{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0433273":{"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\/contributor":[{"value":"Gibbon, A. W.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Ramsden, C. W.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-06-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1960-07-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0433273\/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":" .'\nI\" \u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0  .       . \"\n!\">-'!:..'\u25a0}]\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014~\nSATURDAY EDITION\nwith COMICS - 10c\n*\u00b0,ff r**i~TA\nh&\na\n\u2014- . ,,_ -:\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny. Little\nchange in temperature. Light\nwinds. Low and high at Cranbrook\n50 and 90, Crescent Valley 50 and\n95. Sunday outlook. Increasing\ncloud in afternoon.\n\\%l\nPublished at Nelson, transponu... \u2022\u201e government financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columhia area'\nNELSON, B. C. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1960\nNot More Than 7c Dally,  10c Saturday\nVol. 59 __j^ NELSON, B. C. CANADA\u2014SATpDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1960 Not More Than 7c Dally,  10c Saturday No. 72     I\nFires Break Out Eight Per Hour\nIF YOU THINK you have troubles, listen to Joe Petrie's tale.\nOn Sunday the 2-year-old boy was nearly drowned In a wading\npool. Monday a dog bit him sending him to the hospital, thus the\npatch. Tuesday, Joe was rescued from his blazing home by his\nmother. Resting from the fire ordeal he was stung by a bee. Then\nalong came the doctor with a needle.\u2014TNS.\nFirst UN Troops\nLand in Congo\nPremier Lumumba Demands\nBelgian Troops Withdraw\nBy NIGEL RYAN\nLEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (Reuters) \u2014 The terror-\nhaunted Congo breathed a little easier Friday night as the\nfirst plane-load of United Nations peace-making troops\narrived here.\nHowever, Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba said\nBelgian troops should be withdrawn in 12 hours and if UN\ntroops arrive with the intention of co-operating with Belgians, they would be aBked to leave.\nThe first UN arrivals were from Ghana and Tunisia.\nThe British commander of Ghana's forces said ths\nCongolese army had laid down its arms in the Leopoldville\narea.\ni'mi\nTwo Canadian army offices\u2014\nLt.-Col. J. A. Berthiaume, 44, of\nSt. Hyaointhe, Que., and Maj.\nH. W. King, 40, of Victoria are\nment    with    Belgian    Congolese\nleaders on the division of their\nforces in the Leopoldville area.\nMutineers  still  have  not  been\nSacrifice Rather Than\nSecurity, Kennedy Pledge\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLOS  ANGELES   (CP)   _ John\nKennedy, She Democratic party's\nnew leader, warned Friday night\nbe will demand courage and sa-\nCM&S Net\nProfit Up\nNovember\nIn striking, risky departure\nfrom the traditional style of bidding for votes by promising\nUtopia, the Boston senator boldly\nsuggested that those who want\nj the \"safe mediocrity of the past\"\nneed not vote for him.\nHis formal acceptance speech,\ndelivered before a huge Coliseum\ncrowd that had been treated to\nfree Hollywood - style extrava-\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Consolidated ! ganza headed by famous 6tars,\nMining and Smelting Company of; hinted at prospects of higher\nCanada Ltd. had net profit of, taxes to meet challenges of com-\n$13,290,000 or 81 cents a share in mnnism and poverty if the Dem-\nthe six months ended June 30 ' ocrats triumph over the Repub-\ncompared with $8,564,000 and 52 ! licans in the Nov. 8 election,\ncents in tlie corresponding period ; NEW FRONTIER\nlast  year. j    His  campaign,  he  said,  would\nSales   of   all   products   totalled i be pitched to meet the challenges\nto   assist   in   dministative   prob- j quelled   in   many  parts   of   this\niems. ' former Belgium colony whioh won\nMaj.-Gen.    H.    T.    Alexander,! its independence only two weeks\nalso acting as advance represen- i aigo.\ntative of the UN force, told re-1 Lumumba told Parliament that\nporters he had reached agree- j the reason for Thursday's rup-\nture of Congolese-Belgian diplomatic relations was to get Belgium's troops and diplomats out\nof the country.\nI\/tmumiba disclosed that the\nCongolese treasury was almost\nempty. He told the deputies that\n\"at the end of the month you\nwill not even get 10 francs for\nyour salary.\"\nBREAKING POINT\nEssential sevices were near\nthe breaking point here as Belgian officials and technicians\nleft the country. Food was \u2022\u00ab*_-'\nni'ng short and baSks \"rfere*\nclosed.\nCongolese sources said a total\nof 3,000 UN - sponsored troops\nwere expected here from Ghana,\nTunisia, the MaU Federation,\nGuinea, Morocco and Ethiopia.\nMajor headaches faced the UN\nforce. Reports said Matadi, the\nCongo's only seaport, was held\nby African mutineers. Officials\nof mineral-rich Katanga Province declared that UN troops\nwould not be allowed to go there.\norifice from the American people j Eisenhower rule has led to \"dry\nif he  is  elected  president  next | ,0f \u25a0 aIK) \"payola mentality\" and\nto a loss of U.S. prestige in the\n$64,281,000 compared with $62,-\n826,000 in the corresponding period last year.\nCancer Cure\nExpected Soon\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Recent encouraging developments in cancer\ndetection techniques are raising\nhopes that a cure will be discovered within the next few years,\nLady Henrietta Banting said Friday.\nof a new frontier instead of the\nlate Franklin D. Roosevelt's\n\"New Deal\" which promised security and succor for those in\nneed.\nCharging   that   eight   years   of\neyes-, of the world, the 43-year-old\nKennedy said his campaign will\nappeal to Anjericans' tilde, \"ttdt\ntheir pocketbook.\"\n\"It holds out the promise of\nmore sacrifice instead of more\nsecurity.\"\nThe first Roman Catholic to become the party's presidential\nstandard-bearer in 32 years, Kennedy acknowledged that many in\nthe party felt they took a risk in\nhis nomination.\nBut he pledged to reject religious pressure of ay kind.\nTIBBETT PASSES\nNEW YORK (API - Singer\nLawrence Tibbett, 63, died Friday. The famed baritone underwent surgery June 27 for an old\nhead  injury.\nTibbett, to an unusual extent,\nhelped popularize the great vocal\nclassics. Unlike many grand opera\nLady Banting, widow of Sir, stars, who shun the common enter-\nFrederick Banting, co-discoverer j tainment media, Tibbett pill his\nof insulin, is director of the can- talents to work in all kinds of musi-\ncer detection clinic associated with cal productions.\nthe Women's College Hospital in- Tibbett began his career singing\nToronto. j in theatres and churches, first in\n\"We feel that there will be ai'nis native California and later in\nbreak-through soon,\" she said in I the New York vicinity,\nan interview. \"So many important | He hit stardom suddenly on the j\npieces of this great puzzle have'night of Jan. 2, 1925, at the Metro-'\nbeen discovered that I feel we can politan Opera House, where hej\nsafely be optimistic about an even-1 sang tlie part of Ford in Verdi's |\ntual cure.\" Falstaff.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIII'MIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllll\nPaper Told To Say Only\nNice Things About City\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP)\u2014The Board of Trade Friday\npassed a resolution censuring the Prince George Citizen for \"deploring publicity given ... to the inactivity of the proposed Pacific\nNorthern Railroad.\"\nThe resolution mentioned stories concerning unemployment\nand an influx of transients to work on the railway that will stretch\nfrom north of Prince George to the Yukon border.\nThe resolution was passed 33-3 with six abstaining. There are\n220 members in the board.\nTlie Citizens says only 10 men have been employed on the\nPNR since construction of the railway's marshalling yards was\nstarted at the end of last month.\nHarold Moffat, sponsor of the motion, said in an interview\nafter the meeting stories about the unemployment should not have\nbeen printed.\n\"You should only print stories that are optimistic or reflect\ncredit of the city. We in Prince George can do without the Citizen.\nHow can we sell Prince George if it keeps printing pessimistic\nstories like that?\"\nThe meeting refused, however, to approve a similar resolution\ndirected at city council for having warned the unemployed to stay\naway Irom Prince George.\n\"We didn't want to strain the friendly relations now existing\nbetween the board and the council,\" said Alex Bowie.\nThe Citizen has said in stories that jobless workers are attracted\nto Prince George by publicity about the PNR and they can't find\nwork. The crime rate was increasing with the number of jobless.\niiiiiiiiicuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiHiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii\nFreedom Box\nHoax Blamed\nLONDON (Reuters) -\"Freedom\"^'boxes were Warned\nThursday for the Congo's current tfoubles.\nMrs. j Ann Penston, an English r\u00ab\u00ablident of a border town\nin thevformer Belgian colony\nwho Is visiting here, said the\nboxes were sold to gullible\nCongolese natives by confidence mfen for \u00a31 each.\nThe natives were told that\nthe boxefc contained freedom\nand should be opened June 30\n\u2014 the day the Congo gained\nindependence.\nNatives found the boxes\neither were empty or contained\npebbles.\nMrs. Penston said other operators sold cards for up to 10\nshillings arpiece. They claimed\nthe cards Would entitle the\nholder to an European house,\nan automobile, or a white woman after independence.\numiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWORLD\nSCENE\nHAVANA, Cuba (AP) - A Communist Chinese mission arrived\nFriday at Premier Fidel Castro's\ninvitation for negotiations that\nmay result in increased trade and\npossibly establishment of diplomatic relations.\nMOSCOW (CP) - The Soviet\nUnion Friday rejected as \"sheer\ninvention\" the United States' contention that- an Amex'dah RB-47\nreraraaatenknce plan* Was over\ninternational waters when it was\nshot down by a Soviet fighter\nJuly 1.\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (API-\nSecretary General Dag Ham-\nmarskjold Friday night put Undersecretary Ralph J. Bunche in temporary command of the new UN\nforce of African troops in the\nCongo \u2014 600 strong and growing\nfast.\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) - The\ngovernment Friday rejected compromise offers from striking federal government employees as a\nback-to-work movement was reported from many areas on the\nfourth day of the nationwide stoppage.\nJUNEAU, Alaska (AP) \u2014Heavy\nred salmon runs in Bristol Bay\nhave managed to push the canned\nsalmon pack up this year over the\ncomparable period for 1959, the\nAlaska Fish and Game Department\nreported   Friday.\nThe canned salmon pack for the\nperiod ended July 10 was 976,856\ncases. This represented a 409,214\ncase increase over the period of\n567,642 cases for the period ended\nJuly  12,   1959.\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada will\ndonate to international relief agencies all the surplus whole milk\npowder held by the government,\nAgriculture Minister Harkness announced Friday in the Commons.\nThe initial donation will be 2.-\n000,000 pounds to the United\nNations Children's Emergency\nFund which will distribute it in\n12 countries.\n13 Water Bombers,\n1000 Men Fight\n222 Interior Fires\nKAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) \u2014 \"There were hundreds of\nflies marking our path with smoke below us and on all\nsides. As far as we could see there were patches of smoke\nand the twinkle of flames.\"\nPhotographer John DrysdaJe of\nthe Karmdoops Sentinel described\nFriday a flight over the 200-mile\nmatchbox im this interior British\nColumbia district where 222 fires\nwere burning and where new\nones were breaking out at the\nrate of eight an hour.\nMore than 1,000 men and vast\nquantities of machinery Friday\nwere fighting the fires that cast\nsuch a pal1 of smoke over the\ncity that it was difficult to land\nfire-figihtimg planes at the un-\nHghted airport and it got dark\nhere hours earlier than usual.\nWORST STORM IN MEMORY\nMany oi the weary men, working 16 hours a day for 75 cents\nan hour, were being transported\nfrom fire to fire by bus.\nForestry officials said most of\nthe fires were started by lightning during the worst thunderstorm within their memories\nWednesday. One authority said a\nfire started by lightning could\nsmoulder in a tree for days before breaking out. Some of these\ncould be checked immediately by\naircraft\nDrysdale said smoke from (he\nblazes readied heights of 6,000 or\n7,000 feet.\n\"Everywhere we went it was\nthe same story, smoke and more\nThe smoke made flying hazardous for the 13 water-bombing arid'\nNAMMN-hW^'vf\u00a3^'^'jK)dd%.\nin \u00ab\u2022* \u25a0 \u2022tf^-JNtoPSftl'T-ti*-' s_d\nlMfittfTat Kamloops Airport was\ntffcfey and \"at timei (he conditions are aUnost blind.\"\nPLANE WRECKED\nAn Avenger aircraft was\nwrecked when it made a belly\nlanding at Kamloops Airport. Pilot OHy Olsen was not injured.\nThe planes, mostly Avengers\noapaible of carrying more than\n600 gallons of water, and Spear-\nmans, 100 gallons, land at Kamloops or another airport, load\nwithin six minutes and take off\nagain. The pilots, their eyes\nweary  from  seeing through  tiie\nsmoke, keep at it from 6 a.m.\nuntil it is too dark to use the un-\nlighted airports.\nThe B.C. forest service pays\nalbout $200 an hour for the planes.\nMeanwhile, weary firefighters,\nmany of Ihem recruited from\nbeer parlors and streets of Kamloops and surrounding communities, were fighting the largest\nforest fire in the province, a 3,-\n000-aore monster that was burning out of control over a 512-mile\nfront.\nThe fire, ait Spins Oreek in the\nMerritt area 4S miles southwest\nOf here, was burning mostly\nthrough bush areas but officials\nsaid a turn to the west or northwest ootid put it in valuable\nstands of fir and pine.\nSome of the other fires, mostly\nbrush, were being watched by\nplanes alone. As men brought\none fire under control, they were\npiled into specie- buses and\nrushed to another.\nMUST MAKE ROADS\n\"Forest service men, who made\nthe estimate of eight pew fires\nan hour, said it was impossible\nto reach a_ (he fires. Bulldozers\nhad to make roads to others before men armed wi'h _iovels and\nwater ootid start fighting.'\nArt SeMer, own\u00a9: - manager of\nSkyway Air Services at LangJey\non the'lower \u25a0mainl-id' who lias\nfour. water-ttomlMHg.plan-r-s in the\narea, said the best planes oan ds\nis fSgJRt (tpfr-Qm and \"cpoJ-nff\nbe*-spots.\"   '*   V '\nMeaimtae, temperatures were\nfflopeoted to remain in the high\n90s for another two days. The\nonly hope of easing the situation\nwas a moist low .pressure area\n1,000 miles out in the Pacific.\nNuclear\nHolocaust\nForeseen\nWASHINGTON (AP) - A group\nof American scientists foresees a\nnuclear holocaust within 15 yearjj\nif the United States fails to \"make\nmore creative and intensive efforts.\" for arms control agreements with Russia.\nIn a statement Friday on th*\neve of the 15th anniversary of the\nfirst atomic bomb explosion, the\nFederation of American Scientists\ndeclared:\n\"It appears unlikely that the\nworld will avoid a nuclear holoi\ncaust if another 15 years pass\nwithout arms control agreements.\"\nParliament\nFriday       i\n!\nBy The Canadian Press\nOpposition Leader Pearson criticized President Eisenhower for\nplaying golf at a time when the\nWest looks to Washington foe\nstrong, determnied leadership.\nCCF House Leader Hazen Argu*\ncharged that Canadian foreign\npolicy \u2014 too much fo puff, guff\nand bluff \u2014 has been tucked 111\nPresident Eisenhower's golf bag\nin recent weeks.\nExternal Affairs Ministers Green\nvigorously denied opposition assertions that Canada has failed to\ntake an independent stand in foreign affairs.\nMr. Green said Canada is eon-\nvipoed that the U.S. RB-,47. aircraft\nshot down by Russia July 1 In tb\u00ab\nBarents'Sea was many miles oiit-\nside'Soviet t&jitoriU - waters.\nRevenue Minister. Nowlan tabled\nthe 1959-60 report of the CBC which\nshowed that the publicly-owned\ncorporation had a $6,103,722 margin of income over eirpense after\nusing $54,747,000 of a $58,404,000\nparliamentary grant.\nRobichaud\nOptimistic\nBy DON HOYT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nFREDERICTON (CP) - Liberal\nPremier Louis J. Robichaud is\ndetermined and confident that good\nrelations between Frandi and English in New Brunswick will remain\nthat way during his administration's term of office.\nThis, some observers feel, will\nrequire all the skill at the command of the 34-year-old Riohibucto\nlawyer who June 27 became the\nfirst Acadian to lead a New Brunswick political party to power at\nthe polls.\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP> - Canadian\ndollar 1-64 higher at $1.02 1-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n$1.01 29-32. Pound sterling 1-32 low\ner at $2.80 57.64.\n\"Too Many Uncertainties\" in Rights Bill\nBISSELL CHAIRS\nCANADA COUNCIL\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Appointment\nof Dr. Claude T. Bissell. president\nof the University of Toronto, as\nthe new chairman of the arts-\npromoting Canada Council was\nannounced Friday by Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nDr. Bissell, 46, succeeds the\nlate Brooke Claxton. former Liberal defence minister, who died\nof cancer last month at the age\nof 61.\nSCHOOL BRANCHES OUT\nPENTICTON (CP) - The already successful Okanagan Summer School of Fine Arts will\nbranch into another of its varied\nactivities next week with program\nof choral and band clinics. Registration is expected to top 300.\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Canadian Bar Association said\nFriday thai enactment of Prime Minister Diefenbaker's Bill\nof Rights will introduce many uncertainties info Canadian\nlaw which will have to be settled by the courts.\nDonald Mclnnes of Halifax, association vice-president,\ntold a special Commons committee that a \"great deal of\nlitigation will arise out of this bill.\"\nSections of fhe bill referring to fundamental freedoms and human rights would be raised as a defence in\nCanadian courts. ,\nMr.  Mclnnes said various sec-   CTt ,form'   *]e  said-   **<?e  uncer-\ntions of the bill raise uncertain-    aml,es   and. mmy   othJer   <\"*es\nties because it i^f not known to\nwhat extent they modify existing law. One major uncertainty\ngaining force today was whether\nParliament or the provincial legislatures may deal directly with\nhuman rights and fundamental\nfreedoms \"and, if either or both\nmay, the extent to which such\npower may be exercised \"\nIf the bill is enacted in its pres-\ntions   must  be  answered  by  the\ncourts.\n\"There will be great latitude\nfor judicial lawmaking. Lawyers\ngenerally oppose granting wide\ndiscretion to those who must\napply the law. even the granting\nof discretion of our judiciary, for\nwhich we have the highest regard.\n\"It   inevitably   introduces,   for\nsome time at least, uncertainty\ninto the law If the bill in iis\npresent form is enacted, serious\nconsideration should be given to\na thorough review of existing\nlegislation to amend those provisions that may conflict with\nthe bill of rights, not only to restore certainty to the law but to\nassist the courts in applying this\nbill.\"\nMr Mclnnes said that while\nthe bill has limits, many members of the bar association see\nmerit in a measure of this type\nat this stage in Canada's constitutional development.\nMembers of the association\nagreed that human rights and\nfundamental freedoms must be\nprotected. However, they disagreed on whether this should be\naccomplished by a statute\u2014 as\nproposed by the government\u2014or\nby an amendment to the constitution\u2014as proposed by the Commons opposition.\nSaskatchewan\nAfter Bigger\nTax Share?\nREGINA (CP) - Saskatchewan\nlikely will seek increased welfare\npayments at the Dominion-provincial fiscal conference which opens\nJuly 25 in Ottawa.\nOfficially, provincial authorities\nare keeping quiet about what the\nprovince is likely to demand and\nrecommend at the conference.\nHowever, it is no secret that\nthe province wants a bigger share\nof the tax dollar collected by the\nfederal government.\nRetail Sales\nDrop 3.1 P.C.\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canadian retail sales in Msy fell 3.1 per cent\nbelow year - earlier levels, wiping\nout nearly all the advances of\nthe first four months of the year\nThe sharpest declines were In\nBritish Columbia, Saskatchewan\nand Ontario, the bureau of statistics reported Friday.\nIt put the total of May sales\nat $1,407,369,000 as against $1,452,-\n509,000 a year earlier.\nYear-to-year declines of 8.4 per\ncent in B.C., 4.9 per cent in Saskatchewan, 4.1 per cent in Ontario\nand 1.3 per cent in Alberta were\nrecorded.\nTHE INDIANS would like to collect royalties on the pleasure\nthe white man gets from smoking \u2014 and they have a case. Ever\nsince Sir Walter Raleigh was doused with a bucket of water the\nfirst time he was caught smoking, the white race has been on fire.\nThe Idea for an extra one cent tax on a package for the Indians was\nadvanced by Rev. Andre Renaud, director-general of the Indian\nand Eskimo Welfare Commission of the Roman Catholic Oblate\nOrder. Puffing on the original type of pipe Is Gordon Martin, 67,\nMohawk Indian of the Six Nations Reserve at Brantford, Ontario.\nHe thinks the tax is a great Idea.\u2014TNS.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nWHTTEHORSE, Y.T. (CP)\u2014Three brothers and a friend were\nfined $5 each Thursday for illegal fishing.\nWilliam, John and Harry Harach and Andre Wentfng were caught\nfishing from a raft July 12 on MacLean Lake where angling is prohibited under the Yukon's fisheries act.\nTheir paddle? A \"no fishing\" sign.\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)\u2014Agat Miller petitioned Superior Court\nfor a change in his name because, he said, Miller doesn't reflect the\ntrue spirit of his native land, Greece.\nr     He wants it changed to Agathangelos Gregory Melissaratos.\nTOWANDA Pa. (AP)\u2014After Ernest Easton, 26, of Elira, N.Y.,\nbroke out of Jail Thursday night, Sheriff Frank Detrick began questioning other prisoners about the Incident.\nHe was unable to learn anything from them. They told him they\nfailed to notice the departure of the prisoner because they were\nengrossed in watching the Democratic national convention on television in the jail's \"TV room.\"\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Beer drinkers and brewers here turned up their\nnoses Thursday at reports of the newest beverage \u2014 instant beer.\nThe beer \u2014 just add carbonated water \u2014 was anything but an\ninstant success among those interviewed.\nJohn Piesley, brewmaster at Molson's Brewery, said he doubted\nif the brew, developed by Bass Breweries nf Britain, would be the\nsame as real beer.\nOne drinker declared:\n\"Knocking the top off a bottle is instant enough for me.\"\n______\n ****\n-mm\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m^m^^m^^mm^m^mm^mmmmmmmmm^^i\n..,'.. \u25a0'.'.. -   ,1\n\u25a0:'\u25a0 -.'\" -.;\u25a0\u25a0\u2022*- '\n..i.Ji.,-,ll)>,,i,.ii^*lliWW\u00bbiSJfJI(J\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960\nTwo More Forest\nClosures Ordered\nTwo more recreational closures\nwere ordered in the Nelson Forest District by the Minister of\nLands and Forests Friday bringing the total to 12, as large numbers of fires resulting from Wednesday's lightning storm continue\nto burn, forest service officials\nreported  yesterday.\nThere were 33 new fires reported in the district, with 60 still\nburning. A total of 682 men\nthroughout the district were engaged   in  fire-fitting   yesterday\nGuards on the Perry Siding\nblaze which was thought to have\nbeen under control Wednesday bul\njumped its guards Thursday, have\nbeen completed a second time.\nIt is expected that the blaze,\nwhich gatired 50 acres yesterday.\nMODERN\nPRESCRIPTION\nSERVICE\nPrompt, Courteous Service\nWhile You Wait or\nBy Delivery.\n(Service  Is Our Watchword)\nSAMPLE'S\nNelson  Pharmacy Ltd.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n639 Baker St. Phone 1203\nForever\nCoursing to\nIts Destination\nJust as the stream ever\nflows toward the sea, each\nspirit courses ever toward\nit3 eternal home,\nCOMPLETE\nMEMORIAL\nSERVICE\nCREMATIONS\nARRANGED\nNELSON\nFUNERAL\nHOME\n613 Ward St. \u2014Phone 53\nwill be brought under control today by the 140 men and eight bulldozers at the scene.\nTwo Beaver Aircraft, fitted with\nwater tanks, arrived from the Kam\nloops Forest District and bombed\nthis fire yesterday.\nRevelstoke reports 17 fires\nburning in the Columbia Valley,\nwith 115 men fighting them.\nNinety-three men are still working on the Sulphur Creek fire near\nFernie.\nUSE HELICOPTER\nA helicopter was being used to\ntake 4() men and equipment into\na fire above the east fork of the\nWhite River in the Canal Flats\narea. Today it is expected to proceed to the St. Mary's River area\nfor the same purpose, forest officials said.\nA fire was spotted Friday afternoon on Dainard Oreek in Kootenay National Park by a park\nlookout man. Men and equipment\nwere making their way to the\nscene last night.\nOne B-25 aircraft arrived at\nCranbrook Friday night and one\nmore is expected today. The\nplanes wil! be working im the St.\nMary's River area.\nThe two new recreational closures now in ePfect are the Wilson\nCreek watershed north of New\nDenver; Boundary Oreek. Ingram\nCreek. Comtkle Lake watersheds\nincluding an - area beginning at\nWestbridge extending 12 miles and\nspreading to a five-mile width\nfrom Westibridge.\nPilot Don Thomson Of Pacific\nWestern AirJines Ltd., on charter\nto the forest service, and air observer Dave Crawford, left Nelson at 6 a.m. yesterday morning\non reeonnaisarice flights throughout the district and made several\nsupply drops to firefighters during the afternoon and early\nevening.\nMrs. Samuelson\nOf Rossland Dies\nROSSLAND \u2014 Rossland resident\nfor 32 years, Mrs. Dilys Irene\nSamuelson died here Friday at\nthe age of 65.\nMrs. Samuelson was bom in\nNelson OcWbar 7, 1914. She lived\nin Trail for a short lime before\nmoving   to   Rossland.\nShe is survived by her husband,\nRichard Emanuel; two sons at\nhome, Richard G-wylim and Mou-\nrice Emanuel; three daughters.\nMrs. A. E. Underwood and Miss\nAudrey Christine of Rossland and\nMrs. H. J. Kelsall of New Denver; her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. T. Jones of Kaslo; two brothers, William Owen of Rossland\nand John Ivor of Kaslo; two sisters, Mrs, Kenneth Heywood,\nRossland and Mrs. Maxwell McLellan. Hamilton, Ontario and\nfive  grandchildren.\nMrs. Samuelson had been active in community affairs and\nwas a member of St. George's\nAnglican Ohurch.\nWESTERN WINNERS. Trophies captured by Nelson\nTerminal team in Canadian Pacific Railway western lines\nfirst aid competition, and the happy winners are pictured\nhere. Front row, from left, are E. B. White, G. M. Scales,\nA. H. Sinclair, R. F. Wallace and Rudolf Lanki, CPR\npoliceman, kneel beside the Challenge Shield, western\nlines; Busteed Challenge Cup, B.C. Division; and Dr.\nH. A. Beatty Trophy, western lines. Sinclair also holds\nthe Serving Brothers Award oi the St. John Ambulance\nAssociation, a scroll hand lettered in England. At rear\nare G. L. Phillips, superintendent, Kootenay division,\nCPR; and Arnold Bygate, Nelson car foreman.\n\u2014Daiiy Ne-.vs photo.\nNew Features Mark\nCity Financial Report\nBarge May Aid\nCastlegar Ferry\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The department\nof highways is looking into the\nfeasibility of putting on a barge\nwith a tug to relieve the load at the\nferry until the second ferry goes\ninto operation, Donald Brothers,\nRossland-Trail MLA said Friday.\nMr. Brothers emphasized that a\nbarge might not be found to be\nfeasible but it is, being looked into\nby D. F. Martin, regional highways\nengineer at Nelson.\nThe old Nelson ferry is now at\nNakusp and is being welded and reassembled for transport here.\nStarting tomorrow at 5:30 p.m.\nthe ferry will load only from the\nCastlegar side at the ferry on this\nside of the river. No cars will be\nloaded from the Celgar side until\n6 a.m. on Monday.\nThis arrangement will be carried\nout on weekends. During the resl\nof the week cars will be loaded\nfrom both the Celgar and Castlegar sides.\nDedication of Beach\nAt Taghum Recalled\nIn a letter to the editor which was\nreceived too late to be carried in\nthe regular letters-to-the-editor section, Nelson lawyer Leo S. Gansner\nexplains that Taghum beach is\nopen to Ihe public.\nHe was replying to a letter in\nFriday's paper from Mrs. Bertha\niMom) Whyte, which indicated the\nbeach was private property.\nMr. Gansner's letter follows:\n\"I wish to reply to Mrs. Whyte's\nletter published under the headline \"TAGHUM BEACH NOT PRIVATE PROPERTY\". This attractive beach has been enjoyed by the\npublic for many years and unfortunately it has been one of the very\nfew good beaches in the district\navailable for such use.\n\"May I point out that this sandy\nbeach does not belong to Mrs.\nWhyte or her relatives. Their property, consisting of somewhat less\nCastlegar Hospital\nHead To Join BCHIS\nCASTLEGAR - Castlegar District Hospital administrator Jack\nBainbridge has resigned his position here to 'become hospital\nconsultant and inspector with the\nB.C. Hospital Insurance Service\nin  Victoria.\nMr. Bairbridge's resignation is\neffective August .11, but he has\nagreed to stay on here until a replacement is appointed if the\nB.C.H.I.S.   officials   agTee.\nHe came here from Lancaster\nRoyal Infirmary, England in May.\nIi)57 and worked with the architect\non the construction of the Castlegar District Hospital and supervised the purchase of equipment.\nMr. Bain'bridge is President of\nthe Castlegar and District. Chamber of Commerce, was chairman\nof   living   room   learning   group\nduring tlie past year and is one\nof the organizers of Robson\nOhuroh.\nHis new position with B.C.H.I.S.\nwill involve hamdlirg cases referred to him by the B.C HIS\ninvolving patients with hospital\nproblems. The department also\narts as arbitrator or consultant for\nhospitals asking more money frrm\nB.C.H.I S. snd the service feels\nthe request is not subs;antia',\"d.\nAnother duty will be to enceur-\nage hospitals towards accreditation.\nMr. Bainbridge spent four years\nin the British Army and saw service in Burma and India as a\nCaptain Quartermaster and later\nas a Major In charge of demobilization.\nHis wife and two daushtp-rs wil!\naccompany  him  to  Victoria.\nthan twelve acres, ends at an ap-\nj preciable   distance   short   of   the\nbeach itself. The public is entitled\ni to access to this beach not only\nover the water but also through and\nt over the twenty-foot right of way\nestablished by Plan  1271 and de-\nj posited in the Land Registry Office\n1 at Nelson in 1916. This right of way\ninow obstructed by recent fencing'\nwas dedicated by Mr, M. C, Mona\nghan. one of the Kootenay's earliest\npioneers.  His stated purpose was\nto provide access to the beach for\nthe public for all time, lt is a matter  of   regret   that   more   of   our\npioneers did not have the foresight\nand   generosity   to   make   similar\ngestures.\n\"The public in my opinion is also\nentitled to access to the beach over\nthe read which winds through the\nproperty; this read was constructed\nwith public funds at a time when\nIhe property was in use as a relief\ncamp and it has remained in use\nas a road ever since.\n\"Mrs, Whyte is to be commended\ngreatiy for her efforts in tidying up\nthe properly and in making it so\nmuch more pleasant and attractive\nto campers and others. I think,\nhowever, that it should be clearly\nunderstood that neither she nor her\nrelatives are entitled to any title to\nOr ownership of the beach itself. I\nhelieve, too, that it should be publicly stated that no one i.s entitled\nto interfere with the public's right\nof access either through the right\nof way or over the road.\"\nMrs. Whyte telephoned the Daily\nNews to state that her letter had\nconveyer! thp wmn^ impression.\nShe said ihe beach does not belong\nto her sisters.\nI SS Mm\nI Returns Monday\nI Nelson and the Kootenays are\n'receiving wide pubi'icty from the\n;SS Nelson float which is currently\non tour of several Alberta, British\nColumb'a, and Washington centers\nunder the direction of Thomas\nWhitehead.\n, Speci.'il leaflets contributed by\nI Ihe Daily News describing the old\nI SS Nelson ard Kootenay Lake attractions, and souvenir pictures of\nI'he float, are  being distributed.\nTlie f'o-it won a $12\") prize in the\nLe'hbridge parade recently and it\nis believed that it won at least one\nmore. Direct contact with Mr.\nWhitehead while he is on tour h\nalmort impossible as he is en liv\nmove most cf the time. He is expected back in Nelson on Monday\nNelson's new coat of arms in\nfull color heads changes brough!\nabout in the 62nd aanual finan\ncial report for the ye?r ending\nDecember 31, 1959, for the city\nof Nelson, which is now available\nto the public at the city hall.\nThe coat of arms, presented to\nthe city by Lieutenant-Governor\nF. M. Ross at a special cerenuuy\nhere ki early June, adorns the\nfront of the white glossy cover.\nUnlike the past, many of the\nfinancial accounts have been\nspread across adjoining pages to\navoid squeezing them into many\nsmall lines on one page. This\nhas meant an addition cf 16 more\npages in the book, bringi1:\"^ its\ntotal to 48 pages. Color work and\nprinting were by the Daily News\nCommercial Printing Department.\nA new section to this year'?\nbooklet has been the use of tur\ngraphs to indi:a'e simnV ind\nclearly how the city obtains aid\nspends its money, and also a\ngraoh to show th? citv's bond-d\nindebtedness ups-ar.d-downs fur\nthe part ten v<v*rs.\nAnother partition has heen ttv-*\nirclusion of an index for easv\nref\u00b0rence  to  any  -?->e?ia'l  section\nThe bar gra-oh for smerdin-* reveals that education received th*\nbi^est slice of the financial pie.\n^33,256, or 2\\M per cent. Secnd\nbiggest expenditure was on d\u00b0bt\nforges _\"$I9!U25.42 or 13.43 per\ncent.\nBREAKDOWN GIVEN\nPercentage breakdown of other\ndepartments fo'lows wilh the sum\nsoent included in following brackets:    protection   to   nervns   o'd\nTHE WEATHER\nproperty 11:55 per cant '81*24.2*30.-\n85); recreation and community\nservices 10:53 ($113,329,931; capital\nexpenditure from revenue 10.48\n($112,633,591; public works 10.4.1\n($112,272.881; general government\nadministration 8.85 ($95,242.771;\nsanitation and waste removal 5.50\n($o\u00bb,232 77>; social welfare 2.41\n($25,911,331; health 0.17 ($1,808.-\n971.\nThe taxpayers contributed the\nlargest sum to the filling of the\nfinancial pie. 47.14 per cent or\n$507,354.90. Profit on utilities accounted the second greatest sum.\n23.20 per cent or $249,700.91.\nPercentages pf other forms of\nrevenue follow with the sum collected following in brackets: contributions, grants, subsidies 10.64\n($114,479,641; debenture debt\ncharges recovered 8.09 ($87,050,201;\nlicenses and permits 4.46 ($48,-\n052.90'; recreation and community\nservices 2.29 ($24,694.29); deficit\nat end of year 1.61 ($17,332,641;\nfines and costs 1.20 ($12,960.30);\nrents, concessions and franchises\n0.72 ($7,730.48); interet, tax penalities, etc. 0.48 ($5,146.62); miscellaneous  0.17  ($1,791.62).\nTh? brrded indebtedness graph\npoints out th-t the high year for\nNe'son was in 1952 ($1.898,9761,\nand the low in 1955 ($1,143,400).\nThe sum for the year 1959 was\nsecond hi-hest in the 10 years\nrepresented  at $1,689,000.\nNELSON\nWinnipeg .\nRegina\nKimberley\nPenticton\nVancouver\nVictoria\n58    93\n63\n61\n76     Tr\n87      -\n49 92\n56 95\n55     81\nFor the  Finest  in\nPrescription\nService\nCALL 25\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward St\u00bb.\nPhone 25 Nelson\nkmmm Girl\nROOM AIR CONDITIONER\nKeep home and office cool and comfortable. Install a\nGibson Air Conditioner and get refreshing, clean air even\non the* hottest, stickiest summer day. Only Gibson gives\nyou 6-Way COMFORT CONDITIONING.\nPRICED FROM $299.50\nLIBERTY\nAPPLIANCE DEPT.\nPhone   1192\nCity Oldtimer Last\nCity Hall Customer\nMrs. W. G. Brown of 712 Latimer\nStreet had the distinction Friday of\nbeing the last person lo transact\nbusiness in the old city hall.\nThe doors were officially closed\nat 5 p.m. and all city administration will now be carried on in new\nquarters in the old posl office building.\nMrs. Brown has resided in Nelson\nWorld Briefs\nSPONSOR  WITHDRAWS\nLONDON iReuters) - Butlins\nLimited, the holiday camp firm,\nannounced today that fnr the\nfirst time since 19f>3 it will not j\nsponsor a France-F.ngland cross-\nchannel swimming race this\nyear. The reason given was that\nincreases in reservations at Butlin holiday camps resulted in\n\"heavy commitments\" for personnel,\nFIRST TV LINK\nALGIERS. Algeria \u25a0 Renters)\nThe first direct television link\nhetwe-en Paris and Algiers was\nOpened today. Signals were\n'\u25a0earned across the Mediter-\n\u25a0aean via a relay station in the\n3alearic Islands.\nT. COUNCIL DIES\nDURHAM. N.C. (APi-Thomaa\nCouncil, 73, president and\nfounder of the B.C\nCcmpany. . makers of headache\"\npewders and tablets, di\u00b0d Thurs\nday  of   a  cerebral hcimrrhag?.\nsince 1924 and said that she made\na visit to city hall ahout once a\nmonth.\nHer appearance at city hall Friday marked well over 400 visits she\nmade in her 36 years as a Nelso-\nite.\nTotal collected in taxes Friday\nwe not available. On Thursday\ncollections were $36,548, and Tuesday's total of $102,000 was the highest one-day total in the city's history.\nTourist  Services\nConsultant Here\nG. F. Seldo-n, Tourist Services\nConsultant, has been visting Bruce\nClark. Resorts' Association Secretary. Mr. Seldon is dealing with\neducational materia! for hotels,\nrestaurants and motels. He also\nsupplies materials and pro-grams\nto upgrade standards, particularly\ninformation to new operators\nEventually he hopes to start a |\nwaitress training class through j\nmsfht school in the interior, also a{\ntwo-day seminar in this Nelson\narea.\nINVERMERE - Sylvia Walker\ncf Invennore, sponsored by t;lr\nInvermere merchants, was crowned Lake Windermere Mermsdden\nFriday night at a gig-ntic street\ndance held on Bruce Street.\nHer maidens of honor are Cecilia\nWilder, a!?o of Invernere and\nLorraine Florence of Radium\nJunction.\nThe three will partichate in the\nbig pnrade srhedu'ed fir here a!\nrc.rn and will be presort when\nMayor R. K. \u00a3ing o>f Cranbrook\nofficially opens the Invermere Regal!;!.\nMurray McF.irlane cf Cran\nbrork. MP fc- KaM Kootenay.\nwas nnaMe to be presort to open\nthe Regatta due In previous commitment,'; in Ottawa.\nBin ever! cf the two-day-lo-g\ncompetitions will be the two-mile\nmarathon swim in Windermere\nLake wilh entries from Calgary.\nLoth hrid-70 competing against\nthrice  cf  fie   Koolenay.\nOther aoua'i- r;':\"*s will be run\noff al   the same time,\nOilier performers will be water\nskiers frnm 0'??T\" ,-rd K^ow--1\n\u25a0*;kv divers from r>af\"hro\"k. skin\ndivr**-. frcm Calgary, Cranbrook\nend InvermTe.\nNOTICE\nNelson-Creston Social Credit\nConstituency\nNominating Conveiion\nAUGUST 1, AT 8:30 P.M.\nSilver Room, Hume Hotel, Nelson.\nConvention Open to All\nSocial Credit League Members\nSigned\nNelson-Creston  Social Credit  Executive\nU.S. CONDEMNS\nRED DEMAND\nWASHINGTON 'API - The\nUniled States Friday assailed as\n\"intemperate, misleading and irresponsible\" Soviet Premier\nKhrushchev's newest demand that\nthe West stop ils alleged aggression against the Congo.\n\"This is yet another example\nof Ihe current Soviel attempt to\ninflame the international atmosphere,\" the state department said\nProvincial Judge***\nSouaht For\nExhibition  Class\nAn attempt has been made by.\nlhe West Keote-nav F'xtiilvlion arts\nand crafts commillee tn have provincial judges participate at the\nexhibition this fall. Mrs. L. G,\nCatley, committee chairman, said\nFriday.\nLetters have been sent away but\nin word has yel been received to\nbc'ster the committee's hrpes.\nThe arts and crafts commit!.'-*\nis net loo active prior to the exhibition, but when displays arc\nentered the committee sets up tn0\nexhihits.\nRoy? Sentence?*\nTo  Industrial School\nTwo teenage boys were sentenced\nlo Bovs Industrial School at Brandon Like. Vancouver lsl-n-1. for an\nindefinite term Friday in .Juvenile\nCourt.\nThe two tr, ycar-o'.-'s were found\nguilty of stealing a Nelson resident's motorboat for joyriding last\nweekend.\nBoth hoys had been on probation\nat the time and one had been remanded for trial on a breaking and\nentering charge to come up next\nweek.\nWilliam Plotnikcff of Slocan Park\nwas fined $.i0 by stipendiary magistrate W. Evans in provincial court\nwhen he pleaded guilty to a charge\nof driving without due care and attention.\nGas Sales Climb\nVANCOUVER 'CPi - B.C Natural gas sales are soaring ahead\nof 1959 levels, hut sales of B.C\ncrude oil \u2014 hit hy the world surplus \u2014 are well below year ago\nlevels.\nSales of B.C. gas and oil for\nRemcdy-fMay and the first five months o'\nIhe year are revealed in the monthly report of the department of\nmir.es ard petroleum resources.\nMove Safely With\nWEST\nTRANSFER Co.\n\u2022 LOCAL \u2022 CANADA\n\u2022  UNITED STATES \u2022  OVERSEAS\nFree  Estimates Without Obligation\nPhone  33\nNELSON, B.C.\n719  Baker St.\nNEW\nHOMELITE\nCHAIN SAWS\nDIRECT DRIVE GEAR DRIVE\n9Q\u20acj\\    \\900\/\nONE-MAN\nSAWS I\nMan-siied power for a man-sized job! At last,\nyou can lop alt production records with a\nchain saw that finishes arty job faster, easier\nand with less operator fatiguel\n\u2022 PERFECTLY BALANCED\n\u2022 900D WEIGHS ONLY 23 POUNDS... 900G\nJUST 26 POUNDS (LESS BAR AND CHAIN).\n\u2022 HEFTS EASILY INTO ANY POSITION\n\u2022 RUGGEDLY   BUILT . . . DESIGNED   TO   LAST\n\u2022 ECONOMICAL  TO   RUN . . . CUTS  MAINTENANCE AND OPERATING COSTS\nA FREE DEMONSTRATION will soon convince you\nthat nothing beats these Homelite Giants for extra\nproduction ... extra profit! Just one cut and you'll\ndiscover.. . you reach for the best, when you reach\nfor a Homelite!\nHOMELITE\nSALES & SERVICE  LTD.\n536 Stanley St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 3*402\n Wll!m9ll'lllrr^***m*****mmmmmuummmmmmm\nProgress Report\nOn Columbia Due\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Anticipation\nthat a progress report can be issued shortly to the Canadian and\nAmerican governments was expressed Friday by negotiators\nworking on a treaty for joint development of the Columbia River.\nA communique issued after a\nfifth round of talks starting Thursday said a substantial measure of\nagreement was reached on important issues \"and it is anticipated\nthat the negotiators will shortly be\nable to submit a progress report.\"\nThe meeting had been set back\nwhile the federal and British Columbia governments met to shore\nup a united front to present the\nArnercian negotiators. Differences\nhave exisited on the question of\nfederal assistance and what projects should come first in the development of Columbia hydro and\nflood control projects.\nMEET NEXT WEEKEND\nThe sixth negotiating meeting\nwill be in Washington next weekend, said Ihe communique. Ils con-;\ntents raised the question whether I\nthe treaty still might be ready in'\ntime for ratification at this session |\nof Parliament, as expressed early\nthis year before talks began.\nHowever, it was understood that\nit may be some time yet before all\nthe details \u2014 technical and other-\nwies \u2014 are ready for that step. Alter studying the work done Thursday and Friday a further meeting\nbetween the federal and B.C. governments may be called.\nIt was understood that the progress reports, if published by the\ntwo governments, will simply set\nout accomplishments so far. One\nsource indicated publication would\nbe welcomed by the Canadian government to end speculation about\nwhat pitfalls and accomplishments\nhave been encountered so far.\nJustice Minister Fulton and E. F.\nBennett, U.S. under-secretary of\nthe interior, again headed the two\nnegotiating teams.\nMotor Caravan Aims For Intnl.\nRoad From Alaska To Guatemala\nBy BOB TRIMBEE\nCanadian   Press   Staff   Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The aim\nis a 6,000Hmile international highway  from   Nome,   Alaska,   to\nGuatemala in Central America.\nThe idea for promoting ft is a\n1,000-car  motor  caravan  travell\ning from Weed, Calif., to Dawson\nCreek,  B.C.,  this fall.\nBehind the ambitious plan Is\nthe Okanogan Cariboo Trail Association, a group of energetic\n\u25a0boards of trade, newspapers,\ntourist groups and civic organizations.\nHearing Aid\nSpecialist\nTo hold FREE\nconsultation Saturday,\nJuly 23\n10 a.m.  to 8 p.m.  at the        Mr. A. C. Gorllng\nHume Hotel, Nelson, B. C.\nA widely known hearing aid specialist\nwill be here for this one day consultation to make\nfree hearing tests and evaluate your hearing. He is\na factory-trained Certified Beltone Hearing Aid\nSpecialist with many years' experience in fitting\nhearing aids.\nIf you have a hearing problem, you are invited to\neorne in for a free hearing test and demonstration of\nthe famous Beltone Hearing Glasses. No Obligation.\nDoor Prizes and a Free Hearing Test\nDON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO TRY\nir Th\u00ab World's Most Attractive  Streamlined  Hearing\nGlasses.\nir The Smallest, Lightest and Most Comfortable Behlnd-the-\nEar Aid Ever Created by Beltone.\nE. C. GORLING & CO., LTD.\n524 West Pender Street Vancouver 2, B.C.\nNOTICE OF\nCLOSURE\nSECTION  120, SUBSECTION   1, \"FOREST ACT\"\nIn view of ihe hazardous condition of the forest cover\nand pursuant lo Ihe provisions of Section 120 of the \"Forest\nAct\", the areas hereinbelow described are hereby declared\nto be closed districts as from midnight 'Pacific Daylight Saving Time', Friday, .July 15, I960, and that no person shall\nenter or be in these closed areas lor the purpose of travelling,\ncamping, fishing, hunting, berry picking, recreation, prospecting for minerals or any olher like purpose, without first obtaining from an officer of the Forest Service a written permit\ntherefor, until further notice.\nRay Williston,\nMinister of Lands and Forests.\nDescription  of Closed  Areas\nNEW DENVER  RANGER  DISTRICT:\nArea No. 2fi. All that portion of the watershed of Wilson\nCreek (being a creek flowing southerly into\nSlocan Lake and situated approximately two\nmiles north of New Denver), lying to the north\nof District Lot 13113, Kootenay Land District,\nsave and except that portion of the watershed\nof Fitzstubbs Creek lying to the west of the\njunction of Bremner Creek.\nKETTLE VALLEY  RANGER  DISTRICT:\nArea No. 29. All that portion of the watershed of Boundary\nCreek lying upstream frnm the junction of\nWallace Creek and situated approximately two\nmiles north of Greenwood, Similkameen Division of Yale Land District.\nArea No. 32. All that portion of the watershed of Ingram\nCreek (being a tributary of the Kettle River\nand situated approximately four miles west of\nMidway), lying upstream from the north boundary of Lot 849, Similkameen Division of Yale\nLand District.\nArea No. 37. All of the watersheds of Conkle and Ed James\nCreeks (being tributaries of the West Kettle\nand the Kettle Rivers respectively in the vicinity\nof Westbridge) together with all those portions\nof the watersheds of Johnstone and Jolly Creeks\n(being tributaries of Rock Creek and situated\napproximately two and one-half to six miles\nwest of Rock Creek), Similkameen Division of\nYale Land District.\nArea No. 50. All that parcel or tract of land in Similkameen\nDivision of Yale District, lying between the\nKettle River and the West Kettle River north\nof the settlement of Westbridge and south of\nthe northerly hourdaries of the watersheds of\nTaurus Creek and Ouellette Creek.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960 \u2014 3\nWith little financial support but\nplenty of drive, they plan tiie\nmotorcade to draw attention to\nthe importance and tourist potential of Highway 97.\nFIVE-DAY DRIVE\n\"We have to limit the size of\nthe caravan either to 1,000 cars\nor 3,000 persons because that's\nthe amount of accommodation\navailable at Dawson Oreek,\" said\nJack Bews of Keiowna, B.C.,\nsecretary of tiie Canadian section\nof tihe association.\n\"The caravan will start at\nWeed Sept. 4 and pick up cars I\nas it moves northward. It will |\nreach Dawson Creek five days i\nlater and be met by another |\ncaravan from Fairbanks, Alaska. I\nAt Dawson Creek we'll hold our ;\n30th annual convention.\" j\nThrough the scenic Okanogan,\nCariboo and Peace River districts the caravan, expected to\nstretch 10 miles along tihe highway, will be escorted by the\nRCM'P. Govern ment officials\nfrom British Columbia, Washington State, Oregon, California and\nAlaska will meet the group at\nDawson Oreek.\nEn route travellers will be\ntreated to fish fries, moose barbecues, tours of orchards and oil\nfields  and  trout fishing.\nORGANIZED IN  1930\n\"It will definitely be the largest\ncaravan of ils type ever staged\nin the West, perhaps in North\nAmerica,\" said Bews.\nOCT A was organized by a\ngroup of hotel and restaurant\noperators from Washington and\nB.C. at Kamloops, B.C., Oct. 19,\n1930. Five months later it was incorporated in Canada and seven\nmonths  after that in the U.S.\nToday the organization has\nbeen expanded to include olher\ngroups interested in pooling resources to promote travel and\nimprovement on U.S.-B.C. High- j\nway 97. '\nThe group's first project was ;\nto got bolh U.S. and Canadian .\nofficials to designate the route as J\nHighway 97. The designation is \u25a0\ngiven to about 3,000 miles of con-1\nnectircg highway between Weed\nand  Fairbanks.\nPARALLELS   COAST\nFrom Weed, 308 miles northeast of San Francisco near the\nCalifornia - Oregon border, to\nDawson Oreek, near tiie Alberta\nborder 310 miles northwest of Edmonton, is a distance of 1,460\nmiles.\nThe highway runs through the\nheart of Oregon and Washington\nroughly parallel to the Pacific\ncoast and crosses into B.C. just\nsouth of Penticton, It weaves\nthrough Penticton, Keiowna and\nKamloops a n d northward to\nPrince George before branching\nnortheast to Dawson Creek.\nThere it connects with the\nAlaska Highway for the 1.523\nmiles to Fairbanks. There is no\ndirect road route from Fairbanks\nto Nome, on the tip of the Alaska\ncoast 500 miles west. At Weed,\nHighway 97 connects with Highway 09 which runs to Mexicali,\nMexico. The southward extension\nto Guatemala is another project j\nof tihe future. '\nSupporting its contention that,\nthe route is important, the asso- j\nciaion points to increase in traffic in the last 12 years. In 1048\nabout 175,000 people checked\nthrough the Canadian customs at\nOsoyoos on the B.C.-Washington\nborder. Last year there were\nmore   than   476,000.\nNELSON CALLER BUSY. A popular caller at two-day square dance in Vernon\nwas J. G. (Jimmy) James of Nelson, shown here as he kept the square dancers flying in the street. His calling and ready humor won commendation of the dancers.\n\u2014Photo by Douglas MacArthur, Trail.\nCominco Offer to Revive\nCoast Copper Mine Studied\nCranbrook Airport\nGains Night Lighting\nCRANBROOK - Cranbrook *s\nmunicipal airport is now equipped\nwith low intensity lighting Uie\nlength of ils runway, installed in recent weeks at a cost of $13,700 by\nWurtsnen Electric Ltd. of Edmonton on contract with the Department of Transport.\nSince the completion of the installations the system has been formally turned over to the city by\nthe Department of Transport, and\nthe airport is now authorized for\nnight landings of aircraft.\nThe field lights are especially designed for airport use, and are\nlocated at about 200-foot intervals\non either side of the length of the\nlanding strip. They have red and-\nor green glass covers with two-color\ncovers indicating exact location of\nthe taxi runway at the south end of\nthe strip.\nTheir operation is controlled by\ntwo panels, one inside the Canadian\nPacific airlines office building and\nthe other a locked panel outside the\nbuilding for quick action in runway\nillumination for aircraft in distress\nover this valley in fhe event the office is unoccupied at the time of\nemergency.\nControl panel allows 10, 30 or 100\npercent lighting from the lights\nstringing the runway, depending\non the appropriate intensity for\nweather and visibility conditions.\nTlie revolving light beacon is also\noperating nights at present.\nThe Department of Transport has\nalso confirmed that it will share\n\u25a0with the city cost of converting the\nAn offer which will permit the\nCoast Copper mine to be brought\ninto production has been made by\nthe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, according to W. G.\nJewitt, president of Coast Copper\nCompany, Limited. Terms of the\nproposed agreement have been\ncommunicated to the shareholders\nof Coast Copper by its directors,\nwho recommend acceptance. A\nshareholders meeting has been called for August 2, I960, to decide on\nthe proposal.\nCoast Copper owns a mining\nproperty located on the northern\npart of Vancouver Island, about 25\nmiles southwest of Port McNeil by\nroad. The company was organized\nin 1916, but the mine has never\nproduced.\nUnder terms of the offer Cominco\nwould underwrite a share issue by\nCoast Copper to raise approximate- j\nly $1,180,000 for underground equip- j\nment, preproduclion development j\nand working capital. Additionally j\nCominco would build a concen-!\ntrator, power plant, camp, auxil- j\niary buildings and provide other I\nsurface equipment for Coast Cop-j\nper's use on a toll basis. A recap- j\nitalization would be necessary to I\nsimplify the debt structure of the I\ncompany and finance the $1,180,000\nrequired.\nThe ore position of Coast Copper\nis described as a \"salvage\" situation. Detailed work at the property,\nparticularly the program carried\nout by Cominco in 1955 and 1956,\nand a check diamond drilling program later, place ore reserves at\n2,000,000 tons assaying 2.5 per cent\ncopper, with little possibility of\nfinding more ore.\nUnderground exploratory work\nhas been undertaken at the property intermittently from the organization of the company until 1930.\nThis was carried out and largely\nfinanced by Cominco, which now\nholds 122,505 out of 200,000 issued\nshares. Indebtedness of Coast Copper consists of $750,000 in bonds of\nwhich Cominco holds $722,000, past\nadvances by Cominco amounting\nto about $1,182,000. and $80,500 for\nCominco's  expenditures in recent\nyears. The bonds are long overdue\nas to principal and interest.\nRefinancing terms call for an\nincrease in authorized capita! by\n150,000 Class A common shares,\n250,000 Class B common shares,\nand 50,000 ordinary common\nshares. The reorganization is designed to simplify the debt structure and to finance underground\npreparation and equipment.\n12 Castlegar\nCadets to Camp\nCASTLEGAR - Twelve cadets\nfrom 581 squadron are leaving by\nC.P.A. on Sunday for two weeks\ncamp al Sea Island R.C.A.F. Station. They will be accompanied by\ntheir Commanding Officer, P*,0. R.\nMcBain.\nThe boys are T. Batchelor, Rt.\nBatting, G, Bv). D. Butler, P.\nCrane, D. Hackman, G. lnfanti,\nD. .Jones, A. McMaster, T. Myers,\nD. Sohwartzenhauer and D. Shea.\nEmphasis at camp is on athletics\nand sports and the boys will get\nfamiliarization flights and various\nconducted tours of the city.\nThere are only three of these |\ncamps in Canada and the one at\nSea Island takes boys from as far\neast as Saskatchewan.\nEach group is accompanied by\none or more of their own officers,\nand the camp accomodates approximately 160 cadets.\n32  Kimberley\nBoys at Camp\nKIMBERLEY - Thirty-two boys\nare attending Junior Forest Warden Camp at Rock Lake camp.\nLeaders are David Campbell of the\nCanadian Forest Association, Vancouver; Del Joulie, Al Moon. Ken\nBarraclough and Alan Jones. M.\nBeduz is camp cook.\nLocal wardens are sponsored by\nthe Knights of Pythias and have a\nparent council to handle finances.\nA yearly grant of $300 is made\nby the Community Chest.\nPLAYGROUNDS AT\nKIMBERLEY BUSY\nKIMBERLEY - Kimberley and\ndistrict supervised summer playgrounds are in full swing, with a\nwide variety of special events,\narts and crafts, sports, nature\nhunts, safety lessons, camping\nand group games on the agenda.\nR. A. Debuysscher is director\nand Gloria Seredick is assistant\ndirector.\nInstructors at the various parks\narc:\nChapman Camp, Judy Jordan.\nRolary, Barbara McArthur and\nBeverley Hutton.\nMcDougall Park, Elinor Wilson\nand Jean McConnachie.\nLifeguards are Colin Patterson\nand Milton Howe.\n25 Pass Piano\nAt Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Results of Royal\nConservatory of Music, Toronto,\npiano examinations held recently in\nKimborley are:\nGrade X \u2014 Louise Leveque, pass.\nGrade IX \u2014 Cheryl Warren, pass. I\nGrade VIII \u2014 Alonna Kuhnertj\nand Marianne Hawkins, pass. j\nGrade VII \u2014 Cynthia Spinks, first'\nclass honors. j\nGrade VI \u2014 Barbara Freeze, i\nKatbryn Sorenson and Leiana\nDavies, Vionors; Carol Lefevre andj\nKathleen Johnson, pass.\nGrade V \u2014 Susan Gallpen, first:\nclass honors: Craig Williams, hon-j\nors; David Lowe, pass. i\nGrade IV \u2014 Donna Worth and\nVega Warren, honors; Nancy Mason, pass.\nGrade III \u2014 Mary A. Nicholson,\nSally Hammond and Jacquie Day,\nhonors.\nGrade II \u2014 Frances Wilkinson,\nJerene Armstrong and Gilliam\nHoward, first class honors; James\nReid, pass.\nGrade 1 \u2014 Catherine Gilmar,\npass.\nExaminer was E. Rollinson of the\nRoyal Conservatory of Music.\nSweepstake\nWinners\nUnchanged\nVANCOUVER (CP) - When you\nsuddenly win $140,000 in a sweepstakes, things are bound to change.\nYou throw a party, then quit\nyour job and take a long vacation.\nThen you buy a now car, think\nabout a second one \u2014 and settle\ndown to a life of optimum security.\nThe relaxed approach to Irish\nSweepstake winning is the contribution of Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Gilbert,\nwho won $140,000 when Merryman\nII won the Grand National on\nMarch 26.\nThe money (has not changed\ntheir lives a bit, and Bhey still have\nmost of the sum.\nMrs. Nora Gilbert, 35, who drew\nthe winning horse, quit her job at\na department store.\nElwin Gilbert, 38, kept his job\nat a brewery.\nThey built a three-bed room\nhome, laid wall-to-wall carpel and\nhad the fireplace made of Mexican\nsandstone.\n\"We had plenty of calls, and\nthey all wanted money,\" Mr. Gil\nbert said. \"One of them wanted\n$8000.\"\nThere was a rumor too. he said\nthat they had bought a 'fleet of\npink Cadillacs.\nMrs. Gilbert said it felt wonder\nful fo have security for the rest of\nher life.\nArena Vote\nTuesday at\nKimberley\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Ratepayers will\ngo to the polls Tuesday to express their opinions on the $120,000\narena bylaw.\nThi.s amount is needed to com\nplete the $1132.000 arena, situated\nadjacent to Rolary Park; $212,000\nhas already been spent on the\nproject, and many hours of volunteer labor have been spent in its\nconstruction.\nThirty men working on the Co\nminco steel mill have volunteered\nto install all piping and rcfrigera\ntion, but acceptance of the offer\nwill depend on tho results of the\nvote, as money to purchase ma\nterial  is  nol  available.\nSilverton Claims\nShow Promise\nSILVERTON - Mr. and Mrs. A\nJ. Kesler have returned to Silver-\nton to take up residence and work\non their claims. The claims show\ngood promise of having high silver\nvalue and promise of large ore\nbodies at deplh.\nhazard beacon flasher outside\nsoutheast city limits from battery\nto continuous power supply. City\nelectrical crew under direction of\nSuperintendent George Burch will\nundertake extension of city power\nsupply to the location between\nKootenay Orchard and Horie Subdivision with cost estimated at\nabout $2,000.\nR. (. Rose\nOf Rossland\nPasses at 52\nROSSLAND \u2014 The manager of\nthe bus depot here, Robert Cecil\nRose died suddenly Thursday at\nMater Misericordiae Hospital, five\ndays short of his 53rd birthday.\nMr. Rose collapsed at work and\nwas rushed to hospital.\nMr. Rose, who was horn in Pretoria, South Africa, had lived in\nCanada 3t years. He had spent\n23 years in British Columbia and\nthe last 14 years in the Rossland-\nTrail area.\nA past master of the Corinthian\nLodge No. 27, AF & AM, he was\nalso a worthy patron of Alpha\nLodge No. 1, OES.\nWell known for his activities in\nthe Rossland Community Athletic\nAssociation, Mr. Rose was, in particular, an enthusiastic curler.\nHe is survived by his wife,\nGladys Myrtle; one daughter, Mrs.\nO. H. Svennes, Lethbridge, Alta.;\nthree sons, Alan James in Olds,\nAlta.: Robert Everett in Lethbridge, Alta.: and Larry Donald\nat home; and three sisters, Mrs.\nR. E. Maybank and Mrs. J. Conrad\nin Olds, Alta., and Mrs. H. W.\nGooder in Calgary.\nLodge and public funeral services will take place Saturday\nafternoon at the Rossland Masonic\nTemple. Interment will follow on\nMonday in the family plot at\nEagles Hills Cemetery, Olds,\nAlberta.\nBUY KOOTENAY\nBLEACH\n32 OZ.\nMORE\nFor Your Money\n\/\/\nChoquettP\nFUELS\nPHONE  530\nRange and Furnace\nGait Coal\nSummer   Discounts\nORDER NOW!\n\/\/\nKAMLOOPS ICP) - Five ope-1\nrations at Royal Inland hospital\nwere cancelled because no beds\nare available for incoming patients, a spokesman said Thursday\nHe said the adult surgical and\nmedical wards and the pediatric\nward are full. Tlie patients due\nfor operations would have to waif\nuntil space is available.\nMarysville  Park\nTables  Damaged\nMARYSVILLE - Vandalism at\nthe village's central park has resulted in removal of all picnic\ntables from that raea.\nThe move was decided on hy\nthe local recreation commission\nas a result of deep knife carvings.\nWaler hoses are also being slashed\nwith   knives.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Detectives said Helen Smith told them\nthe writing on the small pad they\nfound in her suite was a cooking\nrecipe, although it listed six horses running at Hollywood racetrack. But she was acquitted of\ncharges of operating a betting\nhouse when she told police she\nhad written down the names, intending ot make a bet, then forgot about them beoause it was\nhe\u00bb birthday.\nRe: CASTLEGAR FERRY\nDue to traffic congestion on the\nCastlegar Ferry (Castlegar Landing)\ntraffic will not be loaded from the\nCelgar Road between 5:30 p.m., Friday, until 6:00 a.m., Monday. During\nthese hours all ferry traffic must line\nup in one single lane on the Castlegar\nside of the ferry approach.\nNelson, B.C.,\nJuly 14, I960.\n<D.J>. VriaJdirL\nRegional Engineer.\nBy GREYHOUND\nTWO\nWEEKS\nWITH\nplay!\nWhethor yon choose a vacation of\nsun, sand anrl surf - or big city\nexcitement - make wire your flirst\nchoice is Greyhound. That wa\u00aby;\nyou're sure of having fun al'l tha\nway with more money to spend at\nyour destination because Gre-j'hovmd\ni-s today's best travel buy!\nLOOK AT THESE LOW\nROUND TRIP FARES\nFrom\nNELSON\nTo\n$27.20\n22.05\nVancouver\nBanff\nRadium\nHot Springs   14.60\nLake Louise     24.50\nSee your local Greyhound Agent for full\nInformation \u2014 in Nelson, the Greyhound\nBus Depot, 686 Baker\nStreet, Phone 800.\n ****m\n***\n\u2022Nrtemt latly Nwua\nestablished April 22, 1903 Nelson. B.C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bakoi Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in tbe centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in tbe Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa\nC.  W. RAMSDEN,  Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON. Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRE8S\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS'   ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CUMULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ol all nows   -\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper, and also the local news published therein.\nFor What Profiteth It a Man...\nWe have always been led to believe that the U.S. la not only the land\nof the brave but the home of the free;\nwhere all are equal, where there is\nno aristocracy and no caste system;\nwhere togetherness has been brought\nto a fine art and every man ia as good\nas his neighbor; and all, whatever their\nsocial Btatus, live together in a society\nwhich recognizes a man's worth and\nnot his position. And now we are disillusioned.\nModern Office Procedures maga-\nrine says that though many U.S. corporations pride themselves on being\none big happy family where top executives are called by their first names\nand the president's door is open to\nall, it just isn't so.\nCompany executives, the survey\nshoes, have adopted the motto, \"Discipline must be preserved,\" and are\nstrongly in favor of the caste system.\n\"Someone,\" Ihey say, \"has to give\norders; someone has to take them. If\nthe relation between supervisor and\nsubordinate is fettered by friendship,\nthe company loses.\"\nWe have always had the belief\nthat a man is known by the company\nhe keeps, and as the future executive\nstep by step advances to hiB high\noffice, he discards his old friends. Noth\ning is said of making new friends, for\nthe company prefers that it be his only\nfriend, but advice is given on how to\npractice the gentle art of disentanglement from friendship with the lower\norders, without embarrassment to those\nworthy people and with no loss of\ndignity.\nOnce having withdrawn from\nfriendships beneath his position he is\nin a position to be tough with his\nformer friends and subordinates, to\nreprove them and fire them when\nnecessary for the good of the company,\na phrase which now replaces the army\none, \"for the good of the service.\"\nYes, the good of a company which\nIs not content with hiring a man to\nwork for it but needs must play god\nand remake him after their own image\n\u2014 a souless cog in a machine lo make\nprofits.\nBut what can it profit the executive\nif he goes through life treading on his\nfriendships to reach a higher level?\nMan does not live by bread alone and\nthe friendships he makes through life\nnourish his soul. It would be unfortunate, if after a lifetime of devotion to\nthe company, he retired to a wilderness without one friendship not based\non self Interest, with only his pension\nand not even a sense of importance\nto sustain him.\nInterpreting the News\nBy DAVID ROWNTREE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe Security Council's action in\naDproving a United Nations force for\nthe Congo is perhaps the one chance\nto avert total chaos in the new repub-\nlie\nBelgium's abrupt withdrawal\nfrom the Congo June 30 left Premier\nPatrice Lumumba's government in an\nunenviable position. Lumumba controls only 35 ol the 137 scats in parliament. He is unable or unwilling to\ndeclare a vigorous national policy.\nThe country is still almost helpless without Belgian support but Lumumba doesn't want Ihe Congolese to\nget the impression that they must still\nlean on their former masters. His action in cutting diplomatic relations\nwith Belgium will only hasten the\nflight of Belgian capital, civil servants\nand technical knowledge that the Congo can ill afford to lose.\nWhen the Belgians left, it was\nthought that Lumumba's main asset\nin the shaky situation would be the\nCongo army, colled the Force Publique\nBut the troops mutinied against\ntheir Belgian officers As much as\nanything, this rebellion moy hove\nbeen caused by Lumumba's unwillingness to make it clear that independence wouldn't mean the complete removal of every sign of the European\npresence\nHowever, the Lumumba government explained its request for UN\nmilitary help by saying that Belqium\nhad committed \"an act of aggression\"\nin sending paratroops to the Congo to\nprotect its citizens from the fury of\nthe rebellious Congolese soldiers\nPrime Minister Macmillon hos\nexpltined why Britain abstained from\nvoting nn the Security Council proposal, along with France and Nationalist China The way the resolution\nwas worded, ot the demand of Russia\nand some African states, Belgian\ntroops must withdraw before their UN\nreplacements arrive\nThis would create a vacuum ond\nMacmillan may have feared that\nGhana, which offered troops to help\nLumumba earlier this week, or Russia, which in similar situations hos\nspoken of sending \"volunteers,\" might\ntry to fill the vacuum ond create new\ndlfcrders\nBritain, with enough problems of\nher own in Africa, is moving cautiously over the Congo uproar. The British\ngovernment was embarrassed last\nweekend by a request for troops or\nsoldiers from Rhodesia to move into\nthe Congo province of Katanga.\nMoise Tshombe, the Katanga\nprovincial premier, apparently believes his future would be brighter if\nhe encouraged European mining interests with valuable investments in\ncopper and uranium by the prospect\nthat Katanga will go through with its\nthreat of secession from the Congo\nand perhaps later merge with the\nRhodesian Federation.\nThis would be disastrous for the\nremainder of the Congo because Katanga spells the difference between a\npotentially rich country and comparatively impoverished one.\nThe A\u00a3e Of\nEnlightenment\nAt Pittsburgh, 30 people have spent\ntwo weeks in a sealed-ln H-bomb\nshelter, where all Iheir day-to-day\nwants were supplied. At the Same time,\nat Denver, a missile manufacturer has\ndesigned a lunar home in which it is\nsaid five men could live indefinitely,\ngrowing their own animal and plant\nlife which would even Irade their carbon dioxide and oxygen supplies.\nAgain at the same time, and in the\nsame country, scientists have been\nsending signals into space in the hope\nof communicating wilh living beings\non the planets ol other solar systems.\nThus historians of the future will\nhave two curious achievements of\nthese times to record (and to rationalize, if they can): 1, self-contained\nhomes were firsl fashioned, not for\nsocial living, but fo frustrate man's\nhostility on earth and cosmic hostility\non the moon; 2, the richeBt country,\nwhile soliciting friendly dialogue with\nunknown beings in space, was not on\nspeaking terms with the most populous\ncountry on earth. People, as the comic\nstrip character once said, are funnier\nlhan anybody.\nIt's Been Said\nOhslina-v and vehemency in opinion are\nlh\" surest  proof nf stupidity\n- Bernari* Bartm.\nF. B. Pearce,..\n,. .Writes\nN<sw it came to pass ln the day\u00bb of\nToml the judge that a decree went\nforth from the Public Health Department aaying: \"Thou shalt not bathe In\nthe Lake, neither thou nor thy children\nfor the waters thereof are unclean.\nAnd the people murmured saying:\nWhat is this PHD that it should do this\nthing? Are not the waters of the Lake\nours by right and shall we not bathe\nin them as we choose? Who made this\ndepartment a ruler over us?\nBut the Council ipake to the people\nsaying: It 1b the government which\ndoeth these things and who shall prevail against it? Therefore thou shalt\nnot bathe in the waters of the Lake\nlest a heavy punishment befall thee.\nVerily it is for thine own good.\nSo the people constrained themselves and forebore from bathing in\nthe Lake. Nevertheless they ceased\nnot to murmur.\nThen came one in haste saying:\nThe Gyro Pool is broken and the\nwaters escape therefrom. And the\nCouncil replied: Lo this has been\nknown for these many months. It is\nbroken and useless and cannot be repaired. Now let us, therefore, build\nanother in the Uphill Park.\nMoreover the PHD hath condemned\nthe pool saying: that the waters thereof\nare unclean. Thou shalt not bathe in it\nneither shall thou use it. Thou shalt\nbuild another in a far place and thou\nshall fence it lest 11 be prolaried by\nlewd persons of the baser sort. And the\nwaters of chlorination shall flow\nthrough lt and II shall be a delight to\nthe senses and all the children of Nelson shall sport therein. Neither germ I\nnor microbe shall assail them and they i\nshall grow and flourish like the green\nbay tree and their happiness shall be\nexceeding great.\nBut the people continued to murmur\nsaying, give us again our Gyro Pool. .\nHave we not always bathed in it, have j\nnot our children also sported therein\nand shall we listen to the voice of the I\nPHD and do this vile thing? |\nAnd   certain  women   hearing   this\nbanded   themselves  together   saying: I\nLet us speak softly to the Council lhat\nthey may give us again our pool. I\nSo it came to pass that as the !\nCouncil sat within\nwomen came, a very great number,\nand they filled the chamber and they\nspake to the Council saying: Give us\nagain our pool for our children and\nour hearts are full of wrath.\nAnd when the councillors saw the\nwomen and perceived the number of\nthem, their hearts failed within them |\nand they repented themselves of the\nwords they had said. i\nThen said they to the women. As j\nthou desirest, so shall it be. The inflow j\nand the outflow will we enlarge and i\nthe water shall again flow in the pool\nand  the   children   shall   sport  themselves therein.\nThen returned the women, each to\nher own house, rejoicing greatly for in\nthe words of many women there is\nwisdom and who shall gainsay them\nwhen they speak?\nThe Amazing Results of  Positive Thinking\nRight Mental Diet Essential\nFourth of 12 articles excerpted\nfrom  \"The  Amazing Results of\nPositive Thinking.\"\nBy NORMAN VINCENT PEALE\nHow good lt Is to be allvel What\na glorious morning! I've really\nnever felt better. This promises to\nbe a wonderful day.\nYour physical condition has a lot\nto do with your ability to enjoy life.\nWhen you are refreshed and re\njuvenated, life takes on new meaning. Proper exercise and proper\nrest are essential ingredients of\njoyful emotions.\nSo, the first step in attaining this\nwonderful sense of the deep fun of\nlife is to feel right. And treat your\nbody right if you want your feelings to be right.\nAnd the second step is to think\nright. Treat your mind right. Think\npositively.   The   positive   thinker\ntrains  himself  in  the  attitude  of by   doing   a   constructive   job   on\nJoy. He expects it, and then he\nfinds It. What you look for, you\nwill find \u2014 that is a basic law of\nlife. Start looking for Joy and you\nwill find it. For when you look for\nit, you will be able to see and\nrecognize It,\nThe thing that determines\nwhether or not a person Is happy\nIs an Inward state or condition.\nIt Is what goes on in the mind\nthat tells the story of whether you\nare happy and positive or sad and\nnegative. Marcus Aurellus said,\n\"No man is happy who does not\nthink so.\" William Lyon Phelps remarked, \"The happiest person is\nhe who thinks the most interesting\nthoughts.\"\n*   *   *\nSo, if you're not happy, you can\nexperience  this deep  fun in  life\n^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii:\n! Your Individual I\n'miimiiiiiiii  gv  prances  Drake   iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii'*'\nFor Sunday, July 17, I960\nLook in the section in which your essential  tasks.   Spend  day  with\nbirthday   comes   and   find   what j thoughts of health, family, recrea-\nyour outlook is, according to the: lion. Consider needs of others,\nstars, j    NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\nMARCH 21 lo APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Quiet acceptance of facts, the\nwill to be inventive, stamina for\ndiffioult tasks are top aids, tiili-\ngently pursue essentials. Disposition must be even, cordial as heretofore.\nAPRIL 2! to MAY 21 (Taurus)\u2014\nComposure necessary when times\ntry. Give due honor required today.\nYou shall reap benefits. Aim\nstraight, don'l forsake simplicity.\nWholesome    activities    foremost.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Geminil-\nNeedless   work,   raucous   sports,\nrough play tabu. Friendly for per-1 jane'doi'es\nsonal,  family matters.  Enjoy  di\nverting leisure.\nJUNE 22 lo JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nToday will be much ss you make\nit. Self-discipline makes us all\nbeter. Charitable thoughts, acts\nbring us closer together, earns\ngratitude of the less fortunate.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo>~\nThe quieter you spend day, the\nhappier, more rested you will be.\nHelp soothe others' harried\nthoughts. Start day right attending\nto important family matters.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Have pleasantries. You\ncan be entertaining, sympathetic;\nthis period needs both. Confidential\n21   (Sagittarius)  -  Hold  self  in\ncheck, thus insure pleasanter day\nfor   you.   yours.   Remember   any,\ndeed of mercy you can perform, [thinks\nVisit shut-ins. the infirm.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) -\u00bb. Indications point to\nuseful, constructive day If you wish\nand work to make it so. Can be\ndiversified, offers new ways to use\nyour talents to good purpose.\nJANUARY 21 lo FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Added self-control,\nunselfish attitude stressed. Heed\nneeds, forget pleasures that are\nIll-timed.    Healthy   exercises    in\nyour thoughts. If your mind is\nfilled with grudges, hate, selfishness or off-color thoughts, why\nnaturally the clear light of joy cannot filter through. You'll need to\nshift to a different mental life, an\nup-heat attitude, if you want a lot\nof fun out of life.\nA reader I have known for some\nyears was originally one of my\n\"miserable\" friends. A miserable\nfriend is a person who makes\neverybody around him unhappy\nbecause he is unhappy himself.\nYou might come Into the presence\nof this man in a more or less\njaunty frame of mind but he was\na Janntiness-extracator. In no time\nat all he would take the jauntiness\nout of you.\nIn the course of time thi.s man\nmoved away, though he remained\non my mailing list for positive\nthinking material. Then, three or\nfour years later, I saw him again.\nHe was so changed it was as\nthough he had been reborn, which\nis exactly what happened to him.\nHe had been mentally reborn and\nspiritually, too. He was definitely\na different person. I was so impressed by his change that I asked how he had managed it.\n\"I went on a seven day mental\ndiet.\" he replied. He explained\nthat he had become interested in\na pamphlet hy Emmet Fox called,\n\"The Seven Day Mental Did,\"\nwhich I had recommended to my\nreaders. Observing that Americans\nare physically diet conscious, Dr.\nFox urged people to undertake a\nmental diet as well. He made the\npoint that a man becomes what he\nthe chamber the | matters, home, issues beneficial to\nfamily and community sponsored.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Include good deeds in\nyour program. Restful diversion,\nlon. Take all in stride, enjoy loved\nones. No need for worry, needless\nstrain.\nOCTOBER 21 tn NOVEMBER 22\niScorpio) \u2014 Do not crowd in un-\nI FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 2(1\niPisces) \u2014 Ymir planets among\nmost favorable; aim to enjoy fruits\nof blessings. Be cheery, good\nscout about tasks, having to doi\nmore than anticipated. Shun gossips.\nYOU BORN TODAY; Cancer,\nSign of tenacity, adventure, the\nmysterious, sociable instincts;\nbright mind, pugnacious yet kindly\nnature. Tend to think about self\nand consider personal matters\nparamount, dwarfing real issues at\ntimes. Romantic, like change, but\nwant family intact. Can be stubborn, unable to see error of your\nways, unless you develop objective\nthinking, accept that others may\nbe right before you contend, then\nyou will evaluate better. Meditative; sometimes active, again lost\nin thought, triviality. Clever in\nbusiness, patient, must curb appre\nAnd what is the seven day\nmental diet? It is this: you resolve\nthat from a given minute you will,\nfor seven days thereafter, watch\nyour every word. You will not say\na single negative thing, or a mean\nthing, or a dishonest thing. You will\nnot make a depressing remark\nfor seven days.\nThe two most important mo-\n! ments nf the day are when you\nfirsl open your eyes, and the moment when you drop off to sleep.\nThese are the brackets of your\nconscious day. If tlinse moments\nare packed full of positive, joyful\nthoughts, your day will be full of\nj positive, joyful living.\nElbert Hubbard said. \"Be pleasant until ten o'clock in bhe morning and the rest of the day will\ntake care of itself. Henry David\nThoreau used lo give himself good\nnows first thing in the morning. He\nwould tell himself how lucky he\nwas to have been horn. If he had\nnever been horn, he'd never had\nknown the crunch of snow underfoot, or the glint of starlight: he'd\nnever have smolled the fragrance\nof a wood fire nor would he have\nsoon the love light in human eyes.\nHe started off each day with\nthanksgiving.\nAn excellent go-to-sleep technique\nis suggested by J. Harvey llowells: i\ntoo high a spirit to be cumbered\nwith your old nonsense.\"\nIn becoming a Joyful person, It is\nextremely Important to clean up\nmistakes, sins, errors; then forget\nthem and go forward. \"Forgetting\nthose things which ore behind, and\nreaching forth unto those things\nwhich are before.\" (Philliplans\n3:13). This is to be smart and wise.\n\u2022  \u2022   \u2022\nAnother important principle in\nleading a happy fun-loving life Is\nto learn to love and esteem the best\nin people. My father taught me the\ngreat truth that how you think\nabout people, how you treat them\nand react to therm. Is ei-tremely\nimportant to your own happiness.\n\"Treat each man as a child of God\nis the secret,\" he said. \"Hold htm\nin esteem and it will make bo*\nhim and you happy.\"\nGiving is another joy producer.\nThis may mean giving money ox\nlime or interest or advice; anything that takes something out ol\nyou and transfers it to other people, helpfully. Anything that gets\nyou out of youdself, actually helps\nyou find yourself. It's a strange\nprinciple but Its true, that those\nwho give the most have the most\nof whatever they give.\nStill another element in the total\njoy-in-life formula is to know for a\nfact that you are able to meet and\novercome the hardships, sorrows\nand tough circumstances of this\nworld. This kind of happiness is\npriceless. This is that deep fun wa\nwere talking about earlier.\nOne thing after another happening to you can literally \"knock the\nlife out of you.\" The expression is\nrealistic, life is knocked out of you,\nfor a fact. Blow after blow can\nleave you pretty limrp and discouraged. Ultimately you may feel so\nbeaten that you crawl through life\ninstead of standing up courageously\nand masterfully, taking things as\nthey come and handling them with\nsure skill and force. There is no\nfun in life for the crawler-through-\nlife. The licked are always unhappy. But those who know in their\nhearts that they are equal to every\nchallenge, minor or major, are the\nones who get a huge amount of fun\nout of life.\nNEXT: What to Do About What\nYou're Afraid Of.\nhension that friends are Not, and | \"When the last good night has been\ndon't   fret over health.   Birthdate  said and the head is on the pillow\nof:  Elhridge. Gerry, early American  statesman,  industrialist.\nFor Monday, July IB, I960\nTear Gas\nAt least one military moral can be\ndrawn from the recent debacle in the\nstreets of Tokyo; the Japanese police\ndid not have the right equipment for\ntheir task. Il would obviously have\nbeen disastrous, on political as well\nas humanitarian grounds, for the police to open fire on the demonstrators.\nNow thai well-organized student\nriots are a fairly common part of the\ninternational political scene we must\nfind a means of stopping them without shedding quantities of blood. The\nbest weapon for this task is a gas that\nwill incapacitate the rioters for a few\nminutes or hours without doing them\npermanent injury.\nNow that student riots have proved\nsuch an effective weapon in South\nAmerica and Asia their use is likely\nto spread to other countries with anti-\nCommunist governments such as India\nand Malaya. If we are to stop organized hordes of young hoodlums disrupting the regular conduct oi national\naffairs, we have a vested interest in\nseeing that the local police forces can\nobtain proper equipment.\n\u2014The Times.\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noul look is. according to the stars,\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\u2014\nCareful management, close attention to chores and interests where\nyou owe loyalty are top requisites.\nSteam ahead; salesmanship stimulated. Expand within reason.\nAPRIL 21 tn MAY 21 (Taurusl-\nPerhaps no big money day. Surely\na period for sound thinking, cooperation in things good and for\nwelfare of the public. Wise managing nets results.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) \u2014\nSolid, essenlial mailers before trivial activities. Promole your product; seek, grant favors. Do not\nlose progress through reckless decisions.\nJUNE 22 In JULY 2.1 (Cancer)-\nShun making commitments, changes under emotional stress. The\ncalmer judgment, Ihe better accuracy. Flattery is rampant, don't\nbe deceived.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) -\nLegal matters, rebuilding, investing wilhin your means favored\nover quick turnovers, unstable ventures. Be acquisilive. discerning.\nTake wise suggestions kindlv.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Start slowly, cautiously.\nGather momentum and volume\nlogically.   Sturdy   atlainment   pos-\n(hunt disd.\nShare\nA long courtship doesn't make\nany difference. If a man courts\nynu seven years, you still findfout\nI you married a stranger.\nsible  if  in  right direction,\nhappiness wilh loved ones.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Some success in unusual manner possible. Objectives\nmust originate from high ideals,\nright principles which your inborn\ntraits demand. Initiative, impartiality urged.\nOCTOBER 24 lo NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Happy days! Pep up\naspects. You have key to enjoyable, productive day designed in\ntune with your abilities. Don't scatter energies wilhnut plan.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 iSagittarius) \u2014 Better not expert, great things In a personal\nway. Concentrate on general issues, business Items, required activity. Gains later to compensate\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n'Capricorn1\u2014Enter into best spirit\nof things. Your bright, interesting\npersonality in demand. Work proh-\niems can be expedited by wholehearted cheerfulness. Give them\n\"old sage\" try.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Rrightened outlook.\nDon't exert to fatigue at work or\nplay. Business, home matters\nshould move smoothly. Have faith\nin outcome.\nFEBRUARY 20 lo MARCH 20\niPisces) \u2014 Driving beyond reasonable, attacking with dynamic bul\noverwhelming force could he\ntroublemakers. Study situations objectively: don't look hack in regret.\nYOU BORN TODAY. Cancer,\nalso with leanings frnm oncoming\nLeo. These make for brilliance,\npersonableness, ability lo make\nfriends quickly, persuade easily.\nCurb emotions, moodiness else you\nmay find self in midst of squabbles,\nmisunderstandings. Hold hack\nquick remarks, smile when others\n6nap, calm the excited, don't join\nthe irritation. Fanaticism, passions\nrun high now, yet there is always\ntbe composed, industrious person\nto be depended upon; here is your\nniche. Talent for music, athletics,\ndiscovery, research. Protect good\nhealth, not dissipating it. Birthdate\nof: Wm. Makepeace Thackeray,\nEnglish novelist; many noted slage\nperformers, directors, chcreo -\ngraphers.\nthe soul is utterly alone with its\nthoughts. It is then that I ask myself, \"What was the happiest thing\nthat happened today?\"\nThis has a great effect not only\nin setting the tone for a deep and\npeaceful night's sloop, but also in\nconditioning lhe mind to anticipate\nthe new day soon to dawn.\"\nThis happiest thing may be only\na little experience like the aroma\nof a flower, golden sunlight througli\na soft glass curtain, a chance word\nof friendship, a little kindness done,\na fragment of melody. But to go j George\nmentally searching through the ac-'\ntivities and fleeting impressions of\nthe day for that one happiest thing:\nthis is a most rewarding adventure\non the borderline of sleep.\nAnd Emerson used lo end his\nday in a wonderful way. He would\nsee to it that he finished it. completely. \"Finish each day and be\ndone with it.\" ho ad-vised. \"You\nhave done what you could. Some\nblunders and absurdities no doubt\ncrept in; forget them as soon as\nyou can. Tomorrow is a new day;\nbegin it well and serenely and with\nDivorce Hoax\nUnlikely To\nGo Further\nOTTAWA (CP) - It appears\nthat little, if any, action could be\ntaken against the CBC in the\nevent that its controversial divorce co-respondent interview if\nproved to be a  hoax,\nInformants said that the most\nthe publicly - owned corporation\ncould expect to suffer would be\nsome damaged pride as a result\nof a sharp reprimand from tha\nBoard  of  Broadcast  Governors.\nMeanwhile, the CBC itself still\nmaintains that it has every reason to believe that Joan Campbell, part-time model who was\ninterviewed on the May 2fi TV\nprog-ram Olose-Up, is everything\nshe said she was\u2014a professional\ndivorce co-respondent.\nThursday the corporation retained this attitude even after\nMiss Campbell's lawyer, Ralph\nNorman Meakes* gave police in\nToronto a sworn affidavit saying\nthat a week before the program\nhe told Close - Up story editor\nRonald that the taped\ninterview was \"a fraud.\"\nEarlier, Miss Campbell said\nfollowing the program that \"unknown to the CBC, It was a\nhoax.\"\nAPHID  OUTBREAK\nSASKATOON (CP) \u2014 Officials\nof the Canadian Agriculture Department said Thursday It is still\ntoo early lo tell whether the outbreak of corn leaf aphids nov\u00bb\nbeing seen in Saskatchewan will\nreach the point of devastation\nrecorded in 1955.\nHUBERT\n\"You mean you WERE a friend of the groom si\"\n If!1;   ',**....\u25a0-..'\u25a0 .   ,\n**\u2022****************************\u2014\u2014^\u2014^-\n\"\u2014\u2014\"^\u25a0''^ff\nAlbertan President\nOf Women's Qroup\nBy EDNA BLAKELY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer     |\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Una Mac-\nLean, the new president of the\n7,000-member Canadian Federation of Business and Professional\nWomen's Clubs, says she thinks\nthe future of the federation lies\nin research into the problems of\nwomen at work.\nMiss MacLean, who was born\nin Calgary, was not opposed in\nher bid to head the federation.\nShe succeeds Isabel Menzies of\nMontreal.\nWith equal pay legislation\npassed in seven of 10 provinces,\nMiss MacLean says she hopes\nthe work for equal pay and equal\nopportunity can soon be dropped\nand the attention of the club\nturned to other fields.\nThe problem of older women\nre - entering the business world\nand the training available to\nthem is one of the problems the\npresident would like to study.\nFATHER HOMESTEADED\nA fifth generation Canadian,\nshe's the daughter of an Alberta\nhomesteader, Augustus Mac-\nLean.\nShe was the only woman candidate in Alberta when she ran as\na Liberal candidate in her home\nriding of Calgary North in the\n1957 federal election.\nAlthough defeated, she consid\ners the experience stimulating\nand worthwhile. Women, she said\nin an interview, sometimes make\npoor candidates because they\nlose their objectivity.\nHer interest in politicals began\ntawa with the army towards the\nend of the Second World War.\nVISfTED  GALLERY\n\"I wasn't old enough to vote\nbut I was given a pass to the\nvisitors' gallery and became fascinated by the proceedings,\" she\nexplained.\nElected first vice-president of\nthe federation was Senator\nMuriel McQueen Fergusson of\nFredericton.\nOther vice-presidents are Nazla\nDane, Toronto; Elizabeth L.\nForbes, Victoria, B.C.; and Margaret Pewtress, Cobourg, Ont.\nMargaret Mclrvine of Ottawa is\nhonorary secretary-treasurer\nAt a founders' luncheon Thursday, delegates took a nostalgic\nlook at the federation's 30 year\nhistory. The first president of the\nfederation, Dorothy Heneker\nCummins of Cotno, Que., was\nchairman of the meeting and the\nsecond president, Josephine\nDauphinee of Vancouver was\nguest speaker. Special guests included the first vice - president\nand secretary - treasurer, Mary\nEthel Thornton of Victoria.\n(Horn to (Mjttrdj\nAnrtltratt GUjitrrtj of Gkma&a\nSt.  Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral\nWard and Silica Streets\nRector:\nRev. Canon George W. Lang,\nB.A., L.Th.\nTHE FIFTH SUNDAY\nAFTER TRINITY,\nJuly 17th, 1960.\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Family\nEucharist.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong and\nSermon.\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nSecond and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector:\nCanon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc.\nJuly and August\nChurch of Redeemer\nat 9:00 a.m. only.\nRev. E. Thain, L.Th.\nPreacher.\nSouth Slocan at 11:00 a.m,\ninttrii (Mptrrly nf (Eanafo\nFounded in 1925, uniting Methodist, Congregational and\nPresbyterian Churches, invites you to share the Summer\nWorship Services each Sunday.\n\u00a7t. pauI'H-2Iritiitg JFairutnu $\u00ab\u00bb**\u2022&\n9:30 a.m. 11:00 o.m.\nCor. Josephine and Silica Fifth and Elwyn Streets\nRev. H. R. Whitmore in charge during July.\nItrat (Mfttrrif of\n(Eijrtst \u00a7mttttfit\nA Branch of the Mother Church,\nThe  First  Church of Christ,\nScientist, in  Boston,  Mass.\nSunday School: 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service:  11 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"LIFE\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting \u2014 8:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.,\nOpen Daily From\n2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday Evening\n7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nMISSION\nCOVENANT\nCHURCH\n802 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\n9:46 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning\nWorship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nTHURSDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's\nAll Welcome!\n\u25a0JJabernarU\n(PENTECOSTAL)\nSUNDAY;\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Devotional.\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Radio Broadcast.\nNo Evening or Week Services.\nCo-operating with Kootenay\nPentecostal Camp.\nREV. R. SWANSON\nPhone 2225\nCHURCH   OF  JESUS  CHRIST\nOF  LATTER DAY SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\nEagles Hall, 641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings Call\nBranch President, Phone 1297-X\n\u00a3>al nation Army\n513 Victoria St.\nLIEUT. P. A. ROED\nSUNDAY, JULY 17, 1960\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness\nMeeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation\nMeeting\nA Warm Welcome Awaits\nYou at the Salvation Army\nfirst\nPreahgtman\nGUjurrlj\nCorner of Kootenay and\nVictoria Sts.\nMinister: E. A. Hircock\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n2:00 p.m.-Salmo.\nCORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL\nJTirat fiajrtiat\nGUjttrrij\nSUNDAY:\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nMinister:\nREV. R. CROSS\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nPhone: Res. 1582-Y\nALL WELCOME\nSt. John's\nLutheran Church\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St. - Phone 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and\nJunior Bible Class\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine Service\nSUNDAY SCHOOL PICNIC\nJuly 16 \u2014 2:30 p.m. at\nLakeside Park.\nALL ARE CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nthe\nTOWN\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Boyle and son\nTimothy off Alameda, California,\nare visiting Mr. Boyle's brother,\nRev. J. A. Boyle, CSsR, of Nelson\nfor a few days.\n* *   *\nM. W. Wheeler of Price, Utah,\nis visiting his niece and family, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. J. Coleman, 1814\nStanley Street.\n* *   *\nPetty Officer and Mrs. J. R.\nKrepps of Victoria visited Mrs.\nKrepp's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nClarence Ward, 505 Nelson Avenue,\nen route to Halifax, where Petty\nOfficer Krepps has been transferred. Visiting also were Mrs. D. R.\nHinton and he daughter and niece,\nMrs. A. Botharnley and Susan; and\nMr. and Mrs. C. Currah of Trail.\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nHow good it in to have on hand drip-dry dresses\nand blouses when a travel-light wardrobe is the order\nof going. Mac Shore does a perky, woven stripe, sleeveless blouse of drip-dry cotton broadcloth recommended\nespecially for tropical cruise wear ashore. The shirt has\na mitered club collar, blended pocket and button front.\nThis tuck-in can be worn with a skirt, with shorts and\neven over the bathing suit, always retaining its classic\ngood looks.\n\"Almighty God, as I sit here\nthis lovely Sunday morning surrounded by the Sunday paper and\nhalf listening to one of the big\npreachers over the radio, it has\njust come over me that I have\nlied to Thee and myself. I said\nI did not feel well enough to go\nto Church. That is not true; I was\nnot ambitious enough. I would\nhave gone to my office had it\nbeen Tuesday morning. I would\nhave played golf if it had been\nSaturday afternoon in the summer.\nI would have attended my luncheon\nclub if it had met today. I would\nhave been able to go to the show\nif it had been Friday night. But\nit is Sunday morning and Sunday\nillnesses cover a multitude of sins.\nGod have mercy upon me. I have\nlied to Thee and myself, I was not\nill; I am lazy and indifferent.\"\nAmen.\nA client went to his attorney\nto tell him that he was going into\nbusiness with a man he did not\ntrust. \"Would you please frame\nan air-tight contract which can not\nbe broken and which will protect\nme from any sort of mischief\nwhich my partner might have in\nmind?\" asked the client.\n\"Listen, my friend,\" replied the\nattorney, \"there is no group of\nwords in the English language\nthat will take the place of plain\nhonesty between men or which\nwill fully protect either of you if\nyou plan to deceive each other.\"\nThere is nothing in this wide\nworld that can protect a man or a\nwoman or a community from the\njudgment of God that rests upon\na dishonest relationship to Him.\n\"We have followed too much the!\ndevices and desires of our own\nhearts.\" The Lord Christ died that\nwe might be able to \"come clean\"\nwith God and walk honestly in\nHis sight. His love for us is a\nrighteous love ribbed and girded\nwith the fibre of inescapable law.\nREV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG\nVows Exchanged In\nCastlegar Ceremony\n  \u2014mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwm\nH3P\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960 \u2014 5\nWoman Speaker Blames Parents\nFor Dissatisfied Youngsters\nBy EDNA BLAKELY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014Members of\nthe Canadian Federation of Business and Professional Women's\nClubs attending their 17th biennial meeting here took a long\nlook Thursday at the federation's\n30-year history.\nDorothy Heneker Cummins of\nComo, Que., the first president\nof the federation, was chairman\nat a luncheon honoring the founders of the olub. Seated near her\nwas Mary Ethel Thornton of Victoria, the first national vice-president and secretary-treasurer.\nGuest speaker Josephine Dau-\nphinee of Vancouver scolded\nmodern parents for \"bringing up\nour children with habits of living\nthat do not prepare them for life\nand certainly not for life in the\natomic age.\"\n\"BASK IN LUXURY\"\n\"They bask in luxury,\" she\nsaid. \"As soon as they can get a\nlicence they drive and have cars,\nand those who can't have them,\nsteal them.\"\nShe said young people have no\nworry for the future, take too\nmuch for granted and are aggrieved if denied any request.\nHer plea was to teach girls as\nwell as boys to think and to apply their knowledge.\nTo fit itself for the atomic age\nthe federation's members must\n\"sacrifice money, use influence\nand pull any strings\" that would\nmake training possible for potential leaders.\nMiss Dauphinee suggested club\nmembers make a concerted effort to change some of the habits\nwhich are \"so luxurious that\ncosts soar to heaven.\" She cited\ntravel luxuries as an example.\nMiss  Dauphinee,  84,  was  federation president from 1932-35.\nINITIATE STUDY\nMargaret Ashdown of Toronto\nreported the results of a Wednesday workshop on employment\nconditions which included a suggestion that the government of\nCanada initiate a study of the\nunemployment situation by a\nteam of top economists, sociologists, representatives of business,\nlabor and employed women.\nOne new field of endeavor for\nthe federation may be efforts to\nhave the retirement age of\nwomen changed to the same age\nas men.\nThe women's bureau of the federal department of labor may be\nasked to study the implementation of equal pay.\nThe training of the older\nwoman and bursaries to help\nher were also discussed.\nThe five-day meeting ended Friday.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH - Mrs. R. Glass-\npoole and daughters, Betty, Mary\nJane and Debbie, who have been\nvisiting the former's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nHartland, have left for their home\nin Victoria.\nMrs. H. S. Currie has returned\nfrom a holiday spent in Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Blanchard and\nsons of Medicine Hat, Alta., were\nrecent guests of the former's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs.   P.   Gilchrist.\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Faye Jeannette,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland\nHarmston of Castlegar and Gary\nBlandford Hyson, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Henry Hyson of Robson, exchanged marriage vows in a\ndouble ring ceremony in June at\nSt. Alban's Anglican Ohuroh.\nOfficiating clergymen were\nArchdeacon Basil Resker of Balfour and Rev. H. I. G. Ragg of\nCastlegar.\nBaskets of bridal wreath, blue\nand pink lupin and delphinium\ndecorated the ohuroh, while peonies enohanced the altar. Nuptial\nmusic was played by Mrs. Fred\nHostetter and a solo was rendered\nby Mrs. J. MacBain.\nThe bride, given in marriage by -=-      v.       \u00bb\u00bb\u2022 \u00bb\nher father, wore a floor length, full i I 0    D6    LMSCUSSeO\nGladys and Donald, Kimberley;\nMr. and Mrs. E. Erickson and Kenneth, Salmo: Mrs. Blanche Lister,\nJune and Bob, South Slocan; Mr.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Lister, Tanis and\nKen, Slocan City; Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Lister, Trail; Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMacintosh, Cranbrook; Mr. and\nMrs. J. Firkins, Trail; Mrs. Theresa Fertich, Montrose; Mr. and\nMrs. J. Firkins, Mr. and Mrs. K.\nSaplywy, Mr. and Mrs. N. Coombs,\nMrs. M. McAmis, Mr. and Mrs. D.\nMcAlpine, all of Trail; Mr. and\nMrs. J. Campbell and SaEy,\nCreston, and Mr. and Mrs. R.\nTinker, Nakusp.\nWay To Peace\nskirted gown of net on lace over\ntaffeta, the pleated bodice was\nstyled with rounded neckline and\ncap sleeves. Her chapel veil was\nheld by a rhinestone tiara and as\n\"something old\" she wore a heart-\nshaped gold locket which had belonged to her late grandmother,\nMrs. Edith Ada Peaohey, of Silver-\nton. A bouquet of red rosebuds\ncomplemented her ensemble.\nMiss Sharon Harmston, maid of\nhonor was her sister's only attendant, and wore a semi-formal gown\nof blue nylon lace over taffeta and\nwhite accessories, she carried a\nbouquet of white carnations.\nThe groom was attended by Mr.\nGerald Stewart of Robson. as best\nman, while Mr. Marvin LeRoy and\nRoland Harmston. brother of the\nbride were ushers.\nThe way to unfailing peace and\nsatisfaction will be pointed out at\nChristian Science churches Sunday\nin a Lesson-Sermon entitled \"Life,'\nthe first of a series this summer\ndevoted to synonymns for God\nOpening the Scriptural selections\nto be read are these verses from\nPsalms 136:7-9): \"How excellent\nis thy loving-kindness, 0 God!\ntherefore the children of men put\ntheir trust under the shadow of thy\nwings. They shall be abundantly\nsatisfied with the fatness of thy\nhouse; and thou shalt make them\ndrink of the river of thy pleasures.\nFor with thee is the fountain of\nlife.\"\nCorrelative citations from \"Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy\nwill   include:    \"God   fashions   all\nThe Lady Hardinge college for\nmedical education of women in\nIndia opened at New Delhi in\n1916.\nBy. dawuL uJhe&l&A\nJUMBO-KNIT\nCasual, jumbo-knit jacket you'll\nwear and wear and love! Cables\nadd smart texture accent.\nFashion's popular bulky-knit jacket! Inches FLY \u2014 use large\nneedles, 2 strands knitting worsted. Pattern 857: directions sizes\n32-34 and 36-38 included.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St. W., Toronto.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\n(DhsAL tip, UJiik\nmcudaft MaJdin,\nPrinted Pattern\n9055 ^kmmX  \u2122\u00a7\nI things, afler His own likeness. Life\nPink and white bells, streamers! js reflected in existence. Truth in\nand baskets of summer flowers* truthfulness, God in goodness.\nwere used to decorate St. Alban's I which impart their own peace and\nParish Hall for the reception. When permanence.'\nthe couple were assisted in receiving by heir parents.\nThe bride's mother chose a beige\nlace sheath with matching jacket,\nwhite accessories and wore white\ncarnation corsage.\nThe groom's mother chose blue\nslate lace dress with matching\njacket, pink accessories and wore\na pink carnation corsage.\nThe bride's table, covered with\na  lace  clobh,   was  centred   by   a\nthree-tiered wedding cake made by\nMr.   and   Mrs.   John   Kavic.   The i\ncake was embedded in pink tulle j\nand  flanked  by white candles  in \u25a0\nsilver holders. Following the first\ncut by the bride and groom, the   \\jZ77r\ncake was cut and served by the   Y%:?\u00a3\nbride's   aunts.,  Mrs.   R.   Peachey.   \\$f'S\nMrs. V. Evans and Mrs. E. Erick-1 \\i\nson.\nGrace was said by Rev. H. Ragg\nand the toast to the bride was proposed by Archdeacon Resker.\nMr. Leslie Cantell was master of\nceremonies and the groom's sister,\nMiss Beverley Hyson was in charge\nof the guest book.\nFor the wedding trip the bride\ndonned a mauve sheath topped\nwith a mauve plaid coat with which\nshe wore white accessories and\nwhite carnation corsage.\nThe happy couple left by plane\nfor a honeymoon trip to Vancouver\nand coastal points and have now\ntaken up residence in Robson,\nOut-of-town guests were Mr. and\nMrs. A. R. Harmston. Mary and\nBarbara, Oasis; Mr. and Mrs. R.\nPeachey. Silverton: Mrs. V. Evans,\nYmir Couple\nHonored\nYMIR - Mr. and Mrs. M.\nGallie were honored by their many\nfriends with a going away party\nat the Ymir Community Hall.\nResidents of Ymir for the past\n11 years they leave within the week\nfor Scotland for an indefinite\nperiod.\nDonald Pedersen presented the\ncouple, with a flight bag on behalf\nof the townspeople. Dancing, and\nlunch was served. Hostesses were\nMrs. Jean Sikdra, Mrs. Muriel\nAnderson, Mrs. Dinah Tetz, and\nMra(|Polly McDonald.\nJRS.   HIT  STYLE !\nShoulder - to - shoulder collar \u2014\npretty across a desk or a table\nfor two! Sew this curving sheath\nin colors that are basic or bright,\nin cotton or gleaming shantung.\nThree sleeve versions.\nPrinted Pattern 9055: Jr. Miss\nSizes 9. 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 takes\n3\\ yards 35-inch fabric.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) in\ncoins 'stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.,\nToronto, Ont.\nROCKGAS\n\"RED HOT SPECIALS\nFor a\nCOOLER SUMMER\nSAVE $100.00 ON\nNew 36\" O'Keefe and Merritt Propane Gas Range. Quality at the lowest\nprice. Minute minder, storage compartment, $17(0  Crt\n100% safety oven ignition. Only   1\/ 7.jU\nSAVE $125.00 ON\n36\" O'Keefe and Merritt deluxe popane gas range,\nchrome lift-up top, thermatic burner, transparent\nnon - breakable shelf, lifetime porcelain enamel\nfinish, chrome top, oven on, oven ready and\nrotisserie on lights, griddle ond fifth burner, clock controlled oven, glass\noven door, separate Grillevator Broiler and Rotisserie. t\/s A a   \\rf\\\nThe very best. Only    __\u201e .._.  *f*\u00bb*f.DU\nKeep Your\nSummer\nHome\nfflojoket!\nWith a Propane Gas Refrigerator\nUsed\u2014but reconditioned, refinished and a\none year guarantee. Only \t\n$159.00\nPropane Gas Lamps, from\n$12.00\nJiffi Ranges, from   21.95\nFOR HEATING ESTIMATES \u2014 GAS DELIVERIES\nGENERAL INFORMATION\nWRITE OR PHONE\nROCKGAS PROPANE Ltd.\n610 Railway St. Nelson Phone 2230\nWE WILL CALL \u2014 NO OBLIGATION\n  : \u2014. ;\t\n\u2022  \u25a0       ,      .\u25a0'\u00ab\u25a0'    ,\n'.\u25a0'ii       ,    I.,      *m**-mi****m**********ggl\u00a7^\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY\/JULY IfS, 1960\nLesage Said Ready For New\nDimensions For Gov't Policy\nQUEBEC (OP)-Premier'Jean\nLesage of Quebec is believed\npreparing to give a new dimension to provincial government\npolicy in federal-provincial fiscal\nrelations.\nThe 48-year-old Liberal leader\n\u25a0who toK>tod the Union Nationale\nparty from power June 22 in the\nprovincial election is believe-]\nanxious to bring a greater measure of financial autonomy to his\nprovince but equally anxious not\nto put Quebec In the position of\nwrangling against the rest of Canada, a position French Canada\nfeels Is outmoded,\nMr. Lesage and representatives\nof Wj new team of ctiMnet min-\ntst#T5 are in Uie ml^M of jn-epwt-\ntlons for the fetters! \u2022 provlijclfll\nfiscal conference in Ottawa starting July 25.\nThe new premier, formerly, a\nfederal cabinet minister in tho\nSt. Laurent adminsit aroti.nls\ncommitted to a strong provincial\nrights policy by his own party\nplatform\u2014a policy that is on\npaper more positively autonomist\nthan anything Qtiebec has actually put into practice.\nFundamentally he Is expected\nto hold views against federal subsidies to the provinces in traditionally provincial matters.\nBut ttot .tactJCs ajroear to be\ntllei) cut. Instead;, sources say.\nh* Heft pi-eftfe* $W Jo ,($&\u25a0\n, ... delkiiid m UMii proposals - SdiriSthlrtf! th\u00ab late\nMauri** Dupfesls did nqt-and\nto lay tbfj groundwork for an\ninter - provWttal conference hi\nplans to call, probably some\ntime neitt year.\nThe Idea Would be to bring the\nprovinces together ln a common\nfront, at) ijiiy ccjt*M'wbrk out a\nuniform Ux-e-nfffflnf dan add propose It to the ted\u00ab-ral government\nbefore the present tax - sharing\narrangemeiiU explfo March 31,\nM.\nQuebec now Is Hie only prov-\nIr.tb rtllicli hU no tax - sharing\nOho of Uib new Quebec government's proposals on tax - snaring\ndeals with federal conditional\npayments.\nThese are parymehta v*ich\namount to $500,0(10,000 a year and\nwhich Ottawa distributes to the\nprovinces to help them meet the\ncost of social welfare measures\nHhspital feurance and other cost-\nsliarlng measures.\nMr. Lesage. reliable sources\nsay, wants to push for enough\nadditional direct taxation income\nfor the provinces to meet these\ncttfU lfut\\ thsif 0WI1 t*V$<W-\nthe (Jtiebeo premier Is Relieved headed Into a new aifrten-\nslon of the provincial rights question in the Sense* that he plans\nto approach the problem as one\nwhich is common to all provinces: The need for additional\nrevenue to meet Uie growuvg\ncosts for social welfare, education, and industrial development.\nROMAN   STADIUM\nThe Colosseum at Rome, built\nIn 83 AD, seated 30,000 with\nstanding room for another Jo,-\n000.\nANOTHER PROFITABLE\nOPPORTUNITY TO\nINVEST IN B.C.\nB.C. Power Commission Bonds \u2014 just like the PGE Bonds which\nwere oversubscribed last year \u2014 give B.C. families a golden opportunity to profit financially from our Province's dynamic growth.\nThe B.C. Power Commission is a public utility owned and operated\nby the people of British Columbia. It supplies low-cost electricity\nto more than 250 communities in Vancouver Island and Interior\nB.C., including such fast-growing cities as Nanaimo, Prince George\nand Kamloops. The steady growth and development of the Commission and the ever-increasing need for power throughout the\nProvince makes these new 5% Parity Bonds an exceptionally\ngood buy.\n$25,000,000 ISSUE\nPARITY BONDS UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED BY THE PROVINCE OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA AND REDEEMABLE ANY TIME AT FULL PURCHASE PRICE\nDENOMINATIONS; $100, $500, $1,000, $6,000, $10,000.\nINTERESTi Interest at the rate of 5% per annum will be paid quarterly\non the 15th day of November, February, May and August during the\ncurrency of the bond.\nDATE OF ISSUE* August 15, 1960.\nDATE Or MATURITY! August 15, 196S.\nREDEMPTIONi Should you need the money in a hurry, you will be able\nto cash these bonds at par value at any time you wish, at any bank in\nthe Province of British Columbia and at the principal  office of the\nCommission's Bankers in Calgary, Edmonton, Regina, Winnipeg,\nToronto, Montreal, Saint John, Halifax or St. John's.\nLIMIT OF PURCHASE: There is no limit whatsoever to the amount\nyou may purchase. However, in the event that this issue is over-subscribed,\nthe B.C. Power Commission reserves the right to allocate bonds and to\nlimit the amount which may be bought by any one purchaser.\nREGISTRATION! Bonds of $1,000, $5,000, $10,000 and $25,000 can\nbe fully registered.\nPLEASE NOTEi This will be the only parity development bond Issue\noUered by the Province of British Columbia this year.\nAUTHORIZED SALES AGENTS-ALL BRITISH COLUMBIA BANKS,\nTRUST COMPANIES AND LEADING INVESTMENT DEALERS\nThe\ntin\nCommission ttrm more than      This Georgia Thermal Unit terms antral Vancouver     In li yean the Commission hat spent over (100 million     A\/or\u00ab power dim its a higher standard a] living and\ngrowing communities. Island and the GuSJ Islands. on Hit Campbell River hydro system. greater opportunities lor \u00abi>eryon\u00ab.\nBUY B.C. POWER COMMISSION  PARITY BONDS\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Netfs itpes not hold Itacll responsible In the event\nof tin error In the following lists.\nTOltONtO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\t\nAdvocate\t\nAnglo Rouen\t\nAumaque  \t\nAunor   \t\nBarnat ... -\t\nBase Metals \t\nBlbls Vukoh  ..._\t\nBrqulan \t\nBtttWo Al* -\t\nOairipMll C  \t\nCampbill ft. L \t\nCentral Patricia\t\nChromium \t\nConiaurum \t\nCons. Discovery \t\nCons Hailhvell \t\nCons Mining fc Smelling ...\nCons R6*}cOU!rt \t\nCon Sanorm  .\t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man\t\nCraig\t\nD'Aragon \t\nDonalda\t\nEast Amphi \t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nElder Gold \t\nFalconbrldge\t\nFaraday \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGoldale    \t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerala \t\nHasaga\t\nHeadway\t\nHollinger  _\t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration -\t\nInt. Nickel \t\nIron Bay \t\nJonsmith  ,.\t\nR J Jowsey \t\nKenville        \t\nKerr Addison \t\nLeitoh \t\nLoxindin \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLorado \t\nLouvic't        .\t\nMadsen R. L\t\nMaritime Mining \t\nMcLeod \t\nMcKenzie R L \t\nMining Corp.\t\nNew Alger        \t\nNew Bidlamaqua \t\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Harricana \t\nNew Hosco   \t\nNew Lund     \t\nNoranda New  .\t\nNorgold     \t\nNormetals\t\nNorpax     \t\nNorth Can\t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska\t\nPickle Grow \t\nPreston E. D\t\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Metallurgical \t\nQuemont \t\nRadiore \t\nRayrock      \t\nSan Antonio       \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSteep Rock ..\t\nTaurcanis\t\nTeck Hughes\t\nTemagami   \t\nThomp-Lund\t\nTomblH \t\nTrans Cont Res  _\t\nUnited Keno \t\nVentures    \t\nVlolamac       \t\nWaite Amulet  \t\nWiltsey Ooglln        \t\nWrisht Hargreaves \t\nYale \t\nYellowknife Bear      \t\nYoung IH.G.) Gold \t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  _\t\nBailey Selburn       \t\nCanadian Devonian \t\nMarigold \t\nMidcon       \t\nOkalta\nPacific Pete \t\nPetrol \t\nPonder\nPlace Oil \t\nProv Gas \t\nRoyalite\t\nSpooner \t\nStairwell Oil   \t\nTriad\nUnited Oils    \t\nYank Canuck\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum   \t\nAnalog \t\nArgus 2nd pfd\t\nAtlas St. \t\nB.A. Oil \t\nBathurst Power \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s   \t\nB.C. Electric 4Hs \t\nB.C. Forest     \t\nB.C. Power A     \t\nBurns A\t\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners    ....\nCanadian Oelanese   ....\nCan. Cement \t\nCan Ohem Co      \t\nCanadian Dredge\nCan. Curtis Wright ..\nCan.  Malting  \t\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCockshutt\nColumhia Cellulose \t\nCons Gas \t\nDist. Seagram     \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar Is Chemical\nDom. Textiles\nEddy Paner .    .\nFamous Players    \t\nFord U.S.\t\nGatineau \t\nGen. Steel Wares  \t\nGoodyear \t\nHoward Smith \t\nIn-ujerial Oil \t\nInd. Ace\t\nLoMsw A\t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Ferguson \t\nMolson Brewery\t\nMont. Loco\t\nMoor\" Com\t\nNat. Steel Car \t\n.06\n3.30\nil\n.07 Vi\n.07%\nM\n1.80\n5.ib\n10.4*7 Vi\n.00\n8i\u00b0\n3.15\n.45\n16.12%\nM\n.04 Vi\n.20\n.11\n5.85\n.ao vi\n.06\n.07\n1.95\n1.02\n1.09\n32.12%\n.69\n1.00\n17.75\n9.15\n.16\n7.25\n.06\n.14Vi\n.28\n21.87 Vi\n44.75\n.26\n58.50\n2.30\n.11\n.26\n.04%\n11.75\n1.33\n.02 Vi\n1.75\n.51\n.05\n2.69\n.80\n1.02\n.17Vi\n10.75\n.04 %\n.05 %\n.09%\n.09\nno\n.14\n38.50\n.04\n2.90\n.08\n1.05\n.57\n6.25\n.70\n4.16\n.09\n.65\n8.40\n.58\n.52\n.92\n3.10\n7.90\n.44\n1.62\n1.67\n.75\n.31\n.13\n600\n24.62%\n1.35\n6.10\n.11\n1.08\n.14\n.92\n.71\n.07\n4.90\n2.27\n.06\n.34\n.35\n' 8.20\n,5.1\n.54\n.46\n1.77\n6 50\n.11\nM\n2 05\n.98\n.05\n40\n32'',\n28 \"4\n4.85\n48\n20\n23'n\n38%\n451,\n4 15\n76\n864\n11\n3 Hi\n13%\n38%\n13',2\n20%\n26\n7\n13V4\nIV.\n53\n19%\n23%\n15\n4\n41\n28%\n40%\n59\n13'\u00bb\n9H\nSB'j\n22%\n64\n35%\n10%\n125\n36%\n31V,\n38%\n28\n28\".\n9%\n23\n15\n45%\n12Vi\n21%\nfluss. Industries\t\nShawinigan    \t\nSoutham  \t\nStandard Paving    \t\nSt. Lawrence Corp\t\nSteel of Canada\nTenaco                \t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Steel      \t\nWestnh fleorie\t\n9%\n28%\n21\n15 Vi\n17%\n69 V\u00ab\n50\n13 Vi\n6\n83%\nWoodwards A       IS\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  05\nBralorne     5.10\nCnilllsn              03Vi\nCariboo Gold\t\n.97\n5.80\nGiant Mascot\t\n.25\n1.20\nHighland Boll            \t\n1.35\nNational Ex    \t\nPend Oreille    \t\n.03\n2.45\n.18\nReeves MacDonald \t\n1.76\n.86\n2.95\n.41\n,03 V.\n.20\nSunshine Lardeau\t\n.08\n.12%\n.12\nWestern Potash \t\n.05\nOILS\nA P Consolidated      .30\nCalgary k Edmonton     14.75\nCharter  70\nHome             7.50\nOkalta Com  31\nRoyalite             6.45\nRoyal Can  11%\nUnited         - 95\nVanlor  30\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers        2.00\nB C Forests           1100\nB C Power          31.62%\nB C Telephone          44.37%\nCanadian Collieries      7.75\nCrown Zeller (Can!    18.50\nInt Brew B      3.50\nMB & PR           14.62%\nMid-West Cop 10%\nTrans Mtn      8.12%\nWestminster Paper     32.00\nWestern Plywoods     12.25\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk    18 00\nTrans Canada Com       17.50\nTrans Mountain Unit      8.00\nWest Coast Unit ....   79.00\nWest Coast Vt        11.75\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal ... 51.50 52.50\nCan. Bank of Com. 51.00 52.00\nImp. Bank of Can. 57.50 58.50\nRoyal Bank of Oan.     68.00  67.00\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket olosed the week Friday\nwith most sections showing\ngains.\nIndustrials and base metals\nbolh registered gains of more\nthan a point and western oils,\nfailing rapidly near the close,\nmanaged to hold, fractionally, on\nthe plus side. Golds lost a lew\ndecimal places.\nToronto \u25a0 Dominion Bank, pacing the leaders most of the day,\ngained 1V\u00ab at 52% and Bank of\nMontreal was up % at 52%, while\nBank of Nova Scotia improved %\nat 58V\u00ab.\nStelco influenced steels, up %\nat 69%, with Algoma up % at\n32% and Dominion S eel up % at\n11%.\nMinnesota and Ontario Paper\ngained a point at 28% and Abitibi\nwas up % at 40.\nAmong speculative issues, Latin American showed a 10 - cent\ngain at 46 cents. -\nCominco jumped a point at 18%\nand Dome was up V\u00ab at 17%.\nGeco was off % at 17% while\namong senior uraniums, Rio Algom lost 20 cents at J8.45 and\nDenison gained 25 cents at $9.26.\nWestern oils moved in the five\nand ten-cent range.\nMONTREAL I OP'-After making fractional gains in Ihe afternoon, the Montreal and Canadian\nstock exchanges slipped lower\namid light trading at Friday's\nolose.\nClosing averages: banks up 0.21\nat 63.62. utilities down 0.3 at\n137.6, industrials down 0.9 at\n270.9. combined down 0.7 at 226.5,\npapers down 2.0 at 425.7 and golds\ndown 0.67 at 69.09.\nHoward Smith Paper at 35%\nand Dominion Glass at 70 led losers, both down 1%. National Steel\nCar slipped 1 at 12 and Ogil-\nvie Flour dropped 1 at 40.\nDominion Stores led winners,\nup 1% at 59 for a new high. Montreal Trust added 1 at 43% and\nOntario Steel climbed % to 19.\nIn mines, Satellite Metal fell 29\ncents to 60 cents, Mclntyre\ngained % a'. 24 and Hudson Bay\nclimbed % at 45%.\nCanadians  Among\nBisley Corttestants\nBISLEY, England (Reuters)-\nTwo Canadians, were among the\n10 contestants who will fire in an\nelimination shoot at the rifle match\nhere. The 10 contestants tied with\n73 points each in the Duko of Gloucester's competition for 15 shots at\n600 yards.\nThese are Sgt. J. J. Cramer\nof Port Coquitlam, B.C., and Sgt.\nC. Westling of New Westminster,\nB.C.\nI\n \u25a0^F\"\n\t\n\t\n \u2014\n\t\nJhn Vnodakn Mown\n - \u2014 \u2022 \u2014r-r , : .,...,.,\n** \u2022':\nPlan No. 178 Is a split level\nfeaturing double plumbing on tbe\nupper section with tbe basement\narea directly below, and plenty\nof space for the rumpus room,\nlaundry and furnace room.\nLarge living and dining room adjoin tbe oablnet kitchen with\nplenty of space for a nook. This\nplan lends Itself admirably to a\ncorner lot with the breeieway\njoining the house, and tbe double\ncarport with workshop and storage tn tbe end. If your lot Is In\nthe centre ot the block, build It\nwithout the carport. Working\ndrawings are available frm the\nBuilding Centre (B.C.) Ltd., 116\nE. Broadway, Vancouver 10.\nWrite for our new booklet \"Select Home Designs\" enclosing\n25c to cover cost of mailing and\nhandling. ISM edition now available.\nPLAN NO. 178 (copyright serial\nNo. 117093).\nAwards From Design\nCouncil Bad Omen\nBy BETTIE BRADLEY\nThe National Industrial Design\nCouncil was formed In Ottawa to\npromote and reward excellent\nCanadian design. Annually, top designs In everything from washing\nmachines to tea pots are presented\nwith awards by the Council. And\noften it is the kiss of death.\n\"Only rarely does an award win-\nm\nUS. Congo Resolution May\nBe Lacking \u2014 Khrushchev\nBy PRESTON OROVER\nMOSCOW (AP)-NiktU Khrushchev declared Friday the United\nNations resolution on the Congo\nmay not be enough. He said the\nSoviet Union is ready to act \"to\nhalt the aggression\" there \"if\nttiose states which are carrying\non direct aggression against the\nCongo do not stop their criminal\nmeasures.\"\nThis was disclosed In a message from tlie Soviet premier to\nthe Congo's President Joseph\nKaeacubu and Premier Patrice\nLumumba. The Soviet news\nagency Tass quoted tfhe Congo\nleaders as cabling Khrushchev\nThursday: \"We will be compelled to ask for intervention by\nbhe Soviet Union if the Western\ncamp does not desist from aggression. . . .\"\n\"USEFUL THING\"\nIn his message Khrushchev\nspoke of the UN resolution arranging for a UN force to go to\nthe Congo. He said:\n\"The Security Council did a\nuseful thing in adopting a resolution catl'-rg for a withdrawal of\nthe Belgian troops from the\nCongo.   H   the   aggression   con-\nN\u00abw and Used\nEQUIPMENT\nSALES \u2014 SERVICE\nRENTALS\nI I I ii llCGranvIlle  Island\nUJLUV   Vancouver I,\nB.C.\ntinues in spite of this decision,\nthe Soviet government declares\nthat the necessity would arise for\nbolh the United Nations and\nIhose peace-loving states which\nsympathize with the Congo to\ntake more effective measures,\n\"If those states which are\ncarrying on direct aggression\nagainst bhe Congo do not stop\ntheir criminal measures, the Soviet Union will not hesitate to\ntake decisive measures to halt\nthe aggression.\"\nLIVES  IN  DANGER\nKhrushchev's warning followed\nan earlier caution against intervention by the Western nations\nin the Congo. He said Monday\nWestern countries, led by the\nUnited States, were trying to re-\nimpose a colonial rule over the\nCongo less than two weeks after\nIt received independence from\nBelgium.\nTass said:\n\"On July 14 Kasavubu and\nLumumba sent Khrushchev a\ntelegram stating that Congolese\nstate territory had been occupied\nby Belgian troops and that the\nlives of the president and the\npremier of Uie republic were in\ndanger.\n\" 'it Is possible,' they pointed\nout, 'that we will be compelled\nto ask for Intervention by the\nSoviet Union if the Western camp\ndoes not desist from aggression\nagainst the sovereignty of the\nCongo republic'.\"\nTlie Tass story continued:\n\"In his message Khrushchev\nemphasizes the immense inter-\nnational significance of the\nheroic struggle of Uie Congolese\npeople.  . . .\n\"I m p e r i a 1 i s t intervention\nagainst the republic of the Congo\nis an attempt to hold up the\nprocess of the complete liberation of Africa and, if possible, to\nturn It back, he continues.\"\nThe Indian ambassador in Moscow, K. B. S. Menon, called al\nthe foreign oflice today. He was\ntold that Russia while voting for\nUN police action would have\npreferred that the resolution contain a condemnation of Western\ninternventlon.\nThe warning issued Friday was\nsimilar to that taken In the case\nof the Suez affair in 1956.\nAt that time, also, the Soviet\ngovernment said it would send\n\"volunteers\" to fight on the\nEgyptian side against the\nFrench,  British  and  Israelis.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nBeaver Lumber Company, Ltd.,\ncommon 25 cents, class A 25\ncents, Oct. 1, record Sept. 10.\nCanadian Utilities Ltd., 5 per\ncent pfd. IS 1.25, 4Vt per cent pld.\n$1.06, Aug.  15, record July 29.\nCoohrand-Dunlop Hard ware\nLtd., class A 20 cents, Aug. 13,\nrecord July 29.\nDominion and Anglo Investment Corp., 5 per cent pld. $1.25,\nSept.  1, record Aug. 12.\nDominion Oilcloth and Linoleum Company, Lid. 40 cents, July\n29, record July 20.\nFord Motor Company, 75 cents,\nSept. 1, record July 28.\nGeneral Bakeries Lid., 10 cents,\nOct. 27, record Oct. 13.\nNormetal Mining Corp., Ltd. 5\ncents, Sopt. 30. record Sept. 2.\nQuemont Mining Corp., Ltd., 20\ncents, Sept. 30. record Sept. 2.\nBETTIE BRADLEY\nning design sell in quantity to the\nmass market,\" said Neil Cough, of\nthe wallpaper industry earlier this\nSpring. \"In fact, many of our\naward winners never pay the cost\nof production,\" he went on.\nThis tale is repeated again and\nagain hy other manufacturers.\nSeveral weeks ago I visited Imperial Furniture in Stratford. Ontario. When 1 remarked on the\nastonishing number of awards\nframed and hung in the reception\narea, Mr. Hemphill, their general\nmanager, said \"we accept the\nawards proudly but the lines that\nwin the awards do not have the\nbest sales records.\"\nAssuming that the Council Is\nmade up of practical as well as\npie-in-the-sky aesthetes \u2014 and that\nthe awards really go lo functional,\nuseful furnishings \u2014 what is wrong\nwith the taste of the average Canadian? Why are we suspicious of\nour best designs, often overlooking them for the imitative and\ntawdry.\nThis does not happen ln other\ncountries. The Council of Industrial\nDesign in England was only ftf-m-\ned in 1956. Let their awards generate great excitement and even\nbhe Duke of Edinburgh, a patron\nof the Council, instituted his own\nspecial award, \"the Prize for\nElegant Design.\"\nThe Scandinavians appreciate\ntheir excellent design and enjoy a\nhealthy domestic market.\nCanadian taste should be as advanced as any other. We are\nvigorous, curious, have a high\nstandard of living and are exposed\nto the best every other country has\nto offer.\nYet this final factor may be the\nvery reason we are so slow to sup^\nport our bast home-grown designs\nThe European countries have t\nhealthy export market to support\ntheir own domestic market. Their\nsuccess abroad assures their sue\ncess at home.\nCanadians, on the other hand,\nexport very little in the furnishings\nfield. And the Canadian consumer\nwith the fattest pocket book likes\nto buy the product marked \"made\nin Sweden \u2014 or Germany \u2014 or\nIreland.\"\nThis places our Canadian manufacturers ln an unenviable position. They are unable to compete\nin a world market due to high\nwages and manufacturing costs at\nhome and unable lo sell their best\ndesigns in Canada due to the\nprestige and competition of imports.\nYet hats off to them. They persist In developing excellent de\nsigns. They aocept their awards\nwith pride and the public dis\ninterest with equanimity. May\nthey continue to do so.\n(Copyright. Toronto Telegram)\nON THE AIR\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nBE SURE TO INCLUDE\nId&JbsaJtoA.\nSIDING\nIn Your\nPLANS\nTo Build, Renovate,\nRemodel or Repair.\nAtlas Asbestos Siding Shakes\nColors: \u2014 White - Poitel  Green - Sun Bright Yellow\nTile Red - Sage Green\n$25.00 per 100 sq. ft.\nBURNS\nPhone 11 BO\nLUMBER CO.\nLTD.\nNolson, B.C. (02 Baker St.\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC\n59\u2014Sign On\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Farm Fare\n15-Wake Up Time\nD0-News\n05-Wnke Up Time\n.25\u2014Sports News\n: 30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\noo\u2014News\n:10-Wake Up Time\n55-Blrlhday Hook\n00\u2014Sample's Pharmacy\n30\u2014Adventures with Danny\nand Debbie\n45-Story Man\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014 News\n05\u2014Musicale\n15-Hobby Club\n30-SI'CA\nSUNDAY,\n59-Sign On\n00-Nows\n05\u2014Vacalion Time\n00-nnC News\n15\u2014British Israel\n30\u2014News\n40\u2014Children's\n59-D O 0 T S.\n0(1\u2014Children's\n30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Vacalion Time\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Vacation Time\n00_News\n05\u2014Vacation Time\n30\u2014Vacalion Time (CBC)\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Points West\n30\u2014Critically Speaking\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Vacation Time\n30-Vacation Time (CBC)\n1390 ON  TIIE DIAL\nDAYLIGHT TIME\n10:45\u2014Vacation Time\n1:30\u2014World Summer Curling\nChampionships\nWomen's and Men's\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Supper  Serenade\n7:00\u2014CBC National News\n7:10\u2014Musicale\n7:15\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n7:30\u2014Serenade\n8:00\u2014Hit Parade\n9:30\u2014The Continentals\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Serenade\n10:30\u2014Call The Tune    \u25a0\n11:00\u2014Western Jamboree\n11:57\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Serenade\n1:00\u2014Sign Off\nJULY  17,  1960\n2:57-Weather\n3:0(1\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Vacation Time\n3:1.5\u2014 Vacation Time\n4:00\u2014News\n4:05\u2014Vacation Time\n5:00\u2014Capital Report\n5:27\u2014Weather\n5:30\u2014Billy Graham\n6:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n6:30\u2014Fleming Presents\n7:00\u2014News\n7 10\u2014Weekend Review\n720\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Concert Hall\n8:00-CBC Stage\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014 Silent Friends\n10:30\u2014This Is My Story\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nSUNDAY, JULY  17,  1960\n00\u2014Random Hour\n00\u2014BBC News\n15\u2014B.C. Gardner\n30\u2014Neighborly News\n40\u2014Hidden Pages ol the Air\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Children's Magazine\n00\u2014Organ Recital\n30\u2014Religious Period\n00\u2014Invitation\n30\u2014Show  Music\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Points West\n30\u2014Critically  Speaking\n00\u2014Music Diary\n30-Carl  Tapscott\n:57\u2014Regional Weather\n00\u2014Matinee Highlights\n30\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Flashback\n3:42\u2014Regional Weather\n3:45\u2014Recitals from Ihe Orchestra\n4:00\u2014Chamber Music\n5:00\u2014Capital Report\n5:27-Wcather\n5:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n6:00\u2014Venture\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014 Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014 Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Concert Hall\n8:00\u2014Summer Stage\n9:0O\u2014 Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Clowns through the ages\n10:30\u2014The Critics\n11:57\u2014News\nMONDAY, JULY 18,  1960\n00\u2014Sharpe at Six\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014.sharpe\n45\u2014The Archers\nllll-RUC News\n15\u2014Candid Concert\n30\u2014Morning Concert\n: 59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014Billy O'Connor Show\n45\u2014Stories With John Drainie\n00\u2014House of Horton\n15\u2014Off the Record\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014Pacific Express\n00\u2014Pacific Express\n30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n30\u2014Summertime\n00\u2014Now I Ask Vou\n30\u2014Tempo\n30\u2014Blues and the Ballad\n7 00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Beyond Our Ken\n11:00\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00\u2014Ohambsr Music\n10 oo\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Church and Family Life\n10:30\u2014Points West\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16,1960 \u2014',\nEASY DOES IT. Window sashes are sometimes fitted with glass belore installation, but glazing Is often carried out on the site. With wooden sash care should be\ntaken not to damage the edges of the frame. (CMHC photo.)\nCare Required  in Adjusting\nWindow  Frames and Sash\nWhen nailing wooden windows\nand door frames in place, care\nshould be taken to avoid hammer\nmarks. Disfigurement of this sort\nare difficult to conceal and are a\ncontinuing blemish on a finished\nsurface.\nA precision made wooden sash\noften has the tendency to bind to\nthe frame when exposed to excessive moisture. This may result\nfrom insufficient priming. Once the\nwindow frames and sash have been\ngiven the required three coats of\npaint the tendency of bhe wood to\nswell is greatly reduced. Until the\nsashes are painted or some other\ntype of moisture repcllant has been\napplied, the house should be kept\nas dry as possible. Prolonged rainy\nperiods may lead to marked swelling In wood that has not been properly moisture-proofed. Moreover,\nuntil the basement floor has been\nlaid, a certain amount of dampness\ncan be expected throughout the\nhouse.\nPlastering should be postponed\nuntil finish wood surfaces have\nbeen waterproofed. A great deal\nof waler is used in plastering a\nhouse and some of it will he absorbed by the wood if it has not\nbeen properly treated.\nWoodwork should be dry before\nputting a plane to it. Otherwise,\nwhen the wood loses its moisture\ndoors and sashes will no longer fit\nsnugly. A gap of as much as a\nquarter of an inch may appear between the door and the door frame\nafter the wood has dried out.\nDuring the summer months window sash is often not glassed-in or\nAussie Police\nMay Have Line\nOn Kidnappers\nSYDNEY, Australia (API - Police said Friday they are hunting\nfive men in trying to track down\nthe kidnapper \u2014 or kidnappers\u2014of\nGraeme Thorne. They did not\nelaborate.\nDetectives have established that\nthe day before the eight-year-old\nboy disappeared on the way to\nschool, a man asked two of\nGraeme's clasmates about him.\nPolice Supt. Ron Walden said\nthe searoh, now in the eighth day.\nhas been extended to an area 50\nmiles south of Sydney.\nRev. Clive Goodwin Friday withdrew his offer to act as a go-\nbetween for the Thorne family in\npaying the $56,000 ransom demanded by the kidnappers.\nThe clergyman said the kidnappers had failed to contact him\nand the publicity given his role\nhad made it impossible for him to\nact as intermediary with the\ndegree of secrecy essential.\nMr. Goodwin, rector of St.\nMark's Anglican Ohurch, got three\ntelephone calls Thursday night but\nsaid he was convinced none was\nfrom the kidnappers.\nThe clergyman said his phone\nhas been ringing constantly but\n\"most of the callers were people\nwho wanted to* give me their\ntheories on the kidnapping.\"\n\"glazed\" immediately. H the sa-fih\nis installed temporarily before\nglazing, care should be taken not\nto mark the frame or the sash with\nthe tool used In removing it. These\nprecautions are all the. more necessary when the sash and frames are\nof soft-textured wood, such as white\npine, often used for this purpose.\nSome builders nail a piece of\nrough lumber to windows and ex-\ntrlor door sills to prevent damage\nduring construction. This is good\npractice, provided It Is done carefully. Only finishing nails should\nbe used and nail holes should afterwards be puttied over to remove\ntell-tale marks.\nSash balances are needed for\ndouble-hung windows. There are a\nnumber of devices for this purpose, spring balance probably being the most widely used today.\nThe older cord and pulley has\nfallen inlo disuse with the introduction ot similar types of frames.\nMany builders favor balances with\na leaf spring since they are inexpensive, simple to install, and are\nnot conspicuous. Factory-built sash\nand frame units often come equipped with their own balancing device.\nIt is useful to have both lower\nand top sa-jh with balances. A\nslight additional expense is involved, but many homeowners consider the extra convenience well\nworth it.\nFactory-built sash equipped with\nweather^tripping Is also becoming\nincreasingly popular. Weather-\nstripping the windows provides additional Insulation for your house\nand prevents heat loss at these\npoints. If weather-stripping is being put on by the builder, the job\ncan he postponed until the house i.s\nnearing completion.\nStorm sash and screens, if ordered at the same time as the\nregular sash, should be given a\npriming coat of paint when received, then stored ln a dry place\nIf they are properly stacked there\nshould be no danger of the wood\nwarping. At the first opportunity,\nhowever, after deciding on the exterior colors for the house, the\nstorm sash should be given three\ncoats of paint.\nELECTRIC  MOTOR\nREWINDING\nService and Repairs\nWe Rewind  All Size Motors\nand Armatures\nSee  Us  About  All Types of\nINDUSTRIAL CONTROLS\nColeman Electric\nLTD.\nPhone 2055 Nelson, B.C.\nNELSON   READY   MIX\nCONCRETE   LTD.\n\u2022 Ready-Mix Concrete\n\u2022 All Sizes  Crushed  Rock\n\u2022 Pea  Gravel  for  Roofing\n\u2022 Road   Gravel       \u2022 Sand\nPhone 871\nPREMIER  SAND\nand  GRAVEL   LTD.\ncklb\u00a3eeWe^L\nWE WOULD BE THRILLED\nTHROUGH ANDTHROOOU\nIF WE COULD DO THAT\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\n410 Kootenay St*.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 1630 Nights, 544-R\nYou May Place Your\nGAS REQUIREMENTS\nin Our Hands With Confidence.\nWe are licenced and bonded gas fitters efjuipped for all\nclasses of work. Our skilled mechanics give prompt and\ncourteous  service.  CALL  US AT 668  for  Prompt Service.\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\n351 Balior St.\nCO. LTD.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 666\nNOW AVAILABLE\nHome Improvement\n\u2014 Loan \u2014\nSee Us for Supplying and Applying\nCOLORED ALUMINUM ROOFING and SIDING\nMAPLE LEAF\nPhone 2107\nNelson, B. C.\nCONSTRUCTION\nCO.\n1914 Kootenay St.\nGLASS \u00b0' A|1 Kinds\nWhen  You  Require  Glass  for\nAny Building Purpose\nSEE US FIRST\nWe  Have a Complete Stock and\nOur Prices Are Right.\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\n101   Hall St. Phone  156 Nelson,  B.C.\n1\n . ' 7'\n^   1   \u25a0! ..,\u2014    ...   i.   I    ,1,      ....    ,Jt-llM^*J*-fttW,.i.\nw\nI\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960\n\u25a0tl) Gospel in PCL\n[TOWER PILLS;\" A SLUGGER'S FRIEND\nBy BOB TRIMBEE\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\n.VANCOUVER (OP) - Howie\nloss insists that the reason he\nas become the surprise power\nfitter of the I960 Pacific Coast\n\"league baseball season is reg-\nliar diet of food-supplement piils.\nj-Goss, six-foot-three, 200-pound\niative of Wewoka, Okla., is so\nBrnJ-y convinced that the pills\nrfe\" directly associated with his\niudden imrprovement as a batter\nbat he has spread the \"pill gos-\nKB\" up and down the league.\n' tflie result is that all teams but\n\u25a0\"prtland Beavers now use the\nrime supplement for their play-\nirs.\n-*;Goss, 25, and with rejuvenated\nMpe of reaching the major\neagues, said in an interview his\nafroduction to the pills marked\nlie \"crossroads of my career.\"\n1TTAH TRAINER\n! In July, 1959, just before Salt\ntake City of the POL sent him\nbo a lower league because of poor\nMWng, Walt DeLand, told Goss\neffects of the pills on Umi-\ni\nversity of Utah atliletdc teams\nDeLand  coached.\n\"For example,\" said Goss,\n\"Utah's basketball team went\nthrough an entire season and finished third in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's invitational tournament using only\nsix playes. And the sixth man\nsaw only 40 minutes of action a-M\nyear. They called Utah's team\nthe  Iron Five  and no wonder.\"\nGoss decided to try the pills\njust before being shipped to Gas-\ntonia, N.C., of the South Atlantic\nLeague. He improved gradually\nand by the end of the season was\nhitting the ball well. For the last\nmonth his average was .400.\nHe signed with Vancouver\nMounties this spring and hit six\nhome runs in seven games before running into a three - week\nslump that almost cost him his\nplace in the PCL. Then he\nbounced back, hitting an nth-inning home run that gave Mounties a 3-1 win over Spokane Indians, and has been batting well\never 6ince.\nUp to June 20 he had 13 homers, good enough for a fourth-\nplace tie with Seattle's Joe Taylor in that department and was\nbatting .290.\n\"The pills have really helped\nme. At first I was a bit skeptical\nso I went to a library to read\nup on Ihe pills. I learned a lot\nabout the importance of our diet.\n\"The fast pace of today's life\nmakes it almost impossible to get\na properly balanced diet and\nthat's why the pills are the answer, especially for professional\nathletes.\n\"The pills have a wheat base\nand contain all the minerals and\nvitamins the body needs. 1 take\ntwo a day, one in the morning\nand the other at night.\n\"Even my wife takes them and\nshe, too, has found a terrific improvement in her physical condition. We bolh have more energy,\nfeel more mentally alert and face\nup to the strains of family life\nmore easily.\"\nWILD  AS   PITCHER\nGoss   signed   with   Pittsburgh\nPirates in 1953 as a pitcher. But\nbecause of wildness \u2014 he once\nwalked 15 in five innings\u2014and\nhis power at the plate he was\nshifted to the outfield.\nHis best season was 1955 when\nhe hit .30, including 36 doubles,\nHis best season was 1955 when\nhe hit .306, including 36 doubles,\n11 triples and 25 runs batted in,\nfor Salinas of the class-C California League and was named all-\nstar centrefielder.\nFight Results\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nSpokane, Wash. \u2014 Kirk Barrow,\n178V4, Spokane, outpointed Sixto\nRodriguez, 176*4, San Francisco,\n10.\nTokyo \u2014 Hachiro Tatsumi. 156,\nJapan, outpointed Masao Gondo,\n153, Japan, 10.\n\"With a bit of luck, regular\nplaying and the pills I can still\nbecome a good major\nplayer.\"\nAndras Fay. the Hungarian\npoet and playwright w<ho died in\n1864, was also the founder of a\nsavings bank.\nPhillies File\nDamages Suit\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Two\nPhiladelphia Phillies pitchers filed\nsuit in United States district court\nThursday, each asking $100,000\ndamages against Time Inc. because\nof a story in the weekly magazine\nSports Illustrated on June 13.\nThe players \u2014 Dick Farrell and\nJim Owens \u2014 also asked a retrac\n' tion, saying the article damaged\nI their reputation and hurt their\nI chances of getting oft-season em\n! ployment.\nj Cornelius C. O'Brien Jr., counsel\nfor the two, alleged in the suit that\nthe story was meant to give read\ners the impression that Owens and\nFarrell were \"irresponsible, heavy\ndrinking, loose living, brawling and\nhot-tempered.\"\nCBC To Continue Bid\nOn Television Rights\nDO\nYOU\nKNOW\n<**\u2022*>.\nTHE\nDIFFERENCE?\nTo the observer both boats look identical - as a matter of fact,\nthey are. Both represent a capital investment of roughly $3000\nto the Nelson family who own them.\nThere Is a Big Difference, However!\nThe boat on the left and the family who enjoy it are fully\nprotected by adequate marine insurance.\nThe boat on the right has no Marine Insurance. Not only\ncould this family lose its entire investment through even an innocent piece of driftwood \u2014 if they were unfortunate enough to\nram another boat \u2014 they could pay for their lack of foresight for\nthe rest of their lives.\nIf you have any doubts regarding protection for yourself and\nyour boat, drop in and see the man who knows the difference\nbetween delight and disaster afloat.\nYour favorite NELSON MARINE INSURANCE AGENT will be\npleased to talk over your investment and how it may be best\nprotected . . . anytime and, of course, at no obligation.\nC. W. Appleyard & Co.\nReal   Estate  &   Insurance\n421   Baker St.                 Phone 269\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nInsurance\n554 Ward St.                 Phone 135\nT. D. Rosling & Son\nInsurance\n568 Ward St.                 Phone 717\nP. E. Poulin\nInsurance\n528 Ward St.                    Phone 70\nRobertson, Milliard,\nCattell, Realty Co., Ltd.\nInsurance\n456 Ward St.               Phone  1912\nWm. Kalyniuk Agencies\nInsurance\n534 Josephine St.        Phone  1777\nOTTAWA (CP) - The CBC is going to continue bidding for television rights on sports events \u2014\nregardless of a suggestion to the\ncontrary by a 1959 Commons committee.\nThe publicly-owned corporation's\n1959-60 report, tabled in Parliament\ntoday, included this resolution\namong several adopted by the CBC\nboard of directors during the year:\n\"That the CBC should continue\nto acquire the rights to sports events as and when necessary in tbe\npublic interest.\"\nLast year the special Commons\nbroadcasting committee, in a critical appraisal of CBC affairs,\nstrongly advised that the corporation get out of the costly commercial game of bedding lor TV rights\non major sports events such as\nprofessional football.\nAs the committee saw it, the CBC\nshould limit itself to providing production facilities for telecasts and\nlet potential game sponsors bid for\nthe rights.\nSince then the corporation has\npaid $437,500 for professional foot-,\nball TV rights for the 1960 season, j\nII WIFU GAMES\nIn April it concluded a $312,500;\ndeal \u2014 the same as in 1959 \u2014 lor j\nlelevsion broadcasts of 21 Big Four\ngames \"and three playoff games.\nIt paid $125,000 for Western Inter-\nprovincial Football Union rights,\ncovering 11 league games and a\nminimum of four and a maximum\nof five playoff games. Last year the j\nCBC paid $117,00 to the WIFU for '\n-even games.\nSome of the 1959 committee\nmembers were reported displeased\nwhen the CBC took this action several months ago.\nHowever, CBC officials have explained that the corporation ii virtually forced into bidding for rights\nif it is to satisfy the public appetite\nfor pro football.\nDespite the thousands paid by the\ncorporation, it has never lost\nmoney on football telecasts. Advertising time bought by sponsors\nalways has been enough to write\noff the cost of rights plus expenses\nand make a small profit besides.\nAll available advertising time on\n'big Four telecasts already has\nbeen sold to two large firms. Hall\nthe time available for WIFU games\nhas been sold to one sponsor and\nthe CBC now is dickering with other\npotential advertisers for the other\n50 per cent.\nrf\nTwo To Make\nA War\"; Rozelle\nNEW YORK I API-There is\nno war between tlie National and\nAmerican pro Football Leagues,\nsays the new NFL commissioner,\nbut there isn't much harmony\neither.\nPete Rozelle made the statement Thursday to an open house,\nmarking the return of the NFL\nheadquarters to New York after\na 14-year stay in Philadelphia.\n\"It takes two to make a war,\"\nhe said, \"and technically there\nstill is only one league. We of\nthe National League will welcome\nlhe competition frcm the new\nAmerican League but we are too\nbusy preparing for another season of the best there is in football to concern ourselves with\nwhat they are doing.\"\nRozelle said he and Joe Foss,\ncommissioner ol the American\nLeague, held a three-hour con-\nlerence in St. Louis some time\nago at whioh \"I thought we had\nreached an agreement to respect\nthe contracts and options involving  players.\"\n\"The AFL hasn't shown that\nespect, as promised, and we will\nhave to defend ourselves,\" he\nsaid.\n\"But I hope that this fall and\nwinter the followers or pro foot-\nlall will be concerned with what\n'lappens on the field, not what\nhappers in lawyer's offices.\"\nRozelle said the AFL, which\n\"days its first schedule this fall,\nhad come a long way in one summer and congratulated it on its\n'eague-paokage TV deal.\nIN  SHAPE  FOR  SWIM\u2014Mrs.\nJane Baldasare, Long Island\nhousewife, is in England,\npreparing for her attempt\nto swim the English channel\nunderwater. Jane holds two\nunderwater records, endurance (100 hours) and distance (14 miles). She's pictured boarding a plane for\nLondon.\nInter-Squad Tilt\nInter-Squad Gam\nKELOWNA, B.C. (CP) - AH-star\nlineman Tom Hinton remains the\nonly player unsigned in the British I\nColumbia Lions' camp.\nFullback Don Vicic signed with\nthe Western Intenprovincial Union\nclub Fri,day bringing the team roster to 53.\nIt is reported that Hinton wants\nto play out his option with Lions,\nwhich would make him a free agent\nat the en dot the 1960 season.\nLions hold their annua) inter-\nsquad game at Keiowna City Park\nSaturday an a complete sellout is\nexpected.\nThe teams are named the Ogos\nand Pogos \u2014 after Ogopogo, the\nmonster which is alleged to prowl\nLake Okanagan. Coaching the\nPogos will be Don Burnaby and\nJoe Davies with backfield coach\nDave Skrein handling the Ogos.\nThe coaches, with hhe exception\nof Wayne Robinson, head coach,\nwill head for Edmonton by plane\nFriday to witness the game between Edmonton Eskimos and\nMontreal Alouettes.\nIKE'S GRANDSON\u2014It's David\nEisenhower, grandson of the\npresident, starting his first\ngame as second baseman for\na Gettysburg, Pa., team ia\nthe Little League there.\nSPORTS\nSputterings\nBy Walter L. Johns, Central Press Sports Editor\nKANSAS viTY\u2014Items of sports Info picked up here\nand there in the steam bath known as Municipal Stadium,\nKansas City ... A small boy approached Commissioner\nFord Frick in the lobby of the Muehlebach hotel and asked\nfor his autograph . . . The baseball czar consented and\nwhen the boy retrieved his program he said, \"By the way,\nyou are Mr. Frick, aren't you?\" .. .\nStan Williams, the Dodger pitcher who had two distinctions appearing in the All-Star cast\u2014he was the heaviest\nand the tallest on the squads\u2014came up with a silly injury\nthe night before the first game when he caught his finger\nin a hotel folding bed . . . Bob Skinner, the Pirates' big gun\nsays that his hitting fell off last year because of that early\nseason injury and \"I was pressing too much after that.\" . . .\nTony Cuccinello, the long-time associate of Al Lopez and\ncoach of the White Sox, says that the big trouble with the\npale Hose pitchers at the start of the year was control . . .\n\"But they seemed to have found some of it, now,\" he adds\n. . . Hank Aaron, the great natural hitter of the Braves,\nwill turn out to be the big money winner on that Horne\nRun Derby television feature and the Hank bankroll, will\nrun into $14,000 ...\nHappiest kids at the All-Star game were the Kirmsa\nbrothers, bat boys, -who were to receive $10 apiece for lugging the bats of the inter-league stars.\n* \u00ab     *\nSOMEONE asked genial AJ Lopez, the fine senor who\nmanaged the A. L. Stars, if he had planned to* hold a meeting before game time on signals. \"Shucks, no,\" said Al,\n\"we're All-Stars-I\"\n\u2022 \u2022      \u2022\nVTNCE DIMAGGIO, one-third of the brother act who had\none distasteful distinction in his career\u2014holding the N. L.\nstrikeout record\u2014once hit a home run over the left field\nwall in the K. C. park here, a ball which then cleared another wall and landed on\u2014and through\u2014a fender of an\nautomobile in a parking lot . . .\nSomeone wanted to know if Early Wynn had ever thrown\na spit ball . . . Lopez said that in 20 years he's been in\nbaseball no one ever accused Early of throwing one.\" . . .\nLou Brissie, the former Philadelphia and Cleveland pitcher\nwho was a war hero, now is in his fifth year aa head of the\nAmerican Legion program . . . Lou said here that there are\nnow 19,000 teams in the league but that baseball interest\namong the kids \"is lagging east of the Mississippi\" . . . H\u00ab\nsaid that best interest is being shown in Oregon and Nebraska .. .\nA Yorkton, Saskatchewan, television station sent a cameraman 1,600 miles to Kansas City to take films of the\nAll-Star setup here, for showing to its viewers . . . The\ncameraman, Linus Westberg, said that interest in baseball\nin his area is amazing, that even the little kids can tell you\nwhat club is leading what major league and name the leading hitterc . . .\nA total of 170 newspapermen requested tickets for the\ngame in K. C. but 35 failed to show . . . Biggest entertainment for the pre-game customers was an impromptu \"dumb\nwaiter\"\u2014a bucket on a rope\u2014which elevated messages and\nfood to the upper roof . . . Only trouble was that the operator had a heckuva time trying to reach the bucket when\nIt hit the top . . .\nEddie Mathews of the Braves was berating his play but\nsaid that he always was a slow starter and generally came\non after the All-Star Game ... He thinks the Braves have\na good chance to win . . . Pittsburgh spokesmen will tell you\nthat the Pirates aren't going to fold . . .\nMarty Marion, the former \"Mr. Shortstop\" and now president of the Houston club, is angling for a major league\nfranchise and it might come through expansion of the big\nbig leagues or purchase of the Kansas City A's, which are\nto be sold . . . Marion, a traveling companion on Uie press\ncharter plane, said that his group\u2014there are 18 stockholders, 16 of them Texans\u2014are holding on in Houston despite big losses because they're hopeful of getting a big\nleague franchise , . .\nMarty revealed that his group purchased the Houston\nteam for $100,000 a year and a half ago and already have\nspent $262,000 . . . The club lost $130,000 last year and will\nlose even more this year . , . Marty has made his money\nin investments.\nHr\nMM\n sp\u2014\u2014, :  .-  _ i ;\t\n\t\n1<B3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960 -^9\n\u00ab1\nWESTERN CANADA ATHLETES TOP TRACK TRIALS\nOne of Fastest Men in World\nCoast Sprinter Compiles\nAstounding Track Record\nsdiool competition, he showed his\npromise hy knocking one-tenth c'.\na second from Percy Williams' 22-\nsecond record for the 220 yard\nevent.\nBROTHER-SISTER  TEAM\nHe and hie sister, Valerie, became the first brother-sister entry in tho 'Pan-American Games\nin Chicago in 1959, but did not\nplace in the finals.\nIn May of this year he ran\nj three straight Kkl-yard times of\n9.4, one-tenth of a second off the\nworl record.\nWilliams, the man Jerome is\nbeing constantly compared with,\nastounded the world in 1928 when\nhe scored upset victories in the\n100 and 200 yard events at the\nOlympics.\nIn 1980 he equalled the world\nrecord for 100 metres, 10.3, in\nToronto. Two weeks after he\npulled a thigh muscle ln his left\nleg and the injury has never\nmended.\nSASKATOON (CP)\u2014Harry I\u00bbrome, a 19-year-old Van-]\ncouver track sensation, made his mark Friday as one of\nthe fastest men in the world. ,\nJerome, competing in the Cartadlaft Olympic track!\nand field trials, racked up an astounding time of 10 seconds\nflat in the men's 100-metre race.\nIt makes him one of only two men in the world who\nhave recorded Ihe time.\nIn Zurich last June a German\nsprinter, Armin Hary, also covered the distance in 10 seconds\nbut his record has not yet been\noffioialHy recognized.\nJerome beat the established\nreoord of 10.1 first set by W. J.\nWilliams of the United States in\nGermany in 1966. Others who have\nmade it are I. J. Murdilson of\nthe U.S. and Learmon King of the\nU.S. who did it twice within a\nweek in California in October of\n1956.\nThe Vancouver sprinter, a husky\nyoung Negro, stands five feet 10\nIndies and weighs in at 156\npounds,\nCOMPLETE SURPRISE\nHis record-shattering time et\ntfhe meet here was a complete\nsurprise to the 1,800 spectators\nand officials.\nHis time in the qualifying heats\nwere low, 10.7 and 10.8. Right up\nto startin'-* time he couldn't say\nwhether or not he would be turning on the speed ln the final.\n\"It's a thing you Just have to\nfeel,\" be sn'd. \"Sometimes it (eels\ngood  and  sometimes it doesn't.\"\nThere was a false start in the\nfinal when one cf the runners\nbroke early and a track official\nremarked at the time it would\nprcfoalbly throw Jerome off if he\nwas keyed for a record run.\nThe second start was good and\nJerome broke from the starting\nblocks  as  if jet-propelled.\nHe was in the lead after his\nfirst driving steps and widened\nthe gap all the way down to the\nline. At the finish he was aboul\n10-15 feet ahead of the second-\nplacer, Lynn Eves of Victoria.\nJerome took the news cf his\nrecord calmly. He said in a brief\nInterview after he \"felt good about\nthe race\" as scon as he broke\nfrom the Mocks.\n\"I got a good start and I guess\nI was ready for a good one. I\nhaven't had a good run for a couple of weeks\".\nHis victory almost assures him\nof a spot on the track and field\nsquad Canada will send to the\n61-ymplc games in Rorne this\nAugust.\nJerome, a student at the University of Oregon, was born in\nPrince Albert, Sask., the second\nyoungest of five children, son of\na railway porter. The family\nmoved to Winnipeg h the early\n1940s  and to Vancouver  in  1959.\nHe started sprinting in 1958 after he decided he could beat most\nof the other students in the high\nschool meets.\nIn his  first test,  an inter-high\nShamrock Clubs\nMay Re-Enter\nOne \u2014 and possibly two \u2014\nShamrOok teams will re-enter the\nNelson Boys Mid-Summer baseball tournament, Cy Jackman,\ntournament manager, announced\nlast night.\nThe Shamrook team that swept\nthrough all opposition to the\nShrimp leaigu* championship, and\n1 withdrew from the mid-summer\nj tournament because it was ton\nstrong, has been split down the\nmiddle.\nHalf of the main power\u2014Ivan\nSchindel, Wilfred Playdon, Stuart\nWard, Bcfb Smith, K\u00abn Smith and\nGordon Apostoliuk, wilh six boys\nfrom the Pee Wee league\u2014will\nform a new toam, the Shamrock\nGrizzlies. The Pee Wees selected\nare Robert Richardson, Robert\nCarmichael. Dirk Jan Huysman,\nTerry Wikstrom, Calvin Morton\nand Jim Tedeoco.\nThe new team will work out\nMonday at 6:30 p.m. at the Uphill park and get Its first test\nthere at the same time Wednesday\nagainst another new entry, Wool-\nworth's.\nStill to decide whether they will\nadd some Pee Wees and enter the\ntournament a< the Shamrock\nBears or try out for other teams\nare the six boys who provided the\nolher half of the power on the\nShrimp league champion Shamrocks:   Todd   Phillips.   Dick   Vul-\nMatch Called in First Halt\nReferee Criticized\nAfter Soccer Match\nTurbulence and turmoil has raised its ugly head in\nthe soccer ranks in West Kootenay.\nFollowing a soccer match Sunday between Trail's\nItalico and Nelson soccer club, referee Red lus of Trail received a large amount of criticism from one side of the fence\nwhile on the other side, an equalwamount oteupporting praise.\nIub disqualified Nelson soccer club late in the first\nhalf when inside right Joe Molnor \"used abusive and foul\nlanguage\" in regard to a referee's call. lus also claimed\nMolnor re-entered the game, after he was sent to the sidelines, and kicked the ball.\n'Tin Can Trophy\" Presented\nHeat Fails To Chi\nEnthusiastic Meet\nDespite blistering heat, more\nthan 125 Nelson children turned\nout to compete for the coveted\n\"tin can trophy\" Friday afternoon\nat Civic park in the playground\ntrack meet championships.\nAthletes were started through\ntheir paces with a miniature Olym\npic torch similar to that of the\nWorld Olympics in Rome. A rep\nresentative from each playground\ntook part in the official torch light\ning.\nDon Dozzi accepted Ihe coveted\ntrophy on behalf of the winning\nplayground Nelson Junior High\nSchool. The winners wrapped up\na total of 101 points. Runners up\nwere Hume playground 86, Lake-\nijde 48 and Uphill 26. Playground\ndirector, Ernie Gare presented the\ntrophy to the winning team.\nIndividual awards were penny\nsuckers which we**e. part of the\ntrophyr\nEvent winners: 6-8 years of age\nhoys high jump, I. Doug Huln\nJr. High; 2, Noel Pepin, Jr. High;\nThe match will have to be replayed under official soccer rules\nas it did not proceed past the first\nhalf.\nTempers flared following a 1-1\ntie breaker by Trail late in the\nhalf when charges were made that\nthe ball was \"handed\" or touched\nby the scorer's hand before it entered the net. Linesman Joe Karasz\nof Nelson apparently signalled lus\nthat there was some discrepancy j\nin the play but the head referee\nfailed to see the warning flag.\nFrom that point on players show-1\ned an obvious dissatisfaction to-,\nward the calls of lus. I\nRay Jonkers. Nelson team captain and secretary of the West j\nKootenay Soccer League stated:\n\"The referee had no right to stop j\nthe game. He is a 'dictator' . . . but ,\nwhat he says goes and that's that.\" \\\n\"He's known to be a little tough\n\"In the first place,\" Jonkers stated, \"Joe did not use foul language.\nHe merely said 'that was a hand\nball.\"\n\"We have trouble with Italico all\nthe time . . . it's the refereeing.\nThere is definitely no conflict between any of the teams or players.\n\"We won't file a protest to the\nleague. The whole thing is too ridiculous. A large per cent of lhe\nTrail players think the same way\nabout the whole incident . . . quite\nunfair.\"\nA report was received that al\nleast two Trail players turned in\nIheir uniforms following the fracas. Mr. Jonkers said \"I actually\nsaw one of them quit but I couldn't\nsay if anyone else has. AH the rest\nis completely hear-say.\"\nlus stated through a letter to Alt\nBaker of Nelson, league president,\nthat he \"will take no further part in\nPennant\nChase\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW L\nMew York\nCleveland\nChicago\nBaltimore\nDelroit\nWashington\nBoston\nKansas City\nWashington\nCleveland\nRamos.   Lee\nPet Gbl\n45 ,11 .592 -\nHi\n44 33 .571\n44 36 .550\n46 38 .548\n38 39 .494\n37 40 .481\n37 4B .392 15\u00abis\n29 49 .371 18\nOOO 000 000-0 4 1\n110 000 20x\u20144 B 0\n(8)    and   Bailey\nIn the past.   A referee has lo be \\ refereeing games if he has to lake\ntough. But he is a little bit too muoh\nthat way.'\nArcaro Favored\nFor Monmouth\nBy The Canadian Press\nEddie Arcaro guns for his fourth\nvictory in five years In the $100,000\nadded Monmouth Handicap at Monmouth Park Saturday, and with\nFirst Landing under him he i.s a\nheavy favorite to make it.\nThe lVd-mile event for older\nhorses is one of the two big-money\nraces on the day's program. The\nother is the Hollywood Gold Cup at\nHollywood Park, worth $162,100 at\nthe same distance.\ncano,  Ivano  Jacoe,  Sid  Palmar.\nBob Jarrett and Gordon Shlakoff.\nFriday line score:\nHipperson's 5 12 0 0\u20148\nFrank's 2 0 0 1 0-3\nNext game;  Monday, 9:30 a.m.\nLord    Nelsons    at    Hipperson's.\nCivic gounds.\nthi.s kind of abuse.\" Mr. lus was\nreferring to the alleged foul language used by the Nelson player.\n\"That suits me Just fine.\" Jonkers remarked hotly. \"We want tn\nkeep the game ol soccer clean and\nhealthy and It can't he done if there\nis fighting like this. We might at\nleast get a referee that knows\nsomething about the game and can\ndo an adequate job.\"\n\"All those claims made against\nMolnor and the Nelson club are\nquite untrue. It's the referee that\ncaused the trouble,\" he said.\nJonkers remarked, \"The ball was\nin play even before Molnor had a\nchance to get off the field. The\ngame should have been stopped until he had completely left the playing area. Also he did not kick the\nball ... he headed it.\"\nNo comment has been made by\nMr. Baker nn the affair, however a\nspecial meeting is expected to be\nheld within the next week.\nNelson will meet the Nakusp club\nat Nakusp Saturday at 6:30 p.m\nThe team will leave the Civic Cen\nIre at 3:30 p.m.\nThis is your chance to\nenrol for top aviation\ntraining work with\nthe late-it equipment-\nearn good pay as you\nlearn.\nContort the RCAF\nCareer Counsellor who\nwill answer all your\nquestions . . tell you\nof the many other\nbenefits of a career in\nthe RCAF.\nRight tw& in\nNelson, B. C.\nAt the Hume Hotel, Room 325\nOn   July   19th\nfrom 12:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.\nRCAF  CAREER   COUNSELLOR\nPerry and Romano.  W \u2014 Perry\nj HO-4). L-Ramos (5-10).\nRoston 200 000 000\u20142 8 0\nKansas City        100 000 000\u20141 7 0\n1 Monbouquette  and  H.  Sullivan;\ni R. Daley and P. Daley. W\u2014Mon\nhnuriuelte   (9-7).   L   \u2014   B.   Daley\n(12-5).\nNew York 300 000 001\u20144 5 0\nDetroit 106 001 00x-8 7 1\nDitmar, James (3), Gabler (5),\nDuren (7), Maas (8) and Howard\nMossi and Berberet. W \u2014 Mossi\n18-61. L-Ditmar (7-6). HRs: NYk\n\u2014 Mantle 121). Det. \u2014 Yost (6>\nColavito (18), Boiling (6).\nBaltimore 002 001 002\u20145 13 0\nChicago 010 000 010\u20142   5 0\nPappas   and   Triandos;   Pierce\nLown  Ul)  and Lollar. W\u2014Pappas\nill-fii. L-Pierce (7-5). HRs: Bit\nBrandt  (7), Robinson  17). Chi \u2014\nSievers  113).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L   Pet Gbl\nPittsburgh       49 32 .605 \u2014\nMilwaukee .   45 34 .570   3\nLos  Angeles 42 38 .525   61\nSt.   Louis 42 39 .519   7\nSan Francisco 40 39 .506   8\nCincinnati 47 42 .468 n\nPhiladelphia 34 48 .415 15'z\nChicago 30 47 .390 17\nMilwaukee 000 421 000\u20147   9 1\nPhiladelphia        OOO 003 002\u20145 10 0\nSaphn, Piche (9) and Crandall.\nShort, Green (6) and Coker. W\u2014\nSpahn (9-6). Ij\u2014Short M-6). HRs:\nMil\u2014Adcock    (14i.    Tha\u2014Herrera\n2 il3>.\nLos Angeles       211 001 000-5 12 1\nSan Francisco    000 100 110-3   9 2\nDrysdale, Roebuck (8) and\nRoseboro; Jones, O'Dell (3), Loes\ni8) and Landrith. W\u2014Drysdale\n17-10). L-Jones (11-9). HR - Los\nAngeles. Howard (14).\nCincinnati . 200 000 020\u20144 11 1\nPittsburgh 000 000 010-1   7 0\nO'Toole. Brosnan (8) and Bailey;\nFriend. Face (8) and Smith. W\u2014\nO'Toole (7-8). L-Friend (10-6).\nChicago 000 000 000-0 1 0\nSt. Louis 210 000 03x\u20146 8 0\nCardwell, Schaffernoth (8) and\nTappe, Thacker (8); Broglio and\nSawatski. W-Broglio (10-4). L -\nCardwell 14-81. HR: St L - Sawatski  (4).\n3, G. Smith, Uphill. 6-8 boys\nbroad jump, 1, Billy Haliday, Jr.\nHigh; 2, Gary Westfall, Jr. High;\n3, John Marion, Lakeside. 6-8 boys\nball throw, 1, David Huln, Jr.\nHigh: 2, Terry Severyn, Jr. High;\n3, Jim Pickering, Hume. 6-8 boys\nrace:   1, Jimmy Stewart, Hume;\n2, Ken Olechick, Jr. High; 3, Doug\nHuln, Jr. High. 6-8 boys relay \u2014\n1, Jr. High.\nGirls 6-8: high jump, 1, Y. Cole\nLakeside; 2, Betty Marken, Jr.\nHigh; 3, A. Stewart, Hume. Broad\njump: 1, Joan Woolls, Hume; 2,\nBrenda Humble, Lakeside; 3,\nRhonda McKenzie, Lakeside. Ball\nthrow, 1, Mary Ann Bragagnola,\nJr. High; 2, Irene Steenvoorden\nUphill; 3, Joan Woolls. Race, 1\nJoan Woolls; 2, Irene Steenvoorden. Relay, 1, Hume.\nBoys 9-11 high jump: 1, Joe\nSmith, Jr. High; 2, Pat Laughton,\nHume; 3, Doug Johnston, Hume,\nBroad jump, 1, Bob MacLeod, Jr.\nHigh; 2, W. Negroeff, Uphill; 3,\nKen Stevenson, Lakeside. Ball\nthrow, 1, Pat Laughton; 2, Joe\nSmith; 3, B. Poznikoff, Uphill.\nRace, 1, Pat Laughton; 2, Joe\nSmith; 3, Bob MacLeod. Relay\nJr. High.\nGirls 9-11 high jump, 1, Shirley\nCole; 2, Lorraine Keinholtz; 3\nLavern Marken. Broad jump, 1\nJanet Hart, Jr. High; 2, Marg\nMoir, Jr. High; 3, Mary Horton\nHume. Ball throw, 1, Bernice\nKary, Lajfeside; 2, Mary Horton;\n3, Marcia Marion, Lakeside. Race,\n1, Janet Hart; 2, Mary Horton; 3,\nAdell Sjoberg, Uphill. Relay, Jr.\nHigh.\nBoys 12 and over high jump. 1,\nDick Smith, Jr. High; 2. John\nPuddicombe, Hume; 3, Don Dozzi,\nJr. High. Broad jump, 1, Don\nDozzi; 2, John Puddicombe; 3\nTom Yasik, Hume. Ball throw\n1, Bob Smith, Uphill; 2, John\nPuddicombe; 3, Don Stephenson,\nJr. High. Race, 1, Don Dozzi; 2,\nR. Haden, Uphill; 3, Dick Smith.\nRelay, Uphill.\nGirls 12 and over high jump, 1,\nPam MacDonald, Hume; 2, Elizabeth Hamilton, Hume; 3, Cathy\nMarion, Lakeside. Broad jump, 1,\nPam MacDonald; 2, Elizabeth\nHamilton; 3, Linda Barefoot, Lakeside. Ball throw, 1. Lorraine Vickers, Lakeside; 2, Linda Barefoot;\n3, Pam MacDonald. Race. 1,\nElizabeth Hamilton; 2, Pam MacDonald; 3, Linda Snyder, Lakeside.\nRelay, Lakeside.\nAggregate winners: 6-8 boys,\nDoug Huln; 6-8 girls, Joan Woolls;\n9-11 boys, Pat Laughton; 9-11 girls,\nJanet Hart; 12 and over boys, Don\nDozzi; 12 and over girls, Pam\nMacDonald.\nWINNERS OF THE PLAYGROUND track and field\nmeet Friday, left, Junior High. They compiled a total of\n101 points. Above, from left to right, Don Dozzi, Junior\nHigh; John Walker, Uphill; Pat Laughton, Hume School,\nand Ted Allen, Lakeside, officially started the.games\nby lighting the \"Olympic torch.\" More than 125 children\ntok part ln the events.\nFor Your Entertainment\nAnd Enjoyment\nAt the Matinee Today at 2:00 \u2014\n\"PRINCE OF PIRATES'7 (Technicolor)\nSerial, Cartoons, Comedy\nLast Times Tonight\u2014Shows at 7:00-9:05\n. \/TS WHAT GOES ON WHEN THE LIGHTS GO OFF!\nwMfllLpJBTHBMiiBIlBl\nwin ^^^ ^*W     AN ARWIN PRODUCTION\nKICK ADAMS-MARCEL DALIOOULIA MEADE a univebsahniehnaiional release   '\nin Emtmsn COLOR \u2022 CINEMASCOPE\nMonday at 8:00 p.m.\n\"THE ROOKIE\"\u2014\"VALLEY OF THE REDWOODS\"\nCIVIC\n\"Friend of a Friend\"\nThat Didn't Click\nReason for Failure\nAUGUSTA, Me. (AP)-Failure of\nCanadian light-heavyweight Yvon\nDurelle to appear for a July 4\nAugusta boxing bout may have resulted from an arrangement wilh\na \"friend of a friend\" that didn't\nclick.\nThe Maine boxing commission\nwas told by promoter Arthur Terrell at a hearing Friday lhat neither he nor the matchmaker made\ncontact with Durelle or his manager. They left arrangements up\nto another man who said he knew\na friend of Durelle.\nMatchmaker Jackie Nichols said\n(here was no written contract for\nIhe bout with Augusta boxer Paul\nVVheelock because the bout was to\nhave been only a sidelight on an\notherwise all-wrestling program.\nDurelle was at his home In Baie\nSte. Anne, N.B., the night the bout\nwas to have gone on.\nPCL SCORES\nTacoma 9, Salt Late City 3\nSpokane 3. Seattle 2\nVancouver 1, Portland 2\nI\u2014TONITE!\u2014,\nU Head For The [|\nPLAYMOR\nSummer Dance Spot of\nThe Scenic Kootenays\nAMONG THE PINES\nWHERE IT'S COOL\nonncE\n9:30 to 1 \u2014 With the\nNelson Kootenairesl\nELK  DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"THE   MOTORCYCLE  GANG\"\nSteve Terrel - Anne Neyland\nPlus\n\"SUICIDE   BATTALION\"\nTouch Connors - John Ashley\nOne Showing, 9:20 p.m.\nAUTO-VUE Drive-ln\nTrail, B.C.\nToday  Through  Tues.,  July  19\n\"KARAMOJA\"\n(Adult Entertainment Only)\nALL NATIVE CAST\nPlus \"TIME LOCK\"  (Featurette)\nShow Time, 9:00 p.m.\nCASTLE  THEATRE;\nCaitlegar. B.C. 5\nLast Times Tonight\n\"UP PERISCOPE\"\n(Color - Cinemascope) .\nJames Garner, Edmund O'Brien\n\u25a0 \"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -7\u00bb \u00bb   \"J\nSTARLIGHT      (\nDRIVE-IN        I\nTonight, Monday, Tuesday!\nt\nI Show Time, 9:00 p.m.\nI \"THE HANGING\nI TREE\"\nI (WarnerCoIor)\nI\nGary Cooper, Maria Schell\nPLUS -\n'J BUGS  BUNNY\n| CARTOON  CARNIVAL\nI Admission: 75c-50c - All Children '\n25c, This Show Only [I\n| Studenta' Cards Must Be Shown\nSUNDAY KINSMEN SHOW\n\"BANDIT OF\nZHOBE\"\n(Cinemascope - Color)\nVictor Mature\nSILVER COLLECTION\nI\nn       SILVER COLLECTION       *\nTriple - Header\nBASEBALL\nSaturday, July  16\nKimberley Hoboes\nvs.\nNelson Outlaws,   6 p.m.\nSunday, July 17\nKimberley vs Nelson\n1:30 p.m.\nNew Denver-Silverton\nvs Nelson Outlaws, 4 p.m.\nCIVIC GROUNDS\n PSfPSiPllBI^-W\n<PWffjPl>\n-_-_-------_-----__-__________.\n^^^^^^mm^m^w\nmmw^w^^mW'xw' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960\nL\nI\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nO\nI\ns\nB.\nB\nR\nA\nD\nF\nO\nR\nD\nD\nD\nN\nA\nU\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nJ\nU\nL\n1\nE\nT\nJ\nO\nN\nE\nS\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nB\nU\nZ\nS\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nB.\nB\nA\nI\nL\nE\nY\n'J\n1\nG\nG\nS\n& j\\\nf   \/VIAN,      X\n' WHEM I GO k\nIH TOWN I   C\nWEEP      H\nCOMBAT   ly\nBOOTS \/\n.   V ^?r\ni_mf\nIff\n&&s2>\nM       7J\nI WAS HOPINS THAT WAS ^\nTHE MESSENGER WITH\nFATHER'S   BIRTHDAY\nPRESENT- J\"*\"\n\\\\m\\wxi m\nPfRSON'IWikM MNTM\nFOR QWCK ffiULTS!\nBIRTHS\nBARISOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Barisofff, Crescent Valley at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJuly 14, a daughter.\nGRETCHEN - To Mr. and Mrs.\nAlec Gretchen, Thrums, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, July\nIS, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 6\n(KOOTENAY LAKE)\nWANTED FOR SEPTEMBER\nTERM \u2014 full time handyman to\nact as School Bus Driver (Class A)\nfor short run morning and afternoon (Meadow Creek \u2014 Argenta),\nbalance of time Janitor, and Maintenance man as required. Salary\n$300.00 per months, MSA, etc.\nOwn Trailer would be an advantage.\nApply  with  full  particulars  of\nexperience and two references to\nALF. WATSON,\nSecretary Treasurer,\nSchool Board, Kaslo, B.C.\nWANTED\nTwo experienced underground miners to work in\nsilver mine. For appointment send complete detailed information pertaining\nto self, marriage status,\nlast two jobs held and\nname of employer. All information held in strictest\nconfidence. Box 987, Nelson Daily News.\nLeading Canadian Distributor\nof construction and forestry\nequipment has opening for\nqualified commission agent in\nNelson territory. Products are\nleaders in their field and well\nestablished in Western market.\nOnly sales personnel with\nproven background can be considered. Apply Box 1002, Daily\nNews.\nWANTED - SECOND-CLASS\nsteam engineer for shift work.\nApply Master Mechanic, Michel\nColliery, The Crow's, Nest Pass\nCoal Company Limited, Michel,\nB.C.\nPUBLIC   NOTICES\nWANTED SMALL CAT AND Operator to skid, and split fence\nposts part time, also post makers\non contract basis. Apply 1105 Sel-\nbySt.\nWANTED: EXPERIENCED LUM-\nber grader with certificate if\npossible. Apply Ph. EL 6-4443,\nCreston.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nAVON OFFERS AN EXCELLENT\nearning opportunity for housewives. Work morning or afternoon at your convenience in your\nneighborhood. Please note this\napplies to a number of towns\nnorth of Nelson also. Write to\nMrs. E. C. Hearn Boi: 14, R.R. 4,\nKeiowna, B.C.\nLOCAL RETAIL STORE HAS\nopening for saleslady. Year round\nemployment. Experience desirable but not necessary. Apply\nBox 9114 Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED SEPTIC TANK\ncleaning. Low rates. Free inspection on tank and drain fields.\nPhone 161-L-l.\nPRECISION    GRINDING,    SCIS-\nsors, Garden, Pinking Shears.\nHipperson's,   Nelson \u2014 Ph.   497\nFOR ROOFING, CONCRETE\nwork or repairs and alterations\nto buildings. Phone 1463-L.\nCHESTERFIELD, RUG CLEAN-\ning. Dutch Cleaning Service \u2014\nPhone 2190.\nWANTED - LOGGING CON-\ntractor to make cedar poles. Apply Box 997 Daily News.\nLARRY'S EXCAVATING - FILL\ndelivered or removed. Phone 171\nNelsim Satly News\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy carrier per week 35c\nin   advance.\nSubscription rates\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 the\nUnited States:\nOne month          $ 1.75\nThree months      5.00\nSix months         9.00\nOne year        18.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rules plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,     phone     Mrs.     Stanley\nWillisson;\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown;\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner;\nIn Rossland. Mrs. Ross Saundry.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - GOOD YOUNG\ncow. Just freshened. Apply Alex\nMarkin, Thrums, B.C.\t\nFOR SALE - GOOD MILKING\ncow. G. Polonikoff. Slocan Park.\nFRESHENED COW FOR SALE.\nApply J. Lehedoff, Glade, B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentlemen. Phone Mrs. Truscott.\nPhone 1179-X.\t\nROOM AND BOARD FOR WORK-\ning man in quiet home. Ph. 67^R\nNOTICE OF MEETING\nOF THE HOLDERS OF\nTEMPORARY FIRST MORTGAGE\nTEN YEAR SIX PERCENT\nGOLD BONDS OF\nCOAST COPPER COMPANY,\nLIMITED\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat a meeting of the holders of\nTemporary First Mortgage Ten\nYear Six Percent Gold Bonds exchangeable for Engraved Bonds of\nthe Issue of $750,000.00 Ten Year\nSix Percent Gold Debentures (hereinafter called the \"debentures\")\nof Coast Copper Company. Limited\n(hereinafter called the \"Com\npany\") issued under and secured\nby a deed of trust and mortgage\n(hereinafter referred to qs the\n\"Trust Deed\") dated the 26th May\n1917, and made between the Com\npany and the Trusts and Guarantee\nCompany, Limited now known as\nthe Crown Trust Company (here\nmatter called the \"Trustee\") wil\nbe held in Room 311 of the Genera\nOffice Building of The Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company of\nCanada Limited, City of Trail,\nBritish Columbia, on the 2nd day\nof August, 1960 at the hour of two\no'clock in the afternoon, for the\npurpose of: \u2014\n1. Considering and, if thought\nfit, passing one or more resolutions\nfor the following purposes, namely\nA. To sanction the abrogation\ncompromise or arrangement of the\nrights of tlie debenture holders\nagainst the Company and the property of the Company involved in or\nnecessary or advisable giving effect to and carrying out the agreement dated the 27th day ol June,\n1960 made between The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company ot Canada Limited and Coast\nCopper Company, Limited (hereinafter referred to as \"the said\nagreement\").\n(i> To provide that the holders\nof all debentures shall surrender\nsuch debentures to the Trustee for\ncancellation and that the Trustee\nShall thereupon deliver to the debenture holders so surrendering\ntheir debentures Class \"A\" common shares with a nominal or par\nvalue of $5.00 (hereinafter called\n\"Class \"A\" shares\") of the Company on the basis of 2O0 Class \"A\"\nshares of each $1,000.00 debenture.\n(ii) To authorize the Trustee to\nexecute and deliver to' the Company a release and reconveyance\nof all the property, assets and\nundertakings secured by the trust\ndeed upon receipt of the said\n150.000 Class \"A\" shares.\nB. (i) To direct tile Truslce to\nwaive all defaults under the Trust\nDeed and, without limiting generality, to direct the Trustee lo\nwaive interest and all rights to\ndamages for non-payment of interest on the principal amount secured\nby the debentures.\n(ii) To authorize the Trustee to\nconcur in and execute Irom lime\nto time deeds and other documents\nsupplemental to such release and\nreconveyance which may be necessary or desirable for giving effect\nlo and carrying out the said agreement and\/or resolution or resolutions:\nthe whole subject to the condition that such resolution or resolutions shall cease to have any force\nor effeel if the shareholders of the\nCompany  shall  not  on  or  before\nthe  1st day ol September, I960: \u2014\nla)  ratify   the   agreement,  with\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelling Company of Canada    Limited     ('hereinafter\ncalled \"Cominco\") dated the\n27th day of June, I960, wilh\nor withont modifications approved hy the Irustee. providing,   inter   alia,   for   the\nprovision  by Cominco of a\nconcentrator  and  other  facilities al no capital cost to\nthe  Company   to   treat  the\nores from the mining properties of Ihe Company, such\nfacilities to be made available for a rental payable by\nthe   Company   as   specified\ntherein,\n(h)   pass such special resolution\nor  resolutions   as   may  be\nnecessary to provide for: \u2014\n1. An increase in ils authorized\ncapital from 290,000 ordinary\ncommon shares with a nominal or par value of $5.00 to\n650,(100 shares divided into\n150.000 Class \"A\" shares.\n250.000 Class \"B\" common\nshares and 250,(KM) ordinary\ncommon shares, each with a\nnominal or par value of\n$5.00.\n2. The alteration of Clause 5 of\nthe Memorandum of Association of the Company to\nprovide for such increased\ncapitalization; and to provide furlher that until such\ntime as there has been paid\nby way of preferential dividends on each of the Class\n\"A\" shares an aggregate\ntotal amount of $5.00 per\nshare, no dividends shall he\npaid on any other shares:\nand to provide further that\non any liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the\nCompany, the holders of\nClass \"A\" shares shall be\nentitled to receive in priority\nto any other shares the sum\nof $5.00 per share less the\ntotal of all amounts paid\nthereon by way of preferential dividends prior to such\nliquidation, dissolution or\nwinding up; and to provide\nfurther that no shares shall\nbe created or issued in\npriority or in parity with the\nClass \"A\" shares until preferential dividends to the\ntotal aggregate of $5.00 per\nshare have been paid thore-\nPUBLIC   NOTICES\n(Continued)\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n(Continued)\non; and to provide further\nthat no mortgage, lien,\ncharge or encumbrance ol\nany kind shall be created on\nany part of the existing\nproperty of the Company,\nreal or personal, its assets\nor undertaking.\n(c) have obtained from tlie\nRegistrar of Companies a\ncertificate showing that the\nsaid special resolution or\nresolutions have taken effect.\n(d) have obtained such consents\nand approvals from tlie office of the Superintendent of\nBrokers as may be required\n(if any) pursuant to tlie\nSecurities Act of British\nColumbia.\nII. Taking such further or other\naction as may be considered\nadvisable.\nThis notice is given pursuant to\nthe provisions of the Trust Deed to\nthe intent that any resolution or\nresolutions passed at the said\nmeeting or any adjournment thereof shall, if passed in accordance\nwith the provisions contained in\nthe second schedule to the Trust\nDeed in that behalf, be binding\nupon all the holders of the debentures, whether present or absent,\nand each and every holder of debentures, and the Trustee (subject\nto the provisions for its indemnity\ncontained in the Trust Deed) shall\nbe hound lo give effect thereto\naccordingly, and to the further intent that in considering and passing\nany such resolution or resolutions\nsuch meeting may modify, amend,\nchange, amplify, add lo or omit\nany of the matters and things\nhereinbefore specified, it being\nstipulated lhal the foregoing does\nnot purport to specify the terms\nof any resolution or resoluions to\nbe proposed at the meeting, but\nonly to indicate the general nature\nof he business to be transacted\nthereat and in general terms the\nsubject matter of any resolution or\nresolutions to be submitted thereat.\nDebenture holders are reminded\nthat pursuant lo Clause 12 of the\nsecond schedule lo the Trust Deed,\nthe bearers of the debentures and\nno other person or persons shall\nbe recognized as the holders thereof, and such hearers shall accordingly be exclusively entitled to\nvole in respect thereof; but for\nthe purposes of the said Clause 12\nthe hearer of a Certificate from\nany bank approved by the Trustee\nstating thai the holder of the\nCertificate is entitled to any debenture or debentures and that\nsuch debenture or debentures have\nbeen deposited with such hank and\nwill remain so deposited until the\nsurrender of the Certificate shall\nbe recognized as the holder of the\ndebenture specified in such Certificate and such Certificate may\ncertify to any number of debentures.\nA holder of a certificate unable\nto attend the meeting may deliver\nhis certificate and proxy to the\nperson appointed lo represent him\nat the meeting for production\nthereat or may deliver his certificate and proxy lo the office of the\nCompany al Trail, B.C.\nDATED this 14th day of. July,\n1960.\nCROWN TRUST  COMPANY\nTrustee\n3(12 Bav Street\nTORONTO. Ontario\nFor the convenience of debenture\nholders Certificates of deposit may\nbe obtained from any branch of\nany of the following banks;\nnamely: \u2014\nBank of Montreal\nThe Royal Rank of Canada\nImperial Bank of Canada\nThe Provincial Bank of Canada\nBank of Nova Scotia\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nThe Toronto-Dominion Bank\nBanque Canadienne Nationale\nNOTICE OF CLOSURE\nunder\nSECTION 120 SUBSECTION 1,\n\"FOREST ACT\"\nIn view of the hazardous condition of the forest cover and pursuant to the provisions of Section 120\nof the \"Forest Act\", the areas\nhereinbelow described are hereby\ndeclared to be closed districts as\nfrom midnight (Pacific Daylight\nSaving Time), Thursday, July 14,\n1960, and that no person shall enter or be in these closed areas for\nthe purpose of travelling, camping,\nfishing, hunting, berry picking, recreation, prospecting for minerals\nor any other like purpose, without\nfirst obtaining from an officer oi\nthe Forest Service a written permit therefor, until further notice.\nDescription of Closed Areas\nCastlegar Ranger District:\n11. All of the watersheds of Tiger,\nCambridge, Gorge, Ryan, Mc-\nAlister, and Casino Creks, being\ntributaries of the Columbia\nRiver, in the vicinity of Trail,\nKoolenay Land District.\n13. All that portion of the watersheds of Blueberry, Poupore,\nSullivan, Johnson, Murphy, Mc-\nNally, Hanna and Topping\nCreeks (being tributaries of the\nColumbia River', lying to the\nwest of Highway No. 3 and ex-\nextending from Trail to Kinnaird, Kootenay Land District.\n40. All that portion of the watershed of Big Sheep Creek lying\nnorth of the International Boundary, and situated approximately four miles west of Rossland. Kootenay Land District.\n43. All that portion of the Ladybird\nand Norns (Pass) Creek watershed lying North-west of the\nconfluence of Kinney Creek, 5\nmiles North of Castlegar, Kootenay Land District.\nNakusp Ranger District:\n28. All that portion of the watershed of Arrowpark Creek (being\na creek flowing southerly inlo\nthe Columbia River, approximately one mile north of Arrow\npark) and upstream from the\njunction of Bergman Creek,\nKootenay Land District.\n38. AH that portion of the watershed of siewisken Creek (being\na creek flowing westerly into\nUpper Arrow Lake and situated approximately six miles\nsouth of Nakusp), lying southeast of Highway No. 6, Kootenay Land District.\n46. Ail that parcel or tract of land\nin Kootenay District which Hes\nwithin the watershed of the Kus-\nkanax Creek except thereout\nthat part of the Townsite of Nakusp which lies to the south of\nthe left bank of said Kuskanax\nCreek.\n47. All that parcel or tract of land\nin Kootenay District which lies\nwithin the watershed of Nakusp\nCreek together with that part o!\nthe watershed of Fitzstubbs\nCreek lying to the west of the\nwesterly boundary of the watershed of Bremner Creek and the\nwesterly boundary of S.T.I,.\n10556P and southerly prolongation thereof except thereout\nthat foreshore and land covered\nhy waters of Wilson Lake.\n48. All that parcel or tract of land\nin Kootenay District lying within those portions of the watersheds of Caribou Creek an-l\nBurton Creek which lie abovn\nthe confluence of the said Caribou and Burton Creeks.\nYours truly,\nRay Williston.\nMinister of Lands and Forests.\nAUCTION SALE\nTIMBER SALE X82227\nThere will he offered for sale at\npublic auction, at 10:30 a.m. Local\nTime on 22nd. August. I960, in Ihe\nI office of  lhe Forest   Ranger  New\nI Denver. B.C.. lhe Licence X82227,\nto cut 2,082,000 cubic feet of spruce,\nJ hemlock, balsam, cedar, fir, white\npine and larch trees and trees of\nother species on an area situated\nI on Crown land on Shannon Creek,\nKoolenay  Land  District\n!    Five years will  tie  allowed  for\nremoval of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend\nI Uie auction in person may submit\na sealer! tender, to he opened al\nthe hour ol auction and treated as\none bid.\n| Further particulars may he ob-\nItained from Ihe Deputy Minister of\nForests. Victoria. B.C.; the District Forester, Nelson. B.C.: or lhe\n' Forest Ranger. New Denver. B C\nAUCTION SALE\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n2 YOUNG BREEDING BULLS, 1\nAyrshire. 1 Holsteln, 9 mos. old.\n2 Ayrshire milk cows. 1 year old\nAyrshire heilct. Rubber tired\nhay rack and wagon. Furnished\ncabin and boat by the week or\nthe month. 1 room for single\nperson. D. ,1. Mclnnis, Willow\nPoint, Phone 369-L-l.\n300 WEATHERBY AND .338 MAC,\nnum rifles. Imports from Liege,\nBelgium. .303 BR Jungle Car\nbines, new and used. .3006 and\n.303 Army amo mfg. by Winches\nter $2.,50 box of 20. Reloading\nsupplies. Gunsmith. Norm's Sport\nShop, 171 Baker. Ph. 385.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nTIMBER SALE X82989\nThere will he offered fnr sale\nat public auction, at 10.30 a.m.\nLocal Time on 8th August, 1960. in\nthe office oi the Forest Ranger.\nCranbrook, B.C.. the Licence\nX82989. to cut 521,000 cubic feet\nof fir, larch, lodgepole pine and\nspruce trees on an area situated\non part of Lots 9210 lo 9212 inclusive\nand 1095.*). Gold Creek, Kootenay\nLand District.\nFour years will be allowed for\nremoval of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend\nthe auetion in person may submit a\nsealed tender, to be opened at the\nhour of auction and treated as one\nbid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Vicloria, B.C.: the District Forester, Nelson. B.C.; or the\nForest Ranger, Cranbrook, B.C.\nBARGAINS GALORE - SPORTS-\nman's equipment. 519 Silica.\nEverything for fisherman, skin\ndiver, hunter (rifles, air-rifles\n] ammo, archery equipment' alsr\nexercise equipment. Phone 347-Y.\nIU)YAL MLUXE PORTABLE\ntypewriter. Fibre glass case $65.\nSunbeam Shave Master. $12. Bot '\nnew condition. Phone 2144, 9:5\nlo 5.\t\nSLAB WOOD $12 DELIVERED\nPick-up $8. C'onlact Micke\nMonahan. Taghum, or Albert\nGrams. Nelson.\nHELP YOURSELF OR YOUN(\\\nster. Bargain books. Every sub\nject imaginable. 519 Silica. Phonf\n347-Y.\t\n2 ROYS' BICYCLES. l-3-SPEED\nBoth in excellent condition. Ph\n2261-L.        \t\nLARRTS BLACK LOAM~~TO!\nsoil. Immediate delivery, Frc\nestimates. Phone 171.\t\nBARGAIN HOUSEHOLD ARTK\nles, radios, record players. 511\nSilica St. Phone 347-Y.\n115 VOLT GENERATOR. NORTI\nShore Service. Phone 11141.\nBABY   BEEF   OR   VEAL   FO\"\nSale. Phone 513-L.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPE*\nday and evenings. 924 Davies S'\nA    GIRL'S    BICYCLE   -   LIK!\nnew. Best offer. Phone 2219.\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nS M A L I,   HOUSE   FOR   CASH\nPhone 1246-Y. i\n wm\nmmfKmim\n\u2022**\u2014\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*\u2014\u25a0\n\u00a32\u00a3>\nCLASSIFIED\nDeadline tui Oas-iif-ied Ads \u2014 5 p m.\nAUTOMOTIVE, I AUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES | MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n> Continued <\nI960 Chevrolet Sedans\n1960 Chevrolet Pickups\n1960 Corvoir Sedans\n1960 Envoy Sedans\n1960 Envoy Station Wgn\n1959 Chevrolet Sedan\n1959 Meteor Sedan\n1959  Ford Sedan\n1959 Chevrolet Pickup\n1959 Vauxhall Sedan\n1958 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1958 Cadillac Sedan\n1958 Chevrolet Sedon\n1957 Willys 4-W.  Drive\n1957 Pontiac\n1957  Bedford Van\n1956 Mercury HT\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1956 Volkswagen Del. Van\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Pickup\n1955 Chevrolet Coach\n1955 Ford Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan, $575\n1954 Buick Sedan, $995\n1953 Meteor Sedan, $450\n1953 Pontiac Sedan, $500\n1953  Dodge,  $250\n1953  Henry J., $275\n1953 Ford  1-Ton, $550\n1953 Consul,  $600\n1952 Dodge, $325\n1952 Monarch, $235\n1952 Dodge Stn. Wagon\n$595\n1952  Pontiac, $150\n1951  GMC, $75\n1951   Pontiac, $195\n1951  Monarch, $195\n1950  Plymouth Stn. Wgn.\n$175\n1949 Dodge, $175\n1949 Pontiac, $125\n1948  Plymouth, $75\n1947 Oldsmobile, $50\n1947 Mercury, $50\nTERMS - TRADES\nChevrolet,   Oldsmobile,\nCadillac, Corvairs,  Envoys\n24-Hr, Wrecker Service\nPHONE 35\notors\nLTD.\n323 Vernon Street\nNelson,  B   C.\nCOMPARE\nTHESE  PRICES\n1956 Monarch\nFully Automatic, Power Steering.\nPower Brakes, etc.\n$2300\n1957 Chevrolet Convertible\nRuns Like New.\n$2100\n1950  Pontiac  8\nAutomatic Transmission.\nSacrifice at\n$395\n1950 Chevrolet\nNew Paint, Almost New  Rubber.\n$335\nABOVE  CARS  A-l  SHAPE.\n1960  Borgward\nStandard\n$2497\n1960 Borgword\nDeluxe\n$2596\nTry one of these cars. The car\nthat amazes everyone. \u2014 See\nus for Iree demonstration today.\nel Emerge\notors\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nNew Ford Fairlanes\nNew Falcons\nNew Angia  105E\nNew Consul\nNew Zephyr\nNew Monarch\nNew Ford Trucks\nThe  BEST  in  USED CARS\n1959 Meteor Montcalm HT\nAuto Service\nLimited\nBORGWARD\nSALES AND SERVICE\nPHONE IMS YMIR RD,\nNelson, B.C.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE SER-\nvice English and Canadian used\ncar parts. '56 GMC ti T Pickup\nparts and '53 Ford parts Phone\n2100. Box 382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson    l\n1959 Mercury\nConvertible\nLow Mileage.  Fully Equipped.\n1959 Ford 6-Cyl. Sedan\nAutomatic\n1957 Chevrolet Tudor\n1957 Ford Deluxe\nAutomatic\n1956  Ford Sedan\n1955  Ford Sedan\n1955 Chrysler Windsor\n1954 Buick Sedan\n* SPECIAL *\n1952 Chevrolet Sdn. $295\n1952 Pontiac Sedan $295\n1953 Monorch Tudor $595\n1953 Pontiac Sedan $395\n1950    Studebaker    Sedan\n$195\ne\nPhone    1135   ond   1744\nFord - Falcon - Zephyr\n1959 Chevrolet Stn. Wgn.\n1956 Studebaker  Stn.  Wgn.\n1958 Meteor Fordor\n1958 Ford  Fordor\n1957 Oldsmobile\n1956 Plymouth\n1956 Austin\nAND  MANY  OTHERS\nNEW Vauxhall\nNEW Pontiac\nNEW GMC Trucks\nBEACON\nLTD.\nPHONE  578\nComplete Automotive Service\n'Continued in Next Column'\nMUST SELL '52 HUDSON IN\nvery good condition. New rubber\nand 2 speaker radio, all for $295.\nPhone 396-Y or see at 1201 Cross-\nley Ave.\nt UK SALE 1948 PONTIAC. GOOD\nmechanical condition, good tires,\nneeds some body work. Phone\n462-L-2\nFOR SALE-1948 DODGE 4-DOOR\nsedan in good running order. 2\nnew tires. Radio. As is $300 cash.\nH. Nixon, South Slocan.\nFOR SALE - KB-8 LOGGING\ntruck, bunks, trailer. Can h&ul\nlong logs. Can be financed.\nPh6ne 1733-R evenings\nFOR SALE-JOHN DEERE FARM\ntractor with rubber tiffts and\nblade, like new condition. Western Auto Wrecking. Phone 2124\nFOR SALE TANDEM DIESEL\ntruck with or without work. Apply Box 873. Daily News.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\ni Continued'\nHILLMAN FOR CHEAP HOLI-\nday. One owner. Beautiful shape\nPhone 347-Y, call 519 Silica.\n'58 FORD 6 CYL. RANCH WAGON\nLow mileage. Phone 231 or 2134-X\nevenings\nWANTED - 4 WHEEL DRIVE\nJeep. Must be reasonable. Phone\n1053, eves. 1204-L.\n1950 HILLMAN - GOOD CONDI-\ntion, good tires. Price $200.\nPhone 189-L-2.\nWE PAY CASH FOR GOOD USED\ncars   McElroy Motors Ltd\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n'Continued'\n'56 OLDSMOBILE 88. $1800.  PH.\n417-X.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nBEAUTIFUL\nFAMILY HOME\nl-Two-level house OVERLOOKING LAKE AND CITY. The\nupper level consists of L.R.,\nD.R., kitchen, breakfast nook,\n3 B.R.s and bath. Fully carpeted other than kitchen and\nbathroom. Has fireplace, built-\nin dishwasher and recessed\nlighting, and 2-car garage attached. The lower level has a\nlarge rumpus room and complete suite with bath, kitchenette, L.R. and B.R. Economically heated by oil hot water\nsystem. All this and a 200' x\n400' lot with beach frontage\nand wharf. Owner will con-\nsite trade.       $31,500\nWe Also Need\nNew Listings\nPHONE 70\nNo Charge\nFor Listing\nP. E. Poulin\nREAL ESTATE - INSURANCE\n582 Ward St. Phone 70\nIt's Later\nThan\nYou Think\nStep up to a new three-bedroom, ultra-modern home with\ncarport attached. Located on\n2 level corner lots on city bus\nline. Assume NHA 6% mort-\ngage of $12,087. $|7 500\nSelling price        v      \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\nWILLIAM    KALYNIUK\nAGENCIES\nFor the BEST in Real Estate\nconsult us anytime by phone\nor drop in. Strict confidence\nprocedures.\n534 Josephine St. Nelson\nPHONE 1777\nHappiness\nA house that needs newlyweds\nor nearly-weds. A happy couple\nare leaving and wish to sell\nyou their 2-bedroom home located on large landscaped lot.\nThe house will be open for inspection commencing todav. \u2014\nSellin\u00ab $8950\nprice\nTry $2000 down. Phone for a\ntime most convenient for you.\nNo obligation.\nWILLIAM KALYNIUK\nAGENCIES\nFor the BEST in Real Estate\nconsult us anytime by phone\nor drop in. Strict confidence\nprocedures.\nS34 Josephine St.,   Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1777\nChoice North Shore Home\n2 minutes walk to bridge. Gracious 4-B.R. home of quality\nconstruction. Living room with\nlake view, picture window, cut\nstone fireplace. Convenient\nkitchen, dining room. Sloping\ngrounds to sandy <t I A Sftfl\nbeach. Price       *' t,\u00bbovu\nDown, $3900.\nIncludes Bendix auto, washer,\ngas range, H. water tank, gas\nlawn mower.\n\"Phone 68 For\nReal Estate\"\nMcHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\nINSURANCE\n554 Ward St.\nREAL ESTATE\nNelson, B.C.\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE, L.R., KIT.,\nBath and Shower, Den, utility\nroom, part basement, stone\nfoundation, no hills, central location 226 Baker St., has parking\nspace and small lawn area \u2014\n$6500, Down $2500, balance easy\nterms. Apply P. H. Zubick \u2014\nPhone 303-L.\nLISTINGS - HAVE YOU BEEN\nwanting to sell your property?\nWe require properties of every\ndescription. It costs nothing to\nlist. Kindly give us a phone call\nor come in personally. William\nKalyniuk Agencies, 534 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson. B.C. Phone 1777.\nFOR SALE-2 BEDROOM HOUSE\nlower Fairview. 2 excellent corner lots. Fully landscaped. Gas\nfurnace, garage. Full price $10,-\n000. Reasonable terms. Phone\n742-X or call at 612 Fell St. after\n5:30 p.m.\nBEAUTIFUL, COOL DUPLEX\nacross from St. Paul's-Trinity\nChurch. Priced low for quick\nsale, $150 income per month.\n$1000 cash down takes it. Call at\n519 Silica or Phone 347-Y.\nMACHINERY\nSpecials\nTD-9\nWith blade, winch,     $3500\ncanopy. Ready to go. *\nOC-3 OLIVER\nB'ad\u00b0* $1600\nwinch\t\nFERGUSON 35\nWith mower, plow, tandem disk.\n1959 CASE\n200. 2-plow tractor, with hyd.\ncable hitch, 12-speed transmission, P.T.O. Complete with Case\n2-bottom plow. This machine was\nused very Utile. $2500\nNew guarantee.\nGehl Chop All\nFORAGE HARVESTER\nExcellent Shape.\nJUST ARRIVED\nNEW  CRAWLER,  LOADERS,\nANGLEDOZERS, BACKHOES\nTERMS - TRADES\nWrite \u2014 Phone \u2014 Wire\nEagle\nEquipment\n191 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPhone  142 or  1742\nRENTALS\nAIR CONDITIONED\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning    rooms,    weekly,    monthly\nrates.   Dishes,   linen   supplied;\nparkin?. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.\n3 RM. APT. AND BATH. FURN.\nultra-modern. Hot water and\nheat supplied. Vernon St. location. Phone 385\nCLEAN HOUSEKEEPING AND\nsleeping rooms. Very reasonable.\nVi block from Bus Depot. 705 Victoria St. Alley\n3 RM. MODERN. SELF \u2022 CON\ntained apt., unlurn., central\nHeat and hot water. Adults. Ph\n2106-L.\nFOR RENT - NEWLY BUILT 1\nbedroom house. Gas range and\nfurnace. Apply Benny's Grocery\nPhone 1236.\nLARGE APT. 2 BDRMS. L&D RM.\nGas furnace, wired for stove and\nT.V. Adults. 409 Silica.\n3   ROOMS   WITH    BATHROOM.\nGarden and [ruit trees. 313 High\nSt. Phone 387L3.\t\nCLOSE   IN,  3  ROOMS,   UNFUR-\nnished, heat and hot water. Ph.\n1022-L.\nCLASSY BED-SITTING ROOM,\nkitchen and bathroom suite.\nGround floor, unfurn. Phone 130.\nCENTRAL - REDECORATED 3\nroom suite. Heated and hot\nwater. Gas range. Phone 305-X.\nBRIGHT,   CENTRAL,   COZY,\nfurn. apt. for two. Phone 1703.\n3 ROOM FURN. APT. CLOSE IN.\nvacant Aug. 1. Phone 653-R.\nFOR   RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, $18 per mo. Phone 405-L.\nLARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM.\nPhone 964-R. 116 Vernon St.\n2   ROOM   HOUSE AND SHACK.\n125 Silica St.\nSINGLE   HOUSEKEEPING   AND\nsleeping rooms. K.W.C. Block.\nFOR RENT FURNISHED 4-ROOM\napartment. Phone 423-Y.\nVERY NICE FURNISHED 3\nroom apt. Phone 474-L.\nSELF-CONTAINED HOUSEKEEP-\ning. Call 71 High St\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960\u201411\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\n4 KITTENS WOULD LIKE GOOD\nhomes. 6 weeks old, housebroken.\nApply Mrs. Holmes, 108 Morgan\nSt. Phone 840-Y.\nFOR SALE - PEDIGREE DACH\nshund puppies. Red, black and\ntan. Yoxall, Phone 46-H Kaslo.\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED - UNFURNISHED\napartment or house. 3 bedrooms,\nkitchen, living room. Sept. 1.\nBox 932 Daily News.\nRENT IMMEDIATELY - HOUSE\napp. 4 rooms and bath at Nelson\nor close in. Apply E. Yerbury,\nYaiik, B.C.\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nOttawa\u2014Thomas Griffiths, 90,\nBritish opera singer who retired\nin  1929 after a  lengthy  career.\nOttawa\u2014C. P. Edwards, 74,\npioneer in Canadian civil aviation and a key figure in establishment of the Commonwealth\nair training plan during the\nSecond  World War.\nNew York\u2014Warren H. Miller,\n82, former editor of Field and\nStream magazine and author of\n32 books.\nIstanbul, Turkey\u2014Corral Kele-\nsoglu, former governor of Konya\nprovince, of suicide while in\nprison.\nHarry HoudinJ, the American\nmagician and escape artist who\ndied in 1926, left his great library\non magic to Uie Library of Congress at Washington.\nLignite or brown coal is much\nyounger in geological age than\nhard coal.\nPEEBLES\nUSED CARS\n1956 Pontiac Laurentian\nV8  Automatic,  4-Door  Hardtop.\nFinished  in  flawless ivory with\ngunmetal. CUSTOM RADIO ! -\n<*\u00b0\u00b0d., $1695\nUpholstery. ^\n1956 Chevrolet\n6-Cyl. FAMILY SEDAN. Deluxe\nmodel. Eggshell blue. 5|395\nRadio. One owner.\n1954 Pontiac\n\"Hardtop\" Laurentian. 6-Cyl. \u2014\nRed  with  white top  and  white\nflare.  New Saran $895\nseat covers. **^\n1951   Buick 8\nDynaflow Automatic. Maroon and\nivory.  CUSTOM H^KQ\nRADIO.  .. *OOV\nImport\n(Hillman) \"Humber Hawk\"\n'50. Licenced, $ | 59\nReady to go.    ^\nAnd Many More To\nChoose  From  in All  Makes\nPEEBLES\n5 ROOM HOUSE IN YMIR - j\nLarge living room, kitchen and |\nbathrcnm down, 3 bedrooms up- j\nstairs, 2 level lots. See George!\nMurray. Ymir.\nFOR SALE LOVELY 2-BEDROOM\nstucco home on 2Vi level, landscaped lots. Full cement basement. New gas furnace. Drive-in\ngarage. Phone 1581-Y\n3 BUILDING\" LOTS 25'xl20* UP-\nhill. Basement excavated. Water\nand sewage to property line.\nSome trees, beautiful view.\nPhone 2344 or 1936-R.\n5 ROOM HOUSE AND BATH ON\n2 lots. V, basement. $3500, $1000\ndown. Leona R. Prout, Box 1285,\nPhone 0-4602, Rossland, B.C.\nFOR SALE - DUPLEX, CLOSE\nin at a reasonable price. Very\ngood return on investment. Apply Box 7092 Nelson Daily News.\nHOUSE IN EXCELLENT LOCA-\ntion 4 bedrooms, oil furnace,\ngrounds landscaped, fruit trees,\ngarage   Applv 612-5th Street\nFOR SALE - TO CLOSE ESTATE,\nlot 50 x 120 corner of Park and\nMill St. Phone 841-X.\nFOR SA LETT ON NORTH SHORE\n5 rooms and bath on large lot\nPhone 303-L\nPROPERTY ON NEW HIGHWAY.\nRox 108, Kinnaird.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nFurnace. Major Appliances, Etc.\nTune-Ups and Repairs, Phone 2333\nD. McCUIAG SERVICE-NELSON\nEquipment\n'57   INTERNATIONAL   TD9\nDroit Front End Loader,  Hi-\nYd. Bucket. Like !M3,000\nnew condition. 7\n'56 INTERNATIONAL TDM\n(141 Series 1\nHydrauUc  Direct   Lift   Angledozer, Logging Winch, Canopy.\nNow being rebuilt.\n'51   INTERNATIONAL\nTD14A\nHydraulic Angledozer, Logging\nJ\"\"**. $7000\nCanopy.\n'52   INTERNATIONAL  TD9\nHydraulic Angledoze***, Logging\nw*\"ch* $5500\nCanopy.  .\nCATERPILLAR  RD6\nCable   Angledozer,   Double\nDrum Winch, Extra $2500\nSnow Blade.  ...    .\nCENTRAL\nT\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 front St        Nelson.  B.C.\nHEATED  AND  FURN.   3  ROOM j\nsuite. Phone 2147-L.\n3 BEDROOM HOME LATE AUG.\nClose in. Box 546 Daily News.\nNOR. SHORE COTTAGE AVAIL-\nable now. Ph. 1703 or 1604-R.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Service\n205  High St. Phone  1917\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S.   ELMES,  ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer,  Chemist,  Min  Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer\n1015 Eighth St.,  Nelson.  Ph. 144-R\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor, P. Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson   Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.L.S.\n373 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 1118       Res. 2315\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor - Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Ave., Castlegar, B.C.\nTRAILERS\nGOOSE CREEK - 37.5 ACRES. 15\nacres cleared; fruit trees. 103,000\nfeet of timber. Extra large house\nwith 3 bedrooms down, large\nliving room and big kitchen,\nwater piped in. The owner says\nyou can have property at full\nprice of $4000. With $1500 down,\nbalance $40 plus 6% interest.\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies, 534\nJosenhine St., Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 1777.\nULTRA MODERN BUNGALOW -\nVery well built and in new condition. 3 bedrooms. L.R.. Kitchen,\nlarge dinette. 3 piece bath. Full\nbasement. Oil furnace. Garden\nand fruit on 2.3 acres. View location. Owner moving f6r business\nreasons. A wonderful buy at\n$10.70000. Terms and pictures st\nT D. Rosling and Son Ltd.. 717\nJ. B. Brown. Eves 1055-X.\nLOT   FOR   SALE - VIEW   ST.\n$550.  Phone 461-Y-l.\nDELUXE CUSTOM BUILT 18-\nfoot Travel Trailer. This is a\nbeautiful job and as good as new.\nCost new $3600.00 and only ac-\ntully travelled 1500 miles. Sleeps\nfour, two walk in clothes closets,\nplenty of cupboards, all windows\nscreened and all open from in-\nsmde. Double sink, water and\nelectric light connections, also a\n12-gal. tank for water when travelling with pump at sink. Beautiful four burner gas range, electric fridge. Trailer has electric\nbrakes wilh two propane tanks.\nAlso a propane gas heater in addition to range. Five drawer\ndresser with mirror and many\nother features. Must be seen to\nbe appreciated. Will sell for\n$2,000 00 or might consider trade\nfor anything I can use.\nD. W. McDerby.\nMirror Lake. B.C. (near Kaslol\nFOLD-DOWN CAMPING-TRAlL-\ner. 5-ply construction, 8' x 66\".\nNew 8 oz. duck cover sleeps two.\nBest offer takes lt. Phone 1404-R\nTrail after 5 p.m.\n2   WHEEL   UTILITY   TRAILER.\nAll steel Phone 2148.\nLOST AND FOUND\n<Co' unued in Nex' Column'\n(Continued in  Nex' Column1\nLOST  IN   DOWNTOWN  -  ARM-\nstrong   3-speed   boy's   bicycle.\nFinder please phone 1647-R. Re-\n\\vard.\nro II N O - MONEY AT CtHHKCT\nMika Dance last Sat. For ideni-\nfication Phone 888.\nGOOD USED\nTRACTORS\n1\u2014John Deere Crawler with dozer,\nwinch and guard. Completely\nreconditioned. $3800\nPrice  \t\n\u2014Terratrac Crawler with dozer,\nwinch  and guard. Diesel  en-\ngine. Al! new. $3\u00a700\nPrice\nThese  Are Truly GOOD  BUYS\nCall, Write or See\nH.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nAlec   McDonald,  Gordon  Coutts\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD\n514 Railway St.       Phone 1402\nD2 CAT WITH DOZER AND\nwinch. Sell for cash or trade for\nlift truck. Max Zeebin, Ymir,\nB.C.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US NO. 1 COPPER 23c LB.\nRed brass 19c lb.. Radiators 15c\nlb.. Steel $22.50 ton. Ship via\nrailway or truck line. Payment\nsent return same day. Commercial Steel k Metals Ltd., 2561\nWillingdon Ave., Burnaby 2,\nVancouver. B.C.\nWANTED - HAM    RADIO   RE\nceiver and transmitter for CW\nand phone. State price and full\nparticulars. Apply Bo\"x 962 Daily\nNews.\nTO RENT OR POSSIBLY PUR\nchase air compressor and misc\nequipment in good condition (or\nmining. Immediately. Reply Box\n527. Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED - SMALL METAL\nscrew cutting lathe. State price\nand full particulars Box\nDaily News.\nWANTED: PEELED CEDAR\npoles loaded on cars 35 to 75\nfeet long Dumont. 1164 West\n32nd Ave , Vancouver. B C\nWANTED - CEDAR POSTS\nsplit and rounds ready to load\nApoly Box 515 Daily News.\nOWN YOUR OWN\nBUSINESS ! !\nIncomes up to $1000.00 per month.\nKING    COIN   PHILCO - BENDIX\nEquipped   Launderettes   are   the\nmost profitable in this \u2014 Canada's\nfastest growing business.\nAvailable only through King Koin:\n\u2022 Three types of Heavy Duty Commercial Philco-Bendix Washers.\n(Double and Single Load Tumble\nAction and Largest Capacity\nAGITATOR Washers.)\n\u2022 Newest and Largest Capacity\nPhilco-Bendix Dryer.\n\u2022 Low Down Payments and\nQuantity Discounts.\n\u2022 Most Complete Merchandising\nand Engineering Program.\nIf it's Commercial \u2014\nIt's  a  PHILCO-BENDIX\nWrite, Wire or Phone for\nComplete Information.\nKOIN LAUNDRY SALES, LTD,\n4117 Fourth Street, N.W.,\nCalgary, Alberta.\nFOR SALE - CONFECTIONERY\nStore, Cafe and B.A. gas pump\nwith living quarters on Highway\nNo. 6 on Slocan Lake. Govern\nment Tourist Park and Picnic\nPark alongside. Buildings and\n2 lots, stock and equipment,\n$8000.   Contact   personally.   No\n, letters please. Reason for selling\npoor health. Tri-Angle Confectionery. Rosebery, B.C.\nFOR SALE OR \"LEASE - WAN-\nstall Motors, Nakusp, B.C. An\nideal opportunity for ambitious\nmechanic and welder. Going con\ncern. Immediate possession to\nright party. Health reasons. Contact Charles Wanstall, Nakusp,\nB.C.\nSILVERTON CONFECTIONERY\nFor Sale. 3 lots and good living\nquarters of 5 rooms. Steady\ntrade. Silverton, B.C.\nSILVER LEAD PROPERTY WITH\nvery good showing available for\noption. Phone Trail 1123-L.\nPeebles Auto Talk\nHOT WEATHER DRIVING TIPS\nThere are many hot weather casualties attached to summer;\ndriving. Hardly a day passes when you would not find someone\nstranded on the highway with an overheated car.\nOther parts of the car which react violently to hot weather\nravages include the battery, tires and fuel pumps. Hot weathef\nis almost as hard on a battery as subzero temperatures. Tires take a terrible\nbeating, because of the heat they normally develop while running, added to\nthe heat of the day.\nFuel pumps often develop air locks,\nor vaper locks, causing a fade out or\nstoppage altogether on heavy pulls.\nBefore you start on a trip, it would\nbe good insurance to bring your car\nin  for  a  complete Radiator  Reverse\nflush. At Peebles Moton we have the\nvery efficient Choldrun cooling system\ncleaner, which has visible glasses which\nactually show you the scale, rust and\nmuck which has accuniulated in your\ncooling system. Engineers tell us that\nc Hit is caused by electrolysis.\niKS-'8\u00ab*-P^^^^^^B      The battery is the heart of your\nelectrical system, If your battery is over a year old, it would be\ngood business to trade It in to us for its unused value, and then\nyou're on your way with a fully guaranteed battery.\nBetter still, trade the old lizzy in on one of the fine used cars\nwe have listed elsewhere, and in this hot weather you don't have\nto roast out on the lot, we have a lovely display in our air condi-\nioned lower floor showrooms, Glad to have you drive id to the\nlot from Vernon Street, and enjoy a \"COOL\" visit.\nYours for Happier Motoring,\n\u00a3Wuj ^0, -^U*vc*r>-\nGeneral Manag**\nMid-Summer\nCAR BUYS\nat\nBOATS and  ENGINES\nBOAT FOR SALE - 30' CABIN\nCruiser, Hall Scott Marine Motor.\nBoat and motor in good condition.\nLocated at Waterton Lakes, Alta.\nWrite or call C. E. Forster, c\/0\nForster Agency Ltd., Lethbridge,\nAlherta.\n22' CABIN CRUISER, NEW, 126\nh.p. Chrysler, sink, stove, mahogany finished, push-button control\nfor sale or trade for? Ph. Kootenay Bay IF.\nEXCELLENT VALUE AT $195 -\n15 h.p. Evinrude outboard motor.\nVery good condition. Phone 2230\ndays and Phnne 577-X-2 eves.\nBEST BUY IN TOWN - 15' GLASS\nBoat. New. Value $1595. Sale\nprice $995. with free gift of 25\nli.p. Evinrude motor. Phone 385.\n14 FT. RUNABOUT, COMPLETE\nly equipped with 15 h.p. motor\nand trailer. Gift at $625. A. A.\nLambert, Kinnaird. B.C\n12 FT. PLYWOOD FIBERGLASS\nboat with 15 h.p. Evinrude. $350.\nPh. 482-L-l.\nBUSINESSES WANTED\nWISH TO SECURE A SMALL\nbusiness in Nelson or area.\nPlease write stating type of business you have for sale to Box\n988 Daily News.\nPERSONAL\nWANTED: SINGLE DRUM JAM-\nmer and 1928 Durant motor Box\n228 Nelson News.\nUNWANTED HAIR\nVanished away with Saca-Pelo.\nSaca-Pelo is different. It does not\ndissolve or remove hair from the\nsurface, hut penetrates and retards\ngrowth cf unwanted hrjur. Lor-B-'cr\nLeo. Ltd. Sle. 5, 679 Granville,\nVrn-o-ur-r 2, B.C.\nMcElroy Motors\nNEW 1960 AUSTINS IN STOCK\nAUSTIN A55 SEDAN\n7600 Miles.  New Car Condition Throughout.\nFully Guaranteed.\nCHEVROLET BEL-AIR 4-DR. SEDAN\nAutomatic, Radio, New First Line Whitewall Tires.\nFully Guaranteed.\nPONTIAC LAURENTIAN 4-DR. SEDAN\nAutomatic, Radio. Power Steering, New Tires.\nFully Guaranteed.\nCONSUL 4-DR. SEDAN\nImmaculate Inside and Out. Fully Guaranteed.\nFORD FAIRLANE 4-DR. SEDAN\nAutomatic.   Radio.   Whitewall   Tires.\nFully Guaranteed.\nFORD HALF-TON PICKUP\nImmaculate Inside and Out.\nWE PAY CASH  FOR GOOD USED CARS\nMcELROY\nMotors Ltd.\nAUSTIN SALES AND SERVICE\nPhone 2000 CAR LOT PH.  2242\n .\u201e. .\ni^PPPPftiPffl^^\nty9&tf^ffi&!W**PF3^-~ '..'\u25a0- \u25a0 \u25a0>\u2022-.\u25a0\u25a0\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1960\nTRIM\nTRIO\nKnife, Bottle Opener,\nNail File, Key Chain\n(A Handy Little Arsenal of Tools)\nOnly 69i\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACBOSS\nt. Motion\npicture\n6. Country\ngallant\nIt Unrolls\n32. Himalayan\nmammal\n18. Forays\n14. Following\nIB. Girl's\nnickname\n16. Facile\n17.Ire\n20. Shifted\n23. Open\n(poet)\n26. The ankles\n(anat.)\n2T. Theater\nattendant\n29. Longing\nSO. Secures, as\na ship\n82. Lucid\n83. Armadillo\n86. Colors\nslightly\n40. Characteristic of man\n42. Open\n43. Sharp\n44. A. musical\nshow\n46. Frenchman's hat\n46. A winter\nhazard\nDOWN\nI 1 Additional\n1 2. Precious\natone\n8. A mask\n4. Cayugas\nandEries\n8. Necessary\n6. Resort\n7. Thin,\nbrittle\ncookie\n8. Species of\npier\n9. Caesar's\nwarning\ndate\n10. Not one\n(dial.)\n18. Germanium\n(sym.)\n19. Teachers\n20. Pigpen\n21. Have\n(Scotch)\n22. Footed\nvase\n23. Ex-\nclama-\ntlon\n24. Through\n25. Bitter\nvetch\n28. Wither\n3L Northeast\n(abbr.)\n32. Packing\nbox\n33. Israelite\n-king\n34. Reddish\ncolor\n35. Asian\nriver\nmm\nESSE  6I0HH\nam   tmmvi\nBusiness Spotlight .\nCanadians Might\nIf Companies\nYofltotday'o Answer\n37. Glacial\nsnow\n38. Genuine*\n39.Lettt\nstand\n(print)\n41. Seine\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian  Press  Business  Editor\nWould Canadians invest substantially more in common stock\nif the price tags were lower?\nThis question probably is discussed by the boards of directors\nof every sizable company at one\ntime or another.\nLowering the price tag is, of\ncourse, relatively simple \u2014 a\nmatter of dividing die existing\nnumber of shares into smaller\npieces.\nMany companies do this when\nthe price of their shares on the\nstock exchanges go higher than\nthey think desirable. Others,\nhowever, say:\n\"What difference does it\nmake? A man with $100 to invest\nis just as well off buying one\nshare worth $100, as he is in buying five shares worth $20 each.\"\nPRESTIGE VALUE\nThose disagreeing with this\nview reply, in effect:\n\"Some companies resist share\nsplits simply beoause they think\nthere is prestige value in a high\nstock-market quotation, or because they do not wish the price\nof their stock to appear out ot\nline with that of a competitor.\n\"Such arguments against share\nsplits have little value and they\nfall to appreciate the nature of\nthe emerging Canadian investment public.\n1\n%\ni\n1\n5\nl\n\"~\n7\na\n9\nIO\nII\nl\nIX\nIJ\ni\n1+\niS\nV\/t\n%\nlb\n%\nvs\nty\n(7\nIB\n19-\n%\n%\n%\n20\n11\n21\n^\n13\n34-\nIS\nlb\nf\/t\n**7\n36\n11\nU\nJO\n31\nVi,\n%\n%\n31\n^\/,\n%\n%\n33\n34\n3r\n%\nl\n3b\n-J7\n38\n3\u00bb\n40\n41\nI\nAi.\n-Ii\n1\n44\n45\nV^\n44\n7-16\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAX YD LB A AX It\nis   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nZ      NZQ      XU      SWQFCJ      EZJ      YWWQ\nJWOTXN      PCFQWV      YCD      TB      *HFN>\nJWOU \u2014 MXEQJXQ;\nYesterday's Cryptoqnote: MAECH ON! MARCH ON! AIJTj\nHEARTS RESOLVED ON VICTORY OR DEATH!\u2014USM.\n(\u00a9 I960, King features Syndicate, Inc.)\nMan Drowns In\nRainwater\nAtop of Roof\nNEW YORK (API\u2014A Brooklyn apartment superintendent drowned in 10 inches ot\nrainwater atop the roof of his\nbuilding Thursday in a freak\naccident.\nThe victim, Albert Eigen, 49,\nreceived a complaint from a top\nfloor tenant at his building that\nwater frenn a heavy downpour\nwas leaking into her sixth-floor\napartment.\nEigen went to the roof where\nhe found the drain plugged and\nsome 10 inches of water on the\nroof.\nHe took the top off the drain\nand plunged both arms in up to\nthe elbows, seeking to unplug the\ndrain. Suddenly whatever was\nblocking it gave way and water\nrushed into the six-iooh drain.\nThe suction pulled Eigen's\narms in farther so that his face\nwas forced into the water and he\ndrowned. It was four hours before he was missed. When police\nfound the body they had to oil\nthe arms to release them from\nIhe drain.\nInvest More\nShares\n\"Share prices should be kept\ntailored to the needs of the bulk\nof the Canadian population-\nmade up of people with relatively\nhigh earnings and some money\navailable for investment, but not\nso well off that they can do much\nbuying in a high-price blue-chip\nrange.\n\"There is. a psychological factor, too. A man with $100 to invest is not likely to buy one share\nat $100; but he may well buy five\nshares at $20 each.\"\nCONSUMERS GAS SPLIT\nConsumers' Gas Company\u2014\nwiho supply natural gas to a\nlarge part of the Ontario market\n\u2014put itself behind the lower\nshare price-tag with its recent\nannouncement of a three-for-one\nsplit. A. L. Bishop, president,\ncommented:\n\"Other companies, by similar\nactions, have increased the number of their shareholders by IS\nto 20 per cent. We hope to do the\nsame or better, thereby making\nthe benefits of ownership - available to more of the public. Our\nthree-for-one split will place our\nshares within tlie reach of many\nmore small investors.\"\nMr. Bishcp said the company\nnow has some 9,000 shareholders,\nof whom 7,250 live in Ontario and\n1,425 in other parts of Canada. A\nsurprising fact, he added, is that\nmore than 60 per cent of the\nshareholders own 100 shares or\nless.\nConsumers' Gas shares now\nsell around $40\u2014so that the split\nwould presumably bring them\ninto the $13-plus range.\nEric W. Kierans, president of\nthe Montreal Stock Exchange,\nwould go further than most companies envisage. In a recent address he said:\n\"How much better would it be\nto have our best stocks selling in\nthe $5 to $10 area with the consequent multiplation of informed\nshareholders? British banks have\nthree to 10 times as many shareholders as Canadian banks because their stocks are quoted in\nthe $8 to $10 range. Many Australian industrials have many\nmere shareholders because their\nsecurities are in the $5 category.\"\nMedical Supplies\n?rom U.S. Flown\nTo Guatemala\nGUATEMALA CITY (AP)-The\nUnited States is flying medical\nsupplies and clothing here Friday\nfor survivors of the tire in the\nGuatemala city mental asylum\nwhich took more than 200 lives\nThursday.\nMany of the 1,400 patients,\nsome classified as criminally insane, escaped during rescue\noperations, making it diffituU to\nfix the exact death toli. About 60\nsurvivors were burned.\nAuthorities said a short oircuit\nprobably sparked the asylum's\nfire, irtaoh caused the heaviest\ndeath toll ever experienced by\nGuatemala in a disaster other\nthan an earthquake.\nPolaris Fired\nSuccessfully\nCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.\n(AP)\u2014A Polaris was fired successfully from an underground\ntube early Friday in the missile's\nfinal tuneup for key launchings\nfrom a nuclear submarine.\nThe United States Navy announced the missile achieved all\nobjectives in scooting more than\n1,000 miles down the Atlantic\nmissile range. A major goal was\nlo check the performance of the\nPolaris' sensitive inertial guid-\nj ance system.\nI    The   success,   the   16th   in   23\n! Polaris   firings   this   year,   followed to failures for the stubby\nrocket last week.\nWithin a few days the giant\natomic submarine George Washington is scheduled to fire one of\nthe missiles for the first time\nwholly submerged about 30 miles\noff Cape Canaveral. The critical\nshot will signal the beginning of\na navy drive to make the Polaris\noperational by October.\nTO   CARRY  MISSILES\nHONG KONG (Reutersl-\nAmerican cruisers equipped with\nguided missiles soon will be deployed with the United States\nSeventh Fleet in the Pacific,\nnavy officers said today. They\nwere addressing a press conference held aboard the U.S. heavy\noruiser Canberra which is\nequipped with more than 100\nnon-atcrnic surface-to-air terrier\nmissiles.\nInclude Canadians In\nUN Guard To Congo\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\nCONCERN   OVER  FIRES\nPRfNCE ALBERT (CPI -\nSome concern was expressed\nThursday that forest fires near\nFlin Flon, Man., may spread into\nnorthern Saskatchewan. \"We are\nbeginning to worry about (he\nfires around Flin Flon where\nthere are still several burning.\"\nsaid F.H. Hewett, assistant director of forests for the natural\nresources department there.\nNOTICE\nTHE CITY OF NELSON\nAs of Monday Morning, July 18,\nall City business will be transacted in the building known as\nthe\nOLD POST OFFICE\nLocated At\n502 VERNON STREET\nThe  Building Located air 501   Front Street\nWill Be Closed on That Date.\nBUSINESS HOURS:\n8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.\nMONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY.\nClosed Saturdays and Official  Holidays.\nJ. \u00a3. .ShojdhDjtWL\nMayor.\nSATURDAY\n7:45 I. E, Farm Summary\n8:00 Ruff and Reddy\n8:30 Fury *\n9:00 Howdy Doody *\n9:30 Q-Toons\n10:15 On Deck Circle \u2022\n10:25 NBC Major League Baseball'\n(New York at Detroit!\n1:30 I Led Three Lives\n2:00 Saturday Matinee\n\"Stage Mother\"\n3:00 True Story \u2022\n3:30 Detective Diary \u2022\n4:00 Q-Toons\n5:30 Roy Rogers\n6:00 People's Choice\n6:30 Bonanza (Ci *\n7:30 Challenge *\n8:00 The Deputy *\n8:30 World Wide 60 *\n\"Secret of Freedom\"\n9:30 Whirlybirds\n10:00 Sheriff of Coahise\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Rogues Yarn\"\nSUNDAY\n10:15 On the Deck Circle *\n10:25 NBC Major League Baseball*\n(New York vs. Detroit)\n1:00 Compass\n1:30 Travelogue\n2:00 Science Theater\n2:30 Ohristopher Series\n3:00 This Is The Answer\n3:30 Live Wrestling\n4:30 Week's Best Movie\n\"Showdown\"\n6:00 Overland Trail *\n7:00 Music on Ice (C) *\n8:00 Mystery Show (C) *\n9:00 Loretta Young *\n9:30 Take a Good Look\n10:00 Arthur  Murray  Party\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Three Loves Has Nancy\"\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n11:35 Back To God\n11:50 Week-End Digest\n11:55 Major League Baseball *\n2:25 Week-End Digest\n2:30 Farm Story\n3:00 Spoken Russian\n3:30 American Legend\n4:00 Colonel Bleep\n4:30 Dick Clark\n5:00 Championship Bowling\n6:00 How To Marry a Millionaire\n6:30 Big Story\n7:00 High Road *\n7:30 Leave It To Beaver\n8:00 Lawrence Welk *\n9:00 Saturday Showcase\n10:30 Channel Two Theatre\n11:50 News\n11:55 Prayer and Hymn\nSUNDAY\n11:35 Sign On\n11:40 Sacred Heart Hour\n11:55 Week End Digest\n12:00 College News Conference *\n12:30 Your Social Security in\nAction\n1:00 Bible Answers\n1:30 Cultural Classics\n2:00 Open Hearing\n2:30 Faith For Today\n3:00 World Review\n3:30 American Religious Town\nHall\n4:00 Spokane Forum\n4:30 Star and Story\n5:00 Matty's Funday Funnies *\n5:30 Lone Ranger *\n6:00 Broken Arrow *\n6:30 Maverick *\n7:30 Lawman *\n8:00 Rebel *\n8:30 The Alaskans *\n9:30 Johnny Staccato *\n10:00 TV Hour of Stars\n11:00 11th Hour News\n11:15 Sunday Spectacular\n12:30 Nightcap News\n12:35 Prayer and Hymn\n12:40 Sign Off\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP>\nThe United Nations hurried a\n22-man advance guard including\nCanadians to the Congo Friday\nand assembled an international\nAfrican military force to help\nrestore order in the chaotic African republic, newly-independent\nfrom Belgium.\nMaj.-Gen Carl Carlsson von\nHorn of Sweden, since 1958 head\nof the UN truce supervision organization in Palestine, leaves\nhis Jerusalem headquarters by\nplane to become commander of\nthe new military force.\nGoing south with him were five\nradio technicians, five security\nguards and 11 military observers\nto serve as advisers and instructors to the mutinous, 25,000^an\nCongolese army, now in revolt\nagainst its Belgian officers.\nDiplomats here said the observers were officers of the truce\norganization from Canada, Denmark, New Zealand, Norway and\nSweden.\nWILL PROVIDE  TROOPS\nGhana and Tunisia already\nhad agreed to provide troops for\nthe international force. Guinea,\nMali and Morocco were asked to\nfill out the force and were considering the request. Ghana was\nreported to have offered to send\ntwo of its three British-trained\narmy  battalions.\nUN Undersecretary Ralph J.\nBunch told a press conference in\nLeopoldville he expected four\nbattalions \u2014 perhaps 2,400 soldiers \u2014 to be in the Congo early\nnext week. The first of these was\nexpected by Saturday.\nThe UN called for 17 French-\nspeaking volunteers from its\nheadquarters   security   force   to\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\n9:45 Bread Basket\n10:15 Baseball *\n1:15 Cartoon Carnival\n1:30 Playhouse\n2:00 I Love Lucy *\n2:30 Mighty Mouse *\n3:00 Lone Ranger \"\n3:30 Robin Hood\n4:00 Big Playback\n4:15 Hollywood Park Races\n4:45 Big Playback\n5:00 Ringside With Rasslers\n6:00 This Is Alice ,\n6:30 Texas Rangers\n7:00 Coronado 9\n7:30 Wanted: Dead or Alive\n8:00 Mr. Lucky *\n8:30 Have Gun, Will Trawl *\n9:00 Gunsmoke *\n9:30 Percy Mason *\n10:30 Death Valley Days\n11:00 4-Most Feature\nSUNDAY\n9:45 Bread Basket\n10:15 Baseball *\n1:15 Travelogue\n1:30 Oral Roberts\n2:00 This Is The Life\n2:30 Pro Football\n3:30 Texas Rasslin\n4:00 Sky King *\n4:30 Face The Nation '\n5:00 FYI *\n5:30 20th Century *\n6:00 Lassie *\n6:30 Dennis The Menace\n7:00 Ed Sullivan *\n8:00 G. E. Theatre \u00bb\n8:30 Alfred Hitchcock \u2666\n9:00 Lucy In Connecticut\n9:30 What's My Line *\n10:00 CBS News *\n10:15 Sports Special\n10:30 Reckoning *\n11:30 Citizen Soldier\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nSmall Boys See\nMother Killed,\nFather's Suicide\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 An unemployed father shot his wife\nThursday and then himself as\nhis two small sons pleaded with\nhim not to shoot.\nNearby residents said the\nchildren screamed \"mommy . . .\ndaddy . . . don't do it,\" during\nthe shooting beside a car parked\nin a playground in suburban\nYork Township.\nLorene Palmateer, 29, died beside the car with a bullet in her\nhead. Her husband Clare, 32,\ndied of a similar wound an hour\nlater in hospital.\nPolice believe the mother was\nsitting in the car with the children and pushed them out and\ntold them to run when her husband came out of their nearby\nbasement apartment with a .22\ncalibre rifle.\nThe children, Robert, 8, and\nGlen, 6, were taken to the home\nof an uncle. Several children\nwere playing nearby at the time\nof the shooting.\ngo to L e o p o 1 dville to guard\nBundle, an American Negro.\nThe first four volumteers included two Negroes from Trinidad.\nUN Secretary - General Dag\nHammarskjold also asked the\nUnited States, the Soviet Union,\nBritain, India and Italy to transport the troops and supply food\nto meet a shortage in Leopoldville.\nU.S. SENDING FOOD\nThe U.S. already had offered\nsuch assistance, and President\nEisenhower approved the airlift\nof 300 tons of American surplus\nfood to the Congo from stocks in\nEurope.\nTbe Soviet delegate to the UN\nArkady A. Sobolev told reporters\nhe had passed Hammarskjold's\nrequest to his government and\nhoped it would be \"considered\nsympathetically.\" The Soviet Union has refused to contribute to\nthe support of the other UN\nmilitary force, keeping peace between the Egyptians and Israel,\nterming it an illegal organization.\nDiplomatic sources said Ham-\nmarskjold asked Britain for the\nuse of a big airfield at Kano,\nNigeria, as the main staging\narea for the UN troops. They\nsaid the request was under consideration in London and in Lagos, the Nigerian capital.\nOttawa Names\nOfficers For\nCongo Service\nOTTAWA ICP) \u2014 Army headquarters Friday named Lt. - Col.\nJ. A. Berlhiaume, 44, of St.\nHyacinthe, Que., and Maj. H. W.\nKing, 40, of Victoria as the two\narmy officers being sent to the\nCongo to assist with administrative problems in the strife-torn\nnew republic.\nBoth have been serving in\nPalestine with the United Nations\ntruce supervisory organization.\nMaj. King is a former member\nof the Canadian Guards.\nTropical\nSuit\nSALE\nStay cool for the balance\nof the summer in one of\nthese light-weight suits\nmade by Warren K. Cook\nand Shiffer - Hillman.\n10 Only\nSizes 38-42. Reg. $69.50\nSale $4950\n2 Only\nReg. $49.50\nSale $3500\nEMORY'C\nLTD.      \u00b0\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nMINISTER  APPOINTED\nBERLIN (Reuters) \u2014 Lt.-Gen.\nHeinz Hoffmann, former first\ndeputy to the East German defence minister, has been appointed defence minister, the\nEast German news agency ADN\nsaid Thursday. Former defence\nminister Willi Stoph as deputy\nprime minister, now will take\nover general co-ordination and\ncarrying out of decisions of the\ncentral committee of the Socialist Unity (East German Communist) party.\nHAIGH\nTRU   ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827\n576 Baker 81\nHave  the  Job  Dane  Right 1\nVIC GRAVE<\n\u2122        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nB.C. Highlights\nPOLICE   COURT   CHANGE\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Police\nofficers on police court duty will\nbe replaced shortly by civilians,\nChief Constable Archer told the\npolice commission Thursday. He\nsaid the change will free up to\nseven  officers  for  active  police\nBAKERS PLAN STRIKE\nABBOTSFORD (CP) \u2014 Employees of Abbotsford Bakery\nsay they will go one strike Saturday unless they get the same\npay increase as Vancouver\nbakery workers. The men voted\n15-3 for a strike in a government-supervised ballot. About 550\nworkers in 10 Vancouver bakeries got an 11-per-cent pay increase.\nNews of the Day\nRATES- 30c tine, 40c line black face lype; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nTrail Business College\nNew Term  Begins September  6\nLost - Girl's Maroon CCM Bicycle. Phone 744-X or 616.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St., Ph. 1108, Nelson\nAnnual Rebekah Picnic\nat Lakeside Park, Monday, July 18\nBring your own refreshments.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nThe Salvation Army\nRummage Sale\n1:30 p.m. Saturday\nLarge selection of Garden Tools.\nLowest prices in town.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nAnother shipment of Split Bamboo Roll-Up Shades just arrived at\nlie per sq. ft.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nAUTO GLASS\nCut and polished to fit any make\nor model of automobile, at\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nLockers For Rent on Annual or Semi-Annual Basis.\nRent Now and Save. City\nLocker   Plant,   611  Front St.\nFILMS UNDER THE STARS\nSunday, 9:15 p.m.. Lakeside Park\n'Radiation\" \u2014 a complete color\nsurvey of its origins, uses, dangers\nand controls.\nAUCTION   SALE\nAN AUCTION OF FURNITURE\nAND HOUSEHOLD GOODS WILL\nBE HELD AT THE PREMISES\nOF WEST TRANSFER CO.,\nBAKER STREET, NELSON, AT\n1:30 P.M., SATURDAY THE 16TH\nDAY OF JULY 1960.\nTHOMAS G. C. FOX,\nOFFICIAL ADMINISTRATOR,\nCOURTHOUSE, NELSON, B.C.\nEnglish   Bone   China   Cups   and\nSaucers. - HOBBY SHOP.\nHOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE\nREPAIRS and SERVICE\nPhone D. McCuaig\nWeek Days 2333\nNights and Holidays 622-Y\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank our many\nfriends for their thoughtful sympathy in our recent bereavement.\nSpecial thanks to Sisters and Staff\nof Mount St. Francis. Rev. Canon\nG. W. Lang, and Dr. N. E. Morrison.\nThe Phillips Family.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe would like to express our\nheartfelt thanks and appreciation\nto all our friends and neighbors\nfor their acts of kindness and\nthoughtfulness who helped in any\nway during the loss of our Dear\nFather. Special thanks to Drs.\nStepanelli and Clark for their care\nof our father, also the Matron,\nnurses and staff of the Trail-\nTadanac Hospital.\nFamily of late\nMr   John M. Gillete.\nBachelor\nSMOKERS\nTOOTH PWODER\nWith Sodium Perborate\nHelps remove nicotine stains,\nremoves discoloration,\nneutralizes acid condition.\nPrice 79e\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSAMUELSON \u2014Funeral services\nfor the late Mrs. Dilys Irene Sam-\nuelson. beloved wife of Richard\nEmanuel Samuelson of 18 3 0\nPhoenix Avenue. Rossland will be\nheld Monday July 18, 1960 at 2\no'clock from St. George's Anglican\nChurch. Rev. F. D. Wyatt will officiate, interment in Mountain View\nCemetery. Clark's Funeral Chapel\nin charge.\nFUNERAL SERVICE\nROSE \u2014 Funeral service of the\niate Robert (Bob) Cecil of 1956 Columbia Ave.. Rossland. will be held\nSaturday. July 16, 1960 at the Masonic Temple. Masonic service will\nbe conducted at 1:00 o'clock followed by public service at 2:00. Interment will be at Eagles Hills Cemetery, Olds, Alberta. In lieu of flowers, donation to cancer society.\nClark's Funeral Chapel in charge.\nBuz Sawyers\nAssignment\nTO MAKE YOUR\nVACATION MORE\nEXCITING.\nAnd You Can Give\nthe Order  for  Him\nTo Do It.\nJUST PHONE\n1844\nAnd Make Arrangements\nTo Have\nThe\n1Mson\nSatUj\n\u2022fas\nand\nBuz\nSawyer\nDelivered To Your\nVacation Address.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1960_07_16","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0433273","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}