIRST PERIOD:'\n1. Rossland, Jones (Demore)\n1:34.\n2. Rossland, Turik (Andrews,\nKraiger) 8:06.\n3. Spokane, Beattie (Goodwin,\nGordichuk)  12:00.\nPenalties: None.\nSECOND PERIOD: %\n4. Spokane, Gordichuk 4:35.\n5. Rossland, Fletcher (Lucchini)\n19:05.\nPenalties: Nadeau 13:19.\nTHIRD PERIOD:\n6. Rossland, Lucchini (Lenardon,\nAndrews) 14:06.\n7. Rossland, Lenardon (Birukow)\n14:51.\nPenalties: Lofvendahl 5:27; Lenardon 9:15; Gordichuk (10-minute\nmisconduct) 13:49; Lofvendahl\n19:52.\nStamps, Warriors\nBattle to Draw\nCALGARY (CP) - Winnipeg\nWarriors missed a chance to regain joint possession of first place\nin the Western Hockey League's\nPrairie division by battling to a\n2-2 overtime tie with Calgary\nStampeders  Wednesday  night.\nThe tie left Winnipeg one point\nback of Edmonton Flyers, who\nwere idle, and strengthened Calgary's hold on third place in the\nsection. \u2022\nExhibition\nBaseball Scores\nBy The Associated Press\nAt Ft. Myers, Fla.\nKansas City 300 100 000 301-8 16 3\nPittsburgh   OOO 300 100 300\u20147 16 1\nMaas, Burnette (5) Taylor (8)\nDuser (ID and H. Smith; Friend,\nWitt (6) Arroyo (11) and Peterson. W-Duser. L\u2014Arroyo. HRs:\nPittsburgh\u2014Powers, Stevens.\nAt Mesa, Ariz.\nBaltimore     402 OOOflOO-T 10 2\nChicago (N) ... 300 000 000-3   7 1\nOdell   and   Ginsberg;   Phillips,\nHobbie (5) and Neeman. L\u2014Phillips. HR: Chicago-Walls.\nAt Phoenix, Ariz.\nCleveland 000 010 311-6 9 0\nSand Francisco  000 010 200\u20143 7 1\nMossi, Garcia (6) Brodowski (7)\nGrant (7) and Nixon; Gobez, Burn-\nside (6) Miller (8) and Thomas.\nW\u2014Garcia. L \u2014 Burnside. HRs:\nCleveland\u2014Harrell; San Francisco\n\u2014Spencer.\nDarlington Falls\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 South-\nport beat Darlington 2-1 in their\nthird division north football match\nat Darlington Wednesday.\nMAN, OH, MAN! -\nOF 7H\u00a3 StlOO\/S\nCAXaO\/S\/Ais,\nMOWS MEXS\n\/<\/$ nexr\n\/00, ooo\nl<?  COM\/\/\/S\nFROM THMKS\nTo #\/$ RE CORP\nMT'o\/f\/n\nLEAGUE\ncontract:\nAon\/ #e'z\niOOKM6 POP\nT\/\/E PATi>PDT\nO\/lfJ\/e BAT\nTHAT mil.' \\l\ny\/ELP THE 43\nwrz ME\nMEEPS  70\naiak\u00a3 ir.jti\neftd 3,ooo.\nBy Alan Mover\nEARLY\/HTHEI9S3\nSEASOH STM SHOULD^\nBECOME rHESrH MEMBER\nOFT\/IE 3,ooo Hit CLUB.\nAHP AHOTHER PATT\/\/1G\nPTLE rYOULP PUT MM iff\nTHE ULTRA EXCLUSIVEtf.1.\n8-T\/MES-P4TT\/4& CMAMP\nCLUB MTU HMS M6MEP.\n'U*ria.ua *) Ik) rattans Umascle.\nNEW YORK (AP) ia. Boston\nBruins kept New York from clinching second place in the National\nHockey League Wednesday night\nby earning a 1-1 tie.\nBronco Horvath's goal at 17:40 of\nthe first period matched one by\nAndy Hebenton of the Rangers\nseven minutes earlier.\nThe result left the fourth-place\nBruins with an outside chance of\ncatching third-place Detroit and\nleft the Rangers still needing a\nvictory to cement the runnerup\nposition. Should the Rangers pick\nup only one point in their two re-\nWin Soccer Tuneup\nFRANKFURT, Germany (API-\nGermany's national soccer eleven\ndefeated Spain 2-0 Wednesday in\na tuneup game for the world soccer cup tournament.\nmaining games and the Wings win\nall three they have left, the teams\nwould end in a deadlock on points.\nBut Detroit would take the position\nwith more victories, 31-30.\nHorvath's goal, his 29th of the\nseason, came with the Rangers a\nman short. Horvath picked up Vic\nStasiuk's rebound and whacked it\npast Gump Worsley.\nHehenton's tally at 10:11 was\nneatly set up by Red Sullivan. Sullivan sent a good relay to Hebenton\nand Andy beat Don Simmons in\nthe Bruin goal with a 35-footer that\ncaught the left corner.\nAndy Bathgate, New York's star\nright winger, suffered a cut over\nhis right eye in the first period\nthat required two stitches. However, he returned to his position in\nthe second period.\nIt was the final regular season\nLancien, Zanier Repeat;\nThree Leafs Make Squads\nTRAIL (CP) -T- Spokane Flyers'\ncaptain Jack Lancien and Rossland\nWarriors' Reno Zanier are the only\ntwo repeaters on the 1957-58 Western International .Hockey League's\nall-star team.\nLancien was named to the team's\nfirst-string defence for the third\nconsecutive year while netminder\nZanier was chosen over John Sofiak and Trail's Seth Martin for the\nsecond consecutive year in a poll\nof radio and newspaper sports reporters.\nSofiak was named second \u2022 team\ngoalie for the third straight year\nwith three votes more than Martin.\nLeague champion Spokane had\ntwo players named on the team\nand second-place Rossland three,\nincluding coach Mike Buckna,\nwhile Nelson Maple Leafs have\ntwo.\nThe cellar-finishing Trail Smoke\nEaters failed to place a player on\neither of the first or second team.\nLancien previously was named\nmost valuable to his team.\nFirst Team\nZanier, Rossland\nLancien, Spokane\nKraiger, Rossland\nHyssop, Nelson\nMaxfield,  Spokane\nKeller, Nelson\nBuckna, Rossland\nSecond Team\ngoal Sofiak, Spokane\ndefence Ferguson, Rossland\ndefence Fletcher, Rossland\nforward Kubasek, Spokane\nforward Maglio, Nelson\nforward Gordichuk, Spokane\ncoach McBride, Spokane\nWHITBYSWIND\nUP WITH WIN\nPAISLEY, Scotland (CP) -Canada's world champion Whitby hockey team finished its European\ntour with a 9-5 win over Paisley\nPirates of the British League here\nWednesday night.\nThe Whitby scorers were Burns,\nFrank Bonello, Sinden \u2014 each with\ntwo goals \u2014 and Sid Smith, Gordie\nMyles and Bus Gagnon.\nThe champions' European record including the world tournament at Oslo is won 25, lost one;\ngoals scored 289, goals against 38.\nThe' only game they lost was to\nWembley Lions 6-2 Monday.\nThe Canadians sail for home\nfrom Liverpool Friday.\nChildren Take\nNews lo Mother\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Telegram\nsays Mrs. Kenneth Leishman of\nWinnipeg learned from her crying\nchildren that her husband had been\narrested on holdup charges here.\nThe newspaper, which telephoned\nMrs. Leishman in Winnipeg, quotes\nher-'as saying:\n\"I couldn't believe it, but they\nran into the house crying that the\nother children had told them their\ndaddy was a bank robber.\"\nMrs. Leishman, 30, mother of\nfive children and expecting another, said school children heard\nradio reports.\nHer 26-year-old husband was\ncharged with the attempted holdup Tuesday of a Canadian Bank of\nCommerce midtown branch and\nthe $10,000 holdup last December\nof a downtown branch of the Toronto-Dominion Bank.\n\"PERFECT HUSBAND\"\nMrs. Leishman is quoted as saying she understood her husband\nhad flown to Toronto on business\n\"I never pry into his affairs. He\nis a perfect husband and father\nand just a wonderful guy.\"\n' She met her husband \"in a little\nplace in the country.\" They have\nbeen married eight years.\n\"I can't understand what this\nbank robbery business is supposed\nto be about, but whatever happens\nI will stand by him.\"\nShe said her husband is a sales-\nman and had sold \"all kinds of\nthings,\" including planes.\n\"My husband is fond of flying\nand got his pilot's licence in 1952\nHe flies with Winnipeg Civil Defence.\"\nNORWAY PRODUCTS\nToy seals\u2014made of genuine seal\nskin\u2014and sealskin purses are\namong exports from Norway.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nJmtf JoiL\nSKATING\nTODAY \u2014 2 to 4\ntfhifd\/uinA. SJioiiiti}.\n4:05 to 5:55\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nMiami Beach, Fla. \u2014 Larry\nBoardman, 141, Marlborough, Con\nnecticut, stopped Kid Centella, 139\nLos-Angeles, 5.\nMcKeesport, Pa.\u2014Johnny Mor\nris, 164, Pittsburgh, stopped Clar\nence Alford, 163, Cleveland, 4.\nmeeting between the teams and\nBoston wound up on the long end\nwith six victories, five defeats and\nthree ties.   -\nFirst period: 1. New York, Hebenton (Sullivan) 10:11; 2. Boston,\nHorvath (Mohns, Stasiuk) 17:40.\nPenalties: Hillman, 6:48; Prentice, 16:03; Fontinato, 16:36, La-\nbine, 16:36.\nSecond period: No scoring.\nNo penalties.\nThird period: No scoring.\nNo penalties.\nStops:\nSimmons 13 10 12\u201435\nWorsley 11 11 10-32\nWest Indies\nClinches Series\nGEORGETOWN, British Guiana\n(Reuters) \u2014 Centuries by Garfield Sobers (109 not out) and Conrad Hunte (114) helped the West\nIndies beat Pakistan by eight wickets in their fourth test Wednesday and clinch the five-match series.\nThe West Indies has won three\nmatches and drawn one.\nResuming their second innings\nWednesday at 99 for no wicket,\nthe West Indies needed 218 rims\nfor victory, with five hours playing time available. They reached\nthe target with 100 minutes to\nspare.\nThe final scoreboard read: Pakistan 408 and 318; West-Indies\n410 and 317 for two.\nSobers, who beat Sir Leonard\nHutton's world record test soore\nby making 365 not out in the third\ntest, batted brilliantly again Wednesday and reached his century in\n157 minutes. In six innings in the\ntest series he has hit 783 runs for\ntwice not out and an average of\n195.75.\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nRHEUMATIC\nPAIN\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nWestern League\nNew Westminster 3 Victoria 1.\nOkanagan Senior\nKamloops 0 Kelowna 3.\n(Kelowna wins best - of - seven\nfinal 4-2, one game tied).\nAmerican League\nSpringfield 3 Cleveland 2\nRochester 5 Providence 2\nQuebec Leagne\nMontreal 6 Trois-Rlvieres 1\nInternational League\nLouisville 2 Cincinnati 1\nLouisville leads best - of - seven\nsemi-final 2-1.\nOHA\nPembroke 2 Belleville 6\nBelleville leads best - of - seven\nfinal 3-1, one game tied.\nOHA Junior A\nSt. Catharines 4 Toronto Marlboros 6\nMarlboros lead best - of - seven\nsemi-final 3-2, one game tied.\nHockey's Big Seven\nBy The Canadian Press\nGordie Howe, last year's scoring\nchampion, garnered a goal and two\nassists in the National Hockey\nLeague's only game Tuesday night\nto edge closer to the leaders in the\nrace for individual honors.\nThe Detroit rightwinger boosted\nhis season's production to 32 goals\nand 39 assists for 71 points, eight\nless than pace-setter Dickie Moore\nof Montreal, who also tops the\nleague in go,als with 34.\nThe leaders: G A Pts\nMoore, Montreal    34  45  79\nBathgate, New York ....   30  46  76\nH. Richard, Montreal ..  27  49  76\nHowe, Detroit   32  39  71\nHorvath, Boston    28  34  62\nLitzenberger, Chicago ..  29  28  57\nDelvecchio, Detroit     19  36  55\nIIIIiLSdJUl\n-mss^^^^^^am-\nini:rm^ffi\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILV   I,\nSMOKES\nFOR CANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving wilh the\nUnited Nations Emergency\nFores in the Middle East\n*1\u00a3\u00b0 sends 400\nEXPORT\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included\nMall order and remittance foi   1\n.   OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC\nP.O. Box 490, Plata d'Armoi,\nMontreal, Que.\nThli offer le eubfeet to any thango\nIn Government Regulations!\nJTATY R D M\nThis advertisement is not published ot displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia ,\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\nL\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nC\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nb:\nB\nA\nI\nL\nE\nY\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nToronto Plans\nSecond Subway\nTORONTO (CP) - Metropolitan\nToronto council early Wedensday\napproved an east - west Bloor\nStreet route for Toronto's second\nsubway, climaxing a four-year\ndispute over where it should run.\nCouncil finally settled the issue in a 12-hour session that\nwith an 18-to-2 vote favoring the\nmidtown Bloor route with a University Avenue extension.\nCost of the subway has been\nestimated at $332,710,762, and the\ndecision on how the cost will be\nshared by Metro and the Toronto\nTransit Commission is still to be\ndecided. Metro has proposed a\n50-50 basis.\nThis has not been agreed to\nby the transit commission, however, wh!ch has asked for a 60-40\nratio. The commission will be\nasked to prove it cannot finance\na 50-50 split before council will\nagree to the 60-40 sharing.\nAPPROVE SURTAX\nToronto's first 4',4-mile subway\nwas completed in 1954 and runs\nin a north-south route, along the\ncity's main Yonge Street.\nIn addition to approving the\nroute, council also endorsed a\ntwo-mill' surtax for subway finances for a 10-year period, 1959\nto 1968, to raise more than $78,-\n000.000.\nThey agreed that financing will\nbe based on the city considering\nrezoning lands adjacent to the\nsubway for high-density commercial and apartment purposes.\nThe second subway would run\nfrom Woodbine Avenue in the\neast to Keele Street in the west.\nA spur line would extend down\nUniversity Avenue from Bloor\nStreet to Front Street. The route\nwould extend 0.85 rmles, bisecting the Yonge Street line.\nThe subway would be at least\n10 years in construction. The first\nsubway was built in four years\nat a cost of $58,000,000, including\nrolling stock, and opened in\nMarch, 1954.\nHTeld\nIn Slayings\nELLIOT LAKE, Ont. (CP)-A\n30 - year - old Northern Ontario\nmineworker, regarded by trailer-\ncamp neighbors as \"a good fellow\", was to be returned here Wednesday, charged with murder in\nthe knife-slaying of his wife and\ntwo children' nearly a week ago.\nOntario Provincial Police broke\ninto a locked 35-foot trailer Tuesday on the Algom-Quirke uranium mine property and found the\nbodies of Lucille Sabourin, 28,\nand her two children, Lorraine,\n7, and Jeanette, 3.\nTheir throats had been slashed\nand the walls of the trailer were\nsplashed with blood.\nPolice went to the trailer park,\narea 10 miles from this mine\ntown, midway between Sudbury\nand Sault Ste. Marie, after word\nfrom Detroit that a man had told\npolice: \"I'm haunted by the feeling I killed my wife and daughters.\"\nHe was Identified as Roland\nSabourin of Elliot Lake who quit\nhis job as an Algom-Ouirke. cage-\ntender March 5 and was last\nseen March 12.\nREMEMBERS NOTHING\nProvincial Police Inspector\nH. M. Purdy took Sabourin into\ncustody at a Detroit hospital\nwhere he was under guard. Following extradition formalities, he\nwas taken across the river to\nWindsor and on to Toronto Tuesday night.\nPurdy quoted Sabourin' as saying he could remember nothing\nabout the slayings.\nSabourin walked into a'TJetroit\npolice station, identified himself\nand talked to a detective. Police\nsaid he appeared to have been\ndrinking heavily. He told them\nhe did not know how long he\nhad been in Detroit or how he\ngot there.\nThe Sabourin family was described by acquaintances as\n\"quiet.\" J. Goldrich, a co-worker\nof th ehusband, said he was \"a\ngood  fellow.\"\nSabourin collapsed when told\nhis wife was dead.       ' .\nFood Prices\nBoost Index\nOTTAWA (CP) -.Several distinct periods of retail price behavior have been associated with\nCanada's 12 years of almost continuous growth since the end of\nthe Second World War, the bureau of statistics said Wednesday.\nIn a review of price movements from 1945 until the end of\n1957, it said the latest such period occurred during most of 1953\nand 1957 after four years in\nwhich a plateau in retail prices\nwas established.\nRelaxation of price controls in\n1946 and consumer demands in\nexcess of supply resulted in rapidly advancing prices between\n1946 and 1948. The consumer\nprice index, based on 1949 prices\nequalling 100, rose more than 25\nper cent.\nFrom late  1948 to May,  1950,\nretail prices rose by only slightly\nmore than one per cent.\nFOOD PRICES JUMP\nOutbreak of the Korean War in\nJune, 1950, brought a resurgence\nof pressure on prices and the\nprice index rose from 102.7 in\nJuly, 1955, to 118.1 in December,\n1951, an increase of 15 per cent.\nThis rise was caused mostly by a\njump in food prices.\nFrom 1952 to 1956, the index\nranged from 114.4 to 116.9.\nHowever, the bureau said that\nafter May, 1956, the index rose\nsteadily from 116.6 to a post-war\npeak of 123.4 in October, 1957.\n(At the start of February, 1958,\nthe index stood at 123.7, a new\nhigh).\nThe bureau said higher food\nprices were the main reason for\nthe increase in the index in the\n1956-57 period. The food subindex\nrose from 109.3 in May, 1956, to\n121.9 in September, 1957.\nPay High Price\nFor Painting\nLONDON (CP)-A painting hy\nthe 19th-century Canadia.n artist,\nCornelius Krieghoff, was sold in\nLondon Wednesday for a record-\nequalling \u00a32,100.\nMeasuring' 13% by 21% inches,\nThe Trapper's Return portrays a\ntypical Krieghoff winter scene\nwith a trapper greeting his family outside a log cabin situated in\na forest clearing. It was sold at\nSotheby's to a \u25a0 private buyer\nidentified only as a Mr. Wood-\nham-Smith.\nThe price equals the record for\na Krieghoff set last October when\na Canadian collector, Roy G.\nCole, bought another winter scene\nbearing the same title.\nA second Krieghoff winter\nscene, measuring 13V4 by 18 inches, was sold at Southeby's for\n\u00a31,500.\nThe prices reflect the phenomenal vogue in recent months for\nKrieghoff paintings. Two years\nago a price of \u00a3500 was considered\nunusually high for a painting by\nthe Canadian artist.\nSEATO Regarded\nWith Optimism\nBy JAMES  CARY\nMANILA (AP)-The Southeast\nAsia Treaty Organization, \"paper\ntiger\" of Communist ridicule,\nnow is considered out here to be\na going concern capable of standing up to communism militarily\nand economically.\nA new feeling of optimism\nswept through closing sessions of\nforeign ministers conference last\nweek. It was felt that SEATO\nmilitary preparations have\nreached the point where immediate retaliation is possible if any\nmember is attacked.\nThe final SEATO communique\nemphasized that more than $700,-\n000,000 in aid, principally from\nthe United States, has poured\ninto the area in the last year to\nhelp stabilize economies.\nBETTER CO-ORDINATED\nNo one claims the tiny military forces of the three Asian\nmembers \u2014 Pakistan, Thailand\nand the Philippines\u2014could stand\nagainst Ihe estimated 3,000,000\nmen in the army of Communist\nChina. But one high informant\nfold reporters:\n\"We have had a series of military exercises that have taught\nus how to work together. We\nhave greatly improved communications. Thai and Pakistan\nforces now are better trained and\nequipped, and there has been progress in standardization of equipment.\"\nThis is a far different situation\nfrom that of 1954, when SEATO\nwas born as a paper organization in the wake of Communist\nvictory in Viet Nam. Such progress, although small, is believed\nlargely responsible for the increased attentiqn Pakistan, Thailand and the Philippines 'are focusing on their needs for economic help. a\n\"SEATO has given them confidence to deal with their internal\nproblems,\"  one  source  said.\nThe SEATO members are the\nUnited States, Britain, France,\nAustralia. New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand and  Pakistan.\nGUY GETS LEGAL OKAY\nLOS ANGELES (AP)-Robert\nOzell Moseley officially became\nGuy Madison Tuesday. Madison,\n36, who portrays Wild Bill Hickok\noh television, told a court he\nwanted to make his professional\nname his legal name.\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n00\u2014Good Morning\n30\u2014Search for Tomorrow *\n45\u2014Guiding Light * *\n00\u2014Hotel Cosmopolitan\n15\u2014Love of Life\n30\u2014As the World Turns *\n00\u2014Beat the Clock *\n30\u2014Houseparty *\n00\u2014The Big Payoff *\n30\u2014Verdict Is Yours *\n00\u2014Brighter Day \u00bb\n15\u2014Secret Storm *\n30\u2014Edge of Night *\n00\u2014Garry Moore *\n30\u2014Godfrey Time *\n45-TBA\n00\u2014Fun at Home\n30\u2014Dotto *\n00\u2014Early Show\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014Doug Edwards News \u2022\n30\u2014Sgt. Preston *\n00\u2014I Search for Adventure\n30\u2014Kingdom of the Sea\n00\u2014Richard Diamond *\n30\u2014Shower of Stars *\n30\u2014Playhouse 90 *\n00\u2014News\n: 15\u2014Late Show\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n8:10-Color Test Pattern\n8:13\u2014Test Pattern\n8:25-NARTB\n8:26\u2014Bible Reading\n.8:29\u2014Program Previews\n8:30\u2014Q Toohs\n9:00\u2014Tic Tac Dough *\n9:30\u2014It Could Be You *\n10:00-Dough Re Mi *\n10:30\u2014Treasure Hunt *\nll:00-Price Is Right*\n11:30\u2014Kitty Foyle *\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre *\n1:00\u2014Queen for a Day *\n1:45\u2014Modern Romances *\n2:00\u20141 Married Joan *\n2:30\u2014Truth or Consequences *\n3:00\u2014Matinee on Six:\n\"Night Is Young\"\n3:30\u2014How To Arrange Flowers\n3:45\u2014MatjneeOn.Six (cont'd.)\n5:00\u2014 Five O'clock Movie:\n\"Skyscraper Wilderness\"\n6:30\u2014Weatherwise; Front Page\n6:45-NBC News \u2022\n7:00\u2014Honeymooners\n'7:30\u2014State Trooper\n8:00-You Bet Your Life \u2666\n8:30\u2014Dragnet *\n9:00\u2014Sea Hunt\n9:30\u2014Tennessee.Ernie Ford *\n10:00\u2014Rosemary Clooney *\n10:30\u2014Late Movie: \"Sequoia\"\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\nOntario To Build\nNew Toll Bridges\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Highways\nMinister James Allan said Wednesday the Ontario government is.con-\nsidering $100,000,000 in bridge \u2022\nconstruction and plans to charge\ntolls.\nHe introduced a bill in the legislature permitting establishment\nof an authority to collect tolls on\npossibly five new bridges in ad-\ndition to the Burlington Skyway,\nthe Fort Frances Causeway, and\n\"either or both\" bridges at Fort s\nFrances and Rainy River.\nMr. Allan said the government\nplans to build new international\nbridges at Niagara Falls and\nSault Ste. Marie and disclosed\nthat \"there are presently discussions between Ontario find New\nYork state relative to a new\nbridge in the Queenston area connecting our highway system with\nthe New York Thruway.\"\nThe Daily Telegraph, commenting on the vogue recently, said\nKrieehoff's only claim to fam\u00bb\n\"is that he was one of the fe\\f\ncompetent painters working ia\nCanada about the middiel of th\u00ab\nlast century.\"\n.  ON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC\nTHURSDAY,\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:30-All the Weather\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News'\n9:10\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n9:30\u2014Women Today\n9:35-Song Serenade\n9:45-Food Facts\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Story Parade\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45-Here's Health\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Seven Come Eleven\nll:30-Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Song Serenade\n11:55\u2014Entertainment\n12:00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nSTANDARD   TIME)\nMARCH 20, 1958\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie  News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Ottawa Philharmonic\n2:00-School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinet\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45-Rocking With Boatej\n4:45\u2014The Beacon Mystery\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show1\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Market*\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30r-UBC Digest\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Music\n6:50\u2014Social Credit Party\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:00\u2014Political Broadcast\n9:15\u2014Chamber Music\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC   STANDARD   TIME)\nFRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1958\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Musical Program\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Free Time Political\nBroadcast\n11:30\u2014Theme and Variation\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm-Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45-B.C. Roundup\n4:30_Folk Tales of French Can,\n4:45\u2014Miss Switch\n5:00\u2014Bands on Parade\n5:15\u2014News\n5:25\u2014Report from Legislature\n5:35\u2014Sports Desk\n5:40\u2014Byline\n3:45\u2014Folk Songs\n6:00-Points West\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:38\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Tapestry in Music\n8:00\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30-Songs for You\n8:45\u2014Piano Music\n9:00\u2014Songs of My People\n9:30\u2014Petit Ensemble\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014West Indies Federation\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert-\nU:57-CBC News\nDAILV   CROSSWORD\n.5:00\u2014Woody Woodpecker *\n5:30\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00\u2014Royal Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Newsbeat\n7:00\u2014Pride of the Family\n7:30\u2014Circus Boy *\n8:00\u2014Zorro *\n8:30-Real McCoys \u2022\n9:00\u2014Pat Boone Show *\n9:30\u2014Duffey's Tavern\n10:00\u2014Make Me Laugh *\n10:30-Nightbeat\n10:35\u2014Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject ia^ change by stations without notice.)\nH. Narrow\nIriletfl\n47. Not freak\nDOWN\n1. Vapors\n2. Mr. Mather,\nclergyman\n3. Kind of\nbomb\n4. City (Nev.)\n5. Type\nmeasures\n6. Capital of\nOkinawa\n7. On top\n8. Sick\n9. Dropped\n12. Dirties\n16. High,\ncraggy\nhill\n19. German\nriver\n20. Unman-\nner-\niy\nperson\n22. High\nmountains\n23. Jumbled\ntype\n24. Hebrew\nprophet\n25. Tibetan\ngazelle\n28. Young\nturkey\n29. Come into\nview\n30. Trick\n(slang)\n.HMUIsit'l   tlWUlii-l\nU'.'JMklU   KIMUBM\niiaijia i'uunn:;)\n\u25a0um aaaa eh\n\u00abi>na sir-jsiE\naHsitaii! iiaaaH\niraraia saa\nunci atantaDBH\nn:i HHEJtQ nan\ndrjataga hh3b\nlAlMfilNlT,\n3-se\u00bb-\nVcBlrrday's Answer\n31. Twaddle\n32. Calm\n37. Circle of\nlight\n38. Sacred  bull '\n39. Animal's\nskin\n40. Melody\n42. Bird (N.Z.)\n43. Duct  (mini.I\nACROSS\nI. Frighten\n6. Naive  \u2022\n10. Object of\nworship\nlanthrop.)\nli'. Book of\nmaps\n13. Kind of\njacket (pi.)\n14. A call\n15. Steam\n(comb,\nform)\n16. Knock\nlightly\n17. Chinese\nmeasure\n18. Show Me\nState\n(abbr.)\n19. Hawaiian\nbird\n20. Chief deit)\n(Babyl.)\n21. Garden\nflowers\n26. A fib\n27. Lowing of a\ncow\n28 Poster\nmaterials\n33. Goddess of\nharvests\n(It.)\n34. Equally\n35. Music note\n36. Overhead\n37. Old Dutch\nliquid\nmeasure\n30. Couple\n41. Abatement\n(colloq.)\n43. Marked\naptitude\n44. Bull (comb,\nform)\n45. Foreign\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it: I\nAXYDLBAAXR\nis   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A ts user)\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.   Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nH FHDD PA VK KVTKN VI BTGEW\nVJL   YK   GJSWWMTWUHKHJC   VK\nQGKEHSA- CYTTHKWJ.\nYestenUy'p Crvptoquote: THE SECRET OF SUCCESS M .\nCONSTANCY TO PURPOSE\u2014DISRAEU.\n1\n1\n3\nT~\n5\n|\nI\n7\n6\n1\n%\nIO\nI\ni'i\n11\n13\n^A\n14\nIS\n%\nIb\nt\n17\n16\n%\n%\n4\n^\n%\n30\n51\nJl\nVt\n\u25a0si\nis\n%\n%\nar\n|\nlie\n%\nt\n\u25a0US\n11\n30\n31\nJl\n33\ni\n%\nsA\nS\n%\n35\n3b\n%\n37\n36\ni\nV)\n40\n41\n41\n%\n43\n44\n%\nn\ntA\nu\n%\n47\n o\n^icf\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's-the Want Ad Story -\u00bb PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nZOOBKOFF - To Mr. and Mrs.\nMike Zoobkoff, Box 11, Brilliant,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, March 18, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nWE NEED AGENTS\nin the City of Nelson and\nsuburban towns to mail\nour advertising literature.\nFull or part-time. Profitable hobby made simple\nand easy. Write:'\nINFORMATION,\nBox   812,   Dauphin, Man.\nEXPERIENCED HOUSE -\nto-house salesman to sell CROWN\nROYAL MEIMAC \"Get in on our\nnew bonus deal\". A nationally\nadvertised dinnerware guaranteed against chipping or cracking for two years. Terms $1.00\ndown and $1.00 weekly. Only two\nsales daily pays over $100 commission weekly. See Neil McKee,\n973 Eldorado St., Trail,, or phone\n1669 for appointment.\t\nWANTED - SINGLE MEN FOR\ndairy and barn work 6 months to\n1 year. Contract at 1 week trial.\nPlione 64949 or write Valley\nDairy, Box 527, Rossland, B.C.\nDAY CARE FOR 2 CHILDREN.\nPrefer Fairview, Ph. 1726-R.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDO IT NOW, SAVE MONEY. CE-\nment flodrs, sidewalks, full\nbasement, steps, rebuilding, roofing. Monthly payments if desired. The Concrete Specialist,\nPh6ne 1752-L-3, S. Zylstra.\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT\nting, appliances, oil burners serviced. Norm Bowcock, Bonded\nLicenced Gas Fitter, ph. 385,\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd., or phone\n186-X-3.\nWE SPECIALIZE IN REMODEL-\nling old houses and cement work.\nPhone 1581-Y-3, 5 to 7 o.m.\nFOR ALL YOUR PRUNING, PH\n1989-X.\nRENTALS\nWE HAVE AVAILABLE 2000 SQ.\nft. of floor space to rent in ultra\nmodern shopping centre in Leth-\nbridge. Can give a non-competitive lease on either shoe store\nor men's wear or both. Fixed\nmonthly square foot rate or\nwould consider percentage of\ngross. Centre' contains Dominion\nSupermarket, Tamblyn Drugs,\nBank of Nova Scotia, and many\nother stores. For further particulars, write Art Batty, Presi\ndent, Shoppers' World Limited\nMayor Magrath Drive, Leth\nbridge, Alberta\nDUPLEX WITH TWO BEDROOMS\non North Shore at 6 mile. Oil\ncirculating heater supplied. $50\nper month. Immediate, occupancy. T. D. Rosling & Son Ltd,\nPhone 717.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPrice\n2 RM. APARTMENT WITH BATH\nin my residence, North Shore, Vt\nmile from bridge. Con Cummins,\nphone 940-X afternoons or evenings. \t\nSELF CONTAINED APARTMENT\nsuitable for small family. Near\nbridge on North Shore, lake\nfront. Phone 1095-L.\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars,\nphone 77.\t\n2 RM. FURN., HEATED SUITE,\nbed linen and fridge supplied.\nAdult. 715 Vernon St., oh. 902.\nMODERN UNFURN. 3 RM. SUITE\n1 Br., stove, frig., tiled bath $75\nmonth. Phone 130.\nLARGE BED - SITTING ROOM\nfor two. Nicely furnished with\nfridge, etc. Annlv 171 Baker St.\n1 AND 3 RM. APTS. FOR RENT-\nprivate entrance. 2 rm. $25; 3\nrm. $35. 618 Latimer.\nFOR RENT - FURN. SUITE\nfor couple, May to September.\nPhone 394-R.\nRM. SUITE FOR RENT - $40\nper month, ground floor. Phone\n1321-L.\nS.C. 3 RM. SUITE, HEATED, UN-\nturn. El. range, mod. 711 Victoria\nStreet.\nRM. FURN. APT., ALSO BED\nroom, close in. Phone 839-R.\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM\nrent. Call 140 Baker St.\nFOR\nSUITE FOR 2 MEN, CLOSE IN\nPhone 149.\t\nMODERN UNFURN. SUITE\nPH\n2075.\nPARTLY\nFURNISHED   2-ROOM\nsuite tor rent. 723 Silica St.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n1\u2014ATTRACTIVE 3-BEDROOM\nBUNGALOW. One of our\nbest buys. Bedrooms are\ngood size, living room 9' x\n15', kitchen 9' x 13', wired\nfor range. Concrete foundation, good basement, cement\nfloor, oil furnace. 2-car garage. Conven- \u00ablft CrtA\nient location. \u2022PIU.3W\"\n$3500 will handle, balance\nmonthly. Good discount for\ncash.\n2\u2014DUPLEX, VICTORIA ST.\u2014\nOwner's suite 2 bedrooms\nand bath, living room and\nkitchen. Also 4-room suite\nwith bath, at present rented\nat $35.00 a month. $5300\nSome Terms.\n3\u2014Excellent Building Lot. \u2014\nDouglas Road. C 1 gRQ\nPrice    \"^\n4\u2014Good building lot, near the\nNorth Shore Hall. View and\nconvenience. \u00ab I 700\nPrice     *^\n5\u2014YMIR ROAD (Ml Mile South\nof City). Modern.2-bedroom\nbungalow, built 1953. Fully\nmodern, full basement, oil\nfurnace. Well water, automatic pressure.     $8400\nDown Payment: $4000.\n6\u2014NORTH SHORK. New 2-\nbedroom bungalow in 6.Mile\narea, near store and service\nstation. Improved $8500\nlot. Price ^\nDown Payment: $1500.\n7\u2014ALSO IN 6-MILE AREA. 3-\nbedroom bungalow built 5\nyears. No basement plan.\u2014\nAutomatic dishwasher and\nsink unit. $6950\nPrice     . -\nDown Payment: $1000.\nOwner transferred, cap give\nimmediate possessibn.\n8\u2014Attractive 2-bedroom bungalow. Oil furnace. Drive-in\nvieTd,:Sc-t.   $H,500\nVery good terms.\n9\u2014Small local business opportunity. Details on inquiry.\n10\u2014FOR RENT: 2 large housekeeping rooms, unfurnished.\nHot and cold water. Gas installed, in brick building,\nBaker St. Central _ \u00ab1\u00ab\nlocation. Per month    \u2022V\"v\n' a     AND\nTwo - bedroom unfurnished\nsuite. Good bathroom and\nliving room. Also in above\nbuilding $55\nPer month  , v*\"\u00bb\n11\u20144-BEDROOM HOUSE. Cement foundation. 2 lots, all\nin first-class shape. 600 blk.\nggst $8000\nSome Tenns. Good Discount\nfor All Cash Offer.\nCar Insurance and Package\nPolicies a Specialty\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nSARAH JANE MATHEWS,\nDECEASED\nNOTICE  is  hereby  given  that\ncreditors and others having claims\nagainst the estate of Sarah Jane\nMathews,! deceased,   formerly  of\nSilverton,   B.C.,   are   hereby   required to send them to the undersigned executor at the Court House,\nNelson, B.C., before the 30th day\nof April, 1958, after which date the\nexecutor  will  distribute  the  said\nestate among the parties entitled\nthereto, having regard only to the\nclaims of which he then has notice.\nTHOMAS   GEORGE   CHARLES\nFOX, Executor.\nWRAGGE, HAMILTON &\nARNESEN, Solicitors.\nMACHINERY\nUSED\nTRACTORS\n1\u2014Massey Harris Pony with\nplow, cultivator and mower.\nLike new.\n1\u2014John Deere Crawler with hydraulic angledozer and winch.\n1\u2014John Deere Crawler with front\nend loader; backhoe available.\n1\u2014Oliver OC3 Crawler with front\nend loader.\n1\u2014Shawnee Ditcher, used as\ndemonstrator; for any tractor.\nSee\nH.  \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nM\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.,   LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n& Co., Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 1912\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR QUICK SALE-$15,000 BUYS\nchoice corner property with store\nand modern living accommodations. 100' frontage on No. 3 Highway in Castlegar. This is an ideal\ncorner for an apartment block or\nadditional stores and offices. For\nfurther particulars write Box 400,\nCastlegar.\t\nL - 1B2 INTERNATIONAL DUMP\ntruck, 6 yard gravel box and 1\ncomplete sawmill with International diesel power unit. Phone\n4509, Castlegar,\t\nFOR SALE - D2 CATERPILLAR\ndiesel, bare cat. P.O. Box 283,\nTrail.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B C. Ph\nPAcific   6357\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\"\ntractionizing. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins. '49 to '51 Hillmans,\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '53\nAustin. Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 1363-L-2, Box 382,\n24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - 1951 KAISER SE-\ndan, radio, air conditioner, overdrive, new tires, turn signals,\n$450. Apply, to Peter Gall, c\/o\nJorgenson's Store, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nMUST SACRIFICE '55 OLDS 88\nHydramatic, power steering,\nbrakes, signals, tinted glass. Accept any smaller trade. Phone\nfrom 1 to 6 p.m., 613-X.\n55 CHEV SEDAN, 2 TONE TUR-\nquoise and white, air conditioner,\noil filter, windshield washer,\n$1500. Phone 491-R between 6 and\n8 p.m.       \u2022  .\nFOR SALE - TANDEM L-190 IN-\nternational, good shape, 10-yard\nBump. Cash price $5000, or terms\n$5500. Phone 1757-R.\nFOR SALE - $500 CREDIT NOTE\non automobile. Will sell for $225\ncash. Phone 1989-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1953 FORD, GOOD\ncondition. Phone 1729-X or apply\nParkview Motors.\nFOR SALE - '47 3 TON FORD\ntruck, box and hoist. Phone\nCasllegar 2628.\nTRAILERS\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar,  Phone 2701\nCranbrook,  Phone JU-6-2270\nFor the Best in Mobile Homes\nSee These:\u2014\n* PATHFINDER      * REX\n* MERRIMAN      * A.B.C\n* MARATHON\nAlso a Good Selection of\nUsed Cars.\n.. ,,,,,,*\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\u201411\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newt don not hold Itself responsible In ths event\nef anierror In the following lists.\nTORONTO   STOCKS\nQuebec Lithium     5.45\nQuebec Metallurgical ....\u201e 90\nQuemont      8.40\nRadiore  _    ' .39\nSherritt Gordon _     4.20\nSilver Miller _ 43\nStadBcona    23\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket snapped a three-day decline Wednesday and stage a modest advance.\nMany leading issues rose fractions to about a point, but numerous others declined fractions.\nBrokers attributed much of the\nbuying in some stocks to'reports\nthat short interest had climbed\nsubstantially in the last month.\nAfter the close, the New York\nStock Exchange announced short,\ninterest rose about 14 per cent\nsince mid-February to the highest level in almost 27 years.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose 80 cents to $163,\nwith industrials up $1.40, rails up\n40 cents and utilities up 10 cents.\nExcept for steels, which enjoyed a surge at mid-day, buying\nwas centred largely in special situations. Most steels closed up\nfractions after several rose a\npoint or so at best.\nCanadian issues on the New\nYork Stock Exchange were generally higher. Aluminum Ltd.,\nDistillers-Seagrams, and Walker-\nGooderham all rose, Vt; Dome\nMines rose *k, wt0.r'ratlr\",al\nNickel VA, and Mclntyre 1%.\nGranby and Hudson Bay Mining\ndeclined Vt each.\nAmong Canadian issues on the\nAmerican exchange Preston East\nDome gained K>.\n(Closing Prices)\n.MINES\nAcadia Uranium 06\nAlgom Uranium    14.25\nAnacon Lead 50\nAtlin Ruff 27\nAunor      2.21\nBarnat 36\nBaska Uranium      .15\nBoymar      .09\nBrunhurst 05\nBrunswick      2.55\nBuffalo Ank    _     .80\nBuff Red Lake   .06\nCampbell C     ,     4.95\nCampbell R L     7.30\nCanMet : :.:.     1.35\nCasiiar   .           7.30\nCentral Patrcia  89\nChimo      47\nChromium       3.15\nCoin Lake  , 14\nCons Denison     12.25\nCons. Discovery     2.75\nCons Halliwell  29\nCons Mining & Smelting ....   17.75\nCons Red Pop 0914\nCon, Sub         77\nCopper Man 08\nDonalda  14\nEast Malartic     1.43\nEast Sullivan      1.99\nElder Gold    73\nFalconbridge ,.   23.8714\nFaraday      1.45\n, Frobisher      1.45\nBARRETT TRAILER SALES -\nNew location. Highway 3A, Fruitvale. Direct factory distributors\nfor Aljo and Terry Travel Trailers. Built for Canadian roads.\nInsulated for Canadian climate.\nREFRIGERATOR (FRIGIDAIRE\n9 cu. ft.); Singer sewing machine; kitchen table, 4 chairs;\nbuffet. All good condition. H.\nGolz, No. 3B Tungsten, Canadian\nExploration Ltd.\t\nDO IT YOURSELF SPECIAL -\nJust Arrived: Thousands ol fir\nplywood cuttings, all sizes and\nthicknesses. Cheap. Columbia\nTradinrr, 902 .Front Street.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies Si.\nCOAL   BURNER    WITH   A\nblower and pipe. Phone 1850-L.\nCOW MANURE FOR SALE,\n477-Y-2.\nPH.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH.  S.   ELMES,  ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys.\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752.\nOffice Mgr. Ray Johnson, B. A. Sc.\n1015-8th St., Nelson\u2014Phone 144-R\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, ME1C\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nDAIRY RANCH FOR SALE - 60\nacres of land, seven-room house,\nbig barn, garage, blacksmith\nshop, milk house, etc. Also nine\nhead of cattle and 75 chickens.\nVt mile south of Ymir on blacktop highway. For further particulars apply Mr. J. Tarron,\n. Ymir. fLC.\t\nWE WILL DELIVER BY OUR\nown truck pullets of any age\nDelivery to be made in July qr\nAugust. Orders taken from now\non. No deposit necessary. Sound,\nhealthy stock guaranteed. White\nLeghorns,    New    Hampshires,\n. White Rocks and Cross breeds.\nAppleby's Poultry Farm, Mission\nCitv, B.C. \t\nFOR SALE 10 GOOD DAIRY\ncows. All Springers. R. Dauphin-\nais. Ph. 48X, Salmo, B.C. '\nFOR SALE - POULTRY FARM\n3 mi. Irom Castlegar. 7 barns.\n4000 birds. Phone Castlegar 2067.\nCLASS  AUS GET  RESULTS!\nFOR SALE\u20142 BEDROOM HOUSE\nwith basement suite, on 6 lots,\nin city. Phone 1043-Y.\nHOUSE FOR SALE 313 HIGH ST.\n1 BR., K\u201e DR. Full basement,\nbathroom. Phone 419-L.\nHOUSE FOR SALE ON 2 CORNER\nlots, good location, 1 block from\nbus. Phone 1411-Y.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST, GLASSES, BLACK WITH\nbrilliants, Pixi frames, in Pale\nblue case. Phone 487-R.\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.    Nelson    Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances. Free Estimates.\nPhone 774\u2014523 Cedar St., Nelson\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\n,      INSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.,\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nFOR SALE - SMALL 2 - WHEEL\nbox trailer, reasonable. Sunny-\nside Trailer Court.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up lo\nour door, we will look after your\ncar.\nSHOPPING OR VACATIONING -\nIt's more fun when you stay al\nthe Colonial Hotel. Exact centre\ndowntown Spokane shopping and\ntheatre district at Post and Main.\nClean, quiet rooms at $2 to $4.\nRamo narking across ihe street\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS\nFridays, ph.\nANONYMOUS\n366-Ror 483-R.\nGEORGE-IT'S TOO LATE NOW.\nBesides you would never buy me\nanything I wanted. Margie.\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EF\nfective. 3 weeks supply $2.50, 9\nweeks $6.00 at Fleury's Pharmacy and, all druggists.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket Wednesday snapped a\nthree-session losing streak by\nposting a moderate advance in\ndull trading.\nThe market opened mixed to\nhigher aH \"radnallv .w--!'.\"-*\nahead until hitting its peak at\nthe close. Brokers described the\nadvance as technical, resulting\nfrom investors taking advantage\nof the low prices.\nConfederation Life recorded the\nbiggest change on the ' board,\njumoing 8>\/> points to a 1958 high\nof 131. Building Products gained\na point at 41 but most other\nfains wore confi\"\u00bbd to % or less.\nPa>\u00bbe-Horsey T\"bo*s lost 114\npoints at 11614. Trans Mountain\nr-'osed .at 47, down \u201e, It was\ndown to 45 at one time in the session.\nSenior base metals climbed\nfractionally, led by a %-point\nirnin to 72'4 by International\nNickel. Campbell Red Lake, Kil-\nembe, Lake Shore, Opemiska and\nPirkle Crow were 11-25 cents\nhillier among lower - pficed\nmines. Jacobus lost 16 cents at\n96 cents on a moderale turnover.\nWestern oils were quiet but a I Kootenay Base Metals\nfew   15-20  cent   gains   were   recorded by medium-priced stocks.\nSenior  issues  Were mixed  in  a\nfractipnal range.\nGeco        9.80\nGeo. Scientific Pros 35\nGiant Yel     5.35\nGlen Uranium  10\nGoldale     i .15\nGold Eagle        07\nGolden Manitou 30\nGunnar Gold     16.00\nHeadway 55\nHollinger        22.00\nHudson Bay    42.50\nInt. Nickel     72.50\nJoliet Que 25\nlonsmith        09Vi\nKerr Addison    17.25\nLabrador\nLake Lingman .\nLexindin\nLittle Long Lac .\nLorado\t\nMacassa   ..\t\nMadsen R. L\t\n    15.75\n 08\n 0414\n     2.00\n 52\n     2.70\n     2.15\nMalartic G. F     1.02\nManeast  07\nMaritime Mining  53\nMart McNeely   17\nMcLeod  99\nMcKenzie R. L 13\nMilliken        2.10\nMogul 28\nMulti Mins  43\nNew Delhi  \/, 38\nNew Fortune 14\nNew Jason 0614\nNew Lund 15\nNipissing      1.24\nNisto     .    06\nNoranda New  .:.  40.00\nNorgold     ..;. 07\nNormetals  j     2.50\nNorpax  21\nNorth Rankin  38\nOpemiska  _..    7.20\nPickle Crow     1.18\nP'acer Devel     9.25\nPi eston E. D     5.25\nQuebec Copper 30\nQuebec Lab  07%\nSteep Rock     10.1214\nSullivan Con      2.15\nSylvanite     1.14\nTeck -Hughes      1.66 .\nTemagami         1.36\nThomp-Lund     _._ 82\nTrans Cont Res 14\nVentures     23.50\nVicour  04\nViolamac            1.21\nWaite Amulet     6.15\nWiltsey Goglin  17\nWright. Hargreaves      1.35\nYale  12\nYeliowknife Bear  75\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  19\nBanff Oils     1.80\nBailey Selburn      7.70\nCalgary and Edmonton ....    1.80\nCdn Atlantic      4.05\nCanadian Devonian     5.80 '\nCan Decalta 12\nHome A .     15.00\nLong Island Pete 08\nMarigold  12\nMidcon 68\nNat. Pete      2.00\nNew Continental 29\nOkalta      1.45\nPacific Pete    17.00\nPetrol      ' .55\nPonder  28\nProv Gas      2.60\nRoyalite      12.50\nSpooner        .20\nStanwell Oil * 75\nTriad     4.40\nUnited Oils     1.93\nWestern Pacific 28\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi        2814\nAlgoma Steel  \u201e       2514\nAluminum   >       29%\nArgus 2nd pfd \u201e \u201e.      4714\nAtlas St \u201e s     17\nB.A. Oil       35H\nBell Telephone \u201e       41\nBrazilian  \u201e       6\nB.C. Electric 4s\nB.C. Forest \t\nB.C. Packers A\nBurns A\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING AT THE\nMarvelle Beauty School in Trail\nFor information write to 1319\nBay Ave. or phone 2822.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED - CLEARING BLADE\nsuitable for a Caterpillar D7.\nWrite or phone Gordon R. Ball.\nCascade, B.C., phone 3-R.\nBOY'S OR GIRL'S JUNIOR Bicycle, 24\" or 26\" wheels. Phone\n167-R.\nREST HOMES\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD'\nfor all Building Supplies Spe\nciahzing in Plywood Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 3600 E Hastings St.. Vancouver, B.C., GLen\nburn 1500.\nNICE SURROUNDINGS AND\ngood care for aged and chronics.\nLicenced Rest Home. Mrs. G.\nKennedy, 1595 Sixth St., New\nWestminster. B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nvoung gentlemen  Phone 1I79X\nROOM AND BOARD 3 PHONE\n1196-Y.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nCOMPLETE SERVICE AND RE-\npair  on  all  outboard  motors.\n'COffeMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, 502 Front Street.\nMONTREAL <C) - Tr-M\"\"\nwas moderate and prices fractionally mixed Wednesday on the\nMontreal and Canadian Stock Exchanges.\nReflecting the general trend\nwere the utilities, base metals,\nconstructions and steels.\nBanks and pipelines were\nmixed hut slightly lower. Trans-\nMountain losl  Vt to 471\/4.\nRefining oils and newsprints\nimproved in a mixed range. B.A.\nOil was up li at 35'A.\nMines and oils traded moderately and in the snecu'iti'\"! nric\u00bb\u00ab!\nwere irregularly mixed in a\npenny range. Among the producers, prices were generally higher\nwith Central Del Rib at 7.40 up\n35 ceifts.\nClosing averages: banks up .05\noft 1.56 at 1120.43, golds tin-\nat 45.32, utilities up .3 at 136.5,\nindustrials off .4 at 243.2, papers\nchanged at 68.08.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 17\nBralorne      5.30\nCanusa 0314\nCariboo Gold : 64\nFarwest Tungsten 09\nGiant Mascot  09\nGranduc       1.00\nGrandview  \u25a0    .07\nHighland Bell      1.28\n.01\nNational Ex       15\nPioneer Gold      1.30\nPremier Border 05\nQuatsino   2414\nSheep Creek '...'. 36\nSherritt Gordon     4.00\n.05\n.03\n.14\n.12\n.12\n.18\n.01%\n.10\n' .15\n.37\n19.75\nNelson lathj Npwjs\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice ner single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance.\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month          $ 1.25\nThree 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 nlus nostage\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nREVENUE HOME, MONTHLY IN\ncome $240. 914 Stanley St., phone\n808-X.\nWANTED   iO\n2 BEDROOM SUITE OR HOUSE.\nPhone 1726-3.\nWestern Plywoods\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk .\nTrans Can Com .\nTrans Mtn Unit ..\nWestcoast Com ..\nWestcoast Trans\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank'of Can\nRoy Bank of Can\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund\nCommonw'lth Int\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverjie\nTrar.s Can \"C\"\nBid\n15.1214\n28.37,14\n46.00\n22.75\n90.50\n40.50\n42.00\n44.00\n53.50\n8.03\n6.63\n3.2S\n9.39\n4.55\n5,05\n13.00\nAsk\n23.25\n92.50\n41.50\n43.50\n45.00\n54.50\n7.29\n3.54\n10.59\n5.01\n5.45\nN.Y. Critics Hail\nStratford Actors\nNEW YORK (CP)-A troupe of\nstrolling players from the Stratford, Ont., Shakespearean Festival came to New York Tuesday\nnight with Two Gentlemen of\nVerona for a limited six-weeks'\nrun. By the reaction to the first\nnight, New York will be sorry to\nsee them return to Canada.\nMark Barron of The Associated\nPress says of the performance at\nthe off-Broadway Phoenix Theatre: \"An effervescent delight\nbehind the footlights.\"\n\"It is a strikingly colorful production,\" the AP critic adds, \"one\nin which the Canadian version\nhas changed Shakespeare's Elizabethan mood to a regency era,\nthereby allowing more colorful\ncostumes and such painting\ngroups.\"\nBrooks Atkinson of the New\nYork Times calls it \"a regal and\nstately production\" under Michael Langhatn's direction.\n'FIRST-RATE\"\n\"Everyone . . . speaks the\nlines clearly and devotedly, and\nthere is a nice over-all pictorial\nquality,\" Atkinson says.\nThe Canadian players, he adds,\nare \"first-rate.\"\n\"That this Canadian company\nhas come by its plaudits honestly\ncannot be gainsaid. It has style,\nintelligence and an affection for\nthe work in Hand. And it knows\nhow to speak the verse with\nclarity and a tough of music.\"\nBarron adds:\n\"Although it is one of Shakespeare's seldom-performed minor\nplays, this Stratford Festival\ngroup makes ft an effervescent\ndelight behind the footlights. They\nuse all sorts of imaginative costumes and dances, and occasional music by Louis Applebaum,\nto tell this story. . . .\nLangham said after the opening that he thought the performance was \"warmly received.\"\nThe Canadian group took eight\ncurtain calls.\nCanadian Breweries .\nCanadian Canners\t\nCanadian Celanese ...\nCan. Cement .\n4214\nlO'A\n12'\/,\n12\n27-14\n14\n15 '4\n2814\nCan Chem Co     4.85\nCan. Malting\t\nCan Oil'\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly .\nCan. Packers A\t\nCan. Packers B\t\nCons Gas \t\nDist. Seagram .!.\nDom. Foundries \u201e\nDom Magnesium  _\nDom.Stores\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical.\nDom. Textiles\t\nFord A .'.\t\nGatineau\n52\n2414\n23%\n40%\n38%\n3014\n27Vi\n26%\n10%\n53\n11%\n814\n7414\n32\nGatineau 5% pfd      102\nGen. Steel Wares\nGypsum Lime...\nHoward Smith...\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco ...\nIndust. Accep. .\nLaura Secord ...\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris .\nMcColl Frontenac .\ney\u00ab\n38%\n1314\n47M,\n1914\n24\n23%\n614\n53\nMoore Corp       68V1\nChippewa Wins\nTrophy Third Time\nHAMILTON (CP) - HMCS\nserve division, has won the in-\nterdivisional efficiency trophy for\nthe third successive year, Rear-\nAdmiral K. F. Adams, flag officer, naval divisions, announced\nWednesday;\nIn 1956 Chippawa shared the\ntrophy with HMCS York of Toronto and last year won it outright.\nThe trophy, a sterling silver\nmodel of the destroyer escort\nHMCS St. Laurent, is given annually to the best all-round naval\nreserve division in Canada. In\nsecond place was HMCS Discovery of Vancouver.\nNat. Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp :....\nRuss. Industries\t\nShawinigan\t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A\t\nSoutham \t\nStandard Paving\t\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can ...\nUnited Steel\t\nWestern Grovers A.\n21%\n11614\n31%\n59%\n7H\n25H\n25\n16%\n4014\n37\n52%\n80\n13\n33\nSALE!\nSilback Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard \t\nSunshine Lardeau \t\nTaylor \t\nTrojan \t\nUtica\t\nYale \t\nOILS\nAltex \t\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary .and Edmonton\nCharter  1.70\nHome           14.75\nNew Gas Ex  1.20\nOkalta Com   1.38\nPacific Pete         16.75\nPeace River Gas  32\nRoyalite    ;  12.25\nRoyal Can 30\nSparmac  13\nUnited   1-85\nVanalta \u2022' 16\nVantor  -  1-18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers .:.-.  1.35\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.25\nB C Forests  10.00\nB C Power   39.75 -\nB C Telephone    *  43.25\nCrown Zeller (Can)   14.75\nInt Brew B  4.00\nInland Nat. Gas   3.00\nLuckv Lager        4.40\nMacM & Bloedel B  26.25\nMid Western  1-55\nPowell River  31.50\nTrans Mtn   46.00\nWestminster Paper   23.50\n' WAS\n1957 CHEV. DeLuxe Sedan. 6000 Miles $2750\n1957 NASH Metropolitan. 4000 Miles  1800\n1957 FORD Ranch Wagon. 6 Cylinder.  2695\n1957 CHEV. 1-Ton. 4-Speed Trans., Duals.   2900\n1957 CHEV. %-Ton. Chassis and Cab 2800\n1956 CHEV. 2-Door. One-Owner Car .:.. 2395\n1956 CHEV. Vi-Ton Pickup  1650\n1956 FORD. Vi-Ton Pickup  1650\n1956 G.M.C. Vi-Ton Pickup ...'.  1650\n1955 FORD 4-Door Sedan.  1795\n1955 SUPER 88 OLDS Sedan. Fully Equipped. 2900\n1955 PONTIAC DeLuxe Sedan. One-Owner. 2100\n1955 DODGE Vi-Ton Pickup  1450\n1955 VOLKSWAGEN  1395\n1955 G.M.C. '\/a-Ton Pickup  1475\n1954 FARGO Vi-Ton Panel  1295\n1954 CHEV. 4-Door Sedan  1575\n1953 PONTIAC Sedan Delivery  1100\n1953 CHEV. Sedan  1295\n1953 FORD Sedan ,,.,;  1195\n1953 PLYMOUTH 4-Door Sedan  1350\n1953 DODGE 5-Passenger Coupe  1200\n1953 STUDEBAKER Champion Sedan 1400\n1953 METEOR Tudor  1295\n1952 BUICK 4-Door Sedan. Auto., Radio  1450\n1952 STUDEBAKER 2-Door Hardtop  1295\n1951 CHEV. 2-Door \"Torpedo\"    850\n1951 FORD 2-Door Hardtop, Victoria    995\n1950 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan    575\n1950 FORD 4-Door Sedan    500\n1950 CHEV. 2-Door Sedan '....   625\nNOW\n$2595\n1675\n2495\n2395\n2275\n2175\n1475\n1475\n1395\n1675\n2495\n1995\n1175\n1250\n1275\n995\n1375\n975\n1095\n975\n1175\n975\n1295\n1175\n1175\n1175\n675\n875\n375\nS25\n535\nPhone 35-36\nSPECIAL  NO-TRADE  DISCOUNTS .\nAt\nReuben Emerge Motors Ltd,\n323 VERNON ST. - NELSON, B.C.\n 12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MARCH 20, 1958\nYou Don't\nHave To Be On the Sahara    .\nTo Appreciate This\nDesert Flower\nSPECIAL\n$1.25\nINCLUDES:\n1 Desert Flower Hand and Body Lotion\n1 Desert Flower Toilet Water\nA Delightful Gift for a Friend or Self\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment,\nSurvey Chides Canada\nFor Makeshift Method\nEaster Perfume Sachet Cards. FILM FESTIVAL\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT Tonight at Capitol Theatre, 8 p.m.\nLatest in drapery \"Scenic Panels\"\nat $8.95 per panel.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nComplete range of boys' Easter\ndress-up styles.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nG. R. Pickering\nPainting and Decorating.\nPhone 44-R-2.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhahging. R.R. 1.\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nBake Sale\u2014LA to 3-5-6, Cubs and\nScouts, Sat, March 22, McKay and\nStretton, 9-1.\nClear sheet plastic, several thicknesses, t. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.,\nPhone 156,  101 Hall St., Nelson.\nJob's Daughters spring tea and\nbake sale, March 22, Silver Room,\nHume Hotel, 3-5 p.m.\nAN ELECTROLUX will do your\nspring cleaning. (Cleaners and\nPolishers). Phone 1108.\nSpecial! Greenhouse daffodils, 89c\ndozen.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nFisherman's Headquarters\nTnXICUM INN\u2014BALFOUR, B.C.\nCKLN TONIGHT 6:50 P.M.\nHarry Almack, Social Credit candidate speaking on the National\nSocial Credit Platform.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922. ,\nOTTAWA 'CP) - Canada must\nexpand her training facilities for\nprofessional and skilled workers\nif she is to meet the needs foreseen for her 1965 economy, says\nan economic survey ' published\nWednesday. *\nThe report says that since the\nSecond World War only a combination of \"makeshift\" methods\nand immigration enabled the\ngraduates of the countryls insufficient training establishments\nto go any distance towards meeting the demand for qualified personnel. The demand was not fully\nmet, however, and the over-all\neconomy suffered.\nTitled 'Skilled and Professional Manpower in Canada, 1945-\ndepartment's economics ad research branch, the survey is one\nof a series prepared for i; the\nGordon royal commission on Canada's economic prospects. The\ncommission, headed by Toronto\naccountant Walter Gordon, presented a preliminary report a\nyear ago and is' expected to\nmake public its final document\nnext month.\nSEE NO LET-UP\nRequirements . for skilled and\nprofessional workers likely \"will\noutrun supply for the next 10\nyears, the survey says, and there\nis no evidence that the demand\nwili slacken. Automation would\nmerely vary the demand, producing new needs and reducing\nothers.\nCanada's great post-war expansion \"created a severe pressure\non specialized manpower supplies.\"\n\"Makeshift\" methods were\nused to meet the demand domestically. \"These included the\novercrowding of training facilities, unusually large use'of upgrading and on-the-job experience\nas a means of acquiring skills,\nthe acceleration of training for\nskilled and technical workers, the\nuse of underqualified instructors,\nand in some years very heavy\nreliance on immigration.\"\nSCHOOLS NEGLECTED\n\"The long-run insufficiency of\nCanadian vocational training and\nhigher educational facilities was\nobscured by the easily available\nsupply of immigrants possessing\ncations.\"\nSuch immigration \"has tended\nto reduce the urgency of giving\nconsideration to the longer-run\nadequacy of our educational and\ntraining institutions.\"\nExpansion of Canada's training\nfacilities would have to be done\n\"in an orderly fashion.\"\n\"Fast-changing, technical developments affecting skilled and\ntechnical occupations,\" . the survey said, \"create a need for people with a thorough grounding in,\nbasic mathematics and science,\nwhich in turn means longer periods of. formal training,\"\nSays Bulganin\nAdmits Reasons\nTo Shoot Stalin\nCOPENHAGEN (AP) - A Conservative member of the Danish\n.Parliament, who visited Russia\nin 1956, quoted Soviet Premier.\nBulganin as saying there was\n\"ample reason\" -to shoot Stalin.\nPastor Gottschalck-Hansen, in\na speech at a Conservative meeting Tuesday night, said he met\nBulganin and Party Secretary\nNikita Khrushchev at a reception jn the Kremlin.\n., \"I ventured asking why the\nRussian' leaders had not got rid\nof Stalin, who had committed the\nmost. terrible things, adding:\n'You've got the method, haven't\nyou?' \u00bb\n\"Then Bulganin replied:\n'Legally we could have done it\nwhenever we wanted. There was\nample reason for an execution,\nbut the people just wouldn't have\nunderstood it.'\"\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 London\nbusinessman Barclay Barr admitted Wednesday he should have\nknown better than to hand a shilling to a policeman who helped\nhim find his automobile outside a\nLondon theatre one foggy night.\n\"He refused it at first,\" Barr\nrecalled, \"then said he would\npass it on to a police charity.\"\nTwo days later, police headquarters telephoned Barr and\nasked for details. Eight hburs\niater\u2014after midnight when Barr\nwas in bed \u2014 police telephoned\nagain for a \"fuller report.\"\nTwo days later, he received a\nreceipt for one shilling. Three\nweeks later, the assistant commissioner of police wrote a formal letter enclosing a money order for one shilling.\nThe letter said: \"I am directed\nby the commissioner to say that,\nwhile appreciating the motive\nwhich prompted your offer, it\nwould be contrary to service\nregulations to sanction its acceptance.\"\nNo Tip for\nLondon Bobby Surveys Terms\nLONDON  (Reuters) \u2014 London '\nFor CPR Firemen\nFUR STORAGE\nCleaning\u2014Alterations.\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\n580 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nHarry Almack, Social Credit candidate for Kootenay West, will address a public meeting in Odd Fellows Hall at Kaslo on March 20th\nat 8 p.m.\n450  Living  Colors  are  yours  in\neither  latex,  flat,   semi-gloss  or\noutside paints.\nStephens Paint Headquarters\nASSOCIATED ENTERPRISES Ltd.\nKootenay Residents\nTo Visit Britain\nFour Kootenay residents, Mr.\nand Mrs. S. T. Lea, Horace Morgan of Nelson and C. W. Fraser\nof Castlegar, will be among a group\nof some 70 members of Canadian\nPacific Pioneers overseas \"house\nparly\" to visit Britain and the continent this month.\nLeaving Montreal April 1 after\npicking up members en route\nacross Canada, the party will sail\non the Empress of Britain. Tour\nconductor will be Archie Sturrock,\nformer CPR'master mechanic, of\nVancouver, who is 75 years of age.\nAmong the party will be a newly\nmarried couple, John Fowler, 82\nyears of age, and his bride, Mrs.\nLena Simons, 72, who were married in Vancouver March 15.\nATTENTION\nCANADIAN  LEGION MEMBERS\nDance to Roy Kline\nand His Organ at the Legion.\nThurs. March 20th.\nFishing Tackle Department now\nopen. Stock up for bigger ones this\n, year.\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nNELSON GARDEN CLUB\nCalling all gardeners,   meetii\nW.I. Room, Civic Centre Friday,\nMar. 21st at 8 p.m.\nGuest Speaker: J. E. Swales,\nDistrict Horticulturist.\nYouth Urged\nTo Shun Evil\nVATICAN CITY (API - Pope\nPius, in a great outdoor audience\nin St. Peter's Square Wednesday\ncalled on Catholic youth to fight\nevil and dedicate itself to the dawning \"springtime for humanity,\nspringtime of life.\"\nThe audience,' about 250,000,\nwas one of the largest since the\ngreat demonstrations of the 1950\nHoly  Year.\nOccasion of the audience was\nthe 90th anniversary of the establishment of the youth of Italian\nCatholic action. But thousands of\nRomans also went to the audience on this St. Joseph's Day, a\nnational holiday in Italy.\nThe Pope declared that the\nworld is entering \"one of the\nmost beautiful springtimes that\nmankind has ever known,\"\nmarked by a greater awakening\nin all fields of human life.    \u25a0\nCurrent progress in science and\ntechnology was making men ever\nfreer \"of material labor, of servile work,\" and was spreading\ngreater well-being throughout the\nworld.\nEach Vanguard\nTo Differ From\nClassified Ads Brine Returns!\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\ndirector of the U.S. Navy's Vanguard program said Wednesday\neach of the seven satellites scheduled fo rlaunching in as many\nmonths will be \"radically different.\"\nDr. John P. Hagen, director of\nthe project which launched its\nfirst small test moon into orbit\nMonday, told a reporter the\nequipment \u25a0 to provide the great\nmajority of information scietists\nwant from space is much too\nmuch to crowd into one satellite.\nHe said that from now on, all\nVanguard satellites will be full\nsized\u201421 inches in diameter and\n2Hii pounds. He added that the\ninstrumentation for the next\nsphere is already assembled, for\nthe primary purpose of reporting\non radiation from the sun, particularly x-rays.\nThe Nova Scotia-born scientist\nsaid satellites scheduled for\nlaunching later in the year will\nconcentrate on such problems as\nmeasurement of the earth's 'magnetic fields, meteorology and scientific measurements that should\ncontribute to knowledge of the\nouter reaches of the earth's at:\nmosphere and near-space.\nThe navy has been authorized\nto attempt the launching of seven\nfull-size satellites in addition to\nthe much smaller test moon,\n'about the size of a grapefruit,\nthat now is in orbit.\nThe army, with one instrumented satellite already in orbit,\nhas been given clearance to put\nup a second one in the near future.\nOxford Students\nClaim Policemen\nThreaten Them\nLONDON (AP) -Three 21-year-\nold Oxford University student editors say they were threatened\nwith police action for publishing\nan article charging the West with\nprovoking incidents with Russia\nto get military intelligence information.\nThere has been. no immediate\npolice comment.\nThe article in the monthly student magazine Isis said British\nmonitoring stations along the Soviet frontier from Iraq to the\nBaltic record everything sent by\nradio from Soviet \"ships, tanks,\nairplanes, troops and control stations.\"\n\"Since the Russians do not always provide the required messages, the article said, \"they\nare sometimes provoked. A plane\n'loses' its way while behind a\nfrontier. Tape recorders excitedly\nread .the irritated exchanges of\nRussian pilots, and when the Matter sometimes force an airplane\nto land, an international incident\nis created and reported in the\nusual fashion.\"\nAssistant Editor Paul Thompson told reporters \"two plainclothes men in overcoats and\nblack hats\" threatened him and\nanother assistant editor, William\nMiller, with being charged under\nthe Official .Secrets Act.\nThompson said the article was\nwritten \"from the personal experiences of someone who Was\nin the forces.\"\nThe magazine's editor, Lewis\nRudd, said he told police he did\nnot know who wrote the article,\nbut that as editor he was responsible for what appeared in the\nmagazine.\nMONTREAL (CP) -. A union\nsurvey of Canadian Pacific Railway firemen is being -conducted\nin preparation for new contract\ndemands to be served next month\non .the CPR, it was learned Wednesday.\nW. E. Gamble, Canadian vice-\npresident of the Brotherhood of\nLocomotive Firemen and Engine-\nmen (CLC) said the union's general chairman for the CPR, John\nGraham of Montreal, has been\nmeeting with union locals across\nCanada.\nHe said Mr. Graham will report to union negotiators next\nweek before the new union demands are presented to the railway. The firemen's contract with\nthe CPR is to expire May 31 and\nnotice of demands may be served\nanytime after April 2.\nThe CPR n e g o t iations are\nlinked with a prolonged dispute\nwith the union over the need for\nfiremen on diesel locomotives in\nfreight and yard services. The\nscrap led to a nine-day strike\nagainst the CPR in January, 1957.\nIt was expected the firemen's\nunion would seek from the CPR\nthe same concessions . as asked\nfrom the publicly-owned Canadian\nNationai Railways last month, including an 18-per-cent wage increase.\nNegotiations with the CNR\nbroke down last month and a federal conciliation officer has been\nnamed to try to achieve a settlement.\nMUSIC FESTIVAL\nENTRIES HIGH\nMusic festival entries so far number some 403 with still more expected before the March 22 deadline.\nRoss W. G. M. Fleming, festival\nsecretary, reported Wednesday\nevening there are 600 individual entries, and approximately 1000 musicians in group competition, making\na total of some 1600 contestants to\ndate. The 1000 group participants\nare included in three adult choirs,\n16 junior' and school choirs and 11\nbands and orchestras.\nIt is anticipated the total may\nreach 2000 by deadline time.\nPlaygrounds May\nBe Livelier\nOrganized playground activity is\nexpected to be even more lively\nthis year than last with 30 applicants so far listed for the Playground Leaders School to be held\nin April.\ninstruction will be conducted in\nthe Civic Centre by Robert Stang-\nroom, regional recreation consul\ntant, Ray Gould, athletic director\nand J. Johnson, Nelson recreation\ndirector,\nLeaders from the school will or\nganize children's summer activities at Gyrd, Lakeside and Uphill\nplaygrounds. Last year there were\neight leaders at the playgrounds.\nCivil Servants\nRequest Raise\nOTTAWA (CP) - A brief requesting a nine-per-cent, across-\nthe - board increase for federal\ncivil servants, plus a one-hour\nreduction in- the work week was\nforwarded to Prime Minister Diefenbaker's office Wednesday by the\nCivil' Service Association of Ottawa and the Amalgamated Civil\nServants of Canada.\nThe two organizations are to\nmerge April 30 to form the Civil\nService Association of Canada.\nThe brief, copies of which also\nwere sent to offices of State Secretary Fairclough and Finance\nMinister Fleming, asked that the\nsuggested increase go into effect\nMay 1. The work-week reduction\nwould mean 36% hours' wOrk\nweekly, instead of the present\n37%.\nBulbous Betty\nTo Be Moved\nLONDON (Reuters)-The enemies of Aphrodite triumphed\nTuesday night in Richmond, a\nwell-to-do  London  suburb.\nThe women of Richmond\nbalked at the sight of her ampie,\nunclad figure smack in the\ncentre of their Thames-side vil-\nage.\nThey nicknamed Richmond's\nversion of the Greek goddess of\nlove, beauty and fertility\u2014a one-\nton, seven-foot-tall statute riding\na dolphin in the centre of an\nornamental pond \u2014 \"Bulbous\nBetty.\"\nThe statue, erected a few years\nago, is not only nude but lewd,\nthey said. Richmond council met\nTuesday to consider the case,\ndubbed Bulbous Betty a \"vulgar\nmonstrosity.\"\nAlderman   A.   C.   Macdougal\nCouncillor Van Stranbenz-e\npleaded for Aphrodite as \"an incentive to young men to get\nmarried.\" But councillor Keith\nMorell retorted: \"I pass her\nevery day and I'm still a bachelor.\"\nThe council finally voted to\nshift the goddess as soon as a\nmore suitable, out-of-the-way site\ncan be found.\n$50 Fine After\nAccident\nJohn Woikin of Nelson was fined\n$50 and costs Monday after pleading guilty before Magistrate William Evans'to driving without due\ncare and attention.\nA vehicle driven by Woikin was\ninvolved in an accident about 8\np.m. Thursday near South Slocan.\nRCMP said it ran .off the road,\nbroke a telephone pole' in half and\nwas damaged extensively. Woikin\nsaid he thought he fell asleep.\nCarl Swan was fined $10 and\ncosts for driving a vehicle Friday\non Falls Street without a drivers'\nlicence. John French was fined a\nsimilar amount for allowing Swan\nto drive his car. Both pleaded guilty\nbefore Magistrate R. S. Nelson.\nr\nOPENING\no p n t e\nPlaymor - Sat.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\n576 Baker St,\nPhone m\nWHITE\nSHIRTS\nFor\nEASTER\nWe have a'full range of\nFORSYTH NO-IRON\nWHITE SHIRTS\nPick up one now for\nEaster.\n\u2022 PAL COLLAR\n\u2022 SINGLE OR\nDOUBLE CUFF\n\u2022 $5.95 and $7.50\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     U\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPHILIP AMONG BIDDERS\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Princ*\nPhilip paid 50 guineas for a giant\nblack stetson at a light-hearted\ncharity auction in London's Covent Garden produce market\nTuesday. The auction raised\nVi3,500 in 40 minutes for the Na-\nciation, of which the prince il\npresident. \t\nBBS\n,Uor UPSET STOMACH\n4 oz. $1.29\n16 ox. $2.91\nCITY DRUG\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nMALKIN 5 MnfM\u00bb*\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nHamilton \u2014 Wing Commander\nRoyden Foley, who learned to fly\nfrom the Wright brothers.\nLondon\u2014Capt. P. Olley, 64, the\nworld's first pilot to fly 1,000,000\nmiles.\nRadlett, Eng. \u2014 Capt. Georgtr\nF. H. Gracey, 78. who led an exodus of 25,000 Armenians from\nTurkey to Russia during the\nFirst World War.\nFrobisher Bay, N.W.T. - M.\nLeo Manning, 54, one of Canada's\nfinest Eskimo  linguists.\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Customs\ndocuments for cars .of fqreign\ntourists entering France will be\nabolished March 30 under plans\nlo attract more visitors. Motorists will be given a tourist sticker\nvalid for six months. This will\nalso entitle them to cut-price\ngasoline.       \t\nHave The Job Done Right\nV\/IC GRAVEC\n\u2122        LIMITED        -*\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nDISIRT FLOWER\nSPECIAL\nHand and Body Lotion\nand Toilet Water\n$1.85 Value   .\nBoth for Only $1.25\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPhone 25 Nelson, B.C.\nCANADIAN. CHEMICAL sV CELLULOSE COMPANY, LTD.\n-J r-\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. 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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"}]}}