{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0433343":{"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":"1960-05-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0433343\/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":" ^^mmmmmmmm\nEaai__-_Ea^\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb^\u00bb\"\nMtHaWaaa\n*mmtm\n.m\nThe Interior's *D** vis^,    ,\nLargest Daily Newspape       W8l7^noj_vr*   '\nApril Daily Average Press Run \u2014 9054 r-i~-QS^Ovq XrI*0Sd >gt   \u25a0\nPublished ai ,_..,.-      * importation, government financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columhia area\nmi\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny and very\nwarm, possible thunderstorms tn\nlate afternoon. High-low Cranbrook,\nOrescent Valley 45 and 80.\nVol. 59\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 12, I960\nNot  More  Than 7o  Dally,  10c Saturday\nNo. 18\nJV33T\nIke's Tour May\nBe a Short One\nBLOSSOM BEAUTIES \u2014 Blossom time is here at\nCreston Valley and this bevy of beauties are getting\n\u2022xcited as this weekend one of them will be crowned\nqueen of the 1960 Blossom Festival. Hundreds of outside\nvisitors are expected at Creston to enjoy this annual\ncelebration and to view the valley at its loveliest. Pictured amid cherry blossoms are queen candidates and\nQueen Cathy of 1959. Back row, left to right, are Theran\nLane, Queen Cathy 1959, Pauline Hagen. Front tow,\nMaurine Jones, Aline Beech and Judy Kriz.\n\u2014Photo by H. M. Budrncr.\nAlberta Tribes Fearful of\nFuture Betrayal by Gov't\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nCanadian   Press   Staff  Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A parliamentary committee was told Wednesday lhat Alberta's treaty Indians\nremain unconvinced that any real\neffort will be made by the federal\ngovernment to improve the lot of\nCanadian  Indians.\n\". . . We are still fearful that\nunpleasant or further dictatorial\nmeasures may again be forced\nupon us . . . \" the 18,525-member\nIndian Association of Alberta told\nthe joint Commons-Senate committee studying Indian affairs,\n\"Too many times in the past\nwe have experienced betrayal or\nthe misuse of trust.\"\nTVie association presented a 58-\npage brief to the committee containing 57 resolutions proposing a\nwide variety of amendments to\nIhe Indian Act and other measures to help Canada's 174,000 Indians.\nThe association   said   the   pro\nposed resolutions would ensure\nprotection of treaty Indians in the\nfuture. There always is danger\n\"that an unscrupulous or thoughtless government might again betray us.\"\nThe brief said that the Indian\nis unable to live on an equal footing with Ihe white man unless he\nIs prepared to give up his treaty\nrights. He must become eniran-\ncised. a step which enables him\nto obtain a lump sum of cash\nfrom band  funds.\nCanadian Indians \"are being\nbribed with their own money to\nfree the government o[ its treaty\nobligations.\"\nThe Indian wanted to be placed\nin a position where he could\nmake progress without sacrificing\n\"the rights, protections and priv-\nlishment of a separate federal department of Indian affairs and\nroyal commission to study Indian\neducational prolems and Indian\naffairs administration in Alberta.\nIt proposed that Indians be\ngiven the right to appeal to provincial supreme courts against\ngovernment ruling affecting Indians. And it urged greatly expanded health, education and welfare services and greater opportunities for employment.\nThe association said no amendments should be proposed to the\nIndian Act until all Indian bands\nand organizations have had an opportunity to study and comment\non them.\nMrs. John C. Gorman of Calgary, counsel for the Alberta association,  said   the   Indians  take\nilegcs which were granted to us I strong exception  to a section of\nWhen  we relinquished this  country to your government.\"\nASK ROYAL COMMISSIONS\nThe brief called for the estab-\nAsk Gov't Aid To Prevent\nWhite-Indian Marriages\nOTTAWA (CP) - An Alberta\nIndian chief made an impassioned\nplea to the federal government\nWednesday to help prevent white\nmen from marrying Indian girls to\nobtain their treaty money.\nHoward Beebe, president of the\nlR,525-member Indian Association\nof Alberta, told the joint Commons-\nSenate committee studying Indian\naffairs that there are too many\ncases of young Indian girls misled\nby false love. Mr. Beebe is a councillor of the Blood reservation at\nCardston,  Alta.\nHe said that when an Indian girl\nmarries a white man she loses her\ntreaty rights and cannot return\nto her reserve. However, when she\nleaves  and  becomes  enfranchised\nshe receives a per capita share of\nthe capital and revenue in the band\nfunds.\nSPENDS HER MONEY\n\"There have been cases where\na woman has been induced by a\nnon-Indian man to marry him,\" he\nsaid, \"and as soon as her enfranchisement money arrives, he\nspends it and deserts her. This\nleaves the woman in the pitiful situation where she cannot return to\nher own people and is usually ill-\nequipped to make a living in the\nnon-Indian community.\"\nHe said the association recommends that payment of enfranchisement money to an Indian\nwoman who marries a white man\nbe delayed  for five years.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nHAVfiLOCK. Ont. (CD\u2014John W. Sheffield of Sutton, Ont.. hired\nat $3fi00 a year plus $500 car allowance as police, chief here, has\ndecided not to take the job.\nThe police chief's duties include caretaker of the town hall,\ncaretaker of fire-fighting equipment, building inspector and weed\ncollector.\n\"He just came and looked it over and left,\" said Mrs, Dorothy\nMcMillan, clerk of this village 115 miles northeast of Toronto.\nthe Indian Act which enables the\ngovernment to enfranchise an Indian arbitrarily. This could be\ndone in cases where the government felt an Indian had advanced\nsufficiently to live in the white\nman's world.\n\"Instead of encouraging us to\nattain self-sufficiency, tihe government has placed an ominous\nthreat before us, warning what\nmight happen to any of us who\nprogressed too far,\" the briof\nsaid.\nVISIT OF QUEEN\nMOTHER BRINGS\nHARD MEASURES\nLUSAKA, Northern Rhodesia\n(Reuters) \u2014 Authorities cracked\ndown on militant Negro nationalism\nWednesday night as Queen Mother\nElizabeth arrived in the Rhodesian\nFederation for a three-week visit\namid rising racial unrest.\nNorthern Rhodesia Governor Sir\nEvelyn Hone announced he has\nbanned the United National Independence party \u2014 tbe main Negro\nnationalist organization \u2014 in this\nprotectorate's western province.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Police, firemen and ambulance attendants\nworked frantically Monday to unload three sling-loads of lumber\nfrom an overturned truck in the hopes that the driver Was alive\nbeneath.\nThen a man came along.\nIt was the driver. Battan Singh, 58. who had walked back lo his\noffice to get help in moving the lumbe% off the road.\nPORT HOPE, Ont. (CP)\u2014A young fisherman flicked a long,\noverhand cast Saturday night and for two hours this town 55 miles\neast of Toronto lay in darkness.\nThe story behind the power failure was released Monday hy the\nOntario Hydro-Electric Power Commission. They declined to name\nthe fisherman.\nThe nylon fishing line became entangled in a 4000-volt line near\na bridge. The youngster kept hauling on It to free it but instead he\ndrew three of Ihe power lines together. Fuses blew fnr miles around.\nThe boy was not injured. He was insulated by hie rubber boots.\nSoviets Question\nAdenauer  Eyesight\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Moscow radio\nWednesday night accused West\nGermany Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of a deliberate lie in asserting that Soviet spy planes\nhave been making high - altitude\nreconnaisance flights over West\nGermany.\n\"Oddly enough, neither the American airmen nor the American\nradar instruments in West Germany have been able to detect\nwhat the chancellor \u2014 with his\nnot-so-young eyes \u2014 claims to\nhave noticed.\" said a broadcast\nbeamed at Germany.\nIn a speech at Dusseldorf Monday. Adenauer said Soviel planes\nhad for years been flying over and\nphotographing great tracts of the\nUnited States and West Germany.\nCOMMONWEALTH\nLEADERS DISOWN\nRACIAL POLICIES\nBy ARTHUR GAVSHON\nLONDON (.AP) - Ten of M\nCorr-momvealtih leaders are reported to have agreed Wednesday\nto make public a declaration disowning South Africa's racial segregation policies.\nThe agreement was reported by\nsenior Commonwealth officials following a virtual breakdown of informal talks with Foreign Secretary Eric Louw of South Africa.\nThe informal meetings were aimed\nat modifying South Africa's controversial system of apartheid of\nracial segregation.\nThe 10 countries said to be\nready to disavow publicly the sort\noi racial segregation practised by\nSouth Africa are Britain, Canada,\nAustralia, New Zealand, the Central African Federation, India, Pakistan, Malaya, Ceylon and Ghana.\nSouth Africa is the' l'lth member of the conference of Commonwealth leaders meeting here.\nThe officials reporting the agreement said only the form of the\ndisavowal remains to he decided\nand present plans are to issue it\nFriday when the conference ends.\nU.S. Startled\nBy Red View\nBy JOHN SCALI\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014U.S. Officials were plainly startled by\nPremier Khrushchev's remark\nWednesday that Eisenhower\nmight be an embarrassing guest\nbecause he approved espionage\nflights over Russia.\n\"The Russian people would say\nI was mad to welcome a man\nwho sends spy planes over here\nlike that,\" the Soviet premier told\nreporters in Moscow.\nThis raised the prospect that\nthe Russian leader might pull\nback his invitation to Eisenhower\nor that the president might cancel or delay the 10-day visit set\nto start June 10.\nThe only official reaction here\nwas from White House press secretary James Hagerty who said:\n\"I haven't any comment\u2014period. That's about all. I don't expect there will be any.\"\nIKE ANXIOUS TO GO\nAn Eisenhower associate, expressing what he called & personal view, doubted that Eisenhower would seek to cancel his\ntrip because of Khrushchev's\nwords. The president was described as eager to make the\nvisit. The official said Eisenhower sincerely believes it might\nlead to an easing of tensions.\nEisenhower views the sharp\nwords exchanged between the\nSoviet Union and the United\nStates since the spy incident as\njookeying for advantage prior to\nimportant negotiations, this informant said.\nNikita Hints Trip\nCould Be Cancelled\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014Nikita Khrushchev expressed doubt\nWednesday whether President Eisenhower can be welcomed\nto the Soviet Union-next month.\n\"The Russian people would say I was mad to welcome a man who sends spy planes over here like that,\" the\nSoviet premier told reporters.\nKhrushchev said the May 1 esjfionage flight has\nchanged his opinion oi the American president, whom he\nvisited last September.\nKhrushchev added that the two\nof them can exchange views at\nthe Paris summit conference next\nMonday as to whether Eisenhower should come to Moscow.\nEisenhower is due here June 10.\nAPPROVED BY DULLES\nThe premier said the spy flight\nhad been approved by Allen Dulles, head of the Central Intelligence Agency, and under the direction of the president.\n\"Don't expect me to say after\nthat what nice people these are.\"\nStanding on a wicker chair at\na display of equipment from the\ndowned American flyer, Francis\nPowers, Khrushchev said:\n\"Just imagine what would have\nRockefeller\nDies in Tucson\nTUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - John D.\nRockefeller Jr.. who poured millions of dollars into a world-wide\nprogram of philanthropy, died in\na Tucson hospital Wednesday at\nthe age of 86.\nA spokesman for Rockefeller's\nphysician attributed death to pneumonia and heart strain. Rockefeller, a frequent winter visitor to\nTucson, had been ill for several\nmonths.\nAdmitted to the hospital last December, Rockefeller remained\n.there until being discharged two\nweeks ago. He was re-admitted\nMonday when his condition became\nserious, and members of the family were called to his bedside.\nHis son. Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York, arrived by\nplane only a few hours before the\ndeath.\nDam Collapses, Adds\nTo Ont. Flood Chaos\nBy  BEN WARD\nCanadan   Press   Staff   Writer\nTIMMINS, Ont. (CP) - An armada of small boats rushed to\ncomplete the evacuation of\nMountjoy Township late Wednesday, racing against new flood\ncrests pouring down the rampaging Mattagami River.\nCivil defence officials estimated that, practically all of the\n1,000 residents of the township,\nwhich lies across the river from\nthis northern Ontario town, would\nbe evacuated by nightfall.\nMost of the residents left without argument but a few citizens\ninsisted on staying put.\nCollapse Tuesday of a loggers'\ndam 50 miles south of Timmins\nwas the cause of the new flood\nthreat, already serious after four\ndays of rain.\nEMERGENCY DECLARED\nReeve Jack Atkinson of Mountjoy Township declared a state of\nemergency at noon, after word of\nthe dam break reached here, and\nordered evacuation of all residents.\n\"We can't ri9k lives any\nlonger.\" he said. \"The whole\ntownship will have to be abandoned to the flood.\"\nIn Toronto, a spokesman for\nthe Hill-Clark-Francis Company,\nnorthern Ontario lumber operators, said the company dam at\nMuskisenda Lake gave way and\nan estimated 40,000 logs broke\nloo.e into the Mountjoy River,\nwhich .\/lows into Uie Mattagami\na few  hundred  yards  upstream\nfrom Timmins.\nCivil defence authorities said\nthe Mattagami rose almost a\nfoot during Tuesday night and\nanother 10 inches Wednesday. It\nwas continuing to rise at the rate\nof an inch an hour.\nThey said the dam break did\nnot mean a wall of water rolling\ndown on Timmins and its environs. But it was causing the\nsteady rise of the Mattagami.\nREFUSED TO LEAVE\nOne of the handful of residents\nwho refused to leave the flood-\nstricken area was Mrs. Katerine\nHartig, 40 - year - old mother of\neight children. She runs a small\ndairy farm on the side of the\nriver, four miles below Timmins.\nMrs. Hartig told rescue crews she\ncould not abandon her 40 registered\nHolstein cows. She said they re\nquired  daily  care  and  milking.\nAlberta Forest Fire\nHazard Growing\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 The hazard\nof forost fires in Alberta has increased to such a degree in recent days that it may be necessary\nto close some areas to travellers if\nthe warm dry weather continues.\nEleven new fires have been re-\nttorted since Tuesday morning.\nThe biggest, a 500-acre blaze 25\nmiles north of Rx>cky Mountain\nHouse, is out of control and defying the efforts of 30 men and five\nbi_l_doz\u00bbrs to extinguish it.\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nExternal Affairs Minister Green\ndeclared that no American spy\nplanes have ever operated from\nCanadian bases; flights of American U-2 aircraft over Canada were\nfor weather work and were confined to North America.\nImmigration Minister Fairclough\nannounced that immigrant fiances\nand fiancees of Canadian citizens\nno longer will have to marry\nwithin 30 days of arrival to win\npermanent Canadian residence.\nThe Commons continued debate\non' the government's university\ngrants bill and it did not receive\nfinal passage.\nSenator Wishart Robertson (L\u2014\nNova Scotia) said Canada has to\ncome to grips with the question\nof whether she should remain\nmember of GATT, the international\nconvention on tariffs and trade.\nSenator David CroH (L - On\ntario) introduced a bill that would\nrequire finance companies to state\nall interest charges on loans\nterms of annual  interest.\nCanadian Dollar\nLowest in Year\nIn U.S. Currency\nNEW YORK (API - The \/alue\nof the Canadian dollar in terms\nof U.S. currency sank Wednesday\nto the lowest closing level in more\nthan a year.\nForeign exchange dealers quoted\nit at $1.02 27-32 in U.S. currency\ndown 11-64 from $1.03 1-64 Tues\nday.\nAlthough the rate rallied slightly\nfrom a mid-day low, the final quo>\ntation was the lowest since the\nCanadian dollar closed at $1.02\n25-32 on  March 2.   1959.\nCanadian Team\nOn Columbia\nReadies Itself\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 The negotiating team which represents Canada on Columbia River develop\nment talks will meet here Saturday to iron out a solid front which\nthey want to present to United\nStates officials.\nThe British Columbia contingent\nconsisting of Lands and Forests\nMinister Wi'lliston, Attorney-General Bonner and Dr. H. L. Keen\nleyside. Chairman of B.C. Hydro\nis expected lo launch a plea for\nunity in future talks with the U.S\nThey believe American negotia\ntors will capitalize on any lack of\nunanimity within the Canadian\nteam.\nJustice Minister Fulton, Exter\nnal Affairs Minister Green, Re\nsources Minister Hamilton and\nGen. A. G. L. McNaughton, chair\nman of the joint committee, represent the Federal government in\nthe negotiations.\nbeen tlie reaction if, on the eve of\nmy visit to America, we had sent\na plane over the United States.\"\nThen, speaking as though he\nexpected Eisenhower to visit\nMoscow anyway, Khrushchev\nadded that there would be \"no\nexcesses whatsoever among the\npeople.\"\nDISPLAY EQUIPMENT\nThe exhibit of weapons, documents and wreckage was put on\ndisplay in Gorky Park where Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko\nheld a press conference.\nGromyko accused the United\nStates of aggression and \"trampling underfoot the charter of the\nUnited Nations.\" He warned that\nthe spy flight was playing with\nfire and that violation of territorial integrity was \"one of Ihe most\ndangerous forms of brinkmanship.\"\nAircraft which \"again dare to\nmake a sortie into our borders\nwill be smashed to smithereens,\"\nGromyko said. He reiterated that\nthe Russians will obliterate the\nforeign bases used by Americans\nfor spy flights over Soviet territory.\nSoviet skies are closed and will\nremain closed, Gomyko said.\nU.S. To Try\nTo Renew Open\nSkies Policy\nWASH I NGTON (Reutersl -\nPresident Eisenhwer said Wednesday the United States carried out\naerial intelligence missions over\nthe Soviet Union because it did\nnot want anolher Pearl Harbor.\nThe president totd a press conference that he will again ask Nikita Khrushchev to agree to his\n\"open skies\" proposal to end the\ndanger of surprise attack.\nEisenhower, who first made the\nsuggestion at Hie Geneva summit\nmeeting in 1955 only to have tihe\nRussians reject it, said he would\nrenew it at the Paris-summit talks\nnext week as a means of ending\nconcealment and suspicion.\nHowever in Moscow Wednesday\nSoviet Foreign Minister Andrei\nGromyko rejected the plan in advance.\n\"Obviously the Soviet government could not accept the open\nskies idea,\" he told reporters, \"The\nSoviet sky is and will 'be firmly\nclosed.\"\nPenfield To Trade\nScalpel  For Pen\nMONTREAL 'CP) - Dr. Wilder\nPenfield, 69, one of the world's\nleading brain surgeons, has retired \"lo use the pen instead otf the\nscalpel.\"\nHe made the announcement Wednesday at the annual meeting of\nthe Montreal Neurological Institute, a department of McGit! University.\nDr. Penfield served as director of\nthe institute and chairman of the\ndepartment of neurology and neurosurgery at the university.\nKennedy Hopes Soar,\nHumphreys Disappear\nCHARLESTON, W. Va. (API-\nThe Democratic p r e s i d e n tial\nhopes of Senator John Kennedy\nof Massachusetts have soared\nhigh on tile wings of a sweeping\nvictory in Tuesday's West Virginia primary.\nAs the late returns mounted\nWednesday, Kennedy continued\nto rack up more than 60 per cent\nof Ihe vote in a contest in which\nhe knocked Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota out of contention for the presidential nomination.\nWith 2,355 of 2,750 polls tabulated, the count stood at 198.165\nvotes for Kennedy and 126,347 for\nHumphrey.\nKennedy's victory was impressive beyond tlie boundaries of\nWest Virginia because of the way\nit was achieved. A Roman Catholic, he took on Humphrey, a\nCongregationalist, and thrashed\nhim soundly in a state where\nonly 4.5 per cent of tlie population is Catholic.\nHOPES ISSUE SETTLED\nKennedy said this would settle\nthe religious issue which has\ncaused some Democratic leader*\nto oppose his nomination on the\nground he couldn't win in November.\nKennedy's associates predicted\nthat a number of party leaders\nwho have been holding out\nagainst him are going to find\nthemselves under extreme pressure to line up for the Massachusetts senator before the July\nnominating convention in Los Angeles.\nHumphrey gave no clue in\nwithdrawing whom he plans to\nsupport for the nomination. But\nmany of those who were active\nin his campaign were from the\nranks of former backers of Adiai\nE. Stevenson.\nKennedy also did well in the\nNebraska state primary Tuesday\nwhere his name was the only one\non the ballot. Electors who\nwished to indicate a preference\nfor other contestants wrote in the\ncandidates' names. In this way\nVice-President Richard Nixon received what was described as an\nunexpextedly large vote.\nWith returns counted from 1,939\nof the 2,107 polls, Kennedy had\n71,405 votes. Write-in votes gave\nNixon 66,399; Democratic Senator\nStuart Symington of Missouri 8,-\n363: Humphrey 2,299: and Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New\nYork 1,467.\nSenator Hubert Humphrey\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\nKinnaird Boy Wins\nJunior Pianoforte\nWinning first place in the Koo- Bringing the day to a \"happy fin-\ntenay Music Festival Junior Qiatn-\npionship pianoforte class Wednesday afternoon at the Capitol\ntheatre, Kenneth Culley. Kinnaird,\nwas awarded the Nqlson Rotary\nChallenge Shield.\nPlaying the pieces with which\nthey had previously won in other\nclasses. Susan Wolfe. Trail, and\nBeth King. Trail, also competed.\nJames McGowan, Rosslaind, did\nnot appear.\nPIANOFORTE: Bach. Under 17\nyears. In this class of Inventions in\nthree parts, all competitors played well, according to adjudicator\nLloyd Powell. First place was given\nBernadetle Bergeron, Trail, who\nreceived an 86 for her \"excellent\"\nplaying. She was commended for\nher \"clear, rippling touch\" a^l her\nphrasing.\nSecond place was won by Pes?gy\nMorrison. Trail, with an 85. This\nwas \"intelligently played\" and was\nconvincing. Tying for ttiird place\nwith marks of 84 were Gwen Rice,\nRossland, and Karen Gibson, Nelson. Robert Moisey. Nelson, was\nalso fn the class.\nPIANOFORTE: Badh. Under 21\nyears. Playing with style a very\nwell prepared piece, the two contestants in this class \"ran eadi\nother very close\" according to the\nadjudicator. Winning first place\nwith an 87. Jean Ethridge, Rossland. was told her rendition of\n\"Well Tempered Clavier\" was very\nwell done on both the prelude and\nfugue.\nPlaying very well and presenting the same piece with style and\neffect. Geraldine Cooper, Rossland. received a mark of R6.\nPIANOFORTE: Sonatina. Under\n1(5 years. Thirteen young ladies\nplaying from Scarlett! or Hadyn in\nthis class were told. \"This is a difficult class, for so many are playing so close.\" After looking for fill\nthe fine points. Mr. Powell awarded first place to Elaine Jackson,\nRossland. with a mark of 87.\nGwen Rice, Rossland. achieved\nsecond place wilh a mark of 86.\nIn third place werp three contestants with marks of 85 \u2014 Judy Arm\nAnderson, Trail: Louise Simcock.\nRossland; and Merrfle Shaw, Nelson.\nOther contestants ln the class\nwere: Janet Anderson. Harrop:\nBernice Martin. Trail; Karen Gibson. Nelson: Theresa Stromstead,\nNelson: Couleen Sandulescu, Rossland; Brenda Lawrie, Rossland;\nJanet Anderson, Trail.\nPIANOFORTE: Under 15 years.\nAgain Available\nGILLETTE\nADJUSTABLE RAZOR\nWith\nSuper  Blue  Blades\n$1.95\n(Blades 1(1 for 69c)\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St., Phone 1203\nish\" for Mr. Powell, three youth\nful performers played \"Siliano\nand Hornpipe\" by Purceil.\nFirst place and a mark of 87\nwent to Bernice Martin, Trail, for\nan \"excellent performance\". Catching the character of the music, her\n\"first rate\" playing was worth coping, according to Mr. Powell.\nCouleen Samluleseu, Ross'and.\nwas awarded second place and an\n83. Third place was won by Peter\nBrockway, Trail. AJ'l performers\nwere told they were very good.\nRossland, Trail\nShare 4 Trophies\nBusiness Drive\nFor Notre Dame\nFunds on Today\nA committee of 75 men is poised\nto begin a canvass today of business and industrial institutions in\nNelson in the Notre Dame College\nfunds drive.\nChairman Albert Malda said the\ngroup had given of both time and\nmoney in assuming responsibility\nof conducting the drive for the\ndevelopment of the college.\nHe said Notre Dame, besides providing university education for\nmany youths who might not otherwise have the opportunity to further their education is contributing\nabout a quarter of a million dollars\nyearly to the economy o( Nelson.\nMeasure of participation taken\nby businessmen in Nelson will, to\na great degree, he said, determine\nthe success or failure of the campaign. A successful campaign\nwould contribute to the prestige,\nculture and economy of Nelson and\ndistrict.\nTlie Business and Industry Committee agreed that rather than\nthink of its contribution to this\ncampaign as a gift. Ihe business\nmen should consider it as an investment in the youth of Nelson\nand British Columbia as well as\nin the future growth and economy\nof Nelson.\nIf the campaign goal of $315,000\nis realized Notre Dame will have\ninvested $150 for every $1 raised\nin the campaign, over the 15 to\n20 year projection period, he said.\nClubs Sponsoring\nPNE  Candidates\nFour trophies were presented\nand three other awards were announced during the Wednesday\nevening session of the Kootenay\nMusic Festival at the Capitol\nTheatre.\nCHAMPIONSHIP CLASS: Senior\nSpoken Poetry. Linda Westaway,\nRossland, received the Knights of\nPythias Shield for her recitation of\nthe festival test piece. Maureen\nLambert, Kinnaird. also competed\nfor the award.\nPUBLIC SPEAKING: Junior\nHigh Age. For her recitation Marilyn Hechter. Trail, received the\nOameron Trophy and a mark of 85.\n\"This was a very commendable\ntalk which I personally enjoyed.\"\nSydney Risk, adjudicator, said.\nPoints were given for a feeling\nof spontanity. good clear speech,\nan easy platform manner and a\ngood sense of pause. Her natural\ndelivery of satire with tongue in\ncheek were commended.\nPUBLIC SPEAKING: Senior\nHi* Age. With a mark of 80. Gayle\nMini, Rossland. was awarded the\nTrail Women's Liberal Association:\nCup for her talk on \"Swinvmin'g \" \u25a0\nAlthough she was nervous, herj\ngood, dear speech was interesting sirhiect matter and well-marked headings earned her the trophv.\nPUBLIC SPEAKING: ODen. With\nno competitors for the Trail and\nDistrict Toastmasters Club Trophy,\nno award was made.\nWINS TWO AWARDS\nBefore leaving Nelson Mr. Risk\nannounced the winner of the Trail\nParent-Teacher Association Award\nand the Little Theatre Cud in the\nSpoken Poetry Class for girls under\n14. Both wore won by Janet Mc-\nMvnn, Trail, with a mark of 90.\nWinner of the special Civic\nTheatre award for hoys under 8 in\nSpoken Poetry with a mark of 88\nwas Peter CherenkoPf, Tarrys.\nMr. Risk said he was pleased\nwith the natural quality of the\nyou'Tg voices he'd heard. The Bible\nreading class given by 11 boys under 1? was \"the most exciling class\nI've heard ln festival in a long\ntime.\" He was impressed with the\nthree verse reading choirs of the\nafternoon.\nVocal solo: In Italian. Open Mrs.\nLambert. Trail, received the Chris-\ntoforo Colombo Lodge No. 1. Trail\nCup and a mark ol 88 for \"13\nBacio\" by Arditi. \"Here you have\nIhe voice in the right setting and\ntemperment where this person\nreally shows her worth.\" said Mrs.\nWhitehead. She called it a \"lovely performance\" and said she enjoyed it very much.\nSacred Solo; Open. Any voice.\nSinging Panis Angelirus\" by\nFrank. Mrs. Kathleen Lambert.\nTrail, achieved first place with an\n84. In second place with 79 was\nMiss Helen Brader, Nelson, singing\n\"My   Heart   Ever   Faithful.\"\nCommending both contestants on\nI heir choice, Mrs. Gladys Whitehead said of Mrs. Lambert's piece\nSix Trophies Presented\nIn Single Festival Session\nSeven happy young people walk-1 Trail   for   \"a   very  sensitive   and\nTwo service clubs are sponsoring candidates for the annual Miss\nPNE contest and a third is expected to enter the race in Nelson, Albert Maida said Wednesday,\nMr. Maida, who has played a big\npart in keeping the contest alive in\nNelson, said the Elks and Lions\nclubs are sponsors F. A, Abfalter\nis assisting Mr. Maida\nContetants must be 17 years old\nor over  by  August  and not  over! \"This is a brute to sing.\" She felt [Trail, received a mark of 86, Mrs,\ntheir 22nd birthday by Dec. 1        jthe   phrases   were   managed   well i Whithehad felt the piece went, with\nNelson's candidate iast year was though they were taxing. The de-! Ihe   singer's   temperment,   had   a\nMiss Lesley Hammond. I mands   upon   Miss   Brader   were! very good climax and was vocally\n'ine\nWINS SHIELD. A Rossland girl, Linda Westaway,\nis shown holding the Knights of Pythias Shield which\nshe won last night in the senior spoken poetry cham-\npionsihip class ol the Kootenay Music Festival. It was\none of many awards at yesterday's sessions.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\ngreat in her piece which she sang\nwith \"sincerity of purpose and\nsound musicianship\nsang \"Star Vicini\" by Rosa. \"His\nsinging, flowing style is developing,\"   said   Mrs.   Whitehead.   She\nDramatic Soprano: open. Singing found he sang in a tasteful, tender\nfashion wilh good diction and constant pitch.\nGirl's solo: Under 21. Low voice.\nEarning a mark of 84, Jane Pearson. Nelson, sang \"Tulips\" by\nQuiltor. She was commended for\nher good sense of phrasing, firm\ntexture, clear diction and nice nuance. \"I enjoyed your voice,\" said\nIhe adjudicator,\nGilr's Solo: Under 19 years. Sacred. Singing a difficult and exacting aria. \"Wilh Verdure Clad\" by\nHaydn. Carol Dahlstrom. Rosslond,\nreceived a grade of 81. Mrs. Whitehead said the piece was too difficult for a young girl although she\nCome, 0 Come. My Life's De\nlight\" by Harty, Mrs. Kathleen\nLambert, Trail, received an 84 for\na piece which was \"very taxing to\nthe singer.\" Her rendition was\ntermed \"very delightful with a\ngreat deal of sincerity.\"\nIn the same class, singing \"0\nMlo Babbino Caro,\" Mrs. Lambert\nreceived an 86 lor a \"very lovely\"\nrendition. Mrs. Whitehead felt she\nshould submerge her own personality  to  make  the  song  live.\nMezzo-Soprano: Open. Singing\n\"very good songs \u2014 an excellent\nchoice as lo contrast\" Mrs. Doris\nWright. Nelson, was awarded (wo\nmarkes of 85,.For her rendition of\n\"Dream   Valley\"   by   Quilter:   she1 sang with musicianship and good\nwas told she had a \"fine concept-taste.\nwhich completely swayed us,\"     : \u2014, \u2014\u2014\n\"Art Thou Troubled\" by Handel\nwas a good contrast. \"I enjoyed it,\"\nsaid the adjudicator.\nOperatic Solo: Open Any Voice,\nSinging \"Un Bel Di Vedremo\" by\nPuccini.   Mrs.   Kathleen  Lambert,\nLions View\nFi!\nFIRST\nANNIVERSARY\nWe Are Just A Little Over A Year Old-\nBut Who Tells the Truth About Birthdays?\nWHITE LATEX: Gals $5.10\nOUTSIDE WHITE: Gals.     ...     $4.50\nSleel  Reinforced,  Vinyl  Covered\nFolding  Doors\n$12.60\n3   Colors\nMARINE GRADE PLYWOOD in stock\nGOOD ON  BOTH SIDES\ni\"x4'xl4'  Per Sheet    $18.48        |\"x4'x.O'  Per  Sheet  ...    . $15.70\ni\"x4'xl7'  Per  Sheet     $22.44        J\"x4'xl3'  Per  Sheet     ..      $19.80\nSEE OUR DISPLAY AT THE BOAT SHOW\nNo. 1 Quality Waterproof Fir Plywood\n'Both sides sanded, one side free from knots >\nV X 4' x 8'           13.95\nV.\" X 4' x 8'       6.95\nV X 4' x 8'      8,50\nV x 4' x 8'                                     9.60\n5\/16\" x 4' x 8' Sanded Underlay.\nNew\nWashable\n84 sq\nA film on the story of Kootenay\nForest Products was shown at the\nvery  line. [I,ions Club dinner meeting at the\nThe choice of Miss Helen Brader,'Xelsnn Holel Tuesday by E. L.|\n.Nelson, was \"Voco di Donna\" by|Vance, general manager of the'\nPonchielli for which she earned an company.\n31.  Her piece showed good intent I   T\"e [llm covered var,ous Pna5es|\nand  good   Ita'ian,   but   Uie  inter- \u00b0<   lo\u00a3SlnS   operations,   including\ned out of St. PaUl'S-Trinity Church\nWednesday afternoon with six\ntrophies tucked under their arms\nin the third day of the Kootenay\nMusic Festival.\nAfter hearing three young boys\nln the finals of the junior boys'\nvocal solo, Mrs. Gladys Whitehead\nsaid \"sometimes an adjudicator\nneeds to be assured too. We have\nto make a great many snap judgments, and when we hear a trophy\nclass such as this, we know we\nhave made the right ones.\" \"Each\nof these winners in his own class\nhas shown today that he is skilled\nand has a fine knowledge of his\nmusic.\"\nDavid McElroy, Nelson, winner of the Frank Wheeler Memorial Trophy, sang \"I Will Sing\nof Thy Great Mercies\"\u2014a piece\nof great stature\u2014and he sang It\nwith clarity of words and great\ndignity, said Mrs. Whitehead\n\"Your trophy Is well and truly\nearned.\"\nOthers in the prize-wining class\nwere Richard Campbell and John\nCampbell, both of Nelson.\nIn presenting the Trail Amateur j\nMusical and Dramatic Society I\nChallenge Shield to Beth King of\nTrail in the junior girls' vocal solo,\nthe adjudicator said \"this little girl\nchose a piece, Franck's 'O Lord\nMost Holy', which I thought would\nbe beyond the scope of one so\nyoung, but she interpreted lt with\nan amazing devotion, sincerity,\nclarity and skill.\"\nRunners-up were Patricia Campbell, Trail, and Marilyn Benson,\nRossland.\nNedene Ward of Nelson won\nthe Bud Greenwood Trophy for\nIntermediate girls' vocal solo, for\n\"dignified, poised and sincere\nsinging of a lovely sacred song,\n\"The Little Town of Bethlehem'.\"\nOther class winners were Judith\nFoster, Nelson; Theresa Stromstead. Nelson, and Beverley Raw-\nson, Rossland.\nOnly entrants in the Mrs. B. fl.\nOmaney Memorial Cup. presented\nby the B.C. Registered Music\nTeachers' Association. Trail branch\nfor two or more strintr instruments\nwere Barbara and Adrienne Allen\nNelson. Mrs. Whitehead said she\nconsidered them both to be intent\nand promising young musicians,\nand she liked their intelligence in\nhandling their instruments. She\ncongratulated them on playing so\nwell together.\nWood Vallance Hardware Co.\nLtd, Cup for junior spoken poetry\nwas awarded to Allen Wallach,\nSouth Slocan, because, said speech\nadjudicator Sydney Risk, \"he\nreally convinced me that he truly\nwanted to go to 'The Edge of the\nWorld'.\"\nOthers successful in their classes\nwere Peter Chernenkotf, Tarrys;\nLorraine Kalmakoff, Tarrys;\nKathy Moran, Tarrys; Edward\nBlake Allan. Harrop; Barbara\nDempsey, South Slocan.\nThe Nelson Little Theatre Cup\nwas awarded to Janet McMynn of\nsincere rendition of a very diffi\ncult piece, \"Overheard in a Salt\nMarsh\".\nRunners-up were Michael Regan.\nKinnaird; Nadeen Perehudoff,\nTarrys, and Gerald Warner, Kinnaird.\nThere were three choral speech\ngroups and Mr. Risk was delighted\nwith them all.\n\"The Owl and the Pussy Cat\",\ngiven by Tarrys Elementary school\ngrades 1 and 2, conducted by Mrs.\nM. Fleming, \"was spoken beautifully, every word was clear and\nthe story beautifully told.\" Their\nmark, 86.\nEXCITING GROUP\nIn the choral group under 14\nyears, \"The Pirate Don Durk of\nDowdee\" wa6 directed by Miss M\nA. MacAsklll, and presented by\nStanley Humphries High School\ngrade 7, Castlegar, \"was another\nexciting performance.\" Their mark\nwas 85.\nNelson Junior High School entry,\nunder 16 years, \"Drake's Drum,\"\nconducted by Mr. B. E. Ryall,\ncame in for high praise. \"1 was\nvery thrilled with this choir, especially since you tackled a piece\nwhich I would hesitate to tackle\nwith such a young group of boys.\nVou carried It off superbly. Lovely\ntonal contrast between light and\ndark, and you rose to a lovely climax.\" Mark was 87.\nMr. Merlin R. Bunt presented\nthree classes in the folk song\nensemble, from Nelson Junior High\nSchool. Two groups from Grade 7\nsang \"Marianina\", and both received praise and a little criticism\nfrom Mrs. Whitehead. Praise because they were nicely balanced\nand such lovely diction, and criticism because they were not free\nenough In singing the folk songs.\nThey received marks of 83 and 85.\nThe adjudicator lightly scolded\nthe grade 8-9 group, for some of\nthe class lacking concentration,\nthus causing the whole group to\nflounder. Their mark was 84.\nAdjudicator Pleased\nBy Festival Pianists\nVery good examples of pianoforte in all classes filled the morning Kootenay Music Festival program at the Capitol Theatre Wednesday.\nPianoforte: Under 17 years.\nPlaying \"Gigue in A\" by Jones,\nthe young contestants displayed\ngood playing with differences in\nstyle according to adjudicator,\nLloyd Powell. With a mark of 88\nBernadette Bergeron, Trail, received first place for her \"excellent\nplaying with excellent style and\nphrasing.\nland. Judith White, Rossland, was\nsecond with 87, and Sandra Wilkinson, Trail, third with 86.\nOthers in the class were: Lola\nBernick. Trail; Faye Mydansky,\nNelson; Marjorie Newman, Rossland; Beth King, Trail; Jennifer\nPaterson, Nelson.\nPianoforte: Modern. Under 16\nyears. Mr. Powell found this a\nvery interesting class not only because of the music itself, but because It Is very modern. In \"Le\nPolichinelle\" by Villa-Lobos, because it is modern music, every\nJane Daly, Trail, was in secondtnote must count, pedalling is im-\nplace with 84, and Eleanor Perkins,! portent and the tune must be\nTrail, third with a mark of 83. j brought out in the middle, he said.\n19 years Playing \"musically and with\nstyle.\" Peggy Morrison. Trail, received 87 in this class for first\nplace.  Bernice Marlin, Trail, was\nater operations with tugs hauling\nlog booms, plant processes and!\nwhen the finished product is ship-]\nped to markets.\nA While Eeiephant Auction was\ndiscussed and it is expected to be\nW. S. Hamilton\nDies In Calgary\nNews has been received of the\ndeath, in the Col, Belcher Hospital,\nconsultant engineer, with an\nnretatinn was not as good as it\n..liould have been for works of this\nstage according tn the adjudication.\nYoung Men Under 21 years,\nSacred.  For his singing of \"Sing\nPraise to Gud'  by Bach.  Martin , . .\nHorswill,   Nelson,   received  an  84 \u2122.ed   out   within   the   next   two as^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^\nand much praise from the adjudi- ' ,ub g]    ^^ th(, Mjd.| street. He came to Nelson in 1947,\ncator She felt it an excellent choice I    mmer  Honspie] breakfast  whic.h! was a nlemoer 0f the Chamber of\n'\"ht  sponsors annually on behalf of ] Commerce and Kiwanis Club, and\nIhe   bonspiel   commtilee. I lived here ah. nt 10 years\nThe   proposed   slate   of   officers     He is survived by his wife\nfor the coming year was brought\nforward  Nomination., will be asked\nfrom the  floor at the next dinner\nmeeting.\nPianoforte: Under 1!) years\n'These performers were two of\nthe best I've heard at this festival,\" said Mr. Powell as he awarded Sharon Wilkinson, Trail, a mark\nof 89, and Kathy Moore, Rossland,\nan 86. He felt they were remarkably good with a real understanding of Schumann.\nPlaying \"Fantasie Piece,\" the\npianists were told that this is a\ndifficult piece. Of Miss Wilkinson's\nperformance, he said -it was excellent and played with real musi-(\ncal understanding and with a great\ndeal of imagination and poetry.\nPianoforte: Duet under 16 years.\n\"This seems to be my lucky morning lor we are having some really\nexcellent playing,\" said Mr. Powell\nas he commented on the excellent\nensemble, feeling for the lilt, good\nsense of piano time and warmth\nwhich all the contestants exhibited.\nFor their playing of \"Fantasie\nSur un Motif de Sarabande\" by\nElliott, Couleen Sandescu and\nJoan Williams. Rossland received\na mark of 87. Their use ol the\npedal was highly commended.\nTIED AT 86\nTying lor second place with a\nmark of 86 were Karen Sibson and\nMernie Shaw, Nelson, and Judy\nAnn Anderson and Peggy Morrison\nof Trail.\nPianoforte: Beethoven. Under 17\nyears. Fine performance in play-|\nling \"Bagatelle in C\" received high\nsecond with 86, and Christine Hry-\nIzak. Nelson, third with 84. Janet\nAnderson,   Trail,   also   played.\nlise by  Pe;:gy Morrison, -Trail,]\nand   Bernadette   Bergeron,   Trail.\nCalgary, of William S.  Hamilton. nj_ing a \"genojne Beethoven stvle,\"\nMr. Hamilton was well-known in|Miss  Morrison  achieved  a  mark\nNelson where he was in business]0[  BS    j|jss   Bergeron's   \"genuine\nI of\nWhite   Ceiling\nft   per box.\noirtone\nx  12\".   Box\nx   12\"   Armjsllr   Tile\nx 4' x 8' Painted Wallboard.\nSheet\nPainted Wallbcard. Sheet\nTile\n$8.96\n8.96\n8.64\n11.52\n11.40\n.1,33\n2.38\nThursday. Friday and Saturday Only\ntBuildinq. ^upphj <ZtcL.\n301   Baker  St. Phone   1704\n\"BETTER  BUYS AT BEE\"\nOnrn Till .'\u00bb p.m.  Friday\nfor   thp   nnwly   changed   voice\nwhhh he had all sorts of control,\nvery   Food   diction,   and  sense  of\nphrasing.\n\"There was not one disl.ip.pf.il\nnote,\" said Mrs. Whitehead. She\nmentioned the \"good musicianship\" and said trm piece was\n\"tasteful and dignified as Bach\nshould he.\"\nVocal Solo: In Italian. Any voice.\nUnder 21 years. For her singing of\n\"No. Oh Din\" by Handel, Jane\nPearson, Nelson, was awarded first\nplace and a mark of 85. She was\ncommended for her very\" good\nvoice, well controlled phrasing, and\nwell-developed style.\nIn second place was Carol Dahlstrom. Rossland. who received 84\nfor \"Se Tu M'Ami\" by Pergolesi,\nHer freshness and coy touch were\n'most enjoyable to listen to.\"\nThird place and a  mark of 81\nALL NEW\nHOMELITE\n23\nSeven Drivers\nCauqht by Radar\n\u00b0 ' NELSON\nSeven  motorists checked  in  an : Spokane\nRCMP radar trap Tuesday on the; Calgary\ninterpretation\" earned her a mark\nof 84.\nPianoforte     Sonatina.   I'nder    !,.\nyears.   \"Different   pieces   present\ndifferences  in judging,\" said  Mr.!\nPowell   afler   listening  to   several}\nMrs   sonatinas by Kuhlau. He said the\nHamilton, one son, Brian,-class exhibited  clear  playing  andj\nalso  a   consulting  engineer,   with!a round tone with some very nice|\nthe C'oti-Olidated al Kimberley. and; rounds.\nfive grandchildren. The funeral is| First place and a mark of 88,\nto he held in Kimberley from the; went to Barbara Johnson. Ross-1\nSacred Heart Church Thursday.\nBeatri\nDIRECT\nDRIVE\nCHAIN SAW\n\u2022 only 23 balanred Bounds\n(lebS bar and chain)\n\u2022 fe'ls trees up to 7 feet irt\ndiameter\n\u2022 new - all rt\u00bb.w \u2014 design\n\u2022 guaranteed for 7 months\nHave \u00ab frtio demonitration todayl\nHOMELITE\nSALES and SERVICE\nLtd.\n530 Stanley St, Phone 2042\nNELSON,   British  Columbia\nSalmo-Fruitvale highway were fined a total of $75 and costs in Salmo provincial court.\nAt least t_iree said they were\nclocked at 56 miles per hour in a\n50 m.p.h. zone.\nG. A. Wagner nt Trail pleaded\nguilty and was fined $15 and costs.\nF. A. Black of Trail, R. A. Fur-\nwent to Melvln Magio. Nelson, who seth of Kamloops. A. Momsen of\nTHE WEATHER\n48   84\n48   82\n81\n87\n82\n57\n56\n  50\nKimberley     45\nPenticton      54\nVancouver     51\nVictoria 49\nSalmo. C W, Ramsden of Nelson.\nJ. K. Fry of New Westminster and\nE. T. Bodard of Nelson all pleaded guilty and were fined $10 and\ncosts.\nTwenty - Seventh Annual\nKOOTENAY MUSIC FESTIVAL\nTODAY\nCAPITOL THEATRE\nMORNING:\nTwo Pianofortes    \u2022    Pianoforte\nConcerto for Piano, or String and Orchestra\nAFTERNOON:\nDancing Solo     \u2022     Pianoforte     \u2022     Boys Choir\nEVENING:\nDancing\nPresented by THE KIWANIS  CLUft OF   NELSON\n17 JEWEL\nWATCHES\nOnly\n\u2022 17 Jewel Movement\n\u2022 Anti  Magnetic\n\u2022 Water  Res stout\n\u2022 Shockproof\n\u2022 Round  Luminous Dial\n\u2014 GUARANTEED \u2014\nC0LLINS0NS\nJEWELLERY LTD.\nNELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\nBusiness Established Since 1897\nPhone  120 Nelson, B.C.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960 \u201413\nVl\nHeavy Business Agenda Dealt J h\u00abw, \u00bb\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\n1 v Over 50 Years,\nWith at Robson Wl Conference \u00bb\u25a0\" Suddenly\nDINE HEARTILY AT TRAIL. Recent smorgasbord\nstaged by Trail Knox United Church AOTS (As One\nThat Serveth) in church basemen! was reported a great\nsuccess. Here Chef  Fred J. Robins,  well-known Camp\nJapanese-Canadians\nGet N. Denver Homes\nVICTORIA <CP>-T5ie provincial cabinet is making a gift to\n150 Japanese-Canadians of the\nNew Denver homes in which they\nhave lived since 1942.\nAn order-in-council has turned\n88 lots over to almost. KM) residents of an orchard, one of the\nKootenay sites where 7,000 Japanese were interned during the\nSecond   World   War.\nThey were moved there\u2014despite tihe fact that many were\nnative-born British Columbians\u2014\nbecause authorities feared there\nwere spies among them.\nNine years later, in 1951, they\nwere allowed once more to live\nwhere they wished.\nMost of them wanted no further\npart of B.C, and headed east.\nBut many were too old and too\nsick to stand the strain of another  move and stayed.\nOTHERS MOVED  KN\nOthers moved from scattered\nareas into the New Denver site\nwhich had hospital facilities and\na community hall.\nGovernment, officials estimate\ntfhere are between 150 and 200\npeople, mostly elderly, living\nthere now.\nEssential repairs have been\ndone to the little homes and the\ngovernment has turned them over\nto the occupants without charging them routine fees for registering the land in their names.\nThe community hall has been\nhanded over to the village of New\nDenver but the government retains Ihe 100-bed hospital, until\nrecently, used lo hnu.se Doukhobor\nchildren.\nIt hasn't decided yet what to\ndo wilh this.\nNEW SCHOOL\nPLANNED\nAT GRAY CREEK\nGRAY CREEK-Creston School\nBoard has advertised for a money\nbylaw. In (\"he proposed expenditure\nis a new Iwo-rnomed elementary\nschool at Cray Creek. The proposed\nsite of this building is above the\nhighway between Ihe Magee and\nStewart  homes.\nIncrease of children for the first\ngrade and lack of school huses\nare reasons for this new school.\nCrawford Ray Junior-Senior High\nSchool will then be used for all\nstudents above the first two grades.\nHeating Plant\nConversion\nDeferred Year\nCRANBROOK-A! its May meeting the Cranbrook District School\nBoard decided to defer for one\nyear the planned conversion of Ihe\nheating plant at Central School\nfrom sleam to hot water, and has\nreturned the tenders submitted in\nresponse to a published call.\nTender of $7302 for a new 411-\npassenger school bus for district\nuse, submilled by the Hanson Garage Ltd. was selected from the 12\nbids from eight garages. Delivery\nis specified for service in lime for\nIhe Fall term.\nResignation from Mount Baker\n.staff of Paul Dickeson has been\naccepted. Mr. Dickeson has decided\nto return lo leaching work in Rhodesia, Mounl Raker School public\ncommencement exercises for Ihe\n51 pupils of grade 12 have been set\nfor Friday,  June 3.\nCranbrook Junior Chamber of\nCommerce was given permission\nto use Ihe new track and playing\nfield at Mount Baker School July 1\nfor its third annual track meel,\nKoolaree chief, assists visitors as they reach for goodies\nat ham and turkey dinner. Others helping were president Bill Millard, Don Forteath and A. H. Delorie.\n\u2014Phofo hy Louis Fryiing.\nLiberal, Not Specialized\nEducation, Best-Soles\nTRAII.T\u2014A broad. liberal educa-\n'ion, ralher lhan specialization in\n:hree major fields, is the most desirable instruction for senior high\nschool sludents, suggested A. E.\nSoles, J. Lloyd Crowe High School\nprincipal, when he spoke to the\nfinal Rotary convention luncheon\nmeeting.\n\"II seems lo me,\" commented\nMr. Soles, \"lhat society in general\nwants its educators to use as their\ncriteria of success the values common lo Ihe market place -the yardstick of dollars and cents.\n\"And I say this thinking about\nmy own school where 7.1 per cent\nof the students are enrolled in the\nuniversity program and 24 per cent\non Ihe various vocational programs\nand only some three per cent are\ntaking a general education.\n\"1 know this is wrong \u2014 I know\nfrom experience thai 7.3 per cent of\nmy students cannot meet Ihe present university entrance standard.\nI'll he very lucky if 50 per cent\nof (hem can meet it.\n\"And so I'm faced with at least\na 23 per cent failure rate. And of\nIhe 50 per cent who might altain\nil only aboul 30 per cent will, in\nfact, go on lo the university and\nof this 30 per cenl only perhaps 15\nor, al the most, 20 per cent will\nbe successful.\"\nMr. Soles said thaf whether or\nnot one cared to admi! it for the\ngreat majority of people high\nschool education is, in fact, terminal education. For this reason he\nfelt thai the type of education offered should he different from Ihe\nrather narrow, specialized, purely\nacademic type necessary lo students who proposed going on (o\nfurther study in specialized fields.\n\"What we should be giving these\npeople, who wil! perhaps never\nagain engage themselves in formal\nstudy, is a broad and liberal education in English and science and\nmathematics and history and geography and so on.\" proposed Mr,\nSoles,\n\"And we should stop asking them\nlo select Ihree major fields of academic study to the disregard of\nother equally important, fields. And\nwe should stop insisting lhat (bey\nassemble a system of credits or\nunits like some occult Japanese\nflower arrangement, and wilh\naboul as much real significance.''\nTRAIL SCHOOL\nGOOD ONE\nREPORTS SURVEY\nTRAIL 'CP'-The city's J. Lloyd\nCrowe senior high school on the\nwhole is a \"good school\" says a\ni.0-page survey of the institution\nprepared for the department of\neducation by a team of evaluators\nearlier this year.\nSchool Board Chairman R. K.\nWalton said the report added thai\n'he school provides programs\nwhich \"give opportunities for the\ndevelopment of all the types of\nstudents found in a modern composite high school.\"\nMuch For Youth\nIn College,\nStudents Find\nNohc  D.i.i.c\ndeal  to ofler !\nIhe youth\nreal\nNelson, of British Columbia, and to\nthose from farther afield I chose\nto take advantage of Ihe opportunities afforded by this educational institution for many reasons.\nPrimarily. 1 was unahle lo decide\nwhich field I wished to enter and\nI felt that a year or so in a college almosphere would aid me in\nplanning my future. Secondly, Ihe\nbenefils of a small college; smaller\nj classes and more personal attention; were obtainable at Noire\nDame. Disregarding the educational   service   of   Ihe   college.   Ihe\nj low costs for such high standards\nwas another reason lor my de\ncision In attend Notre Dame.\nThe eight months I have spent\nat Ihe college have proven to me\nthat Notre Dame is an institution\nof which to be proud.\nThere is (he fact that many students do not consider attending\nNotre Dame because they erroneously consider it to be a denominational college. As a non-Catholic,\nI feel that to forego the advantages\nof the college for this reason alone\nis a misguided decision The very\nfact that Ihere are many races,\nreligions and creeds represented al\ntbe   college   helps   Ihe   student   lo\nNEW LOOK FOR STREET. Shaver's Bench in Trail Inker, on new look and promises to he a show subdivision as curbs and gullets ate conr-dructecl. Residents petitioned   city   council   for   the   improvements on a part pay  basis.\n\u2014 Photo hy Louis Fiyhnq.\nhecon\nand\nCat ho\nfaith\nMlhehl\ntolerant, unbiased\n'd. whether he IS\nslant,  or  any other\nMaureen Shayler\nROBSON \u2014 Keen interest has\nbeen shown in reports on the mentally ill and in the B.C. Cancer\nClinic, Mrs, J. O. Decker, president of the B.C. Women's Institutes, told the annual West Kootenay institute conference in Robson community hall.\nMrs. Decker congratulated delegates on their fine reports.\nShe was pleased to see a welcome sign at the entrance to Deer\nPark and had noticed other entrance signs placed by other B.C.\nInstitutes.\nPrior to leaving to catch the CPA\nplane for Vancouver, She urged\ndelegates to attend discussion\ngroups at Uie biennial conference\non appointing of a superintendent\nfor the institutes of the province.\nThe Wl's, which have 4500 members in B.C.. are assured of gov-\nennment support, she said.\nReport was given on the Mary E,\nDavidson memorial fund, which\nprovides children with glasses in\nneedy cases. Eleven cases were assisted last year, with two having\nan operation and many glasses repaired, it was stated.\nAbout 80 delegates were present\nwith 15 Institutes represented.\nTbe flags were presented by Mrs,\nH. Johnson and Mrs. A. Smecher.\nJ, T. Webster, Best Citizen of the\nyear for Castlegar and District,\nwelcomed ihe delegates, Mrs. J.\nScott, president of the Robson W.I.\nextended greetings from Robson.\nMrs. J. Doerkson, president, introduced the Board members and\nMrs. Scott, assisted by Mrs. A\nSmecher, pinned a corsage on each\nof the board members. One min\nute's silence was observed for the\nmembers wso had passed on dur\ning tbe year.\nThe minutes of the 1959 confer\nence were read by the secretary\nIreasurer, Mrs. R Leckett. A five\nminule report was read by each\nof the delegates.\nMrs. K. ,1. Roylance lhanked all\nfor inviting her lo attend the conference  and  spoke  on   Fellow.shir.\nand Nalional organization,\nOUTLINES COMPETITION\nMrs. C. B, White nf Willow Point,\nDirector of the R.C.W.L, gave a\nshort talk on Ihe W.I. and the Red\nCross, also of the Tweedsmuir\nCompetition. This competition is\nheld bierona'lly for three cups given\nby Lady Tweedsmuir, for the best\nhistory of a community, a cultural\nproject and handicrafts.\nThe Federated W.I.'s of Canada\nBoard of directors determine the\nnature of the competition at each\nbiennal meeting and name a committee to he in charge. Facli Provincial W I , the Saskatchewan\nHome Makers and the Newfoundland Jubilee Guilds may submit\ntwo entries for each cup This necessitates elimination at the provincial level.\nAt lunch, the long tables were\ndecorated with low bowls of pan-\nsies and forget-me-nots. The hall\nwas decorated with bowls of daffodils, tulips, gladiolus and green\nfern. In charge of decoraling were\nMrs. W. T Waldie, Mrs. J. Scott\nMrs 11. Johnson, Mrs. Dick Fow-\nMrs. J. Fornelli and Mrs. II.\nj Hubert and Mrs. O. R. Ballard.\nI Representative to tbe Nalional\ni Convention will be Mrs J Doer'y\nson. Hands Across Ihe Border Pic\nnic is lo he held in Nelson July 20,\nReports of Ihe Resolution committee was given by Mrs. Sent!, the\nresolutions were moved and seconded and will be arled on at tlie\nBiennial Conference at U B.C.\nVancouver at Ihe beginning of\nJune.\nMrs. Doerkson hoped that the Institutes would  have  an exhibit   in\nNelson   exhibition.   Invitations\nSchool Building\nProgram Starts\nINVKRMKRK \u2014 Construction of\nthe two classroom and aduitonum\naddition lo the Fdgewater High\nSchool has begun. Contracts for\nthe addition were signed May 2\nand during the past week the contractor. David Howrie Ltd. of Vernon has moved materials and\nequipment to the site. Estimated\ncompletion date is October 31. but\nevery effort will be made to complete the work sooner.\nII is hoped lhat one classroom\ncan he completed by Soptemher 1\nso thai it will not he necessary to\nuse the temporary classroom in\nthe Community Hall.\nTenders for the addition were\nrailed lasl fall, but due to tight\nmoney conditions the provincial\ngovernment was unable to sell\nbonds to rover the cost of construction. The addition, costing $12fi,fi07,\nwi'1'1 be financed by the sale of\nbonds by the Provincial Government on June 1.\nTlie addilion includes two classrooms to double as library and\ncommercial rooms, and tbe audi-\nlorium to be used also as a gymnasium and a lunchroom\nTwo other major building projects planned under tbe Ht.'iO referendum, the addition lo the David\nThompson High School al Inver\nmeie and an addition tn the Canal\nFlat High School will he Marled as\n^oon as financial arrangements\ncan be made.\nwere received from Balfour amd\nSlocan for the District Board to\nhold their 1961 meeting. Tlie place\nwill be decided later by the\nboard.\nMrs. R. C. Palmer, director of\nthe Provincial Board, said that arrangements have been made to\nmake the delegates to the biennial\nas comfortable as possible.\nMrs. Palmer spoke of her experiences when attending the Associated Country Women of the World\nConference whioh she attended in\nEdinburgh. Scotland. She said it\nwas the most memorable experience of her life. Colored slides taken during tbe trip were shown.\nMrs. E. Woodward urged all\nW.I.'s to use the News Letter more\nat their meetings. Mrs. Scott extended thanks to the retiring board\nfor ils work. Mrs, Waldie spoke of\nthe Well Women's Clinic. Mrs.\nRoylance said that the Adalaine\nHoodless Home had been purchased by the A.C.W.W. and wil! become historv. Mrs. Hoodless is the\nfounder of Women's Institute,\nAfternoon tea was served, then\nMrs. Mondini of the Courtesy committee  expressed tbanks    lo    the\nRobson W.I. for the hospitality\nMrs, Doerkson gave her address\nand said how much she had en\njoyed being president and thanked\nher executive for their support,\nand congratulated tlie new board.\nInjured Cranbrook\nTeacher Given Leave\nCRANBROOK-Miss E. B. Pater\nson of Central School staff, who\nhas launched in the paths of education some 1600 Cranbrook children since she joined the school\nstaff in 1<)20, has been given sick\nleave to the end of the term, which\nwill be followed by superannuation.\nShe sustained a shoulder fracture\nin a fall recently and though now\nconvalescent will be unable to resume her duties this term. Mrs,\nGraham Phillips has been appointed to complete the term as Grade\n1 teacher at Central School.\nThe Cranbrook District School\nBoard, the staff of Central School\nand the Cranbrook Parent-Teacher\nAssociation are planning an invitation reception in her honor at\nCentral School May 18.\nFirst Aid Cup Goes\nTo Tadanac Shop\nTRAIL - The Cominco Cup,,\nemblematic of first aid supremacy\nfor the Trail operations of The\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany, has been won this year\nby tbe Tadanac Machine Shop No.\n1 team.\nThe annual competition was held\nTuesday night at the Cominco Gym\nwith Ihree teams com|>eting. Mem-\nhers of Ihe winning learn are:\nSammy Anselmo, Doug Bagsbaw\nand Les Thorington, coach.\nThe learn was presented with tbe\nCominco Cup by J. H. Sailer, General .Superintendent of the Chemicals and Fertilizer Division, who\ncomplimented all three teams \"on\ntheir excellent display of first aid.\"\nHe said the marks of the teams\nwould have been very close and\nthat probably the overtime penalties actually determined Ihe final\nwinner.\nMr. Sailer pointed out lhat the\ncompeting teams were the best of\n39 teams which had entered in an\nelimination competition for the\nright to contend for the Cominco\nCup.\nEach member of the winning\nlearn was also presented with portable coolers.\nPlacing second was the Lead Refinery No, 2 Team. Members of\nIhe team are Dick Bertoia, Diamond Orlando and Guido Martinelli,\ncoach. The second place team\nmembers each were presented with\nelectric manlle clocks.\nThe War field Engineering Team,\ncomprised of F r a n k MorranJ\nCharles Evans and Ray BombenJ\ncoach, placed third and each member of the team was given a pocket\nsecretary.\nJudges were A. C. Rickerton and\nAlex Brokenshire. Scorekeepers\nwere J. II. Hughes and R, P,\nEaston. Mrs. Eleanor Smith was\ntimekeeper and R. J. Thompson\nwas floor manager. J. C. Ink acted\nas master of ceremonies.\n.Joseph Edward Hawes, 69, ol\nAinsworth, a miner who worked\nthroughout the Kootenays and in\nthe East, died suddenly Monday.\nMr. Hawes first came to Wes!\nKootenay and Ainsworth in 1897,\nA long mining career that spanned\nover 50 years took him throughout\nthe district, to Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and the North\nwest Territories.\nBorn in Tenecape, Nova Scotia\nin 1891. Mr. Hawes joined the Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany in 1911, 14 years after be\ncame to this area. He worked for\nCominco at the Hailstorm mine in\nthe Arrow Lakes, tbe Bluebell\nmine at Riondel, the Molly Gibson\nand at the Sullivan in Kimberley,\nIn 1933 he moved to Cordova\nMines, Ont., and during (he nexl\neight years was employed by various mines in that district. In 1942\nhe went to Port Dufferin, N.S.,\nworking in mines in that, province\nand in New Brunswick until 194(5\nwhen he went lo Yellowknife,\nN.W.T.\nIn 1947 Mr. Hawes retired from\nCominco and returned to Ainsworth. where he worked for Yale\nLead and Zinc until 1957.\nSurviving are his wife; one son,\nMarsh in Riondel; two daughters,\nMrs. D. C. Macdonald, Chapman\nCamp, and Mrs. Hugh Loughery of\nRiondel; one brother, Thomas of\nAinsworth; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel\nSkead of Vancouver and Mrs. W.\nFarmer of Kinnaird; and eight\ngrandchildren.\nRossland To Vote\nOn  Fluoridation\nROSSLAND (CP) - A plebiscite\non fluoridation of Rossland's water supplies will be pul before\nratepayers shortly when they vole\non a proposed new waterworks\nprogram.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nYou Can Depend On\n_.i.]\u00ab and un. t\nl,u. k_.hr, tir\n(..liim, <ii.lu.lx.iS\nrent ufu-ii loll,\nDudcl'a Kid I\nPills stimuli\nkidnt'vs In m.n\nV.hi  Icrl I\nDodd's\nKIDNEY\nPills.\nIli'tlr\nirk heltel\nVou ran depend\non Dodd'a.GotDudiJ'fiUtiiiiy dr ug pWe.\nHere Is a Range Price\nThat Can't Be Beaten\nOn This New Shipment of\nGENERAL A ELECTRIC\nDELUXE\nModel TJC357\n30-INCH\nRANGE\nThis Pride of the Kitchen Has:\n\u2022 Hi  Speed  Calrod  Elements\n\u2022 Giant 2-Turkey Capacity  Oven\n\u2022 Focussed   Heat  Broiler\n\u2022 Fully Automatic Oven\n\u2022 Push-Button  Controls\n\u2022 General  Electric Quality  Throughout\nNelson Electric\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n\u25a0 tit\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\nPhone 260 NELSON, B, C. 574 Baker St. '\u2022\u00ab\u00bb'\n Nflamt iatly Nntia\nEstablished April 22, 1902 Nelson.  B C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED,\n266 Bakei Street. Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays In the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily cLculation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall.  Post Office Department. Ottawa\nC  W.  RAMSDEN,  Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON. Editor.\nMEMBER OF   THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN   DA1LV  NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS'  ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use (or republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\nThursday, May 12, 1960\nCanada Should Take Lead\nRunning true to iorm, ihe Commonwealth Conference is letting leak out\nwhat goes on in the conference room.\nIt is known that the subject ol South\nAfrica's racial policy was a burning\nquestion wilh many of the delegates,\nbut nothing of what has been said is\nknown.\nWhich is perhaps as well. The\nSouth Africans know quite well what\nthe rest of the world thinks of apartheid, and though they are consumed\nwith racial pride there is little likelihood of there being any more shooting incidents, for the present at least.\nBut whatever subjects were discussed it is certain that trade and\ntariffs were the most important. The\nrapid changes which have been taking place in the past few years have\naltered the relative positions ol the\ntrading nations. North America is no\nlonger in the strong position It held\nalter the war. A reborn Europe and\nJapan are making themselves felt in\nworld trade and Canada has lo struggle today lor overseas markets.\nIn Europe Ihe Common Market\ncountries have led the way in economic union to cul tariffs, while the\nScandinavian group of seven countries\nis working out another free trade area.\nObviously the Commonwealth should\nset up a similar organization lo improve their trade with one another.\nThis cahnot be done through the\nCommonwealth Conference, but it is\nto be hoped that the talks there will\nlead to the initiative being taken outside. This is clearly a case where the\nCanadian government should lake ,he\nlead. Sound proposals from it would\nundoubtedly lead to Commonwealth\nagreements on trade.\nOut With V\nA move by the BBC lo check the\nshowing of unnecessary violence on\ntelevision has been generally welcomed in Britain, where concern was\nvoiced recently by a member of parliament at what he described as \"the exploitation of the baser, crueller and\nmore bestial instincts of mankind\"\nbeing made by some films, some television plays and some newspapers.\nThe BBC policy, set out in a note to\nproducers from its controller of television programs, Mr. Kenneth Adam,\nrecognizes the danger of being dogmatic about a subject which is conditioned by, for example, the type of\nprogram, the time of its showing and\nits possible audience. 11 is, rather, a\ngeneral code of practice designed to\navoid harm without impoverishing programs and taking into account tho\nfact that subejcts that may have unpleasant associations for adults may\nbe taken lor granled by children, and\nvice versa.\nThere will, for instance, be no\nwatering clown of westerns in which\nshooting and \"slugging it out\" are an\nessential part of the stylized tradition,\nbut a watch wiil be kept for any scenes\nthat emphasize violence for lis own\nsake.\nOther danger points in children's\nprograms, or indeed in any program\nshown up to 9 p.m. when children are\ntolence\nlikely to be viewing, are listed as:\nsituations which upset a child's emotional security (for example, desertion,\ncruelty in the home or friction between\nparents); the portrayal of injury, illness\nand disablements: examples of villainous action which invile imitation, such\nas the use ol trip-wires; bad habits in\n\"good\" characters, such as hitting.below ihe bell; brutality, as opposed to\nthe violence of healthy combat; the\nuse of weapons such as coshes, knives,\nwhips and bottles which are more\nreadily available or improvised than\nrevolvers, rifles or swords; and the\ncreation of a fearful atmosphere which\ngoes beyond the spine-chilling which\nis a legitimate part of story-telling.\nIn programs for adults the code\nlays down the principle that \"any sequence involving violence should arise\nnaturally from the story, and therefore\nbe dramatically necessary and defensible. If it is inserted extraneously\nfor depraved eflect, il should be rejected outright.\"\nIt is stressed that any such \"natural\" sequence should not be unduly\nprolonged; that the more bloody aspects of physical combat should not\nbe dwelt on; that sound eftecis should\nnot be used to magnify the impact of\nviolence, for example the breaking of\nbones, nor should contestants engage\nin tactics ol a vicious or bestial nature.\n\u2014BBC London Letter.\nV\noice m\nthe\nSouth Africa's announcement ol a\nlarge-scale program lo attract white\nimmigrants is almost pitiful in its\nnaivete. Does the South African Government really think thai West Europeans will go there in the present\ncircumstances, with Ihe present grave\nrisks?\nSouth Africa is one of the most\nbeautiful countries in the world; in\nterms of natural resources, it is one of\nthe wealthiest. But the racial policies\nof the Government have made it one of\nthe most unattractive as far as white\nmigration is concerned. It is unattractive not just because Government\npolicies have made a long period of\nbloody racial strife inevitable, but also\nbecause most white men who might\notherwise like to take up residence in\nSouth Africa would not want to aid\nthose policies even to the extent of\nadding to the size ol the white minority.\nAt present, the whiles of South\nAfrica are a minority ol 3,000,000 in a\npopulation of about 15,000,000. In recent years, the country has been\ntaking in about 16,000 white immigrants annually, but this has been\nlargely offset by annual departures of\nabout 11,000.\nSince the present emergency started,  Canadian,   Australian   and   New\nWilderness\nZealand representatives (and presumably others) in South Africa have been\nflooded with inquiries from whiles\nanxious lo leave the country. It is only\nreasonable to suppose that this is being accompanied by a drop-off in\nwhite immigration.\nThis is Ihe trend lhat Ihe Verwoerd\nGovernment is trying to reverse. But\neven if it succeeded in obtaining a\nsmall surplus of immigrants over emigrants -- which seems most unlikely\n- il would still be doomed to failure\nbecause of the increasing number of\nAfricans.\nThe South African Government is\ncaught in a tide that must engulf it.\nThe huge African majority can be\nkept down by force in the very short\nrun, perhaps, but not in the long run.\nIn launching an immigration policy to\ntry lo bolster the ranks of the whites,\nIhe Government is merely grasping at\nstraws.\nThere is only one solution, and that\nis to accept the fact ol an African\nmajority, and to make an accommodation with it. This means according them\ntheir full rights at human beings; it\nmeans racial equality in place of\nwhite supremacy. Anything short of\nthis is mere postponement of the\ninevitable.\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nInterpreting the News\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe real tragedy of the Commonwealth conference is that of the bit\nman who isn't there.\nAs worried ministers grope for a\nsolution to the South African problem,\nPremier Dr. Hendrik Verwoerd is in-\nthe absence from London of ailing\ncreasingly regretted.\nWith Verwoerd slowly recovering\nfrom a bullet wound, his place ot the\nconference table in Downing Street\nis taken by Eric Louw, the union's external affairs minister.\nIt will be Louw's duty to carry\nback to the sick man in Pretoria a true\npicture of the feelings of his Commonwealth colleagues\u2014and that is\nexactly what some observers fear he\nmay fail to do.\nFor Louw is widely regarded here\nas an impenetrable man, with a mind\nclosed to entreaty or reproach. British\nofficials, usually polite in their assessment of visiting dignitaries, are unusually blunt in their remarks about\nLouw,\nOne London paper says it is \"no\nsecret that some of fhe prime ministers are developing a considerable personal antagonism towards this dogma-\nHe man.\"\nA weekly magozine, The Economist, says Louw will be no more impressed by his isolation than \"a rhinoceros can be tickled with a straw.\"\nThere is reason to believe that\nthings might have been different with\nVerwoerd. He is just as convinced as\nLouw of the Tightness of Nationalist\nracial policies, but he is formidable\nintellectually and prepared to listen to\nother points of view.\nConference sources feel he would\nhave received a different impression\nhere than the one Louw will pass on\nlo him As it is, the result may be that\nSouth Africa will persist in policies\nlhat a great majority of outside observers regard as folly.\nFor these reasons, the conference\nis submerged in pessimism and foreboding. Probably the Commonwealth\nwill survive this crisis, as it has survived other dark moments. If it does\nnot, the blame may be attributed in\npart to the bullets that prevented Verwoerd from keeping his date in London.\nLetters to the Editor\nLetters to the editor on any topic of genuine interest are\nwelcome If they are brief, accurate and (air. They may be\npublished over a nom de plume, but the name of the writer\nmust be given to the Editor as evidence of good faith. Anonymous letters go Into the wastepaper basket. Typewritten letters\nmust be double-spaced.\nCASTLEGAR RATEPAYERS RECEPTION\nBY COMMISSION WINS PROTEST\nenjoyed by this Village when em\nploying competent engineering ad\nvice were well drawn. There is\nno doubt that Associated Engineers\nwere primarily responsible for altering Council's intention to purchase the CM 4 S tank. A complete\nestimate showing the economic disadvantages of such a purchase was\nattached to their May 20, 1958 report. The dispute concerning the\nsaving of $51,000 through adequate\nengineering and supervision places\ncouncil in the somewhat awkward\nposition of arguing against the\nvalue of professional advice. The\ncost, therefore, of such items as\na sub surface exploration over an\narea such as Castlegar to discover\nIhe hydraulic qualities of the water\nbearing medium and Ihe proper\nlocation of a well, might well constitute an ultimate saving if the\npresent well should fail and a new\nlocation required.\nIt is regretable that so many im\nportant points have been overlooked in Ihe report or dismissed as\n\"minor or detailed recommendations with the final salute that the\nreport Is of little value in helping\nto solve our problem.\nThe chairman's suggestion that\nCastlegar, outside Kitimat has\none of Ihe finest water systems in\nthe province for the size of the\ncommunity and the rate levied\"\nis an extravagent claim that bears\nlittle or no relation to Ihe prevailing   facts  and  would  indicate the\nWho Respects the\nL\naw?\nOntario Provincial Secretary Dr.\nMacKinnon Phillips pleaded guilty last\nweek, through his lawyer, to a charge\nof failing to remain at Ihe scene oi\nan accident. The evidence was that Dr.\nPhillips drove his car into the rear of\nanother car, causing $1100 worth of\ndamage, and drove away, leaving the\nother  driver,  a  woman,  unconscious.\nAn Investigating officer told the\ncourt that Dr. Phillips, when interviewed after the accident, was not very\nco-operative, and appeared to have\nbeen drinking. This was clearly a serious accident involving a serious\nbreach of the law. Dr.' Phillips, the\nmagistrate, and the public appear to\nview it lightly.\nThe facts of this case were fully\nreported in the newspapers, but the\npublic has shown no particular interest or concern. There has been no\nwidespread public criticism of Dr. Phillips for leaving the country when he\nhad been summoned lo appear in\ncourt. There has been little or no public\ncomment on the nature of the penalty\nimposed by Magistrate Prentice.\nThe public, in fact, appears to have\nviewed Ihe whole affair with indifference, as just another traffic accident\nwhich might happen to anybody. This\nis increasingly the way in which all\ntraffic accidents are viewed, and one\nof the reasons, no doubt, why there\nare so many accidents.\nThere can hardly be respect for the\nlaws governing traffic safety when a\nminister of the Crown can break a law\nand then fail to appear in court. When\na person accepts the responsibility of\npublic office, then he automatically\nassumes fhe responsibility of upholding the law and ensuring public respect for the law.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nIt's Been Said\nIt is easier to perceive error than to find\ntriilh. for the former lies on (he surface and\nis easily seen, while the latter lies in the\ndepth, where few are willing lo search for it.\n\u2014Goethe.\nTo the Editor:\nSir \u2014 The recent reception and\nrejection of the Ratepayers Association Water Committee Report\nby the Village Commission is a\nfair example of the unnecessary\nbitterness felt towards this very\n(Ine association whose avowed in\ntent is \"to assist Council, inform\nthe ratepayers and bring before\nthe public every item of municipal\naffairs that takes place.\"\nThe attitude of the chairman in\nsuggesting that the report was \"insulting to previous Councils\" and\nthat he would have been a lot less\nkind than the Water Comnissioner\nis disappointing in the extreme\nand is a measure of his study of\nthe report. I have personally\nsought independent opinion and in\nno case has the report been considered insulting even in import.\nThe report, as apparently the\nWater Commissioner has noted in\nhis reply, was compiled with great\nsincerity and diligence. We held\nmeetings long into Ihe early hours\nof the morning on many occasions.\nProbably never before in any municipality throughout B.C, has a similar group of ratepayers performed\nsuch a public service. The report\ndocs bear sincere study and I fervently hope that the Association\nwill find it within their means to\nhave  the  report  distributed.\nDealing with the reply of the\nWater Commissioner, for whom I\nhave every respect; it is time that\nthe increase in insurance rate is\na vital point of the report, and the\nargument we are putting forward\nis that we are not only paying an\nincreased rate for fire insurance\nbut also an increased charge for\na deficient water system. Simply\nstated we feel that the water frontage tax devoted to the redemption\nof a new bylaw as originally proposed by Associated Engineers In\nOclober 1958, would result in an\nultimate reduction in insurance\nrates. It is common knowledge that\nthe Village of Kinnaird will enjoy\na reduction in their fire insurance\nrales on complclion of their current\nwater system construction. Thus\nwe do not feel that our \"basic\nrecommendation should be altered.\"\nI should like to challenge the!\nfigure of 55c per $1000. What is I\nimortant is the increase in rate,\nduring the last three years. My,\nown domestic Insurance renewed\nlast November has increased from\nMc to 80c per $1000, an increase ol\n,13 1 3 per cent. So I can hardly\nsee how the \"vital point of the\nreport is at variance with the\nfacts.\"\nIt is incorrect to consider as a\nhasls of design Ihe capacity of an\nauxiliary driven pump when calculating the storage of a tank.\nPumps are usually concerned with'\nsupply. Our point in considering\nthe even! of a pump repair or\nshutdown was probably not clearly\nmade, but to arrive al a storage;\nfigure it is usual to consider aj\ncertain period when no further!\nsupply is mailable If present\ncouncil are designing their tank\nsize with regard to the capacity;\nof an auxiliary driven pump then\nIhere is little wonder that the Rate-'\npayers and Council do not concur 1\non Ibis point.\nIt is stated thai the presenl\ncouncil has no intention of not\nevaluating Ihe real requirements\nof an engineering service provided\nby professional consultants. The\ndouble negative is significant. No\nprofessional engineering service\nhas been requested since the falli\nof 1958 despite a recommendation'\nmade hy the Water Commissioner\nin January 1959.\n\"To assure public confidence and\nsupport for major proposals the\nobvious need for continuing com-]\npetent planning, expert advice and i\nadequate supervision must have\nbeen provided for. For this reason\nit is recommended lhat our present;\nconsultants   be   retained.\nI challenge the \"current minimum rate of approximately 12,\nper cent.\" I\nWhen Ihe new tank is constructed\nit is apparent lhat council will\naccept Ihe erection without any\nengineering advice or supervision\non behalf of the village. This is\nconsiderable responsibility and in\nconflict with normal practice. Is\nit not admitted that the construction of the first deep well was\napproved by Ceigar engineers he-\nfore accepance by the Council?\nThe two examples of the savings\nLITTLE T Ft A C I R \u2014 Youns David Thompson peers\ndown bell of French horn lo seek sound source in visit\nto rehe\u00bbr\u00ab\u00bbl of Community Symphony at Marietta, Ga.\nBusiness Spotlight . . .\nStorekeepers Crack Down\nOn Halifax Shoplifters\nBy KEITH KINCAII)\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX ICP.\u2014Halifax merchants are slarlmg a crackdown\non a traditional headache they\nsay has grown into $200,000 proportions.\nThat is the amount city retailers estimate they lose each year\nto shoplifters,  and  they  say   the\ntolal  is showing  no signs of de-\nremoteness of the chairman from! creasing- A large national depart-\nthe problems before us. I ment  store said it  lost   more  to\nWe in the Shewchuk subdivision\nhave received little consideration\nfor the intolerable water service,\nfor which we pay Ihe same charges\nas any other ratepayer In this\nvillage. Blasts of air and frequent\nfailure of supply are only two of\nthe frustrating annoyances that\nplague   our   daily   lives.   Approxi-\nshoplifters in Halifax than in any\nother city in Ihe country.\nThe board of trade is heading\na drive aimed at teaching merchants and their employees how\nto guard against shoplifting and\nwhat to do with shoplifters once\nthey are caught. They also plan\nto establish  a  clearing-house   for\nmalely   Iwo   weeks   ago  my   wife1 exchanging    information   on    ha\ndrew a hath of sandy wafer lo add! itual shoplifters and  their meth\nto our inconvenience. Our patience | ods.\nhas   been   tested   to   an   absolute\nlimit   and   it   is   on   the   basis  of\ndirect experience of the inadequacy\nof our water system that I have\nmuch pleasure in associating my\nself with the ratepayers' report.\nGW1LYM HUGHES\nCastlegar. B.C.\nThe board feels lhat many\nshoplifters go unpunished because\nmerchants dc not wish or do not\nknow how to go about taking the\nculprit to court. Most settle for a\nreturn of Uie merchandise and a\npromise that it won't happen\nagain.\n\"This isn't good enough if the\nproblem is lo lie licked,\" Gene\nVilleneuve, Simpson's assistant\nsuperintendent in Halifax, said in\nan interview.\n\"To deter shoplifters we must\nmake greater use of the courts.\nA talking to and a warning often\ndon't solve anything. The shoplifter merely moves into another\nstore where  he  is  unknown.\"\nMr. Villeneuve, who supervises\nhis store's security staff, said\nthat during a recent 10-day anti-\nshoplifting campaign in the television and radio department,\nmerchandise valued at $1,900 was\nrecovered from shoplifters. How\nmuch was stolen and not recovered is not known\nAmong those caught was a\nwoman who made off wilh two\ntelevision sets and was finally\narrested looking over some coats\nin the fur department. Four\nyoungsters, all under 12. were\ncaught with seven radios valued\nat $350.\nMOSTLY JUVENILES. WOMEN\nMr. Villeneuve said about 60\nper cent of shoplifters are juveniles. The remainder are mostly\nwomen, many of them normally\nrespectable housewives who can't\nresist a temptation to pilfer. Occasionally an adult will train a\nchild to shoplift.\nLook in the section in which your' 'Aquarius) - Uranus one of few      Sam Jacobson, chairman of the\nbirthday comes, and find what your I planets in strong favorable aspect.! trade   board's   retail   committee,\noutlook Is, according to tihe stars.' You have a clearer, smoother road,   said literature and films on shop-\nFor Friday, May 13, I960 but because others about you may   lifling   are   being   distributed   to\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 'Anesi   be troubled or have it  less easy,   merchants.   A   program   of   tec-\n- Slow up a bit hi early day lo be   take more care. | lures by police and legal experts\nsure you are nol racing through to;    FEBRUARY  20  to   MARCH   20   is also being slarted.\niPlscesi \u2014 If you start right, and j Mr Villeneuve said .. a large\naim steadily al YOUR soundly pari of the problem is that many\nplanned goals, yon can make some j children who start out stealing\nunusual strides. Rut there are oh i chocolate bars go unchecked,\nslacles. so take sure aim, and heed   either   because  shopkeepers   con-'\nHALIFAX CPi-For the sec\nond consecutive day, no forest :\nfires were reported in Nova I\nScotia Tuesday. Hoi. dry weather\ncaused a heavy rash of fires in !\nthe province last weekend. Rain I\nfell on the province Tuesday.\nrwnT\u00bbtntw<Mwtw^tiiwi\u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb**\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb'\u00bb\"\u00bb\u00bb'\nHoroscope\ni ^ <_____ _,-_--\u2022\u2022\u2022*\nBy Frances Drake\n-A\na fastor-but-less-proficiont finish.\nOiid mistakes can occur with heedlessness. Shun aggravation.\nAPRIL 21 In MAY 21 'Taurus' -\nTake care of personal and social\nmailers in as quiet and efficient\nmanner as you would, business affairs. Terriplalion lo hurry and irritation for many Signs today.\nMAY 22 lo JUNK 21 iGomini) -\nTake care you do not get caught in\ncrossfire of others' troubled waters.\nSteer clear of squabbles, your nature does not 'nor wil] associates''\nthrive under contention. Check\nbudge!,\ndanger signal?\nYOU BORN TODAY: Taurus, an\nall-round enthusiast for life and its\nbolter side. Good for you! We hope\nyou always develop your many attributes. If you do not. you can become frritahle, contentious, and\ngenerally waste your time and\nothers'. You have wide talent for\nconstruction, invention, work thai\ncalls for travel (thouyh you deeply\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 'Cancer' -1 love dear ones and wish your home\nOunL XslL\nI'm as modest and decent as\nany other woman, but I don'L\ninsult men by actin' stand-offish\nand scared when they try to be\nI friendly.\nThose \"little\" things can pile up\nand get you 'down', Annoyed if not\non guard. Smile, again and again.\nNothing is as difficult as It seem*\nal the onset.\nJULY 24 lo AUGUST 2,1 'Leo) -\nYou could capably handle an extra\nchore or aid another lo finish\nquicker, or assist at a charity affair, and be the happier for it now.\nas always. Mind the disposition and\nmanner.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 2.3\n'Virgo' \u2014 Review to note where\nyou are being ton minute or perhaps demanding in detail. The bigger the day, then the bigger the\nparticipants, Certain gradual changes necessary.\nSEPTEMRER 24 lo OCTORER 23\n'Libra' \u2014 Again thai old warning,\n\"haste makes waste.\" And the redoing is also annoying. So prevent\nthis and wearisnme discussions bv\nforethought, accuracy, proper cooperation.\nOCTORER 24 In NOVEMRER 22\n<Scoroio' \u2014 A spot for some of\nyour Ingenuity, precise figures, new\nideas to inspire, and ambition to\ncreate and improve. But hold energies not !o overdo.\nNOVEMRER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 'Sagittarius' ~ Eorgetfulness,\ncarelessness can over-turn well-laid\nplans, delav good results. Take\nsteps cautiously, don't talk too\nmuch, and listen attentively: recipe for success.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n'Capricorn' \u2014 You can make or\nbreak this day by methods and persona! charm, or lack of it. People\nlike to be thought kindly of, praised a bit 'we all flourish under just\npraise'\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\nto stay Intact, always waiting for\nyou). Could become outstanding religious, speakers, musicians, actors. Striking qualify in voice and\neyes. Keeip fit by shunning over-indulgence. Rirthdale of: numerous\nstatesmen, builders, oiera singers,\ntechnicians, nurses, doctors.\nt them just a nuisance or because of embarrassment involved\nin Idling their parents or the police.\nSrme merchants say that\nshould shoplifting continue at Its\npresent rate il is bound to be reflected in consumer prices.\nLONG PRESERVED\nRemains of ancient plants and\nanima's have been recovered\nfrrm the La Rrea tar pits near\nLos Angelrs, Calif.\nPGE Freight Train\nLoadings  Lower\nVANCOUVER 'Cr'-Revenue\nfreight car loadings on the Pacific Great Kaslern Railway were\ndown lo 3.904 last month from\n4,0(12 in  April  last  year.\nHowever, cars received from\nconr'Ttiors increased to 2tM\nApril (his year from 239 in Uie\nsame rnonlh last year.\nRevenue cars loaded on the line\nand received from connections\nlb? end of April this vear totalled\ni\" H)2.   compared   with   16,211   in\n1959.\n\"Yoo-hoo!   Oh, nurse!\"\n Wishes for Happiness Received by\nNewlyweds Mr* and Mrs* EJ* Boyce\nWishes for many years of happi-1 Boyce, 83. and his bride, Mrs. Ma\nness together were    received    by bel A, Stempkie. 73.\nNelson oldtimer Mr. Edwin James     Apple blossoms and daffodils or-\nMB\nnamented the Salvation Army cita\ndel for Uie Tuesday morning wed\ndang.  A  large number of friends\nMR. AND MRS. EDWIN JAMES BOYCE OF NELSON.-Phofo by Benwick Studio.\nof both principals attended the\nmarriage ceremony, when Lieiit\nPeter A. Roed read the service for\nthe well-known couple.\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher son-in-law, Mr. H. A. Reck,\nchose a blue suit with white ac-\ncessories awl carnation corsage\nfor the occasion.\nHer attendant. Mrs. Percy Perdue, wore a beige suit with white\naccessories and pink carnation\ncorsage.\nMr. J. C, Royce supported his\nfather as best man.\nA reception, hold in (he Annable\nBlock apartment of Mrs. J. M\nBoates, was arranged by members of the bridge club to which\nthe bride belongs. Tlie table, cov\nered with a lace cloth, was-centered with a three-tiered wedding\ncake and ornamented with spring\nflowers.\nThe newlyweds Infl for a trip to\nVancouver on Ihe afternoon bus.\nMr. Royce was employed before\nhis retirement with the former\nR and K Milling Company\" for\n43 years.\nMrs. Royce c;nme to Nelson from\nManitoba five years ago.\nDiocesan Board Report Presented at\nMeeting of St Saviour's Auxiliary\nA report of tbe 52nd annual meeting of the Diocesan Board held in\nCreston last week was presented\nat a meeting of St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral Woman's Auxiliary Monday.\nPresident Mrs. Gordon A. Knight\nread the report, prepared by Mrs,\nVincent Fink, St. Saviour's Junior\nAuxiliary, of which Mrs. Fink is\nleader, was awarded Ihe silver cup\nfor the best branch of under 12's\nin Hie diocese.\nThe theme \"forward in faith\"\nwas prominent in all addresses,\nalso the corresponding message\n\"launch out into Ihe open,\" said\nMrs. Fink's report.\nOne speaker commented that\n\"this is a time tn think about each\norganization and consider what\nmight be done lo improve methods.\nare we to draw people  to\n\"How\nChrist'\nLOOK FORWARD\nWA social service work was\nstressed by guest speaker Mrs. F.\nM. Rastin of Winnipeg, who said\nthere is great danger al annual\nmeetings of looking backward instead of forward.\n\"What   is   Ihe   function   of   the\nIn Japan, the Junior Auxiliary\nbought a cow for an orphanage\n\"We must teach our children to\nact Christianity in their lives.\"\n1332   LITTLE   HELPERS\nIn the diocese there are 1332\nLittle Helpers and 271 Juniors.\nA letter was read from Ruth\nLang, daughter of Rev. Canon and\nMrs. (;. W. Lang, who attends the\nchurch\"\" she asked. \"It is to show j Women's Training College in Tor-\nCod's love to all His crealures. We ; onlo. Miss Lang said il is a wonder-\nmust fill our hearts wilh compas- fui experience and she hopes more\nsion, and reach out lo help any-, candidates will come forward,\none in need, not only our own Lunch was served by Ladies of\nmembers. Our responsibility is lo tne Presbyterian Church in their\nall Cod's children,\" her message hall.\ncontinued. j    Anniversary silver spoons were\nOilier speakers stressed the need displayed at Creslon, connnemor-\nfor prayer and thanksgiving, and! Ming the WA's 75th anniversary-\nnecessity of youth work. I these are to he available for sale.\nWe do not realize the help given j Mrs. Knight reported that the\nby the Juniors and Little Helpers.\"     Synod has had to be postponed\nRossland Wedding Colorful\nWith RCMP Dress Uniforms\n| ninston and Robert'Hull of Trail\nj ,vere ushers.\n] The bride had ehosen a lovely\n' ^nwn of white nylon nrfjanaza\n| simply   designed   wilh   hill,   floor-\nlength skirt enhanced with inserts\n! of lace. The bodice was fashioned\nj willi    three-quarter-length   sleeves\nand scalloped bateau neckline\n| bordered with lace and opalescent\nROSSLAND  -  White  gowns  ofl    Th\u00ab bridegroom was attended by\nthe bride and her maids, and the| Constable Donald Nordic of Ores-\nred dress uniforms of the groom j ton, while Constables Robert Ren\nand his attendants set the decorative theme for the wedding of\nKathleen Patricia 'Colleen' Bell,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs, Patrick\nRoll, and RCMP Constable Lawrence Trevor Mills, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Phillip Mills of Broadview.\nSaskatchewan.\nMonsignor A. K. Maclntyre of\nficiated at the double ring ceremony in Sacred Heart Catholic! sequins. A pearl-encrusted crown;\nChurch where calla lilies and hy- held her sheer fingertip veil. She1\ndrangeas graced the altar, andiwore a pearl choker necklace and!\nwhite bows with red carnations and i earrings, and earned a crescent\nlily-of-the-valley marked the guest' bouquet of calla lilies, feathered\npews. | white carnations and ivy.\nNuptial music was provided by Miss Gail Marzocco as maid of\norganist Mr. Richard Bourcier and honor, anrl bridesmaids Miss Don-\nrhe senior choir, with Mr. George! na Dosen and the bride's sister.\nBourehier as soloist singing \"Panis j Miss Christina Bell, wore similar\nAngelicus\" and \"On This Day, 0 frocks of white flocked nylon in\nMr. Bell gave, cocktail   length.    With   very    full\nBeautiful Mother.'\nhis daughter\nskirts and brief sleeves, the dresses\nHCMP CONST. AND MRS. LAWRENCE OLIVER MILLS\nOF BURNABY, B.C.\n\u2014Photo hy Hoden's Studio, Bossland.\nwere accented with wide cummerbunds of rod taffeta finished at the\nback willrbig bows. Their whimsy\nhats of veiling were topped with a\nwhile orchid, and tiny red hows\nornamented their fingerless white\ngloves. They held bouquets of red\nand while candy-stripe carnations\narranged with while satin and nel.\nLittle flowergirls Cecilia Dorey\nand Kim Campbell were dressed\njust like Ihe senior attendants.\nwith red flowers on their whimsies.\nThey carried miniature bouquets\nof candy-striped  carnations.\nThe afternoon reception was held\nIn the IOOF Hall. The bridal party\nwas assisted in receiving the guests\nby Mr. and Mrs. Bell and Mr. and\nMrs. ,1. P. French,\nRed carnations and white chrysanthemums, and candelabra holding while tapers graced the bride's\ntable.\nThe four-tiered cake, ornamented with liny \"Mountie\" and bride,\nwas set on white tulle scattered\nwith red petals and flanked by\ncrystal vases ol red carnations.'\nThe cake was cut by Mrs. Fred\nThompson and served by Mrs. W.\nA. Dorey and Mrs. A. K. Campbell,\ncousins of the bride. Mr. Paddy\nBell, jr., was master of ceremonies,\nand Mr. Maurice McWatters proposed the loast to the bride. The\nbride's aunt, Mrs. S, .1. Bowen,\nwas in charge of the guest book.\nAssisting with the luncheon were\nMrs. Arthur Ewing, Mrs. Bernard\nHolm and Mrs. Ron -fanni, while\nMiss Mary French, cousin of the\nbride, and Miss Lorraine McWatters, Miss Yvonne Joffers. Miss\nEvelyn Allison. Miss I.oretta Fox\nand Miss Arlene Hawkins were\nserviteurs.\nDuring a honeymoon trip the\ncouple will visit with the groom's\nparents at Broadview For travelling the bride changed to a black\nand while suil of imported wool\nworn with red hat and accessories,\nHer corsage was a tiny miniature\nof her bridal bouquet.\nConstable and Mrs. Mills are expected to visit briefly in Rossland\nenroute home from Saskatchewan\nlo Burnaby whore the groom has\nbeen transferred\nComing lo the city for the wedding Were the bride's brother. Mr ,\nPaddy Bell, jr . and her aunt and\ncousins. Mrs. M. Scoretz, all from\nVancouver. The good wishes ot ah\nsent relatives and friends were ox-\npressed in numerous telegrams re\nreived from Retina and Rroad-\nt view. Saskatchewan. Vancouver\nI and Seattle. |\nuntil after the summer months,\ndue to illness of Right Rev. Philip\nR.  Beattie, Bishop of Kootenay.\nShe also announced that a tea\nand bake sale will be held early\nin June, and a rummage sale later.\nYmir Notes\nYMIR\u2014Former resident George\nChristian, now living in Creston,\nvisited his friends here en route\nlo Vancouver.\nMrs. Diane Lundgren is a patient\nin Koolenay Lake General Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Gould had as\nguests Mr. Gould's two nephews\nMalcolm and Alfred Gould of Walton, Nova Scolia.\nWomen Patients\nReceive Corsage\nOn Mothers' Day\nA gesture made by the Mothers'\nClub of the North Shore United\nChurch was greatly appreciated by\nwomen patients at Willowhaven\nPrivate Hospital on Mother's Day.\nOn behalf of the club, Mr. and\nMrs. J. F. Hogg presented all the\nwomen with pink and red carnation corsages Sunday.\nOne elderly woman conscientiously said that she didn't think she\nwas eligible for a corsage, since\nshe had no children of her own but\nhad brought up two nieces \u2014 and\nwas assured that she belonged in\nthe mothers' category without a\ndoubt.\nThe evening previously, husbands\nof the club held a Mothers' Day\nparty at the hall for their wives,\nwho were dined and entertained\nby the men.\nThe hosts prepared refreshments,\nprovided contests and carpet bowl\ning for entertainment, washed the\ndishes and cleaned the kitohen in\nthe hall.\nFinally, each wife was given a\nturn at sitting in the centre of\ncircle and expressing one wish for\nMothers'   Day,   which   would   be\ngranted Sunday.\nThey were also presented with\ncorsages.\n|,^1\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960 \u2014 5\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN-Mrs. R. Duns-\nmore and sons. Robert and Glen,\nleft by plane Friday to spend a\nmonth in Whitohorse, Y.T.. visiting Mrs. Dunsmore's parents, Mr,\nand Mrs.  Earle.\nMrs. W. Raker has returned\nhomo from Creston. where she\nattended the two-day Anglican\nWomen's Auxiliary diocesan annual,\nMrs. A. McFadden, Sr,, has returned home after visiting her\ndaughter,   Mrs.   I.   Dunsmore   of\nArchdeacon's\nSister Here\nFrom England\nMrs. E. Payne of Worthing,\nEssex, England, arrived Tuesday\nlo visit her brother, Venerable\nArchdeacon B. A. Resker of Balfour, who has been a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nfor several months.\nMrs. Payne will be guest of Rev\nCanon and Mrs. W. J. Silverwood,\n521 Fourth Street, until Archdeacon\nResker returns to his home at Balfour within the next few days.\nMacLEOD OF VANCOUVER.\nPrincipals of Kimberley\nWedding To Live at Coast\nKIMBERLEY - A recent wedding in Sacred Heart Church in\nKimberley united in marriage Judith Anne DesBrisay, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. D. DesBrisay of Chapman Camp, and Mr.\nNorman A. MacLeod of South Burnaby, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. H,\nMacLeod.\nRev. J. J. Oheevers read the\nmarriage service.\nThe church was ornamented with\nyellow chrysanthemums and snapdragons for tbe occasion.\nGiven in marriage by her father.\nthe bride chose a white ballerina\nlength gown with titled lace bodice\nand layered net skirt over a hooped satin underskirt. Her shoulder-\nlength veil was held by a net and\nsequin tiara.\nTlie bride was attended by her\nsisters, Misses Sharon and Pal\nDesBrisay as bridesmaids, and\nMiss Margaret Ann Lukas as maid\nof honor.\nMr. Don Hughes of Vancouver\nwas best man. and the bridegroom's brother,   Mr.   Alan  Mac-\nGraduates Honored\nAt CGIT Banquet\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER-Ronald Garner, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Alec J. Garner\nof Procter, who graduates this\nterm from UBC, is student teaching at L. V. Rogers High School.\nMr. and Mrs. Albert Ogden and\nBeth motored to Cranbrook to sec\ntheir first grandchild, Cheryl,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. Riedel\nnf Cranbrook.\nMrs. S. Rryan and Mrs. G. Walton spent ten days at Sandpoint\nrecently.\nMr, and Mrs. Charles Ferguson\nand daughters, Lynn and Peggy,\nhave returned from Calgary, where\nIhcy attended Ihe wedding of their\neldest daughter, .loan, to Lawrence\nSchauerte at Easter.\nGKOWINI\nCanada had 112:\n70   or   more   in\nOLDER\n;100 people aged\nltl.ia.   compared\nth lfi.,731 in IDOL\nRecent ISeivlyweds\nHonored at Procter\nPROCTER - A large miscellaneous shower was held recently\nin the Procter Community Hall for\nMr. and Mrs. Lawrence John\nSohaucrle, who were recently wed.\nMrs. Schauerte is the former\nJoan    Ferguson,    who    attended\nwho\nin Calgary, Procter and\nnd has been leaching in\nfor the past three years\nschools\nNelson\nCalgary\nGnosis at Ihe shower enjoyed\ncards for the hrsl pari of Ihe even\ning. wilh Mrs. Joseph McMullin,\nBob Stevenson and Albert Ogden\nwinning prizes and Mrs. Jenke and\nMrs, W. Donaldson being awarded\nconsolation prizes.\nMrs. It L. Stevenson was convener of the event, assisted by\nMrs. A. Garner, Mrs. H. A. Tear-\nson, Mrs. W. A. Henke, Mrs. M.\nI). McKinnon. Mrs. A. Ogden and\nMrs   N.  Dosenberger.\nGifts were presented in a basket\nplaced on the stage in a large,\nseasonably decorated basket, and\nMr. Henke made the presentation.\nSchool friends of the bride were\nsealed with the guests of honor at\nthe \"cad table during the luncheon,\nand all (he guests received a piece\nof wedding cake.\nThirty St. Paul's-Trinity CGIT\ngirls, their mothers, leaders, and\nguests enjoyed their annual mother\nand daughter banquet Tuesday\nnight.\nShannon Norris, president of the\ngroup, acted as master of ceremonies and Rev. R. Donovan Jones\nsaid grace.\nHonored guests at the banquet\nwere graduating Explorer girls and\ntheir leader. Miss Lillian Kaiser,\nMiss Judy Foster, president of the\nFairview CGIT. Mrs. J. W. McClelland, represcnling Ihe Chris-\nMan Education Committee, and\nMrs. L. G. Catley, who brought\ngreetings from the Women's Federation.\nToast to the mothers was proposed by Nuda Birch, and responded to by Mrs. J. T. Harvie. Janel\nMason proposed the toast to the\ngraduates from CGIT, and Doreen\nSpeirs responded.\nMrs. F. Mcrriman. leader, presented Janet Mason with a cheque\nfor fees lo attend Camp Koolaree,\ngiven to Ihe girl who receives the\nmost points throughout  Ihe year.\nMrs. K. Mullins. leader, present-\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nACHING\nMUSCLES\ned Marion Harvey with a cheque\ncovering travelling expenses tn\nCamp Council al the coast during\nthe summer.\nWhite lanyards were presented\nby superintendent Mrs. F. Walgren\nto Sharon Leverington, Linda Far-\nenholtz, nd Janet Mason, who are\nentering Ihe senior group.\nGraduates Shannon Norris, Bev.\nArchibald, Diane Kashluba and\nDoreen Speirs received red corsages, engraved silver spoons and\ngraduation certificates.\nFollowing Ihe banquet and present aliens, guests enjoyed skils put\non by the. girls.\nLeod, and cousin, Mr. Fred Den-\nwick, were ushers.\nA reception was held in Chapman Camp hall where the bride's\nuncle, Mr. Alfred Noxon, proposed the toast to his niece.\nFollowing a honeymoon trip to\nthe United Slates, the couple wil!\nmake their home in Vancouver,\nwliere Mrs. MacLeod is a nurse\nin St. Paul's Hospital.\nOut of town relatives of the bride\nattending were Mr. and Mrs. Doug\nCummins, Nelson: Mr. and Mrs.\nNoxon. and A. Bond, all of Creston and the groom's relatives, Mr.\nand Mrs. Denwick and their 60ns,\nFred and Ron: Cecile Girard, Vancouver, also friends from Lethbridge, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Ki'llins,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lowe, Calgary.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nQuick Help\nfor Baby's\nTummy Upsets\nDon't let those frequent Utile tummy\nuptets worry you or came baby to became\nfeverish, 'retty, fmw ind resilesv For quick\ndependable relief from cnmmnn digeinve\nupsen resulting from need for a corrective,\ngive Baby's Chin Tablet*. These little tablets\n, . , made just for baby . . , work quickly\nand gently to relieve tbe upset ind help\nbahy feel better fust. F.spet ially helpful\nduring teething rime when this condition\nhas baby feeliriK out-of-jom, fussy, feverish,\nrolicky, frefty anil gassy Clinically and time-\ntrsred. Baby's Own Tablets are rhoroughly\ntrustworthy, mikl. gentle and act promptly\nto hung truly satisfying relief Ask your\ndoctor about Baby's Own Tablets. Get a\npat ka^e today at ymir druggist\n\u2022 Moth\u00abf I For irregularity ond minor digestive ups\u00abti of older child, 3 to 15, alvt\ncl.nkally-taitedChildren'i Own Tablet!\nQuite of Miir^\nfflSBHu.\nTHE\nKootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital\nHas Used\nKootenay Bleach\n\u2022 There is  None  Better   \u2022\n\u2022 More for Your Money   \u2022\nKEEP\nB. C.\nCLEAN\nWith\n| Kootenay Bleach\nSafeway Stores\nMaple Leaf Store\nSugar Bowl Store\nLiberty ar\nShop-Easy\nHotels   and   Cafes\nAsk Your IDL\nWholesaler\n\/\nCHOIR PRESIDENT \u2014 Receiving the Pennoyer Cup\nnnd Ihe cup donated by doctors ol the C. S. Williams\nClinic on behalf of the L. V. Rogers High School chorus,\nMiss Ann Postlethwaite, choir president, is pictured\nabove with the trophies. The choir, under direction of\nE. D. Baravalle, entered the mixed voice choir intermediate class for under 21 years and the class for junior\nchoirs, girls under 20.-Daify News photo.\nYOUR SPRING HAT J>A&L!\nWith the\ni$m   Purchase of a Wool Coat\n\u00ab.\nCOATS to $39.95\nCOATS .0*49.95\nCOATS to *59.95\nCOATS over    OU.V\/U Your choice of any hat.\nFree hat to value of $7.95\nFree hat to value of $10.95\nFree hat to value of $14.95\n942\n596  Baker  St.\n Hall Tells Conciliation\nBoard Waqes Must Go Up\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS,\nTHURS., MAY 12, 1960\u20146\nway arguments of low revenues\nand it is a position past conciliation boards have sympathized\nwilh.\nThis year the unions are ask\ning 25-cent-an-hour increases for\ntheir members - at present earning an average $1.77 hourly\u2014during the life of a two-year contract\nThe railways estimate this\nwould cost about $65,000,000 annually and the unions agree this\nis roughly correct. But they feel\nthe cost \"is a matter to be\nworked out between Uie government and the railways\" since the\ngovernment controls railway revenues.\nIn developing his arguments on\n^'public policy\" Mr. Hall went\n'into the reasons for low revenues\nat some length and wryly com- j\nmental \"maybe we're anticipating part of the railways'\ncase . . .\"\nOUTLINES GRANTS\nBut he also outlined subsidies\nand grants given to the railways\nduring tiieir existence to offset\nlow revenues and costs on uneconomic runs they are forced to\ncontinue.\nlie said the railway claim of inability to pay raises was \"unjust\nBy KENNEDY WELLS\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) - Frank H.\nHall completed the non-operating\nrailway employees' brief before a\nthree - man conciliation board\nTuesday by claiming the employees must have raises even il\nUie companies have no money to\npay them.\n\"Our position is simply that we\nmust not be expected to subsidize public policy, any more than\nwe can expect to be subsidized\nby public policy,\" Mr. Hall told\nthe board during the second day\nof hearings into the contract dispute.\nIf the government has decided\nto force the railways lo perform\nunprofitable services in order to\nbenefit tbe whole of the Canadian\npublic, then the whole public\nmust bear the cost, not just the\nrailway employees, said Mr. Hall,\nchairman of Uie committee which\nnegotiates for the 15 unions which\nrepresent   120.000  non-ops.\nThe non - ops are railway employees   not   actually  engaged  in\nrunning trains.\nFAMILIAR ARGUMENT\nTlie  position  is one the unions\nhave taken in Ihe past when their I and irrelevant\" and contradictory\nwage demands were met by rail- 1 because Ihe companies had never\nNo U-2 Flown Over Canada\nFor Spying, Says Pearkes\nargued CNR should pay lower\nwages than CPR because its annual earnings were different.\nIf railway wages fluctuated according to railway revenues, Mr.\nHall said, then why should the\nemployees be the only suppliers\nof services to the companies who\ncharged prices for those services\nin accordance with revenues.\nASKS HOLIDAY CHANGE\nMr. Hall also outlined the case\nfor changed vacation rules. The\nunions are asking employees be\ngiven three weeks holiday after\n10 years instead of 15 and four j\nweeks after 20 years instead of\n35.\nHe    estimated    the    maximum ;\ncost   of   the   suggested   holiday ;\nsetup   would    be    $3,065,000   an- i\nnually  or ahout   P\/4-cents  hourly\nfor each non-op employee.\nThe unions will introduce a series!\nof exhibits\u2014graphs and statistical'\nanalyses \u2014 designed to back up!\nthe demands made in tbe written\nbrief. I\nHEADS TOCO-\nPremler Sylvamis Olymplo,\n57, an admirer of the U. S\u201e\nis the leader of little African republic of Togo which\ntame into being; on April 11.\nJet Flight Authority Doubts\nKhrushchev's Bail Out Story\nDUNCAN, B.C, <CP>\u2014Sir Philipi destroyed   instantly   by   the   slip-\nOTTAWA iCP) - American\naircraft of the type that was shot\ndown over Russia May 1 have\nmade flights over Canadian territory\u2014but not for the purpose of\nspying on the Soviet Union, Defence Minister Pearkes said in a\nstatement Tuesday night.\nHe said that American U-2s\nhave flo'\"'n over Canada on\nweather missions. None had violated Soviet air space.\nNo U-2 plane which might have\nflown spy missions over Communist territory had operated\nfrom any Canadian base.\nMr. Pearkes' statement was in\nline with one made in the Commons Monday by External Affairs Minister Green that Canada\nwas unaware the U.S. was flying\nreconnaissance missions across\nSoviet borders at all.\nWASHINGTON  INFORMED\nMr. Green assured the House\nTuesday that Canadian anxiety\nabout the danger of such missions to world peace had been\nmade clear to Washington.\nHe also described as \"wild\nspeculation\" press reports that\nAmerican spy flights over Russia\nwill continue.\nMr. Peakres told the House that\nfrom    time    to    time    unknown\nLivingston, former director-general\nof RAF medical services, said here\nit  would  be  \"utterly  impossible\"\nstream  and  air  pressure.\"\nHe added thai should the pilot\nsurvive     this     impossibility,     he\nplanes have been spotted  by the\nDEW radar line in the Canadian j\nArctic.   Il   had  never   been   possible   to   confirm   that   the   unknowns were Soviet planes,\nRussia claims that the American plane downed 1,300 miles\nwithin the Soviet's borders May\n1 was on a spy mission and has\nangrily threatened to bombard\nbases from which U.S. reconnaissance flights originate.\nNO STRAYING\nMr. Pearkes emphasized that\nthe weather flights were restricted to North American air\nspace, They were designed to\ngather scientific information on\ncloud formations, jet streams,\nupper atmosphere and radiation.\nAll the planes involved were unarmed.\nOn March 15, a U-2 made a\nforced landing north of Prince Albert, Sask., while on a routine\nflight to carry out meteorological\nand radiological studies,\nIn Washington Tuesday night a\nspokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration\nconfirmed that. U.S. U-2 jets\nnever have operated out of Canadian territory. The closest to Canada the planes had been based\nwas Alaska.\nfor a pilot to bail out of a super- culdn't last more than 45 seconds\nsonic U-2 plane without using his without the oxygen equipment at-\nejection equipment. 11ached to the ejection seat.\nSir Philip, now living in retire-' 'The frftic co\" \" il w0,lld \u2022*\nment here, said Russian Premier!*0\"1 ^degrees below zero - is\nKhrushchev's   story   of   shooting! J^t another factor that makes sur-\nvival impossible.\nSir Philip said ejection seats are\ndesigned to get the pilot out of Uie\ncraft and down to an altitude of\n30,000 feet before the parachute\nopens.\nFLYING HIGH\n(    Reports   from   Moscow   indicate\nFrancis   Powers,  30,  pilot of  tihe\ndown the U.S. plane over Russian;\nterritory May 1 and capturing the!\npilot is \"unbelievable.\" I\nSir Philip, a leading medical J\nauthority on jet flying, said: !\n\"There are many things that >\ncould have happened. But the story\nfrom Russia just doesn't make\nsense.\nWOULD DIE INSTANTLY\n\"It is utterly impossible for a\npilot to bail out without using ejection    equi pment,    I le    would    be\nLiberals Villains in Quebec\nClaim Heroic Conservatives\nBy KEN KELLY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA <CP>\u2014The big, bad\nvillain tried to starve the beautiful princess into submission and\nwould still be doing it if the handsome hero hadn't tome to ltie\nrescue.\nThat, in fairy-tale words, is\nFinance Minister Fleming's pic-\nure of the way the Liberals\ntreated Quebec on the university\ngrants issue until the Progressive\nConservative government took office at Ottawa\ndaily Lionel Chevrier \u00abI>\u2014 Montreal Laurier' and Maurice Bour-\nget. iL\u2014Levis', waited for their\ncue to attack the bill from .lean\nLesage, Quebec Liberal leader.\nBut Mr,   Pearson   had   repurii-\nJobless Ranks\nDrop Sharply\nThe number of male applicants\nfor unemployment insurance decreased approximately 200 last\nmonth for the same period in 1959.\nwhile the number of female applicants remained about Ihe same.i\ntihe Nelson Employment Service\noffice reports.\nA year ago male applicants numbered 1224 while files contained\n1063 a\u00bb the end of April. Little\nchange was shown in (lie 1959 number ol 197. for femaile applicants.\nBoth skilled and unskilled construction worker files are down as\ncompared In a year ago. Impending\nprojects will further reduce their\nnumbers despite Ihe reductions expected in the crew of the general\ncontract.xr at Ceigar's pulp mill\nproject where certain phases are\nnear completion.\nU-2 shot down May 1, was flying\nat about 60.009 feet when the plane\nwas destroyed.\n\"If he 'Powers' ran into engine\ntrouble he could come down to\n4000 or 5000 feet, stall his craft,\nroll over arid bail out.\n\"But this is a different matter\nthan being hit with a missile at\nsupersonic speeds,\" said Sir Philip.\n\"Critics of the U.S. government\nare most unjust. I don't doubt that\nRussian planes have been flying\nover Canada and we would be\nfoolish not to know what is happening inside Russia.\n\"We have a long way to go before we get to the bottom of this\nincident,\"\nPenticton  Denies\nUphill  Charge\nated them and also Mr, Lesage ] new|y arrived sub-contractors are\nby announcing the Liberals would I being listed and the total work\nvote for the bill.   \" 1 f(trce is in the vicinity of 800 men.\nMr. Chevrier denied any divi- j Unemp]oyed workers in the for-\nsion between himself and Mr. ost jndllstry number approximately\nPearson.   Liberals   voted   for   the   I40 which* is level with the num-\nPENTICTON 'CPi-The Penticton Board of Trade says MLA\nThomas Uphill of Fernie was\nwrong when he said Penticton\nwould not co-operate in attempting\nlo secure daily service on the Canadian Pacific Railway's Kettle\nValley line.\nSecretary-manager of the board,\nOrders for workers required hy| Jim Donald said the hoard sub-\nmilted   a   brief   to   the   Board   of\nbill because they believed in Uie\nprinciple of such grants and at\nlater    stages    would    propose\nIf the Liberals had continued    amendments,\nn office  .   ,   .  they  would  have\ncontinued   I heir nefarious   efforts       Havre,   France's   most   import -\nber in 1959. Some smaller companies have recalled crews and\nothers are expected to begin operations as the woods dry up.\nIn Nelson, a  total of 2227 man\ndays of work bad been involved in\nto starve the province of Quebec ' ant Atlantic seaport, was founded   the winter  works projects to the\ninto submission,  . .  . early  in Uie  16th  century, I end ol April\n\"We   of   this  government   were\nnot prepared to stand idly by and iia\/ f\\ T\\      *\\    T\\ \u25a0\nWenner-Gren Rail Route\nFeasible Says Surveyor\nexcessive grades and the railway j maximum grade on northern ex-\nPacific   Great\nsee a great province of this coun- I\nry treated in this discriminatory j\nmanner.  .  . . There are no second-class  provinces  in this coun\ntry' I     VANCOUVER   iCPi\u2014The  engi-;    Highest point on the line would\nUNANIMOUS APPROVAL 1 neer who supervised surveying of ! be  3,970  feet  at  Gnat  Pass,   bo-\nMr. Fleming's attack came the Wenner-Gren railway route in j tween Ihe Stikine River and\nTuesday night as the Commons | Northern British Columbia says \\ Dease Lake. Maximum grade\nvoted unanimously to approve in j the route is feasible and without j would be 1.75. equivalent to the\nprinciple the government's alternative method of getting university grants into Quebec university hands on the same scale as\nthey are paid to universities of\nother provinces.\nThe legislation will enable Quebec to assume payment of the\nuniversity grants on its own. To\nget the finances to do this. Quebec is increasing its corporation\nincome tax by one percentage\npoint and Ottawa will allow corporations in that province a similar increase in deductions from\ntheir federal  tax,\nQuebec had refused to accept\nthe Liberal method of having federal grants paid to the provinces\nthrough Ihe Canadian Universities Foundation, contending this\nwas an invasion of provincial\njurisdiction over education.\nLIBERAL CONFLICT?\nWinding up a long debate on\nsecond reading of the bill, Mr\nFleming suggested thai Opposition Leader Pearson pulled the\nrug nut from under his Liberal\nsupporter1- who had denounced\nthe measure.\nHe said these supporters, espe-\ncan be built without excessive\ncapital   or   maintenance   costs.\n\"Afler nearly three years of\nadverse and questionable comments\u2014political, economical and\nstrategical\u2014I he construction of\nthe railway is about to begin,\"\nH. H. Minshall told the Association ol Professional Engineers of\nB ('   Tuesday  night.\nMr. Minshall spoke about the\nrailway proposed by interests of\nSwedish financier Axel Wenner-\nGren  through  northern  B.C.\ntensions ot the\nEastern Railway.\nPEEKED  AT   Y.T.\n\"With  our  last   'survey)   camp\nin   B.C.   on  the   shore  of  Gladys\nLake,   just    15   miles   irom   the\nB.C.-Yukon    order.\"     Mr.     Minshall said, \"we look a pee*  into\nii? Yukon as lar as i m, .-> .kirk.\nto  satisfy   ourselves   lhat   il   was\nquite feasible to run Ihe proposed | gnrri\nline   through   Wh dehor se   lo   join   said  \\\\\nIhe   route   proposed   by   Ihe   I\n\\rmv  in   1942.\"\nTransport Commissioners when\nthey sat in Nelson last year.\n\"The brief among other suggestions said that the railway did not\nseem lo be considering tbe tourist\npotential of the Kettle Valley line,\"\nbe said. \"However, the Board of\nTransport. Commissioners ruled\nthat the railway could suspend the\ndaily service, which they did.\n\"Penticton certainly does not\nbenefit from Ihe broken daily service\u2014she suffers. The odd passenger that might slay overnight in\nPenticton does not make up a\nfraction of the revenue Penticton\nreceived when railway crews were\nworking daily out of Penticton on\nthe line,\n\"Revenue from boundary area\nshoppers that came to Penticton\nnow is lost also.\"\nMr, Uphill made his remarks\nduring Ihe weekend al a meeting\nof the Associated Chambers of\nCommerce of Southeastern B.C. in\nFernie.\n'It\nis to dispel this destructive j     He said a nnjor crossing of the\nriticism that we wish to inform\nmembers of the engineering pro\nfession in simple, truthful English, how thoroughly all aspects\nof the line's construction and its\noperation are being considered,''\nhe said.\nDETAILS   ROUTE\nWith his associate H L Smith.\nMr Minshall detailed tlie full\nsurvey   of   the  route.\nThey said Ihe survey entailer!\n1.500 miles nf aerial reconnaissance and 340.000 acres ol land\nwere mapped by aerial photog\nraphy.\nSkeena  River would be \"surpr\ni ingly  simple\"   and   for  economic\n, reasons it might be necessary (or\nj ihe, railway to cross and re-cross\nj the Nass River.\nI    The railway  proposal was part\nof    an    agreement    Wenner-Gren\n| interests   reached   with   the   B.C,\n: government about three years\nago to open northern B.C. 'o\ndevelopment. Under the agreement, construction is to start by ese and foreign fir...\nIhe end of June. A comonry i Among the copied items \\\nnamed Pacific Northern Railway : synthetic textiles, gloves mm\nhas hren set un lo undertake the j fishing   tackle,   razor   blades\nI proposed   project. I cameras.\nJAPAN  DISCUSSES\nCOMPLAINTS\nFROM OVERSEAS\nTOKYO   iReulersi   -  Overseas\nmanufacturers   have   complained\nannul Japanese imitafinns of Iheir\nJapan's    trade    mmi.slry\nInesday\nBusinessmen in nine weslern\ncountries, including Canada, accused Japanese manufacturers\nand exporters nf copying their de\nsigns or Irade marks, in  19..9\nThere were 6.\", such cases last\nyear compared wild a Intal of fi.l\nin (lie previous two years com-\nined, according to the Irade\nministry\nIn 21 of Uie 1959 rases. Ihe ministry issued warnings nf the Japanese firms involved Six cases\nwere  settled helween the Japan-\nand\n \/\u00ab3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960 \u2014 7\n|\/\n8167,048.00\n(Up to and Including April 30)\nm,\n:..-Ji^i.xi:._''_.'.i.\n\u00bb2\u00a3v.\n%'\nBONUS GAME\nHAS BEEN PAID TO\nSHOP-EASY CUSTOMERS\nA GAME OF FUN AND SKILL\nPick up your free BONUS CARD at your SHOP- EASY CHECK-OUT. Carry it with you at all times.\nEvery time you shop at your SHOP-EASY STORE the cashier will punch the amount of your pur-'\nchase You will, if your card is fully punched and you are skillful and answer the question under\nthe seal correctly, receive one of many cash pri zes ranging from $1.00 to $1,000.\ni$2 PUNCH\nON YOUR BONUS CARD EVERY TUESDAY!\nPRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 12th, 13th, 14th\n1W\nPERFEX-\nBETTER BUY.\nBURNS-\nNelson, Kinnaird and Rossland Stores\nlb.\nSmoked Shoulder.\nWhole or Shank Half.\n32 ox. bottle-\nHot Dog Style.\nChildren Love 'em!\n12 oi.\nround tin\t\nSpork\nBathroom Tissue ^ **\" \u2014^ 6 * 99*\nChoice Peas Ay- **J 15 0K *\"      5 for 9o<\nPenn Pears \u00bb-\u25a0\u00ab \u2014        3,or$]\nChocolate FluHsw.,on-^^2o40<\nTomatoes cm*\u2014' 28\" \"\" __    89*\nPeanut Butter ***\u25a0\u00ab \u00ab\u2022 \u00ab \u20141   3 \u00bb$1\nCake Mix Be\u00bby<**\u00ab  2 {r 29<\nTuna Flakes \u25a0\u00bb- ^6 \"^\n33c\n3 ib, 99e\nZ'\u00ab49i   g-|Stal    A |b69t tap Roast     A|b69c\n39c\nBeef Liver\nServe with Tender\nBacon Strips. \t\nCanada Choice.\n1 ibs 6\/C\nSide Bacon\nLean, Rindloss.\n16 oi. Picture Pak.\t\nCalifornia White Shafter\nNew Potatoes\nServe a delicious Potato salad.\n10 ib 49c\nSALAD SPECIAL\n1 SOLID HEAD OF LETTUCE\n1 CRISP BUNCH OF CELERY\n1 TUBE RED - RIPE TOMATOES\nALL THREE FOR   faQ*\nKraft Miracle Whip J    Tops Dog Food     J   Powder Pet Milk   j      Tomato Soup\n2 99c   39CJ     12 99c     i   .'3-9*     J     \\fcyp'\nS2 OZ. JAR\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nTomato Juice\nLibby's;\n48 oz.\ntin . . .\n39\nC\n -       ;      \u25a0 \u2014 , \u2014 - \u2014 -       : \u2014 ___ __.\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\nNEVER TOO OLD \u2014 George Maynard, an entrant at 88, makes a shot in annual British marbles title\nplay at Tinsley Green. He's been competing for 80 years.\nB.C. Employment Outlook Bright\nVANCOUVER   (CP)\nBritish\nColumbia's employment situation\nIs brighter than it was a month\nago but is not improving as\nquickly as it did last year, Horace Keek>h, regional director for\nthe Unemployment Insurance\nCommission, said Wednesday.\nMr. Keetch blamed adverse\nweather conditions, business closures, continued curtailment of\nhouse construction and increased\noperating efficiency for the slow\nrecovery.\n\"Despite Ihe slightly higher\nnumber of job registrations this\nyear than last, there are approximately 8,000 more persons employed than there were during\nthe corresponding month a year\nago,\" he said.\nMore than 77.000 persons were\nregistered for jobs in the Pacific\nregion March 17, a drop of 2,776\nfrom the previous month but\n2,076 higher than the corresponding 1959 figure.\nDefence Department Stores\n15 Million Yards of Cloth\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The defence\ndepartment has in storage 15,-\n000,000 yards of cloth, enough for\n3,000,000 uniforms, the Commons\ndefence committee was told Wednesday.\nStrength of the armed forces is\nabout 120,000. On the basis of a\nnew uniform for each man a\nyear, the department has enough\ncloth to last another 25 years.\nHowever, it was learned outside\nthe committee, some of the cloth\nhas been spoiled because it has\nbeen in storage for at least eight\nyears\u2014since Korean War days.\nSteel bands used to bale the\ncloth have in some cases eaten\ninto the fabric so that it will have\nto be thrown away.\nAll the cloth has been mothproofed. How much will have to\nbe written off because of spoilage could not be learned.\nThe subject of cloth came before the committee's first working meeting when Defence Minister Pearkes said $15,000,000\nworth of cloth was transferred to\nhis department from the defence\nproduction department in 1958-59.\n15,000,000  YARDS\nDeputy Defence Minister Frank\nMiller said the sum represents\n15,000,000 yards of cloth. A uniform requires about five yards of\ncloth, a battledress about 4._\nyards.\nHarold Winch (CCF \u2014 Vancouver East) asked how there was so\nmuch cloth on hand eight years\nafter the Korean War.\nMr. Pearkes said the former\nLiberal government thought mobilization might have been necessary during the Korean War and\nstocks to equip large armed\nforces had been acquired.\nThe sending of a large expeditionary forces overseas now was\nnot contemplated, Mr. Pearkes\nadded.\nNot unexpectedly, the committee started wrangling right at the\nstart.\nProgressive Conservatives beat\ndown a Liberal-CCF attempt\u2014by\na vote of 6 to 4\u2014to have the committee concentrate its initial\nstudy on 1960-61 spending and policy. The committee took up 1958-\n1959 expenditures first.\n\"BAD\" ESTIMATE\nPaul Hellyer (L\u2014Toronto Trinity) asked whether the armed\nforces were as well equipped as\nMr. Pearkes would like to see\nthem.\nG. Ernest Halpenny (PC\u2014London), committee chairman, said\nthis was an all-embracing question which could \"start an argument.\"\nMr. Hellyer said it was a fair\nquestion because the department\nhad spent $262,000,000 less than\nestimated in 1958-59. There was\n\"something wrong\" in Ihe defence department w<ien it made\nsuch a \"bad\" estimate.\nMr. Hellyer said Mr. Pearkes'\nopening statement must have\nbeen written by some public relations officer under orders to\nmake it as dull as possible and\n\"rationalize everything.\"\nWhen Mr. Hellyer tried to continue questioning, he was cut off\nby Mr. Halpenny who said there\nDUCK  MIGRATIONS\nLargest of the great migration\nroutes for ducks and geese, the\nMississippi Flyway extends 3,000\nmiles from the Mississippi delta\nto the mouth of the Mackenzie\nRiver.\n__ PRESENTING THE SYMBOL OF\nBULDVA\nLEADERSHIP IN TIMEKEEPING\n4P\/time:.J{{htdte\/t\nCANADA'S\nFINEST\nTIMEPIECE\nIntroducing the exciting and\ndramatically different\n\"Prime Minister\" styled by\nthe world's foremost fine\njewelled waichrjiakers\u2014the\n\"Gift Supreme\" for any man.\nEach mode! encases a\nshock-resistant 23 Jewel\nPrecision Bulova Movement\nwith lifetime unbreakable\nmainspring\u2014all truly the\nultimate in fine timekeeping\u2014\nfully guaranteed and priced\nwithin the reach of all.\nAt Better Jewellers Everywhere\nPRIME MINISTER \"HW\"\nThe ultimate in t fine timepiece! 23\nJewels\u2014waterproof\u2014 shock replant,\nluminous hands and dial, combination\nexpansion band in fioientmn finish.\nJ 100.00\nMIME MINISTER \"A\"\nHandsomely tailored! 23 Jewels\u2014shot!.\nrcsislant\u2014genuine leather strap.\nOutstanding value. $59.50\nPRIME MINISTER \"B\"\nAristocrat ot tine dress watches\u201423\nJewels\u2014 handsome expansion band \u2014\navailable in yellow or white.      J69.50\nPRIME MINISTER \"L\" MIME MINISTER \"EW\"\nDistinguished florentina dial\u201423 Jewels    A 23 Jewel Waterproof Watch as modem\n\u2014tailored eipansion band. A watch any    as tomorrow. Luminous dial and bandsman would be proud to weir.    $75.00    sweep-second bind\u2014shock-resistant\u2014\neipansion bind. 535.00\nPRIME MINISTER \"FW\"\nThin Waterproof for all occasions. 23\nJewels\u2014luminous hands and modern\ndial\u2014sweep-second hand\u2014in yellow or\nwhite. $89.50\nCOLUNSON'S JEWELLERY\n561   Baker St.\nLtd.\nNelson, B.C.\n'    Phone 120\nMcLACHLAN JEWELLERS\nLTD.\nPhone 616 491  Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nOlson's Credit Jewellers\nPhone  1149\n364 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nBOSSE'S Jewellery\nPhone 2041 178 Pine St\nCastlegar,  B.C.\nMILLER Jewellers\nBox 278 Phone 6-2045\nCreston, B. C.\nwere 14 other members on the\ncommittee. Mr. Hellyer would be\ngiven as much consideration as\nany other member but no more.\nSOME   IMPROVEMENT\nLater, Mr. Pearkes said unification oi the armed forces' medical services has not reduced the\nnumber of personnel but that it\nhas resulted in improvement in\nefficiency.\nMr. Hellyer urged that Mr.\nPearkes first give the committee\na statement of the government's\ndefence ojectives and that the\ncommittee members be given\nbriefings by the defence staff, including briefings in camera on\nintelligence.\nHis proposal went counter to\nthe report of the committee's\nsteering body which proposed\nlhat work begin wilh the 1958-59\nspending, leaving the I960 - 61\nspending for later study.\nEgan Chambers, parliamentary secretary to the defence minister, said the committee should\nlake up the previous spending on\ndefence first in order to get a pic-\nlure of the development of de-\nlence before going on to spending\nin the current fiscal year.\nRussia To\nShoot Down\nAny Snoopers\nLONDON (Reuters) - Soviet\nForeign Minister Andrei Gromyko\nwarned Wednesday that Russia will\nshoot down any foreign planes\nwhich \"poke their noses\" into Soviet territory.\nHe also told foreign correspondents in Moscow that Russia can\n\"incapacitate\" foreign bases\nused by the United States for espionage flights over Soviet territory.\nGromyko issued his warning at\nan exhibition of wreckage of the\nAmerican U-2 aircraft shot down\nover Russia May 1 while on an\nespionage mission.\nHe said that nations violating\nSoviet airspace \"were playing\nwith fire\" and engaging in \"one\nof the most dangerous forms of\nbrinkmanship.\"\n\"We shall m\u00abet such uninvited\nguests in tlie same way as aggressors have always been met\nby the Soviet people and only\nwreckage will remain of any\nplanes which might have fhe\ntemerity to poke their noses into\nour territory.\"\nHe said the May 1 flight was\nmade from a base in Turkey and\nlhat Turkey was \"an accomplice\nin this aggressive act, as is Norway where the plane was due to\nland.\"\nSPIKES FOR STRAYERS \u2014 Driver ln car demonstrates how reflectlns\nspikes fold on while line between two lanes on autobahn near Offe.nbarh. West Germany.\nThe  spikes  were  installed  as warning  to  motorists not to cross the roadway marker.\nCanvass Finds Bad Husband\nFate of 50% British Wives\nBy   STEWART   MacLEOD\nCanadian   Press   Staff   Writer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The Christian\nEconomic and Social Research\nFoundation studied 700 young\nBritish wives and discovered lhat\n50 per cent of them are stuck\nwith \"bad\" husbands.\nIn this case, a bad husband is\none who goes out alone.\nMore specifically, it means\nthose men who inhabit the local\npub night after night while poor\nMa  stays   home.\nThe study was made on behalf\nof the United Kingdom Alliance,\nan organization that bows to no\none in its total disrespect for al-\n:ohol.\nAnd the foundation, in its tour\nof the 700 \"average\" homes,\nfound plenty of husbands for the\nalliance to disrespect. Nearly all\nof the 50 per cent of bad husbands were, in varying degrees,\npub dwellers. And on top of this,\nmany watched football, the dog\nraces or played snooker.\nNever did these men take their\nwives along. Only tihe other 50\nper cent did this.\n13-PAGE REPORT\nln a 13-page report that could\nput some women off marrying\nforever, the foundation found that\n:ven when there are no children\nin a family, a surprising 20 per\ncent of the wives never get out\nsocially.\nAnd in  homes  whore  there  is\nRescued Men Spent Grim\nTime in Nahanni Valley\nEDMONTON (CP) - \"We almost exploded with joy when we\nsaw the plane,\" said Dean Ross-\nworn, 55 - year - old Yellowknife\nprospector, from his hospital bed\nTuesday.\nRossworn, weak and emaciated\nand John Richardson, were flown\nto Yellowknife Saturday by Yellowknife pilots Chuck and Jim\nMcAvoy after spending two\nmonths almost without food at a\nprospecting camp in the fabled\nNaihanni Valley.\nRossworn described his ordeal\nin a radio - telephone interview\nwith Ron Hayter of the Edmonton Journal.\nHe said the party of five went\nbo McMillan Lake, 400 miles west\nof here, last October, and understood they were to be picked up\nMarch 3. The plane didn't arrive\nand food supplies ran out.\nTOOK  HIS   LIFE\nRossworn said Alex Meiskonen\ntook his own life in a dynamite\nblast. Tom Pappas and Orville\nWebb, the two other members of\nthe party, still are missing. They\nleft the camp April 12 to walk to\nthe settlement of Nahanni Butte,\nabout 110 miles by air.\nRossworn said Meiskonen was\nthe most despondent of the group\n#hen the plane did not appear.\n\"He kept insisting that he would\nnever get out of the valley.\"\nOn March 17, he went out with\nsome wire to try to snare a rabbit.  \"We heard a terrific bang.\"\n\"Orville Webb came back and\nsaid 'Alex has blown himself all\nto pieces.'\n\"For the next 2fi days we\nhoped, prayed and kept a watchful eye on the sky, but nothing\nappeared. . . .We lived on what\nrabbits and squirrels and partridges we could shoot\u2014we even\nate a wildcat. We ate four of our\ndogs, including one that had died\ntwo months before and had been\nthrown in the creek. We blasted\ntree trunks, then took the roots\nand boiled them to get the juice.\nWe also chewed tree bark.\nDECIDED TO WALK\n\"On April 11, Tom and Orville\ndecided to walk to Nahanni Butte\nand get help. I couldn't make it,\nI knew, because I was quite weak\nfrom hunger and had broken out\nin sores. John decided to stick\nwith me.\"\n\"As we said goodbye 1 remember thinking: \"T h e odds are\nagain&L them, but they have a\nchance to make it.' They were\nboth young men\u2014Orville 36 and\nTommy about 40\u2014and both were\nbig, husky types.\" An RCMP\nconstale left Fort Liard Tuesday\nto begin a search for the missing men.\n\"When they left, we had one\ndog left. This, along with boiled\ncaribou skin and the odd rabbit\nand squirrel, was our main diet.\n\"After our meat ran out, we\nsmashed dog bones and boiled the\nmarrow out of them. ... We even\ntried eating whiskey jacks (Canada jays), but we found thorn inedible. . . .\nSAW CHUCK'S  PLANE\n\"Then, last Saturday, we saw\nChuck McAvoy's single - engine\nplane. ... We yelled and waved\nour parkas.  . .  .\n\"When the plane landed on McMillan Lake, we almost exploded\n| with  joy.\"\nRossworn weighed 175 pounds\nwhen he left Yellowknife last\nfall. He lost. 55 pounds during the\nordeal. Hospital officials, however, said he was in amazingly\ngood condition. Richardson, who\nis in his 20s, was not detained in\nhospital.\nTbe Nahanni Valley, running\nnorth from the junction of the\nLiard and Nahanni Rivers, is a\nwild land of swamps and mountains. It was shunned by super\nstititious Indians, who told of a\nlush, green valley and tropical\nclimate. Prospectors often became lost and sometimes vanished altogether in the wilderness and a vast amount of legend\ngrew up about the area.\nSome skeletons\u2014minus heads-\nwere said to have been found,\ngiving rise to the name \"Headless Valley.\" Most of the stories\nhave been thoroughly debunked\nby parties which have gone into\nthe valley by plane in recent\nyears. Some hot springs were\nfound, and there are said to be\ncliff dwellings built by early Indians.\nmore than one child, 80 per cent\nof the wives spend all their evenings at home. Good husbands stay\nwith them; bad ones skip out.\nThe survey also discovered that\nwives of bad husbands smoke\n\"substantially\" more cigarets\nthan their luckier counterparts.\nAnd Lhey watch television a great\ndeal more.\nThe report breaks down the 700\nwives into three general categories.\nNo. Lis the quiescent wife, the\nold-fashioned type who gets married with the idea that she's a\nhousekeeper and belongs in the\nkitchen. She will put up with\neverything, and sometimes does.\nThese marriages seldom break\nup.\nNo. 2 is the companion wife,\nthe type who insists marriage\npartners should do everything together. Most stay home together.\nEQUALITY WIFE\nNo. 3 is the equality wife, the\none who lets her husband out a\ncertain number of nights a week\nproviding he lets her do the same.\nThey work out equal schedules\nThe survey found these homes\nrather unhappy and children tend\nto separate man and wife rather\nthan unite them.\nApart from bad husbands, the\nreport suggests that the expense\nof hiring baby-sitters accounts for\nmuch domestic unhappiness. Several London newspapers studied\ni the findings and agreed.\nAlberta, Manitoba, Press\nNew Export Grain Costs\nBy ROBERT RICE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Manitoba and\nAlberta Wednesday pressed for\nnew information from the CPR\nabout the cost of handling western\nCanada's big export, grain crop.\nThey made (heir move before\nthe Royal Commission on Transportation after tlie OPR introduced changes in its original cost\nanalysis\u2014changes that amounted\nto a 1.55 per cent increase in the\nCPR's loss claim in hauling export grain at low statutory freight\nrates.\nThe new deficiency on grain\nshipments amounted to $36,300,-\n000\u2014an increase of slightly more\nthan $1,000,000 on the previous\nfigure.\nManitoba counsel Arthur\nMauro, supported by J. J. Fraw-\nley, Alberta's spokesman, said\nthe figures were available some\ntime ago and could have been\npassed on to Prairie cost experts\nfor study.\nCHARGES   DELAY   MOVE\nHe asked the commission to order the CPR to distribute revised\nexhibits showing all Ihe original\nchanges rather than the over-all\neffect,\nCPR Vice-President Ian Sinclair promptly charged the western spokesmen with making a\nstrategic move to delay the commission's inquiry five or six\nmonths.\nHowever, he agreed to make a\nrush set of copies and to try to\nget them before the commission\nlater today. The hearing was adjourned until the next exhibits\nwere ready.\nThe Prairie move came after\nR, A. MacKimmie of Calgary\ncompleted his cross-examination\nof the astruse problem of how to\nfigure out the cost of rail movement of prairie grain.\nWASN'T HIS TURN\nNEW YORK (APi-A 13-year-\nold hoy hanged himself Tuesday\nnight, after protesting in vain that\nit wasn't his turn to wash the\ndinner dishes of the family of\nseven. James Williams was found\nhanged y a necktie in a closet\nin the family apartment. The\nmother, Mrs. Grace Williams,\nsaid James washed the dishes\n0-\\: argu that it was his 14-\nv'-ar-old brother's turn.\nPACIFIC MILK\nHAS FRESHER\nSWEETER FLAVOR!\nthe only evaporated milk processed in B.C.\n OUT FOR VIEW \u2014 Nurses and a doctor climb\nNattire for glimpse of French President lie Gaulle during\nhis visit to Stanford Medical Center In Palo Alio, Calif.\nTownship Declared\nMajor Disaster Area\nBy  BEN WARD\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nTIMMINS, Ont. (CP) - More\nthan 1,000 residents of Mountjoy\nTownship were out of their homes\nand in emergency shelters Wednesday as the rampaging Mattagami\nRiver continued its relentless rise\nin the suburban township area.\nAbout 300 families were being\nhoused in social halls and homes\nof friends in Timmins to escape\nthe flood crest, which by early\ntoday had hit more than half a\nsquare mile of residential streets,\nFlood-waters had cut off another\n500 families in the west end of\nthe township. These families,\nmostly on farms, will have to depend on boats for their supplies\nduring the next few days.\nWATER CRISIS\nFiremen laid an emergency\n200-yard hoseline across tihe river\nTuesday night to pump Timmins\nwater into fhe crippled Mountjoy\nsystem.\nThe Mountjoy water mains\nfailed when a three-inch ores-t of\nwater struck the township Tuesday, burying roads, boathouses\nand some homes as well as the\npumping machinery at the township waterworks.\nR eeve Jack Atkinson and Dr.\nGraham Lane, medical officer of\nhealth for the area, said no contamination or health hazard had\nbeen found. Dr. Lane said he did\nnot anticipate any problems with\npolluted water.\nOfficials of the Ontario Hydro-\nElectric Power Commission reported Tuesday that the upriver\nstorage dams could no longer\ncontain the floods, and within\nt wo houfs t he Mat-taga mi h ad\nburst it? hanks to flood main\nroads in the township.\nThe river rose three inches in\none hour in its biggest rise since\nthe flooding started Sunday night,\nMAJOR  DISASTER\nA major disaster area was declared by W. R. McAdam, assistant Ontario Red Cross commissioner, as ci\\fil defence crews\nand township emergency units\nbegan evacuation of areas along\nthe edges of previously flooded\nsectors.\nDozens of farm families were\nforced from their homes when\nthe river burst its bflnks downstream from Timmins, washing\nout the road to Timmins airpot.\nTrans-Canada Air Lines cancelled\nflights into the airport.\nThousands of dollars worth of\nfood vouchers were distributed\namong flood victims by the Red\nCross.\nAt Waiwatin Falls upriver from\nhere a 48-year-old dam is holding back a lake 27 miles long.\nJ. P. Burke, area manager for\nhydro, said there was no danger\nof the dam breaking. Extra crews\nwere flown in to control the water\nlevel at. the dam.\nRivers throughout Ontario continued to rise dangerously, but.\nofficials said there was no threat,\nof life.\nIn the New Liskeard area,\nabout (V) miles south of Kirkland\nLake, residents along the Montreal River were told Tuesday\nnight to evacuate their homes.\nHydro officials said they would\nhave to open partially two dams\nin the area because a log jam\nhad  roken  loose.\nAt Pembroke, the Ottawa River\nrose six inches in 24 hours and\nis at the highest level since 1947.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960 \u2014 9\nCanada's Disapproval of Spy\nFlights Made Plain To U.S.\nBy DAVE McJNTOSH\nOTTAWA fCP) \u2014 A dispute may\nhe brewing between Canada and\nthe Enited States over any Amori-\nran continuation of spy flights over\nRussia.\nExternal Affairs Minister Green\nTuesday described as \"rather wild\nspeculation\" press reports from\nWashington that the flights are\n=1 ill going on despite the destruc-\n' on of an American .spy plane in\ntilf1 Russia May 1.\nHowe\\ er, Wash i n.gt on report s\npaid U.S. State Secretary Herter\nh^s left the impression that spy\nfights may be continued until\n\u25a0Soviet secrecy is relaxed.\nNAMED \u2014 John 8. Bray-\ndon, 66, retired Army officer,\nhas been chosen by the President to be a member of the\nCivil Aeronautics Board. He\nvill  succeed  James Durfe*.\nInformants here said Canada\nhas made clear to the U.S. that the\nreconnaissance flights over Communist territory should be halted\nMIGHT TRIGGER WAR\nThey said the suggestion to this\neffect was implicit in Mr, Green's\nCommons statement Monday that\na continuation of such incidents\nmight trigger a nuclear war.\ntt is recognized here, however,\nthat Canada can do nothing to stop\ntho flights if the U.S. fools they\nare essential to help maintain the\nwarning system against surprise\nSonet attack.\nThus any Canada V S disagreement on the matter probably would\nbe confined to diplomatic channels.\nTlie attitude hero is that the\ndanger of touching off a war by\nsuch incidents or a miscalculation\nis greater than the danger that\nthere would be no warning of\nRussian aggression\nOfficials here are disturbed over\nthe U.S. admission that the May 1\nflight was not authorized by Washington. They feel there should be\ntrict Washington control over anything as delicate as spying.\nU.K.   Businessman\nElected  Director\nBank  of  Montreal\nMONTREAL   (CPi-Sir  Hubert\nNut come Hume Tuesday was\nelected a director of the Rank of\nMontreal. A chairman of a number of British companies. Sir\nHubert is the first businessman\nresident in the United Kingdom to\nbecome a director of the bank.\nWASN'T HIS TURN\nNEW YORK (APi-A 13-year-\nold boy hanged himself Tuesday\nnight after protesting in vain that\nit wasn't his turn to t wash the\ndinner dishes of the family of i\nseven. James Williams was found\nhanged by a necktie in a closet |\nin   the   family   apartment.   The j\n\u25a0i\n*tG$i$$!$$!$fi&$8\nPrices Effective\n1\nTODAY TO\nMONDAY,\nMAY 16\nWe Reserve\nThe Right To\nLimit Quantities    )\n_*-\nCHICKEN\nLIBERTY\nFri. and Sat. Only.\nLarge Site, Serves CO.\n4 to 5 each \t\n1.59\nBreakfast Sausage\nYou'll chirp about the special savings on\nboth floors. \u2014 No prizes, no gimmicks to\nadd up to 20c on every $10.00 order. \u2014\nLiberty's produce prices save you as much\nas $24 per year \u2014 plus specials on groceries and meats. Compare \u2014 see why\nmore wise shoppers know \u2014 you save\nmore every day at Liberty.\nSwift't Premium\nSmoked Picnics\nSwift's premium; whole or half\nPot Roast Beef\nSwift's Red label, lean \t\nRib Pork Chops\nSwift's\nib 39\nib. 33\nib 39\nib 39\n\"HP  l~H    '^J\nICE\nCREAM\nWestland ... Fresh-made locally\n$3.69 ]\n'\/_ Gal.\nPalm, 2J gal.\nfor parties, etc\nFree Loan of Insulated Bag-\nMix 'em or match  'em\nOrange Drink sys^ 3 tins $1\nRaisins ^^n:__ you *\u201e ,* 2 lbs. 49c\nCake Mixes \"\u2122**\u2122 chocolate, 3 pk 89c\n^ white, spice, etc. _\nI ea pays bY Naborp\"^\u2014 you save 20c 0\/c\nCaIIaa mjb- The rich' s,noofh QQ\/1\nvOTiee ar\u00b0ma \u00b0f sa,isf\u00b0ction jn o\/v\nevery cup;  Ib. tin     \t\nBrown Bread &rsu\u00bb\u00ab. 2 for 33c\nGinger Ale xcsdeSt19 2 quarts 39c\nShortening ^-i. 4 lbs. 89c\nirmnrii^ hi me   m iw\u00bb*      \"\" \u25a0\u00bb   '\u25a0\u00bb   m   \" \"* \u25a0   _\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb*\u00bb\u25a0_\u25a0 \u25a0   **W \u25a0\u2014i *m\\-~-^ -~--~\u2014\u2022\u2014 p)    __.___-\u00bb_\u25a0_\u2014\nSOLO MARGARINE [\n 4 lbs 9 9\n2  lb.  block\n?J*\niiitim.mimiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiH.niiii.i\nFresh Frozen\nSPECIALS!\niHHiiiiiiimiiiimiHHiiiHiiimi.ini\n' lbs.\nGood Luck Margarine . . 2 lbs. 65<\n\u25a0  p\u00bb mini \u00bb   '  \u00bb^W^*_f*^\"f \u25a0    i>\u00ab^ 11i \u25a0PIP\"'\nwm \u25a0> ^nmm 0 ___\u00bb m *  \u00bb\nLow Prices 6 Days Every Week\nSUGAR\u20141(K69C\nBUTTER stt?\u2014 |b 64c\nPurex Tissue 4\u00b0n*49c\nSoupMixE., 3p!<29c\nTOMATOES\nx.o m a-t. o \u00a9 s\nBlueberries:\nFraservale;\nEgg-Foo-Yong\nPkg      \t\nApples:\nFraservale;\nFried Chicken Wings: gQc\nWith Vegetable Dinner; Pkg. \"'\u25a0   '\nS5<\n59\ndm  it..        \u25a0 f\nlbs.\nTasty,  Field,\nfirm, ripe .\nCalifornia,\nValencias\nCrisp, Green\nWatermelon\nPotatoes\nLethbridge Gems,\nGrand  Cookers ....\nib.29c\nORANGES\nLETTUCE\n13c\nMY\n20 ibs 95c\nLowest price  in town\t\nRed,  ripe,\nMexican .\nOr California New Potatoes\nJohnson's\nHard\nGloss Wax\nat\n99\nJohnson's\nNew\nClear Paste\nSave 10f.  Lb. Tin.\n69\nJohnson's\nHoliday\nCleans and waxes your\ncar for that \"foot deep\"\nshine. 16 oz. tin special.\n\u00bb1.19\nPetunias\nBorder\nDwarf Mix\n2 d\u00b07- 89*\nCabbage\nor Lettuce\nPlants\n2dox- 49*\nTomato\nPlants\nSturdy,   large,   foot   tall\npopular varitiei. Climtzd.\npopular varieties.\nClimatized.\ndoz.\n95'\n wmm\n\u2022mrnimmm.\nGREATEST\nMATTRESS VALU\nin NELSON or Anywhere\nriien..   la.JO Nelson,\nHOME  FURNITURE\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nc    Ph.   1032 640  Boker St   Phone 193\nNelson,  B. C. I\n^mMW>W$\u00b0,WH\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\nCongo Republic\nSuspects Red\nThreat To Slate\nBRAZZAVILLE, Congo Republic fReuters) \u2014 The government\nannounced Wednesday that police\nhave uncovered \"an affair affecting the security of the state.\"\nInformed sources said the government claimed to have proof of\na plot by Communists in the\nCongo in collusion wilh the World\nFederation of Trade Unions,\nThe official announcement said\npolice had carried out searches in\ndifferent parts of the country,\n.seizing documents and questioning several people.\n\"Important developments in\nthis affair can e expected,\" the\nannouncement added, The Congo\nRepublic became independent of\nFrench colonial rule in 11)58.\nMASS   EVACUATION\nIn Uie Belgian Congo, meanwhile, hundreds of Belgian families are making hurried arrangements to leave, as violence and\ndisorder mount on the eve of the\ncolony's independence at the end\nof June.\nBelgian airlines have 80 special\nflights chartered to leave for Europe between now and July. Shipping lines report record waiting\nlists and record bookings from\nCongo as well as neighboring\nports.\nMany of the estimated 80,000\nBelgian residents in the Congo\nare staying because of currency\nrestrictions clamped down in\nMarch afler capital had flown out\nof the country al a rate of 1,000,-\n000,000 francs labout $20,000.0001\ndraining the banks to danger level.\nAll but a few of the 10,000\nmissionaires working in mission\nstations and schools throughout\nIhe 1.000.000 square miles'of the\nCongo's sweltering forests and\nbush are expected to stay.\nA FUTILE SYMBOL \u2014 Ruins of the business district of Larussell In southwest Missouri form somber background for the old town pump which was of no help in\nstopping a lire lhat destroyed buildings. Firemen were hampered  by  the lack of water.\nDisormoment and Berlin To\nDominate Summit Meetinq\nIn this second of a series\nof lour articles, William L.\nRyan describes the strategy\nand tactics behind the Soviet\napproach to the summit conference which convenes Monday.\nBy  WILLIAM  L.   RYAN\nAssociated   Press   News   Analyst\nIn November 1957, Moscow summoned leaders of fit countries to\nan important  conference.\nFrom il came a declaration\nwhich has colored Soviet policy\never since.  It is the very essence\nOttawa Welcomes Truce\nIn Europe's Trade Blocs\n402 Baker St,\nNelson,   B.C.\nOTTAWA iCPi-A new move\ntowards a trade truce between\nEurope's two big trading blocs\nwas welcomed Wednesday in Canadian government circles,\nA spokesman said Canada\nwould look on any move to help\nbreak the deadlock between Uie\nsix - nation Common Market and\nseven - nation European Free\nTrade Association as \"most welcome.\"\nHe was commenting on the decision of the Common Market\nforeign ministers at Luxembourg\ntoday lo seek trade truce talks\nwith   the   British-led   Free Trade\nPity the Poor\nBus Driver\nBy HAL BOYER\nNEW YORK <APi - Remarks\nbus drivers get  tired of hearing:\n\"I'm sorry, tlie smallest I've\ngot   is  a  $10 bill,\"\n\"I'm afraid you'll have tit pull\nto the curb and send for help.\nMy child has her hand caught in\nthe   fare box.\"\n\"Well, you don't have to be\nsuch a grouch aboul it. All i\nasked you is whether I should\ntake the No. 4 bus, the No. 8\nbus, the No. 10 bus\u2014or give up\nand go by cab.\"\n\"I   been   waiting  here  for   half\nan  hour.   Where  you  been \u2014  to\nMars?\"\nNON-NEGOTIABLE\n\"Whaddaya mnan this transfer\nis no good? It was all right yesterday.\"\n\"Don't, you ever get tired of\ndri\\ mc the same old route day\nafter day after day''\"\n\"Hoy, drner, you got change\nfor a  $7  bill*'\"\n\"Just answer me this one\nquestion\u2014are you or are you not\na public servant\"1\"\n\"1 admit he looks big for his\nage, but he won't be five years\nold until November. That algebra book he's carrying belongs\nto his  older  brother.\"\n\"Does this bus go by the department store that is having a\nsale on bedshoel.s this week? I\nforgot the  name of the store.\"\n\"How do you guys operate . . .\none fare for the company and\none for yourselves?\"\n\"Don't argue with him, Grace,\nJust   take   his   badge   number.\"\n\"Just   climb   out   from   behind\nthat wheel. Mac, and we'll settle !\nthis in the street.\"\n\"He's   a   frustrated  jet   pilot\u2014\nthat's   why   he   wears   those   $20 j\nsunglasses.\"\n\"Do you accept credit cards'1\" '\n\"Driver, that man is annoying I\nme 'No. he didn't say anything |\nto me, but . . ,\n\"Can you open the window ;\nback heje0 Junior is getting car I\nsick\n\"I forgot my wallet. Can you j\ntrust  me  until  tomorrow?1\"\n\"You missed that last bump. [\nWhy don'i you gn hack and try j\nagain \"\nHey, dm or wake up' The I\nlight   turned  green:\" '        >\nAssociation. Tlie talks would be\nheld next month within the\nframework of the 18 member organization for 'European Economic Co - operation with the\nUnited States and Canada included,\nttu-.   augurs\nthan   anytli.iig\nalor.g   so   far,\"\nmore   hopefully\nthat    has    come\ntlie   spokesman\n.said.\nDEEPLY   CONCERNED\nCanada has been deeply concerned that trade rivalry between\nthe two huge trading groups\nmight lead to discriminatory tariff and trade  practices.\nThe long-term goal oi the common market is Lo eliminate all\nbarriers to trade among themselves while creating a common\ntariff against goods from all outside countries.\nCanadian concern has been lessened by the Common Market decision to postpone\u2014to next Jan. 1\nfrom July 1\u2014an accelerated 20-\nper-cent cut in tariffs among the\nCommon Market six-. The original plan was for a U)-per-cent\nreduction.\nFinance Minister Fleming said\nrecently that his postponement is\nin line with'Canadian views. II\nwould mean that the next round\nof general tariff negotiations\nwithin the General Agreement on\nTrade and Tariffs, to take place\nnext September, would allow a\ndiscussion of the Common Market\nmove before it takes place.\nTlie Canadian government has\nbeen trying to persuade the Common Market countries to couple\ntheir internal tariff cuts with reductions on tariffs against other\ncountries.\nCanada has a vital stake in\nEuropean trade, wi'h exports to\nEurope averaging about $1,250.-\n0M.(100 a year. Some two-thirds of\nthis goes to the seven European\nFree Trade Association countri -s\n\u2014most of this to Britain. Other\nEFTA members are Norway.\nSweden, Denmark, Austria, Portugal ard Switzerland.\nThe Common Market members\nare France. West Germany, Italy,\nBelgium, The Netherlands and\nLuxembourg.\nof world communism's approach\nto next week's summit meeting\nin Paris.\nDisarmament and tlie dynamite-\nladen Berlin \u25a0 German questions\nwill dominate \"he summit talks of\nPresident Eisenhower, Premier\nKhrushchev, President de Gaulle\nand Prime Minister Macmillan.\nBut Communist preparation was\nconcentrated elsewhere, on the\nreal core of the East-West global\nconflict: The intense struggle over\nthe future of under - developed\ncountries in Asia, Africa and\nLalin America.\nTREASURE TROVE\nAuthoritative Communist pro-\nnouncemer.ts in connection with\nthe recent celebration of Lenin's\n\"Outer Seven\"\nPrairie  News\nSASKATOON iCTi - Edward\nGagnon was sentenced Tuesday\nto five years in Prince Albert\nPenitentiary after a Queen';-\nbench jury found him guilty of\npossessing narcotics for purposes\nof  trafficking.\nEMERGENCY   TELEPHONE\nEDMONTON (CP)-The city of\nEdmonton expects to have 94\nemergency telephonex hoses tn\noperation within a month Sixty-\neight of them will be in tlie\ndowntown area. Some of the telephones were opened for calls\nTuesday.\nTV  FOR NORTH\nEDMONTON 'CPi-The CBC's\n1961-62 budget will include funds\nfor providing television service to\nthe northern Manitoba communities of Flin Flon and The Pas,\ncorporation pesid**nt J. Alphonse\nOuimet said  Tuesday.\nLONDON (OP) - Commonwealth leaders meeting here are\nreported to be worried over the\ndevelopment of the European\nCommon Market and the rival\n\"Outer Seven\" trade bloc.\nCountries such as Ghana fear\ntheir European market for cocoa\nwill be seriously jeopardized as\nthe common market achieves maturity.\nCanada is worried about her\nagricultural and other markets\nfor primary products. All Commonwealth governments hope\nthere will be some modification\nof the common market's policy so\nthat existing trade patterns will\nnot   e disrupted.\nThe Canadian view advanced to\nother conference delegates is lhat\nthe relations or common market\ncountries \u2014 France, Germany,\nItaly, Belgium, Ths Netherlands\nand Luxembourg\u2014should be generalized as much as possible\nCanada feels the six should\ntake no precipitate moves until\nall free world trading nations\nhave a chance to discuss them at\nthis year's meeting of adherents\nto the General Agreement on\nTrade and Tariffs.\nThis is a conference suggesicd\nby the United States in a bid to\nachieve generally lower tariffs\nthroughout  the world.\nThe \"Outer Seven\" countries of\nthe European Free Trade Association are Britain. Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Portugal, Austria\nand Switzerland.\n90th anniversary provide a treasure trove of Soviet aims and intentions:\n1. Since the war, capitalism has\nachieved further development 'because of huge spending for arms.\nA relaxed atmosphere will bring\ndemands for relief from the tax\nburden for arms.\n2. Whatever happens at the\nsummit, efforts will be made to\nretain a relaxed mood for a while,\nin expectation of Western economic dislocations. The capitalist\nworld will fall into quarrels and\ncontradictions and a world crisis\nwill follow.\n3. While preparing for this,\nCommunists will trust Moscow's\n\"political wisdom,\" conduct themselves as \"proletarian internationalists\" and believe whatever\nis good for Mcsccw is good for\nworld   communism.\n4. Communist leaders are\nchiefly concerned with \"the ceaseless process of liberating more\nand more peoples\" from imperialism. Events in Asia signalled the\ninevitable collapse of Western\ncapitalism. The battle now shifts\nj to the Middle East. Africa, and,\ni as one Communist leader wrote,\nI \"to another continent if the peo-\nI pie of Cuba have shown all Latin\nI America an example of how a\nI people can liberate itself from the\nj yoke of American imperialist in-\n! Lerests.\"\ni MARK TIME\n5. Communists, supported by So-\nI viet economic and military power.\nwill exploit such developments\nwhile marking time in Europe.\nMoscow warns Communists that\n\"peaceful coexistence\" does not\nmean an end of political war for\nCommunist world supremacy. It\ndoes not even mean cessation of\narmed conflict. Red pronouncements are laying heavy stress-on\nlhe.se words oi Lenin:\n\"Peaceful proposals of socialist\n'Communist i states, broad propaganda for the idea of coexistence\nof two systems, in no way signify\nrenunciation by Communists of\nIhcir ideological principles as they\nenter into any sort of arrangement wi'h the bourgeoisie fcapi-\n1 talism1.\"\n1 So, it appears that to Moscow\n| the summit meeting is just an\n; incident en the path to world\n! Communist domination.\nj WINNIPEG 'CP>-An elderly\n'man died and six persons were\ni injured Tuesday in a downtown\nj rooming house fire. The dead\n. man was identified as Joseph\n1 Maiheson, 63.\nOFTEN IMITATED, BUT NEVER EQUALLED!\nLamb's\nHAVYaHM\n25 oz bottles and\n12 oz ftaiks\nHearty In body,\nyet light in flavour\nand aroma.\nalso\nLamb's\nJalmjF)lee%e\nRUM\nVERY LIGHT\nPhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Lit\nuor Control Board or by the Government of Bntisrv Columbia\n DUTCH RULER \u2014 Portrait of Queen Juliana\nof The Netherlands uas made hy court photographer\nWax Coot. Monarch marked 51st birthday on April 30.\nPresent Brief To Starr Asking\nJobless Insurance Extension\nOTTAWA (CP)-A demand for\nindefinite extension of seasonal\nunemployment insurance benefits, with industry and government paying tlie shot, was put before Labor Minister Starr Tuesday by a delegation representing\nthe \"Union for Unemployed\nWorkers\"  at Peterborough, Ont.\nA brief presented by delegation\nleader Ray Peters said the seasonal insurance payments should\nnot be cut off May 31 and should\nbe paid as long as unemployment\nlasts.\nlt also called for federal measures to \"provine Jobs Tor many\nhundreds of thousands now unemployed,\" and in particular\nurged an immediate public works\nprogram.\n40 PICKETS\nThe requests were backed up\nby 40 picket-carrying men who\nmotored   from   Peterborough  and\nby a petition signed by 4,500 persons.\nMr. Starr, meeting the delegation in a Commons committee\nroom, told them the government\nhas extended the period of seasonal insurance benefits.\nHe said the government is trying to encourage establishment of\nnew secondary industries to meet\nthe problem. But he said the\nbuilding of unneeded public buildings as a make-work program is\nnot the solution.\nHIGH FIGURE\nMr. Peters, chairman of the\nStewards' Council of Local 524,\nUnited Electrical Workers UndJ\nread the brief which said unemployment in Peterborough last\nmonth totalled more than 4.500.\nThe total had been increasing by\nabout 300 a year since 1950.\n\"For the size of our area this\nis a drastically high figure. This\nunemployment is equivalent to\nthe loss of 10 medium-sized industrial plants in a period of 10\nyears.'\nBefore the delegation met with\nMr. jtari, it paraded in front of\nthe Parliament Buildings with\nplacards reading \"We Want\nwork Now,\" \"Diefenbaker Promised ???\" and \"Repeat the Hungry Thirties\u2014Yes or No?\"\nUN  UKGES CRACKDOWN\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y.  (AP)\nAustralia   was   prodded  Tuesday\nto intensify its efforts to eliminate\nhead-hunting and cannibalism in\nNew Guinea. The question was\nraised in the United Nations\nTrusteeship Council by Rafik\nA s h a, representative of the\nUnited Arab Republic. Australia\nadministers the trust territory\nfor the UN.\njm 7\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\u201411 y\nTUNE    IN    TOKYO \u2014 The music-makine of Arthur Godfrey and Jack Benny\ncL-ie&u't seem to appeal to a hotel maid. They were in Japanese capital to tape a radio show.\n[ CNR Seeks New Look\nTo Draw Passengers\nBy  ROBERT   RICE\nCanadian Press Staff  Writer\nMONTREAL (CP'-The CNR\nis moving ahead steadily on a\nhush-hush project to create a new\npublic face for itself,\nLaunched last summer, a general program for brightening and\ndramatizing the corporate image\nof the publicly owned Canadian\nNational Railways now is under serious consideration in the\nhigher echelon of CNR management.\nWhen and if it is approved, the\nnew face is expected to be unveiled with all the fervor and\nfinesse of a Parisian fashion preview.\nThe aim is to get a bold new\npublic face for the CNR.\nDESIGN   RESEARCH\nThe design ol almost everything the pulic sees in the railway is being reconsidered from\nthe point of view of appeal, impact,   idea   association  and  flair.\nAt the heart of the program is\na new symbol for the CNR\u2014instead of its time-honored black\nsquare with yellow letters on a\nred maple leaf. A top Canadian\ndesigner \u2014 Allan Fleming of Toronto\u2014was chosen from 20 of Canada's leading graphics experts to\ndevelop a  new  trademark.\nIt had to be bright, tasteful,\nlegible, easily remembered and\ntimeless.\nCNR officials have produced\nthe general nut line of what tho\nrailway's new face might look\nlike.\nNEW  UNIFORMS\nThey're k e e p i n g it under\nwraps Rul it could mean the end\nof Ihe drab, washed out look of\ntraditional box car red 11 could\nmean hues wilh a distinctive dash\nand flavor instead of the green-\nand-yellow colors of CNH passenger trains. Time-worn blue-\nand-brass railway uniforms may\nbe redesigned for maximum appeal and comfort.\nThe end result is exerted to\nbe a more colorful public image\nfor the CNR\u2014an image that will\nkeep the railway and its services\nin the public eye and at the\nsame time put a new spirit into\nemployee morale.\nThe privately owned ('PR, eyeing the work of its rival, has\nquietely been doing some redesigning   of   it.s   own\u2014streamlining\nits  beaver symbol and simplify-\nI :ng the lettering on its crest.\n\\    At  the   same   time,   U.S.   rail-\nI ways   have  shown   keen   interest\nin   the   CNR's   \"beauty   parlor\"\ntreatment.  Some have asked for\ninformation on the design studies.\nDIRT  SAMPLES\nWhen the program was\nlaunched, the CNR went into it\nscientifically.\nResearch technicians collected\ndirt from boxcars in various\nparts of Canada. They wanted to\nlind out just what soil and scum\nthe paint and colors had to show\nthrough to be seen. Later, other\ntechnicians will mix colors and\npigments to see which are easily\napplied, are economical, look the\nbest and last the longest under\ndifferent conditions oT weather\nand use.\nThe whole idea of the research\nwork was to find colors and designs that looked good, wore well\nand had a distinctive sparkle.\nThe same theme had to have eye\nappeal and drama on everything\nfrom a mammoth diesel locomo\nlive down to an engraving on the\nhandle of a spoon.\nTo find out how a cross-section\nof the public reacted to the new\nideas, secret public opinion polls\nwere conducted. Special tests\nwere run off to see how easily the\nnew .symbols could be recognized,\nhow long they would be remembered, what they meant to viewers with different tastes and perceptions.\nTOP-LEVEL  CONSULTATION\nTop CNR officers now are examining full-color slide pictures\nshowing the new hues and designs for box cars, locomotives,\npassenger coaches, trucks, sta\nlions, signs, office interiors, book\nlets and matchboxes.\nThe designs are being developed with James Valkus. a young\nNew York designer, under direction o| the CNR's public relations\nohief, Charles Harris. A high-\nlevel committee from various interested railway departments us\neonsu 11ed on each phase of the\nprogram.\nIf Ihe now look is approved,\nCNR officials plan to work closely with Canadian artists and de\nsigners on specific facts of the\nproject. Since it is a long-term\nscheme, it will likely be man;,\nmonths before the full impact of\nIhe new face will appear in\npublic.\nShortage of Canadian Stocks\nDrives Investors To America\nTORONTO 'CP-Shortage of\nsuitable Canadian stocks is sending some Canadian investment\nmoney to the United States, Lloyd\nN. Whilten, manager of the investment department of Ihe Montreal Trust Company, said Wednesday,\nMr. Whit ten\u2014who addressed a\nconference on pensions arranged\nby Montreal Trust\u2014referred specifically to Ihe needs of pension\nfunds and Hie supply of Canadian\nequity   'common1  stocks,\nHe said .hat following several\nmonths study his company is including pur chases from a selected list of U.S. stocks for most\nof the pension accounts under its\nadministration.\nDuring the last 10 years, Mr.\nWhillon .stated, the floating .supply of good investment - grade\nstocks available in Canada has\ndeclined considerably.\nOne reason was the 'takeover\"\nOf a large proportion of Canadian industry by foreign parents\nand other interests.\nThe floating supply o| Canadian stocks had been further reduced hy the rapid growth ol\npension fund purchases of equity\nclocks, and also by Uie mcreas\ning inteiest in equities shown j>\nmutual funds and, to a lesser\ndegree, by insurance companies.\n\"For the most part, purchases\nof common slocks by such insti\ntutional investors are on an ac\ncumulating basis and as then-\ngrowth continues the problem will\nbe aggravated. . . .\"\n\"There can be only one result\n\u2014high prices, higher price-earnings ratios and pun liases based\nupon less sound price considerations \"\nLESS   INFORMATION\nAnother drawback to Canadian\nequities, Mr. Whitten said, is lack\nof complete and up-to-date statistics and information on the various companies whose securities\nare under daily consideration.\n\"Publication of information on\nU.S. securities is conducted on i\nmuch wider and more detailed\nscale Very few Canadian companies publish sales figures or\ninterim reports, while virtually\nall I'S corporations do so as a\nmatter  of course.\n\"The security analy-t is we|\ncome in most I' S corporation\nand giv^n the open door (real\nment In  i' maila  the situa\nUon leaver much lo be desired.'\nOVERWAITEA\nTHE FIRST 100%\nB. C. Employee Owned\nand Operated Food Company\nSpecials for Thursday,   Friday, Saturday-May 12th, 13th, 14th\nFresh Pork\nPICNICS\nlb.\n23\nFresh, Meaty, Pork\ni-resh, Meaty, Pork 4T^       \/W%\\\/^%\\\nSPARE RIBSXTO\nPOTATOES\nNetted\nGems\n10 bs 39\nCARROTS\nCrisp,  New,\nCalifornia   __\n1 lb. pkg. 9'\nLETTUCE\nSolid,  Large\nSalady  Heads\n19\nDON'T JUST CHECK OVERWAITEA'S ADVERTISED PRICES.. CHECK ALL\nOUR PRICES AND THEN YOU WILL BE CONVINCED HOW MUCH YOU\nCAN SAVE AT OVERWAITEA ON ALL YOUR FOODS.\nBANANA\nGolden Ripe,\nNo. 1  Fruit .\nL Zu\nc\n4-Roll Pack Westminster\nTISSUE\nShreaded Wheat 2-.29c\nCampbell's 10 oz. M\nTomato $oup*j\nTins\nc\nICE\nCREAM\nWsudlanxL\nVanilla, Chocolate, Strawberry  and  Maple\nHalf\nGallon\nFor .  .\nOVERWAITEA DOES SAVE YOU MORE\n sw\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\nEarly Season Jitters\nCause High Scores\nEarly season jitters accounted\nfor high scores in the Little and\nBabe Ruth League baseball games\nin Nelson, a number of league\ncoaches have agreed.\nOne coach remarked following a\ngame between Gyros and Kinsmen\nWednesday night that left the\nscoreboard reading 18-16 in favor\nof the Gyros club, \"It's a first\ntime for most of these kids and\nthey're pretty shaky yet.\"\nIn a Babe Ruth game between\nWhiteleys and Algar Dunlops Tuesday night, final score read 20-10 in\nfavor of Whiteleys.\nRoss McKay, Chris Petty and Al\nPalmer were the big guns in the\nWednesday night Little League\ngame, blasting out a homer each\nfor the winners.\nEric Beauchamp, Greg Ozeroff\nand John Smiley came through\nwith extra-base hits.\nKinsmen point-getters were Larry Black, Terry McGovern and\nRichard .Joyce with grand slams,\nbacked up by Mike Ilufty, Doug\nHeslip and Donnie Johnson with\nextra-base  hits.  Chris   Petty  was\nthe winning pitcher with Eric\nBeauchamp relieving in the last\ninning. Richard Joyce went the distance for the Kin.\nGordon Dewar went the route to\ngive Whiteleys their wide margin\nTuesday. George Steed, Algar\nstarter, was relieved by Don Mac-\nKenile. Art Birch led the Dunlop\ncause with a double and a single\nwhile Pat Thast and- Tim Allen\nsmashed doubles.\nDewar helped his own cause with\nthree singles while his brother Ken\ncontributed two singles and Gordie\nSchmidt hit a double.\nWhiteleys scored the major portion of their big win in the fifth,\nsixth and seventh innings, pushing\n17 men across.\nWins Tourney\nTOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Bill Go-\nlembiewski of Detroit defeated\nveteran Steve Nagy of St. Louis,\n874 to 755, in four games here\nWednesday night to win tire American Bowling Congress Masters\nchampionship.\nSAD SAM\nWINS 4TH\nfly The Associated Press\nSam Jonas put away his fourth low-hit game of tha\nseaaon for San FranclBCO Giants Wednesday, allowing only\nj two hits and itrlking out 11 for a 1-0 victory over Phila-\n' delphia Phillies.\nThe run scored when Sad Sam walked with the bases\nloaded in the second lnninq, giving the National League-\nleading  Giants  their  fifth\t\nstraight success. I seven and walked only one while\nMilwaukee  Braves  walloped \\ extending S e n a t o r s' scoreless\nNEW\nfrom\nPAEKiTILFOW)\n8 year old\nwhi^B^ith\n15 im$ old\nPark & Tilford \"Royal Command\" is a MASTER\nBLEND whisky ... a blend of perfectly aged\nwhiskies matured in oak casks ... 8 year old\nwhiskies which have been \"age perfected\" by the\naddition of costly 15 year old whiskies. Park &\nTilford is the only distiller lo offer added quality\nhy adding older whiskies to everv brand. Ask\nfor   those   MASTER   BLEND   whiskies   .   .   .\nROYAL COMMAND-8 year old, with 1 5 year old added\nTHREE FEAtHERS-4 year old, with 8 year old added\nalso available\nPARK 4 TILFORD LONDON DRY GIN\n'!*?\n\"A British Columbia Industry\"\nCANADIAN PARK & TILFORD LTD.\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. v\nOPENING SEASON PITCHING proved to be a bit\nrusty and therefore accounted for high scoring in the\nLittle and Babe Ruth League baseball games so far this\nseason. Above, Gyros beat Kinsmen 18-16 in Little League\naction at Queen Elizabeth Park Wednesday night. Small\nfry baseball will be played every night of the week at\nQueen Elizabeth Park and Civic grounds. Little League\nball is played Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday afternoons while Babe Ruth Tuesday, Thursday and\nSaturday.\nSpokane Comets, Are\nThey Coming Back?\nSmokies Only WIHL Club\nDefinitely Returning\nBy VERN SIMALUK, Statt Reporter\nSpokane Comets, under the leadership ol Roy McBride,\nmay be seeking a berth in the Western International Hockey\nLeague at its annual meeting this weekend in Trail,  the\nNelson Daily News learned Wednesday.\nA Canadian Press dispatch from Calgary, site of the\nprofessional Western Hockey League annual meeting starting today, strongly hinted that McBride's Comets are seriously thinking of leaving the\npros.\nThe dispatch read, \"About the\nonly sure thing likely to occur today (Thursday) is the official departure of Spokane Comets from\nthe WHL and the entry of a Portland franchise. Spokane is said to\nbe seriously considering a return\nto senior amateur hockey, which\nat one time flourished in the city.\nFan interest has dropped since\nSpokane entered professional\nranks.\"\nMcBride could not be reached\n[or conclusive comments on the\nsituation before the Daily News\nwent to press.\nSpokane lofl Ihe WIHL and the\nBritish Columbia Amateur Hockey\nAssociation wilh a bad taste in\nI heir mouths two springs ago when\nil suddenly announced at Ihe Willi.\nFirsf-Place\nSoccer Lead\nClinched\nVANCOUVER 'CP> - Columbus\nwon its fifth straight Pacific Coast\nSoccer League game Wednesday\nnight here before 800 fans, defeating fourth-place Vancouver City\n1-0. j\nThe win extended Columbus' j\nfirst-place lead to four points over;\nWestminster Royals. '\nBoth teams have two games to |\nplay, leaving the Royals with the\ntask of winning two straight while;\nColumbus would have to lose twice j\nfor Westminster to tie for first'\nplace.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiinm\nFISTIC AFICIONADOS\nTAKE BOXING SERIOUSLY\na new amateur entry, we stand a\ngood chance of producing a winner,\" he concluded.\nUgo De Riasio, general manager\nof the Trail Smoke Eaters, Allan\nCup finalists this spring, reported\nthat he had heard very strong talk\nahout Spokane's leaving the WHL\nwhen Smokies played an exhibition\ngame there last month.\nAs for a Spokane entry In the\nleague. \"Love to have Spokane,\"\nsaid De Baisio. \"Trail would be\nhappy to have a good club from\nSpokane under anyone who is reliable.\"\nCqc Hughes, spokesman for the\nNelson Maple Leafs, said, \"1 do\nnot think McBride will be back.\nHe has cut us cold actually from\nthe day he left, and we have been\ndealing with the new setup which\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia\nannual meeting that it would turn probably will get in.\nHe also pointed out that politics\nmay also be involved in McBride's\ndecision.   He indicated  that there\npro.\nSince that time the crowds of\nthe heyday of amateur hockey,\naveraging between 4000-4500, have\nfallen off until this season it was\nreported by one Spokane paper\nlhat Comets had been an artistic\nfailure as well as a financial one.\nThough Cornels' gates have been\ndown in comparison to the amateur\ndays, their average is still on par\nwilh many other centres in the\nWHL.\nIn Ihe last two seasons Comets\nhave finished bnlh times in the\nWHL cellar.\nAn informed source contacted in\nSpokane disclosed there had been\nstrong talk circulating about Spokane's leaving the play-for-pay\nboys, but nothing definite has been\nmentioned by McBride. \"The\nwriter 'referring to the news release' is a little presumptuous,\"\nsaid the source.\nHe also brought out that if Spokane did leave the pros It would\nbe because of not being able to\nohtain enough players of WHL\nstandard, not for financial reasons,\nA decision, informed circles believe, on the professional future of\nSpokane is not expected to be\nmade until probably the last minute of the WHL meeting.\nSuch a decision will have a dynamic effect on the proceedings\nof the WIHL meeting Saturday, but\nit is expected any McBride proposal will be met with reserve if\nnot resentment.\n\"Not a bit, not a word,\" was\nthe reaction of WIHL president Don\nAdams of Rossland when informed\nof the latest news release.\n\"The only forecast prior to the\nmeeting 'WHLi was whether Winnipeg would stay in. There had\nbeen no mention of Spokane's dropping out,\" iie said.\nComets have applied for playing\ndates in the Coliseum,\" he said,\nadding that senior interests have\ndone so too.\n\"In view of this, a possibility of\nare currently two factions battling\nfor majority power on the board of\ncommissioners which sets policy\nfor the Spokane Coliseum. One faction is believed to be in favor of\nthe Comets while the other is said\nto favor the return of senior hockey\nto the city.\nAnother possibility of entering\nIhe league is Kimberley. Earlier\nthis season Kimberley stated that\nthere is a strong possibility they\nwould return, if the league schedule were to be shortened and Spokane were to return.\nAnother team which will be advocating a return to a shorter\nschedule will be Ihe Nelson Maple\nLeafs.\nA large question mark hovers\nover the head of the Rossland\nfranchise whose Warriors lost in\ncrowd appeal rapidly last season.\nTrail is the only definite entry.\nFrom all reports the Smokies will\nbe strengthening themselves with\npossible recruits from the faltering Okanagan senior hockey league\nin an effort to nail down the Allan\nCup next spring.\nVANCOUVER, B.C. - They\ntake boxing seriously in Mexico. So seriously, that 32 fistic\naficionados will fly over 7,000\nmiles from Mexico City to\nwatch hometown boys. Jose\nBecerra, defend his world welterweight tille in Tokyo, May\n20.\nVancouver wil! get a brief\nglimpse of these airborne devotees of the manly art on\nMay 15, when they arrive here\naboard a Canadian Pacific airliner from Mexico. Following\na short stop - over between\nplanes, they will leave for\nTokyo, lo he in good time for\nthe debate between Becerra\nand Kenyi Yonokura, of Japan.\nVeteran Vancouved Travel\nAgent,   Don   T.   Renshaw,   of\nCavalier Tours, who set up ar\nrangements for the group said,\n\"I've planned many a tour in\nmy day, but this is one of the\nwackiest.\n\"Some time ago, I received\nan urgent request from a fellow travel agent in Mexico\nCity,' 'explained Renshaw. \"He\nwanted me to arrange a travel\nprogram which would feature\nthe world - championship boxing match \u2014 in fact, the fight\nwas the primary reason for the\ntour.\n\"Everything has been laid\non the carpet for these people.\"\nadded Renshaw. \"including, of\ncourse, the best seats in the\nhouse for the match.\n\"Following the fight, the\ngroup will tour Tokyo, Kyolo,\nHonkong, Manila. Honolulu and\nSan Francisco, beofre returning\nto Mexico City.\"\nlllllltlllltMIIIIIIIIIIlllHllllllllltlllllllinilllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllMlllllli\nfour solo home runs, two by Ed\nMathews, for a 12-8 decision over\nSt, Louis Cardinals and a chance\nto replace Pittsburgh Pirates in\nsecond place. But the Pirates led\nthe Dodgers 4-3 In the eighth inning at Los Arigeles.\nCincinnati   Redlegs'    game   at l\nChicago   was  called  off  because I\nof cold weather\u2014the Cubs'  sixth\nstraight   postponement.\nTIGERS  WIN ANOTHER\nBad   weather    also   idled   the :\nAmerican   League's   first-division j\nclubs\u2014Chicago,   New   York,   Hos- i\nton and Cleveland. Detroit Tigers,\nafter losing 10 in a row. won their\nsecond   straight   1-0   decision\nagainst the Senators at Washington, this one on Al Kaline's two-\nout home run in the llth inning.\nBaltimore   Orioles  defeated  Kansas   City   Athletics   5-3   in   10   innings on Jackie Brandt's two-run\nhomer,\nPhiladelphia's only hits off\nJones were a loop double by\nHarry Anderson in the fifth inning and a sixth-inning single by\nTony Curry. Jones < 4-2 > got his\nother victories with a one-hitter\nand a pair of three-hitters, but\nthis was his first shutout. He\nwalked three,\nJim Owens '2-3' was the loser.\nThe Giants  had five hits,\nMathews's second home run,\nhis fifth of the year, gave the\nBraves a clinching, 9-2 lead in\nthe sixth inning after they had\nrouted loser Lindy McDaniel in a\nsix-run fifth. Mathews lined a\nbases-loaded single in the fifth,\ngiving him five RBI. Del Cran-\ndall and Wes Covington also homered for the Braves against McDaniel, the right-handed relief\nace who was taking his first fling\nas a starter since last May.\nSPAHN   WINS\nWarren Spalin '2-0' was the\nwinner hut needed relief help\nfrom Don M cMahon a nd Lew\nBurdette.\nKaline's homer, his first hit in\n15 at hats, broke up a duel between Frank Lary '2-2' and Pete\nRamos '0-4'. Each righthander\nallowed five hits. Lary struck out\nHive Shortstop\nSidelined\nSPOKANE - Willie Malendez,1\nwho had taken over the shortstop!\nrole for the Utah Hive, was side-'\nlined after being cut on the foot\nduring the Spokane stopover as\nMike Brumley slid into second j\nbase. Sam Miley, who has played1\nmost of his baseball in the ou!field,\nhas been filling in at shortstop for!\nthe  Bees.\nslump through 20 innings.\nIt was the sixth straight loss\nfor Ramos since last September,\nthe third by one run this season,\nBrandt, whose first AL home\nrun followed a single by Walt\nDropo, also got Ihe first of three\nconsecutive singles by the Orioles\nwhen they scored two in the ninth\nfor a tying rally capped y Clint\nCourtney's pinch single. Milt Pap-\npas '2-2' won it and Marty Ku-\ntyr.a   >I-P   los!  it, both in relief.\nlast Rites\nGiven\n\"Mr. Hockey\"\nMIDLAND, Ont. fCP) - George\nDudley was buried Wednesday in\nthe town where he devoted most\nof his life to hockey, the church\nand the affairs of the community.\nDudlev, 70, secretary - manager\nof the Canadian Amateur Hockey\nAssociation and president of the\nInternational Ice Hockey Federa-\n(ion. died Sunday following a\nstroke.\nA crowd of ,500, including representatives of hockey organiza-\nlions. crowded SI. Paid's United\nChurch to hear final honors paid\nto the man who for more than 50\nvears was active in Canadian\nhockey.\nRepresentatives of hockey al the\nfuneral included Clarence Camp-\nboll, president of the National\nHockey League; Franke Selke,\nn-resident of the Montreal Cana-\ndiens; Jack Roxburg, vice-president of CAHA: Tom Lockhard.\nnresident of the American Hockey\nLeague; Cordon ,hikes, president\nof the CAHA: and Foster Hewitt,\nhockey groadcaster,\nIRELAND   BEATS  GERMANY\nDUESSELDORF 'APt-Ireland's\nnalional soccer team defeated West\nGermany national team 10 Wednesday night before an estimated\n50.000 fans. The Irish scored in Ihe\nfirst  half.\nELECTRIC   MOTOR\nREWINDING\nService and Repairs\nWe   Rewind  All  Size  Motors\nand Armatures\nSee   Is   Ahout   Alt   Types   of\nINDUSTRIAL CONTROLS\nColeman Electric\nLTD.\nPhone 20..5  .       Nelson. B.C.\nBaseba\nII Stan\ndin\ngs\nBy The Canadian Presg\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW  L\nPet.\nGBL\nChicago\n12   7\n.632\nNew  York\nin 7\n...KB\n1\nBoston\n9   7\n.563\n1 ' 2\nCleveland\nin  n\n.556\n14\nBaltimore   .\n11  10\n.524\n2\nDetroit\n7 10\n.412\n4\nWashington   .\n8 12\n.400\n44\nKansas City\n7 13\n351)\n54\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nSan Francisco\n16   7\n696\nPittsburgh\nIS   9\n625\n14\nMilwaukee\n10   7\n58B\n3\nCincinnati\n11 It\n.500\n44\nLos Angeles\n11 1.\n.410\n6\nSt. Louis\n9 12\n.429\n6\nPhiladelphia\n9 15\n375\n74\nChicago\n6 12\n.333\n74\n*\u00a3k?fr'OPS IN PERFORMANCE!\nEvery Way You Look At It-Electric Water Heating\nGives You More ... Costs You Less\nWith a modern Electric Water Heater of adequate size you can be assured of plenty\nof hot water for all your household needs\u2014when you need lt\u2014and best of all, for an average\nfamily you can heat water for less than 9c a day.\nAND DON'T FORGET\u2014when you use an Electric Water Heater\nyou get the advantage of our low rate which enables you to\noperate other Electrical Appliances at half the cost.\nWEST KOOTENAY POWER\n Make Soccer Big\nTime is the Plan\nhXl'l\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 An ambitious project to make\nsoccer a big-time sport in the United States will get under\nway here May 25.\nThat's when the International Soccer League, composed of 10 European teams, one from Brazil and one foreign-\nstudded New York squad, will start operation at the Polo\nGrounds. There will be 30 games in all \u2014 20 at the Polo\nGrounds and 10 at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City \u2014\nthrough early August.\nAlthough soccer is a major\nsport throughout the world, it\nnever has caught on in the U.S.\nAmerican interest in the sport,\nhowever, has been on Uie rise in\nthe high school and college level.\nREADY FOR JUMP\nPromoter William D. Cox believes tihe time is ripe to make\nthe jump to Uie professional level\non a grand scale.\nCox once was president of the\nPhiladelphia Phillies baseball\nteam and executive of Brooklyn\nDodgers of the defunct All-\nAmerica Football Conference.\n\"The foundation of our support\nIs made up of the large foreign\ngroups in this region to whom\nsoccer is the No. 1 sport,\" said\nCox.\n\"After I saw crowds of 16,000\nand more three weeks running at\nEbbets Field for a grade of soccer much below what we will offer, felt convinced the sport has\na future.\"\nThere are many, including Cox,\nwho believe some of the jjames\nmay draw 50,000 to the Polo\nGrounds, especially if the New\nYork learn is strong enough to\noffer solid opposition.\nAlbert Stubins, a former\nLiverpool star and a widely\nknown English coach, is optimistic that he can get together a\ngood New York squad. He expects to have six or seven English players to olsler American\ntalent.\nThere will he two sections in\nthe league and three-games-a-\nweok schedule. The two division\nchampions will meet in a title\nplayoff Aug. fi.\nThe  New   York  team   will   play\nin the division which also includes\nBayern Muenchen of Germany,\nBurnley of En-gland, Nice of\nFrance, Glenavon of Ireland and\nKilmarnock of Scotland. The\nother division includes Bangu of\nBrazil, Red Star of Yugoslavia,\nSporting Club of Portugal, Noor-\nkoping of Sweden, Sampdoria of\nItaly and Rapid of Austria.\nCox is convinced his gamble on\nsoccer will pay off. He foresees\nyear-round competition, spreading to other U.S. ciUes if the\nleague makes good. Some of Uie\ngames will be televised.\nThe opening game matches\nBayern Muenchen and Kilmarnock at Uie Polo Grounds in a\nnight game May 25.\nLOWEST PRICE EVER\ngood\/year\n<&>\nNYLON\nAll-Weather\n6.70 x IS lubo-lypo\nREDUCED\nFROM $16.95\nGlittering\nDebut Made\nWKST JORDAN, Utah (API-\nManager Marv .Jenson says 21-\nyear-old Don Fullmer may have\ntroule knocking out veteran Stefan Hedl of Germany, but Fullmer is going tn try for a KO\nanyway in their 10-round televised middleweight bout here\ntonight.\nBut then Redl says he'll try for\na knockout, too.\n\"Redl is pretty hard to knock\nout,\" Jenson said. \"He gets underneath the punches and is very\naggressive.\"\nRedl says he hasn't seen Fullmer gight, but figures his knockout record is better than that of\nthe American, the youngster\nof the \"fighting Fullmer\" family\nwhich includes NBA middleweight\nchamp Gene and lightweight Jay.\nRedl, the 27-year-old German,\nhas a 26-5-1 record with 14 knockouts. Fullmer's record is 20-3\nwilh eight knockouts. Early this\nyear he won a decision over former welterweight champ Virgil\nAkins.\nIf Don wins tonight's battle.\nJenson says he will continue to\ncampaign in the middleweight\ndivision, possibly with an eye on\nreplacing his brother as middleweight champion.\n\\\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\u201413\n01' Dutch\" Starting\nSecond Half-Century\nStengel Recollects\nEarly Ball Career\nNOT NERVOUS, EH, INOEMAR?\u2014Ingemar Johannsen, world's\nheavyweight boxing champion, turns face-feeler and nall-\nbiter during an interview on hie arrival at Idlewild airport\nfrom Paris. He announces he plana to Immediately start\ntraining for his return bout with Floyd Patterson, the man\nfrom whom he won the title.\nAfrican Batsmen Gain\nConvincing Wins\nfly ED CORRIGAN\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Casey Stengel, 69, started his\nsecond half-century ln baseball Wednesday with his usual\nsly wink and a long look back to Kankakee, 111.\nIt was on May 10, 1910, thai Stengel, 19, took his\nspot in centrefield for Kankakee in the old Northern Association.\n\"They called me 'Dutch' in them days,\" rasped the mu\nNew York Yankees manager. \"I dunno why, but they did. ... so ago when Minnie Minoso  .the\npresent   Chicago   White   Sox   out-\nMain Trouble Is\n\"Vocal Calls\"\nSPOKANE - Manager Ernie\nWhite o( the Sacramento Solons\nIs reported as having some language difficulties wilh Manuel Jiminez, his right (ielder, the latter\nspeaking very little English. On\npop flies into short right fiold and\nlonger fly balls to right center\nthere is some confusion, as Jiminez doesn't understand English\nvocal calls. It's a reminder of the\nodd incident in Seattle a decade or\n\"The league only lasted until\nJuly 4 and no records were\nkept. I never did find out what\nI wa.s hitting. After the last\ngame, the owners split up all\nthe dough they pulled in and\nbeat it.\n\"I didn't know it during the\nEx-Baron\nJoins WCBL\nLETHBRIDGE (CP) - Earl\nIngarfield, who played with\nCleveland Barons of the American\nHockey League last season, has\nbeen signed by Lethbridge White\nSox of the Western Canada Base\nball League.\nHis position was not announced\nWhite Sox also have signed sec\nond base veteran Gord Wesley\nBoth are  from Lethbridge.\nGOODYEAR GUARANTEED OF COURSE!\nWe have brand new Goodyear\ntires as low at 10.88\nAndy's Tire Shop\nPhone  1930,\n323  Vernon   St.\nNelson,   B.C.\nm\nStamps Sign\nJohn Blythe\nCALGARY ICP) - Calgary\nStampedors \u25a0announced the signing\nof John Blyth, offensive guard and\ntackle and defensive linebacker\nwilh Marquette University. The\nsix-foot two-inch 230-pound student\ngraduates from Marquette in June\nand will report to the Slampeder\ncamp in July.\nVANCOUVER (CPi- Country\nClub's Gilman, owned hy Irene\nCanning, captured both the Junior and Open All-Ages qualifying\nevents at Ihe Richmond Lions\nSpring Larador field trials here\nTuesday. Craig End Rock, owned\nby Jack Spring, won the Opon\nAl! Stage event. Hal Straight's\nCanadian champion Riiett of Cold-\nwater   was   third   in   this   event.\nOXFORD, England\nThe South African cricketers,\nwho gained convincing wins in\ntheir first two matches, made\nOxford University si niggle for\nruns on a day cut short by ain\nWednesday,\nAt the close of the first day's\nplay, the university had scored\n77 runs and losl four wickets\nafter 2li>  hours'  hatting.\nOther close-of-play scores:\nSussex 2514 <D. Smith 88, J.\nParks 131'; Glamorgan 64 for 1.\nYorkshire 371 for 3 declared\n(W. Stott 82, P. Sharpe 203 not\nout); Cambridge University 17\nfor  1.\nHampshire 240 'P. Sainsbury 98\nnot out; O. WheaUey six lor 91);\nWarwickshire   11   for  no wicket.\nEssex 303 for il Ki. Smith 74,\nJ.  Milncr  41 >;   vs  Kent.\nGloucestershire lfiS il). Allen\n45 not out; R, Tattersall six for\n351;  Lancashire VI for no wicket.\nSomerset 298  <G.  Atkinson 72;\n(Reuters) J. Lomax 51 not out>;  vs Northamptonshire.\nSurrey 341 for 7 <D. Fletcher\n129, E. Bedser 58'; vs Worcestershire.\nMiddlesex 112 HI. Jackson\neight  for 44 >;  Derbyshire 107.\nCemlO0&i~fe\n(A&ifi^t\nAL Ties Record\nFor Second Time\nNEW YORK iAn-The American I. c ague lied the major\nleague record lor the second time\nthis season with three grand-slam\nhome runs Tuesday night.\nIt was the lllh time three\nbases loaded shots have been hit\nin one day in one league, but the\nfirst lime it was done twice in one\nseason.\nVic Wertz and pinch-hitler Rip\nRepulski connected for Boston\nRed Sox, lying tho major league\none-game record for one club,\nand Dick Williams slugged one\nfor Kansas (lily Athletics.\nTho lied Sox were tho second i\nclub to hit two in one game this!\nseason Baltimore's Alhie Pear- j\nson and Billy Klaus did it against I\nNew York Yankees April 24. the\nday Lou Berberet ol Detroit\nof Detroit Tigers gave the American League throe for the clay.\nand make friends with the lighter flavour and\ndelightful taste of this Canadian Rye Whisky.\nCalvert House surely belongs at your house.\nGO   LIGHT,   GO   MODERN,   GO  CALVERT.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nFighlin' Fullmer\nGels Decision\nWEST JORDAN, Utah i API -\nYoung Don F'ullmer .jabbed his way\nto a unanimous 10-round decision\nWednesday nl^ht over Stefan Redl\nof I'asiac, \\ .1 . in a dull middle\nuor-lii Innil that was televised nationally.\nN'eiia:t lighter was hurt. Fullmer. 21. of West Jordan, weighed\n155 3-5 and Redl, 27, 149.\nD..n is the youngest of the \"fighting Fullmer..'' which include NRA\nmiddleweight champion Gene and\nLightweight Jay Fullmer.\nA capacity crowd of 70(1 fans in\nIhe Wesl Jordan Athletic Club gym\nlotinrl hlllo to cheer. The action\nwas limited mostly to left jabs and\nwild hooks.\nReleree Del Markham scored the\nfight 97-94 for Fullmer. Judge Ken\nGardner gave it to Don 100-94, and\njudge Norm Jorgensen had it 99-\n92 under the 10-point must scoring\nsystem.\nThe Associated Press scored il\n99-95 for Fullmer.\nFullmer, now has a record of 21-3\nand Redl 26-6-1.\nRain Go Away\nCome Again...\nCHICAGO (APi-The Chicago\nCubs had one of their longest\nstreaks in years Wednesday\u2014five\nstraight bad weather postponements.\n\"Enough is enough,\" said\nLou Boudreau, whose debut as\nfhe club's new manager was\nmarred 9-7 last Thursday by\nthe Pittsburgh Pirates.\nBoudreau hasn't had a chance\nsince to try to start the Cubs\nclimbing out of the National\nLeague  cellar.\nRain washed out their entire\nthree - game series with Milwaukee, plus a re - scheduled\nMonday date with the Braves,\nand Tuesday's opener of a\nthree-game set with the hot\nCincinnati Reds.\n\"Wo needed a few days off\nbecause our pitching staff was\nsuffering from arm fatigue,\"\nsaid Boudreau. \"That rain\nlooked pretty good then. But\nnow\u2014it's too muoh. I'm afraid\nwe might get stale.\"\nToday's forecast was for\nclearing  by afternoon,\nThe league record for successive postponed games is\nnine, set by the Phillies in 1903,\nJUMBER TEN? - - -\ncAsey\nSTENGEL,\nWHO CELEBRATES-\nfl\/5 Sort\nANNIVERSARY\n\/NORiSA\/r'IZED\nBASE-\nBAIL\nhut   I   was play\nI never did col-\nast two weeks,\ning for nothing,\nlect that pay.\"\nStengel recalled Uie field was\nacross the street from the stale\nmental institution and the patients were his most loyal fans.\n\"I always thought one of the\nthings that I needed improvement on the most was sliding,\"\nCasey said. \"So after I grabbed\nthe last ball during fielding\npractice, I'd fire it back as hard\nas I could, throw my glove\naway and, at top speed, slide\ninto the glove.\n\"The folks across the street\nalways gave me a big hand\nwhen I'd get up. But y'know, I\ndon't think anyone else knew\nwhat I was doing. . . .\"\nIn those days Stengel wasn't\nthinking of hanging around\nbaseball for another 50 years.\n\"Matter of fact, all I had on\nmy mind was making enough\nmoney to go to dental school\n_he following winter. I still had\nmy mind set on being a left-\nhanded dentist.\"\nfielder was playing with San Diego.\nNEW    LIMON   AID\u2014A   new\ntype \"Little League\" helmet\nIs worn by Jim Lemon, of the\nWashington Senators, In a\ngame against Cleveland. The\nhelmets were ordered after\nEarl   Battey  was  beaned.\nFor Your Entertainment\nAnd Enjoyment\nERROR OF HIS WAYS-It's a\nnice attempt by Don Zimmer\nof the Cubs as he goes afield\nto grab a slow roller and\ntries to cut down a runner at\nthe plate. It was only an attempt, however, for Don\nwound up with an error on\nthe play during game with\nDodgers In Chicago.\nBy Alan Maver\n\\\/e& tY\/T\/i1\nPROFEZSOR\/AL\nAS HE TRIES\nTo F\/&UPE.\nWW M\/\u00a3\nTEAM f\u00a3LL\nto3rp a rip\nNEW YORK'S\nWORST\nWON-IOST\nRECOUP\ns\/nce \/?&\n\/F HE COMES\nUP >Y\/TR T\/JE\nRISHTAHSWBR\nHE'LL SETA\n~NElV AMERICA\/\/\nlEAGtJE MARK.\nOF 'O FLASS{\n, - -    -AND   EQUAL\n'TJJfc      TUB MAJOR\n'     e=3- CEASUE MARK\n-1- SET &y N\/S\nOLP &OSS, JOHN MC6RAW.\n\u25a0^DUIribvltd by _Mn? Fcalurt, Syndicate\t\nf-HM-*\natakfyte\nDMVE-W\nTONIGHT,  FRIDAY\nONE SHOW NIGHTLY AT 8 P M.\n\"No Time For Sergeants\"\nII Andy Grilfith, Myron McCormick\n1\nI\nI\nI\nI\nCASTLE  THEATRE\nCastlegar.  B.C\nTONIGHT.   FRIDAY.   SATURDAY\n\"THE  ENEMY  BELOW\"\n(Color - Cinemascope)\nRobert Mltchum - Kurt Jergens\nAUTO-VUE Drive-ln\nTrail, B.C.\nTonight and Friday\n\"PAJAMA GAME\"\nDoris Day, John Raltt\nSHORTS\nShow time 8:15 p.m.\nSquare Dance\n\"JAMBOREE\"\nCreston   Blossom   Festival\nMay  12,  13,  14,  15\nELK  DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTONIGHT,  FRIDAY,  SATURDAY\n\"Wetbacks\"\n(In  Color)\nLloyd  Bridges .  Nancy Gates\nPLUS\n\"Naked Africa\"\n(In  Color)\nA Quentln Reynolds Narration\nONE   SHOWING,   8:30   P.M.\n; The Scottish deeriiound is re-\ni lated lo the greyhound species.\n| but is stronger and heavier.\n 14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nB\nB\nA\nI\nL\nE\nY\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nMEREGCINS I\nTO MEED <l\n>*DDITIONAlj\u00abL\nHELP ON ^Jf\nT^\u00a3 NEW J~ f\n[JOB   f-^\nPUT AN AD  IN    I\nTHE PAPER--I'LL\nPUT VOU IWCHflPSE\nOFHlPlM-5     ,_\nTHEM\nHOW ABOUT VI1''1'1\nmujj_i_il!ii!ii|\n.SALARIES?\/   (   BE FAIR-- ')\n^\u2014ir' \u2014-\"\u2014 r~ pav them '-\nIT   \\?\nAT Thev'PE\n0\"H  ,\u2014\u25a0\nm\nmi\n$\nI'Vw          (\nxmi\n~\\m\nw%\n\\jm*\na)-_\n^%j!\n\u25a0fDUK-^\n5-12         j\n^HTP3 voucantget\nANV BODY TO WORK\nrTHAT CHEAP\nWECMTUkSITN BUT, HENRY,\nAROUND WITH U5,\\ WHAT'S THE\nAND WE DON'T \/ USE OF HAVING\nDARE LEAVE \/ SIF6.000 IF\nIT. LET'S JUST \/ TOU'RE COINS\nSTAY HOWE,\/TO LET IT BECOME\nk   ttW.   y\\ A BALI AND\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe   Dally   News   does   not   hold   Itself  responsible  In  the  event\nof  an error  Id  the  following  lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium           .07\nAdvocate ._       3.20\nAlgom Uranium         10 50\n 15'-\n        .07':\n 06\n 08\n      2.26\n       133\n 12\nAnglo Rouen\nAtlin Ruff    \t\nAumacbo   \t\nAumaque   \t\nAunor        \t\nBarnat \t\nBase Metals       \t\nBaska Uranium \t\nBibis Yukon    \t\nBoymar        \t\nBuffalo Auk\t\nCampbell C\nCampbell R. L\t\nCassiar \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nChimo \t\nCoin  Lake \t\nConiaurum        \t\nCons.  Discovery   \t\nCons Halliwell\nCons Howe\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Regcourt\nCon Sanorm \t\nCon Sub \t\nComvest        \t\nCopper Man\t\nCraig \t\nD'Aragon      \t\nDonalda \t\nEast  Amphi    \t\nEast Malartic \t\nEast Sullivan   \t\nElder Gold       \t\nFalconbridge   \t\nFaraday        \t\nGunnar  Gold  \t\nHarminerals    \t\nHollinger        \t\nHudson  Ray \t\nInspiration        \t\nInt. Nickel      \t\nIron  Bay\nJoliet   Que.' \t\nR .J .Jowsey     \t\nKenville \t\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLake Lineman   \t\nLakeshore \t\nLake Osu\nLeitch \t\nLittle Long Lac\nLorado \t\nLouvic't \t\nMacassa\nMalartic G. F.\nMaritime Mining\nMcLeod\nMcKenzie R L\nMining fori).\nMulti Mins\nNow Alger\nNew  Hosro\nNew Jason\nNew Lunrl\nNoranda New\nNorgold\nNorpax\nNorth Can\nNorth   Rankin     \t\nOpemiska\nPickle Crow\nPlacer Devpl\nPreston K. D.\nQuebec Copper\nQuebec Lab\nQuebec Lithium\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQnemont\nRadiore\nRainville\nRayrock\nSan  Antonio\nSherritt Gordon\nSteep  Roi-k\nSullivan Con\nTaurcanis\nTeck   Hushes\nTomagami\nThomn-Lund\nTombill\nUnited  Keno\nUpper Canada\nVentures\nViolamnc\nWaite Amulet\nWlllsev Go^hn\nWlllrnv\nWright  Hargreaves\nYale IS\nYellowkn'fp  Rear I K\nYoung 'It G i Gold 6,.\nOILS\nAmerican I\/educ 08\nRanff  Oils 1 10\nRailey Selburn S..V)\nCalgary and Edmonton 14 12':\nCanadian Devonian 2 HI\nDuve;: 05':\nHome A a -\"'0\nLong Island Pete in\nMarigold .07\nMidron .3\"'\nNew Continental 211'\nOkalta 36\nPacific   Pete .  in\nPetrol 6,i\n.06'4\n1.73\n5 50\n11.00\n12.2.5\n1.10\n.53\n.121-.\n.55\n3.50\n.43\n67\n17 624\n.06'.\n.04',\n.31\n3.,50\n.081.\n4.50\n.20\nOil1 j\n.06\n1 42\n1.45\n1.17\n31 25\n79\n7.75\n,06i_\n22.00\n44.37'_\n.32\n50 75\n2 59\n.20\n.25\n04' i\n10.R7'.\n20 1X1\n06\n4 15\nIS\n1 52\n1 66\n.34\n(14\n2 Ii0\n.72\n111\n1 (10\n.18\n10 112'_\nM\nIII1-;\n.80\n05'2\nH'2\n3875\n.06';\n.07'2\n1 15\n76\n6 35\n75\n1? 00\n3 55\n.12\n.03\n2 60\n\u00bb'.\n9 HI\n58\n.25\n.46\n54\n2 72\n8.70\nI 50\n12\nI 115\nI 55\n75\n57\n6 :<(>\nI 04\n23 50\nI 15\nli 35\nOil'!\n1 21\nI (15\nPonder \t\nPlace Oil     \t\nProv Gas      2\nRoyalite           7\nSj>ooner     \t\nTriad      2\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nUnited Oils      \t\nYank Canuck   \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel   \t\nAluminum       \t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A.  Oil       \t\nBeatty  Bros.      \t\nBell Telephone     \t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4\u00bb\/<s   \t\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Celanese\nCan.   Cement\nCan Chem Co\nCanadian Dredge\nCan. Curtis Wright   \t\nCan. Malting\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCan. Packers B\nCockshutt\nColumbia Cellulose \t\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram      \t\nDom, Bridge \t\nDom.  Foundries\nDom Magnesium\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nFamous Players\nFord U.S. \t\nGatineau \t\nGatineau 5% pfd     \t\nGen. Steel Wares\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco    \t\nInd. Ace\t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMolson Brewery    \t\nMont.  Loco \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat. Steel Car    \t\nPage Hershey      \t\nRuss.  Industries \t\nShawinigan\nSimpsons A\nStandard Paving\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\nWestern Grocers A\nWeston George\n46\n66\n04\n10\n12\n25\n23\n.03\n39'\u00bb\n33 V,\n29'\/b\n22'\u00bb\n28 '_\n6'.\n44's\n50\n85 V,\n12'\u00bb\n3134\n13'-_\n34'.i\n191-8\n27\n5'2\n14'-.,\n.80\n4<)'s\n21\n24 vt\n43' 4\n14'\u00bb\n4\n37'j\n29\n18',\n4-1'.i\n6'j\n50'.,\n14\n19'\u00bb\n63 V,\n34\n93\n11'.,\n30'.,\n12\n3.V,\n25'i\n26\n9'.\u00ab\n22\n16\n41\n16\n2.5'4\n10%\n27\n30\".\n14\".,\n73'i\n49'-.\nlit\".\n7\n33\n3-1',\nMontreal Makes\nEmergency\nDialinq Easier\nMONTREAL <CP> - Montreal-\ners will be able to phone police,\nambulance or the fire department\nby simply dialing \u25a0 \"0\" after\nSept. 1,\nThe city executive committee\non Tuesday approved a plan to\nset up an emergency telephone\ncentre at the fire department\nalarm headquarters on Park Avenue,\nBell Telephone Company operators will be on 24-hour duty there\nlo receive the calls. A special\napparatus will transmit emergency call information to the department concerned.\nInstallation of equipment will\ncost $:>0.f.0(.. The city's telephone\nbill-including salaries of new operators needed\u2014will increase an\nestimated $02,000 a year.\nRut the change will free a number of teletype and telephone operators at police headquarters,\nthus diminishing the over - all\ncost.\nThe new scheme will not affect\nthe existing street corner alarm\nboxes for fire calls, or police call\nboxes.\nN'eighbonne municipalities will\nhe invited to join the emergency\nservice\nThe city administration also decided Wednesday to renovate the\npolice radio network, most of which\n=;  now outdated\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACFIIC STANDARD TIME\nKHQ - Channel 6\n6 15 N'BC News '\n6 30 Front  Page\n7 00 Rat  Maslerson  *\n7 30 Producer's Choice\n8 no Sea Hunt\nB 30 Tenn   Krnie Ford\n9 00 You Ret Your Life *\n9 30 Highway Patrol\n10 00 State Trooper\n10 30 News\n10 40 Late Movie\n\"Broadway .Serenade\"\n- Channel 2\n5 00 Three Stooges\n5 3(1 Rocky and His Friends\nII 1)0 News\nfi 30 Hiirkleberry Hound\n7 (XI Donna Deed \u2022\n7 30 Real  McCoys  *\nfl on Pat  Rnone Show *\n8 30 The Untouchables *\n9 30 That   Man Dawson\n10 IX) News\nin 15 Jack Paar Show *\n12 on Dateline Europe\n12 30 Nightcap News\n12 35 l!\\-mn and Prayer\n12 40 Sign Off\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nfl 15\nfl 15\n9 no\n9 30\n10 00\n10 .10\n10 45\n11 00\n11 .30\n12 on\n12 30\n1 00\n1 .10\n2 on\n_ :io\n3 (X)\nUniversity Profile\nSong Shop\nI Love Lucy *\nDecember Bride '\nLove of Life *\nSearch For Tomorrow\nGuiding Light *\nRay Milland Show\nSusie\nTake 4\nAs The World Turns '\nFor  Better or Worse  '\nHouseparty *\nMillionaire *\nVerdict Is Yours *\nBrighter  Day  '\n3 15\n3 ;tn\n4 (X)\n5 30\n5 -15\nfi 15\nfi 30\n7 Ofl\n7 30\nfl on\na 30\n') (XI\ntn no\n10 .30\n11 (XI\nII 15\nSecret Storm *\nF,dge of Night *\nMatinee\nTime Out For Sports\n4-Star Report\nDoug Edwards *\nAmos n' Andy\nBetty Hulton *\nJohnny Ringo *\nZane Grey Theatre *\nMarkham *\nRevlone Revue *\nLock Up\nShotgun Slade\nNews\n4-Mosf  Feature\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\n.08\n5.00\n04 Vi\nCariboo Gold \t\n.80\n4.45\n.21'i\n1.20\nHighTand Bell \t\n1.70\n.04\nPend Oreille     \t\n2.55\n174\nReeves MacDonald\nSheep Creek           \t\n1.86\n.76\n2.55\nSilbak Premier \t\n.23\n.03'-.\n.17\n.08\nTaylor\n.14\nTrojan\nWestern Exploration\nOILS\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary & Edmonton   \t\nCharter\nHome              \t\nOkalta Com\n.08'2\n.10\n42\n13.62'i\n.86\n8 25\n.33\nPacific Pete\t\nRoyalite               \t\nRoval Can      \t\nUnited\n9-40\n.34\n7 35\n.13\n1 23\n.34\nInland Nat Gas   \t\nMid-West Cop\t\nTrans Mtn\nWestminster Paper \t\nWestern Plywoods   \t\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Unit\nWest Csast Vt\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan. Bank of Com.\nImp. Bank of Can.\nRoyal Bank of Can.\nFUNDS\nAH   Can.   Com.      .  .\nAll Can. Div\t\nCan.  Inv.  Fund\nCommonwealth Int. ..\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGrouped Income    ....\nInvestors Growth   .\nInvestors   Mutual\nLeverage\nTrans Canada \"C\"\n125\n10W\n9 124\n34.124\n13.25\n20.50\n18.75\n9 00\n7fi(X)\n11.50\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\nB C Power\nB C Telephone\nCanadian Collieries\n2 30\n1.80\n12.624\n31.50\n44.00\n8.124\n50.25 51.00\n50.00 51.00\n53.50 54.50\n67.00 68.50\n6.83\n5.39\n8.36\n7.72\n3.37\n3.44\n5.66\n1054\n6.12\n5.40\n7.42\n586\n9.17\n8.48\n3.68\n3.76\n6.10\n11.39\n6.73\n5.90\nSTUDENTS   PUNISHED\nNEW YORK AP'\u2014Eight college students from Turkey who\ntook part in a demonstration here\nin sympathy with the Turkish student uprising have had their student exchange privileges rescinded, it was reported Tuesday A\nspokesman for the Turkish educational attache confirmed that letters have been sent to the students but would say only that the\nreason is a secret.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTHURSDAY, MAY 12,  1960\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014 B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada  Matinee\n3:30\u2014Music From Montreal\n4:00\u2014B.C. Road Report\n4:05\u2014Rocking With Boates\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:20\u2014Ottawa Report\n5:25\u2014Rolling Home Show\n55:40\u2014Closing Markets\n5:45\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:55\u2014Dee's Show\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Sport News\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014The '20s Roar\n7:00CBC National News\n7:30\u2014Christian Science\n7:46\u2014Canada At Wark\n8:00\u2014Little Symphonies\n8:30\u2014Science Review\n9:00\u2014 Room For Argument\n9:30-Eventide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Personal Appearance\n10:30\u2014Drama\n11:00\u2014Pacific Exchange\nll:57-News\n12:0O-Sign Off\n6:45\u2014Sign On\n6:50\u2014 Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in Ihe Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n8 00\u2014News\n8 10\u2014Sports News\n8:15-WakeUpTime\n8:30\u2014Opening Markets\n8:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:45\u2014The Archers\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:10\u2014Story Parade\n9:20\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\nII) 00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014 Wheel ot Fortune\n10:10\u2014Interlude\n10:1.5\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n11:00\u2014 Edge of Tomorrow\n11:15\u2014Album Time\nll:45-Food Facts\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014News and Noon Markets\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY, MAY  13,  1960\n00\u2014Sharpe at Six\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Sharpe\n00-BBC News\n: 15\u2014 Much Ado about Music\n: 30\u2014Morning Concert\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014The Tommy Hunter Show\n45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n00\u2014Edge of Tomorrow\n15\u2014Kindergarten of the Aair\n30\u2014Off the Record\n15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n31\u2014BC. Farm Broadcast\n35\u2014Five to One\n(Hi\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Hersenhoren and Strings\n4:00\u2014Court of Opinion\n4:30-Tempo\n7.00\u2014National  News\n7:30-The   Wedding   of   H.R.H.\nPrincess Margaret and Mr.\nAntony Armstrong-Jones in\nWestminster Abbey.\n8 ..0-The Day the War'Ended\n9:30\u2014Songs of My People\n10:00-News\n10:1.5\u2014The Nations Business\nin-io\u2014Anthology\nll:00-Tuned to Dancing\n11:57\u2014News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n4.Uncle (dial). 24. Arabian\nCandle\n6. Celebes ox\n7. Average\n8. Jeers\n;_8. throw\n_.\u2022\u00bb. interjection\n15. Mold again\n17. Story\n18. Class\n21. Film on\nporridge\n(dial.)\n22. Adjusting\ngarment\n25. Firm\n26. Puts\nforth\neffort\n28. Avoids\n29. February 28,\nfor one\n31. Abrupt\n33. Calm\n34. Preposition\nS\u00a3\nnT\u00bb\n.EsSaTI\nAO\nNE|(\nicherI\n5 P A T El\n3 A\ni kjI\nrasa Harass bh\ngasna   hhhei\nuaaa hob\nSU\nJAW 1\n'A t-LIEly\nnu\n?|S\nI5WAKE\nF 1\nAX\nslD|\n|ftE\n)5|P~A\"X\n\u25a0o\nSAR\/\nVRAM 1\n_T\n1 M\u00a3\n\u25a0 l  CES\nm\n3A\u00a3!\n\u25a0best\nYesterday's Aoflf\u00ab9\n37. Taxi\n38. Color\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notise.)\nACROSS\n1. Dull pain\n5. Browns\n9. Son of Noah\n10. Soon\n11. Country\nvisited by\nMr. Eisenhower\nii. Pondered\n14. Entire\n15. Hole-shaping tool\n16. Brinier\n19. Sun god\n20. Tests\n21. Strong\nwoody fibef\n23. Indiana\ncity\n25. In this place\n27. Subsided\n30. Hewing tool\n31. Kitchen\nutensil\n32. Relate\n35. Pecan\n36. Hive\ndweller\n37. Reproach\n39. Carry\n40. Old Frertfc\nmeasure\n41. Spill\n42. Pleads\nDOWU\n1. Squared\natone\n2. Colder\n3. Norse goddess of\ndeath - s-jj.-\nDAILY CRYPTOQCOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is usej\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBGJSJ      WGJSJ      KT      LI      WJCVWT.\nWKIL,      WGJSJ      STL      UJ      MKWWMJ\nNMTKC      WI       EK S WQJ \u2014VS JTNIW W.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: A MYSTIC BOND OF BROTHERHOOD MAKES ALL MEN ONE\u2014 CARLYLE.\n(O I960, Kins Feature, Syndicate, Inc.)\n%\ni\nz\n\u25a03\nA\ns\n*>\ni\ne\nl\n%\n1\n%\n|6\n%\nIt\n%\n11\na.\nA\n^\n'^\n1ST\n16\n17\nIS\n^\n%\n19\n20\n^4\n11\n21\n^A\n'^\n-3\n_+\n%\n%\n_5\n_fa\n^t\nV\nza\n2?\n3\"\n^\n%\n31\n32.\n3il\ny.\nb\n^\n-fr\n3<=\nb\n37\n36\nl\nn\n1\n_|0\nl\n^f\nAt\nV\/\n47\n^A\n 133'\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nThat's the Want\nYOU CAN  NOW PHONE  YOUR\nLARGE RETURNS\nAd Story - PHONE   1844\nCLASSIFIED   ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nPETS, CANARIES,  BEES     NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\u201415\nBEAUTIFUL REG. SAMOYED\nmale, Reg. Longnose, Lassie type\nScotoh collies. Reserve ahead,\navoid disappointment. MacLeod\nKennels. Trail, B.C.\nFOR SALE - PUPS, YOUNG\ndogs. Bar-O. Taghum.\nHELP WANTED\nMAKE BIG PROFITS. SELL THE\nRAWLE1GII LINE There are\nnow a few special opportunities\nto sell Rawleigh's iamous line of\nnecessities .ither full or part\ntime. For full details write the\nW. T Rawleigh Co Lid , Dept\nDD-1553, 539 Henry Ave . Winni\npeg. 2. Man.\nMEN, WOMEN AND~~ SENIOR\nSTUDENTS - Established Wat-\nkins Products routes avai'able in\nthe immediate district. Highest\ncommissions. Car essential. Free\ntraining. For interview, call at\nthe Hume Hotel, and ask for B\nW. Areshenkoff, Friday, May 13,\n2(10-8:00 p.m.\nWANTED-TRUaT~AND~ DRIVER\nto haul short logs on contract\nbasis. Phone 1..6S.\nWANTED - DOORMAN. APPLY\nCivic Theatre, evenings.\nHELP  WANTED \u2014 fEMALE\n$ $ LADIES $ $, BEAUTY IS OUR\nbusiness. Why not m.-ko it yours'5\n\"Avon Cosmetics\" offers an excellent earning opportunity [or\nwomen who qualify. Sell a product unconditionally guaranteed\nand advertised. Yes, it's \"Avon\nCalling\" for women who want to\nearn. For information write to\u2014\nMrs. E. C. Hearn, 2233 Aberdeen\nSt.. Keiowna. B.C. 1\nEadTes WANTED-~MAK!iTUP\nto $2*..(Ml a  week  doing  simple I\nhome sewing in your spare tune.\nWrite   Bo::   431,   Adelaide   Post!\nOffice. Toronto, Out.\n_R)TlKKEEPEfrREQUrR,''In\"\"EOR\nautomotive dealership. Machine\nexperience preferred bui not\nessential. Apply 9947 Daily News.\nH\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\n\/AM I on\\\n[  THfeRE,   I\n\\J5AD?\/V\n' s\n\/ NO. AND IF YOU\nV WERE, VOU'D BB\n-> \u25a0 SMALLER\n!s3S__L  THAN A\n'\u25a0'   ~<Jbr TINy\nTT speck:\/\n'K ^\u2014\"\"*\ni$^m\n!___*r   _____s*\"^C^_!\n71 J\n**\"J  '?2n.\/N^^_M\nf\\v)\nWfi\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES.  BICYCLES\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNew Oldsmobile Tudor  H.T\n7 New Chevrolet Sedans\n1   New Chevrolet  Stn.   Wgn,\n2  New Corvairs\nI   New  Envoy Stn.  Wgn.\n4  New  Envoy Sedans\n1   New\n1959 Chevrolet Stn.Wagon\n1   Used\n1959 Chevrolet Stn.Wagon\n1959 Chevrolet   Fordor   H.T.\n1959 Vauxhall Sedan\n1959  Pontiac Stn.  Wagon\n1959  Fiat Stn.  Wgn.\n1959 Chevrolet Sedan\n1958 Chevrolet   Pickup\n1957 G.M.C.  Pickup\n1957 Bedford Von\n. i-\nPRECISION GRIND1NG-C1RCU-\nlar saws, scissors, pinking shears,\nrotary lawn mower blades\u2014Hip-\nperson's. Nelson, Phone 497\u2014\nMar. Wells Store, Salmo. Ph, 37\nEXPEiHENI'l-'D^SEP'riC TANK\ncleaning, rca -unable, depend\nable service Phone 594-Y. pre-\nviously listed as W-l-Y and I9II4-L\nEXPERIENCED SEpTfcTXNK\ncleaning. Low rates. Free inspection on tank and drain fields.\nPhone 161-L-l.\n$$ SPECIAL $$ SPECIAL $$\n1957 Plymouth Sedan\n$1295\nCHESTERFIELD. RUG CLEAN-\ninq. moth proofing Dutch Cleaning Servire   Phone 2190\nflMTTTYbi MurAXbENTLCnvED\n_Phone 797-X.\nALITtVT'ES OF crEWRAlTSEW^\ning and alleralmns  Phone 9_3-X\nGAR DEN    PLOWING - PHONE\n213VR.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nREPAIRS   TO   ALL   TYPES   OF\nelectrical appliances Vacuum\ncleaner and polisnei armatures\nrewound $3 each Repairs to\nautomatic washers a specialty\nColumbia     Electrocentre,     1130\n_Bay Ave.. Trail  Ph 2533\t\nFurnace, Major Appliances, Etc\nTune-lips and Repairs, Phone 23,13\nD   Mol'UMG SERVICE-NELSON\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Service\n2fl:> High St Phone 1917\nASSAYKRS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nHS\nA .saver\nELMES,   ROSSLAND,   FfC\nChemist     Mm   Ren\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB C   Land Survevor and Engineer\n10! .J^ighthjil Nehon_Ph_ 144-R\nBOYD C   AFFLECK.   MEIC\nB.C. Land Survevor. P  Eng iCiull\n21H Gore St      Nelson     PhoniM238\nG  W  BAERG. bTTL.S\n373 Baker St Ne! .on\n Phone  Ulli Re,   2315\nalex ch.:v.:ldavi.\nB C   Land Surveyor - Phone ..342\n448 Columbia Ave , Castlegar, R C\nAUCTfONEI-'.R~an.l APPRAISER\nJ. S. Gillen, 11117 3rd Ave, Trail\nPhone HII8-L.\nDAILY  VACATION   BIBLE   SUP-\nphes,   10\";   off.   1540  Cedar   Ave ,\nTrail.\nMrkuni Daili; Nrms\nCirculation Dept.. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy  7c  Monday\nto Friday. 10c mi Saturday\nBy Carrier per week 3..C\nin afKanre\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Me|5nn\nOne month $ 1 _..\nThree months    __         _ ln\nSix months ti .ifl\nOne year 12 0(1\nBy Mail to United Kin.dom or the\nUnited Stales\nOne month $ I 7.\nThree months    _.... _ 00\nSix months   9 mi\nOne year 18 00\nWhere ex'tra  po-la_e  is  required\nabove rates plus postaEe\nFor  delivery  by   carrier   in  Cran\nbrook      phone     Mrs      Stanley\nWilhssnn.\nIn Kimberley   -.   W   Brown.\nIn Trail. Mrs Syd Spooner.\nIn Rossland   Mrs   Ross ^-niiidrv\n1956  Pontioc  Sedan\n1956 Volkswagen  Pickup\n1956  Fargo Pickup\n1956 Austin Sedan\n1956 Plymouth Sedan\n1956 Ford  Pickup\n1956 ,Volkswagen Sedan\n1956  Ford Station Wagon\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan   Del.\n1955  Plymouth Sedan\nill Sedan\n1954  Pontiac Sedan\n1954   Buick Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan\nTERMS - TRADES\nChevrolet,   Oldsmobile,\nCadillac,  Corvairs,   Envoys\nPHONE 35\n24-Hour  Wrecker  Service\nReyfoen\nIBuerMe\nlotors\nLTD\n323  Vernon Street\nNelson,  B   C.\nLOST   AND   FOUND\nFOUND - MAY 6TH. A WHEEL\nand tire on Vernon Street. See\n\u25a0Joe Rai'r at Kootenay Laundry\nOwner can rla.m same by pay\nm_ lor this ad\nCOSI' RI.-CK LE.THF.K WM,\nlil on Baker Mav 8   Upward  Ph\nll7 __.__\nLOST       CHILD'S Sir VER CROSS\n,-prl   rh-,n    \u201e\".r   R<-anne   Apl\nRe '..!rd    Phone  153.. R.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE SER-\nvice English and Canadian used\ncar parts, '.jfi GMC 1-2 T. Pickup\nparts and '33 Ford parts. Good\n1956 GMC motor. Good 1949-51\nFord Motor. Ph. 2100, Box 382,\n21 Ymir Road. Nelson.\nWElvRfTWRECKINU '57 CHEV\nsedan, '57 Plymouth, Con '55\nMerc '2 ton, '54 DeSolo, 49 to\n53 Fords, Chevs, Pljmouths. Pon-\nLines. Sludebakers Trail Auto\nWreckers. Phone 2141\n1956 PONTIAC 4 DOOR~H~ARD-\nlop. Automatic. One owner.\u25a0 2\ntone In poriect condition. 1953\nFord 4-Door, Thunderbird motor, radio, A-l. Peebles Motors.\nf9:.r~FORD RANCH WKGON.\nFour door. 6 cy.. standard shift\nwiLo radio and heater. Two tone,\nin At mcch. condition. Phone\n.5418 Castlegar.\t\n'55 FORD RANCH WAGON. AUTO-\nmatic, A-l shape. Radio, 7 tires.\nPhone 42, a_k (or WoodaM. After\nJ> p.m. call 353-Y. Add. 40! Silica,\n^l\"SAL__~ 1953 FORD HARD-\ntop, gord condition, trade-in accepted Can be financed. Phone\n94-M Salmo afler fi p m.\nfor\"sale\"' i94TpontiacTgood\nmechanical condition, good tires\nneeds  some  body   work    Phone\n462-L-2\t\nSOUTH NELSON  BODY WORKS\nTop quality workmanship   Phone\n2324. 49 Ymir  Road\n1951   OLDSMOBILE   98   SEDAN\nRadio  Make offer  Phone 4.V19 at\nCastlegar\nWE PAY CASH FOR' GOOD' USED\ncars   McElroy Motors Ltd\nMUST SELL 1955 MONARCH HI\ncerne   Offers phone 1027 R\nFOR SALE - 1958 OLDSMOBILE\"\nPhone 417 X\nTRAILERS\nFOR     S-M,'\nKline's Trailer Court.\n1    NASHUA\nApp'y  Fetlba.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nMACHINERY\nNEED A JOB - 40 ACRES, 3\ncleared. 2 creeks, new and the\nvery best 1300 foot l'<_ inch water\nsystem. 2 bdrm. house, garage,\nchicken house, another small 3-\nroom house, al least 100,000\nboard feet timber, freight truck\nfranchise. All this can be yours\nfor $8750, will trade for house in\nNelson of equal, less or better\nvalue. Make your own opportunity by seeing. Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Phone 1777.\nLISTINGS - HAVE YOU BEEN\nwanting lo sell your property''\nWe require properties ol 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 - TWO BUILDING\nlots at 316 Gore Street, Sewer\nand water on property. Some\nfruit trees and small fruits. Excellent garden soil. Ph. 2166-R\nor apply to ill Richards St.,\nNelson.\nCHERRY AND LATIMER-WHAT\na view from this.2 B.R. Cottage\nwith lovely grounds. Stop in and\nsee the photo at our office. F.P.\nonly $.5500. Down payment $1000.\nBalance easy terms. Wm. Kaly-\nniuk Agencies. Phone  1777.\nCLEARED VIEW LOT - 24\nmiles from town on North Shore\nN.H.A. approved. $.50 down. $50\nper month plus interest or $850\ncash. Phone 1337-R.\t\nFORSALE-35 ACRES, 7~CLEAR.\ned at Harrop. Must be sold.\nWould consider Crawler Tractor\nin trade. Eric Denny, R.R. No. 1.\nPhone 4S1-R-2.\nATTRACTIVE 4 ROOM STUCCO\nhouse on 3 acres. Paved highway,\nelectricity. Schools and stores\nhandy. $5500. Paul Markoff. Slo\ncan Park.\nHOUSE IN EXCELLENT LOCA-\ntion. 4 bedrooms, oil furnace,\ngrounds landscaped, fruit trees,\ngarage. Apply 812-5l)i Street.\nTWO GOOD BUILDING SITES\nfor sale One on Douglas Road\nand one on Union Street. $1500\neach. Phone 1649-Y.\nSMALL HOUSE. SLOCAN VAL-\nley acreage, good ground cleared for garden. Suitable retired\ncouple. Phone 407-R Nelson.\nFOR SALE: 1 LOT IN SALMO.\nCorner Aspen St and Cottonwood\nAve. Phone 597-R-l, Nelson.\n4\" ROOM HOUSE ON TWO LOTST\nLow down payment. Cheap for\ncash. Phone 1794 afler fi.'\nMOVING. MUST SELL. 3 APT,\nhouse, 2 electric sieves, oil\nfurnace. 210 Victoria SI.\nFOR SALE OR RENT - 4-ROOM\nhouse in Ymir. Box 9938 Nelson\nNews.\n7~~Rm7 FAIRVIEW~TTOME. GOOD\ncond. 908 Fourth. Ph. 1739-X.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS,\nFOR SALE: TD14A-1954 MODEL\nCoutts sawmill, edger and Cater\npillar power unit. E. B. Carlson,\nDiamond T truck, 10-wheel drive;\nWillys Jeep four wheel drive,\nR.R. No. 1, Nelson. Ph. 402-X-l.\nFOR SALE: ONE TD-9 TRACTOR,\nalmost new. Ed Paul, Box 186.\nRossland. R.C.\nDISSTON DO-1O0 CHANNEL BAR\nand chipper chain. What offers!1\nBox 0871 Daily News.\nRENTALS\nATTRACTIVE SUITE. CLOSE IN.\nWired for eleclric range. 3 rooms,\nplus bathroom, washroom, free\nuse of washing machine and\ntubs, hardwood floors. Ideal for\n2 or 3. Private entrance. Rent\n$40 month. Children O.K. Phone\n1327-R.\n3 ROOM UNFURNISHED APT.,\ncentral heat. Hot and cold water,\nwired for TV and phone. Piped\nfor gas. New fridge. Adults only.\n718 Kootenay St. Phone 1013-L.'\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning rooms weekly, monthly\nrates Dishes, linen supplied;\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT.\nClean housekeeping or sleeping\nrooms. Star Rooms, 705 Victoria\nStreet.\nSMALL 1 BEDROOM HOUSE ON\nNorth Shore, 2'-_ miles from\nbridge. Rent $37.50 per month.\nPhone 156 days.\nLARGE 2 BEDROOM FLAT, FUR-\nnished and heated, completely\nprivate. Apply Bishop's News.\n737 Baker.\n3 ROOM APT. 3 ROOMS PR],\nbath, furnished. Fridge, gas\nstove, Vernon St. location. Apply\n171 Baker St.\nROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT\nbaths. Low weekly or monthly\nrate   Savoy Hotel\n2 ROOM SUITE FOR RF.NT\\\npartly furnished. 723 Silica St.\nPhone 718-R.\n2-ROOM SUITE. ALSO HOUSE\nkeeping room, gas cooking. Ph.\n491-X or apply 140 Baker Slreet.\n3 ROOMS AND BATH HEATED,\nfurn. or unfurn. Private entrance.\n912 Sixth SI. Phone 1353-Y.\n3 ROOM SUITE. ALL PRIVATE\n75 High St. 1 housekeeping room,\n$22 a month.\nFURNISHED   4   RM. APT. PRI\nvate. Ph. 423-Y.\nBUSINESS LADIES APT. CLOSE!\nin. Box 8593 Daily News.\n3  RM.   FURN.   HEATED  SUITE\n214   Houston  St.,   Phone  1968-R\nFOR    RENT    -    FURNISHED\nhousekeeping room. Ph. 405-L.\nAPT. FOR 2. CENTRAL, FURN\nBox 9574 Daily News.\nREASONABLE ROOMS FOR\nrent. Apply 210 Vernon St,\nFOR RENT: 3 ROOM HOUSE.\nPhone 2263-L.\t\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, frig. Phone 496-R.\nPORTABLE ASPHALT PLANT -\nWylie Model PM-215 portable hot\nmix portable asphalt plant rated\nat ti-8 tons per hour in now condition, for sale or lease. Contact\nD. Porteous, 415 Baker St., Nelson. Phone ,537.\nLEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR\nsale\u2014whole or hall 28c a whole\nside 30c Ib. cut and wrapped\nReady lor the Iree\/.er Newdan\nFarm. Box 570. Creston. B C Ph\nEL6-2435   We deliver\nFOR SALE - CHEAP. GENTLE\nhor..e, one horse mower, one\nhorse plow, A cultivator, air circulated healpr. All m good condition. Apply Poznekoff Poultry\nFarm   Winlaw, B C.\n1949 G iVI.C. 1-TON. FLAT DECK\nfor sale or will trade for tractor,\npotato planter wilh fertilizer\nattachments. Apply A, Boolmoff,\nThrums.\nTOR\" SALE: DlNl.TnTSU ITES,\nchrome table and chairs, kitchen\nsuite, day bed, single bed, new.\nother beds, dressers, stands,\nstoves   1103 HalljUincs Road.\nDELCO LIGHT PLANT 110-W 12.50\nwall. Use any type ol fuel, economical Very good condition\nGeo_lladikin^Glade. B ('.\nNORM'S~GUNrSHOP. \"GUNSMITH.\nScopes. New and used guns Reloading too's an I supplies. 171\nBaker SI. Ph. 335.\n1939 OSW' WINDSOR REFRIO-\neralor. immaculate condition.\nPhone 163. or 1141 -R\nFOR S\\LE ' - ' H \\Y~fOWER.\nplow, rake, cultivator, wacon\nPhone 2__)_J_\u2122t___l!e\nGASOLINE     POWERED     REEL\nSELF - CONTAINED   3    ROOM\nsuite. Private entrance. Ph. 338-R\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nALL STEEL CABLE TOOL,\nwaterwell drilling rig. complete\nwith 4\" tools, lines, bailer, sand-\npump, electric welder, propane\nculling outfit, light plant, water\nsupply pump and miscellaneous\naccessories, all mounted on long\nwheel base 1951 Fargo Heavy\nDuty truck with excellent rubber\nand new motor. Can be inspected\nat Castlegar, B.C. Bud Henning\nDrilling Co., Ltd., Castlegar, B.C.\nPhone 7951.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE: 10 EWES AND\nlambs, one purebred Suffock\nRam cheap for cash. All are\nready for shearing. Hugh Gra-\nham, Eaickson, B.C.\nPUREBRED MIXbTAN STAL\nlion standing at stud. Fee. grade\nmares, $35 plus board. Write Box\n252, Trail, B.C.\nWE STILL HAVE A FEW SADDLE\nhorses left for sale. Phone Fruitvale 3136 or write Box 209 Fruitvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE-WEANER PIGS. $10.\nNewdan Farm. Box 570, Creston,\nB.C., Phone EL-6-2435.\nBABY CHICKS AND STARTED\nchickens. Schlaffke's Hatchery,\nNew Denver.\nFOR SALE: FRESH COW. HEAVY\nmilker, also two calves. Phone\nE. D. Ward, Balfour 105.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSCRAP STEEL AND METALS.\nTop prices. Old car bodies our\nspecialty. Commercial Steel and\nMetals, 2561 Witlingdon, Burn-\naby 2, Vancouver. B.C.\nWANTED - SMALL CRAWLER,\npreferably with blade and winch.\nWould trade farm at Harrop or\nlumber or both. Eric Denny,\nR.R.- No. 1, Phone 461-R-2.\nWANT E D. PEEELED CEDAR\npoles loaded on cars 35 to 75\nfeet long. Dumont, 1164 West\n32nd Ave., Vancouver. B.C.\nWANTED: CANADIAN COINS,\ngold coins, silver and dollars.\nP. Polovinkoff, Box 2, Nelson.\nWANTED - OIL BURNER CIR-\nculator heater, about 50,000 BTU.\nPhone 1090.\nLARGE GARDEN SPACE. CLOSE\nin. Will look after cultivation,\netc. Phone 205. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR ONE\nor two young gentlemen Ph\nMrs  Trusrott U79-X\nBOARD  AND  ROOM  -  PHONE\n606-X-3.\nROOM. OR ROOM AND BOARD.\nPhone 2132.\n WANTED  TO  RENT\n2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE OR\napt. unfurn. June 1. References\nif required. No children. Apply\nBox 9936 Daily .News.\nMARKET TRENDS\nWANTED TO RENT: 2 OR 3 BED:\nroom house, Fairview district.\nPhone 2341. Mr. Royle.\nQueen Mother\nFlies Into\nRhodesia\nSALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia i Reuters) \u2014 The Queen\nMother arrived here by air Wednesday from London for a three-\nweek tour scheduled to take her\ninto an area where African violence has flared.\nThe area is Northern Rhodesia's copper - mining region\nwhich Queen Elizabeth's 59-year-\nold mother is scheduled to tout-\nMay 21-22 on her visil to Britain's Central African Federation\nof Northern and Southern Rhodesia and Nyasaland.\nMain purpose of her tour is to\nopen Rhodesia's giant Kariba\nDam, a hydro-electric project, on\nTuesday.\nColonial Secretary Iain MacLeod said in London Tuesday\nthat there were no plans to alter\nthe Queen Mother's program in\nthe light of violence in Northern\nRhodesia, but added that tlie situation would be \"watched carefully in Ihe next few days.\"\nPolice reservists in the troubled\nNorthern Rhodesian copper belt\nwere called up for active duty\nTuesday. Last week Negroes began attacking whites after authorities broke up a political rally.\nExtra police from other parts\nof the country were sent into the\narea following weekend violence\nin which several whites were\nstoned and an Englishwoman\nwas badly burned with gasoline\nwhen Negroes stoned her car amd\nset it ablaze.\nTORONTO 'CPi --The stock\nmarket rallied at the close of\nlight tradiog Wednesday to push\ntrading  a   fraction  higher.\nOn index, industrials were up\n.19 at 488.94 and base metals\ngained 80 al 155.22, while golds\ndropped .49 at 79.36 and Western\noils lost   51 at 86.28,\nPapers, banks and steels all\nhad an active day, with trading\nmixed in each group. Minnesota\nand Ontario Pa[>er improved 3.\nand St. Lawrence gained l2.\nwhile Great Lakes was off h,\nCrown Zellei-baoh lost '? and Abi-\ntibi and Consolidated Paper both\nwent down Li.\nAmong hanks. Bank of Commerce, Toronto - Dominion and\nBank of Montreal each gained ^g,\nwhile Bank ot Nova Scotia was\noff '. and Royal Bank slipped ..\nIt was a bad day (or steels,\nwith Alias and Wcsleel off 3_, National Steel Car ofl ._ and Steel\nCompany of Canada off  .\u00bb.\nAmong the general winners\nwere Crush International, up **\nat Itl2; Moore, up ._ at 41, and\nAlberta Gas, up '-_  at 20-V\nln an improved mines section,\nNoranda went up 4 and Cassiar\nand Hudson Bay were ahead y\u00ab.\nwhile Kerr Addison and Mclntyre\nPorcupine each dropped %.\nWestern oils had another bad\nday, although they did altempt a\nslight rally near the close. Bailey\nSelurn, Pacific Petroleum and\nRoyalite all were off 15 cents,\nwhile Calgary . and Edmonton\ngained li and Canadian Husky\nimproved 15 cents.\nMONTREAL (CPi-Tha Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges were mixed to higher\nWednesday afler an inchcisive\ntrading session. Turnover was\nlight.\nClosing averages showed banks\nup 0,17 at 52.86. utilities up 0.2 at\n137.3, Industrials up 0.5 at 279.1,\ncombined up 0.5 at 231.9, papers\noff 1.7 at 430.7 and golds off 1.02\nat 71.06, a new low for 1960.\nAdvances were paced by Texaco, up Y% at 49V_. Du Pont\ngained \\ at 24 and SO-cent Increases included St. Lawrence\nCorp. at 17, Newfoundland Light\nat 44, Asbestos at 25ti, Banque\nCanadionne Nationale at 50V_ and\nMolson A at 22.\nConsumer* Gas, off 3Vd at 34%.\npaced losers. Standard Structural\nSteel dropped 1% at I31t, Power\nCorp. fell \u00a5\u00ab at 453\/., Combined\nEnterprises lost at 42 and\nBrown declined % at 14.\nBailey  Selburn  was  down  K\ncents at $5,50 in Western oils,*\nCalgary and Edmonton up .. and\nUnited Oils off eight cents at\n$1.12. >{\nNEW YORK (APi-A late rally\nleft the stock market mixed Wednesday. Trading was moderate.\nThe market was off a bit by mid-\nsession. In the afternoon a flurry\nof buying erased many losses and\nbrought plus signs\/.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks rose .50 to 210.40.\nJafi was the most active stock,\nsurging 3>_ to 44 on 78.900 shares,\nSecond was Lockheed, down 1%\nat 19'i on 48,300 shares.\nNickel Plate was third, rising\nl\\ to 38U on 48.000 shares. The\ngain was linked to Wall Street talk\nabout the share-exchange ratio in\nIhe proposed merger with Norfolk\nand Western which dipped \u00a54.\nHudson Bay Mining, up to. was\nthe only Canadian gainer. Mclntyre Porcupine lost vj, Dome Mines\nv., Canadian Pacific and Walker\nGooderham Vs.\nAmerican stock exchange prices\nwere irregular. Canadian Marconi\nwas up '-_ and Preston East Dome\n1-16 while Shawinigan lost Vt, Scurry Rainbow Oil %, Brazilian Traction Mi and Fargo Oil and Jupiter\nOils 1-16.\nThomson Reports\nKemsley Merger\nReal Success\nLONDON (Reutersl\u2014Canadian\npublisher Roy Thomson reported\nTuesday that his merger last\nJuly of the British Kemsley newspaper group and Scottish television is already proving an unqualified success and prospects\nare \"most encouraging.\"\nIn his first annual import a>\nchairman of the new group,\nThomson Newspapers Ltd., he said\ngroup trading profit* and investment income for 1959 rose to \u00a33,-\n214,246 from \u00a31,638,002. He added\nthat the contribution of the new\ntelevision subsidiary achieved the\nI estimate made last July _n connection with (he merger.\nHISTORIC SITE\nlite first chapel.at tile famous\nshrine of Ste. Anne de Beaupro\n20 miles east of Qoebeo was\nbufit by shipwirecfked Trench sailors In 1658.\nWEEKEND WAGE EARNER'\n\u2022. Have a thriving concession business at Champion Lake. For sale.\nConsists of: 24-ft. trailer, propane grill, cookers, everything\nnecessary. Gross $700 month\nopen weekends only 1. Sacrifice\nfor $700 cash. Phone 2152 at once!\nsmvWij7~planer  mTi_l7~35\nmillion  timber.  West  Kootenay\nLow   down   payment   to  responsible  operator.   Box   9817   Daily\nNews.\nBI iSINESS FOR\"\"SALE -\nroom  with  5  tables  and\nment   Phone 1453-L.\nPOOL\nequip-\nWANTED - LOGGING CON-\ntractors to fall and skid. Apply\nEd Shepherd. Ph. 6-4075 Rossland\nboats and engines\niTh.p. evinrude~a~quasonTc\noutboard motor with Cruisday\nlank New condition. $225.00 Contact Jim Tasker 2230 days.\n577-X-2 evenings.\nlawnniower\nclippers   Phone ! IV\nh:\u25a0:\"\u25a0'.lTh V'o;iTi <i-\nd,n anil '-\\ rn ii:a.\nFOR   SM,'-'.   SPMi\n817 Cnr'-oc-t. si\n2 sr-.vr r i-'ii)'' ci\n,147 Baker SI , Ne'.-\n'e'tnc lic-ge\nJ IRK  OPEN\n_.    I1.MII'.    st\nON   21\"   TV\ni\\'E STAND\nj TRADE UP TO A MERCURY:\nj Outboards 6-80 h p Glasspar.\nI Fiberglass boats Jetlery Radio\n! NEW IV-FIBRE T,lT?Sl-UNA-\nbout. Must be sold Best offer\n\\ mi's Gun Shoo, 171 Raker St\nj wr.r '\u00bb    \\' V;   ft   cTxoe\nt'n   I londit.on. Box 9(i:i3 Nelson\n'    News.\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Renting\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u00ab^w\nJ\nFIRST UNI\nsecond urn\nTHIRD UNI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nSEVINTM UNI\nEI\u00abHT UNI\n9  Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or  letters count al onf word.\n* Put Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\n* Box Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE RATES, USE THIS TABLI:\nPer Line\n1 Insertion\t\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive  Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n$ .20\n.31\n.45\n.60\n1.B2\n\u2022 Minimum charge Is two line*\n\u2022 Add 15a for Box Number\n\u2022 Take advantage of tho low six Hmo rat*\nMon  Consecutive Insertions 20c a  Line Per Time.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Aj}\nYOUR NAME\nADDRESS\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run .\nBill Me\t\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\n(\"lav si fieri.   Advertising   Department,   Nelson,   B.C.\nill \u2014_____\u2014I IT ii](l_l'ITII\"T>l\u00bbTl_fr___.>iilTi_T__l_r_ii1Tr_'1\n-pj\n _ .    \u2014r>\n16\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1960\nAS ADVERTISED ON TV\nREVLON\nMoon Drops\nIntroductory Offer\nNew . . . Moisturizing Cleanser\nFREE\nWith the purchase of Famous Moon  Drops\n$5.25  VALUE   FOR   ONLY\nGet Yours From\n$3.50\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black (ace type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCopper, brilliant, Iroquois, sum\nmer jewelry. HOBBY SHOP.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n612 Rioliards St., Ph. 1108, Nelson\nMAY FAIR, SAT., MAY 28\nSt. Paul's-Trinity Hall.\nStrong Bamboo Rakes 45c each\nWOOD,  VALLANCE   HARDWARE\nPlaymor For Your\nSat. Night Dance Party.\nBuddy Marr Orch.\nElks Social Saturday. May 14.\nLegion Hall. 9 p.m. Members and\nfriends, $2.00 per couple.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nSATURDAY AT 1:30 P.M.\nRummage Sale\nat the Salvation Army.\nBeach towels, in gay colors on\nwhite ground. ,1p\" x 54\", at $1.79.\nSTERLING  HOME   FURNISHERS\nLarge assortment oi Ladies'\nDresses to clear at Half Price, This\nweek only at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFor Sale \u2014 McClary coal range\nwith double water.jacket and tank,\ncheap. Phone 913.\n3-year guarantee on 50 ft. garden\nhose, with couplings\u2014$1.90 each;\nlarge selection of unpainted furniture.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560\nNEW SHIPMENT OF\nWHITE  HATS\nIRENE'S MILLINERY\n& DRESS SHOP\nWARD PHONE 50\nNext Elk's Bingo Saturday, May\n21, Civic Centre. $500 Jackpot. Admission $2.\nTomato   plants,   specially grown\nin individual pots. Bedding plants.\nUPHILL  GREENHOUSES\n1716 Stanley St. Ph. 2208\nKootenay Lake\nHistorical Society\nThe Annual Meeting of this Society wil! be held at the Kaslo Hotel, Kaslo B.C. on Thursday. May\n26th at 7:30 p.m. Election of Officers and other business. It is hoped that there will be a good turnout of members.\nLast call for Gladiolus Bulbs and I\nDahlia Tubers at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE %2\nNew Hi-Fi and Stereo LP Records\npriced from $1.98 up.   Over    1500\nrecords in stock.\nCUSTOM CAMERAS, 394 Baker St.\nCome to the Rossland Art Club's\nSeventh Annual Art Show, Saturday, 14th from 2 until 9, and Sunday 15th, 2-5 p.m. Co-Op building\nnear theatre.\nHOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE\nREPAIRS and SERVICE\nPhone D. McCuaig\nWeek Days 2333\nNights and Holidays 622-Y.\nSPECIAL NOTICE TO ALL ODDFELLOWS AND MEMBERS OF\nREBEKAH LODGES. IOOF ANNUAL CHURCH SERVICE WILL\nBE HELD IN ST. PAUL'S\nTRINITY UNITED CHURCH\nSUNDAY, MAY 15. 11 A.M. MEMBERS ARE REQUESTED TO\nMEET AT CHURCH AT 10:45 A.M\nDETAILS   ANNOUNCED\nREGINA iCPi - Maximum\ngrant a municipality can receive\nfrom the provincial government\nunder a Municipal Water Assist\nanre Act will be $75,000. This\nfigure is given in regulations\nunder the act. published in the\nSaskatchewan  gazette.\nCommon Market\nCountries End\nMarathon Talks\nLUXEMBOURG (Reuters)\nForeign ministers of the six European Common Market countries ended a 2_yiour marathon\nsession here early Wednesday by\nagreeing to approach the rival\nEuropean Free Trade Association\nfor a trade truce.\nBut formal notification of the\ntruce plan was delayed by an\ninternal dispute.\nThe ministers approved a \"declaration of intent\" calling for\ntalks between the Common Market and the Outer Seven countries\nof the British-led association.\nThe text of the letter to the\nEFTA suggesting a rapprochement meeting next month also\nwas approved. The talks would\nbe held within the framework of\nIhe 18-country Organization for\nEuropean Economic Co-operation\nwith the United States and Canada included.\nAGRICULTURAL  DISPUTE\nBut tile ministers agreed to\nhold up pulication of the \"declaration of intent\" and the sending of the letter because of a\nDutch-German dispute on agricultural tariffs.\nA council spokesman said when\nthe session broke up earlier\nthat the ministers had adjourned\nuntil Thursday. The agricultural\ndispute will be discussed again\nat that time, he said, and any\ntruce moves would be delayed\nuntil agreement is reached.\nThe dispute arose over plans to\ncut tariffs within the Common\nMarket by 20 per cent.\nThe Netherlands has insisted on\nincluding agricultural products in\nthis proposal.\nWest Germany, a heavy importer of food, wants to continue\nto be able to obtain produce\nfrom abroad without paying\nheavy duties.\nA spokesman has said, however, that plans for integration\nwithin the Common Market will\ngo ahead \"with deadline on December 31, 1960.\"\nFUTURE FLIERS. Enthusiastic gas model plane hobbyists are these Kimberley\nboys, Garry, left, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wong, and Garry, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nPhillip Olson. They send their models flying often at Coronation Park.\n\u2014C. Wormingfon photo.\nPretoria Judge Orders British\nWoman Missionary Deported\nPRETORIA, South Africa (Reuters) \u2014 Justice Minister Francois\nErasmus has signed an order to\ndeport British missionary Hannah\nStanton, it was disclosed Tuesday.\nAn affidavit submitted to the\nSupreme Court said Erasmus had\ndeclared Miss Stanton persona non\ngrata.\nThe court was resuming its\nhearing of an urgent application,\nsubmitted by Miss Stanton last\nweek for her immediate and unconditional release. The missionary has asked the court to prevent\nMinister Fairclough Tells Indians\nGov't To End Compulsory Voting\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Canada's 174.-\n000 Indians received assurance\ntoday from Citizenship Minister\nFairclough that the government\nproposes to remove from the Indian Act a section under which\nan Indian can be forcibly enfranchised.\nShe made the statement to the\njoint Commons-Senate committee\nstudying Indian affairs after the\nIndian association of Alberta\ncharged that the section is being\nused to bribe Indians with their\nown money to free the government of its treaty obligations.\nThe brief also said that no\namendments should bo proposed\nto the act until all Indian bands\nand organizations have had an\nopportunity to study and comment on them.\nFEAR  MEASURES\n\". . . We are still fearful that\nunpleasant or further dictatorial\nmeasures may again be forced\nupon us.  .   .   .\" said  Mrs. John\n<??\n:'\\..\nV.\nHERE IS THE MOWER\nTHAT HAS MORE\nTHAN THE MOST!\nTOUCH-A-MATIC   CUTTING\nHEIGHT ADJUSTER\nProvides  fine  cutting  heights operated  by  controls on\nthe handle, right at your fingertips, no tools required.\nIt's so easy now to adjust\ncutting height from 1\" to\n., 3 inches.\nTo  start, simply  turn  the   lever  a   few times,  fold  over\nWIND-UP   STARTING\nind\npress  down.\nMAXWELL  SWIRLCUT\nModel  M-6003\n19\"  Cut\n2J   Horse  Power\nMAXWELL  SWIRLCUT\nModel  M 6002\n22\" Cut\n3   Horse  Power\n$99.95 $119.95\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nPhone 1530\nCo. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE     RETAIL\nNelson, B. C.\nC. Gorman of Calgary, counsel\nfor the Alberta association.\nMrs. Gorman who presented\nIhe brief to the committee said\nthat a feeling of \"fear and suspicion\" will continue to exist\namong Canadian Indians for\nyears to come.\n\"Only honorable treatment and\na sincere effort to help our people will bring about a change in\nthis attitude,\" she said.\nThe brief said an Indian tcan\nbecome enfranchised voluntarily\nbut that Section 112 of the act\nmakes it possible for the government to do this by order-in-coun-\ncil. This could be done in cases\nwhere the government felt an Indian had advanced sufficiently to\nlive in the white man's world.\n\"Instead of encouraging us to\nattain self - sufficiency, the government has placed an ominous\nthreat before us, warning what\nmight happen to any of us who\nprogressed too far,\" the brief\nsaid.\nReplying to Mrs. Fairclough.\nMrs. Gorman said there is no\nrecord of any Indian being forcibly  enfranchised,\nGIVES UP RIGHTS\n\u25a0Hie minister said she has\nasked the committee to recommend that the section be removed.\nThe association said when an\nIndian becomes enfranchised he\nagrees lhat he no longer will he\nlegally considered an Indian. He\ngives up all treaty rights and is\nnever again permitted to live on\nhis reserve. He also relieves Ihe\ngovernment of any responsibilities to him under treaties or the\nIndian Act.\nMrs. Gorman said enfranchisement, to the while man means the\nright to vote and freedom. However, to the Indian it meant banishment \"from the land the government promised would be\ntheirs and their de.scendents for\nas long as the sun shines and the\nrivers  flow.\"\n\"We feel that, an Indian should\nbe able, if he wishes, to enjoy all\nthe rights, privileges and liabilities of non-Indians without any\nloss of treaty rights,\"  she said.\nErasmus from deporting her until\nher appliaction has been decided.\nShe claimed she has been kept\nin virtual solitary confinement,\nbeen refused access to her lawyer\nfor a period and that there was\n\"no justification\" for her detention.\nMiss Stanton, a British subject,\nis warden of the Tumelong Anglican mission in Lady Selbourne\nNegro township, near here. She\nwas detained March 30 under emergency regulations imposed following Negro riots.\nRELEASE PETITIONS\nIn Capetown, the justice department said Tuesday that although\nnewspapers have given publicity to\npetitions for release made by other\ndetainees to the justice minister,\nit had no knowledge of them and no\nsuoh petitions had reached the\ndepartment.\nMrs. Helen Suzman. Progressive\nparty Member of Parliament, said\nMonday night she had received\nanonymously a copy of a petition\nin which 21 white women detainees\nasked to know the reasons for their\ndetention and whether charges\nwould be preferred, and demanded\ntheir release. They threatened to\ngo on hunger strike from May 12\nunless released.\nCol. Rag Jenkins, deputy police\ncommissioner for the Port Natal\ndivision, said Tuesday that more\nthan 2300 Negroes were arrested\nin the Durban area last month and\narrests were continuing at hhe rate\nof about 100 a day.\nCommonwealth\nPassport In\nThe Oiling\nLONDON (CP) - The Guardian\nsays Commonwealth prime ministers during their conference here\nmay discuss the possibility oi ^\nCommonwealth  passport.\nThe Manchester newspaper says the question was raised\noutside the conference by Ghana,\nwhich is interested in discussing\nsome kind of \"laissez passer'\nfor South African political refugees that would be recognized by\nRhodesian authorities.\nSir Roy Welensky, prime minister of the Rhodesian federation,\nissued a statement saying that\nany Commonwealth passport\nwould have to be one recognized\nby all Commonwealth countries.\nNothing could be done unilaterally.\nThe newspaper notes that there\nts at present no concept of a\nwider nationality, though in all\nCommonwealth countries except\nSouth Africa, Pakistan and Ceylon there is a common clause\nwhereby \"the individual is, for\nexample, a Canadian citizen and\na British subject.\"\n\"This dual nationality gives the\nindividual a right to enter Britain\nas a national but it does not afford any such right in any other\nindependent country of the Commonwealth.\"\nThe paper also says that while\na Canadian is a British subject\na West Indian who is also a British subject is not a Canadian and\n\"may indeed if he gets entry to\nCanada \u25a0 find it hard to acquire\nCanadian citizenship.\"\nTake a Holiday\nFrom Heat\nin One of Our\n\"light-as-a-breeze\"\nShort Sleeve\nDress Shirts\n\u2022 Wash V Wear Cotton\n\u2022 Soft Collar\n\u2022 Blue, Tan, Grey or\nWhite\n$5\n.00\nAT\nEMORY'C\nLTD.      \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nCRUEL CO-EDS\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Five\nco-eds from San Francisco State\nCollege were convicted Tuesday\nof drowning a spider monkey at\nFleisch'hacker Zoo. Judge Lenore\nUnderwood sentenced them to\nspend an indefinite number of\nSaturdays working for the Society\nfor the Prevention of Cruelty to\nAnimals.\nDEATHS\nVancouver\u2014Dr. Peter Spohn,\n43, assistant clinical professor of\npediatries at the University of\nBritish Columbia.\nTel Aviv, Israel \u2014 Mauruce\nSchwartz, 72, founder and director of the Yiddish Art Theatre in\nNew York.\nFRENCH SCULPTOR\nEmmanuel Fremi.t, the\nFrench sculptor who died in 1910,\nwas noted for his animal sculptures and equestrian statues.\nBE  SAFE   AT  ALL  TIMES\nUse  a  GOOD   Deodorant\nCREAM-ROLL ON\nSPRAY\nElizabeth Arden \u2014 Tussy\nTiffany \u2014 Adrienne\nBachelor\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nCommercial\nStudents\n\"Promising\"\nGREAT   ABBEY\nThe large Benedictine Abbey at\nPeterborough in Northamptonshire, England, was founded in\n655 AD.\nOver-all opinion of businessmen\nin Nelson towards the capabilities\nof 20 L. V. Rogers High School\ncommercial students who spent a\nweek in business offices earlier this\nspring was \"very promising.\"\nWhen the girls entered the offices they gave their \"employer\"\na questionaire to be filled out at the\nend of the week and returned to the\nschool.\nThe questionaire was in chart\nform, listing skills as inferior, poor,\n! average, good, superior and not. ap\n: plicable. Questions were asked as\nI to Uie girl's ability in typing, using\ntelephone, filing, etc.\nAccuracy, ability to learn and\npersonality traits were also part\nof the questionaire and businessmen were asked to fill them in.\nComments on the girls were also\nreceived from the businessmen and\nsome of them are as follows:\n\"Apprentice has no difficulty\nwith her shorthand and typing and\ndid remarkably well for a person\nstarting in an office where the\nprocedure is strange to her. By\nthe time she completes her course\nshe should not have any difficulty\nin obtaining and holding a position\nas stenographer.\"\n\"This type of student gives a\nbusinessman the feeling that there\nare still going to he available competent and efficient secretaries in\nthe future. Though we did not have\nmuch direct contact with this\nyoung lady, her attitude and approach to her work was most satisfying and pleasing. We are quite\ncertain that, she will more than satisfy any future employer and will\nbe a decided asset to any business\norganization.\"\n\"Great, possibilities for this girl\nas she showed that she 'was not\nafraid of work and seemed to take\nan interest in everything she attempted.\"\nHove   the   Job   Done   Right I\nVIC GRAVEC\n1        LIMITED **\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St.\nARTIST  ATTACKED\nCAPETOWN I API - Ulrica\nForbesz, 57, woman artist who\nhas painted portraits of the Royal\nFamily, was seriously injured by\nan attacker in her flat Tuesday\nnight. Among her best - known\npaintings is one commissioned by\nthe Queen Mother Elizabeth in\n1954 of the infant Princess Anne.\nA non-white man stabbed the\nartist in an arm with a knife,\nthen poured a bottle of benzine\nover her and set her on fire.\nCries for help brought a neighbor\nto the flat, but the assailant escaped.\nGoing On\nHOLIDAYS?\nDon't Miss Important\nNEWS ITEMS\nWhich Take Place While You Are Gone.\nHave the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nSAVED FOR YOU\nBy Your\nCARRIER BOY\nJust ask him to save your paper till you come\nback giving him the date of your return. He will\ndeliver the back copies along with the current\nissue on the date specified.\nOUR\nCarriers Are Anxious\nTo Give This\nSPECIAL SERVICE\nTo Their\nHolidaying Customers\nThis Summer.\n_M0on lath} ^fwa\nE\u2014i\u2014\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_05_12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0433343","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"}]}}