{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0433902":{"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":"2023-06-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1961-06-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0433902\/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":" PfP1- .      \"';fP?^f\nTfie \/nferi*or\/$\nLargest Daily Newspaper\nMay Average Press Run \u2014 9551\n*0*ff\n****)\nPublish**} at Nelson, transportati^i jvernment, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\n1M3S,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: A few douds. A\nlittle cooler. Light winds occasionally southerly IS tonight. Low and\nIjigh at Oanbrook and Orescent\nValley 40 and 70.\nVol. 60\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 9, 1961\nNot More Than 7c Daily, 10c Saturday\nNo. .41\nHelps\nHold?\nPower Dams on Fraser\nAttacked bv B*C Senator\nOTTAWA (CP)-A British Columbia senator Thursday attacked the suggestion of B.C.\nPremier Bennett to sell Columbia River power rights to the\nUnited States as \"a most astonishing proposal.\"\nLiberal Senator Tom Reid also\nFLOOD TROUBLE. A B.C. Telephone Co. crew la seen at work repairing\nthe company's submarine cable beside the park fence on the old Nelson ferry\nlanding. Two hundred lines in Fairview and the North Shore were out when the\ncable was damaged by water. Sery.ce was restored late Wednesday night.\nFrom left: R. B. Smith, Ray McCabe and Frank Smith.\u2014Daily News photo.\nFleming Asks Additional\n$137.5 Million Spending\nGov't Outlay Already\nOver Last Year Record\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Supplementary spending estimates\ntotalling $137,545,683 were presented to the Commons\nThursday by Finance Minister Fleming.\nThe new appropriations requested, added to the\nmain spending program for the year announced Jan. 26,\nbring total spending to a record $6,867,873,865 for the\nfiscal year which began April 1.\nThis total includes $606,570,000 for old age security\npensions which aren't counted as part of budgetary\noutlays.\nof the United Nations Congo aid\nfund.\n$1,810,660 to cover expenses of\nfive royal commissions, including $1,577,480 for the Glassco\ncommission on government organization and $125,000 for the\nroyal commission on health\nservices which hasn't yet been\nestablished.\n$3,922,200 for Uie agriculture\ndepartment, including an additional $1,380,000 as cotmpensa-\nlion for animals slaughtered in\ndisease-control programs.\n$750,000 for Canada's foreign\naid programs, including $390,000\nior West Indies assistance, $60,-\n000 for completion of the program to rehabilitate refugees\nsuffering from TB, and $300,000\nfor the new program of educational aid to French - speaking\nindependent states in North\nAfrica.\nIn the construction field, the\nnew estimates include $900,000\nextra for penitentiary construction, $388,166 for fisheries department projects, $1,100,000 for\nexpansion in the defence research board, $1,317,300 for construction projects in the' Northwest Territories and $1,095,009\nDUNCAN (CP) \u2014 Mrs. Ella for buildings and harbor works\nDuncan,   whose   husband   died! by the public works department.\nThe spending program, which\nwffl be increased1 as the year-\nprogresses, already exceeds last\nyear's record1 $6,670,273,064.\nMost of the extra spending\nproposed today is to meet costs\nof new government policies already announced and continuation otf existing policies. These\ninclude:\n$50,000,000, related' to recommendations of the royal commission on transportation, to be\npaid in 1961 to railway companies as defined1 in the F-eight\nRates Reduction Act.\n$31,250,000 for increases in veterans' disability pensions.\n$20,000,000 to cover new\nagreements with the provinces\non vocational training schools.\n$10,000,000 for the new program of capital subsidies for\nthe shipbuilding industry.\n$3,044,150  as  Canada's  share\nWoman Plans\nSil Down Strike\nwhen his heart exploded, said\nThursday she and her three children will hold a sit-down strike\nin the legislative buildings to protest a Workmen's Compensation\nBoard decision.\nMrs. Duncan, 46, said the board\nowes her money due to the death\nlast year of her husband LesUe,\nwho then was 38. He died after\nlifting a piano at a high school\nand doctors said the strain caused\nhis heart to explode.\nShe said her trip to Victoria\nwith children Harriet, is, Tommy,\n1, and Bonnie, 7, may begin \"any\nAn additional $1,000,000 is requested as the federal share of\nprovincial flood - control and\nwater conservation projects.\nROBLIN  FIGHTS\nFOR MORE\nFLOOD AID\nFleming\nEstimates\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Main items\n!nthe $137,545,683 supplementary\n.Ktimates tabled in the Commons\nThursday by Finance Minister\n.'leming:\n$50,000,000 In direct siftsidies\nto the nation's major railways.\n$31,250,000 for increases in vet-\no.ans' disability pensions.\n$20,000,000 to cover new agreements with the provinces on vocational training schools.\n$10,000,000 to start the n e w\nprogram of capital subsidies for\nthe shipping industry.\n$3,044,150 as Canada's share\nof the UN aid fund for tlie Congo.\nGromyko\nNo Help\nGENEVA (Reuters) \u2014 Soviet\nForeign Minister Andrei Gromyko Thursday night punctured\nWestern hopes that he might\nbreak the deadlock in the 14 -\npower conference on Laos.\n, \"My pockets are empty,\" Gromyko told reporters when asked\nif he had any message from the\nICremlin on his arrival from Moscow.\nWestern delegations had hoped\nGromyko might carry a message\ncalling for an effective ceasefire in the Laotian civil war as\nagreed last weekend in Vienna\nbetween President Kennedy and\nPremier Khrushchev.\nGromyko's statements held no\npromise to get negotiations rolling at the conference, indefinitely stalled Thursday by the American, British and French delegations.\nOJaieA. AlvhIl\nKootenay River at Nelson \u2014\nThursday, 18.35 feet above zero;\nWednesday 18.25 feet. Peak in\n1948-June 10\u201417.62 feet; 1956\u2014\nJune 6\u201418 feet.\nColumbia \u2014 Thursday 44.62;\nWednesday 43.80. 1948 peak -\n46.00.\nsaid he would like to see Mr.\nBennett cany out his threat to\nbuy out B.C. Electric Company\nLimited.\nHe made the statements during a Senate s;.3ecb attacking\nthe idea of building power dams\non the Fraser River.\nSenator Reid, chairman of the i\nInternational Pacific Salmon!\nand lying statements\" and said\nthe proposal to build dams on\nthe Fraser is evidently inspired\nby B.C. Electric.\nATTACKS PREMIER\nSenator Reid referred to a recent statement by Mr. Bennett\nsuggesting that Canada's downstream power rights on the Columbia River \u2014 the additional\nFisheries Commission, said that | ____<,.   _\u201e.;,_,.,.  j.  ft.\n\u2022so-called engineers\" at a re- miei states\ncent engineering Institute oi\nCanada meeting in Vancouver\nhad said the problem of getting\nsalmon safely over high power\ndams has been solved.\nHe termed them \"misleading\nthrough\ndams built in the B.C. interior-\nshould be sold for cash.\nHe said the premier had proposed that the money would provide cheap power at Vancouver\nby aiding Peace River power development in northern B.C.\nThe senator added that there\nwould never be dieap power in\nthe   lower   mainland   of   B.C.\nwhile B.C. Electric remains in\nj its  present dominant  position.\nI The company was losing $2,000,-\nI 000 a year on its buses, subsidized by the power users.\nS   He said the people of the prov-\nLONDON (CP) \u2014In what looks '.ince would be very much in fa-\nlike tlie final prelude to an agon- [' vor of the province purchasing\nCOST OF LIVING\nBritain To\nSound Out\nCommonwealth\nAVERAGE PAY\nParliament\nThursday\nBy The Canadian Press\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\ntold the Commons the U. S. has\nwithdrawn its ban on suction un-\nloaders for tankers on the Cana-\nda-to-China grain run..\nCNR President Donald Gordon\ncame under heavy fire from a\nbattery of MPs as debate resumed on transport department estimates.\nTransport Minister Balcer announced that legislation will be\nintroduced soon for the Great\nSlave Lake itailway project.\nSupplementary spending estimates of $137,545,683 were tabled\nby Finance Minister Fleming\nwith $50,000,000 included for railways.\nMr. Balcer said proposed subsidy aid for shipping could total\n$500,000,000 in 10 years.\nThe Senate put off a show -\ndown battle over a Liberal amendment to the government's\ncontroversial bill on tariffs.\nizing decision, Britain is sending a team of top ministers on a\ncircuit of Commonwealth countries, it was learned Thursday.\nThe object is to find out, once\nami for all, how the sister nations will, react if Britain finally\nand irrevocably decides to link\nher-economic end political destinies wi_h United .Europe.\nCommonwealth\"-(Relations Secretary Duncan Sandys, and probably two or three other senior\nministers, will make the- tour\nperhaps within the next six week\nan official source said. Each\nminister will visit a different\npart of the Commonwealth to\nsave time.\nIt had previously been reported either that Prime Minister\nMacmillan himself would visit\nCommonwealth capitals or that\na meeting of prime ministers\nwould be held in London to consider the implications of British\nentry into Europe.\nThe recent appointment of Vis-\ncouilt Amory as United Kingdom\nHigh Commissioner to Canada\nis also regarded as part of the\ndeveloping political pattern.\nU.S. Concedes\nOn Grqin Equipment\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Premier\nDuff. Roblin of Manitoba said\nThursday a federal government\nformula providing 37V. per cent\nof the cost of the Metropolitan\nToronto flood control plan is not\nday now because I am so fed up acceptable for the $64,000,000\nwith the whole business.\" | Greater Winnipeg Floodway.\nThey have been living off in-;    The Toronto flood control agree-1 bMnrarefuirtou*ed\"andthat\n*-.-.\u00bb..       -.mr.      nll.fKt._i      11 V,f\\ -.\u00bb*     ill* A     J1 \"11. n       ] V\ni probably Canadian Amba_sador\n| Arnold  Heeney  in  Washington\nwould informally convey a fur-\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - The United\nStates Thursday relaxed its ban\non trade with Red Ohina just\nenough to slip through 10 high-\npowered grain pumps needed to\nexpedite Canadian grain shipments to China from St. Lawrence terminals.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\nmade plain his appreciation in\na Commons statement which\nexpressed thanks .and carefully\nnoted the difficulties faced by\nthe U.S. in this special accommodation for Canada.\nWhile no formal note of thanks\nwas indicated, officials said the\nprime minister's statement had\nsurance money since Mr. Duncan ment was signed under the Oana-\ndied and they have enough to da Water Conservation Act which\nlast them another nine months.   I Mr. Roblin has rejected as not\nShe said two doctors have given I applying in Manitoba's case.        ,, ,.\nwritten reports lhat her husbandi    Under the act, the federal and' *OT expression of Canadian ap-\nwas in good physical condition provincial governments each pay\nand died as a result of lifting the 37V. per cent and the municipali-\npiano.\n\"For more than a year I have\nbeen battling with the board for\nties pay the remaining 25 per\ncent.\nMr.   Roblin   has   maintained\ncompensation but they refuse to that the emergency nature ot\nhelp me,\" said Mrs. Duncan, j the Manitoba situation and the\n\"They have classed my husband's fact that international waters are\ndeath as heart trouble and it is j involved make Manitoba eligible\ncompletely wrong.\" for more federal aid.\npreaation.\nThey also suggested that the\nU.S. at this time, hard on the\nheels of President Kennedy's\nOttawa visit, could hardly have\ntaken any action better calculated to fan Canadian good will.\nLAUDS DECISION\nSaid Mr. Diefenbaker: \"I am\nsure honoralble members gener\nally would want me to say how\nmuch we appreciate the good\nsense which the United States\nadministration has shown in reconsidering this matter of concern to Oanada.\n\"The adjustments Ihey have\nmade have not been easy for\nthem in the light of the long-\nestablished policies in their\ncountry and,-ihe strong feelings\nregarding, any United States\nparticipation in trade with Communist China.\nMINE, MILL\nRETURNS GILLIS\nSUDBUrV, Ont. (CP) - Don\nGillis, the man pledged to bring\nLocal 598 of the International\nUnion of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers (Ind.) back into the\nCanadian Labor XJongress, has\nbeen retu\"jned as local-president\nwith his entire slate.\nResults were announced on\nThursday following baJlottjnig on\nWednesday. Mr. Gillis polled\n6585 votes to top Albert Routliffe\nwho collected 5505.\n\\\nthe private power company.\nSpeaking on salmon, he said\nno solution has yet been found\nto the problem of getting migrating salmon safely past high\npower dams.\nPOSTER WINNER\nPENTICTON.(CP) -.Jack Os-\ntoforov, 17, of Penticton has won\nthird prize in a poster contest entered by more than 29,000 persons who submitted works to a\nNew York art.school. He entered three bnmaneJtheme posters\nin the' Latham Foundation international contest.\nIf Dikes Resist River Pressure j\nCrisis Could End in Few Days\nGrief and worry continue for flood lighters in the Kootenays, but reason fo*\ncautious optimism arose along the Kootenay and Columbia Rivers Thursday.\nCooler weather moved over the area, where hot weather several days earlier\nspeeded mountain runoff and sent the two rivers rising to flood stage,\ni If dikes can withstand the pressure of the swollen rivers for a few more days,\n| the worst may be over and\nthe damage confined.\n'    Close watch was being kept on\nthe situation along bolh rivers\nThursday    and    flood   fighters\nmoved quickly to rebuild weak\nspots in the diking systems.\nThe Kootenay showed a slight\ndrop at Oreston. The Columbia\n| continued to rise slowly here toward a peak expected by Saturday, but upstream indications\npointed to a lower crest than originally expected.\nj    Meanwhile, 2,000 civilian and\nI military personnel continued battling the rampaging Kootenai \u2014 the   spelling   changes\ni wtiere the river leaves eastern\n: B.C. to run through Montana\nand Idaho before returning to\n, B.C.   near   Creston   \u2014  in  the\n' United States. There, the river\nhas burst through dikes in 6ev-\n| !\ni Revolt Nipped\nj.n the Bud !\nLA PAZZ, Bolivia (AP) - A\nCommunist plot for a Ouban-\nty-pe revolution in this tin-mining nation has been crushed with\nthe arrest of 60 leftist union\nleaders, President Victor Paz Es-\ntenssorb's government announced\nThursday;        '    ')'    '   \"\"\"\u25a0\nA communique called on all\n3,500,000 citizens to aid the government and oppose communism,\nsaying that \"on this aid depends\nthe future of Bolivia as an independent country and as a democracy.\"\nStanley Kabat Fourth\nFatality at Michel\nMorris Says\nTwo Alternatives\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Joe Morris, president of the 27,000-strong\ncoast lumber workers' union,\ntold members Thursday night\nthey must either accept last\nyear's wage contract or \"consider the possibility of a prolonged\nstrike this year.\"\nHe set out the alternative in a\nradio broadcast sponsored here\nweekly by the Western District\nInternational Woodworkers of\nAmerica.\nMr. Morris appealed to members to accept the contract settlement whidh provides no across-\nthe-board wage increase.\nThe agreement, reached by\nunion negotiators and lumber operators, is being voted upon by\nunion members. Results will be\nknown about June 17.\nMr. Morris' appeal came during a test of strength with a rival\nunion leader, Syd Thompson,\npresident Of the 8(\u00bb0-member\nVancouver IWA local.     '' i '\u201e\nMr. Thompson is urging his\nmembers to feject,the proposed\nsettlement and hold out for the\nunion's '-'Original', demand, for a\n12.4-cent pn.'hour increase.\nMICHEL \u2014 Injuries suffered,\nwhen he was struck by a runaway coal car, proved fatal for\nStanley Kabat, an employee of\nthe Crews Nest Pass Coal Company at the Michel Colliery.\nMr. Kabat, a miner from\nBlairmore, in his middle fifties,\nwas working on the night shift\nTuesday morning in the west\nsection of the Michel Mines when\na cable holding a coal car snap\nped and hurtled down an incline,\nstriking Mr. Kabat. He died on\nthe way to the Michel Hospital.\nAn inquest will be held next\nweek under direction of coroner\nL. F. Cheston of Natal.\nMr. Kalbat's death was t h e\nfourth fatality within a month at\nthe Michel mines.\nFuneral services are to be held\nat Blairmore Saturday from St.\nAnn's Catholic Church.\nTHE WEATHER\nNelson -  52 75\nCalgary    47 70\nVancouver   48 85\nVictoria     50  59  .\nSan Francisco  54 54\nne    42 78\nDOIXARUP\nNEW YORK (OP) \u2014 Canadian\ndollar 1-16 higher at $1.01 5-16\nin terms of U.S. funds.. Week\nago $1.015-16. Pound sterling 1-32\nlower at $2.79.\nera! districts and 5,000 acres of\nfarmland have been flooded.\nIn Washington and Oregon,\nwhere the Colombia flows after\nleaving Canada south of Trail,\ndikes have held firm against tlie\nrising waters and flooding has\nbeen confined to minor low-lying\nareas so far.\nThe River Forecast Centre in\nPortland reported streams\nihrougliout the northwest began\ndropping Thursday. Even the\nheadwaters of the Kootenay fell\nas cooler weather moved in.\nThe forecast is for generally\nfew days, which will slow runoff j\nand reduce the river levels.        I\nIn the Oreston area, where 51\nmiles of dikes so far have pro- j\nlected the 50,000 acres of land\nalong the Kootenay, little dam- |\nage has been done.\nArmy personnel worked\nThursday on dikes near Kootenay Lake where the waters of\nthe lake backed up into the\nriver. The Kootenay is expected\nto orest near Oreston today.\nAt Trail, A. F. Paget, water\nrights controller for B.C., and\ncivil, defence co-ordinator Jack\nBuchanan said the Columbia\ncrest should come by Saturday.\nThe river flow had been expected, to reach . 370,000 . cubic.\nfeet a second\u2014equal to the orest\nin 1848 when flooding caused\nwidespread damage here \u2014 but\nThursday it appeared the flood\nmight be slightly below that.\nTrail already had experienced\nsome flooding, with nearly 100\npersons having had to leave\ntheir homes and some downtown\nstreets awash, and the chief\nroad link between Trail and the\neast has been severed by flooding of approaches to the Castlegar ferry.\nAn emergency passenger\nferry _erv.ce was begun Thursday, with a motor launch carrying 30 to 40 persons crossing the\nriver four hours daily.\nOn the Kootenay Lake, ferry\nservice between Balfour and tlie\nNelson area was ..threatened as\nthe lake continued to rise.\nDRUG ADDICTS\nTO BE TREATED\nAT MATSQUI\nOTTAWA (CP) - The first federal treatment centre for drug\naddicts will be built in Matsqui,\nB.C., it was reported Thursday.\nIf will house 350 male and 100\nfemale addicts sent into custody\nfor treatment under terms of new\nnarcotics legislation now before\nparliament.\nA staff of 200 will man the\ncentre when it reaches full operation.\nAddicts will be held in custody there until released by the\nNational Parole Board.\nFederal authorities now are\nnegotiating for purchase of property in the B.C. community\nand construction is expected to\nstart this year.\nFRACTIONAL DIP. Canada's\ncost-of-living index eased one-\ntenth of a point to an even 129\nat May 1. This compared with\n129.1 for the two previous,\nmonths and 128.2 at May 1 last\nyear. Upper graph traces, living'\ncosts, based on 1949 prices\nequalling 100, for 1959, 1960 and\nto date this year. Lower graph\nshows the index of average industrial wages and salaries. The\nindex, based on 1949 figures\nequalling 100, dropped to 180.8\nat April 1 from 181.1 a month\nearlier. (CP Newsmap)\nCougar Killed\nIn Victoria\nVICTORIA (CP) - Two cab\ndrivers and half dozen police\nturned game hunters to kill a wild\ncougar in a Government Street\ndoorway at dawn Wednesday..\nA M-grown young male tnoun-\ntain cat weighing in over 10Q\npounds, leaped, bounded over car,\ncrouched, crept and ied through\na maze of downtown streets sftejf\nit was first spotted shortly after\n4 a.m.\nOne cab driver saw the animal\nat Douglas and Humboldt, disbelieving his eyes, then had difficulty convincing others by.radM\nthat he was taking up the pursuit\nin his taxi.\nPolice prowlers, traffic psttrol\ncar and patrol waigon entered th\u00ab\nhunt several blocks later and\npolice took a number of shots $t\ntlie cougar with revolvers and\nrifles, killing it at Mc&Mc Bard-\nware store.\n\"It was a wild one, all right,\"\nsaid Cons. Leslie Motterhead,\nwhose rifle bullet first dropped\nChe cat.\nThe incident was closely similar to the last downtown cougar\nhunt in Victoria 35 years ago,\nwhen now retired Cons. James\nStrong shot a female cougar at\n5:15 a.m. on rear stairs of the\npublic library.\nCougars have been seen within\nthe city\u2014on Foul Bay Road and\nin Beacon Hill Park\u2014but not\nsince 1927.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nEUREKA, Calif. (AP)\u2014They've got a peeping horse around\ntown hut the city council won't do anything about it.\nRufus Johnson complained that a horse had been staring Into\nhis bedroom window. The council considered making it illegal\nfor a horse to graze within 35 feet of residential property bu.\nfigured horse lovers would' mount a protest.\nWhen It came to a vote Wednesday, the neighs prevailed.\nCHARLES ROBERT SWART, first president of South Africa,\nis known as \"the man the million Africans feared.\" A one-time\nbit actor ln Hollywood, he became South African head of state\nat Republic Day ceremonies Wednesday. His same means\n\"Black\" is Afrikaans.\u2014TNS photo.\nOTTAWA (CP)~Maj. D. L. (Burley) Burleson, 43, told Thursday how he became probably the first man to \"float\" the Ottawa\nRiver's rocks-tudded Deschenes Rapids \u2014 and live to tell it.\n\"I floated down feet first,\" he chuckled in his office Thursday, and escaped \"with only a few bruises.\"\nMaj. Burleson, deputy director of army public relations, was\nfishing Wednesday in an anchored aluminum outboard skiff about\n50 yards above the rapids in the west end of the.city when a\nwave flipped the boat over.\nHe climbed to the top of the boat and remained there until\nhelp came. A few minutes later a rope was tossed to him from\na motor-launch, but as he was being pulled in the rope slipped.\nMaj. Burleson was swept into the rapids, floating through th.e\n300 yards of churning water feet-first.\nHe was picked up at the other end, only slightly bruised\nand was-.back at his desk Thursday. Above the desk was a sign\nreading:\n\"Niagara Falls or bust.\"\nI\n ___\" , \u2014:\u2014\u25a0\" \"\t\n\u25a0\u2022.;'. :'...:\u25a0\n^'TCW\u00bb5JT\u00bb\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961\nSoutire Dance Jamboree\nTo Be Bonsoiel Feature\nNelson and District Square\nDance Association at the request\nof the Nelson Midsummer Bonspiel committee is holding a\nsquare dance . jeWiiboree July 7\nand 8 of this year as part of the\nsummer bonspiel entertainment.\nThe association has decided to\nmake this an annual event, and\nalthough time has been short, for\nmaking arrangements for this\nyear's event, plans are proceeding without a hitch.\nThe dances will be held on the\nRecreation ball grounds under tlie\nstars. The Civic Centre rink floor\nwill be placed on the grounds and\nthen-a !hree_pfly veneer will be\nlaid over to provide an excellent\ndance surface.\nThe association is expending\nover $500 to obtain the floor,\nwhich with the cost of an outside\ncaller for July 8, will make an\nexpenditure for the first year of\nmil over $650. The association\ndoe. not expect to finish out of\nthe'red this year, but with contributions to the floor fund from\nsquare dancers in the city, will\nbe able to carry on without financial difficulties.\nAn annual summer jamboree\nhas been the aim of a number of\nNelson square dancers for years,\nond it is their hope that this can\nbe built into something comparable to the Penticton Peach\nFestival event, and advertised\ntlie year around.\nBesides the Bast and West Kootenay and Okanagan, dancers\nfrom Montana, Idaho and Washington have already announced\nthey will.be attending. Bringing\npeople into Nelson toward the\nend of the bonspiel week will not\ncause an accommodation problem\nas some of the bonspiel entrants\nwill have already been eliminated\nand will have started to leave\nthe city.\nVic Graves, Nelson square\ndance caller who has received\nKCs Celebrate\njubilee Sunday\nI Jtelson Knights of Columbus\nwill celebrate their Golden Jubilee. Sunday with an initiation and\na banquet \u2014\n; The Nelson Council received its\nnharter May* 28, 1911, and some\nOf (foe oldtimers visiting Nelson\nlor the occasion,v* be Leo Mc-\nKJimon, Joseph Speakman and\nJames Duffy.\ni At the banquet, Gordon Brego-\nBss, newly-elected State Deputy\nof -he order, will be guest speaker. Men from Salmo, Trail. Rossland, Grand Forks and Greenwood will attend the initiation\nprogram, which starts with the\ncandidates and members of the\nOder attending Mass at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate at\n80:30 a.m.\nLarger Dial\nExchange\nFor South Siocan\nCASTLE  Theatre\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight and Saturday\n'GUNS OF THE TIMBERLAND'\n(Color)\nAlan Ladd - Jeanne Crain\nNews - Cartoon - Short\nShow Times, 6:45 and 9 p.m.\nStarlight Drive-In\nTonight and Saturday\nShow Starts at 9:00 p.m.\n\"BUCHANAN\nRIDES ALONE\"\nTechnicolor\nRandolph Scott\nPLUS -   .\"\nTH! WHOLE TRUTH\"\nStewart Granger, Donna Reed,\nGeorge Sanders\nReplacement of the South Siocan automatic exchange with a\nlarger unit is tentatively scheduled in August by British Columbia Telephone Company.\nA 120-line exchange, 50 percent\nlarger than the present system,\nis being installed in a portable\nbuilding at Vancouver. It will be\nshipped to South Siocan in late\nJune for connection to the exchange lines and tests prior to\nj use in August. The exchange oi\nabout 250 phones will continue to\nreceive operator service from\nNelson.\nDistrict manager E. C. Winte-\nmute, of Nelson, said Uiat other\nWest Kootenay exchanges of\nKaslo, Nelson, New Denver,\nSalmo and Siocan would be converted from manual to dial service during the following 12\nmonths. He said those exchanges\nand Sotuh Slooan would be introduced to All Number Calling \u2014\ntlie use of seven-digit telephone\nnumbers.\nln August, South Siocan numbers will be prefixed \"359\" fallowed by four digits. The new\nsystem is designed to provide\nmors exchange prefixes than are\nnow available under the two-\nletter, five-figure plan in many\ndial exchanges.\nMr. Wintemute said ANC lends\nitself to better use of equipment\nas well as increased accuracy in\ndialing.\nDate of the replacement and\nthe use of new numbers coincide\nwilh publication of a new directory.\nconsiderable oall for his services\nin the past two years, will be\nmaster of ceremonies for the July\n7 dance, and Jimmy Brooks, of\nSeattle Hayloft fame, will be the\ncaller on July 8.\nMany Take\nin\nElks Program\nA medley of the more difficult\nmovements oalled \"Pot Pourri\"\nwas particularly well received\nwhen the Balfour Beaux Belles\nentertained the British Columbia\nElks Association conference at\nNelson this week.\nThe group performed for half\nan hour under direction of caller\nJ. G. James, and was one of\nseveral which entertained the\nvisitors. '\u2022\nThe Balfour dancers made a\npleasing picture in their costumes, the girls in white blouses\nand blue skirts, and the boys in\ndark trousers and white shirts.\nThey were applauded for their\ndance, the \"Star Galaxy;\" the\n\"Siesta In Seville,\" a two-step\nperformed by four couples;\n\"Stepping Out,\" a demonstration\nof perfect timing by Pat McKee\nand Harry James, and the Hun-\ngarian Folk Dance by Mr. andl\nMrs. James.\nOthers participating were Nancy Craigdalle, Pat Webber, Lor-\netta Samartino, Anne Wellwood,\nMike Molloy, Norm Kubn, Dale\nSweitzer and Brett Bowles.\nIn other entertainment, Miss\nSharon Leverington did the.\nCharleston dance, Miss Peggy\nJoinson sang \"Cleopatterer,\" and\nthe Canadian Legion quintet ol\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Olson.\nGeorge Harvey and Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Merriman sang selections.\nKen Frederiokson played the guitar and Don Hunter the piano.\nTOP CADETS. Receiving awards at annual inspection of Nelson Junior High\nSchool Cadet Corps Wednesday night were Clem Price, best first-year cadet;\nRay Leeming, best all-around cadet, and David Smith, best marksman. Inspecting officer' was Capt. H. E. Dahlquist of the 111th Battery, Nelson.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nRainbow Spawning\nRun Best Since 1957\nAuto Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B. C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"BABETTE  GOES TO WAR\"\nStarring Bridgette Bardot\nPLUS -\n\"COMANCHE  STATION\"\nShow Time, 9:00 p.m.\n45\nSEE  ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S \"BEST ACTRESS\"\nAWARD-WINNING  PERFORMANCE\nComplete Shows Tonight - Saturday 7:00\ni^Sorne women never give a name.\nI just a phone number!\nM-G-M mrUriNTi\nELIZABETH TAYLOR\nLAURENCE HARVEY\nEDDIE FISHER\n9:00\n(Adult)\nLegion Ritual\nConducted\nAt Serres Rites\nFuneral service was held at\nThompson Funeral Home Thursday for Ernest Dominic Serres,\n74, Harrop war veteran who died\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital Monday. Rev. H. R. Whit-\nmore officiated.\nHymns sung were \"I to the\nHills Will Lift Mine Eyes,\" and\n\"Jesus Lover of My Soul.\" Organist was Mrs. W. A. Manson.\nRoyal Canadian Legion ritual\nservice was under direction of\nH. E. Thain.\nPallbearers were Max Kasper,\nC. O. Anderson, A. S. Horswill,\nFred Castle, J. Dawson and H. C.\nCarne. Cremation followed.\nThe Fish and Game Branch\nthis year reported tlie highest\ncount of spawning trout in the\nLardeau River since 1957.\nThe maximum numbers ol\nKootenay Lake Rainbow trout on\nthe Gerrard spawning grounds at\none time has fluctuated annually\n- 44 in 1957, 107 in 1958, 210 in\n1959, 162 in 1960 and 214 in 1961.\nThis count is not the total number\nof fish in the spawning run but\nthe count of the maximum number of fish at one time. Considerable daily interchange of fish\ntakes place on the spawning\nground with new fish moving in\nto spawn and other fish moving\nout.\nAs a part of tlie Fisheries\nManagement program for Kootenay Lake, the Fish and Game\nBranch this year obtained about\n56,000 eggs from the Lardeau run\nof spawning rainbows. These\neggs are being incubated in the\nSummerland Trout Hatchery and\nwhen hatched, the fry, or finger-\nling trout will be released into a\nrehabilitated lake, barren of any\nother fish. Once matured, these\nfish will be stripped and their\neggs planted directly back into\nthe Lardeau River to increase the\nstock of rout in Kootenay Lake.\nIn tins manner a large planting\nof eggs may he made in the\nLardeau River to add to tlie\neggs now being deposited naturally.\nSix adult trout were taken Irom\nGerrard and preserved for comparison with fish obtained from\nthe West Arm of Kootenay Lake.\nThese fish will be studied for a\nracial comparison in order to\nascertain wnetner ohe Lardeau\nRiver fish are in fact a race or\ngroup of fish separate from other\nspawning populations in Kootenay\nLake.\nJuvenile Jailed\nFor Car Theft\nA Vancouver juvenile was sentenced to one year at Oakalla on\nThursday when he appeared before Magistrate R. S. Nelson,\ncharged with car theft.\nThe car was stolen in Nelson\nTuesday and the youth was apprehended near Yahk later the\nsame day, after a 70-mile an\nhour chase by RCMP.\nAbout $100 damage resulted to\nlhe vehicle when it went into a\nciitch. It is owned by K. W. Fred-\nrickson.\nStipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans reserved decision on an\nimpaired driving charge until\nJune 19. Mike W. Popoff of Crescent Valley is changed with having operated a vehicle while impaired on the Ymir Road Monday.\nD. L. Ferrier of Nelson had a\nspeeding charge waived from\nTrail to Nelson. He was fined\n515.\nEducation, Hunger Challenges\nTo Face, Rogers Graduates Told\nTHE BEST DANCE\nBANfeS PLAY\nIN YOUR HOME\nAll Rhythms V Beats\nFor Step Lively  Feet.\nThe fomoui bonds of:\nRAY McKINLEY \u2014    BILLY VAUGHN\nLIS ELGART \u2014 LAWRENCE WELK\n\u25a0-   _        and many others.\nRecords by\nRCA VICTOR - LONDON - COLUMBIA - DECCA\n':HirFf.d.n|lvS'tefgo':B.e<;brd[irig'S''\nThe challenge of the future and\nwhat today's young people can\ndo about it was the theme of\nKalhie Herbison's valedictory\nspeech at the recent graduation\nexercises in the L. V. Rogers\nHigh School.\nThe first problem, she stated,\nhas to do with education. Half\nthe world's ohildren have no prospect of being exposed to even the\nsimplest fundamentals of education.\nSecondly there is the challenge\nof hunger. \"A number of people\nequivalent to 200,000 times the\npopulation of Nelson is always\nhungry. Hundreds of persons\nstarve to death every day,\" said\nMiss Herbison.\n\"Perhaps the most terrifying\nproblem which our generation\nmust solve is the prevention ot\nnuclear war, and in its place\ncreate a secure and lasting\npeace.\"\n\"President John Kennedy has\nset the pace in showing what\nyoung people oan be expected to\ndo for world peace. Under his\nPeace Corps project, thousands\nof students will go to live and\nwork side by side with native\npeople in all parts of the world.\nThe youth of America responded\noverwhelmingly even though tlie\nwork may be hazardous and difficult.\"\nFREE With the Purchase of\nTONI\n1961 \"Miss America\"\nFashion Collection\nand 8 matching\nhairstyles.\nAll for $2.00\nSAMPLE'S\nNelson Pharmacy Ltd.\n\"Your Fortress ot Health\"\n639 Baker St. Phone 1203\n ft\t\nWILL ALSO RESPOND l\n\"I think that Canadian young j\npeople will respond, too, as soon'\nas they see a way to help solve j\nthese problems,\" she said. \"We\nmay not all he able to be great\nleaders, but leaders need followers to uphold or carry on the work\nthey have pioneered. Whatever.\nour position in life, if our educa-j\ntion has done anything significant'\nfor us, we will toe aware of the\nneed in the world around us and'\ndo something about it.\" j\n\"By the time we are 31, there\nwill be a thousand million more\npeople in the world. Our generation will be the parents oi the\nnext one\u2014the parents of a billion;\nyoung people. What kind of world J\nwill these,people come into? Will1\na few of them live in educated\ncomfort because they happen to\ntoe born on one part of the earth's\nsurface, while others die early!\nand miserably?\" \u2022\n\"Our 12 years of schooling, and\nwhatever other training we get'\nwill surely tbe put to tlie test.\"   |\nMiss Herbison outlined how\nsohool opens new avenues of\ninterest to the young. \"Increased\nknowledge provides, a broader:\nbasis on which to communicate;\nwith other people. As knowledge\nincreases we find we have more1\nin common with different people\nand we can understand eaoh other\nbetter.\" I\n\"It takes an oocasion suoh as\ngraduation to remind us of whatj\nwe owe our parents. Their faith}\ncannot toe measured by money,\" |\nsaid Miss Herbison. |\nGradating with her were 125:\nother students. Graduates were'\nKeith Acres, Erik Anderson. Ken\nAnderson,. Bill Armstrong, Larry\nAuston, Alan Baker, Ross Barrett,\nTerry Bell. Frank Bonacci, Jim\nBrown, Mel Buerge, John Burnt,\nBob Butohert, Jim Cain, Glen\nCairns. Jim Cralgdallie, Ray\nCrockett. |\nEugene Daniel, Dan Davidson,\nStephen Drew, Peter Eaton, Doug\nFlorio, Keith Frederiokson, Ken\nGrahame, Ron Gray, Elwood\nHenke, Nick Hucal, Hugh Hooker,\nWarren Jarvis, Bill Jennejohn,\nFred Jmaeff, Wayne Lewis.\nFred Massey, Alan Middleton,\nStuart McKinnon, Bob Moisey,\nKen Morley, Allan Morris, Gary\nMcCandlish, Fred McClelland,\nDon McEachern, Neil MoEach-\nern, Tom McGregor, Richard McLean, Brian McLeod, Vern Nelson, David Niven, Jim O'Genski,\nJohn Olson, Jim Oulton, Don Parker, Paul Peters, Meredith Pond,\nTom Ramsay, Ken Reid, Sam\nRelkoff, Earle Robertson, Dave\nRobinson, Bruce Rollick, Ed San-\ntor, Alex Soukoroff, Bob Stack,\nBud Stoll, Virgil Swanson, Jim\nSwetlikow, Walter Trkla, Angus\nWhitmore, Bill Zmaeff.\nBeverley Archibald, Clara Beresford, Sharon Berryman, Judy\nBirah, Twyla Bloom, Noni Buckley, Jean Burns, Elaine Ohernen-\nko, Sharon Ohernenkotf, Daphne\nCorrie, Sally Estlin, Valerie\nEuerby, Judy Ferguson, Rosemary Gansner, Karen Gibson,\nArlene Goldsmith, Pat Gordon.\nBernice Hannon, Nadine Hen-\ndrickson, Kathy Herbison, Jeanne\nHollington, Patti Hooker, Hazel\nHorwood, Frances Hrytzak, Bonnie Hughes, Peggy Joinson, Kathy\nKeiran, Nancy Borah\/ Judy Latta,\nJoanne Leslie, Joy Livingstone,\nAndrea Manson, Sheila Munch,\nDianne Muraro, Marilyn Mc-\nEwen, Roberta MoFadden, Pat\nMcKeen, Shirley McRory, Janet\nNeale, Gerry Neighbor, Shannon\n\u25a0Norris.\nMellnda Olson, Sharon Olson,\nVicky Owen Ada Porco, Jean\nRenton, Diane Rogers, Sandra\nRyalls, Diane Sandvik, Vicki\nSparkes, Doreen Spiers, Lorraine\nStallwood, Frankle Stone, Frances\nThreatful, Lynn Walthe, Beverlee\nWard, Sue Watts.\nORDAINED recently for the\nDiocese of Calgary, Rev. Donald Scott, above, will slog High\nMass at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate In Nelson Sunday\nmorning. Father Scott attended\nSt. Joseph's School and Notre\nDame College before his family\nmoved to Calgary. He attended\nSt. Joseph's Seminary in Edmonton.\nOldtime\nRossland\nMiner Dies\nAn oldtime Rossland miner,\nGeorge Stevens died Wednesday\nin Mount St. Francis Infirmary.\nHe was 84.\nMr. Stevens was born in Cornwall, England. He came to North\nAmerica towards the end of the\nlast ceiitury and settled first in\nNew York. At the turn of the\ncentury he moved to Victoria and\na short while later came to Rossland to work in the mines.\nWhile in the Golden City he\nwas   active    in   local   music\ncircles  and was  organist and\nchoir master at St.  George's\nAnglican Church.\nIn 1909 he moved away from\nthe city to work in other mining\ncentres around the province. He\nwas last employed at the Yarrow\nshipyards during the Second\nWorld War.\nSince his retirement he had\nlived with his son, George, on\nColumbia Avenue in Trail.\nMr. Stevens was predeceased\nby his wife in 1918. He is survived by four daughters, Mrs. M.\nKromholtz and Mrs. D. Ferrier,\nboth of Spokane, Wash., Mrs. E.\nYoungs of Buckley, Wash., and\nMrs. O. Luethe of Bremerton.\nWash.; two sons, George in Trail\nand William in Princeton; one\nsister, Mrs. A. Rosewarne, in\nVancouver; on. brother, Thornley\nin Vancouver; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.\nSlight River Drop Gives\nDike Warriors New Hope\nRising flood waters were threatening a number of avenues in\nand out of West Kootenay Thursday.\nThfe Kootenay Lake ferries, faced with a possible shutdown, will\nbe in service for at least two\nmore days, said D. F. Martin,\nregional Department of Highways\nengineer.\nReport that' the dikes on the\nUnited States side of the border,\nsouth of Creston, might be blown\nup in places to relieve pressure\nin areas that were still dry was\nbeing checked Thursday night by\nthe commanding officer of the\narmy detachment at Creston.\nCautious optimism prevailed in\nCreston Thursday with the drop\nin the rivers at Canal Flats,\nWardner and Bonners Ferry. \u25a0\nDikes were still being raised in\nplaces in expectation of windstorms. One boil early Thursday\nPolio Survey\nDisappointing\nResults of the telephone survey carried out recently by the\nWomen's Auxiliary of the Selkirk\nHealth Unit have been tabulated.\nEvery tenth number in the directory was called and the respondent asked how many adults\nlived in the house and how many\nhad had polio shots. Those who\nhad had shots were asked how\nmany and when the last was.\nThe co-operation was \"very\ngood\". Those who had had none\ngave various reasons, from being uninterested to being opposed. Many felt they were too old\nwhile one or two had already had\npolio and erroneously thought it\nprotected them from all three\ntypes.\nFinal analysis showed that a\ntotal of 498 of Whom 238 were\nmales, 260 females. Only 13 per\ncent of the men and 22 per cent\nof the women had had three or\nmore shots.\n\"Disheartening to us at the\nSelkirk Health Unit when we\nhave run a free clinic once a\nmonth on Friday evenings at considerable inconvenience to ourselves,\" Dr. A. S. Arneil, director, commented.\n\"Recently some publicity suggested that the Salk Vaccine was\nless effective last year. That may\nbe so, tat those vaccinated had a\n10 to 1 better chance of not getting the disease (hah those who\nhad not. The polio season will\nsoon be upon us. Our next clinic\nis tonight.\nCanon Lang to\nCelebrate\n25th Anniversary\n1   Twenty-fifth anniversary of his\nI ordination will be celebrated Sunday by Rev. Canon G. W. Lang.\nI Canon Lang was ordained to\npriesthood on St. Barnabas' Day,\nJune 11, 1936, in St. Steven's\nChurch, in Calgary, by Rt. Rev.\nL. Ralph Sherman, Bishop of\nCalgary, who became Archbishop\n' of Ruperts Land.\nj He served the Diocese of Calvary until the spring of 1954, then\ni moved to Edmonton and later\nVictoria where he was senior\nassistant priest in Christ Church\nCathedral.\nOn Monday, Mrs. Lang will be\ninducted by Ven. Archdeacon E\nH. Patterson of Trail as a lay\nassociate of the Society of St.\nJohn the Divine, at Holy Eucharist at 10:30 a.m. Canon Lang is\na priest associate of the society.\nSENTENCE   PLOTTERS\nSAIGON (Reuters)\u2014A special\nmilitary tribunal has passed\ndeath sentences on three South\nVietnamese, two of them civil\nguards, for planning a Communist take over in True Giant,\ncapital of Kien1 Hoa province,\nthe Viet Nam press agency reported Wednesday. The prosecution said the provincial capital was to be taken over by\nthree Communist armed companies on the night of April 1.\nBUY\nCOAL\nNOW!\nSUMMER\nDISCOUNTS\nPHONE   1518\nQueen City Fuel\n(Office of\nNelson Farmers' Supply)\n524 Railway St. Nelson\n\u25a0*ir\nTHONGS\nWomen's and Men's\nSmall, Medium, Large\n49c\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPHONE 25\ngave flood-fighters a bad time.\nOver 1200 sandbags were thrown\ninto the gushing hole before it\nwas controlled.\nGuy Constable voiced confidence Thursday the crest might\nbe over. One army spokesman\nsaid that a period of maintenance would have to be kept on\nthe bolls and dikes rotted by\nseepage. Some trucks were still\non the Job Thursday.\nLevel of the river at 9 p.m.\nThursday was 25.1. feet. This\nwas slightly below the high of\n25.22 feet Tuesday.\nTraffic to Northport, Washing.\nton, has been rerouted through\nWaneta, southeast of Trail. A foot\nof water  on  the Sheep  Creek\nBridge forced stoppage of traffic\nbetween Rossland and Northport.\nWater  has  lapped  away  the\nshoulder of the highway between\nKootenay Bay and Creston in two\nplaces. In places the bank right\nup to the hard surface has slipped\ninto the  lake.  Highways  crews\nwill start repairs today.\nThe same situation prevails at\nLakeside Cabins.\nKinnaird Village Council has\nsought a log boom as a means\nof securing the village water\npumps against driftwood on the\nColumbia The river is threatening the walk leading to the pump-\nhouse and supports conveying the\nwater supply.\nThe Trail bridge Is still hold\nIng its own against the surging\nColumbia. Mr. Martin said auto\ntraffic is proceeding normally\nover it.\nPlanks are being laid over the\nnew bridge for pedestrian traffic.\nKootenay Lake at Nelson was\n18.35 feet above zero Thursday.\nTnis was a rise of one-tenth of a\nfoot ovor Wednesday.\nThe approach to the ferries al\nBalfour was raised another foot\nThursday. Mr.. Martin said another eight inches of rise in the\nlake would force the ferries to\nstop operating.\nA warning note was sounded In\nVictoria where the Water Rights\nBranch said there is still an average of four feet of snow on the\nmountains of southeastern B.C.\nBEE\nBUILDING\nAIDS\n\u2014 I\u2014 l^r\u2014\"rr\u00bb\nSTEPHENS'\nLATEX\nHOUSE   PAINT\n900 Colors\n301 Baker St.        Phone 1704\nQift Items\nPipes\nSouvenirs\n.  \u2022\nNovelties\n\u2022\nLeather\nQoods\nNew Shipment\nBOOKS\nValentine's\nWatch for the\nKING\nof  the\nFOREST\nThe New Models of the\nHOMELITE\nCHAIN SAWS\nHOMELITE    SALES & SERVICE\nPhone 2042 536 Stanley St.\n \u25a0   \u25a0\n\u2014 . .\u2014\n\u25a0      r      \u2014       \u2014T   T    ;     .    .         .; rr\u2014; :\u2014\u25a0,  ..-:  .\u25a0   \u25a0\t\n\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0-.;\u25a0     : '  \u25a0\u25a0\nHomes, Highways, Countryside Overcome by Floods\n: r\u2014- -t : , .\t\nNil\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961 \u2014 3\nFIRST NEWS\nMOSCOW (AP) - Fidel Castro's proposal to trade prisoners for U.S. equipment was\nmentioned for the first time\nWednesday by the Soviet press.\nThe official newspaper Agricultural Life indicated it approved\nof the deal.\nRead the Classified Dally\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1532 Bay Ave.        Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.\nIIIIIIIIMIllllllllllllllllllimi\"\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS L\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nStationery, Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane St.    Phone 1 .\nTrail, B. C.\nimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWATER HAS CREPT UP inside the Kaslo Scout      has been raised section by section to hang from.the KASLO HOMES NEAR THE PARK have been      ing with water. This is a picture shot toward the park\nHall to a 20-inch depth above floor level. The floor      rafters. ,     evacuated and basements of others have been fill-       with the flooded Scout Hall in the background.\nV'\nNEW,\nPERMANENT\nBEAUTY\nWITH\nMONAMEL-X\nInsist o\u00ab Monamet-X Outside Paint\u2014with the tough\nall-weather finish. Paint sunshine colors\u2014paint on years\nof extra life.\nCOOPER CREEK, four miles from Lardo, has had\nthe run of woodlands bordering the regular creek-\nbed and has covered the roadway along past the\nFruitvale Post Office To Be\nIncluded on Winter Works\nCooper Creek bridge. Here it is shown rushing willy\nnilly through the trees.\nGREAT CHUNKS OF HIGHWAY past Lardo have\nsuccumbed to battering of waves and driftwood, at\nthe north end of Kootenay Lake. At the right, a large\npiece of the road shoulder has fallen away taking a\nsmall tree with it.\u2014Daily News photos.\nFRUITVALE - Council is.in\nreceipt of another letter from\nH. W. Herridge in connection\nwith the proposed new post office\nfor Fruitvale. He advises that\nthe department of public works\nhas a new building listed tentatively as one of the 1061-62 winter\nworks projects.\nThe clerk advised Council that\nhe had sent a list Kf possible\nsites to the Department of Pub-\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0q\nYOUR GARDEN\nNeeds Proper Care\nConsult Us First...\nGet a GARDEN FEEDER\nHere Is the attachment you've been looking for. '\nAttaches quickly and easily between your faucet\nand your hose connection. Automatically feeds\nyour liquid garden food through your $^ ^Q\nsprinkling system. Only    Jmitis%sg\nFolding Aluminum Chairs\nFor outdoors OiJJ    and      \/.IU\nBug-Geta Pellets\nOrtho. Kills snails, slugs, cutworms.    $1   QQ\nGood for 7200 sq. ft. 6 lbs. Only      I .OV\nSAVE MONEY - USE\nLafer's Compost Builder\nPrepare your own rich i\/n ti   r\/s\nhumus, top soil  IU lbs.     I .OU\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nFERTILIZERS\nare a vital NECESSITY...\nChoose the Right Kind!\nLawn and Garden Sprinklers\nLafayette     i*  Aft \u2022 Deluxe Melnor, metal.\nplastic only     I.W7     Up  from       <f\\ ty\\\nOnly ........       L.O I\nWeed-n-Feed\nFast acting, lawn fertilizer. With broad-leaf weed\n$3.65\nkiller. Cover 2500 sq. ft.\nOnly\nNELSON FARMERS'\nSUPPLY LTD.\n524 Railway St. Nelson Phone 2255\nlie Works in Penticton; he had\ncompiled this 'from information\nreceived from council, the Merchants Association and various\nparties having property for sale\nin the 'business area of the Village.\nCommissioner Lewis reported\nthat 5000 gallons of oil had been\napplied to streets and lanes of\nIhe village, as major part of the\nliiiil oiling program.\nAnother 500 gallons is to to\napplied by Blackline Paving\nCompany within next few days\nto round out the program.\nColumbia Garden Road hard-\ntopping has been carried out by\nUie same company and the\nWorks Department is now busy\ncompleting the shoulders of the\nroadway to afford protection to\nthe hardtop. At the interseciion\nof Columbia Garden Road and\nKootenay Avenue, council has\nordered a small additional\namount of hardtop to be laid \u2014\nIhis will be done within the next\nfew days also and the interseciion then graded, gravelled and\noiled to prevent the accumulation\nof rocks and gravel on the hardtop surface where the other gravel roads intersect with Columbia Garden Road.\nlt was reported also by Commissioner Lewis that several culverts had been installed ami\nothers repaired since th last\nlieavy rainfall.\nCommissioner Roch'ford reported that seven new sewer\nconnections had been installed\nfrom the mains to property\nlines; a large machine owned by\na Nelson firm had finally reached the main on Columbia Garden\nRoad. It was the only machine\navailable in the area that would\nreach tlie depth of 16 feet where\nfive of the connections were installed.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black (ace type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT\nRotary luncheon Friday   12:13\np.m. Hume Silver Room.\nTrail Business College\nNew Term begins September 5\nELECTROLUX SERVICE\ni 12 Richards St., Ph. 1108, Nelson\nWinners of the Mount St. Francis Open House Tea raffle: 1st,\nMrs. Pauline Smith, 417 Carbonate Street; 2nd, Miss Francis\nNickelson, 823 Carbonate Street;\n3rd, Y. Apagi, Kaslo; 4th, E. Ko-\npeeki 601 Latimer Street; door\nprize, G. W. Stewart, 910 Silica\nStreet; pillow slips, Mrs. H. May,\n916 Josephine Street; lamp, Mrs.\nFred Brown, 520 Wasson Street.\nWindermere\nBoard Annoyed\nAl Gaglardi\nNew patterns in surrali silk.\n45 inches at $2.49 a yard.\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\nWeekend Special\nDelicious  Chocolates\u20141\/,  lb\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nIN MEMORIUM\nIn loving memory of my dear\nDad, Thomas Lawson Knox, who\n,;assed away June 9, 1959.\nGone but not forgotten.\nSadly missed by his daughter\nBlanche.\nSee our selection of\nLawn Furniture\nSTERLING  FURNITURE\nRugs or Wall-to-Wall Carpet\nJORDAN'S LTD.\n924 Cedar St., Ph. 2423, Nelson\nCamporee\nSuccess\nTRAIL \u2014 The District Council\nof the Boy Scout Association,\nmeeting at Camp Tweedsmuir,\nheard a report on the success ol\nthe recent international camporee\nheld near Nelway.\nLeaders were unanimous\nexpressing ethusiasm and praise\nfor the way in which the camp\nchief, Peter Collins, had supervised arrangements for the weekend.\nClose to 600 boys and more\nthan 100 leaders from areas as\nfar away as Cranbrook, Spokane\nand Greenwood had attended the\ncamporee. Almost as many Am.\nerican as Oanadian boys were at\nthe camp.\nNOTICE TO AIR CADETS\nVisit to Castlegar Sunday, June\n11th has been cancelled.\nDOUG  CHAMPION\nALLSTATE AGENT\nat Simpsons-Sears Store, Nelson\nevery Saturday.\nAH your Canary, Budgie and Wild\nBird supplies at \u2014\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n495 BAKER STREET\nMa-Feeder. Feed baby solids the\neasy way, through a nipple. See\nit at -\nTOT - N - TEEN SHOP\nHAIGH TRU-ART\nBEAUTY SALON\nHarper Method Professional\nService exclusive with us.\nWheels and Tires for all vehicles.\nWagons-Buiggies-Tricycles-\nGo-Carts-Bicycles.\nEDEY'S LOCK AND CYCLE\nSHOP\nPOLIO\u2014TETANUS   CLINIC\nThe regular monthly polio-tetanus\nclinic will be held on Friday, June\n9th from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m., in the\nSelkirk Health Unit's offices, 303\nBaker St., Nelson.\nOriginal Expandaway Desk\nTable, closed 40\" x 21\", yet extends to serve 10 people. 3 styles\nonly. Regular up to $225, your\nchoice Vs price.\nHOME FURNITURE\n(NELSON) LTD.\n640 Baker St., Nelson, Phone 1032\nThe Sisters of Mount St. Francis extend their sincere thanks to\nthe Ladies Auxiliary and devoted\nmembens of the staff who did so\nmuch to make open house a great\nsuccess. Thanks are extended also\nto the merchants who made such\ngenerous donations toward the\ntea.\nIN MEMORIUM\nWe who loved you sadly miss\nyou,\nAs it dawns another year,\nIn our lonely hours of Blinking,\nThoughts of you are always\n'near.\nIn loving memory of our dear\nDad, Thomas L. Knox, who passed away June 9, 1959. Always remembered by Carl, Clarence,\nGrace, Hazel and Mary.\nWVERMERE - The Windermere District Board of Trade\nJune, meeting held at Invermere\nemenated sharp comments but\nnot within the meeting. The barbs\nwere directed to the Minister of\nHighways who has promised completion of Highway 95 (Golden to\nCranbrook) and has not fulfilled\nliis promise.\nSaid E. E. Trethway, chairman\nof the Roads Committee, \"We are\nnot getting a square deal. They\nsay the money is appropriated\n(or this work but nothing is being\ndone.\"\nTrade Board chairman said\n\"Plans are so indefinite we can't\nfind out what they intend to do.\"\nCLOSE  OFF  BORDER\nJOHANNESBURG (Reuters)\nSouth Africa is erecting a wire\nfence along its 1,000-mile border\nwith lhe British protectorate of I\nBeahuanaland, the Afrikaans\nlanguage newspaper Die Vader- :\nland reported here Wednesday.\nThe first aim of the fencing is\nto control foot-and-mouth disease, but the government also\nis considering military patrolling of the border and roads are\nbeing cleared alongside the\nfence for this purpose, it added.\nPast board chairman W. Roy\nLake said \"They are running up\nand down surveying and re-surveying. Lei's get a road and get\nit finished,\" and Mr. Trethway\nagreed with him adding \"Tlie\narea is a windrows of stakes.\"\nThe meeting passed a motion\nthat a telegram be sent to the\nminister requesting immediate\naction on completion of the road.\nAPPEALING SALADS\nA simple garnish gives a finished appearance to any salad\nand it should always be dry,\nedible and used sparingly.\nBURNS\nLumber Co.\nLtd.\n602 Baker St.\nPhone  1180\nrefresh\nwith pleasure\n^_^ife\u00bb....\nCARD OF THANKS\nThe Sisters of St. Anne and\nAuxiliary to Mount St. Francis\nwish to thank all who worked for,\ncontributed to, and patronized our\ntea and open house. Through your\ngenerosity our objective has been\nachieved.\nCub Packs Camp\nOn Weekend\nINVERMERE - Lake Windermere Cub Pack and Windermere\n(Swansea) Cub Pack camped at\nLake Enid Scout campsite during\nthe weekend. There were 44 Cub.\nin the group under Cubmasters\nFrank Greenwood and Tony Luy-\nendyk and other leaders.\nThe Scout District Commissioner elect. Pastor Robert Gould, of\nInvermere inspected the camp\nwith his wife. Parents also visited.\nMurray Fisher, chairman of the\nlocal scout group committee, is\nworking with committee members to construct a shorter road\nto Lake Enid campsite and also a\npossible creek diversion project\nis under consideration to direct\nrunning water into the lake.\nTRAIN  IN WALES\nLONDON (AP) - John Profumo, British war minister, said\nWednesday discussions are under way for the training of a\nWest German panzer battalion\nat Castlemiartin, Wales. \"The\npresent demand for training\nareas,\" he told the House of\nCommons, \"is so great that it\nwould othe-wise be impossible\nfor the Germans to fulfil their\nNATO ccmrnitments.\"\nSIMPSONS-SEARS\nF RIDAY-7:30 PJA.\nSPECIALS\n\u2022 Limited Quantities      \u2022  On Sale Sharp at 7:30\n\u2022 No phone or mail orders  \u2022 Personal Shopping\n300 Long-Play Records\nJUST ARRIVED! Top quality selection. |   f\"C\nFriday Night Special Only, each   ' nOO\nNylon Car Wash Mitt\n12 ONLY. Use for washing, dusting, 1 ft\npolishing. Reg. .39  \u2022 1 Jr\nAdjustable Window Screens\nWill fit any size window. Easy to install. qq\nReg. .95 .00\nDrinking Glasses\nIn gay assorted colors and patterns. f\\Oj\nReg.  .15. Each  \u00bbU'\nBamboo Lawn Rakes\nRegular .49  \u2022 ' <J\nToilet Seat\nTop quality moulded toilet seats. Assorted n   Q Q\ncolors. Regular 5.95  ->.O0\n\"brewed\nin the\nKootenays\nto\nKootenay\ntastes'\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liqaor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Corambia.\n ummmmmmmmmmm^mmmwmmmwm\n'jj^^ppf\n'., \u25a0\u25a0 \" \u25a0 . \u2022   '     , '. !\t\nNthum SatU} Nenta\nEstablished April 22, 1002 Nelson, B. C.\nPubli-hed by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bukei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSunday; and holidays in the centre o* the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nC. W. HAMSDEN, Publisher\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF TUB CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DA1LV NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to tht use (or republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also tha local news published therein.\nFriday, \/une 9, 198J\nProblem for the Rural Teacher\nIt wob the belief oi many educationists not so long ago that the consolidated school with its large enrolment made for better education as\nwell as being less expensive. Now,\nOpinion ha? veered the other way and\nthe department ol education favors\nsmall elementary schools and stipulate that nona shall b_ of more than\n600 pupils.\nThe policy of decentralization is a\ngood one with many things in its\nfavor, not the least of which is the\nfact that children will not spend so\nmuch time away from home. It is a\npolicy favored by the School Board\nof District No. 7, which is in process\nof acquiring land for new and smaller\nelementary schools.\nIn this day and age there is no\nreason why teaching ln the rural\nareas should be in any way less\nsatisfactory than in city schools. The\nsalaries in both city and rural schools\nare the same, the teachers are normal\ngraduates and school houses and\nequipment in rural areas compare\nwell with city schools. The only ad\nvantage the city teacher has is his\nimpersonality.\nIn rural areas the teacher has\noften no such impersonal relation\nwith the parents. Instead he is expected to find favor socially with all\nthe parents and the spotlight of criticism is focussed upon him in all that\nhe, or more often she, does.\ntiiven One or two disgruntled parents it is possible to swing others to\nattack the teacher before the school\nboard. As the superintendent of\nschools points out, much more could\nbe done if parents set out to be cooperative. Indeed, it just needs one\nbroadminded parent to tell the\nteacher she appreciates her work to\nraise the morale of the whole school.\nTeachers in rural areas are often\nyoung and very lonely. If the parents do not take them to their hearts\nthey suffer very much. A project for\nany rural PTA is to develop tolerance towards teachers, to go further\nand find means of assuring them that\nthey have the confidence of the\nparents.\nContempts Not Fear, Here\nWhen a Trail alderman, speaking\nof the recent outbreaks of terrorism,\nsays the people of Nelson must be\nliving in terror with what is going on,\nhe does our citizens an injustice, We\nare not living in terror and we refuse to be intimidated by scoundrels\nwho carry out their nefarious undertakings under cover of darkness. We\nhave the utmost contempt for them\nand they do not arouse fear in our\nhearts.\nThis should not be taken to mean\nthat we are indifferent to the bombings. Far from it. We are strongly of\nthe opinion that the authorities Bhould\nredouble their efforts to apprehend\nthe perpetrators. All possible steps\nshould be taken to prevent the recurrence of bombings but until the\ncriminals are discovered we shall\ncontinue to take the matter calmly\nand refuse to give them the satisfaction of believing that they have made\nus either panicky or hysterical.\nHeartbeat\nBridges\u2014 whether they bear famous names like London Bridge, the\n\"Golden Gate,\" the \"Brooklyn Bridge\"\nor have no names at all\u2014cross not\nonly rivers but the gap that exists\nbetween the animate and inanimate\nin the experience of mankind. They\ncommand not only the gratitude that\npractical men leel for helpful things,\nnot only the admiration most men\nfeel for the grand or the beautiful\nbut beyond all that an affection,\nsometimes explainable, sometimes\nnot.\nPerhaps in this affection there is\nsomething instinctive. Engineers will\ntell you that. bridges are \"living\nthings.\" They move, they breathe,\nthey adapt to conditions, or are, like\nhuman beings themselves, challenged by them. They seem to be simply\nthe work of men's hands but some-\nUnholy Writ\nHumor is where you find it, and\nHoly Scripture, quite properly, is\nneither above nor beneath it.\nThe Times of London, that utterly\nrespectable and reliable, yet by no\nmeans humorless, newspaper recently illustrated this by printing a letter\nto the editor from a parson in Exeter,\nin Devonshire, whence have come so\nmany famous seamen, like Frankie\nDrake.\nThe writer relates the _fory of an\nExmoulh pilot listening in church lor\nthe first time to the story of the\nshipwreck of St. Paul. The reader of\nthe Lesson ended dramatically at the\nverse, \"Then fearing lest we should\nhave fallen upon rocks, they cast four\nanchors out of the stern, and wished\nfor the day.\" In utter amazement at\nsuch seamanship, we are told, the\nExmouth man was heard to mutter:\n\"The damn vools, they'll ev the backside of 'er out\"\u2014Brant\/ord Expositor.\nof Bridges\ntning in their inspiration surpasses\nthe mundane reasons for their being.\nSo when news crosses unbridged\noceans that one or more of the individualistic bridges crossing the Seine\nin Paris are again showing signs of\nwear and tear, thousands who have\nhurried over them, or stood dreaming upon them, or only pictured them\nfrom a distance with help of travel\nfolders, think \"long, long thoughts.\"\nIl Is more than a pedestrian matter, for example, that the airy footbridge, the Pont des Arts, has recently been damaged by a ship's\nmast. Of all the bridges between right\nand left banks, this bears perhaps\nthe least poundage of traffic but the\nmost cherlshable weight of aspiration.\nIt is negatively reassuring meanwhile to recall that like London\nBridge, those of Paris have always\nbeen falling down, while 2000 years\nof history have stomped across them.\nWhen they do succumb to fire or flood\nor war, they soon flower again like\nthe living things they are.\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nIt's Been Said\nThe wise carry their knowledge, as\nthey do their watches, not for display, but\nfor their own  use.-Sir Thomas  Browne.\nMonstrosities\nIf Canadians had been design-\nconscious, says Senator Donald Cameron, director of the Banff School of\nFine Arts, they would \"have refused\nto buy some of those monstrosities of\nUgliness that paBs for automobiles.\"\nWhich paraphrases what owners\nof fishtail models two or three years\nago were saying about people who\nbought non-fishtail cars, and is being\nsaid today by drivers who have non-\nfishtail cars about those who still run\nthe finned jobs.\nBut unless you stick with the legal\ngrandeur of an early Rolls Royce, or\nlhat sweetheart of an old man's youth,\nthe T-model Ford, how can you be\nsure what is really lovely?\nTo the mudhen, alter all, her offspring is more beautiful than Ihe\nswan.\u2014Vicforia Times.\nInterpreting\nThe News\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nJohn Kennedy went back to\nWashington irom his first presidential tour abroad convinced\nthat the tree world must make\nfresh efforts ln the economic\nfight against totalitarianism.\nln his whirlwind circuit of\ncapitals\u2014from Ottawa to Perls,\nVienna and London\u2014this young\nman in a hurry has been fortified in his belief that a new ap-\nproadi is needed to keep Russia from scoring any further\nbloodless advances in the uncommitted countries.\nThe summit meeting in Vienna showed plainly that Nikita\nKhrushohev Is in no mood (or\nconcessions. The Russian leader\nfeels events aire going his way.\nRecent developments appear\nto support bis oase. While the\nnuclear stalemate rales out a\nmajor war, Russia keeps the\nfree wcrid Jittery by sponsoring revolutions or disorder in\nweak spots round the globe.\nMONEY  DISAPPEARS\nAmerican counter - measures\nusually take (he form of financial aid or arms. But sometimes the money disappears\nstrangely and the men who get\nthe guns turn out to be lukewarm soldiers.\nIn Lacs, for instance, the U.S.\nshelled out more dollars per\ncapita than to any other country. But in five years a few\nthousand hard - core Communist rebels have advanced from\nthe northern hills to establish\ncontrol of perhaps half the\ncountry.\nTo prevent similar experi-\ne n c e s elsewhere, Kennedy\nwants to make sure the money\ngoes to social projects, education and worthwhile economic\nprograms in the recipient state.\nKennedy is believed to have\ngiven an indication of the new\nemphasis in his talks Monday\nwith British Prime Minister\nMacmillan. AU the signs are\nthat MaonvHlan heartily endorses the idea.\nWith the Vienna meetings\nhaving exposed a deadlock in\nBast-West positions, the Allied\nside now seems likely to concentrate on removing the economic causes for dissatisfaction\nin the non-aligned territories.\nNobel Prize Winner Warns\nDanaers In Misplaced Ideas\nKennedy Aim To Keep\nKremlin Doors Open\nBy KEN SMITH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (OP) - A Hungarian - born winner of the Nobel PriM said Wednesday night\nleadership would not be suoh a\nscarce commodity In the West\n\"if we bad spent hall as mtWh\nmoney and thought on the outstanding as we have on the retarded ohildren.\".\nAddressing a panel discussion\nat tlie third world congress of\npsychiatry, Dr. Albert Szent-\nGyrogyi said the development of\noutstanding creativity is greatly\nhampered \"by misplaced Ideas\nabout democracy, according to\nWhich we are all equals.\"\nDr. Szent - Gyorgyi, who left\nHungary when the Communists\ntook over after the Second\nWorld War, said \"nature Is not\ndemocratic and as far as the\nintellect is concerned does not\nmake us all equal.\"\n\"Some of us are smart and\nsome are dumh. Accordingly,\nthere are good artists or scientists, and bad artists and scientists.\"\nHe now lives In Woods Hole,\nMass., where he works with the\nMarine Biological Laboratory.\nHe won the Nobel Prize In\nchemistry In 1987 for work on\nbiological combustion.\nDISCUSSED IDEAS\nHe appeared on a panel with\ntwo other Nobel Prize winners\n-Lord Adrian of England and\nLinus   Pauling   of  the  United\nTraclors-For-Freedom Committee\nFeel Castro's Terms Hopeful\nDETROIT (AP) - The Trac-\ntors-for-Freedon. Committee replied Thursday to the terms under whioh Ouban Premier Fidel\nCastro would trade 1,200 men for\n300 machines despite a congressional leader's warning that it\n\"will be getting on tenuous\nground\" if it attempts to negotiate with Castro.\nWalter Reuther, committee\nco-chairman and president of\nthe United Auto Workers Union,\nsaid Wednesday the committee\nexpects to have a reply ready\nto a cable from Castro in which\nthe Cuban leader outlined his\nterms for the proposed trade of\ntraders for prisoners taken in\nthe ill-fated April invasion of\nCuba.\nThe committee, he said, felt\nCastro's terms \"leave the way\nopen for negotiations between\nthe committee and Mr. Castro.\"\nDELICATE PROBLEM\nReuther said no decision had\nbeen made as to whether the\ncommittee would send a delegation to Cuba for a personal\nmeeting, as Castro specified in\nhis message; but observed later\nthat it was doubtful he or any\nof the other leading committee\nmembers would travel to Havana for such a discussion.\nSenate Republican leader\nEverett Dlrksen of Illinois said\nWednesday night the commlUee\nmembers \"will be getting on\ntenuous ground\" if they go to\nHavana to discuss the deal,\nDirksen said that if the persons concerned accepted the\nCastro invitation 'they might run\nafoul of the Logan t. The act\nbars individuals from ealung\nwith foreign governments under\nspecified circumstances. Kennedy administration officials\ncontend the adt Is not involved\nin the tractor matter.\nWOULD  TRADE ARMIES\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Lord\nNorrie, former governor of\nSouth Australia and a former\ngovernor-general of New Zealand, suggested in the House of\nLords Wednesday night that\nexchanges between the Commonwealth armies should be\nencouraged. It would be\n\"grand\" to see a battalion of\nthe Grenadier Guards in Australia for 18 months, with an\nAustralian unit stationed in\nBritain, he said.\nBugs, Floods, Fires Still\nPlaaue Western Canada\nBy  THE   CANADIAN  PRESS\nForest fires, bugs, floods and\nheat continued to plague Western Canada Thursday and little\nhope was given for any relief\nexcept from the heat.\nForest fires crackled in timber and muskeg in the northern\nareas of Saskatchewan and Alberta.\nThe insects \u2014 grasshoppers\nand cutworms \u2014 posed the most\nserious problem of its kind for\nmany years in numerous farmlands of the southern Prairie\nprovinces.\nTha l.ods, on both sides of\nthe international border in the\nQjlwL disdL\nSue's afraid it's a sin to play\nbridge, and I reckon it is sinful\nto torment other people's nerves\nthe way her playin' does.\nregions of southeastern British\nColumbia, continued in the Kootenay and Columbia rivers with\nlhe situation more acute in\nnorthern Idaho than in B.C.\nThe heat, whioh increased the\nhazards of forest fires, floods\nand insects, was beginning to\nmoderate after record maximums had been set for five\nconsec u t i v e days at many\nplaces on the western prairies.\nThe weather forecast issued in\nEdmonton said high temperatures Thursday on ihe western\nprairies will range from Uie 60s\nIn the Peace River region in\nnorthwestern Alberta to the 70s\nelsewhere. During the heat wave\ntlie mercury has approached\nthe 100 mark in some areas.\nFOREST FIRES BURN\nBig forest fires burned near\nEdson, 130 miles west of Ed-\nmontcn. Forestry officials described one as still dangerous\nbut not now threatening the\ntown of 3,000. A light shower\nweakened the blaze and a shift\nof Wind Wednesday drove it\naway from the town.\nTlie worst of northern Saskatchewan's fires were in the\nSquaw Rapids and La Ronge\nareas.\nThe Squaw Rapids blaze was\nmade bigger when two new\nfires brake out and joined the\nmain fire in that area 105 miles\nnort-ioast  of Prince Albert.\nHUBERT\nFirefighters put out 10 of 20\nfires which broke out Tuesday\nin the La Ronge area 135 miles\nnorth of Prince Albert.\nGrasshoppers were tlie main\ninsect plague as the hot, dry\nweather was ideal for hatching\neggs. A. M. Wilson, Alberta's\nHeld crops commissioner, said\nmost grasshoppers were hatching around the edges of fields\nand no real damage has been\ndone yet.\nThe grasshopper 'menace extended from the Red River valley of southern Manitoba to tlie\nPeace River region of northwestern Alberta and the cutworm infestation was worst in\nthe extreme south of Saskatchewan.\nINSECTS SPRAYED\nFarmers used record quantities of spray in efforts to wipe\nout the grasshopper threat in all\nthree Prairie provinces.\nAt Oreston thousands of acres\nof seeded, rich farmland have\nbeen Hooded in the Kootenay\nRiver valley. Canadian soldiers\nand civilians went to Bonner's\nFerry in northern Idaho where\ntwo dikes burst, flooding 4,000\nacres.\nSome 2,000 men were patrolling and iking sanuoags aiong\n51 miles of dikes but ihe barriers were reported to be in\ncritical condition \u2014 too soft to\nsupport heavy equipment with\nrising waters lapping at the\ntops.\nAt Trail, 50 miles east of\nCreston, the rising Columbia\nRiver has forced two dozen families to leave their homes and\nwas threatening an important\nbridge.\nTraffic has been held up on\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway\nnear tlie Alberta - B.C. boundary while crews repair a railway bridge over the Kicking\nHorse River 32 miles west of\nField, B.C. CPR officials 6aid\nthe repairs are necessary because the river is washing out\nan abutment on one side of the\nbridge. There will be no traffic\nover the bridge until about noon\nFriday. Meantime east and\nwestbound passengers were being taken by bus between Golden\nand Field.\nStates \u2014 discussing Uie topic\nWhere Ideas Come From.\nDr. Szent. Oyargyl said many\nideas come from the subconscious.\n\"1 go on thinking about my\nproblems ail the time, and my\nbrain must be going on thinking about them even in the middle of the night. My brain Is like\nthe laxative that was advertised\n'while you sleep it does the\nwork.'\"\nHe said he solved his research problem- because he was\nmiserable if he didn't. They got\ninto his blood and tortured him\nuntil they were solved.\nMr. Pauling, who won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1B64\nfor work on the forces holding\nmolecules together, agreed that\nideas spring from the subconscious and suggested students\ntrain their mind to work on an\nunsolved problem.\nEXPRESSED  DOUBTS\n\"f doubt- that tlie uneonschis\ncan be directed to work on a\nproblem, but the problem can\nbe suggested to It and If it is\ninterested ln it something may\nresult.\"\nLord Adrian, who recioved the\nNobel Prize in medicine in 1932\nfor his work on the formation\nof neurons, said many new\nideas are a logical development\nof accepted theories.\nThe most potent factor in promoting new discoveries was the\nintroduction of some new technique or piece of equipment.\n\"I think we oan reasonably\nexpect that we have now come\nto the end of this phase of technical progress and that it will\nremain a major factor in leading to new discoveries.\"\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nPresident Kennedy la mapping\nout a new atomic teste policy,\nconcluding that after almost\nthree years of conversation the\nRussians have become frozen ln\nan attitude that virtually eliminates further hope of an effective test ban agreement.   -\nIt is underotood Kennedy is\nready to end the United States\nmorat o r i u m on underground\ntests. But despite domestic\npressure to proceed with new\nexplosions, he is moving cautiously \u2014 partly because of urg-\nings by Canada and other allies\nagainst new tests and partly because he doesn't want the conversations with Ihe Russians to\nend.\nKennedy wants to keep open\nas many doors to the Kre:\u00abiltn\nas possible. A pattern of engaging the Communists in conversation or negotiation \u2014 even\nif this produces nothing but talk\n\u2014seems to be one of the key\nforeign policy characteristics\nemerging from the new U.S.\nadministration.\nKennedy knows tlie mere\npresence of members of the\nWestern and Communist blocs\naround a conference table, as\nat the Geneva conference on\nLaos, does not stop Communist\npower tactics. The Communist\nforces in the southeast Asian\nkingdom have continued to capture ground despite the ceasefire that was supposed to be in\neffect there.\nBut the feeling apparently is\nthat the fighting would be far\nmore widespread In Laos if it\nwere not for the Geneva conference.\n.. To give (he appearance of\nwanting to agree that Laos be\nprotected as a neutral country,\nthe Communlsta have had to go\nthrough the motions of showing willingness to conauK and\nnegotiate on terms of neutrality.\nGAINS TIME\nMeanwhile, as Kennedy continues to engage lhe enemy in\ntalk, he has time to build up\nstrength on his aide, time to increase American Guerrilla\nforces and time to persuade allies to strengthen and unite be-,\nbind the forces of freedom.\nBut In Uie case of the nuclear\ntest han negotiations time\n6eoms to be running out. Kennedy has the problem of U.S.\nmorale and prestige to consider.\nHe has made clear to American people that Soviet Premier\nKhrushchev feels continuation\nof the present nuclear negotiations at Geneva is futile. Russia wants a veto* on inspection\nand control against sneak explosions. It wants to Ue a nuclear tost ban to a grandiose\nscheme of world disarmament.\nKennedy is eager to engage\nthe Russians in a new series of\ntalks on disarmament. But that\nwon't tie his hands. He already\nhas set into motion an increase\nin U.S. military expenditures.\nIn the case of the nuclear negotiations, Kennedy would be\nprepared to embark on a \"test-\nand. talk\" phase but he doesn't\nwant to give the Russians any\nopportunity of making propaganda gains from any decisions\nthe U.S. may make. His present\nmood is one of caution.\nOttawa Realizes Narcotic\nLaws Proved Ineffective\n\"They seem to be weathering the slump pretty\nwell, Boss.\"\nWILL  CONFER\nWASHINGTON (AP) - President Kennedy and Prime Minister Amintore Fanfani of Italy\nwill confer 'next Monday and\nTuesday  at  the  White House.\nBy DON HANRIGHT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (OP) - The government has left no doubt of its\nbelief that Canada's existing\nnarcotics laws have been a flop,\ndespite the best efforts of\nROMP undercover squads.\nJustice Minister Fulton said\nWednesday that drug addiction\nstUl forms a large blot on Canadian society. This could only\nmean Uiat federal laws were ineffective.\nHe said the country's 3,100\ncriminal addicts are caught in\na degrading cycle of crime and\nprison, then crime again. One-\nthird of Unem were in prison at\nany one time. He even admitted\nfailure to prevent drugs being\nsmuggled to them while they\nare behind bars. It was alter\nhearing this frank assessment\u2014\nand one by heatn minister Monteith \u2014 that the Commons gave\nswift and willing approval to\nthe principle of newer, 'tougher\nfederal legislation to handle the\ngrowing problem.\nA central feature of the bill\nis that in future, addicts would\nbe sent to specialized federal institutions and remain there until it appears they are cured\u2014\nno matter how long it takes.\nFor addicts it means a potential lifetime of medical and psychiatric care.\nBUILD CENTRE IN B.C.\nOne such federal centre will\nbe built this year in British\nColumbia, he said. The government also stood ready to help\nfinance construction of provincial drug \u25a0 addict treatment\ncentres.\nThe proposed legislation is designed to stamp out the supply\nand demand in the underworld\nnarcotic trade, not only through\ntreatment but in harsher treatment of drug smugglers and\ntraffickers.\nIt provides a minimum term\nof seven years and up to life\nimprisonment for those convicted of illegally importing\ndrugs into Canada, or of exporting them later to the United\nStates or other countries. Thus\nwould be created a new crime\n\u2014not specified now.\nThe penalty for trafficking\nnow Is a maximum of 14 years\nin prison. It would become life\nimprisonment, although no minimum term is stated in the bill.\nThe proposed terms are not\nexcessive. Mr. Fulton said, in\nview of tlie nature of the crimes.\nBy such action the government would rank drug smugglers and traffickers \u2014 in terms\nof maximum punishment\u2014with\nthese convicted of kidnapping,\nattempted murder, manslaughter, raps, robbery and abortion.\nEven this didn't go far enough\nfor John Drysdale (PC \u2014 Burnaby - Richmond), a lawyer. He\nsaid the death penalty, as an\nalternative to life invorisonment,\nshould be provided fcr trafficking. A life term isn't enough by\nitself, he said.\nMr. Drysdale made his point\ntills way: \"In the field of medicine today, cancerous areas of\ntlie body are removed for the\nprotection of the remaining living tissue.\"\nMr. Fulton noted that the federal sphere includes only the\ncriminal addicts \u2014 those who\nfinance purchases of expensive\nhoroin and other narcotics by\ntheft, shoplifting and other petty\ncrime or, in the oase of women,\nby prostitution.\nIt was hoped that the provinces will enact laws for custody and treatment of noncriminal addicts.\nHarold Winch (OOF - Vancouver Easti called the bill a\nrealistic and modern apiproach\nto narcotic addiction. But he\nsuggested that doctors be given\nlegal authority to provide at\ncost a minimal dose of narcotics for addicts unable to throw\noff \"the horrible craving.\"\nCOOL TO SUGGESTION\nMr. Fulton appeared to reject\nMr. Winch's suggestion of administered narcotic doses for\naddicts. He said this has been\nstudied  by   not  only  the   1956\nSenate committee but also by\nUnited Nations and American\nbodies, and all of them rejected\nthe idea.\nThe Commons barely got\nstarted with clause - by - clause\nstudy of the bill before its 6'\np.m. adjournment. Today, the\nHouse will turn to debate on'\ntransport department estimates.\nGiven final reading Wednesday were three other bills.\nOne is designed to curb trafficking in barbiturates and am-\npheta - mines \u2014 the drugs that\nmake \"goofballs\" \u2014 without restricting their legitimate medical use.\nAnother extends to September,\n1962, the Combines Act exemption granted to suspected price-\nfixing arrangem e n t s between\nBritish Columbia fishermen and\nfish packing companies.\nThe third provides for appointment of one new member of the\nExchequer Court of Canada, two\npuisne judges to the Quebec\nSuperior Court, one member of\nthe B.C. Appeal Court, two Ontario county court judges and\nanother district court judge for\nAlbert*.\nKennedy Worse Than\nIke Say Chinese Reds\nTOKYO (AP) - The fall of\nPadoug and Communist Ohlna's\ncomments since Nikita Khrushchev and President Kennedy\nagreed in Vienna that an effective cease-tire in Laos is necessary suggest that Asian Communists headed by Mao T_e-\ntung feel in no way bound by\nIhe sober no - ultimatum, no-\nIhreat spirit of Vienna.\nThe Chinese Communist boss\nhimself has made no comment\non the Vienna meeting. But his\npropaganda organs now dismiss\nit a6 a handshaking session\nthat produced little or no results,\nThe Chinese Redis from the\nbeginning of Kennedy's term\npictured him as worse than\nPresident Eisenhower and by\nimplication warned Khrushchev\nUiat such a man could not be\nIrusted.\nThe Chinese diatribes against\nKennedy have stepped up since\nIhe Vienna meeting.\nThe government - controlled\nTa Kung Pao declared Thursday\n\"facts prove that Kennedy, this\nself - styled 'leader of the cause\nof freedom, is precisely a murderer of freedom and the most\nvicious enemy of democracy\nand freedom.\"\nReferring to the cease - fire\nin Laos, Uie official New China\nnews agency charged that violators were created solely by\nthe pro - Western government\nheaded by Prince Boun Oum\nand Gen.  Phcumi Nosavan.\n\"If Kennedy really means to\nrecognize the importance of an\nas he stated in Vienna, then the\neffective cease -  fire in Laos,\nUnited States should desist from\nencouraging the Phoumi - Boun\nOum rebel clique to violate the\ncease \u2022 fire,\" it said.\nMao and Communist China\nspeak with authority on neighboring Laos, Though Soviet\nplanes and pilots now airlift\nmunitions and supplies to the\nrebels in Uie land-locked jungle\nkingdom, the Russians are johnnies - come - lately there. Indochina for centuries has been a\ntarget for Chinese conquest.\nSince 1951, when he sent his\n\"volunteers\" into Korea, Mao,\nhas indeed regarded all of Asia\nas his special preserve, to be\nconverted to communism by,\nwars of liberation or by subversion.\nHe believes that if he is to '\nmake any headway among the\nbackward, former colonial countries of the region, he must constantly keep before them the\nimage of a rapaciously imperialist Uniled States threatening\nto enslave them.\nThus Mao's policies run head-\non into Khrushchev's public\nview that Russia and the United\nStates must reach a live-and-let-\nlive arrangement if nuclear oa-\ntastrophe is to be avoided.\nThe Communist sage of Peking has made it clear that\nthough he does not agree, he is\nwilling to humor Khrushchev in\nhis periodic ventures into summitry as long as China's Asian\nsphere cf influence is left alone.\nThough Khrushchev may say\nas much as he wishes on Laos\nor on Asia, Mao plainly indicates the last word will come\nfrcm Peking, not Moscow.\ni\n '\n*^\u2014! ' \u2014 \u2014r- ; ^?r^\nTm\nMiss Marilyn McEwen Installed\nAs Honored Queen Nelson Bethel\nIn the traditionally moving and impressive aemi-\n\u2022 annual ceremony, Bethel No. 10 Order of Job's Daughters\ninstalled its officers, with MiBs Marilyn McEwen as new\nBethel queen.\nThree retiring, council members were honored and\n, majority degrees were conferred on two members during\n'the colorful service, which also marked.the 13th birthday\nof the Nelson Bethel.\n-;' Retiring Queen Sandra Ryalls\ninstalled the new Bethel officers,\n^assisted by Miss Carol Waldie,\npast queen and installing guide;\nMiss Andrea Manson, installing\n'marshal!; Miss Alex Hanna, installing recorder; Mrs. Alma Gal-\nderoni, past queen; Sue McAd-l\n. ams and Joy Livingstone, past j\nqueen.\nThe officers instated Nan Hen-\ntriangle, each girl paid Mrs. ]\nChristie an individual tribute and;\npresented her with a rose. The\nBethel presented her also with;\nher past guardian's pin and a\nspecially made hand - carved,]\nhand \u2022 polished gavel, which was\ndesigned and carved by A. W.j\nBetton. A musical background\nwas provided by Mrs. Manson, I\nduring this ceremony. \u25a0\nOthers honored by the Bethel\ndrickson as senior princess and. we_. M__ j g Livingstone_ who\nVicki Sparkes as junior princess.,       res^ned h__      t __ di___,_)_\nMiss  Marilyn  McEwen  was; ^ ^^ ^ five y____,  ___.\npresented   at  the   altar  while i ^   Mn.   Uvfag-tone was pre.\nMrs. W. A. Manson played the  sente . ^ __ emblBmalic pen.\nLord's Prayer   Following her   ^ a_d _   jec_ _.        ^ {_orn\npresentation, she received her  ^. members_\ncape and was crowned by re- ,_r_-i\ntiring queen'Sandra Ryalls. Mr. Stromstead, wno is retiring\nPrior to this solemn ceremony,! \u00abs associate guardian received\nthe majority degree was confer-J ? presentation from Bethel mem-\nred upon Mrs. Rosina Warner *\u00ab *J ^ assistance to the\nand Mrs. Alma Calderoni, who Betel during his term of office,\nwere presented at the altar by, New Bethel officers, with Miss\nMiss Waldie and Miss Manson. ***\"\/! quaen, sft M \u21221*\nThey received purple and white | Nan\u201eH^k\u2122 ^ St^l\ncarnations and their certificates\nMrs. Christie installed the new\ncouncil, which this year includes\nMrs. Stan Morris as Bethel\nguardian and Mr. Morris as associate guardian; Mrs. Earl\nShannon as guardian secretary\nand Mrs. F. J. Bird as guardian\ntreasurer; Mrs. F. E. Morris as\ndirector of music; Mrs. M. R.\nSmith as promoter of hospitality;\nMrs. A. W. Betton as promoter\nof sociability; Mrs. G. P. Saw-\nzcuk as custodian of paraphernalia; Stewart -toss as director\nof epodhs and W. B. Christie as\npromoter of fraternal relations.\nIMPRESSIVE ADDENDA\nMrs. Christie was honored by\nthe Bethel which, in an especially\nmoving ceremony paid her tribute for her work with 'he members.   Forming  an   emblematic\nEngagement\nAnnouncement\n' Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Y. Hama-\nkawa announce the engagement\nof their only daughter, Olic Ka-\n'zumi, to Mr. Brendan Emmett\n'Foley of Montreal. The wedding\nwill take place at ll a.m. on July\nlo at the Church of the Blessed\nSacrament.\nTASTY ORiUSTS\nUncooked granular osreale\nand cereal crumbs made by\ncrushing ready - to - eat cereals\ngive a crisp tasty crust to pan-\nfried or deep fried foods.\nNelson |\nBride-Elect\nHonored\nMiss Beverley Cote, June bride-\nelect, was honored at a shower\nheld al the home of Mrs. William\nMarken, 416 Park Street, with\nMrs. James Watson as co-hostess.\nMiss Cote and her mother were\npresented with corsages. Gifts\nfrom the 26 guests attending were\narranged ir a decorated basket\nand presented to the guest of\nhonor.\nGames were played and refreshments enjoyed.\nes as princesses, are; Sandra Ryalls, retiring queen; Shirley Bird,\nguide; Carol Betton, marshall;\nVeronica Irving, Lynne Green,\nJune M'acKenzie, Loreen Browell\nand Sheila Morris, messengers;\nPain Ross, chaplain; Donna\nDrew, recorder; Margaret Riush-\nby, musician; Monica Barrett,\nlibrarian; Nancy Craigdallie,\ntreasurer; Cheryl Sommerville,\nsenior custodian; Wendy Webb,\njunior oustodian; Andrea Saw-\nzouk, outer guard and Cheryl\nSmith, inner guard.\nOne of the highlights of the afternoon, the Floral Cross Ceremony, concluded the semi-annual\ninstiling. Miss Alex Hanna read\nthe service and Miss Terri Stromstead sang \"The Old Rugged\nCross.\"\nHonoring the Bethel on its\n13th anniversary, a birthday\ncake was cut. Mrs. Earl Shannon was convener of the tea.\nPurple and white lilacs were\narranged around the hall and \u25a0_,.,\u2022\u25a0\nMrs. M. B. Ryalls. mother of' \u00bbf \u00ab* f \u00bbUP'  sfd. \u00bbe .** >s\n1 designed as a study and good-\nINSTA1LING MISS MARILYN McEWEN as this\nseason's honored queen of Nelson Bethel No. 10, Job's\nDaughters, retiring queen Miss Sandra Ryalls places\nthe crown on Miss McEwen's head at an impressive\nceremony held at the Nelson Masonic Hall.\n\u2014Photo by Vogue Studio.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961 \u2014 5\nNelson Nurses Graduates of\nSt. Paul's School of Nursing\nBalfour Sunday\nSchool Enjoys\nHike, Bonfire\nBALFOUE \u2014 Three team cap\ntains. Terry Trip, Jack Well-\nwood and George Wellwood lead\nthe 28 rnemibers of the Balfourlonly the third in B.C. history\nSunday Sohool on a fast-paced |   The son of a former nurse, he\nNelson nurses were among those graduating from\nSt. Paul's Hospital school of nursing at a ceremony which\ntook place in Vancouver's Queen Elizabeth Theatre.\nMiss Margaret Lynn Derby, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Neil Derby, 510 Cottonwood Street, and Miss Shirley\nKathleen Gustafson, daughter of Mrs. A. L. Gustafson,\n54 Douglas Road, and the late Mr. Gustafson, were\namong 137 young women and one young man who\ngraduated   in   this   year's\nthopedic award, Mary Ellen Dor-\nman of Burnaby and Mavis Winn,\nChapman Camp; Women's Auxiliary general proficiency award,\nPauline Craig, New Westminster;\nAlumnae award for best bedside\nnurse, Elizabeth Shussel, Kelowna.\nNames of district nurses graduating with the class are: Gloria\nJean Zita Bortolussi, Gloria Norma Cooke, Katherine Lorna Muz-\ni-toTon Uielast'day'of'the*'Sun\"1 hopes to\"become a hospital'ad- zi\". Theresa Ann Marie Porcel-\nclass.\nTop award went to Annie Holz-\nman of Oyama who was judged\nthe most proficient all-around\nnurse in the class and was presented with the medical staff\naward.\nDon Ransom of New Westminster was the only male nurse\ngraduating in B.C. this year and\nday sdhool year. All returned to ministrator.\na huge bonfire by the creek on| The graduates were addressed\nthe M. Wellwood property, to by Dean David Myers, dean of\nroast hot dogs and marsltmallows the faculty of applied science at\nover the embers. A candy,UBC, Alderman Marianne Lin-\nscramble was also enjoyed, hell, representing the city, and\nPerfect attendance prizes pres-' Consignor Leo A. Hobson, repre-\nented to the senior pupils by the senting the Roman Catholic\nGuild to St. Michael and AH 'hur<*. Diplomas were presented\nAngels' Church were won by '\u00b0y Mrs. s- G. Hewitt, president of\nMarilyn Erickson, Kathy Stain- \u00bb\u00abw\u00b0'\u2122\u00a3s Aurihary^and Mrs\nton, and Scott Heuston. Perfect\nattendance prizes, junior division,\nlato, all of Trail; Marilyn Frances Fricke and Koralie Ann Hub-\nberstey of Fruitvale; June Elaine\nKasmar of Fernie; Senta Meister\nof ' Montrose; Marjorie Louise\nMurray and Vera Polonicoff,\nGrand Forks; Sharon Felicia\nMary Newman of Castlegar; Margaret Michiko Okamato of Cascade; Mavis Louise Winn of Chapman Camp, and Keiko Inouye of\nNew Denver.\nAnn Barnes, president of the\nschool alumnae. Nurse Marlene\nPenner gave the valedictory address.\nOther top prize-winners were:\nobstetrical   and ^ecological'W\u00a3   pfan$   Bazaf\n\\St. Stephen's\naward. Ruth Neufeld, Sardis; or-\nMISS  SHIRLEY  GUSTAFSON\nMISS MARGARET DER_!Y\nNEW DENVER - Final\nrangements were made for the\nsummer bazaar and committees\nappointed at a meeting of the St.\nStephen's Anglican Ohureh Wo-.\nFruitvale Notes\npresented by the Balfour Sunday\nSohool,   were   given   to   Anna\nErickson, Timrny Stainton,  and\nRichard Wellwood. Five \"almost\nperfeot\"  tokens went to  Diane\nand Charles Peterson, Kent and\nTerry Walkley, and Jimmy McKay. Most correct answers on\nSunday School papers through the\nyear   went   to   Scott   Heuston.\nHelpers for the season \u2014 Leah\n' Stainton, music, Elaine Walkley,\nj records,   and   Anne   Wellwood,; \"JXSrjfa n\"nch h\u00b0S.' wi\\MisS Gladys U ^ l CasUega7a#ter' sending \"Several\nteacher of the tiny tots class -' \u2122..\u00b0L*f v^_SlT\"iSf,   \"\u00b0Hs Presiding I \u25a0\nGRADUATES OF 1961 \u2014 Two Nelson nurses\ngraduating with a class of 138 from St. Paul's Hospital\nSchool of Nursing in Vancouver are Miss Shirley\nKathleen Gustafson, left, and Miss Margaret Lynn\nDerby. Miss Gustafson, who is now holidaying at\nhome for three weeks, is the daughter of Mrs. A. L.\nGustafson. Mrs. Gustafson, with her son Bob, and\nMiss Gustafson's grandmother, Mrs. A. C. Gustafson,\nattended the graduation ceremony. Miss Derby's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Neil Derby, also motored to\nthe Coast for the graduation. Miss Derby is continuing at the hospital until her three years' training is\ncompleted in September.\nFRUITVALE - Mr. and Mrs.\nJack Smith of Castlegar were recent visitors at the home of Mr\nand Mrs. F. Oullen. Mrs. King\nman's Auxiliary at the Meinardusl accompanjed t,n6m to her home in\nthe junior past honored queen,\nwill\nand Mrs. J. J. McEwen. mother \u2122\u00bb mlss1\u2122- \u2122e ot!hers are\nof the incoming queen, pre-1 Donald Roy and Fernand Mor-\nslded at the tea table. I issette.\nHEADING SOUTH | SEEK HOLIDAY\nMONT-JOLI.   Que.    ICPI   -     OTTAWA   (GPl-ft-ed  White-\nThree  Mont-Joli  men  plan  to j house,  president of the -6,000-\nleave   Monday   for   Tierra   del j member Civil Service Associa-\nFuego  at  the  southern  tip  of; tion .of Canada, urged the gov-\nSouth   America   in   a   covered I eminent Wednesday to give fed>-\nwagon   drawn  by   two  horses. ! oral workers the Monday follow-\nThey expect the trip will take j ing   Dominion1   Day   off.   Mr.\nfive years. Yvon Berube, leader; Whitehouse said a holiday Monday was the right of civil servants.  Otherwise with Dominion\nDay falling on a Saturday, July\nwere thanked for their assistance\nby senior teacher Mrs. M. Well-\nwood and intermediate teacher,\nMrs. L. Stainton.\nLIBRARIANS MEET\nOTTAWA (CP) - More than\n400 librarians are expected to\nattend the 16th annual Canadian\nLibrary Association conference\nat St. Andrews-foy-the-Sea. N.B.,\nJune 17-23, the association said\nWednesday. Improvement of library service will be the main\nthey would be deprived of a   topic of discussion at the week-\n1.\nstatutory holiday.\nlong meeting.\nSenior Citizens\nTalk Over-\nSummer Activities\nFRUITVALE - Summer activities were discussed at the meeting of the Senior Citizens Branch\n44 when A. Nash and his daughter, K                                     I aays ** \u2122elr Suest-\nMrs., J.  Lewis  were  host  and; A special meeting will'be held     M_.   an(_ jj-j   R   Hubbersteg\nhostess at the home of the latter, after the bazaar, it was decided.  atK_ [arrajy j-ave returned from\nThe interesting program was Mrs. E. R. Hope gave the Bible i Vancouver where they attended\npresented by  Mrs.  A.  C.   (Ro- reading and members handed in' the graduation of their daughter\nzella)   Webster  who   spoke   on donations for the Dorcas parcel.' Koralie from St. Paul's Hospital\npainting  and  gave  an  art  dis-     _____    _    _    __ _. _   ___, . School of Nursing.\nMr.   and  Mrs.  R.  Russel   of\nschools in Fruitvale and Trail and\nsurrounding districts.\nA, Jorgenson of Nelson recently\nvisited his grandchildren, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Jenkins and Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Matson, before leaving for Rochester.\nE. Leyland of Victoria is visiting his son and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. L. Leyland.\nMrs.  J.  A.\n__- |    mrs.   _.   a.   Porsyt-ie  offered\nA nicnic in Nelson   durnig the birthday- greetings to Miss L. C.\nsuLneTwa Sssed \"twill be Meinardus and Mrs. M. Emer-' Sqtiamish visited the latter's per-\ndecided at the nut meeting if \u2122- *\" P\u00ab*.dent Panted arts.  Mr   and Mrs.  G.  Le.tch\nthe group will continue to function tn6m w* corsa\u00abes- | wer &e weekend'\nduring July and August. I   Hostess was Mrs. Forsythe, and     Miss Pat Brownsey of Duncan\nNext meeting place will be the she was assisted by Miss Rey- ls the suest \u00b0j Rev- ^ Mrs- L-\nhome of W. Corbett with Mrs. E. nolds iwith refreshments, after, c- HooPer- M,ss Brownsey has\nGanton and Mrs. H. Edmondson the meeting was closed with a been sent .by ohureh headfluarters\nas hostess. I prayer t>y Rev. E. R. Hope. in Vancouver to conduct a leaders\ntraining   course   for    vacation\nFirst Commoner Weds Duke Since Tudor\nTimes, Promises To \"Obey\" at York Minster\nSPRING INTO WARM WEATHER WITH\nHush Pkippies'\nBREATHIN' BRUSHED PIGSKIN BY GREB\nMEN'S  PROM\n$9.99\nPerfect for spring ami sommet. tight 12 ounces per\nshoe. Bouncy crepe sole, steel shank support. Resists\ndirt, repefe water. Brushing deans, restores leather.\nSizes and widths to fit anybody.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS   I'N  FOOTFASHION\nEst. Since 1902\nSUPPLIERS TO THE ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY\nUnit's\nNAVY* RUM\n25 oz tcft\/es and\n12 oz flasks\nHearty in body,\nyet light in flavour\nand aromcb\nalso\nRUM\nVtRY U6HI\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Gov't of British Columbia.\nBy CAROL KENNEDY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nYORK, England (CP)-To the\nsound of silver trumpets and the\ntriumphant pealing ot bells, His\nRoyal Highness Edward, Duke\nof Kerjt, Thursday married his\nsweetheart from the Yorkshire\nmoors, Katharine Worsley.\nExcept for the Duchess of\nWindsor, she was the first untitled woman to wed a British\nroyal duke since Tudor times. It\nwas a splendid, sparkling wedding in Britain's proudest royal\nmanner, though without the elaborate state-coach and breastplate trappings of Princess Margaret's wedding 13 months ago.\nIn this gracious old city that\ncalls itself England's 6econd\ncapital\u2014ai pearl grey stone and\nemerald lawns \u2014 hundreds had\ncamped out overnight, defying a\nchill, grey drizzle.\nDespite the sudden cold spell,\nwith fitful sunshine, it was\nroses, roses all the way for the\nbridal pair in York's first royal\nwedding since 1328.\nClusters of white and yellow\ni roses decorated the soaring\ngothic nave of York Minster,\nEngland's largest cathedral.\nAnd Katharine's bouquet was of\nwhite roses, the ancient symbol\nof York,\nQUEEN ATTENDS\nThe Queen and some 2,000\nguests were present in the medieval cathedral and the big sur-\n\u25a0\u25a0rise came when the pretty\ncommoner promised to \"obey.\"\nThe order of service provided\nior use of the 1938 version of\nthe Anglican Prayer Book which\ndoes not include that word. But\nthe blue-eyed bride vowed to\n\"love, cherish and obey\" the\ndashing duke standing beside\nher in his uniform as a Royal\nScots Greys captain, eighth in\nline for the throne.\nThe first two royal processions to enter the 6reat west,\ndoor of the minster were mainly\nof foreign royalty. Don Juan of\nBarcelona, pretender to the\nSpanish throne, walked with\nPrincess Margaret and her husband  Antony Armstrong-Jones.\nThey were followed by the\nQueen Mother and former\nQueen Eugenia of Spain. Next\ncame the. Duchess of Kent, soon\nto revert to her old name of\nPrincess Marina, in an outfit of\nhoney-colored sil organdie, embroidered in gold.\nPrincess Alexandra, sister of\nthe groom,  wore  her  favorite\ndeep a-alea pink.\nQUEEN IN LILAC\nThe Queen, in lilac ribbed\nsatin, and the Duke of Edinburgh, in the dress uniform of\nan army field marshal, entered\nthe minster to a shrill fanfare\nfrom trumpeters of the bridegroom's regiment.\nThe bride was six minutes late\ninstead of the planned delay of\none minute. Then the silver\ntrumpets rang out in the second\nfanfare, named Hovingham\nafter, the bride's home town and\nspecially composed for the occasion.\nThe colorful crowd of guests\u2014\nand a nation of television view-\nj ers\u2014got their first look at the\n| wedding gown, which was kept\nj as close a secret as a nuclear\ni blueprint.\ni    Like Princess Margaret's,   it\n, was a simple, flowing gown of\n1 white silken gauze, distinguished\ni by  an   imposing  double  train\nI with square-out ends. It had a\n\u25a0 close   fitting  bodice   and   long\nsleeves. The filmy veil floated\nthe full length of the train and\nj was clasped to the head by a\nI diamond bandeau.\n!    Above the standaway  collar,\nKatharine wore a single strand\nof pearls.\nShe   looked  nervous  as   she\nwalked slowly up the 160-foot\naisle on the arm of her smiling\nfather, grey-haired landowner\nSir William Worsley. They were\nfollowed by eight bridesmaids in\nwhite and yellow Victorian-style\ndresses and three pages in yellow silk suits with kneebreeclies.\nThen the whjt.e-hai.-ed Archbishop of York took over, a\nstout' imposing figure, in his\nrobes of white and gold. He is\nDr. Michael Ramsey, soon to be\nenthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury.\nThe program for the rest of\nthe day included a reception at\nWorsley's Hovingham Hall estate near here and the departure of the newlyweds to spend\n_he first part of their honeymoon\nat Birkhall, the Queen Mother's\nScottish holiday home.\nThey will fly to Spain's Mediterranean resort island of Majorca later this month.\n:lIUIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllM\"MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIMIMII!l\"MI|l^\nj Yomr Individual j\n!     Horoscope      i\n'miiiiiiiiiniiii  Qy  Frances Drake  >>\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0~^-\nPAST CHIEFS\nHEAR GRAND\nTEMPLE  REPORT\nNE\"W DENVER \u2014 A report\nfrom Grand Temple sessions held\nat Duncan, B.C., was presented\nat a recent meeting of the Past\nChiefs Club at the home of Mrs.\nJohn Taylor, with president Mrs.\nIsabel Pendry conducting.   '\nMrs. Janet Leask gave the invocation and Mrs. Inga Clever\nreported for the visiting committee.\nMrs. Elsie Nelson gave the\nDuncan Report.\nHigh scorer in whist, following\nthe meeting, was Mrs. Iila Tham-\nlinson and Mrs. Pendry held low\nscore.\nThe hostess was assisted by\nMiss Marjorie Butlin, Mrs. Janet\nGraham and Mrs. Nelson in\nserving: refreshments.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Mr. and1\nMrs. Jan Kobayashi are holiday-'\ning in Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. W. P. Gilroy j\nwere weekend visitors in Castlegar. !\nMr. and Mrs. John Broadfooti\nof Seattle were guests of the\nformer's cousins, Mr. and Mrs.\nQ. A. Forsythe.\nT. M. Leask returned from\nVancouver, where he was visiting\nrelatives for a week.\nMrs. Hermann Clever and\ndaughter, Miss Diane Clever\nspent a week in Victoria with\nHermann Clever and son, Gilbert,\nof New Westminster.\nMiss G. L. Reynolds had as\nher weekend guests, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Marohi of Nelson.\nMrs. Q.- A: Forsythe and daughters, Mary Phyllis and Ginny,\nwere Spokane visitors.\nJohn Clark of Sarnia, Ontario,\nstudent minister for Knox Presbyterian Ohuroh, has taken up\nresidence in the manse.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Gray and two\nchildren of Kimberley were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Neil\nJ. Sutherland.\nMrs. E. A. Baja and Miss Carol\nKrause were Vancouver visitors\nfor a week and were accompanied back by Mrs. Baja's sister, Miss Barbara Rowlatt of\nSydney, Australia, who will visit\nher brother-in-law and sister, Dr.\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Saturday, June 10, 1961\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\nSpend sufficient time studying\nproblems before acting on them.\nPerplexities are about but you\noan handle them through alertness, dexterous maneuvering. Be\nconsiderate, gracious as always.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Don't expect something or nothing. Self-sacrifice necessary, especially in essentials. Process\nself, screen each situation, and\navoid tangling foolishly with\nfriends, associates, superiors.\nMAY 22 to .TUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Fair outlook with proper discriminative action. Forget about\nprivate wishes awhile. Family,\nloved ones' interests rate attention. Go after things as if they\nwere all but won.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Plan soundly, revamp were\nneeded. Look to weekend for some\nphysical relaxation but don't permit your fertile mind to stagnate.\nMany best ideas are born during\n\"off hours.\"\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Don't act too suddenly or smugly. Your substantial basis for expecting gains is your inner power,\ngrit when willing to work to win.\nBypass waste and you can exipect\nreal aa>ancement.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Star aspects moderately auspicious. Decipher well\nyour course so that efforts may\nbe properly registered and benefits derived therefrom. Important\nthing is not to give up trying.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Influences in good\nlineup for general activities, family interests, civic projects. Sidestep ill-temper and moodiness\nshould they rear ugly heads.\nStrategy, true diplomacy wins.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio! \u2014 All activities of\nTRY IT!\nAsk Your Grocer\nsound purpose, sincere meaning\nand that are for good of all are\ngreatly favored. Correct errors\nearly, build for higher standards.\nNaturalness should prevail.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius)\u2014Show your\ninterest in, and self-sacrifice for,\nothers and endeavor will bring\nthreefold benefits. Don't let little\nmean matters upset home life,\nhappiness. Tact essential.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Aspects indicate edginess; for some items, a\ngood signal; others, No! Avoid\nrushing, inadequate planning. In\nfree time, indulge a hobby, relax\nwith friends, visit with loved ones,\nfamily.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Encouraging for\nrefreshed earnest efforts, taking\ncharge of well-thought-out ideas.\nWork for harmony, don't try to\ngo it alone when there are \"hard\nnuts\" to crack.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 If trying a bit of end-\nof-the-week promoting, do not\noverstate your case or proposition. It confuses, sometimes discourages to overexpand. Cut useless detail to minimum.\nYOU BORN TODAY are practical, refined, yet energetic, with\npersistency. Executive ability,\ninnately honest, faithful to a\ntrust. Keep your optimism'even,\nheed advice of wise heads, also\nheed your intuition to differentiate quickly the good from the\nworthless. Have faith, be always\ncheerful: associate with happy,\nintelligent people. Should fare\nwell with opposite sex but don't\nexpect other person to take\nthings for granted. Curb tendency\nto abruptness. Enormous success\npossible in large-scale dealings of\nhigh calibre. Birthdate of: Jas.\nBryce, historian-diplomat; Sir\nHenry Stanley, early African explorer; Prince Philip, Duke of\nEdinburgh, Queen Elizabeth of\nEngland's husband; Chas. H.\nDouglas, editor, writer; Judy\nGarland, singer-actress.\n\"[(jjjfi^ .. sfor Fine Fabrics\nPARCHMENT   CRINOLINE\nSinch' 1.59\nPURE   SILK   BROCADE\nBlue tones only. Reg. 4.95,     __)   <*e\n36\". Yd  3.AP\nGINGHAM CHECKS\nDrip-dry, sanforized.      , \u2022jc\n36\". Yd  \u2022 I J\nSPECIAL\nFAST COLOR PRINTS.\nYd\t\n.55\nJayl&iL QhJL^ Soodts,\n624 Baker St.\nPhone 1485\nSPECIALS\nLimited Quantity Only\nPersonal Shopping Only\nNo Phone, Mail or C.O.D. Please\nReg. 2.98\nINFANTS'   DRESSES\nDainty nylon dresses, embroidered trim, assorted\ncolors. Sizes: 1 AQ\n1, 2 and 3  I \u2022T'\nReg. 2.98\nBABY DOLLS\nAssorted novelty baby doll\npyjamas. Assorted colors\nand styles. *)   JQ\nSizes: S, M, L.   *\u25a0\u2022*\u25a0<\nReg. 4.29 CANNON\nBEACH  TOWELS\nLarge 36\" x,72\". Assorted\ngay patterns on white backgrounds. Limited i QQ\n2 to a customer.  \u2022 \u2022 + <f\nReg. 8.49\nGARDEN   TABLES\nRattan peel. Round or rectangular. Black   te (\nmetal base  \u2022\u00bb \u2022 \u2022\nMEN'S\nBOXER  SHORTS\nCotton;  elastic waistband.\n.79\nSizes\nS, M,\nTERRY CLOTH\nSLIPPERS\nrubber soles, \u2014\n.79\nWashable\nSandal style.\nSizes: S, M\nReg. 3.98 WOMEN'S\nMOCCASIN CASUALS\nFqarri riibljer spies, leather\nuppers, Ijeige arid turquoise\nin sizes iVs . '->\"'*\\ QQ\nto 9 4..Q7\nReg. 1.98\nAIR PILLOWS\nLi-Lo air pillows. Deflated\n13.4\" x 9\". Good for using\nin cars-, boats; etc. h q\nSpecial  r_\"T jr\n-  \u2014_\u2014r\u2014M.imuM\n H^^^^    \u25a0.-.    \u2022  , \u2022\n',     .\/.-;>\u25a0   \u25a0 \u2022,   \u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0  \"^\n.\u25a0:- .'.' 1\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961\n&%\u00a3A& to $o . . . U)haL to (bo . . . Jjot SummstiL Jutt\nTook Three Ballots To Elect Moderator From Medicine Hat\nTORONTO (CF) - The 87th\ngeneral assernWy of the Presbyterian Church in Canada took\nthree ballots to elect a moderator from Western Canada at\nKnox Presbyterian Church here\nWednesday night.\nHe is Rev. Robert L. Taylor\nof St. John's Ohuroh, Medicine\nHat, Alta., a 51-year-old father\nof five children.\nDr. Taylor was eleoted on the\nthird ballot after he and Rev.\nRoss K. Cameron of Dovercourt\nRoad Presbyterian Ohureh, Toronto, divided the votes of the assembly on the second.\nRev. Edwin J. White, first\n. Presbyterian Church. Edmonton\nwas eliminated on the first ballot and Rev. Mariano Di Gangi\nof St. Enoch Ohureh, Hamilton,\nthe fourth nominee, withdrew\nfrom the election shortly before\nthe voting.\nDr. Taylor succeeds Rev. Robert Lennox, principal of Presbyterian College, Montreal,\nelected moderator in Guelph,\nOnt., last year.\nBORN IN SCOTLAND\nA native of Scotland, the moderator received his education at\nOrillia High School, the University of Toronto and Knox College, Toronto, which conferred\non him the honorary degree of\ndoctor of divinity in April.\nHe has been minister of St.\nJohn's Church in Medicine Hat\nfor the last IS years and previously served in Lenore, Man., In-\nnisfail, Alta., and Indian Head,\nSask.\nDr. Taylor is a member of (he\nboard of the Missionary and\nDeaconess Training School of\nthe Presbyterian Church and\nhas served on the board of\nChristian education and the senate of Knox College.\nDr. Lennox, in an address\nsummarizing his year as moderator, told the assembly the\nchurch's work on the campuses\nof Canadian universities is a\nbasic part of its domestic\nstrategy.\n\"This is one area where all\n(he churches must find a way of\nworking together if Christianity\nis to be brought home to the\nstudents,\" he said.\nELECTION CASES END\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Cases of\nvoting irregularities in last October's municipal election were\nwound up Tuesday with the conviction of Paul Cloutier, 45.\nCloutier, the last of 30 to be\ntried, was fined $500 for \"illegally counselling, encouraging\nor aiding\" the impersonation of\na voter. Of the others charged,\n20 received jail sentences of\nfrom three days to two months,\nand nine were fined sums ranging from $50 to $500.\nMeasuring a BIG 5 feet 8 inches high by 7 feet 4 inches in diameter,\nthe B-A Tepee is big enough\u2014strong enough\u2014for all kinds of family\nfun. Made from heavy gauge plastic . . . buckskin coloured and\ndecorated with bright Indian designs. Comes complete with two-piece\nmetal centre pole and metal tent pegs.\nThe B-A Tepee is well ventilated\nfrom the bottom and has a rear\n\"lookout\" window.\nFor backyard Indian uprisings\n... picnics and outings . .. you'll\nfind dozens o[ fun uses for your\nB-A Tepee. Gel one for your family\nfrom your friendly, neighbourhood\nMr. B-A nowl\nSUCCESSFUL ANGLER here ia Mrs. Mel Buerge of Nelson who brought in\nthis 12-pound Kootenay Lake Rainbow trout on an eigh't-pound test line on a\nspinning rod. Fishing north of Kaslo, Mrs. Buerge boated the fish after a 20-\nminute battle.\nWhen In the Kootenays Your\nStay Will Be More Pleasant\nWhen You Visit the\nHOLIDAY\nINN\nin Procter\nCompletely Renovated\nLarge Beach Frontage\nCabins\nBOB WHITE, Prop.\nPHONE PROCTER 691\nPredict Industrial Future\nFor Kamloops and District\nDuring Your Stay ....   -\nTHE BALFOUR\nGENERAL STORE\nwill keep you supplied\n\u2022 FRESH  MEATS\n\u2022 VEGETABLES   .\n\u2022 GROCERIES\n\u2022 FISHING  TACKLE\nImperial Oil and Gas\nVICTORIA (CP) -A department of trade and industry report on the economic prospects\nof the Kamloops area says it\nshould anticipate significant\ngrowth in the manufacturing industries.\nThe siudy is one of a series\nwhich examines small economic\nregions of British Columbia.\nSimilar reports have been prepared on Hope and Chilliwack\nwould increase the annual allowable cut of the area.\nThe population of the area\nis expected to be 45,500 by the\nend of this year and it will\nalmost double, to 86,000, by\n1981. Its growth rate in the past\n20 years has exceeded the provincial average and projections\nhave been based on this trend.\nKamloops should take full ad-\ni vantage of its strategic position,\nBennett Favors Exporting\nHydro-Electric Power\nVICTORIA (CP)-British Columbia's abundance of potential\nhydro-electric power makes it\ngood sense to export some of it,\nPremier Bennett said Wednesday night in an address to the\nOanadian Manufacturers' Association.\nThe provincial government,\nhe stated, is \"condemned\" in\nEastern Canada for its advocacy of export because eastern\nCanadians do not understand the\nsituation. i\nFederal policy, which to date !\nprevents   export,   is   based   on\nconcepts   arising   from   hydro |\nshortages in Ontario, the premier said.\nThe policy arose because\nsome years ago Ontario sold\nsome power to the United States\nand then found it couldn't get it\nback.\n\"If we sold power, we\nwouldn't want it back. When we\nwanted more ourselves we\nwould just build another dam.\nASSETS WASTED\n\"Canada exports natural gas,\noil, coal \u2014 all wasting assets\u2014\nbut in the case of the one continuing asset it Ls said we\nmustn't export.. We have four or\nfive   great   river   systems   for\nRIOTS KILL 64\nZANZIBAR (APl-The death\ntoll in race riots on this Indian\nOcean island was unofficially\nestimated today at 64 persons.\nA total of 745 are under arrest.\npower development. Every day.\nand every minute this water is\ngoing to 'export' into the Pacific\nand Arctic oceans, unused.\"\nPremier Bennett said both\nthe Columbia and Peace River\nsystems should be developed for\npower. As well as benefitting\nBritish Columbia, their development would spread wealth\nthroughout Canada.\nF. D. Mathers of New Westminster, B.C., newly - elected\npresident of the association,\nthanked Mr. Bennett, He said\nhe hoped the eastern manufacturers who had listened to him\nwould do what they could to get\npermission for power export.\nHOTEL\nW213 Riverside   W124 Sprague\nSpokane, Wash.\nRooms with bath $3.50 to $4.50\nWithout bath $2.00 to $3.00 \"\nSuites $7.00\nFamily Rooms $4.00 to $4.50\nWELCOME\nCANADIANS\nCurrent Premiums Paid\nThere   are   opportunities   at (says   the   report,   and  take  a\nKamloops   for   machinery   and j lesson  from   Washington   State\nRESTAURANT and\nCOCKTAIL LOUNGE\nW. 518 Sprague Ave.\n\u2022 PAN-FRIED CHICKEN\n\u2022 SEA FOODS\n\u2022 CHOICE STEAKS\n\u2022 COCKTAILS\nFREE\n2-Hour   Parking\nAt City Ramp\nRough 'n Ready\nCamp\nGround\n_\u25a0 Propane Gas Cooking\n+ Fireplaces\n\u2022 Shower Bath\n\u25a0*\u2022 Laundry Facilities\n+ Trailer Hookups\nFree Train to All Campers\nOpen 24 Hours per day\nEAST SPOKANE in\nDISHMAN\nWrite Eastwood Motel for\nFree Folder\n5502 E. Sprague Ave.,\nSPOKANE,   WASH.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 mmsmmmm \u00bb>i>i\u00bb\nFUM-TO-AQOEMBUE!\nCOMPLETE WITH EASY-TO-FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS\nMAY BE PURCHASED WITH\nYOUR B-A CREDIT BOOK\nTHE BRITISH AMERICAN OIL COMPANY LIMITED\n*Suggest4d rttail priet\nHOWARD L GANE Agent\nAgent for Troil and Castlegar\nBRITISH AMERICAN OIL COMPANY, l,TD.\nIf-\nPliom. 586 Trail\nAllen\nBeacon\nFrank's\nSkyline\nMotor\nMotors\nAuto\nAuto\nService\nLtd.\nService\nService\nDavies Street,\nUpper Fairview,\nPhone 1798.\n701  Baker St.,\nPhone 578\n295 Bolter St.,\nPhone 2195\n850 Columbia\nPhono 3451\nNelson, B.C.\nNelson, B.C.\nNelson, B.C.\nCosrlegar, B.C.\nFor the Finest in Eating,\nVisit the\nBalfour Beach\nInn\nDINING ROOM\nOpen 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.\nSundays: 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.\n\u2022 STEAKS\n\u2022 DEEP-FRIED\nCHICKEN\n\u2022 BAR-B-CUE\nSPARERIBS\nPhone  Balfour\n751\nfor   Reservations\nJ\nmetal-working,   aluminum   fabrication, rubber products, clothing and film industries.\nI    The    eventual   establishment\nI of a provincial power grid may\n' result in  the city become one\n| of the hubs of the network. It\n. would be ideal for industries.\n|    \"An   increasing   value   from\nthe recreation resources can be j ets.\nachieved by the maintenance of\nhigh standards of accommodation and the promotion of special tourist attractions,\" says the\nreport.\nIt urges that lakes and\nstreams be made more accessible and \"circuit routes\" be\npromoted whioh would attract\nvisitors from adjoining areas.\nLocal and metropolitan Vancouver markets could absorb\nmost of its agricultural production but irrigation is Hie key to\nexpansion in the industry.\n\"Prospects for the establishment of a pulp mill in the region\nare bright in the light of availability of resources and favorable freight rates.\"\nIn spite of over-Cutting in\nsome districts, logging activity\ncould be increased. If currently\nnon-commercial species such as\nlodge-pole pine were utilized it\nin tourist promotion. It should\nplug circuit routes, similar to\nthose on the Olympic Peninsula.\nMore attention should also be\ngiven to pctato-growing. Large-\nscale operations should be considered to economically supply\nthe growing frozen trench fried\nand packaged potato chip mark-\nfi.C. Briefs\nmSft\u2014Smm\n^CackmanL motel\n24 Modern Units     Kitchenettes\nFREE TELEVISION\nSleep Off the Highway\nHEATED POOL NOW OPEN\nW. 1923-6Hi, Spokane, Wash.\nemu ^mmi^SnnWsmmem^fgmmmMpmmmmmmM SsSmssut\nPh. Rl 7-3067\n\u25a0 \u2014 nMmt WmMmmtt\nTHE\nSIX - MILE\nSERVICE\n6 MILES EAST OF NELSON\nEn Route to the Main Lake Ferry\nBA GASOLINES and OIL\nOther Brand Name Oils To Suit\nYour Requirements.\nMARINE OIL AND GREASE\nKEROSENE NAPHTHA\nOPEN    \/AM. TO JO PM\nJ. C. and E. A. Muir Phone 1668-L-l\nPENTICTON (CPI -A youth\nfrom the Penticton Indian Re- |\nserve was charged with at-, I\ntempted murder in juvenile\ncourt Wednesday in connection\nwith the shooting of Robert\nManuel, 34, the Walla Walla,\nWash. He was remanded to\nJune 17. Manuel, who suffered\na bullet wound in the abdomen\nearly Wednesday was reported\nin fair condition.\nNANAIMO (CP) -Tlie Associated Chambers of Commerce\nof Vancouver Island have recommended that the Island Publicity Bureau be given control\nof.the $10,000 provincial government allotment for tourist promotion of the island. It recommended that five upper - island\nrepresentatives be appointed to\nthe bureau.\nBIG   LUMBER   LOAD\nNANAIMO (CP) - The\nfreighter Betparsil has sailed\nfrom Nanaimo for Japan with\n4,000,000 feet of cedar logs and\npilings aboard. Longshoremen\nworked long hours to get the\nbig load aboard in two weeks.\nThe vessel will return for another load in August. ,. :\nLAWYER DIES\nVICTORIA (CP) - Harry\nJames Davis, 79, a well-known\nlawyer here, died in hospital\nWednesday. He had practiced\nfor 39 years and was a senior\npartner with Crease and Company.\nNEW SPEED TRAP\nVICTORIA (CP) - Central\nSaanicb police force announced\nWednesday it has bought a $1,-\n400 radar unit to check highway traffic. The machine can\nbe plugged into a cigarette\nlighter and may be taken into\ncourt to prove the exact spe\u00b0d\ni at whidh a driver was travelling.\nand\nCOTTON ROOM\nE 8122 Sprague\nPhone WA-4-3141\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nFINE FOOD SERVED in an\nATMOSPHERE of HOSPITALITY\nLUNCHEON - DINNER\nDANCING  WEDNESDAY THRU  SATURDAY\nFamily Fun for Everyone\nWELCOME\nCANADIANS\nClip This Ad\nGood for One\nFree Ride\nRelax and escape from tho\ntensions of the real world . . .\ncome to a make believe world\nwhere fun reigns supreme . . .\nwhere everything is new but\nnothing has changed. Spend a\nday of wholesome entertainment with your family. There's\nFamily Fun for Everyone in\nthe never-never land of...\nMAT* PARK\nWEST END OF BOONE AVE.\nSPOKANE\nI\n .  '   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\n~       ; \u25a0 i   i       f    f \"'-':\":' \u2014\t\n\\HHI\nBraves Set New Record\nBut Lost Game Anyway\n* * \u2022\nWon't Remain Unchallenged\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nModern baseball being what It\nIs, the record of lour consecutive home runs, set by Milwaukee Braves Thursday against Cincinnati Reds, Is not likely to remain in the books unchallenged\nfor long.\nBut many a baseball is likely\nto float out of the park before\nanother team manages lo pull\noff the feat and still lose the\nball game.\nIt happened to Milwaukee mostly because they were trailing\ntlie   Redlegs  10-2  before  Eddie\nIng.   Yankee  right-hander  Bill\n.ta.ford yielded live lilts In winning the cpener,\nLEADERS DIVIDE\nL.-velor.J r.dlat.B maintained\ntheir thin edge over Detroit Ti.\ngers at the top of the American League standings as they\n\u2022pllt a doubleheader, the Tribe\nwinning Ihe opener 1-0 and Uie\nBengals taking the nightcap 8-1.\nFirst - Inning doubles by\nJohnny Temi.e ai'.d Vic Power\nprovided the only run of the\nfirst game and ran Cleveland's\nwinning streak  to 10 straight.\nMathews, Hank Aaron, Joe Ad-|Norm Ca(h., homc run ,nd a\ncock and Frank Thomas stepped        ,. of ._.._. b   bh- Tribe..\nup_sm,\u00b0 T !\\.he se,venUl lnnlnE, infield accounted for the Tiger\nand  clouted  their  four-baggors.'\nEven another homer by Mathews\nin the eighth was only enough to\nmake the final score 10-6.\nStarter Jim Maloney, the eventual winner, was the victim of\nthe first two blasts in the seventh. I '\"*\nReliever Marshall Bridges yielded\nthe last two.\nLoser Warren Spahn, who hit\na homer himself, gave up six\nruns before giving way to a\npinch .vltter in the sixth inning.\nA three-run homer by Gene\nFreese off Moe Drabowsky in\nthe sixth gave Cincinnati a lead\nthat all Milwaukee's seventh-inning heroics couldn't overcome.\nPHILS WIN ANOTHER\nVeteran Sam (Toothpick) Jones,\nwho hadn't lost to Philadelphia\nIn their last seven meetings,\nfound out what It felt like when\nthe Phils got to him for three\nruns In the first inning and went\non to beat San Francisco Giants\n5-2.\ntallies in the nightcap, played\nunder protest by Cleveland after\nthe eighth inning.\nDetroit manager  Bob  Scheffing was on the field complain-\nabout a call at first base\nbut time had not been called\nwhen Cleveland base - runner\nBob Hale broke for second and\nwas tagged. The Indians protested the game when the umpires called Hale out.\nMinnesota Twins snapped\ntheir l.-game losing streak by\nbeating Baltimore Orioles 3-1\nwhen veteran Chuck Stobbs\nbore down with the bases loaded\nto retire Jim Busby for the final\nout. i\nDODGERS DEPOSED |\nPittsburgh   Pirates   knocked j\nLos Angeles Dodgers out of first ]\nplace in the National League by\ndefeating them 4-2. Bob Skinner ;\ni and Bill Mazeroski each belted\nthe Dodgers half a game behind Cincinnati and put the Pirates 1V4 games out of third\nplace.\nBob Friend who had a seven-\ngame losing streak as a starting pitoher, got the victory with\nan assist from Bobby Shantz.\nBoston Red Sox gained a 6-5\nwin in the openor of a twi-nlght\ndoubleheader with Los Angeles\nAngeles. Tlie two clubs then\nbattled to a 4-4 tie in the second game, called after 11 Innings because of rain.\nVic Wertz walloped a two-run\nhomer in the seventh for Boston's first game triumph which\nwas credited to southpaw Ted\nWills.\nIn the nightcap, Gene Leek's\nhomer gave the Angels a 4-3\nlead In the 11th inning but Boston tied it again in Ihe bottom\nof the frame on a walk and a\ntriple by G-ary Geiger who then\nwas trapped in a run down.\nJones  was  in   trouble  when | Iwo^-un\ncatcher Ed Bailey threw wild on' inning.\nCharley Smith's attempted sac-|    The   Pirate\nrifice and put two runners  on,\"\nbase. A force play and a squeeze!\nbunt  that misfired disposed  oh\ntwo Phils but doubles by Pancboj\nHerrera and Don Demeter and\nBobby   Del  Greco's  single  did\nthe damage.\nWinner Johnny Bu-hanJt gave\nup only four hits, two of them\nbases - empty homers by Willie\nMays and Willie McCovey.\nRookie Jim Archer ended\nNew York's home-run streak at\n17 straight games when he survived a five-run second inning\nto give Kansas City a 9-6 victory over the Yankees after Bill\nSkowron's two-run blast helped\nthe Yanks win Ihe opener 6-1.\nThe As ended New York's\nwinning streak at six as a\ndouble by Hank Bauer and\ntriples by Leo Posada, Norm\nSiebern ond Joe Pignatano contributed to a five-run third inn-\nhomers  in  the  fourth :\nvictory   dropped j\n4 Hoopsters\nIndicted\nNEW YORK (AP) - The\never-expanding college basket.\nball scandal resulted in the indictment Thursday of four former\nplayers on charges of conspiracy\nand bribery in point-shaving attempts. All four had been named\npreviously as coconspirators.\nTwo new names were involved\nin the announcement by District\nAttorney Frank Hogan.\nAnother former Connecticut\nplayer and a former North Carolina player were the new men.\nHogan said Jack Rose, 23, Of\nSouth Windsor, Conn., accepted\n$1000 to hold down the score in a\nConnecticut-Niagara game Jan.\n16, I960, at Niagara Falls, N. Y.\nLAEKBGEamm\nNOW AVAILABLE\nFROM YOUR\nLAFARGE DEALER!\nHere's a simple to follow, profusely illustrated book on how\nto do dozens of small concrete\njobs around the home. It shows\nyou how to make curbing,\nwalks, patios, steps, how to do\npatching, gives you complete information on what to order for\neach job.\nGet your copy today, free, from your LAFARGE dealer.\nBqsl\nBuildinq. Supply 3ttd..\n301   Baker St.        Phone 1704\nNelson, B.C.\n\"BETTER BUYS AT BEE\"\n744 West Hilling. Street, Vancouver I, B.C.\nmiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiui\nWIHL Meet\nSet for 24th\nOfficials of the Western International Hockey League and\nof the respective clubs will have\nplenty on their mind on June\n24 . . . the date Bet for the\nannual general meeting in Kimberley.\nThe list of business it a long\none and may get longer before\nthe meeting day arrives.\nFinancial reports will be the\nbig worry because hockey clubs\nIn this league hove had considerable problems financing\ntheir through the season. The\nleague Is expected to offer some\nsolutions to alleviate the growing problem.\nIn the order of general business, the franchises with Cranbrook, Kimberley and Spokane\nis al the ton of the list.\nElection of officers for the\nnew season will also be made.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBritish Track\nSlars Favored\nITHACA. N.Y. (AP)-An Ox-\nford-C a m b r i d g e combination\nstrong in the hurdles and distance events carries the favorite's\nrole against a Penn-Cornell team\nin their fifth international track\nmeet Saturday.  \u25a0\nDespite the absence of Herb\nElliott, the great miler who decided to run this weekend at\nZagreb, Yugoslavia, the English\nteam boasts capable men in the\n10, the mile and the two-mile.\nThe meet presents a big opportunity for Steve Machooka, the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961 \u2014 !\nNHL Finding Out American\nSchools Biggest Competition\nFight Facts\nTale of the Tape\nNEW YORK (AP) - Facts and\nfigures of the Archie Moore -\nGiulio Rinaldi fight:\nDate\u2014Saturday, June 10.\nTime\u201411 p.m. (ACT)\nSite\u2014Madison Square Garden,\nNew York\nDistance\u201415 rounds or less.\nAt Stake\u2014World light heavyweight boxing title recognition\nin New York, Massachusetts\nand Europe (National Boxing\nAssociation states recognize\nHarold Johnson as champ).\nPrincipals \u2014 Archie Moore,\nSan Diego, (champion), vs. Giulio Rinaldi, Italy (challenger).\nScoring \u2014 By rounds with a\nsupplementary point system in\ncase rounds are even.\nOfficials \u2014 Referee and two\njudges to be named at ringtime.\nRematch\u2014None.\nBoxers' records \u2014 Moore 212\nbouts\u2014won 181 H30 kno.k.uts).\nlost 25 (stopped six times), six\n.raws. Rinaldi 30 bouts, won 25\n(eight  knockouts),\n(stopped once).\nlost   five\nNEW YORK (API-Tale of the\ntape for June 10 Archie Moore-\nGiulio Rinaldi light heavyweight\ntitle match.\nMoore Rinaldi\n44               Age 28\nX1T5           Weight X175\n6-0            Height 5-11$\n78              Reach 71\n40               Chest (nml) 45\n42               Chest (exp) 47\n33               Waist 35\n22               Thigh 23\n17               Neck 17\n13               Calf 13\n1614            Biceps 16Vi\n12.4           Forearm 12\n12               Fist 12V.\nIVs             Wrist 8\n11              Ankle\nx-Exact weight to  be\nmined at noon weigh-in\nday, June 10.\ndeter-\nSatur-\nFavorite Fades\nNEW YORK (AP),- Light\nheavyweight champion Archie\nMoore faded Tuesday from a\n13-to-S favorite to just an B-to-5\nchoice over Italy's Giulio Rinaldi for their lS-round title fight\nat Madison Square Garden Saturday night.\nThe Broadway bookmaking set\nBig . Heads\nTo Settle Ties\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Heads of\nthe Big Four Football League decided Thursday to settle season-\nend ties in the standing on the\nbasis of games won and lost between the tied teams.\nThe decision replaces the meth-'\nod of giving higher ranking to! second fight at Montreal,\nreported only light action on the\nfight but enough $10 and $20 bettors backing the 26-year-old Challenger to force the odds down.\nThe Italian outpointed a roly-\npoly, 19014-pound Moore in Rome\nlast Oct. 29.\nThe big question, as always\nwith Archie, is when will old\nage finally catch up with him.\nThe 44-year-old light heavyweight champion of New York,\nMassaohusette and Europe holds\nthe world record of 130 knockouts\nand has won 181 of 212 fights.\nRinaldi has won 26 of 30 but has\nscored only eight knockouts.\nThe fight will be Archie's\nninth title defence and his first\nin 22 months. He hasn't tritnmed\ndown to the 176-pound weight\nlimit since he flattened Canada's\nYvon Durelle of Bale Ste. Anne,\nN.B., in the third round of their\nAug.\nLOTS OF MUSCLE Is going Into this swing and big Charlie\nBurdette usually gets a good piece of it. Charlie will be one\nof the biggest threats when the Outlaws host the Kimberley\nDynamos in a league doubleheader this Sunday at Civic park.\nHe led the oak-pounders when Nelson took both ends of a\ndoubleheader   in   Cranbrook  recently.\u2014Daily  News  photo.\nHe could, however, be p'.r.\na pro club's negotiation list. .\nthis means the club would h\nnegotiation   rights   with ,h\nshould he turn pro.\nAt the same time It Is mos\nlikely that, on deciding to tur\npro, a boy would prefer to stic\nwith the club that sponsored Jill\nduring his early hockey days.\nAuthoritative NHL source\nsay U.S. colleges agreed la\nsummer to stop snapping\nyoung Canadians of 18 and li\nBut these promises have bee\ndiscarded.\nDenver University was one i\nthe first U.S. schools to start to\nporting Canadians in a big m:\nMurray Armstrong, who fo\nmerly played with the old Ne\nYork Americans of the NHL,\nthe Denver coach and has bee\nturning out top-notch teams,\nImportation has been Ealri\ngeneral along the northern bo\nder states \u2014 at University\nMichigan, Michigan State, Un|\nversifies of North and\nDakota and Montana,\nschools in New York state ai\nin New England.\nthe team with the best for-and\nagainst scoring totals during their\nseason meetings.\nThis season each team will play\nthe others three times. If two\nteams are tied on points after the\nfull season's play, the team with\nthe better record against the\nother gets higher ranking.\nShould two teams be all even\nin their three meetings, higher\nranking then reverts to for-and-\nagainst scoring points.\nThe clubs unanimously ratified\nan agreement whereby players on\nthe winning. Grey Cup team will\n.       .        ... receive $850 each and those on\nCornell   freshman   from   Kenya, the losing team $500 each, Here-\n12, 1959.\nWHL Forces Retreat\nIn Order To Regroup\nCALGARY  (CP)  \u2014 Directors Leader  said Coley Hail,  who\nof the Western Hockey League would operate the San Francisco\nwere apparently regrouping di- club, was \"very close\" to Cow\nvided forces  Thursday  evening Palace operators in negotiations,\nafter a day without progress in Jjm pi     lu whg WQ_           .,\ndiscussing the circuits future,   j to __<_,. ,,;_ victoria Cougar- to\nAn afternoon session that was Los Angeles, said Wednesday he\nto have ended  at  supper time Was  ready  to  operate whether\nbroke up more than an hour early. San Francisco does or not.\nRepresentatives of Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary and Vancouver\nathered immediately alone, and\nwho has drawn rave notices for\nhis potential as a miler.\nMachooka may expect stiff\ncompetition from a British twosome that could include Stephen\nJames of Oxford, who has been\nclocked in 4:05.1; Tim Briault of\nCambridge, 4:08; or Rodger Bell\nof Oxford, 4:09.2.\nCambridge's John Parker is a\nheavy favorite to win the high\nand low hurdles.\nElliott will join the squad for\na meet against a Harvard-Yale\ncombine at Boston Tuesday.\ntofore  the  amount was $500  to\nplayers of each team.\nLAFARGE\nCEMENT\ni Mads   in   Vancouver,  British   Columbia\nLions Clobber\nGyros 20-6\nLeague-leading lions last night\ndefeated the Gyros 20-6 oehind\nthe fine pitching Of one of their\nyoung pitchers, Jim Shankland,\nwho allowed only three singles\nand struck out nine. In the last\ninning, with two out, Shankland\ntired and allowed four runs by\nwalks.\nThe Liens had a field day\nagainst the Gyro pitching collecting 17 hits, including a home run\ni>y Ted Hennig, triples by Geoff\nWalker and Reg Cherenko. But\ntlie big slugger was Len Furman\nwith four hits in five tries including a double.\nEarlier in the week, the Kiwanis gave the Kinsmen a real battle.\nLate in tlie game, tlie Kiwanis\nwere ahead 3-2 but Kinsmen finally rallied to win 7-3. Pat Laughton pitcher for Kinsmen, Doug\nMadore and Tees for Kiwanis.\nTee Time\nResults of Thursday's men's\nnight:\nBruce Malcolm net 27, Al Cameron net 29, Fred Whiteley, Hans\nSather, Ken Blakeman, Bob Cal-\nderoni and Bob Weist, all net 30.\nLow (gross went to Walter Apos-\ntoliuk with 36 and the goofer of\nthe night went to Howie Hornby.\nFirst round of the club championship will be played Sunday.\nthe two men expected to operate\nIhsi year or next in California\nhuddled apart from other delegates.\nLeague president Al Leader\n;aid the day had been disappoint-\nA multitude of problems spanning finance, players, television\nand a possible franchise in about\ntwo years for Long Beach, Calif.,\nwere still to be dealt with.\nIt was reported that Art Chapman, last year's coach of the\nVancouver Canucks and now an\nSandlot Ball\nSchedule\nTlie Sandlot Mighty Mite baseball league will add one team to\nits schedule every Wednesday.\nafternoon with the South Siocan'\nteam under the guidance of I3ob;\nWiest and Neil McLennaghan.\nThe Nelson Sandlot teams wilj, ngand tlie\" directors had decided I employee of Lon Beach promoter\nreturn the games in South Siocan ta g0 int0 a night session for at \t\nMonday at 6:00 p.m. The follow- ;east another three hours.\ning is the schedule until the final1    Leader indioated at least two\nplaying date m June. ; probiems plagued, the talks:\nSaturday,   June   10\u2014Beavers;      ,   ,      _\u2022\u2022\u2022__.\nHawks  vs Mounties;  Tigers vs'    A clear division between prame\nYankees; Dodgers vs Cardinals.! and \u2122\u00a3}\u00a3****\" * l^,lea\u00aeU*\nWednesday\/June W-Mounties  \u00b0\u2122r W61-62 scheduling. The coast\nvs   South   Siocan;   Beavers   vs I olubs are known to favor an un-\nYankees;   Hawks   vs   Dodgers;\nTigers vs Cardinals. i    A  technicality   over\nArt Edwards, will remain for one\nmore year with Vancouver in\nsome capacity.\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Statt Writer\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014National Hockey League ow\nand general managers are finding that their gre.\ncompetition these days for young players is coming 1.\nUnited States colleges and\nuniversities.\nThere are an estimated 35 to\n40 U.S. schools waving hockey\nscholarships at young Canadians.\nNo one is guessing as to how\nmany boys have crossed the\nborder. Hockey men say the recruiting began in earnest seven\nor eight years ago and has been\nsteadily on the increase.\nWhen NHL heads meet here\nnext week in annual session,\nalong with top men of lhe minor\npro leagues and amateur bodies,\nthe situation is likely to be oMsi\ncussed at length.\nThe pros say they have no\nquarrel with a boy aiming at\nhigher education but they feel\nthe boy's education can be obtained as easily in Canada. To\nthis extent the pros are willing\nto help financially \u2014 and have\ndone so.\nCAN DO BOTH\nThey point particularly to two\noutstanding young hockey prospects\u2014Bruce MacGregor of Detroit Red Wings and Johnny\nMcMillan of Toronto Maple\nLeafs.\nMacGregor attended the University of Alberta and McMillan\nthe University of Toronto.\nThe big concern of the pros in\nthe U.S. college grabfest is that\nit has created disruption of junior hockey careers in Canada\u2014\nan important stage of hockey\ndevelopment through pro clubs'\nsponsored amateur teams. The\nU.S. concentration is on players\n18 and 19 years old.\nThere has also been concern\nabout young men leaving Canada, perhaps for good, because\nof the hockey scholarships.\nIf a boy wants to go to college after his early hockey days,\nwell and good, say the pros. But\nthey want to hang on to him\u2014\ncertainly the sponsoring club\ndoes\u2014should he decide to play\npro hockey.\nApparently only a few who\nhave gone to U.S. colleges have\nbecome hookey pros. They have\nthe happy option of business or\nhookey careers.\nThe standout player who has\ncombined the two is Billy Hay\nof Chicago Black Hawks. Hay is\na Calgary boy who graduated in\ngeology from Denver University. He is active in business in\nhockey's off-season.\nBECOMES FREE AGENT\nThe college man is under no\nobligation in a hookey sense. If\nhe has not turned pro 30 days\nafter graduation, or even after\nquitting college, he becomes a\nfree agent.\nBaseball Standing\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW   LPct\nCleveland   34 18 .654\nDetroit  34 19 .642\nNew York  30 20 .600\nBaltimore  27 26 .509\nBoston  24 25 .490\nKansas City  23 25 .479\nWashington 24 28 .462\nChicago    19 29 .396\nMinnesota  20 32 .385\nLos Angeles .   . 19 32 .373\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW  L Pet\nCincinnati  30 20 ,6J0\nLos Angeles    .... 31 22 .5::i\nSan Francisco .... 28 22 .530\nPittsburgh  25 22 .53 .\nSt. Louis 23 24 .4' >\nMilwaukee    22 25 .4 3\nChicago    19 30 .3.1\nPhiladelphia  .     17 30 .3-\nai\n\u2022\nELECTRIC MOTOR\nREWINDING\nService      \u2022 Repairs\nAll Size Motors and\nArmatures Rewound\nCALL   US   TODAY\nColeman Electric\nLTD.\nPhone 2055 Nelson, B.C.\nbalanced schedule of games.\nA  technicality  over  the  San\nGhosts Toppled 7-1\nThe Ex-pros continued a winning streak and toppled the Cemetery Ghosts 7-1 in a play-for-fun\nsoftball league game Thursday.\nRob Carmen hurled a one-hitter to lead the Ex-pros behind\nthe power-house hitting of John\nIngleman, Dave Stewart, Phil\nGehlen and Grant Thompson\n15 Girls Named\nTo Kooteneers\nFifteen girls will be playing in\nthe Nelson Midsummer Baseball\nTournament during July and\nAugust.\nThe girls, members of the\nnewly - formed Girls' Baseball\nClub, were named at a meeting\nof the club last night.\nThe club will be caied the\nKooteneers. Betty Ohernoif will\nbe head coaoh with Bernard\nSwensen, Fred Bradley and John\nMiller assisting.\nMrs. Klee of the Lord Nelson\nDining Room will sponsor the\ngirls.\nThe girls selected are: Verna\nChernoff, Mary McMaster, Donna\nMcMaster, Donna Bozak, Judy\nGelinas, Dawn Fredenckson\nPhyllis Wikstrom, Madge Wal\nlace, Diane Carmen, Maureen\nHannon, Iris \u2022 Wilimott, Diane\nIngledew. Jerri Heslip, Susan McKenzie, Blaine Ramsay and Lucille Johnson.\nSaturday, June 17\u2014Yankee\npractice; Dodgers vs Mounties;\nBeavers vs Cardinals; Hawks vs\nTigers.\nWednesday, June 21\u2014Dodgers\nvs South Siocan; Yankees vs\nCardinals; Mounties vs Tigers;\nBeavers vs Hawks.\nSaturday, June 24\u2014Oardinals\npractice; Dodgers vs Tigers;\nYankees vs Hawks; Mounties vs\nBeavers.\nWednesday, June 28\u2014Tigers vs\nSouth Siocan; Cardinals vs\nHawks; Yankees vs Mounties.\nWednesday games are played\nat 4:30 p.m. while Saturday\ngames are played at 9:30 a.m.\nFIGHTS\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nBoise,   Idaho  \u2014  Young  Jack\nJohnson,   225,   Salt   Lake   City,\nIt was Carmen's second straight'outpointed   George   Logan,   208,\nwin tor Ex-pros. ' 10.\ni\nProbable Pitchers\nBy THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS\nProbable pitchers for today's\nmajor league games, won and\nlost records in parentheses:\nAmerican League\nCleveland (Locke 1-0) at Detroit (Regan 5-2) (N).\nKansas City (Herbert 3-5) at\nNew York (Coates 6-2)   (N).\nChicago (McLish 2-6 and\nShaw 3-4) at Washington (Daniels 3-3 and Hobaugh 3-31 (2)\ntwi-night.\nMinnesota (Pascaul- 4-6) at\nBaltimore (Barber 7-3)  (N).\nLos  Angeles  (James 0-1)  at\nBoston (Muffstt 1-5) (N).\nNational League\nPhiladelphia (Sullivan 2-6) at\nLos Angeles (Drysdale 3-3) (N).\nPittsburgh (Haddix 4-1) at\nSan Francisco (Marichal 2-3)\n(N).\nCincinnati (O'Toole 5-5) at St.\nLouis (Gibson 2-3) (N).\nMilwaukee 'Buhl 3-4) at Chicago (Cardwell 5-2).\nFrancisco franchise. Leader\nwould not say what the technicality was. but he revealed that it\nwas holding up the final confirmation of franchises for both San\nFrancisco and Los Angeles. Neither has received final approval,\nLeader said.\nWith the evening session and\nanother day of discussion left in\nthe closed meeting, none of the\nclubs bad formally committed itself to operation next season.\nExpansion to California, while\napparently not opposed by tlie\nprairies in principle, was creat\ning serious problems.\nThe technicality over San Francisco did not involve the establishment of an ice plant in the\ncity's Cow Palace. A guarantee\nhad been given the operators of\nthe arena that the equipment\ncould be installed in a lH^month\nperiod next fall left open for tlie\nwork.\nriginal\nanadian\nT.V. Lark Hurt Leg\n1NGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -\nT.V. Lark has hurt a leg and\nmay be out of racing for the rest\nof the season.\nThe four-year-old, a heavy favorite for Thursday's $20,000 added\nGolden State Breeders' Handicap,\nturned lame Thursday morning.\nTrainer Paul Parker said he developed a popped splint on the inside of the left front leg.\nT.V. Lark's lifetime earnings\ntotal $600,152.\nWILL BUY PLANES\nBONN (Reuters)-West Germany will buy 54 Lockheed TF-\n104-G Starfigbters for training\npurposes, a defence ministry\nspokesman  said  today.\nCERTIFIED 8-YEAR-OLD CANADIAN WHISKY\nOriginal... because it was the first certified 8-year-old\nCanadian whisky on the market. Fine ... because it is\naged for 8 years in small oak casks for that fine, full flavour\nthat only comes with age. Canadian ... because it is\nmade for Canadians and by Canadians\u2014a whisky of truly\noutstanding quality.\ni\\ Van.\nQF.C\nCANADIAN WHISKV\nr,_.w*_. _,\n.ardiHiioiifc\n(QaMadeax,\nORDER OF MERIT, AGED 13 YEAR8\nRESERVE, AGED 0 VEARS\nGOLDEN WEDDING, AGED B YEARS\n\"Distillers ot Certified Aged Whiskies\"\nThis advertisement is not published o; displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbii\nt\n -,.-  .  ..\u25a0   -.-. \u25a0.;    ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0-.'\n\u25a0        - \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0.-\".;\u25a0\n........... , . .......    ....    \u25a0      .    .    \u2022    .        ....\n\"\n\u25a0      \u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\".\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\n\u2014-^\"\u2014i^^\u2014\u00ab-^\u2014\u2014\n\"      .  \u25a0     . . \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0    ,:   ;\u25a0\n\u25a0\"\u25a0\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961\nSMALL INVESTMENT  -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story ~ PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNOW IS THE TIME TO DO\nyour summer home, fireplace,\nnew home or addition, rerooi-\ning, cement walk, patios, alteration or cabinets, at a remarkable low price. Before you undertake any job, contact and\ncompare our prices. Write to\nBo;: 422, Nelson, B.C.\nLEO BEVINS, CUSTOM TYP-\ning and mimeographing. Neat,\naccurate, fast service. Phone\n1588-X day or night.\nSEPTIC TANK CLEANING.\nReasonable, dependable service. Phone 161-L-l.\nFOR YOUR CITY HAULING\nneeds call 1770 Speedway Deliveries for fast service.\nWINDOWS AND STORM WIN-\ndows. cleaned. Dutch Cleaning\nService. Ph. 2190.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(Continued)   .\nFOR   ALTERATION   DRESSES\nor pants. 524 Carbonate.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nVONROY PUPPIES - A BREED\nto suit your need: Hunting Wei-\nmaraners, Fun-loving Cocker\nSpaniels and Big-as-a-mimite\nToy Terriers: Reasonable prices. The only love you can buy.\nVonroy Kennels, Box 246,!\nCreston. Phone EL 6-4189.\nROOM  AND   BOARD\nVACANCY FOR YOUNG GENT-\nleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,\n1179-X.\nHELP WANTED\nPIGEONS FOR SALE. PHONE\n582-L-3.\t\nK-9 BOARDING KENNELS -\nTrail-Fruitvale High. Ph. 3613.\nPERSONAL\nOLD, RUNDOWN? Ostrex Tonic!\nTablets   help   \"pep-up\"   thou-1\nsands of men, women past 40.\nOnly 69c. At all druggists.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1390 ON  THE  DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTHURSDAY JUNE 8,  1961\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Farm Fare\n6:15-Wake Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35-Wake Up Time\n6:45-Chape) in the Sky\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports   News\n7.30\u2014News\n1 35-Wake-Up Tune\n7:40\u2014Phone Your Birthday\nWishes\n7:45\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15-Wake Up Time\n:30\u2014Opening Markets\n8:35-Wake-Up Time\n8:45\u2014The Archers\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Morning  Devotions\n9:15\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014The Three Suns\n10:15\u2014Pacific Express\n10:45\u2014Women's World\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Musicale\n11:15\u2014Story Parade Time\nBirthday Book\n11:30\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n11:45\u2014Swift Money Man\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadeast-\nl:00-John Drainie Tells a Story\n1:15\u2014Noon Markets\n1:20\u2014Music Matinee\n2:00\u2014News-In-A-Minute\n2:01\u2014Music Matinee\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:31\u2014Sheila Sings\n3:45\u2014The Thirteen Hills\n4:00\u2014News\n4:05\u2014The \"Pop\" Hour\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05-The Highway Patrol\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30-1.Q.\n8:00\u2014Thirty-Minute Theatre\n8:30\u2014Jazz Workshop\n9:00\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n10.00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014The Critical Year\nll:0O-Chapel In The Sky\n11:15\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACfFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nSATURDAY,\n:00\u2014News\n: 07\u2014Bert Nelson\n:00\u2014B.B.C. News\n: 15\u2014This Week at the UN\n: 30\u2014Just Mary\n:45\u2014Mr. Homme's House\n: 59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014World Church News\n: 15\u2014Themes\n:00\u2014News\ni. .run. min lh_ li.ir.l Inilt siliinl.ilili- r. Lli.-.T.\n.!. Imll.l sl._rrrd prllel.. Hrrs :.i.,,.11...tr.- .lulu\nri.Mr,_naU,c.lvy,hlrjl,.|mrl.!ctstyreriov,ltt,\nilno Bttentr.n to dat.ll. MOST AUTHENTIC MODEL GUN WE'VE EVER SEEN.\n\"...rr-Mill. iLi,ri...iiil|...f, i,l.\n_,l_l\n.,lulhii\nhhnli.i-1.  Full\nGu.r.ntW.   v.n.iil.  gonrl   J2..6\nlilurr 2Tc B|iiii|,in^ .l.\u201erCc or ., .' r C.O.O.   I'ruin:\nNEW YORK IMPORTS DepUuBDmvnsview, Onl.\nJUNE 10,  1961\n11:10\u2014Weather\n11:15\u2014Music\n12:00\u2014Sports College\n12:15\u2014CBC Stamp Club\n12:30\u2014Cornucopia\n1:15\u2014Newsicale\n1:30\u2014Cornucopia (Part 2)\n2:00\u2014Saturday Serenade\n2:30\u2014Of All Things\n3:00\u2014Le Mans Race\n3:30\u2014Saturday Date\n5:00\u2014Time for French\n5:15\u2014Ohansonnettes\n5:30\u2014Cue for a Combo\n6:00\u2014Scope\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Name of a Town\n7:30\u2014International  Concert\n8:30\u2014The Four Gentlemen\n8:45\u2014Sound of Guitars\n9:00\u2014Four's Company\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014British Weeklies\n10:30\u2014Pre World Music Festival\n11:00\u2014Western Jamboree\n11:57\u2014News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n5:30 Rin Tin Tin\"\n6:00 You Asked For It\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Pioneers\n7:30 Mattys' Funday Funnies\"\n9:00 77 Sunset Strip*\n8:00 Harrigan and Sons*\n10:00 Robert Taylor Detectives*\n10:30 The Law and Mr. Jones\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Movie\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nDing Dong School\n9:00 I Love Lucy\"\n1:30 Video Village*\n10:00 Double Exposure*\n10:30 Surprise Package*\n11:00 Love of Life*\n11:30 Search for Tomorrow*\n11:45 Guiding Light*\n12:00 Susie\n12:30 As the World Turns*\n1:00 Take 4\n1:15 Song Shop\n1:30 Houseparty*\n2:00 Millionaire*\n2:30 Verdict Is Yours*\n3:00 Brighter Day*\n3:15 Secret Storm*\n3:30 Edge of Night*\n4:00 Movie at 4\n6:00 6 o'Clock News\n5:30 Abbott and Costello\n6:15 Douglas Edwards*\n6:30 Our Miss Brooks\n7:00 Mister Ed\n7:30 Rawhide*\n8:30 Route 66*\n9:30 Way Out*\n10:00 Twilight Zone*\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n10:30 Eyewitness to History*\n11:15 Jack Paar*\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Manhunt\n7:30 Happy*\n1:00 Third Man\n8:30 Five Star Jubilee*\n9:00 Lawless Years*\n9:30 Nanette Fabray*\n10:00 Alfred Hitchcock*\n10:30 News and Weather\n10:45 Late Movie\n\"Keys of the Kingdom\"\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nJANE:\n\"We went back to ROBERTSON-HILLIARD. Jim has\nbeen sick and they explained how we could spread the car\npremium over three months at no extra cost.\"\nROSE.\n2:00 Chez Helene\n2:15 Nursery School Time\n2:30 Open House\n3:30 The Verdict Is Yours\n4:15 News\n4:30 Friendly Giant\n4:45 Junior Roundup\n5:00 Eyes West\n5:30 On Safari     .\n6:00 Bazaar\n7:30 Astronomy\n8:00 Country Hoedown\n8:30 Perry Mason\n9:30 Danger Man\n10:00 Have Gun, Will Travel\n10:30 Ouisine 30\n11:00 News Toronto)\n11:14 Viewpoint\nFOR YOUNG MEN\nAGED 16\nA TRADE YOU LEARN\nWHILE YOU EARN\nThrough the Soldier Apprentice\nPlan offered by the Canadian\nArmy you not only learn a\ntrade and take the first steps\nto a fine future. In addition,\nyou can \u2014\n\u2022 FURTHER     YOUR    ACADEMIC EDUCATION\n\u2022 BENEFIT FROM MILITARY LEADERSHIP\nTRAINING\n\u2022 EARN  GOOD PAY FROM\nTHE DAY YOU JOIN\nEnrolments start May 1 and\ncontinue until quotas are filled,\nor to September 8. Applications\nare being accepted now and\nwill be processed in the order\nreceived. You must have Grade\n8 education or better, be 16\n(not yet 17) on the day you\nenrol and meet army test requirements.\nPHONE OR VISIT YOUR\nLOCAL  ARMY  RECRUITING\nSTATION TODAY,   OR  MAIL\nTHE COUPON BELOW TO:\nVernon Military Camp,\nVernon, B.C.\nTelephone 4010\nPlease send me your free booklet \"The Way to a Fine Future\"\nName \t\nAddress    \t\nCity\/Town   \t\nProv. Phone \t\nDate and Year of Birth    \t\nE61-34\nHELP WANTED\n(Continued)\nSELL RAWLEIGH\nPRODUCTS\nThere are now a few special opportunities to sell Rawleigh's famous line of necessities either full\nor part time in localities where\nthey have been sold for nearly 50\nyears. For details of our plan,\nwrite to W. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd.,\n589 Henry Ave., Dept. CC-153,\nWinnipeg, Man.\nEXPERIENCED LATHER TO\napply paper and wire. Columbia Trading, 901 Front Street.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nHOUSEWIVES\nTo work from your own homes\nwork 3 hours a day for telephone soliciting must have a\npleasant voice and be able to\nhold a good telephone conversation. Salary plus tonus. Apply\n\u25a0giving name, age, and telephone\nnumber to Box 191, Daily News.\nNATIONAL FINANCE ORGANI-\nzation requires eisperienced\nsecretary-stenographer for Nelson office. Good shorthand absolutely necessary. All usual employee benefits. Salary commensurate with experience.\nPhone 2341 for appointment.\nWANTED - WOMAN TO TAKE\nfull charge of a motherless\nhome. One boy, 11 years. Write\nBox 688, Rossland, B.C.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nTHE NELSON LIONS' CLUB\nneed items for their White\nElephant Auction Sale to be\nheld in the near future. For\npick-up Phone 962 - 1614.\nWANTED, ALL KINDS OF DIS-\ncarded small electrioal appliances. Call 1848 for pick-up.\nWANTED   CLEAN   COTTON\nrags. Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED TO RENT\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nLARGE 5 OR MORE BDRM.\nhouse with yard immediately.\nPhone 1442-R.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAppliances\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Serv.\n205 High St. Phone 1917\nAPPLIANCES\nRepaired and Serviced\nD. McCUAIG Phone 695\nAssayers and Mine\nRepresentatives\nB. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Min. Rep.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac - Buick - Vauxhall\nand GMC Trucks\n701 Baker St.        Phones 578-579\nBILLS'  MOTOR-IN  LTD.\n(Studebaker Lark)\n213 Baker St. Phone 1234\nCITY   AUTO  SERVICE   LTD.\nDodge - DeSoto Sales & Service\nGranite Rd. Phone 447\nRENAULT  SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 2195 295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard Triumph)\nAcross Lake Phone 1841\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave. Phone 1454\nSTAR  AUTO  SERVICE  LTD.\nMorris, M-G Cars, Wolsely\nBorgward Sales and Service\nYmri Rd. Phone 1648\nBeauty Shops\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\n577 Baker St. Phone 244\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\n301 Baker St. Phone 1704\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St. Phone 1180\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n901 Front St. Phone 1511\nCommercial Signs\nFor all your sign needs\nBAMER SIGNS - Phone 1112\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD C.  AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor, PEng (Civ.)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n373 Baker - Nelson - Phone 118\nBox 653 - Creston \u2014 EL 6-4224\n909 Baker\u2014Cranbrook\u2014JU 6-3622\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\n(Continued)\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor\u2014Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Av., Castlegar, B.C.\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer\n1015 Eighth St.   Nelson  Ph. 2309\nGarages\nALLEN MOTOR SERVICE\nCor. 7th at Davies     Phone 1798\nInvestments and\nSavings\nEVANS INVESTMENTS\nStocks - Bonds - Mutual Funds\nFast Telex service and Quotations\nPhones:\n\u25a01460 Bay Ave.    364 Baker Street\nTrail, B.C. Nelson, B.C.\n2378 - 3104 2.98\nInvisible Mending\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nDEPARTMENT OF\nLANDS AND FORESTS\nTIMBER SALE X83718\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 10:30\na.m. Local Time in the forenoon\non the 10th day of July, 1861 lor\nthe purchase of License X83718,\nto out 2,276,000 cubic feet of:\nhemlock, cedar, spruce, larch,\nfir, balsam white pine and lodgepole pine trees and trees of other\nspecies.\nOn an area situated on Lot 5816,\nMoberly Creek, within Salmo\nS.Y.U., Block 1, Kootenay Land\nDistrict.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the Salmo,\nBlock No. 1 S.Y.U.\/P.W.C, which\nis fully committed, this sale will\nbe awarded under the provisions\nof Section 17 (la) of tlie \"Forest\nAct\" which gives the timber sale\napplicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from your local Forest\nRanger, from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C, or from the\nDeputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.\nDEPARTMENT OF\nLANDS AND FORESTS\nTIMBER SALE X84691\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 10:30\na.m. Local Time in the forenoon\non the 26th day of June, 1961 for\nthe purchase of License X84691,\nto cut 3,266,000 cubic feet of:\nlarch, fir, yellow pine and lodgepole pine, cedar and balsam trees\nand trees of other species, except\nspruce trees.\nOn an area situated: on vacant\nCrown Land, Wiilismson - Sebastian Creek, and Kettle River, Kettle P.W.C., Similkameen Division\nof Yale Land District.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area is within tlie Kettle\nS.Y.U.\/P.W.C, which is fully\ncommitted, tiiis sale will be\nawarded under the provisions ol\nSection 17 (la) of the \"Forest\nAct\" whioh gives the timber sale\napplicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from your local Forest\nRanger, from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or from the\nDeputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.\nNOTICE TO CRiEDITORS\nESTATE OF\nJOHN SPENCE RAE,\nDECEASED\nNOTICE is hereby given that\ncreditors and others having\nclaims against the estate of John\nSpence Rae, deceased, late\" ot\nHarrop, B.C, who died on or\nabout the 30th day of Ootober,\n1960, are hereby required to forward full particulars thereof,\nduly vertied, to the undersigned\nExecutor of the Will of the deceased, on or before the 30th day\nof June, 1961, after whioh date\nthe executor will distribute the\nassets of the said estate among\nthe parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims oi\nwhich he shall then have received\nnotice.\nDATED at Nelson. B.C, this\n26th day of May. 1961.\nH. C. IRVING,\nExecutor.\n102 Medical  Arts  Bldg.,\nNelson, B.C.\nNELSON INVISIBLE MENDERS\n712 Josephine St.    Phone 275-X.\nLandscaping\nLARRY'S BLACK LOAM\nTOPSOIL - Phone 171\nPainting\nand Decorating\nF. H. DOYLE\nPainting and Decorating\nPhone 2311 \u2014 Free Estimates\nPainting and Paper Hanging\nL. Wynne  \u2014   Phone 1936-R\nSaws Sharpened\nScissors, pinking shears, etc.\nHipperson's Hdwre.     Phone 497\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street Phone 160\nVacuum Cleaners\nHoses, Service and Repairs\nBen Sutherland's - Phone 258.\nWoodworking\nContractor\nF. PIRSH\nBuild all types custom furniture.\nRemodelling and repairs.\nFrench polish and antique repairs\nBuild office, store, kitchen\ncabinets.\n486 Rossland Ave. Ph. 302, Trail\nNotice of Application for\nChange of Name\nNOTICE is hereby given that\nan application will be made to\nthe director of Vital Statistics\nfor a change of name, pursuant\nto the provisions of the \"Change\nof Name Act.\" by me:\u2014Ludwik\nPompu of Riondel, in the Province of British Columbia as follows:\u2014\nTo change my name from Ludwik Pompu to Walter Pompu.\nDated  this  8th  day  of  May,\nA.D. 1961\n  Ludwik Pompu.\nBOATS and  ENGINES\nH E W E S C R AFT ALUMINUM\nBoat 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18 ft.\nmodels. New and used. Test\ndrive at Jorgenson's Boat Rental and Marine Sales, North\nShore, Nelson.\n22 FT. CABIN CRUISER. MA-\nhogany finish, 110 h.p. Chrysler\nmotor. Stove, sleeps 3. Will take\nreal estate or house trailer in\ntrade. Apply Box 53, Nelson\nDaily News.\n14-FT. RUNABOUT AND TRAIL-\ner, together or separately. No\nreasonable offer refused. A real\nbargain for someone. 623 Latimer Street, Nelson.\nTHERMOCRAFT BOATS, HOLS-\nclaw boat trailers and Mercury\noutboard motors also excellent\nused motors. Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phone 1302.\n35 H.P. OUTBOARD MOTOR\nand boat with remote controls.\nAlso trailer. Phone after 5:30,\n1099-X.\nSEWING   MACHINES\nGUARANTEED REPAIRS TO\nall Singer sewing machines.\ncompetent adjustment to all\nother makes. Written estimate\nin advance. Singer Sewing\nMachine Co. Phone 41.\nRead the Classified Dally\n \u25a0 :\u25a0 \u25a0>$\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0:;\n\u25a01111\nlLN3_\nMACHINERY\nLOGGERS\nThe New Model 172\nMost Powerful\nMcCulloch Chain Saw\nIs Now Here!\nSee Us for\nGas Cans \u2014 Wedges \u2014 Files\nThe New Automatic\nLoggers' Tape\nFire Extinguishers \u2014 Hard Hats\nChains for All Makes and\nModels of Chain Saws\nBars Hard Tipped and Regrooved\nMade Like New\nMAC'S\nWelding &  Equipment Co.\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.        Phone 1402\nLUBRIPLATE\nFamous Waterproof Grease.\nUnexcelled Satisfaction.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone Nelson 97\n1 COMPLETE NATIONAL SAW\nMill 10M capacity, less power\nunit; 1 Int. R200 flat deck (tag-\na-long); 1-1953 Dodge 3Vs-ton\nflat deck; sundry logging and\nsawmill supplies, equip, in A-l\nshape. Ph. 9-R Siocan, Tagami\nBros. Lumbv Co.\nV i-o.\nRD6 CAT WITH CABLE DOZER.\nMax Zeeben, Ymir, B.C.\nRENTALS\nFurnished Self-Contained\nBachelor Suite\nPrivate Bath.   Reasonable Rent.\nPHONE 1899 AFTER 5\nUNFURNISHED   MODERN   1\nbdrm. apt., heat. Phone 2075.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nFAIRVIEW. HERE IS AN' OP-\nportunlty to buy your own home\nwith only $200 down and monthly payment of $125. Clean, comfortable, convenient 2 br. home.\nCheck further with: William\nKalyniuk Agencies, 534 Josephine Street, Phone 1777.\nFOR RENT - PRIVATE CLEAN\n3 rm. lower duplex, gas range\nand heater. Partly furnished.\nSuitable for quiet couple. Call\n515-A Hall St.\nAIR CONDITIONEb\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   room,   weekly,   monthly\nrates.  Dishes, linen supplied,\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 .Baker\nSMALL 1 BEDROOM HOUSE,\nunfurn. North Shore 2te miles\nfrom bridge. Rent $40 per mo.\nPhone 156 days, 575-Y eves.\n3-ROOM MODERN APT SELF-\ncontained, unfurnished central.\nGas range, heat and hot water.\nAdults Ph. 2106-L.\nDELUXE GROUND FLOOR\napt. 1 bedroom, outside entrance, electric range, [ridge.\nPhone 542-R.\nOFFICES TO RENT JOH1.S-\ntone Block, up to 1,400 sq. ft. or\nsmaller to suit tenant. T. D.\nRosling and Son, Ltd. 717\nJULY 1 - SPACIOUS APT. CEN-\ntral, heated, electric range, 2\nrms. and bath. Ph. 1351-X after\n6 p.m. \t\nFOR RENT-QUIET, CENTRAL,\ncheerful apartment. Adults\nonly. Ph. 1233 or 1604-R.\n2-BDRM. GROUND FLOOR APT.\nFridge, stove, heated. Adults,\nPhone 684-Y.\nSUITE, 3 RMS AND BATH, FUR-\nnished, fridge, gas heat, laundry\nrm., parking. Ph. 385.\nLARGE 1 BDRM. FURN. APT.\nprivate entrance, heat and hot\nwater supplied. Phone 902.\n3 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED\nlakeside home. 3 miles from\nbridge. Phone 773-R-3.\nFURN.   2-RM.   SUITE.   APPLY\n140 Baker St. or phone 491-X.\n2 RM. AND BATH, MAIN FLOOR\nFurn. fridge, heat. 171 Baker.\nFOUR - ROOM, SELF-CONTAIN-\ned, unfurnished suite. Ph. 376-L.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\n3 ROOM APT. WITH BATH,\nfridge, electric range. Phone\n1587-R or 1912.\n3 ROOM APARTMENT. UNFUR-\nnlshed. Phone 2327,\n4-ROGM   H6USE   AT   WILLOW\nPoint. Phone 782-X.\nSUITE   FOR  RENT.   PHONE\n2199-L,\nHOUSE FOR RENT - UPHILL.\nPhone 1933-L.\nFURN. APT., CLOSE IN, FOR\nJuly and Aug. Ph. 208-R after 5.\nFOR   RENT   HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 892-R.\nONE CLEAN FURN. 3 ROOM\nsuite. Phone 2147-L evenings.\nHTD., 2-BDRiM. APT. FRIDGE;\nelec. range. Phone 938-L.\nTRADE SCHOOLS\nDiesel\nHeavy Equipment\nTrained men are needed for all\ntypes of jobs in the Tractor and\nEquipment Industry. If you are\nmechanically inclined and are not\nmaking better than $90.00 per\nweek, or you don't have job security, you owe it to yourself to write\nfor free facts, without obligation,\nabout this training.\nTRACTOR TRAINING\nSERVICE, LTD.\nToronto 18 Ontario\nREPLY BOX 8377, THE NEWS\nTRAILERS\nFOR SALE-10' X 41' GENERAL\nhouse trailer, 2 bedrooms, in\nexcellent condition. May be\nseen at Green Timbers Auto\nCourt, Vernon, B.C. Phone Lin\n2-2611.\nTRAILERS\n(Continued)\n22' GLENDALE, EXCELLENT\ncondition, 3 pc. bathrm, sleeps\n4. Apply Solmundson, Cedar\nCrest Motel, Castlegar.\n1957 - 35 FT. 2 BDRM. HOUSE\ntrailer. Phone 5728 or Box 81,\nRossland.\n10 BY 45 NASHUA, LIKE N-.W,\nfurnished. Bargain price. Call\nEarl 782-R-l.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nBETTER\nAUTOMOTIVE.   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued)\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n1957\n1957\n1956\n1957\n1956\n1955\n1954\n1955\nPontiac 4 Door\nStation Wagon\nFord Customline\nFordor\nOlds. Super 88 4-dr.\nDodge Royal HTop\nFord,  Fordor\nFord, Fordor\nAustin Sedan\nPrefect Sedan\n1961 Pontiac Sedans, St.\nwagons and several 1961\nPickups, plus a 4 wheel\nGMC.\nRA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES.\nRollohome. Safeway, Shasta.\nNew and used, terms and\ntrades. Trail \u2022 Cranbrook \u2022 Nakusp.\nel Buerge Motors Ltd\nPhone 1744\nPhone 1135\n1960 DODGE PIONEER\nA   low  mileage,  one  owner,  deluxe\n6-cylinder sedan. Radio, seat covers,\n2-Tone.\n1960 FORD FAIRLANE\nA V-8   sedan   with   standard   trans.\nclean inside and out and\nin perfect shape.\n1953\nAUSTIN SEDAN\nOnly\n1952\nCHEV SEDAN\nOnly\n$299\nI960 FORD\n4 WHEEL DRIVE\nA   one   owner,   low   mileage   truck,\n4-speed trans, with custom cab.\nGo anywhere.\n1960 WILLYS\nJEEP UNIVERSAL\nOnly 8000 miles, all aluminum cab,\n1st class rubber,\nfully guaranteed.\n1950\nPLY' SEDAN\nOnly\n$99\n1948\nDODGE SEDAN\nOnly\n$199\n1951\nVANGUARD\nOnly\n$99\n1959 JEEP\nSTATION WAGON\n2-Tone blue and white, 4 wheel drive,\nIdeal for year 'round\nperformance.\nNow $2699\n1958 EDSEL\nHARD TOP\nV-8   automatic  trans.,   radio,   2-tone\nred and white, all new rubber,\nin top shape.\nNow $2199\n1954\nFORD\nOnly\n$199\n1956\nPLYMOUTH\nOnly\n$499\n1952\nHILLMAN\nWAGON\n$199\n1957 FORD\n2 DOOR HARD TOP\nV-8 automatic, radio, power steering,\n2-tone green and white in\nexcellent condition.\n1959\nTHAMES BUS\nIn very nice shape, ideal for family\ncamping. Economical family unit.\nFORD - MONARCH - FALCON\nZEPHYR and CONSUL\nDeal Now \u2014 Over 50 Cars To Choose From at\n608 VERNON ST. NELSON, B.C.\nMel Buerge Motors Ltd,\nIN OUR CASTLEGAR LOT\n1956 Pontiac Sedan\n1954 Monarch Fordor\n1953 Ford H. Top\n1955 Pontiac V-8 Auto\nSedan\n1952 Vanguard Sedan\n1957 INT. TRUCK\nTandem.\nFirst class shape.\nand Others To Choose\nFrom.\nBE;\nMOTORS\nLTD.\nPhone 578\nComplete Automotive Service\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY ARE\nTRUCK AND STATION WAGON\nDAYS  AT  REUBEN  BUERGE\nMOTORS, NELSON\n1 1961 Chev. .4-Ton 4-Wh. Drive\n1 1961 .4-Ton Chev. 4-Sp. Trans.\n1 1961 Chev. Vi-Ton Std.\n1 1959 Chev tt-Ton. L.W.B.,\nWide Box $1995\n1 1959 Chev. %-Ton  1795\n1 1957 G.M.C. ..-Ton 1195\n1 1956 International .4-Ton .. 1195\n1 1956 Ford .4-Ton     595\n1 1955 Chev. 14-Ton     1095\n1 1951 Studebaker .4-Ton   150\n1 1958 Chev. Sedan Del 1200\n1 1955 Meteor Sedan Del   900\n1 1953 Pontiac Sedan Del    595\n1 1960 Chev. Stn. Wgn. 8 2995\n2 1960 Chev. Stn.Wgns. 6 .... 2995\n1 1959 Chev. V8 Stn. Wgn. .. 2595\n1 1959 Chev. 6-Cyl. Stn. Wgn. 2495\n1 1959 Fiat Stn. Wgn  1095\n1 1956 Ford St. Wgn. 9-Pass. 1495\n1 1955 Ply. 4-D. Stn. Wgn.      1195\n1 1961 Corvair Stn. Wgn. (New)\n24-Hour Wrecker Service, Ph. 35\nCHEVROLET - CADILLAC\nOLDSMOBILE - CORVAIR\nENVOY      ,\nREUBEN   BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\n323 Vernon St.        Nelson, B.C.\n1957 PLYMOUTH SPORTS SUB\nburban station wagon, V8 automatic, power brakes, tinted\nglass, windshield washers, winterized. K. Vierke, Box 1100\nCastlegar.\nPremier Sand\nand Gravel Co.\nPHONE   871\nCONCRETE SAND\nCONCRETE GRAVEL\n1-inch, 2-inch, 4-inch\nCrushed Rock\nPEA GRAVEL\nFOR ROOFING\nAbove Materials\nGuaranteed Clean\nVs\" and iy.\" Crushed\nRoad Gravel\nPIT RUN FILL\nFILL SAND\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nLANDROVERS, THE LOW COST,\nmost dependable in 4-wheel\ndrive. For demonstration (days\nand eves.) call Balfour 668, Nel\nson 1030. Ask tor Geotf.\nALLSTATE QUALITY REBUILT\nmotors. No down payment. Fast\ndelivery on most motors. Simp\nsons-Sears, Phone 2390.\n1955 PLYMOUTH, LOW MILE\nage. Will trade for a Vt ton\npickup. Apply Sam Podovelm\nkoff, Vallican, B.C.\nALLSTATE \"SAFTI-CAPS\" -\nfirst line reoap tires - $9.99 with\nclass A trade-in. Simpson-Sears,\nphone 2390.\n1950 .1-1 TON MERCURY TRUCK\nin fair shape. Question Mark\nStore, R. R. 1, Nelson. Phone\n1670-R-2.\n1952 CHEV. 4-DOOR SEDAN\",\nvery good condition. Radio,\nheater, signals. Larry Reibin,\nPassmore, B.C.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nService - Repairs done, English and Canadian used car\nparts. '51 A-40, '58 Studebaker, '49 Pontiac, '55 Chev.\nmotor. Phone 2100, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road, Nelson.\nALLSTATE REBUILT CARBUR-\netors as low as $14.88 exchange.\nSimpsons-Sears, Phone 2390.\nCAR NEED REPAIRS? BUY\nAllstate guaranteed replacement parts and save. Shock absorbers, heavy duty construction, ea. $6.29. Simpsons-Sears,\nNelson, phone 2390.\n'56 DODGE, AUTOMATIC PUSH-\nbutton, 4-door, new ring, new\ntrans, a clean car, radio, heater, one owner. Priced to sell\nquick. Phone 237 days.\n'40 MERC. GOOD CONDITION.\nBill Dyck, Notre Dame College.\nWE   PAY   CASH   FOR   GOOD\nused cars. McElroy Motors.\n1947 PONTIAC FOR SALE. $75.\nCan be seen at Jorgenson Store.\nFOR   SALE   -   ..-TON   FORD\ntruck and '54 Hillman. Ph. 2100.\n1959 WHITE VELOX VAUXHALL\n13,500 miles. Ph. 1416 or 1827-X.\nG.M.C.   %-l TON TRUCK.  PH.\n161-L-l.\n1956 DODGE Vs TON $525. Ph.\nBalfour 719.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nAT\n[cElroy Motors\nNew 1961 Austins -- Austin Station\nWagons - Prinz in stock\nI %0 PONTIAC  LAURENTIAN   2-DR.   HDTP. ^liO^\n'    \"\" V8. Automatic Trans., Radio, W\/W Tires. *''1(\"'\n1 QfiO ENVOY 4-DOOR SEDAN. I COe.\n,i\",U  Radio,  2-Tone  I01K)\n1 050 FORD FORDOR. 22Q^\n1000 Automatic Trans., W\/W Tires, 2-Tone  **-v*t\nIQCQ CHEV. BEL-AIR 4-DOOR. 91.Q'.\n1303 Radio, 2-Tone, W\/W Tires  Z03a\n1050 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN 4-DOOR. 21Q*.\n'           Automatic. Radio, 2-Tone, W\/W Tires  *-*'*'\nI <KQ ZEPHYR CONVERTIBLE. I Q7\u00a3\n,;,^;,  Radio, W\/W Tires  ll\"D\nJ957 FORD i,2-T0N PICKUP. II 95\nI 05G BUICK 4-DOOR HARDTOP. I 705\nAutomatic, Radio, 2-Tone, W\/W Tires  Il<w\n1 956 BUICK R0ADMASTER CONVERTIBLE. O I 95\nAutomatic, Power Steering, Power Brakes,\nPower Windows, Fully Equipped.\nI OSK FORD FAIRLANE STATION WAGON Ii7\/i\nAutomatic  Trans.,  Radio, '2-Tone,  W\/W n'\u00b0\nTires.\nJQSrr CHEV. 2-DOOR QQS\n1 *DO Radio, 2-Tone. W\/W Tires >  {,J,a\n105\/; ANGLIA 4-DOOR. \/I7K\n1300  New Tires, Radio  ^\/D\n|952 CHEV. 4-DOOR. 395\nRadio.  \t\nSpecial-\n\u2014This  Weekend\nOnly\n1953 Chevrolet 4-Door\n\u2014 $375\n2-Tone, Radio.\nOPEN   EVERY   NIGHT TILL  9:00 P. M.\nFOR GAS and CAR  SALES\nSee GUS or ART at\ncElroy Motors\nPhone 2000 Nelson,  B.C.\nThey Will Be Pleased To Serve You !\n~i~\nFIFTH STREET\nVery nice modern bungalow\nwith oak floors in main rooms.\nLovely large L.R. and D.R. with\npicture window, kitchen, bathroom and three bedrooms. \u2014\nBasement contains large suite\nwith L.R., kitchen, two bedrooms and bathroom. House\nand suite fully insulated. Gas\nfurnace and H.W. tank. MUST\nBE   SEEN   TO   BE   APPRE-\n\u2122 $18,500\n$3000 down.\nMILL STREET\nNice family 2-storey home on\n2',i landscaped lots. Large L.R.\nwith fireplace, D.R., den, nice\ncabinet kitchen. Upstairs, three\nbedrooms and bath, also nice\nglass enclosed sun-room. Concrete basement, H.A. coal\nstoker. Also self-contained modern apartment with separate\nentrance, L.R. with fireplace,\nkitchen, bathroom and one B.R.\nConcrete   basement,   oil   fur-\nS\u00a3 *>V50\nROSEMONT\nThree corner lots and cottage\nwith four rooms and bath. Oil\nfloor furnace. Extra- 53400\nlarge garage *\nTerms.\nROBERTSON AVE\nOn 75 ft. lot, landscaped. A\nnice 3-bedroom home in a beautiful setting of lawns, flowers\nand shrubs. Large living room\nwith a nice kitchen and ample\ndining nook. Basement with oil\nfurnace.   Garage.     $8750\nLow taxes\t\nWith $1500 down.\n810 STANLEY ST.\n3-bedroom home. L.R., D.R.\nand large kitchen wired for\nrange; 3 B.R.s and bath upstairs. Full concrete basement\nwith 2 partly finished rooms.\nH.A. coal furnace.   $7500\nPrice       \t\nWith $2000 down.\nCREEK ST.\nLarge family home, 5 B.R.s,\nL.R., dining room and kitchen,\nwired for range; part basement; H.A. oil fur- $5900\nnace; on V> acre. .\nWith $1000 down.\nVICTORIA ST.\n3-bedroom home with L.R., D.R.\nand   kitchen,   small   concrete\nbasement;   on $6300\n50 ft.  lot. .\nWith $2000 down.\nNORTH SHORE\u20149 MILE\n1.6 acres above and below the\nhighway. Old dwelling. 100 feet\nof lakeshore. $4000\nPrice\nNORTH SHORE\nBUILDING LOTS\nPart  of  Blaylock  Estate.  All\nlarge size from\n$650 to   $1500\nCome in and look the plan over.\nYMIR ROAD\nHalf Acre, good soil, close in.\nCleared with some      $675\nfruit trees. All cash. . *\nAll our listings are inspected\nand appraised at a fair price\nto vendors and purchasers,\nfor your protection.\nWe Need\nMORE\nLISTINGS\nto meet the steady demand\ntor better class homes\nCALL -\nT. D. Rosling\n& Son Ltd.\nPhone 717\nJ. B. Brown - 1065-X\nPhil Robinson - 1063-L\n568 Ward St,\nMODERN HOME\nUPPER FAIRVIEW\nMagnificent view of lake. 3 bedrooms, attractive brick wall in\nL.R. with fireplace, double plumbing, large rec. room. Fully landscaped. 60' lot.\n$18,500 \u2014 Terms.\nPhone 2005-Y.\nATTENTION VETERANS\nF6A SALE\nSuitable for V.L.A.\n\".\u2022Acre View Lots.\nHoover and Cherry St.   .\nPhone 2099\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., .OR SALE\n(Continued)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961 \u2014 9\nMcHARDY   SPECIAL\nNo. 1\nOnly $500 Down\n1 block from Baker St. \u2014\nDuplex. Separate entrance (2\nbathrooms; rock foundation.\nGood\nInvestment.\nBal. mo. payment $80 per mo.\nincl. 6% int.\n$9900\nOnly   $2000 .Down\nOwner leaving. Selling newly-\nrenovated 4-B.R. home, close\nin. Wall-to-wall carpeting L.R.\nand D.R.  New pink kitchen.\n\u00bb1<rts;      $12,000\n$65 per mo. incl. 6% int. on\n1st mortgage.\nReduced for\nImmediate Sole\nYes, the 400 block Nelson Ave.\nGracious 2-B.R. home. Convenient kitchen and dining area.\nLarge rec. room. New gas furnace and gas H.W. 2V. lots,\nbeautifully land- $13,500\nscaped. S.P. '\nBal. mortgage at $50 per mo.\nand 5% int.\nUphill\n1 block from the park block.\n3-B.R. home. L.R. and dining\narea. Wired for range. Part\nbasement. Nicely decorated\nthroughout. $7500\nOnly $2500 down, monthly\npayments $75 per month.\nNorth Shore\n2-minute drive from the bridge.\nHi (2V.) B.R. home. Complete\ninterior arrangement for pleasant living. Lovely garden and\n*\u00a3*\u25a0 $10,500\nJust outside city limits. 2-B.R.\nhome. Solid cement basement;\non 6 lots. Many fruit $7000\ntrees and berries.\n$1500 down.\nApprox. 2.4 miles from city.\u2014\nWell-planned 2-B.R. home. Full\nbasement. Only 6 years old. A\nwonderful opportun- $4900\nity. F.P. *\n$3000 down, good discount\nfor cash.\n\"Phone 68\nfor Real Estate\"\nWE NEED LISTINGS\nOF HOMES\nIN ANY PRICE RANGE\nSalesmen:\nRudi Martin. Res. 969-L-l\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 1966-R\nRon Monty, Res. 792-R\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued 1\nFOR SALE - LEVEL BLDG.\nlots. Call at 2006 Stanley Street\nafter 5 p.m.     \t\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nATTENTION MERCURY OUT-\nboard Owners \u2014 We service all\nMercury Motors, small motors,\nlawn mowers. 1EL Chain Saw\nparts and service. New and\nused Saws. Trade-ins all other\noutboards. See or phone Mac at\nthe Fruitvale Auto Service Ph.\n2451, Fruitvale.\nNORM'S NEW SPORTS SHOP\nDiver's Supplies \u2014 Aqua Lung\nAir Filling Station\nWeatherby and Browning Rifles\nReloading Supplies\nEverything For the Sportsman\n300 Baker St. - Phone 2397\nSIDES CHOICE GRADE A\nlight beef, 45c lb, sides heavy\nbeef, 250 lb. average, 37c lb.;\nsides pork 30c lb. Cut, wrapped,\nfrozen. Delivery by Nelson-\nCreston Transfer. Whitford's\nMeat Plant. El 6-2556.\n|1 LAWN MOWER; USED TWO\nr seasons, $7; 1-40 gal. heavy\ni duty Elco electric water heater,\n, white enamel, double elements\nand thermostats, like new. $60.\ni   Ph. 2060 days, 2101 evenings.\nLEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR\n1 sale. Side 29s a lb. cut, wrapped\nj quick frozen 32s a lb. delivery\n! Nelson-Creston Transfer. New-\n1 dan Farm, Creston. Phone\nEL 6-2435.\n2 BEAUTIFUL IMPORTED CRY-\nstal chandeliers, 5 lite $40.00, 2\ntier $1_.00 or both for $50.00.\nJohnson outboard motor, 25 h.p.\nperfect condition, $175.00. Solmundson, Cedar Orest Motel,\nCastlegar.\nPEDESTAL FAN WITH HALF,\nhorse power G.E. motor oan be\nj raised from four feet to eight\nj feet. Suitable for store or cafe.\n1 Good as new. $60. Box 43, Daily\n'   News.\nLTD.\nREAL ESTATE - INSURANCE\n554 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C.\nOPEN\nOwner Transferred\nWill Sell With Reasonable\nDown Payment\nOr\nWill Rent With Option\nto Buy\nOr\nAgent Will Consider a\nTrade\nThe house is located in Lake-\nview Crescent, has 3 bedrooms,\ndream kitchen, hardwood floors,\nfireplace, patio at front, drive-\nunder garage.\nOPEN  DAILY\nTimes: Afternoon 2-4\nEvenings  7-8:30\nBe Early. You may be the lucky\none to live in this almost new\nhome. Look for our FOR SALE\nsign on the chimney.\nFor the Best in Real Estate\nWilliam Kalyniuk\nAgencies\n534 Josephine St. Ph.. 1777\nATTENTION HONEYMOONEKS.\nBuy this one-bedroom house\nnow that you will love. Built on\nthe rear of 3 lots, 75' X 120'.\nLater build yourself your dream\nhome on the front and keep the\npresent one for revenue. William Kalyniuk Agencies, phone\n1777.\nMODERN APT. HOUSfc. CW\ntral. Partly furn. $13,600, half\ncash and terms. $2400 revenue\nyearly. Box 0870, Daily News.\nLEAVING DI-TRlrf, _.EL1JT.<-\n2 room house on level half acre\nupper bench Kinnaird. Cash or\nterms. Wm. Hadiken.\n3 BDRM. HOUSE FOR SALE,\nnewly decorated. Apply 117\nRichards St..\n1000 GAL. PER HR. WATER\npump, Fairbanks Typhoon. 100\nlb. pressure, handles heads to\n200 ft. Peebles Motors Ltd,\nSEE OUR SELECTION OF US-.I.\nradios, washers and refrigerators. Jeffery Radio and Appli-\nCHILDS' COT AND MATTRESS.\n$5. Large adjustable baby crib,\nas new, $25. Phone 1287-Y.\nGARDEN TRACTOR WITH IM-\nplements, lawn mower, T.V.\nset. Hank Swedberg, Beasley.\nSTOKER FOR SALE - PHONE\n771-R. \t\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies.\nC.C.M.   BICYCLE',  LIKE  NEW.\n116,. High Street.\nCEMENT MIXERS FOR RENT.\nPh. 171, Shorty!s Rerpair Shop.\nFRIDGE, DINETTE SET AND\ntable saw. Phone 2281.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Contlnued)--\nKNIT-KING KNITTING MA-\nchine. $80 or nearest offer. Ph.\n189, Salmo.\nGOOD COAL AND WOOD FUR-!\nnace. 125 Chatham. Ph. 1617-L.\n1948  SILVER  DOLLAR,  WHAT\noffers. Phone 1453-X;\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nBAY MARE AND 3-WK. COLT,\n2-yr.-old Gelding, black, 1-yr.-\nold Pinto-filly, 2-yr.-oW Shetland goldens. Earle Cutler, Nelson, Phone 2325.\nWEANER PIGS FOR SALE $12.50\neach. See A. Townsend, Park\nSiding.\nWEANER PIGS FOR SALE.\nNewdan Farm, Creston, EL\n6-2435.\nGOOD COW FOR SALE, FRESH\n7 weeks ago. Wm. Hoolaeff,\nPass Creek.\nCOW FOR SALE, FRESHENED\njust recently. Apply J. P. Markin, Passmore.\nFRESH   COW   FOR   SALE ~\nB. Chernenko.., Crescent Valley\nMILK COW FOR SALE. FREQ\nPerepolkln, Thrums. _\t\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nMANUFACTURERS OF DYNA-\nmic, unique Product \"Cup'n-\nSeltzer\" with world .wide acceptance, all rights reserved-,\noffer active, participation opportunity to reliable, sober man\nwith smell investment, (Minimum $2000). Write to \"Oup'n-\nSeltzer,\" C. fe S. Lalboratoriel\nLtd., 91 Oxford Street, Toronto\n2B.\nSMALL TOWN GROCERY AND\nVariety Store, Attractive modern equipment, clean stock approximately $20,000. Turnover\nclose to $100,000 annually. Some\npayroll from large industry.\nOpportunity for (amity operation, Rossland Realty, Roselsnd\nDfatann\nSatlij Sfottta\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday,\nBy carrier per week 35c\nin advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson\nOne month   $ 1.25\nThree months _  3.50\nSix months    6.50\nOne year      12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month   _._ $ 1.75\nThree months __  5.00\nSix months     9.00\nOne year  18.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\n[that's a BIO word with us]\nUSED GAR SPECIALS\nWE STAKE OUR REPUTATION ON THE\n\"DEPENDABLE\" EMBLEM. OUR\nUSED CARS ARE TESTED\nAND RECONDITIONED\nWHERE NECESSARY\nTO PROTECT YOUR\nINVESTMENT\n* .1960 DODGE DART SEDAN\n6-Cylinder, Automatic, Radio. In New Car Condition.\n* 1960 CHEV. 6-CYL TUDOR\nVery Clean. Top Mechanical Condition.\n* 1958 DODGE POWER WAGON\nFront End Winch; Only 11,600 Miles. A-l Condition.\n* 1957 MERCURY HARDTOP\nFully Automatic. Radio. Special Value.\n* 1957 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\nAutomatic, Radio. Good Condition.\n* 1956 CHEV. STATION WAGON\n6-Cylinder Reconditioned Motor. Good Condition.\n* 1956 FORD TANDEM F-DECK\nDump and 15-Ton Cable Winch. 5-Speed Main, 8-Speed\nAuxiliary. Exceptional Value. \u2022\n* 1956 PLYM. STATION WAGON\nV8 Motor, Automatic, Radio. Exceptionally Clean.\nSee Your Friendly\nDODGE -- CHRYSLER - VALIANT\nSI MCA Dealer Today\nCity Auto Service\nLtd.\nGranite Road \u2014 Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 447 or 1556\n        .-VLW..  .m,m.\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961\nlook No Further...\nWhite Tissue   24 sheets .15\nPaper Table Cloths .27\nBirthday Candles 36 for .10\nDrinking Straws pkg. .20\nConfetti  pkg. .15\nModel Cement   .15\nThumb Tacks .25\nCarter's Ink Eradicator .79\nin the\nStationery Dep't\nat\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nOdds... and Ends\n. by M. D. B. .\nNews Briefs\n' .OTTAWA (CP)\u2014Production of\n.motor vehic.es in May declined\n.to 41,312 from 45,625 in May,\nM60, and output in the January-\nMay period dropped to 180,364\nUnite from 210,856 a year previous, the Dominion Bureau of\nStatistics reported today.\n, Known cases of tuberculosis\n<8seovered in March numbered\n560, en increase of 74 over February. Some 82 per cent were\nnew eases, while tlie remainder\nwere reactivated oases. The\nnumber of cases recorded in the\nJanuary \u25a0 March period was\n1,648.\nConsumption of crude oi by\nCanadian refineries increased in\nApril to 23,197,114 barrels from\n20,378,7.1 a year earlier, and in\nthe January - March period to\n93,880,253 barrels from 89,473,-\n402 in the corresponding 1960\nperiod.\nPHONE 1844 FOB CLASSIFIED\nHave &\ngoodwmWIi\nftrywr\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Gov't of British Columbia.\n\"Have you visited Mr. Pale-|\nthorpe's garden on Maple\nStreet?\" a friend asked me, \"it's j\nreally a beautiful tiny park.\"     I\nThis was all I needed to set my j\nfeet off in that direction and finding no one at home I took the\nliberty of wandering around this\nlovely sunken garden. Their\nhome is level with the sidewalk\nbut the garden is nestled down in\na little dell surrounded by banks\nof flowers and shaded by tall\ntrees. A lush carpet of lawn\nspreads and winds toward a view\nof the lake. j\n*  *  \u00ab\nThe garden has an informality\nabout it with plantings taking ad-(\nvantage Of land contours. One\nlow bank is massed with lily oli\nthe valley, forgetae-nots andj\nferns, backed by tall cedars.!\nAnother, slanting down from the\nbase of the tall trees, was massed\nwith heart-shaped leaves of violets and must have been partial-\nQuestion Wisdom of Increasing\nFunds Invested In Pension Plan\nlarly enchanting when the flowers\nwere blooming. Another bank\nwas a small rockery with creep'\ning evergreens, tulips, iris and|\nthe promise of .poppies, while the:\nhigh bank from the side of thej\nhouse was bright with a glowing j\nred flower, whose name I did not\nknow, .lags, iris, and peonies,\namong others. .\nNT       \u00ab       *   I\nTulips dividing the lawn from a\nneat kitchen garden still made a\nfine showing the day I was there,\nbut will.have faded by now I\nimagine. A small laburnum stood\nsun dazzled on a western knoll\noverlooking the lake as I sat on\na bench and made notes. Noises\nof the street were muted and\nthere seemed to be only the singing of birds calling back and\nfroth, the joy of June in their\nfeathered throats. Lilacs scattered their fragrance in an azalea\nflamed in a spot near the rockery, and I was sorry to leajve.\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Do the\nincreasing funds being invested\nin pension plans threaten to tie\nup too great a proportion of\nCaada's   financial   resources?\nThe question was discussed at\nthis week's annual meeting of\nthe Canadian Manufacturers'\nAssociation here, paiticulariy in\nan address by J. A. Belford,\nvice-president, personnel and industrial relations, Massey-Ferg-\nuson Ltd.\nMr. Belford indicated that\nsome of the rigidity in the Canadian economy may be due to\nthe tieing up of such large sums\nin conservative investments and\nhe outlined how Germany, for\ninstance,, tries to avoid sudh a\nresult.\nHe said:\n\"Total assets of trusteed pensions plans, life insurance group\nannuities and group annuities of\ncrown corporations and government agencies totalled $4,800,-\n000,000 in 1959. Funds supporting\nthese plans are growing at an\nannual rate of $500,000,000. By\nthe end of this year their assets\npan be expected to be close to\n$5,000,000,000.\"\nBy comparison, Mr. Belford\nadded, the total inflow of direct\nforeign investment in all Canadian industries in 1959 was\n$500,000,000.\ni Germany, Mr. Belford said,\nj has a state pension plan which\ni is generous by our standards,\n' and in addition many employers\nhave added private pension\nschemes.\nHowever, the capital from the\nprivate schemes is directed, by\ndecision of the individual business man, into plant, machine\ntools, research and new markets\nfor his own company.\n\"The only security in the private German pension plan is the\norosperity of the Individual firm.\nWest German employees and\ntrade unions have put their\nchips on free enterprise. This\nDominican Republic's Future\nIn Hands of Investigators\n' OIUDAD TRUJILLO (AP)\u2014\nThe Dominican Republic's political and economic future within\n(he western hemisphere appeared Wednesday to rest with\nspecial investigators sent by the\nOrganization of American\nStates.\nThe Dominican government\nmade clear it hopes the investigators will make recommendations leading to lifting of economic sanctions the OAS imposed on the republic last summer after it was accused of suppressing the rights of its own\ncitizens and trying to overturn\nother governments.\nThe regime took steps appar-\n_____.^j\nWindow Screens       j\nAll metal \u2014 adjustable.\n10 x 36    $1-79   1\n14 x x36 -- $1-99\nScreening\nGreen enamelled.\n24 to 48 inch widths.\nCharcoal Briquettes\n10 Ib. bogs  $1.35\nFor your outdoor cooking.\nPortable Coolers\nA picnic or camping necessity.\n$5.95 \u2014 $17.95 \u2014 27.95\n$31.95\n\\   t\nScreen Doors\nWooden. All standard sizes.\n$9.95\nElectric Hot Plates\nSingle  Burner  $4.05\nDouble Burner  $6.95\nColeman Camp Stoves\n2 Burner, folding.\n$14.95\nElectric Fans\n8 Inch     $6-95\n  $14.95\n10 Inch -\n10 Inch Oscillating . $19.95\nBEACH TOYS\nInflatable Balls, Sand\nPails, Toy Boats, Swim\nFins, Masks, etc.\nTjnpf &r your comfort\"\nOpen Fridays Till 9 p.m. Closed All Day Mondays\nMARSHALL - WELLS STORES\nipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPH6NE 497\n(Owners)\n395 BAKER ST.\nently aimed at convincing the\ninvestigators fhe republic has\nturned over a new leaf since the\nassassination of dictator Eafael\nL. Trujillo last week.\nPresident Joaquin Balaguer\nissued a communique saying the\ngovernment is determined to\nprotect the civil rights of all Dominicans.\nThe communique asked that\npolice or government officials\nwho physically mistreat citizens\nbe reported directly to the president. The Dominican police\nhave long been accursed by their\nopponents of torturing suspects.\nOPENS PRODUCE TRADE\nApparently  hoping  for ex\npanded trade throughout the\nAmericas, Balaguer announced\nthe republic's coffee, cocoa and\nbanana markets will be open to\nall comers.\nHeretofore, these commodities\nhave been restricted to certain\ncontract holders, principally the\nUnited Fruit Company.\nOAS investigators representing the United States, Panama,\nUruguay, and Colombia, came\nfrom Washington Wednesday.\nTheir task is to determine\nwhether the regime that succeeded the generalissimo plans\na new deal in the republic's political life, stifled1 for three decades under Trujillo.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1 Girl's\nnickname\n6. Passageway\n11. Warning\n12. Scoff\n13. Islands\noff Timor\nIi. Three\n(Sp.)\n15. Seed\n4. Coarse\nhominy\n5. Type\nmeasure\n6. Like\n7. Profoundly\nearnest\n8. Withered\n(var.)\n9. Dregs\n10. Scottish-\nGaelic\nintegument IS. External\n17. Aquatic ear\nbirds 17. British\n18. African jailers\ncountry 19. Perform\n20.4 o'clock 20. Male cat\nrefreshment 21. Assam\nsilkworm\n22. Breeze\n24. Flap\n25. Adam's\nrib\n28. Supporters\n31. Music\nnote\n34.AJas.\nkan\nriver\n35. Thin\nbar\n36. Venus\nof\t\n37. Across\n39. Chinese\ndynasty\n:J__I._3  WMHia\nlamwwH _._.r.r._H\n[.BlHIl]   HHBBlliS\nBt-HHiaaia use\nMBHEIB\n0HH9   HEBl-HKI\nE\nHi\n\u00a7____\u25a0__\ny.Bterdfly'a Answer\n40. Grand-\nparental\n41, Overseas\naid package\n45. Toward\n46. Tea, in\nMadrid\n23. Barnyard\n\"boss\"\n27. African\nantelope\n29. Depart\n30. A marvel\n32. Cot\n33. European\nmint\n35. A cigar\n38. Poison \u2014\u2014\n42. Reside\n43. Indian\nceremonial\nchamber\n44. Wideawake\n46. Underwater\ndetector\n47. The human\ntrunk\n48. Fireplace\nDOWN\nLBeer\n(colloq.)\n2, Sailing\nterm\nS. Wharf pests\nDAILY CRYPTOQtJOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDI.B AAXB\nis   LOKGFEIIOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\ntor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single Jetters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hlnto.\nEach day the code letters axe different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nSQUK      O.UII      VE     KZIZIL2?\nXZK      KZXYJQE:      T      IGOK      V S h H\nOZhhZW     ZGK     Z2I     OXJQK\u2014V&3FX*\nIX J.\nYesterday's Cryptoguotes NEVER (SO tSUKtiXOX . . ,\nHOPE IS A EEnm COMPANION THAN BEAHr\u2014TOPPEH.\n<ffl iSta, Kins Fcituwo Bbmfllata, Tne.)\n1\n2\n3\n\".\n5\n%\n.\n7\n8\n9\n10\nII\n1\n12.\n[5\n^\n1\nft\n1.  \"\n15\n%\nN\nf\/t\n%\n%\nIS\n19\n%\n^\n%\n20\n21\n2-\n%\n23\nIS\ny\n26\"\n11\n.ts\n%\n19\n30\n31\n^A\n3Z\n'^\n^A\n'^A\n35\n3.\n^A\n%\nft\n35\n3<\u00bb\n37\n%\n38\n33\n<W\n..\"'\na\n'^\n1\n'^\n\u00ab\n\u00ab\u2022\nK\n1\n\u00ab.\n\u00ab\n%\n.3\n6-9\ncreates in employees and the\nunion a vested interest in the\ncompetitive effectiveness of\ntheir employer.\n\"It is unlikely (hat this could\nhave been feasible without the\nbasic support of the state pension plan. Some such support or\nassurance is probably politically\nnecessary. I sometimes wonder,\nif we went to pensions supported\nin Oanada by faith in free enterprise, whether political requirements could be met by some\narrangement for: .-insuring private pension plans up to .'ah acceptable imnimal- level' at premium rates. Jess than the. cost\nof borrowed money.\" '\u25a0..,.'\nIn some way, .-Mr.. .Betford\nstated, the capital resources\nsupporting- employee benefits\nshould not be allowed to. be a\ndrag on the economy, but somehow should be redirected 'to\nstimulate it-jpartteu-arly in' the\nmore potentially dynamic areas\nlike secondary manufacturing.\"\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible ln the event\nol an error in the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate 3.95\nAgnico .94\nAnaeon Lead .73\nAumacho 13Vs\nAumaque .06V4\nAunor 2.86\nBarnat 1.47\nBase Metals .09\nBibis Yukon .05\nBrunswick 4.35\nBuffalo Ank 1.26\nCampbell C 8.30\nCampbell R. L. 13...V4\nOassiar 14.00\nCentral Patricia 1.01\nOliirno .46V.\nCoin Lake .17\nCoch WiU 3.80\nConiaurum .30\nCons. Discovery 2.64\nCons Hailiwell .42\nCons Mining & Smelting   27.50\nCon Sanorm .07\nConwest 3.7S\nCopper Conp .17\nCopper Man .06%\nCraig 14.12%\nD'Aragon .24\nEast Amphi MVs\nEast Malartic 1.70\nEast Sullivan 1.85\nElder Gold 1.67\nFalconbridge 52.75\nFaraday 1.80\nFrobisher .12\nGeco 21.25\nGiant Yel. 9.80\nGoldale                       .      .28\nGunnar Gold 8.85\nHarminerals .09\nHasaga '.Is\nHeadway                      \u25a0    .28\nHollinger 34.25\nHudson Bay 53.00\nInt. Nickel                 .   75.00\nIron Bay 1.66\n.Met Que. .23\nIt J Jowsey .30\nKenville .06\nKerr Addison 10.75\nLeitoh 1.49\nLittle Long Lac 1.82\nLorado 1.75\nMacDonald .17\nMadsen R. L. 2.10\nMalartic G. F. .69\nMaritime Mining .96\nMcLeod 1.00\nMcManmac .07\nMcKenzie R L .15\nMeta Uran .12\nMining Corp. 12.37%\nMurry Min .94\nNew Bidlamaque .07%\nNew Hosco .69\nNipissing 1.08\nNoranda New 46.25\nNongold .04%\nNormetals 2.75\nNorpax .12\nNorth Oan 1.45\nNorth Rankin .55\nOpemiska 7.25\nPlacer Devel 20.37%\nPreston E. D. 5.40\nQuebec Lab .03\nQuebec Metallurgical .75\nQuemont 8.70\nRadiore .55\nRayroek .76\nRio Algom 9.30\nSan Antonio 1.60\nSherritt Gordon 4.25\nSteep Rock 8.05\nSullivan Con 1.53\nTaurcanis .67 .\nTeck Hughes 1.60\nTemagami 1.39\nThomp-Lund .75\nUnited Keno 8.80\nUpper Canada 1.30\nVentures 43.50\nWaite Amulet 6.25\nWiltsey GogMn .08\nWright Hargreaves .85\nYale .IS\nYoung (H.G.) Gold .40\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc .06\nBanff Oils 1,50\nBailey Selburn 71.15\nBata Petroleum .07\nCalgary and Edmonton     17.12%\nCanadian Devonian 4.10\nOdn Highcrest 128\nDuvex .04%\nHome A 10.25\nLong Island Pete .06\nMidcon .30\nNat. Pete 2.90\nPacific Pete 11.50\nPetrol .75\nPonder .43\nPlace .39\nProv Gas 2.15\nStanwell Oil .33\nTriad 1.87\nUnited Otis 1.36\nYank Canuck .03\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi 37Vi\nAlgoma Steel 40%\nAluminum 34 V.\nAnalog 3.60\nAtlas St. 30%\nB.A. Oil 33%\nBeatty Bros. 15%\nBell Telephone 54Vi\nBrazilian 514\nB.C. Electric 4%s 91%\nB.C. Forest 12\nB.C. Power A 35\nBurns A 11%\nCanadian Breweries 48%\nCanadian Oanners 13%\nCanadian Celanese 28\nCan. Cement 27%\nCan Ohem Co 6%\nCanadian Dredge 32%-\nCan. Curtis Wright\nCan. Malting\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific My\nCan. Packers B\nCooksljutt\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom. Foundries\nDom Magnesium\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nDom. Tertiles\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFord U.S.\nGatineau\nGen. Steel Wares\nGoodyear pfd\nHoward Smith\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Aoc.\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMolson Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNat. Steel Car\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp.\nRuss. Industries\nShawinigan\nSimpsons A\nSoutham\nStandard Paving\nSt. Lawrence Corp.\nSteel of Oanada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\nWeston George\nWoodwards A.\n1.20\n70%\n32%\n25'\/.;\n57%\n13\n4.90\n19%\n40%\n57%\n9%\n69\n17%\n13%\n19%\n20%\n86%\n38\n1014\n44%\n44\n45%\n15%\n58%\n42\n43\n12%\n26%\n14%\n57%\n11%\n23%\n56%\n10%\n26%\n297\/8\n29%\n15%\n24\n73%\n65%\n18%\n6%\n18%\n19%\nVancouver Stocks\n.04%\n1.26\n6.05\n.26%\n1.05\n14.12%\n.49\n3.00\n2.05\n.08\n2.3S\n.16\n1.55\n1.20\n4.16\n.49\n.03\n.27\n.22\n.16%\n.16\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\nBethlehem\nBralorne\nCanaan\nCariboo Gold\nCraig\nGiant Mascot\nGranduc\nHighland Bell\nNational Ex\nPend Oreille\nQuatsino\nReeves MacDonald\nSheep Oreek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilbak Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard\nTaylor\nTrojan\nWestern Exploration\nOILS\nCharter\nHome\nOkalta Com\nPacific Pete\nPeace River Gas\nRoyal Can\nUnited\nVantor\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\nB C Power\nB C Telephone\nOanadian Collieries\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInland Nat Gas\nMacM & Powell River\nTrans Mtn\nWestminster Paper\nWestern Plywoods\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Unit\nWest Coast Vt\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal      63.'\nCan. Bank of Com.    63.1\nRoyal Bank of Can.    74.1\nFUNDS\nAll Can, Com.\nAillCan.'Div. 6.;\nOan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nFirst Oil and Gas        4.<\nGrouped Income 3.'\nInvestors Growth        6,t\nInvestors Mutual        12.!\nLeverage 7.1\nTrans Canada \"C\"     6.:\nUnited Ace. Funds    17,(\nQUITS THE ARMY\nTEHRAN (API\u2014The head of\nIran's military court,today announced his resignation from\nthe army, apparently to be free\nto criticize some actions of Premier Aii Amini's reform government. . Gen. Hussein Emo-\ndeh said he was quitting after\n33 years so he could \"perform\nmy - religious and national\nduties.\"\nBe Ready for the Beach - whether\nSwimming or Sunning\n* Trunks        * Judogi Robes\n-\u2022  Boxer Style       *  Loafers\n\u2022  Poncho Towels\n9  Square Leg Trunks\n\u2022  Deck Pants        \u2022  Cabana Sets\nBE READY FOR FATHER'S DAY\u2014JUNE 18\nEMORY'S LTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nWelensky Bitterly\nCriticizes British\nSALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia (API\u2014Sir Roy Welensky,\nprime minister of the Rho-\ndesian Federation, bitterly criticized Britain's \"tragic\" colonial\npolicy in a speech Wednesday\nnight.\nHe called the policy \"tlie sellout of British Africa.\"\nSpeaking at a dinner, Welensky said Britain had a direct\nresponsibility for the recent resurgence of the Mau Mau movement in Kenya.\nThe Mau Mau, he said, almost broke the country four\nyears ago \"and yet it seems\nthat some in Britain continue to\nput trust in the leaders of sudh\nmovements as Mau Mau to\ngovern themselves and control\ntheir country.\"\n\"Add to this Zanzibar, where\nin recent days we have 6een\na constitution virtually go to\npieces.\"\nPOLICY ABANDONED\nWelensky charged that Britain at some stage had abandoned its colonial policy which\nin Hie past had achieved a\nsteady and real advancement\nby colonial peoples toward competence, integrity and civilization.\nWelensky also attacked Communist   aspirations   in   Africa\nwhich he claimed are creeping\nsteadily southward from Cairo.\nHe said Communists are behind the African nationalists\nand their purposes which are\nmainly \"to rule any sort of\ncountry, whether it makes economic sense or not as long as\nit's a black country.\"\n\"The Communists are biding\ntheir time but in the meanwhile\ntheir encouragement and aid to\nthe disruptive forces of African\nracialism is generous and cleverly direoted.\"\nMARK JUNG DEATH\nMONTREAL (CPl-The third\nworld congress of psydhiatry\nWednesday paid a minute's silent respect to Dr. Cad Jung,\none of the founders of modern\npsychiatric thought who died\nTuesday at his home in Switzerland. Dr. D. Ewen Cameron\nof Montreal, chairman of the\norganizing committee of the\ncongress, said Dr. Jung. Thinking had deeply Influenced psy-\nover the world.\nPHONE 1844 FOE CLASSIFIED\nHave the Job Done Right I\nVIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED       mt\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nRexall't\nFinest Quality I\nIsapropyl\nAlcohol\nRubbing\nCompound\n16 oz.\n98*\n!\u00a7H2g|      Invigorating,\nygjrfljgt\u00a3gi*        Cooling, for\nrub-down.\nALCO-MIST\nSpray On \u2014 No Waste\n7 oz. Aerosol $1.19\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 John\nPritx-aard, 40, one of Britain's\nleading . conductors, has been\nappointed principal conductor\nof the London Sfiilhanmonic\nOrdiestra for the season beginning September 1962, it wae\nannounced \u25a0 Wednesday.\n$ Credit for repair or replacement cost will be prorated based on time\nused. Instructions packed with mower. \u00a9sunbeam\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE - RETAIL\nPhone 1530\nNelson, B. C.\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_1961_06_09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0433902","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"}]}}