{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0434689":{"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":"2023-08-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1963-03-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434689\/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":" \u25a0:\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 ' \u25a0    \u25a0\n7- \u25a0    \u25a0-.\n^ : ; \u2014        .-,\u25a0\u25a0\u201e\u25a0\u25a0......,-\n60\nYeors of\nDaily Service\nto the Kootenays. L_\n11(\nv^oiou\n&m\nVol. 61\nF^jMi \"Wiaiurjioaj iNelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with scattered showers this afternoon.\nContinuing mild. Low and high\ntoday at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley, 37 and 50.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 28, 1963\nLiberals Propose\nAtlantic Trade\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 The proposal\nfor an Atlantic Iree-trade area\nwas revived by Liberal Leader\nPearson Wednesday night as he\npledged a new Liberal government to associate Canada directly with the new long-term international trading patterns.\nUnhampered by heckling for\nthe first time in four major\nspeeches, Mr. Pearson told an\nattentive crowd of 3,500 in the\nRegina Armouries that the Conservative government has been\nunable to appreciate world trade\ndevelopments.\nHe accused the Diefenbaker\nadministration of whining and\ncomplaining about short-run difficulties and thinking \"in terms\nof old-fashioned protectionism\nand old-fashioned preferences.\"\nIt had irritated Canada's friends\nabroad gratuitously, he said.\nBy contrast, he said a new\nLiberal government would work\nto gain benefits for Canada from\n\"this day of a new, large, bold\napproach to international trade\n\u2014an approach which will strengthen the free economies of the\nworld.\"\nAt one point he added:\n\"I am not one of those who believe that tariffs are the answer\nto our country's economic problems. In lact, I should like to see\na careful review of all high tariff rates with a view to bringing\nthem down.\"\n\"Committee Undemocratic\"\nRED DEER (CP)-Social\nCredit Leader Robert Thompson\nheard his proposal for a parliamentary committee on defence\ndescribed Wednesday night as\nunrealistic, irresponsible, unnecessary and \"completely undemocratic.\"\nThe criticism was levelled by\nPaul Jensen, New Democratic\nParty candidate for Red Deer in\nthe April 8 federal election. He\nand Mr. Thompson took part in\nan all-candidates' forum. Tlie\nother candidates are Max de\nHamel, Liberal, and Gordon\nTowers, Progressive Conservative.\nMr. Thompson held the seat in\nthe last Parliament.\nAnswering a question on defence, Mr. Thompson said that\nthe parliamentary committee\nwould be a means of taking defence issues out of the realm of\npartisan politics.\nMr. de Hamel, a United\nChurch minister, criticized Social Credit proposals to increase\nthe money supply. This would\ndrive up prices and no group\nwould be harder hit than farmers.\nRed Deer is a mixed farming\narea.\n10 Cents\nNo. 28S\nNDP Will Cooperate\nOTTAWA (CP)-T. C. Douglas\nsaid Wednesday night the New\nDemocratic Party is prepared to\nco-operate with whatever party\nhas the largest number ol members in the next Parliament.\nThe NDP leader said in a recorded CBC free-time political\ntelecast that the present outlook\nis that no political party will\nhave a clear majority after the\nfederal election April 8.\nBut a minority government\n\"need not lead to instability and\nindecision\" if MPs worked together for the welfare of Canada.\nHis party would not enter into\na coalition with the larger group\nbut would help the government\ntackle social and economic problems \"free from the constant\nthreat of non-confidence motions.\"\nHe said this NDP support\nwould continue while the government \"made an honest effort\nto strengthen and expand the\nCanadian economy.\"\nSays Indian Branch\nOnly Dumping Ground\nVICTORIA (CP) -An Indian\nmember of the British Columbia\nlegislature said Wednesday the\nfederal Indians branch \"is nothing but a graveyard and dumping ground for ex-colonels, ex-\nmajors and ex-RCMPs.\"\nFrank Calder (NDP-Atlin)\nsaid that these persons -do not\nappear concerned in promoting\nself-determination, self-support,\nself-government,\nand individual initiative on Indian reserves.\"\nHe said there are several competent officials in the field for\nthe branch who are sincere in\ntheir efforts to assist the Indian\npeople. But their hands are tied\nand freedom to advance the\ncause of the Indians was prevented by \"Ottawa's pencil pushing,\npaper shuffling bureaucratic In-\nindependence j dian affairs administrators.\"\nHe was speaking to a motion\nhe introduced in the legislature\nwhich requests the provincial\ngovernment to consider the advisability of urging the federal\ngovernment to enact legislation\nwhich will enable the province\nto assume complete administration of Indian affairs within its\nboundaries.\nAttorney-General Bonner said\nthat while the government was\nsympathetic to Mr. Calder's\nlong pieces of wood into his car | motion and remarks there was\n. . . political posters nailed high | nothing it could about the situa-\nout of reach in trees in the city | tion because such a move would\npark on High Street . . . Ted | requjre an amendment to the\nNEW YORK (AP) - Photoengravers turned down strike\nsettlement terms Wednesday\nnight, indefinitely prolonging\nNew York's costly 110-day newspaper blackout.\nThe vote of 191 to 111 against\nthe proposed photoengravers'\ncontract terms came as a stunning shock to the industry,\nwhich had been geared for a\nquick resumption of publication.\nMorning editions had been prepared to go to press within a [\nfew hours.\nTwo of the morning dailies al\nTeachers\nMarch on\nParliament\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Thousands of disgruntled school teachers marched Wednesday on British legislators who were still\nreeling from Tuesday's mass\ndemonstrations when angry\nhordes of unemployed tried to\nstorm the Parliament buildings.\nIn sharp contrast to Tuesday's\npitched battle with police, the\n6000 teachers arrived at Parliament in well-organized groups to\nprotest their position under\nPrime Minister Macmillan's\nConservative government.\nThe teachers, organized with\nmilitary precision by the powerful National Union of Teachers,\nwere protesting a recent decision by Education Minister Sir\nEdward Boyle to distribute a recent $58,000,000 pay increase by\ngiving the biggest boosts to top\nsalary earners.\nThe teachers want the award\nused to increase minimum rates.\nWhile extra squads of police\nwere called in to cope with the\ndemonstrators, their main task\nDespite McGowan's suggestion I their own union leaders, forced, was to prevent them from block\nFORESTERS MEET HERE \u2014 Forest rangers from the 22 districts comprising the Nelson Forest District are meeting here to discuss mutual problems and\npolicy changes. The meeting began Wednesday and will wind up Friday evening with a banguet and dance at the Legion hall. Planning the meetings here\nare, left to right: Dick Jackson, Revelstoke; Arnold Midtle, Arrowhead; W. J.\nBenwell, Lardeau, and  P. F. Russell, Arrowhead.\u2014Daily News photo.\nEngravers Prolong Strike,\nRefuse To Accept Terms\nTrade Balance To Grow\nDiefenbaker Promises\nAttacks Opposition As Nearly\n10,000 Hear Him in Two Halls\nready had announced that their; was two hours late getting under\nreturn to the newsstands would i way. During the meeting, the'\nbe a per-copy price double that I rank-and-file expressed dissatis-\ncharged when the strike began, j facti\u00b0n with wages and vacation\nPicket lines outside struck \\ clauses in the proposed contract,\nplants parted earlier in the day! Printers also turned down the\nto  let  machinists  and  electri-! formula when it first was pre-\nof further negotiations, the pub- j them to reconsider and a week\nlishers were on record as unwill- j later they accepted the contract\ning to go beyond Wagner's set-1 terms.\ntlement formula. They had j Turner Catledge. managing\nwarned that they were not pre-1 editor of the struck New York\npared to negotiate further on the j Times, expressed himself as\nterms. I stunned at the photoengravers'\nThis settlement formula was| rejection. He said:\nbased on the terms accepted by       '   dont  know  ^  exacty\nprinters  at eight  closed New i what-we re going to do now, We\nYork daily newspapers. j W hfn. a>   \"* '\u00bb fu' out a\n +*. |. paper tonight. Most of the staff*\nThe AFL-CIO photoengravers nas been waitjng across the\nunion had scheduled its ratifica-' street to come in just as soon as\ntion meeting for 4 p.m. but it  the picket lines were removed.\"\nng traffic in the busy Parlia\nment Square.\nThe action climaxed a year of\nunrest among primary and secondary school teachers in England and Wales over their longstanding pay demands.\nBy JAMES NELSON\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Prime Minister Diefenbaker, in\na speech drawing lusty cheers and strenuous booing,\npredicted Wednesday night that Canada's favorable\nbalance of trade will grow in 19B3 and he said import\nsurcharges will soon be lifted.\nThe Conservative leader, speaking in the Vancouver Forum where his appearance in last year's election campaign was riotous, recited Conservative government accomplishments and poured scorn on the\npolicies and activities of the other parties for 80 minutes.\nThe forum's 7,200 seats were\nFlores' Wife\nTo Fly Norlh\nSihstsL\nfjohnsJii-\nsenteril to  them.  But pressure\nfrom  many  sources,  including\nCornells Van Pelt rounding a\ndowntown corner with a wet\npaint brush in his hand ... Dr.\nH. H. Smythe trying to get some\nRutherglen out on a conservation\npatrol . . . Wendy Sloan on her\nway up to CKLN . . . Stan Jemson walking down Baker Street\n. . . Canon Lang and Rev. W. Edington enjoying coffee and a chat\n. . . toreador Mrs. E. T. Bodard\nsitting patiently in her car while\na Boston Bull stood his guard\nin the middle of the road . . .\npolitical party telephone campaigners raising burnt tempers\nand chicken rather than goodwill . . .\nrequire  an\nBritish North America Act.\nBad Atmosphere\nAdjourns House\nREGINA (CPI - The Saskatchewan legislature adjourned\nseven minutes after it began its\nafternoon sitting when Premier\nWoodrow Lloyd said the atmosphere of the House was bad in\nthe wake of the suspension of\ntwo Liberal opposition members.\ncians in to ready mechanical\nequipment for publication, in\nexpectation that the 320 photoengravers would ratify the settlement.\nPREDICT WRONGLY\nThe contract rejected by the\nengravers Wednesday night was\nin Ihe framework of a two-year\npackage proposed by Mayor\nRobert Wagner, ol $12.63 a man\n\u2014 $6.50 in wages and fringe\nbenefits the first year, $6.13 the\nsecond. Union leaders had predicted ratification.\nPrior to the rejection, morning papers had expected to hit\nthe streets before midnight,\nwith evening dailies returning to\nthe stands today. It was to have\nbeen a gala debut aller nearly\n16 weeks of idleness.\nABOUT TO RETURN\nSome 20.000 newspaper employees were in lhe process of\nbeing recalled. Most of them had\nbeen jobless since the blackout\nbegan Dec. 8 with a strike of j D0LLAR UNCHANGED\n3,000 union printers. i    NEW y0RK  ,Cp)_Canadian\nFrank McGowan, president of  dollar uncnanged at 92 13-16 in\nCourt Held\nAl (urbside\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Court\nwas held at a' curb Wednesday\nfor a 71-year-old woman ac-\n' cased of ignoring a health department complaint that 18\ncats in her apartment were a\npublic nuisance. Miss Betty\nSax, the defendant, told criminal court Judge Manuel A.\nGomez from the back seat of\na car that she was too ill to\nappear in court. He brought\nthe court clerk, stenographer\nand other officials to the sidewalk to arraign her. Judge\nGomez ordered Miss Sax committed to the department of\nhospitals for observation.\nthe photoengravers union, said\nafter the rejection:\n\"We will have to sit down with\nthe publishers. The major objection from the floor was the lack\nof a 35-hour work week.\"\nPublishers had agreed to a\nreduction in the work week to\n35 hours from 36V4, but it was\nnot to have taken effect until the\nsecond year of the contract.\nterms of U.S.  funds,  eek ago\n92:!i.\nPound sterling up 1-32 at\n$2.80 3-32.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The closing bid on the U.S. dollar in\nterms of Canadian funds was\n$1.07%, the asked $1.07 25-32.\nTuesday the closing bid and\nasked were the same.\nWHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP) -\nTears welled in Ralph Flores'\neyes late Wednesday when he\nwas told his wife was flying\nnorth to Whitehorse to be by his\nbedside.\nTlie plucky 42-year-old pilot,\nwho with Helen Klaben, 21, of\nBrooklyn, N.Y., 'spent 50 days\non a wilderness mountainside\nafter his light plane crashed,\nsaid: \"She'll collapse when she\nsees me. My face is not the\nsame. It's so high up on this\nside.\"\nFlores, from San Bruno, Calif.,\nreferred to a jawbone fracture\non the left side of his face. The\nbreak knocked two teeth out of\nposition and they were filed\ndown by a dentist Wednesday.\nHe said the crash cost \"about\n$20,000, and that's why I couldn't send for my wife.\"\n\"I have financial troubles.\"\nHe said the loss included time\nlost from work \u2014 he would not\nsay what his salary was \u2014 $7000\ninvested in the 1942 single-engine\nHoward plane, and expenses incurred by his family.\nThe Mexican-born electrician,\nwho lost 51 pounds during the\nordeal, left hospital for the first\ntime to go to the dentist's office.\nHe went by taxi.\nLater, dressed in a new outfit\nof clothes provided by a Whitehorse representative of the\nChurch of Latter Day Saints\n(Mormons), he struck off on foot\nfrom the dentist's to a nearby\nbarber shop and got a haircut.\nTHE WEATHER\nCanada high-low:\nKanjjpops 83 \u2014 The Pas 10\nMin'Max Pre\nNELSON    40\nWinnipeg    24\nRegina    24\nLethbridge    33\nCalgary  28\nPenticton   42\nVancouver     45\nSpokane   37\nSeattle     42\n.23\nfilled and the doors closed before he arrived. Another 2,600\nfilled another hall next door, and\nforum officials estimated 1,000\nothers were turned away. It\nrained most of tlie evening.\nWinding up his speech, Mr.\nDiefenbaker said that when the\ncampaign started, many people\nwere saying he was out.\n\"He's not on the floor any\nmore,\" Mr. Diefenbaker declared. \"He's on his way.\"\nHis speech was made up of\nthe three basic themes he has\nbeen following throughout the\ncampaign: An upturn in the economy, opposition obstruction in\nthe last parliament, and Liberal\nParty shifts in defence policy\ntowards acquisition of nuclear\narms contrasted with his own\npolicy of reassuring current defence needs.\n\"It is so easy for Mr. Pearson to shift here and there and\nthe other place, but we are not\ngoing to let public opinion polls\ndetermine our policy,\" he s;''\n\"Do you think I'm going to\nsacrifice Canadian defence: Not\nat all.\"\nOn the econotnic situation, W.\nDiefenbaker said Canada's favorable balance of trade improved\nby $60,000,000 in the first two\nmonths of 1963 over last year,\nand would continue to grow.\nWhen the Conservatives suceed-\ned the Liberals in 1957, Canada's\ntrade delicit was $700,000,000 a\nyear, and the Conservatives turn\nPearson Hints High\nPosition for Argue\nBy DON HANRIGHT\nASSINIBOIA, Sask. (CP) -\nLiberal Leader Pearson flew\nWednesday to the support of\n\"right-hand man\" Hazen Argue\nand hinted at the prospect of\ncabinet portfolio for the former\nCCF-NDP House leader if the\nLiberals form the next government.\n\"I'll be very glad indeed\n... to have a man like Hazen\nto be my friend and colleague\nand adviser,\" Mr. Pearson told\na crowd of 400 that nearly filled\na legion hall in this farm community of 3,200 about 80 miles\nsouthwest of Regina.\nMr. Argue, seeking his seventh election in Assiniboia constituency and his second as a\nLiberal since he broke with the\nNew Democrats, said: \"I come\nhere today without any apology\" and said he is confident\nof a majority in the April 8\nelection.\nMr. Pearson told the crowd,\nmostly district farmers, that he\nconsiders it a privilege and a\ngreat help to have Mr. Argue\nin the Liberal caucus in Ottawa\nand praised him as \"my right\nhand man\" on agricultural\nproblems.\nThe Liberal chieftain also de-\nLegislature Prorogues After Passing 61 Bills\nVICTORIA (CP)-The British\nColumbia legislature was prorogued at 4:45 p.m. Wednesday\nby Lieutenant-Governor George\nPearkes.\nThe house had sat for 45 days,\nequalling a record set in 1962.\nGen. Pearkes gave Royal assent to 61 bills.\nPremier Bennett and the lieutenant-governor left almost immediately to meet the Queen\nduring a brief stopover in Vancouver.\nThe 51 members ol the legisla\nto clear up the last business ol\nthe house.\nHouse standing at prorogation\nwas Social Credit 30, New Democratic Party 16, Liberals 5, vacant I.\nAlter a brief address to the\nmembers, Lieutenant - Governor Pearkes relieved them of\ntheir legislative duties.\nFor eight Social Credit, four\nNew Democratic Party and one\nLiberal member, however, it\nwas business as usual.\nThey are members of the leg-\nture worked throughout the day islature's committee on public\naccounts, now reconstituted as\na board of inquiry investigating allegations of graft within\nthe highways department.\nThe committee has been\nmeeting for three weeks and it\nis estimated the hearings may\ngo on as long as three weeks\nmore.\nThe members are investigating allegations contained in an\naffidavit tabled Feb. 26 by Gordon Dowding (NDP - Burnaby)\nwhich said $135,000 was paid on\na highways contract for work\nnot done.\nThe affidavit was the sensation of the session, but there\nwere other highlights outside of\nlegislation.\nCyril Shelford of Omineca, a\ngovernment back - bencher, received support from both sides\nof the House in his demand for\nequalizing gasoline prices\nthroughout the province.\nMAKE CHARGES\nThe NDP, during the budget\ndebate, frequently charged that\na Social Credit campaign .fund\nwas shaking down businessmen. NDP spokesmen said the\ngovernment was planning to\nbring in an unacceptable medicare plan, a charge dispelled\nwhen the government announced it believes in medicare\nbut only in co-operation with the\nfederal government.\nThe homeowner grant was increased to $70 from $50, with\npromises of more to come in\nthe years ahead. The grant is\npaid to municipalities by the'\ngovernment on behalf of the\nowners of homes. The money is\ndeducted from the owners'\ntaxes.\nPremier Bennett brought\ndown a record balanced budget\ncalling for expenditures of $372,-\n705,000 for the fiscal year starting April 1. For the lirst time,\neducation was the highest cost\nof government, taking $96,800,-\n000 of the estimated revenues\nwith the possibility that more\nwill bs needed.\nLegislation provided for the\ncreation of three new universities, bringing the provincial\ntotal to four; and junior colleges giving the first two years\nof university.\nnied the stripe d-pants-and\nteacups image of him which, he\nsaid, has been painted by \"the\nvivid imagination\" of Agriculture Minister Hamilton.\n\"He  (Mr. -Hamilton)  doesn't\nknow  very  much  about me,\"\nMr. Pearson said.\nWORKED HARD\nHe said he was brought up in\na low - income household and\n\"had to work hard for everything I got.\" Mr. Pearson said\nthis is the kind of background\na political leader needs if he\nhopes to serve the people.\nMr. Pearson also told his\naudience that he once was offered the position of director of\nthe United Nations Food and\nAgriculture Organization but\nturned it down. He explained to\nreporters later that the $35,000-\na-year job was offered in Quebec in 1945 at FAO's founding\nconference, which he chaired.\nThe Liberal party doesn't pretend to have all the answers to\nCanadian agricultural problems,\nhe said, but he promised that\na new Liberal government\nwould \"understand\" farmers'\nproblems and would have a\n\"good farm program.\"\nIn a brief but scathing reference to Mr. Argue's NDP opposition here, Mr. Pearson said\nthe New Democrats could not\nform a government and hope\nonly to have enough Commons\nmembers \"so they can veto\neverybody else's action.\"\nAs for the Conservatives, he\ncontended they stand no chance\nof forming a stable government\nand added: \"Are we going to\nhave Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr.\nCaouette?\"\nMr. Pearson reiterated that\nhe never has opposed Canadian\nwheat sales to Communist countries but warned that Red China\ncannot be relied on as a long-\nterm market. For these, Canada had to look to its friends\nabroad\u2014and the Conservatives\nhad displayed \"peculiar genius\"\nfor getting into trouble with\nthem.\ni surplus\nhe said.\nin the\ned this  into  i\nlast two years\nHe gave credit for the im\nprovement to the government's\ndecision last year to peg the dollar at 92^ cents in U.S. funds.\n\"I've waited for an answer\nIrom Mr. Pearson as to what\nhe would do if he got into office,\" he said. \"Would he remove the peg'\nMr. Diefenbaker's speech was\npeppered with interruptions principally from the far back of\nthe huge coliseum-type building,\nand from the standing room on\neither side of the -platform. About\na score of teen-agers congregated behind the platform and hooed\nevery time the audience applaud\ned. They were escorted out late\nin the speech by forum police.\nThe Prime Minister, apparently relishing the storm, repeatedly\njibed at the Liberals and the\nother parties.\n\"I'd like the Liberals here\u2014\nthe old-time Liberals\u2014 the intelligent ones\u2014those who remember the greatness of the party\nin the past to tell me, do you\nthink under Laurler.or Mackenzie King, they would have voted\nfor debWree money with the\nSocial Crediters?\n\"The Liberal Party of today\ndid that, and then said they\nhave a different definition of social credit. I tell you, if that\nphilosophy works, nobody\nworks.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker answered\nmany of the interruptions, most\nof which were inaudible in the\nvast hall, with quips. He ignored\nquestions like \"What about unemployment?\" \"Where's George\nHees?\" and \"How about Harkness?\"\nIn 1962, he said, Canadian agricultural income, labor income,\nbusiness surpluses and other\neconomic indicators were all at\nrecord high levels\n\"If business hasn't got profits,\nit can't provide jobs,\" he said\nto a chorus of boos and a round\nof applause,\nThe interruptions were most\npersistent when Mr. Diefenbaker\nstarted tracing changes in Liberal Party defence policy.\n\"These people would qualify\nfor members of the Liberal opposition,\" he said of the hecklers. \"Doesn't the truth hurt?\nOh, how they squeal.\"\n\"What's your policy?\" someone .shouted.\nHe described it later, saying\nhe did not intend Canada\nto be made a dump for nuclear warheads, but wanted\nCanada to enter into an agreement with the United States to\nmake warheads accessible\n\"when and if war becomes imminent,\" but preserving Canadian sovereignty.\nWhile the scoffers scoffed, we\npressed forward to maintain our\nsecurity, he added.\nA group of Sons of Freedom\nDoukhobors, carrying placards,\nwas refused admittance to the\nforum.\nThey formed outside the main\nentrance with the placards bearing the words:\n\"We plead to the UN for human rights,\" and \"We destroyed\nour guns in 1895.\"\nThe 1895 reference was to an\nuprising in Russia when members of the strange religious\nsect, refusing to bear arms,\nstacked their rifles and burned\nthem in a village square.\nPlacards were banned from\nthe Forum and a warning had\nbeen issued that no one carrying\nany type of banner or placard\nwould be admitted.\nQueen's Plane\nSlops at Coast\nFor Refuelling\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Queen\nElizabeth and Prince Philip, flying home to Britain after a tour\nof New Zealand and Australia,\nlanded here Wednesday night at\n9:04 p.m.\nThe BOAC jet airliner landed\nat Vancouver airport in the pouring rain and the Queen and\nPrince Philip stepped off to the\ncheers of 500 persons at the terminal.\nShe was met by Lieutenant-\nGovernor George Pearkes on behalf of the federal government,\nPremier Bennett for the provincial government, and Mayor Bill\nRathie for Vancouver.\nThe party was escorted into\nthe terminal by a guard of red-\ncoated RCMP where they were\ndue to wait out the 45-minute\nrefuelling stopover.\nThe Queen wore a full-length\nfur coat with a blue and green\ncloche hat. Prince Philip wore\na belted trench coat and brown\nfelt hat.\nIn the terminal, the royal pair\nand retinue entered the V.I.P.\nroom for an official greeting\nceremony.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker Wednesday night sent a message of welcome and his regret at being\nunable to deliver it personally as\nthe Queen and Prince Philip\nmade a brief stopover here on\ntheir homeward flight from Australasia.\nThe message extended a welcome to the royal couple on behalf of the Canadian government\n\"as you stop over in Canada on\nyour homeward flight.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker, addressing a\nhuge political rally here while\nthe royal couple made their brief\nstopover, said in his message:\n\"I would like to have been\npresent to convey this message\nto Your Majesty but it is with\nmuch regret that circumstances\nprevent me doing so.\n\"May I, on behalf of my wife\nand myself, convey to you and\nPrince Philip, best wishes for a\nsafe journey to the happiness of\nbeing home again with your\nfamily.\"\nFund Assured\nFinancial Aid\nOTTAWA (CP) -The unem-\nploymenl insurance fund will\nneed financial help after March\n31 and \"we have been assured\nwe will get it,\" Commissioner\nC. A. L. Murchison of the Unemployment Insurance Comis-\nsion said Wednesday.\nBut he said the fund will not\nneed the $25,000,000 set aside for\nthe fiscal year expiring March\n31. Aid after that date as necessary must come through governor-general's warrants \u2014 a device to meet essential government spending needs when there\nis no Parliament.\nThe commission announced\nMarch 7 lhat arrangements had\nbeen made to \"provide adequate\nfinancial support for the unemployment insurance funds should\nil be needed.\"\nMr. Murchison, acting chief\ncommissioner in the absence\nfrom Ottawa of Laval Fortjer,\nsaid in an interview that aid will\nbe needed later.\nA heavy drain on the fund \u2014\nsupported by employee, employ!\ner and government conributions\n\u2014reduced its total to $39,442,839\nat the end of February, a seasonal low point.\nIn 1956, the fund totalled more\nthan $900,000,000.\nd\n mm.\n\u25a0\n\u25a0 \u25a0'.\u25a0\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^-\n^^^S^\u2122\u00bb^^^^^^^^\"^^^\"^^^^^^^^i^^^i^^^^^^S^^Sl^^Sl^^^^^^^^S^S^^^^^S^^S^S^^^^\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 1963\nVolunteers, Homeowners\nTo Aid in Nelson Cleanup\nVolunteers and personal assistance from the homeowner will\nform the muscular nucleus of\nthe Arbor Day pick-up squad\nApril 6.\nFife Chief E. S. Owens an-\nnounced this Wednesday while\nformulating plans for a parade\nto launch Arbor Week on Monday.\nIn the past voluteers and service clubs have banded together\nto attempt to pick up the city\nrubbish and trash in a massive\none-day clean-up. This year the\nannual beautification of the city\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Friday\nTWIST AROUND THE  CLOCK\nChubby Checkers, Vicki Spencer\nPlus TEENAGE MILLIONAIRE\nComplete Shows 7:00 and 8:20\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\n7   Re-Opening\nMonday,    April    1\nWatch for Gala Reopening\nAnnouncement\n-\u00abs^-\nA U T 0 - V U E\nDRIVE - IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTonight and Friday\n&   THE PIT AND THE\nPENDULUM\n(Adult Entertainments\nPlus THE DAY THE EARTH\nCAUGHT FIRE\nShow Starts 7:15 p.m.\nhas been spread over a whole\nweek, April 1-6, with the last\nday being for trash pick-up by\ncity trucks manned by volunteers.\n\"It is difficult for a minority\nof the people to get on these\ntrucks and attempt to collect all\nthe garbage in one day,\" said\nchief Owens.\nThis year volunteers will again\nman the vehicles but local citizens will be asked to assist in\nloading trash collected at their\npersonal domain aboard, the vehicles.\nPARADE MONDAY\nThe parade has been scheduled for 3.30 p.m. Monday, starting from the Civic Centre and\nwill wind through the business\nsection. The mayor and council\nare expected to lead the parade,\nconsisting of youth groups, service clubs, city band, and city\nmachinery.\nMonday will mark the Jaycees\nannual paint-up program.\nTuesday will be Health day\nunder the auspicies of Dr. M. R.\nSmart, medical director of the\nSelkirk Health Unit. The Unit's\ncrews will be concentrating on\nthe business section while Dr.\nSmart will give a radio address\nthat evening.\nIt is expected that Mayor T.\nS. Shorthouse will also make a\nradio address Sunday confirming\nthe week April 1-6 to be Arbor\nWeek.\nCLEANUP STARTED\nChief Owens reported tSiat\nmany residents have taken advantage of the warm weather of\nlate and have already commenc-\nIt sounded like fun.\nIt began like a game.\nThe very proper ladies of\nBriarwood were going to\nbe interviewed by the very\neminent Dr. Chapman and\nhis distinguished staff\nof researchers. They would\nmerely reveal the most\nintimate details of their lives,\nTECHNICOLOR*\nJUAUL\nFrom\nI WARNER BROS.\nTONIGHT-FRI.-SAT.\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-9:10\nCIVIC\ned or finished cleaning up their\nproperties.\nThe fire department launched\nits clean-up program 10 day:\nago, and has already burned\nover some 23 properties as well\nas burning down condemned\nbuildings. The chief reported\nthat the department still has\nsome 30 more properties to\nscorch.\nThe only change in the original program has been the\nwithdrawal of the boy scout bottle drive, originally scheduled\nfor April 5. Because of a previous committment the boy scout\nbottle drive has been scheduled\nfor April 20.\nFormer Trail\nMan Dies\nIn Smashup\nTRAIL \u2014 A former Trail man\ndied in Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nearly Wednesday morning from\ninjuries received in a car accident on the Rossland-Trail hill\nlate Tuesday night.\nWilliam George Casey, 24, of\nCalgary, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Casey of Trail, was\nthrown from his late model vehicle, which struck a solid rock\nabutment after travelling about\n130 feet in the ditch.\nA passenger, Eigil Waage, 20,\nof Trail was also thrown from\nthe car and taken to hospital\nwhere he is reported progressing favorably. He suffered a\nfractured arm and other injuries.\nIt is believed that the vehicle\nrolled and crushed Mr. Casey\nafter hitting the abutment.\nMrs. (leave\nDies al Kaslo\nKASLO \u2014 Mrs. Minnie Cleave\nof Kaslo died at her home Tuesday night, aged 87 years.\nBorn in Orono, Ontario, In 1875,\nshe received her education there\nand moved west to Killarney,\nManitoba and was married there\nto William Charles Cleave. Her\nhusband was employed there as\nan electrician. In 1910 they moved to Fort Mcleod, Alta. where\nthey homesteaded and farmed\nuntil 1918, when they moved to\nCreston to operate a poultry and\nfruit {arm.\nKaslo became their home In\n1925. They had a cherry orchard\nduring the days when Kaslo was\nknown as the \"cherry capital of\nB.C.\"\nHer husband predeceased her\nMarch 29, 1962.\nShe is survived by one daughter Mrs. Arvilla Gray of\nKaslo, four grandchildren, nine\ngreat grandchildren.\n)IIIIIIIIIM1MIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIII\nContract Awarded\nFor Kinnaird Bridge\nA $2,000,000 contract for construction of a bridge\nat Kinnaird has been awarded to Northern Construction\nLtd. and J. W; Stewart of Vancouver, Highways Minister\nGaglardi said Wednesday.\nWork would start immediately, Mr. Gaglardi said,\nand would employ \"well over 100 men and up to 200.\"\nIt is expected the project will take two years to complete.\nThe bridge will span the Columbia River, eventually connecting the village with Salmo over the proposed multi-million-dollar highway through Champion\nLakes provincial park.\nlillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliliilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllll\nOFFICIAL VISITOR to Nelson Eagles Ladies'\nAuxiliary Tuesday night was Grand Madam President Cora Rigg of Omaha, Nebraska, right, shown\nwith the Nelson president, Mrs. Malender Kienholz.\nA dinner and special meeting was held at which\nthe Cranbrook drill team performed the initiation\nceremony in her honor.\u2014Daily News photo.\nNotre Dame News\nBy CLAUDIA GWINN\nStudents took full advantage\nof a three-day holiday weekend\nto relax and recreate in midst\nof mid-semester exams. Many\nreturned to their homes in nearby cities, taking with them several fellow students to share in\ntheir activities.\nSaturday was granted as Rector's Holiday by Father Aquinas\nin rememberance of his recent\ncelebration of 15 years in the\npriesthood. He included Monday\nas an unexpected free day to\nbe known as Charter Day, in\nRuling Made\nOn Bridge\nTickets\nOfficial confirmation concerning dispensation of the tickets\nfor travel across the Nelson\nBridge, with approach of the toll\nlifting date, was received from\nVancouver Wednesday morning\nby toll lieutenant R. Roberts.\nWeekly tickets will expire at\nmidnight Friday, as usual. New\nweekly tickets will be issued\nfrom 12:01 a.m. Saturday morning and will expire at midnight\nSunday, with no refunds available.\nTruck tickets issued on the\nnew date will be refunded from\nVancouver.\nNo-limit tickets are not refundable, since these may be used at\nthe Deas Island Tunnel or Oak\nStreet Bridge in Vancouver.\nVote New Democrat!\n\u2022 HEALTH   SERVICES:\nMedical services and drugs to all^on the basis of need alone.\n\u2022 EDUCATION:\nAbility to be the sole qualification for free university tuition and\ntechnical training for our youth.\n\u2022 SOCIAL  CAPITAL:\nPlanned program for the development of \"socal capital\"; houses,\nschools, hospitals, parks, bridges, roads and power development.\nRE-ELECT\nH. W. HERRIDGE\nINSERTED  BY  ND P   CAMPAIGN  COMMITTEE,  KOOTENAY  WEST\nRegistrations\n| Already in for\nCanadian Capers\nA large number of registra\ntions for the Second Annual Canadian Capers Square Dance Institute to be held in Nelson this\nsummer from July 28 to August\n2 have already been received.\nTwenty-four copules have registered from such points as Colorado and California in the south\nand from Prince Rupert and Regina in the north.\nThe institute has become an\nannual event in Nelson and features two of America's top ranking square dance callers and instructors, Dave Taylor from Detroit, Mich., and Bob Page from\nHayward, California. Each is a\nrecording artist for well known\nrecord companies and has been\nfeatured in many Institutes\nthroughout the U.S.A. \"Scotly\"\nand Doris Garrett, from Hay-\nward, Calif., will conduct the\nround dance sessions and are\nalso recording round dance artists. They have composed many\npopular round dances.\n\"Canadian Capers\" is the only\nSquare Dance Institute in British\nColumbia and there are only two\nother such institutions in Canada.\nSuch an undertaking is deemed appropriate to Nelson in view\nof recent developments definitely establishing Nelson as an educational and cultural centre.\nview of the B.C. Legislature\ngranting Notre Dame University status.\nWhen approached about their\nvisits and trips, students chuckled and exclaimed in a satisfied but joking manner \"We'll\nnever tell!\"\nin a singles and doubles table\ntennis tournament held recently\nat Notre Dame, Ed Kelly was\nvictorious in the singles, while\nProf. Dipak Saraswati and Ken\nAckert were co-winners of tlie\ndoubles.\nSixteen players took part in\nthe tournament.\nRunners-up were Dave Kuzik\nand Mike Duclos in the doubles,\nwho were defeated 22-20 and 21-\n12, while Reg Feuz lost the singles, 21-15 and 21-8.\nNext Saturday night should\nprove to be an interesting even-\niing for everyone who attends\ni the boxing smoker at St. Margin's Hall.\ni An added attraction will be a\njudo exhibition at intermission\nand a grudge fight which will be\nannounced.\nThe names, weights, and home\ntowns of Notre Dame's contestants are as follows:\n! Silvano Vecchio, 138, Edmonton; Russ Poirier, 140, Vancouver Island; Bob Stump, 150,\nPeachland; Bob Jenkins, 158,\nGolden; Dave Kuzik, 160, Vancouver; Mike Duclos, 170, Kamloops; Roy Salsbury, 210, Golden.\nCoached by Ernie Gare, who\nis attempting to produce a well\ntrained scientific style of boxing,\nthe novices will be exhibiting\ntheir weeks of hard training.\nThe card will be co-sponsored\nby the Notre Dame Boxing Club\nland the Okanagan Club.\nSteacy's California Tour Remarks\nBring Demand for Recall to B.C.\nVICTORIA (CP) - A New\nDemocratic party member of\nthe B.C. legislature Tuesday\ndemanded the recall of Newton\nSteacy, former agriculture minister who is in charge of the\nB.C. government tourist office\nin San Francisco.\nLeo Nimsiek (NDP \u2022 Cranbrook) told the house Mr.\nSteacy must be asked about a\ncolumn that appeared in the\nVancouver Sun Tuesday which\nalleged that Mr. Steacy made\noffensive remarks during a recent B.C. government-sponsored\ntour of California.\nRecreation Minister Westwood\nand Premier Bennett said they\nhad received no complaints\nabout Mr. Steacy's conduct during the recently-completed tour.\nMr. Nimsiek read a column\nby Jack Wasserman. He said it\ndealt with a visit to San Francisco by British Columbians interested in tourism.\nWasserman said that during\na bus tour of San Francisco,\nMr. Steacy mentioned over a\npublic address system \"Jap-\ntown,\" and a beach on which\non Sundays \"there's every\nshape, shade, size and color\u2014\nexcept whites, of course.\"\nMr. Nimsiek said that the\ncolumn said that Mr. Steady\ntook Tak Toypta, a Japanese-\nCanadian from Creston, B.C.\naside later and said: \"I hope\nyou realize I wasn't talking\nabout you people\u2014I meant the\nNegroes.\"\nHe said that the column said\nMr. Steacy made his original\nremarks before Dean and Fay\nLeung, Chinese Canadians from\nVancouver.\nMr. Nimsiek said a position\nsuch as Mr. Steacy's is \"far\ntoo important to give to broken-\ndown politicians.\"\nHe said that if there is any\ntruth in the Wasserman column\nMr. Steacy must be replaced.\nMr. Westwood said he had\nheard no complaints about the\ntour. He read several letters, including one from Mr. Leung,\npraising the tour.\nMr. Bennett said he had many\nletters of commendation on how\nthe San Francisco p-ffice is\noperated.\nThe matter was brought up\nduring discussion of recreation\ndepartment estimates that was\nadjourned at 1:20 a.m. PST.\nMr. Steacy was agriculture\nminister until 1%0 when he was\ndefeated in a general election.\nComments in Poor Taste\nCRESTON (Staffi - Remarks\nmade by Newton Steacy to a\ndelegation in a B.C. government-\nsponsored tour of California were\nobviously not meant to be offensive, Tak Toyota said here Wednesday.\nBut, coming from a public official, \"they were in poor taste,\"\nhe said.\nMr. Toyota, a Japanese-Canadian businessman here, was\nmentioned as one of the members of the tour who might have\nbeen offended by Mr. Steacy's\nremarks. Two Chinese - Canadians were also on the tour.\n\"Mr. Steacy came and apologized to us, although we had not\nbeen offended,\" Mr. Toyota said.\nHe said, \"Someone spoke to\nMr. Steacy afterwards and sug\ngested that we might have been\noffended, so he came to us to\nexplain that the term Jap-town\nwas commonly used by the\nAmerican residents there.\n\"However, he explained to us\nthat he had not meant it to sound\nthe way it did, he had simply\nused a local term without thinking lhat it might reflect on us.\n\"We had a long, friendly chat\nwitli Mr. Steacy about the problem of racial discrimination in\nthe United Stales.\"\nWhen told thai the remarks\nhad been mentioned by a Coast\ncolumnist and brought to the attention of the legislature, Mr.\nToyota said the comments had\nbeen taken out of context \"and\nof course this makes them seem\nmuch worse than they were.\"\nRival Candidates To\nTalk in Same Building\nNof Meant to Sound That Way\nA political oddity will occur\nin the Royal Canadian Legion\nbuilding here tonight. Two fam-\nilar Kootenay West Riding rivals\nwill be addressing political rallies only doors apart.\nProgressive Conservative candidate Peter Dewdney will speak\nto a rally in the upper small hall\nof the Legion while H. W. Herridge, New Democratic Party\nCandidate, will be addressing a\ngroup in the lower, larger hall.\nMr. Dewdney was runner-up\nto Mr. Herridge in the last two\ngeneral elections.\nThe PC party isn't too happy\nover the hall arrangements while\nthe NDP declares that there was\nno deliberate attempt to contest\nthe PC rally, that the meetings\nstarting al the same time, same\nbuilding, and same date is a\ncoincidence.\nAn NDP oftlcial said Wednesday night that Mr. Herridge's\nitinerary, drawn up weeks ago,\ncalled for the six-lime MP to\nspeak in Nelson on March 28.\nA Legion official pointed out that\nMr. Herridge being a member of\nthe Legion makes it a practice\nto schedule his meetings where-\never possible in Legion Halls\nand the Nelson Hall has been\nhis meeting place for years.\nThe PC's, through the Nelson\ncampaign headquarters, regretted \"that the NDP had called\na meeting for the same night\nand in the same building as Mr.\nDewdney's public meeting which\nhad been arranged earlier and\nwas advertised in last Friday's\nDaily News.\"\nIt declared that \"according to\nlhe Royal Canadian Legion representative the NDP was informed that Mr. Dewdney's committee had previously hired one\nhall for the public meeting. Despite this the NDP went ahead\nand hired the other hall for the\nidentical time thus depriving the\npeople of Nelson of the opportunity of hearing both candidates.\"\nThe NDP official slated that\nit was only after the hall had\nbeen arranged for that they\nlearned of Mr. Dewdney's meeting.\nWest Berlin is to build a museum quarter to house collections now in various museums\nabout the city.\nSAVE!\nBEAVER\n8\" TILTING\nARBOR SAW\nWITH STEEL STAND\nna\ni\" TILTING ARBOR\nCIRCULAR SAW\nREGULAR\nPRICE\n$79.50\n1J-1M        REGULAR\nSTEEL STAND    PRICE 24.50\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014 Newton\nSteacy, in a telephone interview\nfrom San Francisco, said Wednesday he probably made the\nexplosive remarks attributed to\nhim\u2014but he didn't mean them to\nsound the way they did.\nInterviewed by the Sun, Mr.\nSteacy, a former British Columbia agriculture minister, said\nVAN MAARION\nTOURS MINE\nTlie Social Credit candidate\nfor Kootenay West went underground Wednesday.\nMrs. Edith Van Maarion and\nher campaign manager, George\nTalbot, visited the Bluebell mine\nat Riondel on a three-hour tour.\nThey were escorted by ventilation engineer Nielson.\nThe visitors went down to the\n825-foot level, wearing miners'\nclothes and lamps, and during\nthe noon hour visited men at\nlunch.\nremarks to made to a delegation\nof louring British Columbia\nmayors and provincial officials\nwere meant in a friendly, unoffending way.\nMr. Steacy is B.C. tourist\nmanager in San Francisco.\nIn the B.C. legislature Wednesday, Recreation Minister\nWestwood said he would investigate a report that offensive remarks were made and stated:\n\"If it occurred, it is most unfortunate.\"\nMr. Steacy said in the interview Wednesday that when he\nspoke of \"Jap-town,\" he did so\nin the unoffending way as people-\n] do in referring to \"Jap oranges.\nHe said lhat he couldn't recall\n! mentioning the beach for Negroes bul said that if he did it\nwas \"in a joking manner.-'\n\"There was no spirit of vin-\ndictiveness in what I said.\"\nWHITE RAIN\nLOTION    SHAMPOO\nWith New Dandruff Control\nRegular $1.50\n2   for  991\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613       Nelson\n\"price*     *,04'\u00b0\u00b0\nSALE    COMPLETE WITH tt\u2014g. OQ\nPRICE      STEEL STAND     \u00bb<TO.O\u00bb\nTho Beaver 1262 Is on Ideal saw for\nIhe quality conscious craftsman. It It\npacked full of safety and convenience\nfeatures. A Mauhloss Vsluel\nMADE IN CANADA\nHurry Hurry\nNew   Low   Price\n*76.88\n-Hflkdnvrh\n476 Baker St.        Nelson, B.C.\nMrs. Taylor\nLaid at Rest\nFuneral services for Mrs.\nGlenCora Taylor, who died in\nNelson Saturday, were held Wednesday in the Thompson Funeral\nHome.\nRev. W. Edington officiated\nand inlerment took place in Nelson Memorial Park.\nHymn sung was \"What A\nFriend We Have In Jesus.\"\nPallbearers were W. H. Gunn,\nD. Winiaw, D. McCuaig and R.\nM. Edwards.\nCoty DUETTE\nExciting   Make-Up Combination\nPOWDER, FOUNDATION and COTY \"24\"  LIPSTICK\nAll ln One Dainty Case\n$3.25\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON\nPHARMACY LTD.\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\nPh. 352-2313      639 Baker St.      Nelson, B.C.\nBank Opens\nCalifornia Branch\nLOS ANGELES - G. Arnold\nHart, president and chief executive officer of the Bank of Mon-\nteral, opened an office here of\nthe bank's wholly-owned subsidiary, the Bank of Montreal\n(California), Wednesday. j\nThe new B ol M is directed by\nFrank R. Southee, senior vice-[\npresident of the bank's Califor- j\nnia operation. He was formerly\nvice-president at the bank's San\nFrancisco office, now the head i\noffice of the California organiza-1\ntion.\nIn addition to ils local banking\nservices, the new office will\nserve as an information centre\nfor U.S. and Canadian business\nmen with trading interests in\nCalifornia and Canada, as well\nas for tourists.\nThe Los Angeles office is the\nbank's fifth in Ihe United Sates,\nthe others being in New York,\nChicago, Houston and San Francisco.\nLast Rites Held\nFor Mrs. Swan\nFuneral service f o r Mrs.\nSophie Henrietta Swan, who died\nin Nelson Saturday, were conducted Wednesday at Thompson\nFuneral Home.\nRev. Peter W. Faris officiated\nand interment followed in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nHymns sung were \"Unto the\nHills Around\" and \"Abide With\nMe.\"\nPallbearers were Charles\nSwan, Eide Olson, Andy Olson,\nLouis Bonderud, Gordon Burgess\nand Otto Norberg.\n2 DOOR COMBINATION^\nBeatty 14 cu. ft. Porcelain interior, rollout shelves, 120 Ib. food freezer. Regular\n$449.00.   \t\n3-Piece\nKROEHLER SECTIONAL\nRegular $469.00.      C\nWEEKEND *T\nWEEKEND\nSPECIAL\n394\n76\nChrome Suites $dt&\u00bb^8\nBaby Strollers $7\u00ab95\nFrom        \u2022       ~ ~J\nAdmiral Deep Freeze  $*jfA Allowance\nSlightly scratched, 20 cu. ft. Reg. $329.00.\nNELSON HOME FURNITURE\nAND APPLIANCES  LTD.\n640 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 352-6432\n\u00ab,\n  ; : ; \u2014 ;\u2014-\u2014\u2014-\nSpeaks at Riondel\nSC Candidate Gives\nParty Stand on Trade\nTo Experiment With\nChemical Pellets\nOn Island Forests\nKIMBERLEY-BASED 17th Field Squadron RCE (Militia) won the Alberta provincial title in the recently conducted Alberta Military Area first aid competitions open to all permanent militia units. The 17th scored 514 out of a possible 600 points. They will now enter the Dominion competition either the last\nweek of April or the first week of May. From left to right, personnel of the\n17th Squadron shown above are: Cpl. R. Bozzer, Cpl. W. E. Bisgrove, Sgt. W.\nA. Archibald, Cpl. A. McRae, Sgt. R. L. Ralph and Major R. G. Lye, commanding officer.\nBob   Dixon,   Pamela   Malnarich Top Players\nMcKim Junior High\nWins Drama Festival\nKIMBERLEY - The McKim\nJunior High School, of Kimberley, took best play award in\nthe East Kootenay School\nDrama Festival, held in Kimberley.\nThe winning play. \"The Mayor\nof Torontal\" was one of seven\nplays entered from Creston,\nFernie, Cranbrook, Invermere\nand Kimberley. Invermere and\nKimberley\nplays.\nWisteria in  \"Take  a  Look  at\nJohnny.\"\nCertificates of merit went to\nHerbert Dodd, Creston; Jacqueline Murphy, Kimberley;\nGary Dalke, Invermere; Ros-\nann Hedquist, Kimberley, and\nTanis Ewen, Cranbrook.\nEntries were Invermere: \"The\nGrand Cham's  Diamond\"   and\n\"The Ghost Story\"; Cranbrook,\neach   entering   two I \"Take a Look at Johnny\"; Fer-\n! nie, \"It's Quite Natural\"; Cres-\nBob Dixon of Kimberley was\nnamed best actor for his role\nas the mayor in \"The Mayor of\nTorontal,\" and Pamela Malnarich was named best actrtss\nfor her presentation of Zuczka\nSzabadka in the same play. A.\nE. W. Day was director of the\nplay.\nBest supporting actor was\nHerman Manarin of Kimberley\nas the king in \"The Ugly Duckling,\" and best supporting actress was Gail Gooderham of\nCranbrook   for   her   role   as\nPussyfoots\n>*:i:SS:<:S*x.S5j\nNo article of clothing\nis as important to your\nchild as the shoes he\nwears\u2014right from the\nvery first step. That's\nwhy we recommend\nPussy foots,, by Savage.\nPussyfoots are especially\nmade to take care of\nbaby's feet. Moccasin\ntoes give plenty of\nwiggle room and grow\nroom. Flexible, sueded\nleather soles and light\ntreaded heels help\nprevent slipping. The\ntongue extends right to\nthe toe for easy on and\noff. And Pussyfoots are\nSanitized1\u00ae for lasting\nhygienic protection. We\nunderstand the\nimportance of a proper\nfitting. Bring your baby\nto us for his first pair\nof \"walkers\".\nNow Available $ 4.95\nNelson, B.C.\nton,   \"How  To   Propose\"   and\nKimberley \"The Mayor of Torontal\"  and   \"The  Ugly  Duckling.\"\nAdjudicator   was   Mrs.   Kay\nHoward of Brisco. Prior to\ncoming to the East Kootenay in\n1954, Mrs. Howard worked professionally in the East with\nOttawa Repertoire; Hart House,\nToronto, CBC, and did film work\nfor the National Film Board.\nSince coming to Brisco she\nhas done drama work with local\nchildren, conducted drama\nworkshop in connection with the\nnropram branch of the depart-\nment of education, and last year\nstarted a Summer Vacation\nDrama School for 'teenagers at\nKootenay Columbia Lodge. She\nalso adjudicated the drama\nfestival at Natal two years ago.\nHerridge Highlights\nEconomic Development\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 Particular in- treatment, as well as prescribed\nterest was shown in the general drugs and appliances,\nprogram of the New Democratic  elder CITIZENS\nParty  and in  tourist  develop-     He bHefly deaR wjth ^ Re.\nment of the area at a well atten- Urement  p]an  ,0 jde   fffl,\nded public meeting held in Edge- Canada,s o]der ^ .\nwood, with H. W. Herridge as!\nguest speaker.\nDwelling on basic points of the\nparty program, Mr. Herridge\nsaid that Canada is a land of\nabundant resources \u2014 moral,\ncultural and material, yet unemployment, waste, and commercialization of taste and values continue.\nEconomic development is still\nunplanned, unstable and operated chiefly for the benefit of the\nfew owners of big corporations,\nhe said, and pointed out that a\nrational and dynamic investment policy is central to New\nDemocratic planning. -\n\"Under corporation control of\ninvestment, Canada has experienced over-investment and inflation, followed by under-invest-\nment and unemployment in a\nsuccession of humps and hollows. All the while the allocation\nof investment funds has been unrelated to overall social needs.\"\nHe said the New Democratic\nparty believes that tlie investment of capital must be directed\nto serve public need and it seeks\nto break monopoly conlrol over\nCanadian industry and resources.\nDealing with social security,\nMr. Herridge said that Canada's\npresent approach ot social security is inadequate and unrealistic: \"a patchwork of legislation\"\nwhicli provides neither proper\nminimum standards nor adequate coverage for all those who\nneed it. On health, Mr. Herridge\nsaid that a country's most precious possession is the health of\nit citizens, and a New Democratic government would introduce\na National Health Scheme providing benelits to those who need\nthem without regard to their ability to pay, including medical,\nsurgical,    dental    and   optical\nPUBLIC MEETING\nTONIGHT\nSmall  Legion  Hall\nHeor\u2014\nl rrogri\nPETER DEWDNEY\nProgressive Conservative Candidate\nKootenay West\nthat it would be a two-stage\nplan: old age pension increased\nto $75 per month as the basic\npension, available at age 65,\nwith no means test; a contribu\ntory plan set up to provide re\ntirement benefits above this\nminimum. He said Ihe objective\nwould be to provide all elderly\npeople with an income amounting to at least half the income\nthey averaged during their earn\ning years.\nMr. Herridge said the New\nDemocratic party believes that\neducation is a malter of basic\nhuman rights; every young per\nson is entitled to an opportunity\nto develop his talents to the full.\nHe said that education is also a\nmatter of sound economics.\n\"The best investment we can\nmake is an Investment in our\npeople.\" Necessary financial ar\nrangements would be made to\npermit the provinces to provide\nfree education to all levels to all\nthose wh can benefit from it,\nscholarships, bursaries and living allowances lo assist students, capital for school and university expansion, and adequate\ntraining facilities and salaries\nfor teachers.\nHe ended hss meeting wilh a\nplea for co-operalion for peace,\nand slated that the most important issue of today was the problem of nuclear arms for Canada.\nHe said the New Democratic policy was a moraaly right and\nnon-nuclear stand. He said that\nCanada is no longer bound lo\nNATO and as a nation should\nwithdraw from the organization\nif her position became dependent\nupon acquisition of nuclear\narms.\nMr. Herridge spoke al Burton\nTuesday evening and Nakusp\nWednesday.\nRevelstoke\nSewage   Dumping\nCommission   Topic\nKINNAIRD \u2014 Concern was\nexpressed at Tuesday's village\ncommission meeting over Hie\npotential dumping of raw sewage into the Columbia River.\nRevelstoke was named by\nChairman Carl Loeblich as a\npossible offender should the\npollution control board see fit\nto approve its recent application.\nThe Kinnaird commission, although not directly involved,\nwas acquainted with the issue\nthrough the chairman who heads\nRIONDEL - Asked for the\nSocial Credit policy on trade,\nat a well-attended Riondel meeting, SC candidate Mrs. W. J.\nVan Maarion outlined the thinking of her party on accumulation of foreign currencies in the\nBank of Canada.\nShe said that her party would\nallow countries wishing to buy\nCanadian wheat and other products to pay for them in their\nown currencies. She pointed out\nthat tlie Bank of Canada at\npresent holds practically no\ncurrency reserves apart from\nU.S. dollars and sterling.\n\"There is no reason why we\nshould not build up reserves of\nother currencies by selling our\nproducts abroad. Other nations\nare doing this and stealing our\nmarkets.\n\"This policy,\" said Mrs. Van\nMaarion, \"will also provide us\nwith funds which we can use\nfor investment and development\nof these countries, which is our\nmoral duty at this time.\"\nWhen asked why she favored\nthe present Columbia River\nTreaty plan, and why she considers it better than the so-\ncalled McNaughton, or Herridge\nplan, Mrs. Van Maarion replied\nthat five highly reputable and\nindependent engineering studies\nfound the High Arrow the key\nto co-operalive development of\nthe Columbia.\n\"Even the International Joint\nCommission Engineering Board\ndid not find the McNaughton\nplan the best. General McNaughton is the only senior engineer\nclosely involved with the river\nplanning who thinks it is.\"\nELECTED DIRECTORS of\nthe Insurance Agents Association of B.C. at Its recent annual convention in Vancouver\nwere Allan Waldie of Trail and\nJ. S. Johnston of Cranbrook.\nChooses Dates\nFor Cleanup\nKINNAIRD \u2014 Kinnaird commissioners, at Tuesday's meeting, designated cleanup week as\nApril 16 to 23, with the extra\npickup scheduled for these two\nspecial dates.\nThe spring meeting of the\nAssociation of Kootenay Muni\ncipalities in Kimberley has been\nset for May 11, commissioners\nwere notified. This will see\nrepresentation of at least one of\nKinnaird's commissioners, Maurice Simpson.\nCANVASSING\nMrs. D. Hiebert, corresponding secretary Ior Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children\nin Castlegar, was granted permission for a canvassing project\nin Kinnaird. The canvass is in\naid of the proposed Dr. Endicotl\nHome in Creston.\nAnother canvass, which the\nmeeting established to have\nbeen unauthorized by the village, is the current drive for\nfunds for lhe Pass Creek Park\nproject. Village Clerk Allen\nSelbie was directed to send a\nletter to the Pass Creek Parks\nBoard requesting them to \"follow the proper channels\" when\npressing a canvass of this\nnature.\nIMMEDIATE RATIFICATION\nShe stated her reasons for\nurgency of ratification of the\nColumbia River Treaty. Tlie\neconomic benefit to the whole\nof Canada, to British Columbia,\nand especially to the Kootenays,\ncannot be equalled by any other\nresource development project in\nsight today, she stated.\nWater power is a renewable\nnatural resource.\nThe sale of downstream benefit energy to tlie United States\nwould produce the money to\nbuild High Arrow, Duncan Lake\nand Mica dams, with generators\nat Mica. This, would give employment to large numbers of\npeople in the West Kootenay\nRiding, and cheap, firm power\nat Mica, combined with natural\nresources, would attract industrial development.\nMrs. Van Maarion stated that\na Social Credit Government at\nOttawa would establish a modern and scientific financial\nsystem to give the Canadian\nParliament control of Canada's\nmoney supply and credit through\nthe Bank of Canada.\nA Social Credit Government\nwould adopt a \"pay-as-you-go\"\nsystem for government projects.\nThey would reduce taxes to\nhelp individuals as well as\nindustry. Mrs. Van Maarion\nsaid some of the tax changes\nwould be depreciation on private\nhomes to be deducted from\nincome tax; income tax deductions on workmen's tools used\nin earning a living; additional\ntax concessions to those corporations which have established\nprofit sharing plans for their\nemployees according to an\nagreed formula, and Social\nCredit would raise the base for\nincome tax deductions.\nVICTORIA \u2014 The application\nof chemical pellets over several\ntimber areas on Vancouver Island in June may spur the\ngrowth of trees by as much as\n20 years, a logging executive estimated Wednesday.\nWilliam M. Sloan, Pacific Logging Company president, said\ntlie experimental tree fertilization project will cover 450 acres,\nwith 55 tons of Urea nitrate in\nthe form of pellets. It is believed\nto be the biggest undertaking of\nthis nature in North America.\nThe work will start June 1. The\nexperiments will be conducted in\nthe Nanaimo, Cowichan Lake\nand Alberni areas.\nThe project, to be conducted\nin co-operation with Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company\nof Trail, manufacturers of the\nfertilizer, will see pellets dropped on timber stands of 15 to 50\nyears ol age. It is hoped the\nchemical fertilization will speed\nthe growth of trees to loggable\nsize more rapidly that the present average 90 years.\nPacific Logging, a Canadian\nPacific subsdiary, intends to\nplant trees almost immediately\nafter logging. In 1963 one million trees will be planted over\n2,300 acres in the Lake Cowichan\nand Sooke areas. The 1963 program commenced this week and\nplanting would be increased over\nthe next few years.\nEstablishment of seed orchards and seed production\nareas from which high quality\nseed will be produced for future\nuse is also part of the company's\nlong-range forestry program,\nSloan said.\nHe said B.C. Forest Service,\nwith Pacific Logging's assistance, was presently felling\nlarge areas of dead trees which\nhave presented continuous fire\nhazard in the Lake Cowichan\narea for many years..\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 1963 \u2014 3\nFORMER  DEER\nPARK MAN  DIES\nIN  VANCOUVER   j\nDEER PARK - Word has!\nbeen received here of the death\nof Herman Knabe, a former\nresident of Deer Park, Marcli 10\nin Vancouver at the age of 86.\nFuneral service was held in\nthe Chapel of Chimes, March 15,\nwith Reverend Paul F. Wild-\ngruhe officiating. Cremation followed.      ' > \u25a0< \u2022.\nMr. Knabe operated a butcher\nshop in Rossland before moving\nto Deer Park, then in 1947 sold '\nhis property here and moved to\nVancouver, where he lived until\nhis death.\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Classified\nRadium District\nHears Dinsdale\nINVERMERE - Hon. Walter\nDinsdale, Minister of Northern\nAffairs and Natural Resources\naddressed a well attended meet\ning at Radium Tuesday evening,\nwhen some 75 persons heard tlie\nminister discuss nuclear arms,\nthe national parks and the Columbia River issue. He was\nspeaking at the National Parks\nHotel.\nMr. Dinsdale was accompanied by Robert Inglis, President of the East Kootenay Conservative Association, and R. L.\nDonaldson, campaign manager\nfor Murray L. MacFarlane, who\nwas uanble to be present due to\na four-candidate forum elsewhere.\nMr. Dinsdale discussed nuclear arms saying Canada's\nimportant role in disarmament\nconferences has made it inex-\ni pedient to have nuclear weapons\non Canadian soil.\nOn national parks Mr. Dins\ndale said Kootenay Park, one\nof the 18, is also one of the most\nbeautiful   and   is   still   in   the\ndevelopment phase.\nj   On the Columbia River issue,\nIS EDEN'S SITE\nAccording to tradition the\nGarden of Eden lay near the\nconfluence of the rivers Tigris\nand Euphrates in  Iraq.\nthe pollution control committee\nfor the AKM.\nHe said that in response to\nhis letter earlier this month, in\nwhich he raised opposition to\nany further dumping, J. E.\nBrown, chairman of the Pollution Control Board, suggested\ntwo courses: either the board\nwould deny approval to Revelstoke or a hearing would be\nheld to which Mr. Loeblbich\nwould be invited.\ni\nGood Service\nFrom Balfour\nWafer System\nBALFOUR \u2014 Members of the\nBalfour Irrigation District have\nexperienced a minimum of trouble with the entirely new system, a general meeting of the\ndistrict heard in the Balfour hall\nrecently.        '\nChairman T. Craigdallie made\nthis statement in giving his annual report at the meeting, attended also by trustees W. Bar-\nritt and J. Bowles, and 13 residents.\nSecretary Mrs. L. Stainton\ngave the financial statement, left\nopen for inspection.\nIn his report, the chairman in\neluded a brief resume of work\ndone since the start of the op\neration.\nParticipation by all the com\nmunity was felt necessary to\nsuccess of the project.\nMr. Craigdallie expressed his\nthanks to all who had helped\nwith voluntary labor during the\nyear.\nIt was suggested that a suitable plaque be placed at the\npumphouse in memory of F. H\nB. Hansen, whose efforts had\ncontributed greatly to the success of the undertaking.\nDuring election of officers, Mr.\nBarritt was made chairman,\nMr. Bowles trustee and T. Craigdallie serving another year.\nA vote of thanks was moved\nfor all who had made the operation a success.\nhe said there should be no effort\nmade to resurrect the Door diversion scheme.\nThe question period was\nlargely devoted to local issues\nconcerning location of the new\nhighway approaching Radium\nthrough Kootenay National\nPark, the need of more informative road signs at Eisenhower\nJunction and the lack of adequate dressing cubicle facilities\nat Radium Aquacourt.\nWANTED\nYour Old Refrigerator\n$100\u00b0\u00b0 TRADE-IN\nREFRIGERATOR-\nFREEZER\nBig storage capacity in both\nthe freezer and fresh food section. Large 112 Ib. Zero Zone\nFreezer capacity. 2 roll-out\nand 2 fixed shelves, swing-out\nvegetable crisper, adjustable\nstor-a-door shelves. Plus automatic defrosting.\nPrice .   .   . 399.95\nTrade-in $100.00\n&$299.95\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nPhone\n352-5535\nCO. LTD.\nGeneral \u25a0':: electric\nMJ.HM Hif\n574 Baker St\nNelson, B.C.\ntried\nGEORGE\nCADY\nYour\nWANT ADS GET RESULTS\nLIBERAL\nCANDIDATE\nGEORGE  B.  CADY\n1. VJCVJKGc HA5 executive ability. He has served as President and\nVice-President of the Association of Kootenay Municipalities as well as\nother executive posts.\n2. V7CVsRv7C btbb Massive unemployment in the midst of a wealth\nof natural resources.\n3. GEORGE SAYS We need a full time minister of industry, tax\nreform, increased secondary industries and increased trade.\nVOTE CADY ^rthe KOOTENAYS\nInserted by the Liberal Association of B.C.\n\u25a07-   \/J\n '.   \"       ':\u2022  \u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0 \">.    \u25a0     \"    .  \"7'   '\u25a0.'\"'\":\u25a0\u25a0''       ;\u25a0\u25a0\/'  '    '\u25a0'      '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.     ;\u25a0   ''\u25a0'1-:     \"\"''\n'^mmmmmmm-.,\nj-.\\--il,;e.  \u2022 . \u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-- -     -\n;-.\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0 < .-:. ' \u2014 : '\nEstablished April 22. UHI2 Nelson, B.C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n268 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre of the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department. Ottawa.\nC. W. HAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF IHE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for lepublication ot all news\ndispatches credited to It or to The Associated Press or Reuters In this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\nThursday, March 28, 1963\nTyranny in Our Times\nand totally illogical treatment of the\npublic\" which he says is tarnishing\nthe image of business. He referred\nto closing hours and days among\nother things in which the public are\nseldom allowed to have a say. Much\nmore thoughtful consideration to this\nshould be given by the chambers\nof commerce.\nBut business men are not the only\nvillains of the piece. City councils\ncan be tyrannous too. The licensing\nlaw at present being considered in\nNelson is an example of the infringement of the rights of the individual.\nIt was originally not intended as a\nmeans of raising money\u2014the proper\nway to do that is through the mill\nrate \u2014 yet it is proposed to collect\nheavy fees from businesses in the\nname of licensing. Even the small\nman who rents an apartment finds\nhe is mulcted of four dollars annually for each room he rents for which\nhe gets little in return from the city.\nThere are plenty of instances\nwhich may be cited including the\ntyranny of the law. The English\nnewspapers are up in arms against\na judge's sentencing of two reporters for contempt of court. They\nfeel this is tyranny. Unfortunately\nthere is no appeal from contempt\nsentences. Justice might better be\nserved if there were.\nLetters to the Editor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic ot genuine Interest\nare welcome It the; are brief, accurate and fair. Thev ma;\nbe published over a nom de plume, but the name ol the\nwriter must be given to tbe Editor as evidence ol good\nfaith. Anonymous letters go Into the wastepaper basket.\nTypewritten letters must be double-spaced.\nF. B. Pearce\n.. .Writes\nL\nAccolades for  Royal''Pair\nIn British Newspapers\nSpeaking to the Nelson Chamber\nof Commerce, R. D. Baker, president\nof the B.C. Chamber of Commerce,\nsaid that \"The widely accepted belief that in the fields of human freedoms and justice the democratic process is infallible and inherently incapable of becoming an instrument\nof tyranny Is manifestly erroneous\nond should be cast away.\"\nMr. Baker was speaking in support of free enterprise to a body of\nmen to whom business is important.\nIt was his contention that the business community is brainwashing itself into a police state and that this\nabsurdity is the outcome of its insistence on petty infringements,\nthrough bylaws and ordinances, on\nits freedom of enterprise.\nUnder our system, he says, the\nindividual or any minority has no\nassured protection against acts of\ntyranny on the part of the government, that is to say the majority.\nIn an article, \"The Decline of the\nIndividual,\" U.S. Admiral Rickover\nexpresses the same idea when he\nsays, \"Respect for individual freedom, the autonomous individual, is\nthe foundation of free society. As\nsoon as you begin to think in terms\nof 'groups' the foundation begins\nto erode.\"\nMr. Baker spoke of the \"cavalier\nCanada's Defence\nIt is the firm conviction of this\npaper that, in these days of international crisis, Canada ought to arm\nherself with the most modern weapons available. We diVorce ourselves\nentirely from the pacifistic, ban-the-\nbomb movements that are so obviously led by men and women who\nhave never learned to make intelligent value comparisons in life.\nWhether we like the prospects\nor not, the next world war will likely\nbe a nuclear war with the Soviet\nUnion (and its allies) on one side\nand the United States of America\n(and its allies) on the other. That\nplaces Canada in position as the\nmost probable battle ground for such\na war.\n\"Canadians should understand,\"\nJust Imagine\nOne of the minor wonders of the\nworld is the twentieth century bent\nfor discerning in famous figures of\nlong ago some quality on which a\nmodern ideological tag can be\npinned.\nThus it is that Communist Russia\ntries to align the poet Burns to its\ndoctrinal cause, forgetting that of\nall men whose words are on record\nhe had a consuming hatred of\ntyranny.\nNow in America Robin Hood is\nbeing cited as having followed the\nstraight Communist line.\nThat would surely shock the\nlegendary hero of Sherwood Forest\nand cause him to loose his arrows,\nthe while Friar Tuck, no doubt, exploded in gusts of laughter.\nIt is hard to imagine the bold\nRobin as a \"Red,\" green being his\nfavorite color, and besides, was he\nnot noted for his independent but\nchivalrous magnanimity?\nAnyway, was he not Ihe Earl of\nHuntingdon in disguise, an aristocrat who would be an affront to the\nKremlin,.and vice versa?\nIn  some circles across the line\nthere seems a strange fear that a\nCommunist lurks beneath every bed\nor between the coverspof every book.\n\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nand Nuclear Arms\nsaid a recent editorial in the Toronto\nGlobe and Mail, \"that they cannot,\nby refusing to accept nuclear arms,\nexclude nuclear war from this country. The United States fully intends,\nil war comes, to fight the air battle\never Canada, no matter what we\ndo.\"\nThe attitude of the communist\nmind cannot be changed by our refusal to protect ourselves with nuclear defense arms. How often must\nit be told that the mind of communism is set on world dominion. In a\npublic letter published by Britain's\nForeign Secretary, Lord Home, he\nsaid:\n\"What we have to do is to recognize that the basic communist purposes of imposing their system on\nthe rest of the world are consistent\nand relentless and that our safety\nand our freedom depend primarily\non American power and American\nstrength.\"\nTo conquer the world for the\nMarxist-Leninist ideology is built\nright into the warp and woof of communist thinking. Faced with this unchangeable fact, any suggestion that\nthis country refuse to defend herself\nwith the modern weapons of war\nfare is to speak from a mind that has\nbeen paralyzed with the dream grandeur of a pseudo world peace.\n\u2014Bapfisl News.\n\"Blame Not\nOttawa's\"\nTo the Editor-\nSir\u2014I would like to answer\nMr.. Andrews' letter which appeared in your paper last week.\nHe inferred in it that the older\npolitical parties were responsible\nfor the unnecessary delay in\ntlie implementation of the Columbia River Project. I presume\nhe means the Progressive Conservatives or the Liberals.\nI think Mr. Andrews has his\nparties mixed up, for neither one\nis the government of British Columbia. Surely he knows who\nis. Surely he knows it is the\nSocial Credits. And it is common\nknowledge who is doing the delaying balance act. Surely he\nknows or should know the B.N.A.\nAct, especially that section which\noutlines in detail the province-\ndominion relationship.\nYes, Mr. Andrews you guessed\nit. It is Victoria which is being\nthe balky horse, the \"two-fork^\ned\" tongue government who says\none thing and does another.\nStudy, Mr. Andrews, before\nmaking such ridiculous statements again regarding the Columbia River Project. And lay\nthe blame rightly where it belongs\u2014in the laps of the \"Dad-\ndys\" in Victoria and not at the\nfeet of Ottawa.\nLillian Peitzsche\nTrail, B.C.\nLoss to Be More\nStaggering if\nEducation   Unaided\nTo the Editor:\nSir \u2014 Having just read with\ninterest Mr. Ray Nelson's letter about the Macdonald Report\n(Nelson Daily News, March 22,\n1963) I feel the need to make a\nfew comments.\nHowever sound and valuable\nMr. Nelson's ideas are on how\nwe should spend the money\nneeded to maintain an adequate\nlevel of higher education and on\nhow carefully we should plan the\nexpenditures in this regard, his\nstatement that he was asked to\nsign a petition asking the government to provide immediate\nfinancial support for the Macdonald Plan is quite incorrect.\nAs the U.B.C. graduate who\npresented the petition to Mr.\nNelson, I would like to point out,\nfor the benefit of those of your\nreaders who have seen Mr. Nelson's letter, but not the petition,\nthat in this petition the government is asked to do two things,\nwhich I will now quote: \"(a)\nTake immediate steps to provide the financial support in\norder to implement a comprehensive plan for province-wide\nhigher education;\n(b) Provide, during the current session of the legislature,\nthe requested operating budgets\nof the existing public institutions\nof higher education in B.C.\"\nThere is, as you can see, no\nmention of any specific plan.\nWhatever plan we do adopt,\nbe the the Macdonald plan or a\nmodification of it incorporating\nsome or all of Mr. Nelson's suggestions, the fact is that we do\nneed a plan and the financial\nbacking for it soon if we are to\nmeet the needs of higher education in our province within the\nnext decade.\nThe cost of implementing such\na plan may well be staggering\nas Mr. Nelson points out. But if\nwe don't face up to the fact that\nwe have to spend the money \u2014\nand spend it soon \u2014 then the loss\nto B.C. and Canada in wasted\nhuman talent and ability will be\nindeed infinitely more staggering.\nIn closing may I say that, in\nmy opinion, we should leave the\norganization and the fulfilling of\nthe plan designed to cope with\nthe needs of higher education to\nthe men on the job, our educa-\nAction\nThomas Edison would work from\nearly morning until late at night in\nhis laboratory. One night, when he\nreturned home, his wife said to him:\n\"You've been working too hard.\nYou must take a vacation.\"\n\"But where shall I go?\" said the\ninventor.\n\"Anywhere you wish,\" she said.\n\"Think of the one place in the world\nwhere you would most like to be\nand go there.\"\n\"All right,\" agreed Edison. \"I'll\nleave in the morning.\"\nThe following morning, he returned to his laboratory.\n\u2014Fori William Times-Journal.\ntors, who are in a position to\nproperly assess these needs.\nThey have done a good job in the\npast and merit, 1 think, our\nwhole-hearted support.\nA. de Voogd,\nRiondel, B.C.\nTheocratic\nState\nTo the Editor:\nSir \u2014 We are in the midst of\nanother election in which there\nis little or no excitement, simply\nbecause few expect there will be\nanything to get excited about.\nSome will tell us things are in a\npolitical mess, and will be after\nthe votes are in, be in just as\nbad mess, and could continue\nuntil God takes matters in His\nown way and establishes the\nTheocratic State, in which there\nwill be no political parties.\nLet me state what Moses has\nto say in the Record. \"Take you\nwise men, and understanding,\nand known among your tribes,\nand I will make them rulers\nover you, so he took the chief\nof your tribes, wise men, and\nknown, and made them heads\nover you, captains of thousands,\nand captains over hundreds, and\ncaptains over fifties, and captains over tens, and officers\namong your tribes.\" (Deut.\n1:13, 15).\nWhen our nation is re-organized to conform to the Blue\nPrints of God's Kingdom on\nearth there will be no political\nparties. The selection of the\nLeaders of the Nation will be\ndone without any elections as\nwe now think of them. In the\nforegoing verses we have the\nprinciple laid down for national\norganiaztion in a brief and\nconcise manner. The whole\nnation was organized in groups\nof ten people \u2014 each group\nhaving its own leader, or captain.\nOver each 100 people there\nwould have thus be Ten Captains of Tens; one of these Ten\nbeing appointed by the other\nNine Captains as a Captain for\nHundred. And over each thousand people there would be Ten\nCaptains of Hundreds; and one\nof these Ten would be selected\nby the other Nine Captains to\nbe the Captain of the Thousand.\nAt the time of the first census\nas recorded in the first chapter\nof Numbers there were 603,550\nmales of twenty years and upward, capable of bearing arms.\nThis would mean that there 603\ncaptains of thousands from\nwhom Moses chose his Seventy\nJudges. These 70 constituted the\nGovernment of the Nation \u2014 the\nPeers of the Realm \u2014 charged\nwith the responsibilities of the\nAdministration of the Divine\nLaw as the Economic System of\nthe nation. Each of these 70 was\na Captain of Thousand, and also\na Captain of 100, and also Captain of Ten. The entire Government was thus in the very\nclosest possible contact with the\npeople at all times.\nThis Mr. Editor, was the manner in which the nation was\ngoverned 3800 years ago, when\nGod was our King, and Moses\nHis Prime Minister. It could b'e\nour way of life as soon as we\n'Israel-British' people are sufficiently fed-up with this Baby-\nlonion System so costly, in which\nfew are happy about.\n\"STILL BRITISH.\"\nLEADERS QUARANTINED\nDAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -\nSyria's revolutionary regime\nhas put 27 more leaders of the\nregime it ousted into \"political\nquarantine,\" stripping them of\ncivil rights and banning them\nfrom public activity. Previously\n74 politicians and army officers\nhad been quarantined for periods ranging from five to 10\nyears.\nCritics, whether for art or literature, have their own idea of\nwhat constitutes excellence. In\nthe B.C. finals of the Dominion\nDrama Festival at Kamloops,\nwon by the North Kamloops PTA\nTheatre Group the play presented was Shelagh Delaney's \"A\nTaste of Honey.\"\nThis, said the adjudicator,\nEsse W. Ljungh, supervisor of\ndrama for the CBC was a moving, pathetic story and in many\ncases the audience had not realized the depth and pathos of\nthe story which tells about a\nteenager, the illegitimate product of her mother's profession.\nIt was a tormenting drama of\nlife and the desolate loneliness\nof youth, but stubbornly brave\nabout it. He described it as a\nmoving and pathetic story an\nhe admired the author for writing it.\nThe shock values, according to\nthe adjudicator, are the fact the\ngirl became pregnant by a\nNegro and that the language is\nearthy\u2014earthy is a synonym for\ndisgusting. I'm not surprised\nthat Mrs. Gaglardi, to quote the\nheadline in The Province, found\nthe play \"too earthy\", and she\nwalked out. I've no doubt I\nshould also have done so and\nhowever well presented I should\nnot have liked the subject. Why\nshould I? I touched the fringe of\nthe sordid when I was in the\narmy. My room mates were\nships stewards from Southampton, excellent soldiers no doubt,\nbut their conversation took only\none form, well described by one\nman as sex for breakfast, dinner and tea.\nMost people who read or attend plays unconsciously identify themselves with the characters depicted and no doubt many\nof the Kamloops people imagined\nthemselves participators in the\nreal drama. I'm quite sure they\nwould not like the slums in reality or the people who inhabit\nthem, nor do 1 think the critic\nwould be at home in the company of prostitutes and homosexuals in a Manchester slum.\nNor do I think that teenagers in\nthe slums are \"sexually confused individuals\" who need understanding and affection and\nneither does Robert Fabian of\nScotland Yard, who paints them\nfar less glamorously as the despicable people that they are.\nI feel that there are some subjects which should not be made\nthe subject of plays. It is contrary to public morals and decency to do so. It is not a matter of censorship but of a high\nmoral standard of authors and\ncritics. There would be an outcry if a school teacher read this\nplay to (his class and if the\nmorals of the young should be\npreserved so should those of\nadults.\nWhat 1 object to is that the\nmore loathsome the subject the\nmore readily the critics praise\na play and what is most distressing is that no one disagrees\nwith them. From the heights of\ntheir sublime conceit they look\ndown on those who do not like\nsuch plays-and it is a brave\nperson, indeed, like Mrs. Gaglardi, who gets up and leaves.\nEvil communications still corrupt and there Is no reason to\nsuppose that any one person in\nthe audience improved his morals by contemplating the negation of virtues in the slums.\nIf to be adult is to like sordid dramas then 1 would prefer\nto be a child and like pretty\nfairy tales. They, at least, do\nnot leave a nasty taste in the\nmouth.\nHUBERT\nLONDON (CP) - The Queen\nand Prince Philip, ending their\nvisit to the Antipodes Tuesday,\nhave received an almost unanimous accolade from newspapers here.\nBut the 37-day royal tour to\nNew Zealand and Australia\ncame under searching scrutiny\nas correspondents wrote of\nchanging attitudes among the\npeople, particularly in Australia.\nNorman Riley, expressing\nwhat appears a consensus\namong the tour reporters, says\nin The Daily Telegraph it is\nclear fewer people turned out to\nsee the Queen than on her tour\nnine years ago, the first visit to\nAustralia by a reigning monarch.\n\"Any glib attempt to assess\nthe tour by the box office\nmethod of counting heads\nseems to me to miss the whole\nspirit of the Queen's 35,000-\nmile engagement,\" Riley adds.\nLESS FORMAL TRIP\nThe tour was organized\u2014by\ndirect instructions from the\nQueen\u2014on a much less formal\nbasis than the 1953-54 affair and\nalso received television coverage for the first time, enabling\nsome folk to view proceedings\nfrom their living rooms.\nRiley writes: \"The success ot\nthe tour stands out clearly . . .\nin an atmosphere little understood at home. Australia's regard for Britain has a strange\nJekyll-and-Hyde quality. Love\nturns to hate and back again in\na trice.\n\"Australians were convinced\nthat the only purpose of the tour\nwas to provide some kind of a\nsop when it seemed certain that\nBritain would join the Common\nMarket, and about 18 per cent\nof Australia's export trade\nwould be placed in jeopardy.\"\nBut when President de Gaulle\nblocked Britain's entry, Australians promptly went \"looking\nfor a rope to lynch\" the Frenchman for his \"effrontery.\"\nENHANCED IMAGE\nWilliam Fitter earlier wrote\nin The Observer that the tour\nwas \"100 per cent successful.\"\nThe Queen, by her dignity and\nintense interest in Australian\nlife, and enhanced the royal\nimage and perhaps in future the\nmonarch, or the prince, would\nfind it possible to visit Australia each year.\nBuckingham Palace officials\nhave for the most part maintained a wary silence on the\npress stories from the tour but\nthey quickly denied a report in\nthe Sunday newspaper, The\nPeople, that the palace would\nlaunch an investigation into the\nQueen's comparatively cool reception.\nRunning through the stories\nwere suggestions that royal visits could well take a different\nform, with the Queen presiding\nat some important event, such\nas the opening of Parliament,\nrather than undertaki\\! gruelling cross-country trips.\nBLAMES ECM\nLord Beaverbrook's Daily Express said the tour was one of\nthe quietest on record and\nblamed Britain's wooing of the\nCommon   Market,   which   had\ncaused deep changes in Australia's attitude toward the\nmother country.\nUnder the question \"has the\nroyal tour been a flop?\" The\nDaily Mirror ran comments\nfrom Australian editors. Here\nare samples:\nColin Bingham, Sydney Morning Herald: \"It is nonsense to\ndescribe the royal tour as a\nflop. If the crowds were smaller\nhundreds of thousands followed\nthe proceedings on TV with the\ngreatest interest, even emotion.\"\nCecil Edwards, Herald, Melbourne:\n\"The tour has been neither a\nresounding success nor a dreadful flop. It was to have been an\ninformal tour, but it wasn't.\"\nJohn Wakefield, Brisbane Telegraph:\n\"Is this tour a flop? No, and\nneither has It been a riotous\nsuccess. In Australia you just\ncan't put two people on show\nfor 37 days for the second time\nin nine years and expect the\nsame acclaim.\"\nBIBLE DIGEST\nH. B. Dean\n\"And the Lord said, behold\nthere is a place by me, and thou\nshall stand upon a rock: and It\nshall come to pass, while my\nglory passeth by, that I will\nput thee in a clift of the rock,\nand will cover thee with my\nhand while I pass by.\" Exodus\n33:21, 22.\nThere is a place where the\ndivine presence can be felt and\nevery man has a right to it,\nRCMP Lifts Silence  in Seeking\nTo Regain Public  Confidence\nOTTAWA (CP) - Commissioner C. W. Harvison of the\nRCMP says the question of\npublic confidence is the most\nimportant single issue facing\ntoday's police administrators\nand that \"we will continue to\nlose our battle against increasing crime until such time as\nwe have earned and enjoy the\nsupport and confidence of the\npublic.\"\nAt one time the RCMP had\na policy of refusing information\nto the press and this was re\nsponsible for some growing criticism and resentment. Now\nnews was given freely to the\npress. North American police\nforces generally are also \"faced\nwith the problem of growing resentment, hostility and criti-\na falling off of public support\nand confidence.\"\nThe commissioner spoke in\nHamburg, West Germany, to an\nInternational Press Institute seminar on Responsible Crime Reporting.\nA text of his address was is-\nInterpreting the News\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian   Press   Staff   Writer\nPresident Kennedy returned\nfrom Costa Rica with assurances that the future of Latin\nAmerica is safe for democracy.\nHe may have spoken too soon.\nRumblings in Latin America\nraise the possibility of new\ncrises and new opportunities\nfor the Communists.\nRiots, revolution and bloodshed are commonplace occurrences among the Latin Americans and reports of political\ninstability and upsets raise no\neyebrows in Washington.\nThe Kennedy administration\nis in the midst of a deep quarrel with the strongman government of Haiti; the Guatemala\ngovernment claims it is being\nthreatened by a Communist\nplot; political strongmen are\nquarrelling over Argentina;\nReds are reported plotting sabotage in Chile and Venezuela.\nAll these may be labelled\nmere  incidents  in  comparison\nHitchcock Film Makes\nTerrorists of Bird-Life\nA Politician thinks of his next Election\nA Statesman of the next generation.\n\\\\j miii rrniuren iiymiiirtir, inc., uu.>. nunii riKnin rtmrvfn.\n\"I told you I wasn't ready for marriage when\ngot married!\"\nwe\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (API\u2014\"What's\nthe matter with all the birds?\"\nasks a character in Alfred\nHitchcock's new film, The\nBirds.\nWhat is the matter, indeed?\nSea Gulls peck at boats at\nBodega Bay, Calif. Others\nswoop down on a children's\nbirthday party. A flight of sparrows invade a house by the\nchimney. Whole henhouses refuse to eat.\nSomething's got to give, and\nit's the humans. The birds come\nflying at them like a plague of\noversized, carnivorous locusts.\nHitchcock plays the terror for\nall it's worth, and experts estimate that to be $12,000,000 at\nthe box office. The Birds seems\ncertain to be the most successful and most talked-about movie\nof the season.\nHitchcock starts the buildup\nin the first scene, with a flock\nof gulls wheeling over Union\nSquare in San Francisco. He\nfollows the heroine (Tippi Hed-\nren) and hero into a bird shop\nfor their first, antagonistic\nmeeting. The suspense builds\nwith errant bird calls and occasional shots of menacing crows.\nThen the deluge.,\nPECK OUT EYES\nHe spares the viewer nothing.\nWomen and children are repeatedly attacked by the vicious\nbirds. A chicken farmer is killed\nin his own bedroom, his eyes\npicked out.\nTerror? Yes. Mosochism?\nPerhaps. But movie audiences\nhave a taste for this sort of\nthing dating back to Frankenstein and Dracula and Phantom\nof the Opera.\nThere is one magnificent example at Hitchcock's wonderful\nway with a camera. That is a\npanic. From this bird's - eye\nview we see the animals as they\ngather and commence their attack.\nOther scenes are adoitly\nschemed for the maximum effect of fright: The heroine\ntrapped in a telephone booth as\nthe birds fly at her; the mass\nof croaking crows perched in a\nplayground waiting for school to\nlet out.\nThe birds, aided by some of\nWalt Disney's special effects\nmagicians, perform ably. So do\nthe humans, including Rod Taylor, Jessica Tandy and Suzanne\nPleshette.\nwith the crisis that confronts\nthe biggest of them all\u2014Brazil.\nThis country of wealth and\npoverty, of large Canadian and\nU.S. investments and of great\nnatural resources potential is\ntrapped by raging inflation and\nheavy external debt.\nWORKS BOTH SIDES\nCompounding the Brazilian\nproblem is what the U.S. considers an attempt by the Brazilian administration to work both\nsides of the political street. The\nKennedy government is highly\nsuspicious of Brazilian President Joao Goulart. Kennedy\nbelieves Goulart is an opportunist, flirting with Moscow as\nmuch as with Washington.\nYet the U.S. government\nmust keep bailing out Brazil\nfrom its financial problems.\nCollapse of the Brazilian administration could lead to a\nCommunist takeover.\nIt was no accident that a\ncongressional committee was\ngiven a U.S. government report\nsaying there is Communist infiltration in the Goulart administration, although the state department later attempted to\nminimize the importance of this\nreport.\nThe crisis in Brazil is not\nover. The country needs foreign capita] to keep its economy rolling and to cover its external debts. The flow of such\ncapital is likely to be restrained as long as there is\ndoubt about political stability\nin Brazil.\nFRUSTRATES AIMS\nWhile Kennedy keeps feeding\nGoulart financial aid, Goulart\nkeeps frustrating Kennedy's\naims for hemispheric solidarity\nagainst Cuba.\nKennedy came back from the\nsix - country Central American\nmeeting at San Jose predicting\nCuba one day will be free, but\nhe presented no blueprint for\nfreedom. He said steps are being taken to halt Latin American traffic in Cuban arms and\nwould-be saboteurs. But even\nas he spoke. Cuban sympathizers planned a big rally in Brazil.\nIt may be a final touch of\nirony that even while Kennedy\npredicted increased Latin\nAmerican friendship and faithfulness in the future, he had to\ntell his countrymen he .had\npostponed a trip to Brazil and\nwould not be making such a\ntrip this year.\nsued   by   RCMP   headquarters\nhere.\nUntil recently, the RCMP was\nknown as the silent force and\nits members were forbidden to\ngive information on any subject to the press, Commissioner\nHarvison says.\nLED TO CRITICISM\nThe RCMP received much excellent publicity for its romantic\nwestern and northern Canada\nexploits but the policy of silence .led to pVess resentment\nand criticism of the RCMP as\n\"something less than efficient,\nmodern police force.\"\nThe commissioner says many\nauthorities have tried to isolate\nreasons for mounting opposition\nto law enforcement but \"more\nand more, the police seem to\nbe regarded as a body somehow\nseparate from the public and\nbent on imposing disciplines\nand restrictions of their own\nmaking.\"\nA few years ago the RCMP\ndecided to change its policy of\nsilence. It consulted journalists\nand began revisions so that\nnews now can be given out at\ndetachment level.\nNewspaper men also have\nbeen brought in as part of the\nregular RCMP training system,\nproviding guidance on what reporters expect of police officers.\nThe RCMP feels that headway has been made in solving\npress-police differences but that\nmuch more can he done.\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMarch 28, 1963 . . .\nSpanish loyalists surrendered the capital of Madrid\n24 years ago\u2014in 1939\u2014in\nthe final token of collapse\nbefore the Nationalist forces\nled by Gen. Franco. The\nSpanish Civil War broke out\nin 1936 between the republican government forces and\nrevolutionary forces under\nFranco but the strife gained\ninternational flavor with\nGerman and Italian volunteers joining Franco, and\nRussian, communist and\nanti-fascist volunteers fighting for the government.\n1944 \u2014 Canadian humorist\nStephen Leacock died.\n1799 \u2014 The Austrians defeated the French at the\nBattle of Verona.\nCivil Defence preparations\nwill enable a community or a\ncountry to better withstand natural disasters. In tlie case ol\nHurricane Caria nearly 700,001!\npeople were moved from then\ncoastal homes to safety to inlanii\npoints.\n\u2014\n \u25a0    \u25a0\nGranite Road\nWl Packs Two\nCartons Layettes\nTwo cartons of layettes were\npacked at the home of Mrs. G.\nR. Pickering by members of\nthe Granite Road Women's Institute  Tuesday   afternon.\nThis work was planned at a\nmeeting of the Institute held\nnl the home of Mrs. W. W.\nWhite, 214 Silica Street, recently, attended by 17 members and\none guest and conducted by\nMrs. A. Farenholtz.\nThe layettes, which were dis\nplayed at this meeting, will be\nsent to the Unitarian Services\ncommittee.\nThe Wl discussed plans to\nform a badminton club for the\nteenagers.\n\\ The sunshine report was given\nby Mrs. B. A. Pickering, and\nthe Unitarian services report by\nMrs. A. G. Smith.\nThe district conference, to be\nheld in Kaslo in May, was discussed. Delegates will be named\nlater.\nMrs. J. Mondini and Mrs. G.\nR. Pickering were cohostesses\nat the meeting.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n-----\n\u25a0  ,  .  \u25a0\n^^^\\^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\u2014^^^\u2014^^^^\u2014^^^^!f^^.\n\u25a0\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^m9\n-?1$\nGuild Votes\n$10 Assessment\nBALFOUR \u2014 Sixty dollars\nwas voted to assessment when\nthe Guild to St. Michael and\nAll Angels Church met at the\nhome of Mrs. R. Ramsay.\nA report was given on the successful pot luck supper held in\nMarch.\nTentative date set for the\nchurch bazaar was June 8.\nChurch cleaners for April will\nbe Mn. N. Murray and Mrs.\nR. Ringuis.\nContest winner was Mrs. L.\nStainton.\nAbout\nThe Town\nSilverton Gives\n$51 for Slocan\nHospital Ward\nNEW DENVER - At the last\nmonthly meeting of the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital Board, R.\nPeachey presented the board\nwith a donation of $51 from the\npeople of Silverton.\nThis money was raised by voluntary collections and is earmarked for the new children's\nward.\n(GIT Conference\nTo Be Held in\nLocal Churches\nA CGIT conference to be held\nin Nelson April 18, 19 and 20 will\nbe convened by the First Bap\ntist, Fairview United, St.,Paul's\nTrinity United and Presbyterian\nchurches.\nExpected are 200 girls from\nEast and West Kootenay.\nTheme is \"Here Am I, Send\nMe.\"\nApril 18 will be registration\nday and in the evening visitors\nwill be entertained at St. Paul's-\nTrinity Church, carnival-style.\nApril 19 there will be handicraft\nsessions and interest groups. In\nthe evening at Fairview United\nthere will be a banquet and\nskits.\nSaturday, at St. Paul's-Trinity,\nthe girls will be entertained by\nthe Chancel Players, who will\nperform \"Circle Beyond Fear.\"\nThey will have their own service\nof worship and luncheon.\nA visitor from Victoria was\namong top scorers at the Monday night match point bridge\ngame held in the Hume Hotel,\nWith 11 tables in play, H. D.\nDawson of Victoria and his\ndaughter, Mrs. W. S. Ramsay of\nNelson, were first in the east and\nwest winning pairs. First in the\nnorth and south winning pairs\nwere Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nStack. Other winners in east and\nwest were Mr. and Mrs. J.\nCramb, second; Mrs. G. R. Norris and Mrs. J. M. Morley, third,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Tom Whitehead, ln north and south,, other\nwinning pairs were Mrs. Janet\nCoates and Cliff Carne, second;\nMrs. E. Hallett and Mrs. Gladys\nDauphinais, third; Mr. and Mrs.\nF. E. Parson of Salmo, fourth.\n*   *   *\nThe Junior Auxiliary to Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nmet at the home of Mrs. P. H.\nDutton, 501 Cedar Street, Monday night. Plans were made for\nthe annual apple Blossom Dance\nto be held in June. Guest at the\nmeeting was Mrs. Symington.\nParents Club\nSees Film on\nRetarded Child\nWILLOW POINT - At the\nMarch meeting of the Willow\nPoint Parents Club it was learned that the recent bingo night\nhad netted $33.60 (and that the\nmonth of hot dog sales (profit\nfor Red Cross donation) was also\nsuccessful.\nMarch 28 is to be a film night\nat the school with everyone invited.\nIt was decided that a possible\ndate for the sports day might be\nMay 17.\nMr. Shorn advised the parents\nthat many of his pupils are interested in chess, and doing well,\nand are exchanging games with\nstudents in Nelson.\nA film on retarded children\ncalled \"The Eternal Child\"\nwas shown. Guest speaker\nMrs. J. Bickert, gave an interesting talk on the various\nthings being done for handicapped children in this area.\nRefreshments were served.\nChurch School Workshop\nConference Held at Trail\nConsideration of the structure\nand function of the church school\nwithin the framework of the\nchurch was one of the purposes\nof a workshop conference held at\nEast Trail United Church during the weekend. Rev. Rodney\nBooth welcomed those attending.\nResource leaders were Rev.\nIvan Cumming of the Board of\nChristian Education of the United  Church,   from   Vancouver,\nand Mrs. G. W. Strong, Christian\neducation director at St. Paul's-\nTrinity United Church in Nelson.\nSecond purpose of the conference was to provide the opportunity for active teachers to observe actual class teaching,\nwith demonstrations given in the\nafternoon. The morning was\nspent in preparation for what\nmight be expected of the demon- j\nstartions and following the mod\nel classes, evaluation was given.\nThe session drew 85 interested\npersons from the district encompassing Grand Forks to Nelson.\nAttending from Nelson were\nRev H. R. Whitmore, Austin\nFraser, E. S. Jorgensen, J. W.\nSteed, Mrs. David Maloney,\nMrs. L. L. Laithwaite, Mrs. F.\nW. Rapley. Mrs. R. W. Huestis,\nMrs. T. Hubbard, Mrs. Strong\nand Miss Claire Marlatt.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 1963 \u2014 5\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK - Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Law had as their guests for\na few days, their nephew and\nhis wife, Mr. and Mrs. Weins of\nSteinbach, Manitoba.\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. Phelps\nand children spent the weekend\nat Crawford Bay, the guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Phelps.\nMrs. L. Briggeman, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. R. Seaman and son of Trail, were the\nSunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Briggeman.\nW. (Bill) Briggeman of Trail\nspent the weekend at his sum\nmer home in Deer Park. He\nhad as his guests Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Bunn and son Paul, also of\nTrail.\nMr. and Mrs. Caesar D'An-\ndrea of Trail were the weekend\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver\nD'Andrea. Other guests were\nMr. and Mrs. Richard D'Andrea\nand children of Glenmerry.\nEXPORTS HERBS\nCzechoslovakia exports some\n200 types of medicinal herbs to,\namong others, Canada and the\nUnited States.\nSensation\nWomen's Pump\nHigh and illusion heels, in beige, white, black patent.\nSizes AA, B \u2014 6'i to 10.\nNew Spring Shoes now in.\nSHOP EARLY AND AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nEst. 1902\n\u00a7\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u20ac\nThank You Pins\nPresented to\nTwo Mothers\nTwo \"thank you\" pins were\npresented at a meeting of the\nFourth Nelson First Baptist\nScout and Cub Mothers' Auxiliary held at the home ot Mrs. J.\nS. Hamilton, 109 Morgan Street,\nMonday.\nThe presentations were made\nto Mrs. R. Roberts, who is leaving Nelson, and to Mrs. G. C.\nBurns, for her service as\nsecretary-treasurer.\nReports were given from the\nrecent Queen Scout banquet.\nThere were three scouts from\nFourth Nelson honored at this\naffair. They were David Hamilton, Robert Gustafson and Terry\nRoberts.\nMr. Hamilton spoke to the\nmothers on scout organization\nand work of the group committee.\nCohostesses were Mrs. R. W.\nHuestis and Mrs. L. C. Curiston.\nCubsr Scouts,\nFathers Have\nAnnual Dinner\nPROCTER \u2014 Procter and\nHarrop scouts and cubs held\ntheir annual father and son banquet in the Procter Hall.\nThe banquet table was set for\n76 and turkey dinner was served\nj by the mothers of the scouts and\nj cubs.\n' Ross Young was master of\nceremonies and guest speakers\n\u25a0 were J. Phelps of the fish and\nj game department and Corporal\n! Nelson Hindle of the RCMP.\n| Program for the evening included competitive games play-\ni ed by fathers and sons and a\ndemonstration by the scouts in\n| first aid and the cubs in knot\nj lying.\nI Two films, one on fishing and\n! hunting and the other on skiing\n' were shown by W. Henke.\nj It was learned with regret that\n! the Scoutmaster R. Gleam will\nj be leaving Procter. Mr. Gleam\nhas given much lime and effort\nas scout leader.\njF^k    The Manager of your Safeway store\n';   ft *J\nhelped plan this great savings event!\nM&M\nSAFEWAY\nSTORE MANAGER S SALE!\nCheck your 4-Page Flyer, effective March 28th to April 3rd for\nmany great values... Quality and Variety.\nTea Bags\nCosino. Refreshing and\neconomical, Pkg. of 100\n69c\nLayer Cake a*^^-   69c\nStrawberry Jam *-i 89c\nSalad Dressing -    49c\nChuck Beef Roasts\nor Round Bone Roast.\nCanada Choice, Canada Good.\nTomatoes\n14 oz. carton.\nPrices Effective\nMarch 28-\nApril 3.\nWe Reserve the\nRight  to  Limit\nQuantities\nf DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-\nliihsu n* 1r>fltl dompmtn.    J\nII      .    '1.     '\u201e\u2022!- M      i i     V -     MA  '      '.-,  ' i' ' **\n\u2022DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY \u2022DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-\nStarts Today -\nTerrific\nPIECE   GOODS\nAND  STAPLES\nSorry, No Phone, Mail or COD.\nSavings On These $1\nfor\n$1\nLinen Tea Towels\nTea towels; gay       3\nmulti stripes. 24x34.   3\nTerry Tea Towels\nCotton terry tea towels. Bright,\ncolorful 2       $ 1\ndesign.\nPillow Cases\nChinese hand-embroidered pillowcases. Good quality cotton. Cl\nIce blue embroidery. Pair       \u2014\nBath Towels\nDeep piled, absorbent cotton terry\ntowels. Assorted designs Cl\nand colors  '\nFacecloths\nGood quality terry facecloths. \u2014\nSolid colors or C        $1\nassorted designs.\nBath Mats\nWell looped cotton terry towel\nbath mats. Solid color embossed\ndesign. Easily JI\nwashed. . *\nPlastic Foam Squares\nI3xl3x3\/4. A\nDollar  Day   \u201e... ~\n18xlBxl3\/4.\nEach \t\nfor M\n        $1\nPlace Mats\nHand loomed place mats in heavy\ncotton. Bright shades \u2022% Cl\nof green, beige, pink. *\u25a0 for * '\nDrapery Squares\nLarge assortment of drapery\nsamples in 1-yard lengths. Floral\nor geometrical designs. Bark-\ncloth, fiberglass, cretonne and\nantique \u2022)        Cl\nsatin      aim for * '\nLADIES' WEAR\nCotton Pyjamas\nCapri style in flowered or CO\nprints. Sizes: S, M, L.        \"* \u2014\nTailored Cotton Pyjamas\nFlowered or print in pink Cl\nor blue. Sizes: S, M, L.       *\u2014\nRayon Briefs\nElastic or band leg style in assorted colors or white. Cello\npacked. Sizes: 3        Cl\nS, M, L.\nReg. 2.98\u2014\nCotton Slips\nFull slip with shadow panel, embroidered trim. C\"}\nSizes: 32 to 40.                    * \u2014\nCotton Haif Slips\n2 styles with shadow panels. Cl\nWhite only. Sizes: S, M. L.   * I\nReg.  1.98\u2014\nNylon Half Slips\nGood quality nylon in white Cl\nor colors. Sizes: S. M. L.      * I\nReg. $1\u2014Nylon  Briefs\nLace trim, in colors \u00b0\\       Cl\nor white. S, M. L.     *\u25a0 prs. * I\nNOTIONS\nEaster Eggs\nVk  oz.  foil  wrapped chocolate\negg in decorated mug. Cl\nEach  * \u25a0\nAnkle Socks\nRoll down cuff: super soft cotton. Nylon reinforced heel and\ntoe. Sizes 7 to 9. \u2022% Cl\nS-t-r-e-t-c-h-y. \u2022*\u2022 prs. * '\nSubstandard Anklets\nAll nylon stretchies. White, olive,\npink, yellow, pow- 2 Cl\nder, navy. Sizes 6-11.  3 prs.     *\nNylon Hose\nFirst quality. 400 needle, seam-\nfree. Beige shades.  J       Cl\nSizes 9 to lO'\/i.\n\u25a0 prs.\nSubstandard Nylons\n400 needle seamless mesh in beige\nshades. Sizes: J       Cl\n9 to 11      3 prs. * I\nAssorted Toiletries\nBuy  now  and  save.   Dry skin\ncream, hand cream, <j Cl\ncold cream. Sale,     aim for * I\nAssorted Cosmetics\nNail Polish, Lipstick, Talcum,\nRoll-On Deodorant, MacGregor\nShaving Cream. \u25a0> Cl\nSale - 3 for * I\nFancy Tea Aprons\nChoose from a large \u00abJ       C1\nselection of colors.    *. prs.T \u2022\nAll-Purpose Wool\n3 and 4-ply. 1-ounce 3        Cl\nballs. Asstd. colors.   3 for * I\nOven Mitts\nColorful and \u2022%       Cl\npractical. \u2022*\u25a0 prs.T I\nCostume Jewellery\nNecklaces, pins,        y       Cl\nearrings.\nCHILDREN'S WEAR\nBoys' Sport Shirts\nLong sleeves, in colorful plaids of\nred, green, blue and char- Cl\ncoal. Sizes 3, 4, 5, 6, 6X.       * I\nBoys' Athletic Briefs\nFull elastic waistband; fine while\ncotton, double seat. J Cl\nSizes 2, 4, 6. 3 for * I\nBoys' Sweat-Shirts\nSoft, fleeced-linsd and with long\nsleeves. Fancy front pattern. \u2014\nColors: white, blue, maize, Cl\naqua. Sizes: 2, 4, 6. * I\nToddlers' Rayon Panties\nSmartly styled for comfort and\ngood fit. Assorted c Cl\ncolors. Sizes: 2, 4, 6. mf for *^ I\nInfants' Toddlers\nReg. 1.49, Nursery patterned cord\ncotton in pinks, blue and aqua.\nSnap crotch. Sizes: 12 mos., Cl\n18 mos., 24 mos. * I\nInfants' Vests\nSubs of 69c and 79c line. Assorted\nstyles in tie side, button front\nand pullover. Fine white combed\ncotton. 3 mos. to \"J Cl\n24 mos. *- for * \u2022\nInfants' Nighties\nSubs of 98c line. Soft flannelette\nwith   smocked   or   embroidered\nyoke. Pastel shades of pink, blue\nand white. \u2022*       Cl\nSpecial\nCHILDREN'S WEAR\nInfants' Baby Blankets\nSubs of 1.39 line. Soft eiderdown\nby Esmond in colors of pink, blue,\nmaize. Size: Cl\n30\" x 40\" *l\nTraining Pants\nAbsorbent and colorful in fancy\nprints. Good fitting.  2       Cl\nSizes: 2, 4,\nGirls' Rayon  Panties\nLace trimmed and smartly styled\nfor the young miss. Assorted pastel shades; prints.     A       Cl\nSizes 8, 10, 12, 14.\nGirls' Tailored Skirt\nFull cut short sleeve styles. Sanforized and machine washable.\nPlains and checks. Some with Ivy\nLeague collar. Plain colors in\npink, blue, yellow and white. C1\nSizes 7, 8, 10, 12, 14. * I\nCotton T-Shirts\nLadies' T-shirts in a broken assortment of styles and sizes in\ncotton knit. Cl\nSizes: S, M, L. * I\nLadies' Blouses\nGood  quality  cotton   blouses  in\nplain and checks. Cl\nSizes: 32 to 38. . * I\nHOUSEWARES\nWindow Washers\nLong or short handle window\nwashers. Rubber scraper on one\nside and sponge on the other.\nIdeal for your Cl\nSpring cleaning.    * I\nMeasuring Cups\nSet  of  4  aluminum   measuring\ncups with coppertone Cl\nhandles. '\nMeat Board\nWooden meat board; can be used\nfor pounding Cl\nsteak, etc.       * \u25a0\nCheese Board\nWooden cheese board: includes a\ncheese knife and can be hung on\nthe wall when not Cl\nin use.   \u25a0\nJelly Moulds\nIndividual  plastic  jelly  moulds.\nLovely assorted colors and come\nin two shapes.       1 \")        Cl\nSpecial \u25a0 \u2014 for * \u2022\nCoffee Percolator\nAluminum coffee percolator. Cl\nHandy 2-cu psize. * '\nFrypans\n10-inch chrome plated aluminum\nfrypan. Black\nwooden handle.\nWaste Baskets\nPlastic, cleans easily.\nAssorted colors.\nSalts and  Peppers\nWooden  salts  and  peppers  with\ngold top. Very handy size    Cl\nfor kitchen use. * I\nDeep Fryer\nAluminum deep fryer with rack.\nIdeal for fish Cl\nand chips. .. * \u2022\nCola Glasses\n6-oz. cola glasses. 1 f\\       C1\nPlain only. I U for * I\nDecorated Glasses\n9-oz. shell type glass, decorated\nin attractive \u2022y       Cl\n- No Deliveries\nValues!\nHOUSEWARES\nLaundry Baskets\nRound style laundry baskets C1\nin assorted colors.   * I\nMEN'S WEAR\nMen's Shirts\nMen's athletic shirts to match\nbriefs. Sizes: f       Cl\nS, M, L -\u00ab- for * I\nMen's Briefs\nMen's Swiss  rib quality  cotton\nbriefs. Double seat.   J       Cl\nWhite only. S, M, L.  ai. for * I\nMen's Work Gloves\nMen's taskall work gloves. Grain\ncowhide   palm.   Striped   cotton\nflannel back. One size.       Cl\nReg. 1.79 .........    *\\\nMen'sT-Shirts\nMen's short sleeve T-shirts with\nnylon non-sag neckband. Sub-\nstandards. If firsts would be 1.50.\nWhite only. Cl\nSizes: S, M. L. \u25bc I\nMen's Work Socks\nMen's 2'i-lb. grey wool twist. \u2014\nWhite heel \u2022)       Cl\nand toe. fc for * I\nMen's Dress Hose\nMen's first quality ankle hose in\nassorted patterns and colors. \u2014\nSizes WA to 12. Cl\nReg. 1.50 * I\nMen's Handerchiefs\nMen's first quality cotton hankies\nwith 'A\" hemstitched \u00a3 Cl\nborders. Plio bag. w for * I\nMen's Dress Hose\nMen's wool and nylon: sized and\nstretch. Assorted patterns and\ncolors. First quality and slight\nsub-standards. t       C1\n$1\n$1\npastel shades  I for\nDollar Day\ns prs.\nBOYS' WEAR\nBoys' Sport Shirts\nBoys' short sleeve cotton sport\nshirts. Collar stays, pre-shrunk.\nAssorted prints Cl\nand colors.        '\nBoys' Athletic Briefs\nBoys'   Swiss  rib   quality   cotton\nbriefs. Single seat, taned seams,\npre-shrunk. 3       Cl\nSizes: S, M, L. 3 for * I\nBoys' Athletic Shirts\nBoys'  Swiss  rih  quality  cotton\nathletic shirts to match  briefs.\nTaped seams. 2        Cl\nSizes: S. M, L. 3 for * I\nBoys' Dress Hose\nBoys'   fancy   ankle   hose;   first\nquality; assorted colors and patterns.  All crimpset   *\\        Cl\nnylon. Sizes %-Wk.   aim prs.     a\nSHOES\nJet Heel Style Shoes\nGrowing girls' or women's style\nshoes. Dressy but low jet heels.\nMostly blue or orange. JA\nSizes: 5 to 9. * \u25a0\nCasual Moccasins\nWomen's light weight moccasins.\nSelf leather soles. Orange, green,\nbeige and white. Cl\nBroken size range.\nINCORPORATED   2r?  MAY 1670\n \u2014-\u2014: .- \u25a0 ,.,.    \u25a0\u201e,..\u25a0..-...\u2022 ,\n~ ~\n\u25a0--;---T-7~ -..-;;.    .,v\nQUALITY!   SERVICE!  VALUES!\nBONELESS\nVEAL\nROASTS\nChoice\nQuality\nBACON SQUARES   3Q\nThe economical bacon treat.     *%_W    Aw\nIb.\nSIDE BACON\nFirst grade, sliced, rindless.   1 Ib. pkg.\n59\nea.\nOVERWAITEA COFFEE 59* *\nINSTANT COFFEE ft---* 99*\n400's\nButter 2ibs$t 09\nOverwaitea,      a^kmm \u25a0 \u2022 ~\\~w   AW\nScotties Tissue     2for49c\n4 49c\n ib.19c\n3 29<\nKraft Dinners\nMargarine\nDelmar \t\nDog Food\nDr. Ballard's\nShortening\nJewel.\nSyrup\nLumber Jack, 32 ex.  \t\nGinger Snaps\n3 lb.tin 99C\ne,29\u00a3\nProctor & Gamble\nIvory Soap\nPersanel Size.\n12 for 99c\nGiant Ivory Soap\n79c\nCrest Toothpaste\nEconomy Size.\nS9C eacfe\nBaker's.  12 oz.\n2\u00bb49\u00a3\n6\u00b049c\nBreck Hair Special   $1 AQ\nSlinmnnn   nnA   Snrav.   Reaular   \u00a32.54   _   ^*   \u2022  ^\u2014*r       \u2014^\nShiriffs Jellies\nAssorted flavours.\nRobin Hood\nFLOUR JO ib. 89t\nCAKE MIXES      2 * 69i\nICING White or choc 2 tor 49<\nPIE   CfxUaJI   Lar9e package, ea. \\$y\"\nShampoo and Spray.  Regular $2.54\nCARROTS\nPOTATOES\nGrand Forks Gems\nBETTER BUYS\nCABBAGE\nHeinz Pickles\nSweet Mix\n32 oz.\n49c eacSl\nSweet Wafer\n32 oz,\n49c each\nKosher Dills\n40 oz.\n49c each\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS\nTHURS., MAR. 28, 1963\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nYour\nIndividual\nHoroscope\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according,\nto the stars,\nFor Friday, March 29, 1963\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 Trigger action to\nblend with top offerings of the\nday, worthy of your competence. Add finesse to make\nthings pleasanter, smoother. Kill\nany boredom wilh some new\nInterests.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 In your anxiety to tackle Big '\nprojects, don't neglect the 'little'\ndetails which so often spell the\n'ifference between success and\noilure. Be discriminating.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n-A day full of opportunities. Be\n;ure to grasp the best and make\nihe most of them. Don't anticipate problems.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Eliminate flaws, settle difficulties before going to work or\nto enjoy festivities. Handle\nchores promptly. Give rein to\nyour liveliest hopes.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 You can be as discreet as a\nwhisper, an antidote to gloom.\nMay it be so today! Keep mistakes to minimum and follow\nyour better instincts to chalk\nup a delightful record.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo! \u2014 Things will not\ncome to a conclusion now without Your aid. Work them out\nquietly, but firmly; smoothly,\nwith tact. Invest time in cultural interests, loo; they slimu-\nlate incentive.\nSEPTEMBER 24 lo OCTOBER\n23 (Libra! \u2014 Apply a corrective\nformula to matters that need\nrevision. A new format may be\nthe key to Ihe success for which\nyou have been looking. A bright\nday is in the making.\nOCTOBER 24 lo NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 A day that will\nbe more benefic than may appear at first. Dig deep, and\nstay long wilh the task of finding surest means, ablest tools,\nsafest coordinates.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittariu) \u2014 Do not\nleave matters in the air, nor\nbegin more than you can reason-\nably finish. Confusion and hectic, unwanted hassles and protests can arise if you are too\nhasty or shoot for too much.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn! \u2014 Firsts for your\nschedule: proper readjustments;\nupdating outmoded regulations,\npractices; acquisition of knowledge. Avoid pessimism, supersensitivity.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius' \u2014 Advice to\nScorpio also pertinent here. New\nmethods are worth looking into.\nAvoid lack of confidence and\nover-pressing.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces)\u2014Day may begin more\nslowly in some respects than\nyou would wish, bul you may be\ntoo anxious lo get through matters for Ihe week-end. Be objective about methods, in altitude.\nYOU BORN TODAY are far-\nseeing, a brain-worker; instinctively know how to hit the nail\non Ihe head, please a group,\nattack a new subject. But you\nmay forfeit final gains or lop-\nmost attainment al limes by not\nfollowing through on a project\nwith as much vim as you start.\nMany scientists were born in\nAries; also compsers, designers\nof \"radical\" architecture, clothes, etc. Birlhdale: John Tyler,\n10th U.S.A. President.\nNo  Evidence of\nSex Clubs\nSeen in Canada\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canadian\npostal authorities said today\nthere is no evidence that the\nmails in Canada are being used\nby sex clubs formed by married couples for the purpose of\nwife swapping.\nThey were commenting on n\nstatement in Washington Tuesday by Henry Montague, chief\npostal inspector of the United\nStales, to a House of Representatives appropriations subcommittee.\nMr. Montague said some\nAmericans reply to ads in questionable magazines and through\ncorrespondence with others develop clubs. They then exchanged obscene correspondence and obscene pictures and\nsometimes arranged meetings\n'or wife swapping and sex parlies.\nDENMARK Jt.ES LOW\nDenmark is such a flat land\n'hat the Danes named a 482-\nfoot hill Himmelbjerget \u2014 Sky\nMountain.\n '\u2022   \" ~~^~ -^r-;---\u2014---.-\u25a0- -  ;      ; \u2014 \u2014-        ...mm,\u2014,   ,,, JJ.\u201eJJM|}pg\n777\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28,1963\u20147\nDOOR OPENING SPECIALS\nLIMITED QUANTITIES.\nSHOP  EARLY!\nStove V Counter\nMATS\nHeat-proof all over,\naluminum top, rubber\nbottom.\nea.\n2.49\nSilverware\nDrainer\nKingsize utensil troy\nplus 4 silverware sections for air drying.\nWill stand alone or attaches to drainers.\nea.\n89c\nSink Liner\nMATS\nIdeal for the protection\nof dishes ond glassware. Fits large bowls.\nRaised undersurface,\nperforations for draining.\nea.\n1.69\nPad and\nCover Sets\nPad of heat - resistant\nyellow durafoam, with\ngold   color   silicone\ncover.\nea.\n1.49\nSIMPSONS-SEARS\n.:  7i\nIroning\nBoard\nAll-steel board, fully -\nadjustable to 36\" high.\nRubber tipped legs lock\nfor firm support, attractive perforated top.\nea.\n8.98\nBulk\nOil\nHeavy-duty No. 10, 20\nand 30. Bring your own\ncontainer. Reg. 39fS a\nqt.\n\u00ab29c\nPlate\nRack\nStores china in safety.\nCushion - coated rack,\nrubber feet; 4 sections.\nHolds service for 6.\nea.\n1.49\nFREE\nCOFFEE and DONUTS\nToday Only\nCIGARS for All the Men\nToday Only\nSALE STARTS TODAY FOR 3 DAYS ONLY\nTILE\nSALE\nStandard weight Lino Tile in Jaspe and\nMarbelized Patterns.\nEach O\nLimited quantities\nin stock. \t\n(Do a 9x12 room for $19.20, plus cement.)\nFloor Coverings\n9x12' Foam-Backed AXMINSTER\nRUGS. Good patterns to choose\nfrom. Reg. 74.44. CA QO\nSale price    . OT.QO\n9'xl2' AXMINSTER RUGS with separate felt undercushion. C \") QQ\nReg. 69,95. Sale price OA..OO\nNEW LOW SALE PRICES on Small\nQuantities of VINYL LINO ln slock\nat our local warehouse.\nMirror Finish VINYL TILE. Lovely\ngroup of colors; equally good tor one\nor two color floors. ' 17\nReg. .20 each. Sale price, ea. \u2022 \u25a0 '\nRepeat offer on \"TRILAN\", the\ncarefree CARPET. Reg. 7 CO\n8.95 per sq. yd. Sale price lam**'\n9'xl2' RUG FOR ONLY 90.99\nSoft Goods\nCASUALS. Assorted 1   QQ\ncolors. Pair      '\u2022''\nSLIP-ONS. Assorted 1   QQ\ncolors. Pair . '\u2022''\nFLATTIES. Assorted\ncolors. Pair \t\nSANDALS. Red.\nPair\nHomespun twin size ;j   QQ\n1.99\n1.99\nBEDSPREADS. Each\nHomespun double\nBEDSPREADS. Each\nHomespun double^ A   QQ\nAvailable From Our\nVancouver\nWarehouse\nFOAM BOAT nnd SAIL COMBINATION. 9' unsinkable dinghy. \u2014\nReg. ,9,90. 149>0Q\nKlgin Skipper 13' Deluxe ALUMINUM BOAT. Reg. 3QQ f\\f\\\n$479. Sale 37 7.UU\nCAMP TRAILER. \/rn AA\nReg. $799. Sale 03\/sUU\nElgin   14'   CEDAR   STRIP   BOAT.\n289.00\nElgin \"Comet\" 13' Deluxe FIBRE-\nGLASS BOAT. Reg. CAQ f\\f\\\n629.00.  Sale jiy.\\J\\J\nElgin  Tipper  Bed  TRAILER.   Adjustable, 15' 8\" to 16' 8\". Regular\nsT5: 259.95\nDUAL PURPOSE DOORS. Fir and\nMahogany.  \u2014 25%  OFF\nALUMINUM    DOORS.    Assortment\nof sizes. <} Q   Q Q\nSale XO.OO\nPlumbing and\nHeating\nGAS FLOOR FURNACE. One only.\nRe, 159.9, 139f88\nBATHTUB. Pink. One CA   QQ\nonly. Reg. 79.95. Sale   OtsOO\nJET WATER PUMP. 1 1 Q   Q Q\n1 only. Reg. 134.95.     I I'sOO\nKITCHEN  CABINET.  32\".  - One\nonly.\nReg. 39.95\nKITCHEN SINK. One   CA   QQ\nonly. Reg. 72.95 OtsOO\nFURNACE  FILTERS.  \u2014  Assorted\nsizes. Reg. .99. CC\nEach .OO\nGAS WATER  HEATER.   IB-gallon.\nReg. 89.95. f\\   QQ\nSale I ai..OO\n29.88\nHousewares\nGARBAGE CANS. \u2022)   CC\nEach, only  A..OO\nMaid of Honor DUST        \\   C(\\\nMOPS. Reg. 2.98        I ,J\\J\n16-PCE. LUNCHEON C   QQ\nSET. Wheat pattern only. J \u2022 O O\nSpace Saver SHOE RACK. | Af\nEach I \u2022\" \/\nBLANKET BAGS. Solve your storage problems. \") 1 3 rt\nSale *\u2022  for I.3U\n72-oz.   POLY   PITCHERS.\nReg. 1.20. Each\nDeluxe GARMENT BAGS. 3    3 3\nReg. 4.99. Each 3.33\nDOOR MIRROR. 12x48\". \u2022\u00bb s_A\nRfcg. 15.87. Sale \/ \u20223'T\nPoly CLOTHES BASKET. About 18x\n12x14\" high. Reg. 1.89.\nSale\nTROUSER CREASERS. Adjust from\nchildren's to adults' sizes. m \u00a3-\nReg. .99 pr. Sale. pr. . I J\n.80\n1.27\nSKIRT AND BLOUSE RACK SETS.\nSet\u20141 skirt rack, 1 blouse | Jl\nrack. Reg. 1.96. Sale I .3 I\nSave 9.78 on 10-piece Set\nDeluxe\nStainless Steel\n1-Quart Covered Saucepan\n2-Quart Covered Saucepan\n3-Quart Covered Saucepan\nlO'\/j\" Trl-Ply Skillet\n5\u00bbi Quart Covered Dutch\nOven\nComplete Set f\\\u2014w f\u2014\nOnly     \u00a3.1.1 I\nSporting Goods\nwaW\u2014sM\nYOUR  CHOICE\nFor only 10.99\n\u2022 3-Way Camp Cot Lounge\n\u2022 Air Mattress \u2014 32\"x78\" Size.\n\u2022 Convertible Air Bed, 28x79\" Size\n\u2022 Camp Lantern \u2014 Burns Leaded\nor White Gas\n\u2022 Sleeping Bags \u2014 36\"x76\" Size\nElgin 12 H.P.\nReg. 379.95. Sale\nElgin 8 H.P.\nReg. 319.95. Sale\nElgin 714 H.P.\nReg. 259.95. Sale\nSLEEPING BAGS. Adult Q  QQ\nsize. Reg. 13.95. Sale       7.7 7\nHIGH WALL TENT.      CO   QQ\n9'x9'. Special J O.OO\n$339\n$289\n$229\nALUMINUM   STORM   WINDOWS\n3 Only-24\"x24\". 1 \")   Art\nReg. 23.98. Sale     \\ U.\\J\\J\n3 Only\u201424\"x46\".\nReg. 23.98. Sale ..\n1 Only-^l8\"x48\".\nReg. 28.98. Sale .\n3 Only^(2\"x54\".\nReg. 31.95. Sale .\n6 Only\u201428\"x64\".\nReg. 31.95. Sale .\n12.00\n14.00\n16.00\n16.00\nHardware\nSABRE SAW KIT.        \")\")   QQ.\nReg. 29.88. Sale \"'OO\nDRILL KIT. \\A   Q Q\nReg. 18.88. Sale IT.OO\nWHEELBARROW. Q   QQ\nReg.  10.88. Sale         O.OO\nWHEELBARROW. 11    Q Q\nReg. 13.88. Sale I I .OO\nGalv. CHAIN LINK FENCE. 50 ft.\nonly. Reg. .23 ft. 1 C\nSale, ft. '*\u2022*\nPlastic Coaled CHAIN LINK FENCE\n50 It. nfnly. Reg. .34 ft. \u2022) r\nSale, ft. 'imJ\nFreezers\n21 Cu. Ft. MIRACOLD FREEZER.\n1 Only. 1 yr. food n\/\u00abQ QC\nwarranty tree. iO\/s\/J\n17 Cu. Ft. MIRACOLD FREEZER.\n1 Only. 1 year food *\\ J Q Q Q\nwarranty free. A\u00bbi7sOO\nCOLDSPOT Porcelalned FREEZER\n18 Cu. Ft. Holds \u2022) c Q Q C\n630 lbs. of food. . ** J 7. 7 J\n22 Cu. Ft. Holds\n720 lbs .of food. ..   .\n299.95\n$20 WORTH OF STEAK with\nthe purchase of any freezer or\nrefrigerator during this sale.\n\u2014  -      - \u25a0    \u2014\u25a0 \u2014\u25a0 \u25a0\u2014\u2014- \u25a0\u2014-\nMiscellaneous\nWindow Glass\nClearing our entire stock of\nwindow glass. 16 sizes to\nchoose from\u201410\"xl2\" to 30\"x\n30\". Reg. .66 to 1.80 sheet.\nHALF PRICE\nmm  \u25a0\u00bb \u25a0 \u25a0   \u2014\nDAVID BRADLEY ROTO TILLERS\n$120\n$165\nVs H.P.\nReg. 149.95\n4',8 H.P.\nReg. 184.50 .\nSU H.P.\nReg. 204.95\n$185\nRefrigerators\n11.1 Cut. Ft. COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR. Fully automatic. 2-door\ncombination. \u00a364.95\n13.2 Cu.' Ft. COLDSPOT Fridge-\nFreezer COMBINATION. Family-\nsized refrigerator with 100-lb.\nfreezer chest.\nSale   .\n9.6 Cu. Ft. COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR. Manual defrost. Deluxe\nporcelain interior.      1 QQ  QC\n12   Cu.   Ft.   COLDSPOT   REFRIGERATOR. Manual defrost.  Regular\n259.95.\nSale\n289.95\n238.88\nRanges\nKenmore 30\" ELECTRIC RANGE.\n7 heat switches. Full 3-year guarantee on oven and 1 QQ QQ\ntop elements. Sale lO\/.OO\nKenmore 30\" ELECTRIC RANGE,\nwith rotisserie, 7 heat switches. \u2014\nBeautiful coppertone backguard. \u2014\nRe, 234.9, -, 99   gg\nKenmore Deluxe 30\" GAS RANGE.\nFeaturing   automatic   oven   clock\nST- .199.95\n1 Only-GAS RANGE. Deluxe 24\"\nmodel with automatic ignition and\nlarge visi-bake oven window. Regular 204.95. ITO rtrt\nSale price I \/\/.UU\nWashers\nand Dryers\n3-Cycle ELECTRIC DRYERS with\ninfinite heat selection. Sun-fresh sanitizing lamp to give clothes the fresh\noutdoor dried scent. 1 \/JQ rtrt\nReg. 185.00. Sale        I OJ'.UU\n3-Cycle AUTOMATIC WASHER\u20141\nOnly. Handles delicate garments\nwith reduced speed and gentle care.\nRegular 289.95. t AQ   QQ\nSale priced ATfO.OO\nSlmpMJlJu-sSsiiVlL\n556 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE 352-5531\nPORTABLE   DISHWASHER.   Lady\nKenmore.  A real  labor  saver.\nReg. 229.95.\nSale \t\nKenmore 7-Cycle Deluxe ELECTRIC\nDRYER.  Complete with sun-lamp.\nReg. 259.95.\nSale\t\nKenmore Deluxe WRINGER WASHER with 2-yr. service and parts warranty,  including\nlabor. Only\n188.88\n199.88\n127.00\nRadio and TV\nSilvertone 23\" TV. Our finest console. Elegant set features \"memory-\nfine\" tuning. Was \"iCQ rtrt\n328.71. Now only .    i-OO.UVJ\nSilvertone \"Medallion\" STEREO-\nRADIO-PHONOGRAPH. - 13-tube-\nfunction power transformer and 6-\nspeaker system. Was '\n319.89. Only\nSilvertone Non-S t e r e o PHONOGRAPH. Separate volume and tone\ncontrols for \"custom\" tuning. \u2014\nReg. 49.95. 43   Q Q\nSale *t3.00\n259.00\nSummer\nFurniture\nSove 20% to 35%\nCHAISE LOUNGE. Adjustable four-\nposition back, aluminum armrests.\nComplete with spring-filled mattress.\nReg. 34.89. jr  go\nFOLDING CHAISETTE with duck\nmattress. Reg. 24.78.      1 O   JO\nCHAISE LOUNGE. Adjustable four-\nposition back, 3\" box edge cotton-\nfilled mattress. ^ 1 Q Q\nReg. 29.88. Sale X. I .OO\nMATCHING CHAIR i matches above\nlounges!. Floral pattern. c CC\nReg. 8.98, Sale O.OO\nWEB CHAISETTE. 5-position back,\ndouble fold action.\nReg. 14.99. Sale\nWEB CHAISETTE. Extra high 5-\nposition back. Molded plastic armrests. Reg. 18.88. |3 Q Q\nSale I 3.00\n11.19\nVinyl Tube WEB CHAISETTE. 5-\nposition back, most modern styling.\nS5!1* 16.29\nWEB CHAISETTE. Low priced for\neconomy.  4-position  back  rest.  In\ngreen and white.\nReg. 9.99. Sale ....\nBASKET CHAIR. Polyethylene baskets; wrought iron frame. Choice of\ncolors. Reg. 10.88.\nSale\nFOLDING CHAIR. 4x8 web. Polished aluminum frame. Double tube\narmrests. Reg. 8.24.\nSale    \t\nLow-Priced CHAISETTE. Polished\naluminum frame, 4-position back,\ndouble folding for easy T 3 Q\nstorage. Reg. 9.77. Sale ..   \/ .3 J'\nStrong   DUCK   CHAIR. Aluminum\ntube frame, green duck seat wilh\narmrests. Reg. 5.37. 3   QQ\nSale Js77\nAluminum WEB CHAIR. Folds for\nstoring. 4x7 web.\nReg. 6.59. Sale .\nWEB   CHAISETTE.   Multi - position\nback, modern plastic web cover.\nChoice of colors.\nReg. 13.67. Sale ..\n7.44\n7.88\n6.19\n4.99\n9.88\nFurniture\n239.88\nKroehler   2-PCE.   CHESTERFIELD\nSUITES. Foam rubber and nylon\nfrieze. Color: mushroom beige. Reg.\n259.95. Reduced T 1 O   Q Q\nlo clear . ai-\\ 7.00\nKroehler   2-PCE.   CHESTERFIELD\nSUITE. Foam rubber and nylon\ncover. Color: spice brown. Regular\n266.1)0.\nSale\nLowboy 3-DRAWER CHEST. Finished in blonde al less than unfinished\nprice. Regular 27.88. \")f\\ Q Q\nSale price . \/.U.OO\n54\" BOOKCASE BED in blonde finish. Will match chest \")C Q Q\nabove. Sale price ^3.00\n3-PCE. BEDROOM SUITES. Radio\nheadboard, in light beige finish. \u2014\nStrong birch construction at ridiculous low\nprice of\n54\" BOOKCASE BED. Ready to\npaint.  Attractive  high  style.   Reg-\n21.88\n89.95\nular 29.88.\nSale price\nMARBLE TOP TABLES. Floor samples.  French provincial styling. \u2014\n1  Only Commode. Reg. 49.88\n1 Only Coffee Table \u2014 Reg. 49.88\n1 Only Rnd. Lamp Table\u2014Reg. 49.88\nSel  39.88\n1 Only\u20142-PCE. SOFA BED. Nylon\ncover, foam rubber. Color: dark\ngreen. Reg. 209.95. inn nn\nSale lOO.OO\nExtra long 4-cushion CHESTERFIELD with matching chair. The\nnew. modern, narrower arm style.\nReg. 239.95.\nSale price \t\nColonial Style 3-PCE. BEDROOM\nSUITE of Canadian birch with red\nmaple finish.'Ideal for q;j CA\nchild's room. Sale price 3'3 .Ot1\nROLLAWAY  COTS,  30\"x72\"  when\nunfolded.  Complete with  mattress.\nIdeal for summer vis-   ~\nitors. Sale price\nSTROLLERS. Large mudguards,\nchrome tubular handle. Nicely padded. Regular 18.95. 1 A Q Q\nSale price I t.OO\n1 Only, fully upholstered colonial\nstyle 2 - PIECE CHESTERFIELD\nSUITE. 32\" high back for ultimate\nin comfort. Reg. 1 QQ QQ\n269.98. Sale price       l77sOO\n2:PCE. CHESTERFIELD SUITE \u2014\nRich green nylon frieze; covered\nserofoam cushions. iijA qq\nReg. 199.95.. Sale   107.00\nBABY CARRIAGE. English style,\nwith modern molded steel body, fully\nlined and padded. Blue A\\ QQ\nonly. Reg. 54.95. Sale    Tl.OO\n179.88\n15.88\nBonus Buys\n2-PANT SLEEPER SET, | f\\(\\\nSizes 1 to 4. Reg. 1.69  I a\\J\\J\nBOYS' FLANNEL SHIRTS. Sport\nshirt styles. Assorted pat- (JQ\nterns and colors. Reg. .97 .. .3<\nBOYS' S.S. CARDIGANS. QQ\nAssorted colors. Reg. 2.99 .... \u2022 ifaf\nBOYS' JACKETS. A good assortment of boys' sizes. | ^Q\nReg. 2.49 to 2.99 I sT7\nCOMFORTERS. Buy some of these\nfor the summer cottage. \"1 \"fl\nReg. 10.98, 11.98, 13.98. .. I . I I\nFACECLOTHS. Good quality terry\nfacecloths. Assorted   J CQ\ncolors. Reg. .33. Now 3 for \u202203'\n1\n\u00a7\nere's Best Value Ever\nFor this 36-Month Nflon The\nfcs'M\nL I    Ul-..   \u25a0\u25a0B^fif^\nAllstate Silent Guardsman Nylon\nOne of the safest, quietest-running, longest-mileage premium 4-ply tires we've ever\noffered! Actually outwears and outperforms\ntires on  new  1963  cars.\n1\n1    Mtrs.      I\nSIZE\n1      Type\n|      List  -\nSale\n6.70\u201415\nTubeless Blackwall\n1      31.15\n17.95\n7.10\u201415\nTubeless Blackwall\n1      34.95\n19.95\n7.60\u201415\nTubeless Blackwall\n|       37.95\n21.95\n7.50-14\nTubeless Blackwall\n1       31.15\n17.95\n8.00\u201414\nTubeless Blackwall\n1      34.95\n19.95\n850\u201414\nTubeless Blackwall\n37.95\n21.95\n6.70\u201415\nTubeless Whitewall\n34.25\n19.95\n7.10\u201415\nTubeless Whitewall\nI       38.45\n21.95\n7.60\u201415\nTubeless Whitewall\nI       41.75\n23.95\n7.50\u201414\nTubeless Whitewall\n|       34.20\n19.95\n8.00\u201414\nTubeless Whitewall\nI       38.45\n21.95\n8.50-14\nTubeless Whitewall\n|      41.80\n23.95\nI\n ~p\u2014f\u2014    1~'-  ' |. \u25a0 \u25a0 ~ i i ' \u25a0\" . I- \u25a0\u2022' \u25a0\u25a0>-':\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014^-\u2014'\nI \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 19631\nI Ely PASO, Tex. (AP)\u2014Jurors; Judge R. Ewing Thomason that;\nI the Billie Sol Esles fraud trial | they were deadlocked and could\nWednesday notified U.S. District j not reach a verdict.\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022I\nLUMBER\nSPECIAL\n\u2022  UTILITY GRADE SHEATHING\nAlso\n\u2022 2x4s   and   2x6s\nfc Ideal for the farm or summer cottage.\nPriced to Clear On\nLoad Lots\nPassmore Lumber\nCo. Ltd.\nPassmore, B.C.        Ph. So. Slocan 359-7221\nOpen this Saturday for your convenience\nNHL Playoffs Continue\nCoachs Blame Soft Ice\nFor Defeats in Openers\nTonight\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSid Abel and Toe Blake,\nwho just happen to be the losing coaches in the openers of\nthe Stanley Cup semi-finals, both\nblame soft ice conditions for\ntheir clubs' defeats.\n\"The soft ice didn't help us,\"\nwere the almost identical dressing room comments as Abel's\nDetroit Red Wings lost 5-4 to\nthe Black Hawks in Chicago\nstadium Tuesday night and i\nB 1 a k e's  Montreal  Canadiens\nAbel said. He could have added\nthat both Red Wings and Hawks\nlorgot the manly art of body\nchecking.\nTALK ABOUT PAIR\nThe off-day talk around here\nI centred around the performances of Bobby Hull and Eric\n(The Pest) Nesterenko. Gimpy-\nshouldered Hull, who said he\ncouldn't lift his right arm above\nhis shoulder, set the pace for\nthe   Hawks   with   a   sparkling\n_   two-goal effort and Nesterenko,\ndropped\" a 3-1 decision'to\" Tor-1 \">e gangly one with the prom-\nonto in Maple Leaf Gardens.    ! ment   elbows,   shadowed   Detroit's Gordie Howe like a pick-\nAbel repeated his statement\nWednesday as both Red Wings\nthe the Hawks took a day off to\nenjoy the balmy 60-degree Chicago weather and rest for the\nsecond game of their best-of-\nseven semi-final tonight.\nAbel admitted the opener was\na loosely-played encounter and\nhe received support from Chicago coach Rudy Pilous.\n\"We just gave up skating,\"\n| pocket.\nj    Pilous, talkative and just a bit\ni confidenl, figures now the duration of the series rests with\n' Howe, the National Hockey\ni League's scoring champion and\nthe Wings' perennial home-run\nhitter   over   17   brilliant   big-\nleague seasons.\nThe big right - winger, who\nscored playolf goal No. 42 \u2014\nwhile Nesterenko was taking a\nbreather on the bench \u2014 could\nkeep the series going to the full\nseven games, says Pilous, if he\ncan get away from Nesteren-\nko's clutches. That's a tribute\nto Howe's ability and Abel is\nthe first man to agree with Pilous.\nIf Howe can't break away\nfrom the Hawk right-winger,\nPilous thinks the Hawks might\nadvance to the final against the\nMontreal-Toronto winner in the\nminimum four games.\nEXPECT NO CHANGES\nNo lineup changes are expected for Thursday night's\ncontest.\n99\nMake Lawn Care Easy With a 21\" 4 Cycle\nRotary Mower . . . Low in Price, Big in Value\nFloat lock safety handle is aJways at proper height.\nDeep deck is contoured for non-clogging discharge\n. . . made of heavy steel, reirvforced for extra long\nlife. Double disc wheels, self1 lubricating bearings,\nnew turbo-lift blade.\n2 CYCLE\nROTARY MOWER\n18\" with  popular Clinton  engine,  offset\nadjustable wheels. ONLY\t\n59\n44\nEach\n99\nWheelbarrow\nDrawn tray ... no seams\nor welds. Comfortable hand\ngrips, nylon wheel bearings, puncture 0 QQ\nproof tires. Ea.   O.j'y\nBAMBOO\nGARDEN\nRAKE\nii\nGet\nwide.\nyour  rake\nnow\nand have it handy\nwhen you\nneed it most.\n49C\nLawn Sprinkler\nMclnor. Covers rectangular\nareas up to 1575 square\nleet. Size 15',2Xl5'^xfi. Exceptionally low \/_ QQ\npriced. Each      T.7?\nGarden Hose\nLawn Sprinkler\nEdge Shears\n100% pure vinyl plastic,\nsuper flexible, solid leak\nfree brass couplings. 50-\nfeel. Price,\neach\n2.49\nRevolving lype with 3 aims\nand sled base. Buy your\ngardening needs now and\nbe ready for the\nspring.\nNot exactly as illustrated.\n1.98\nLong handle edge shears.\nLong, sturdy, all metal\nhandle with hardened culling edges. 3'\nhandle. Only\nHEDGE SHEARS. Also an\noutstanding\nquality.\n5.98\n5. Also an\n1.98\n50'  GARDEN   HOSE\nSturdy ribbed garden hose.\nSPECIAL   1.49\nLAWN EDGING\nKeeps driveways and flower beds\ntrim and neat. 20 feet.\nONLY 1.89\nl^nmy'&Bg (tuittpflttg.\nINCORPORATED   2^   MAY   1670.\n... it usually bothers me for\na week after an attack.\"\nThe effect on him wasn't evident to the 13,800 customers at\nTuesday night's game, however. The slim, six-footer made\nsome spectacular saves in holding the Leafs to a 3-1 victory\nin the first game of the best-of-\nseven series.\nAfter the game Tuesday\nnight, Blake pinpointed a lack\nof drive among many players\nfor the Canadiens' poor showing.\nPlante, a veteran of nine full\nseasons with the Canadiens,\nsays tlie trouble is \"we haven't\ngot a leader.\"\n\"We used to have leaders like\nButch Bouchard, Bert Olmstead, Doug Harvey . . . guys\nwho would tell you if you\nweren't going well ... we need\nj a guy to give you the occasional\nwhack on the seat.\"\nThe man Plante thinks helped\nthe Canadiens in this respect\nthis season is Lou Fontinato.\nThe defenceman is still in hospital with a severe neck injury\nsuffered late in the season that\nmay have ended his hockey career.\nTO DRESS AGAIN\nForward   Phil   Goyette,   who |\nsaw   limited   action   Tuesday.\nnight in his first game since\nsuffering  a  broken  ankle  last |\nChristmas night, will be dressed\nagain tonight and Blake said he '\nmight see more action\u2014\"it depends on how it goes.\"\nBlake was still unhappy over'\nthe first-game loss.\n1 don't know if Toronto was\nPepitone Homers Twice\nAs Yankees Edge Twins\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Palm Beach, Chicago Cubs out-\nGOLF CLINIC \u2014 Leo Atwell, president of the\nNelson Golf and Country Club, is seen here showing Pat Rand some of the finer points of the game\nof golf at the club-sponsored clinic which is held\nMonday nights at the Nelson Junior High School.\nGolf club members do the instructing at the weekly\nsessions designed to help newcomers learn the basic\npoints of the game.\u2014Daily News photo.\nbut there was a heck of\nference,\"  he  said.   \"How\ndif-j\ncan,\n\"We will have Bruce Mac-1 that good or we were that bad,\ngregor to fill out our quola of\n17 men,\" Abel said. The 21-\nyear-old right winger's father\nwent home to Edmonton for the\nfuneral.\nJacques   Plante  has   that\nchoked up feeling, and he says\nMasters Lead Canadian\nBadminton Championships\nJoe Pepitone drove in five\nruns with two homers Wednesday, leading New York Yankees\nto a 7-6 victory over Minnesota\nin exhibition baseball.\nPepitone, who has succeeded\nMoore Skowron at first base for\nthe Yankees hit his first homer\nwith two on in the second\ninning. In the sixth, with the\nTwins ahead 6-5, he connected\nfor the clincher with Hector\nLopez on base.\nBoth Pepitone  homers  came\noff   Camilo   Pascual,   Minnne\nsota's  20-game  winner,\nexhibition at Orlando.\nEddie Sadowski's ninth inning\nhomer gave Los Angeles Angels\na 4-3 triumph over Boston at\nScottsdale and first place in the\nAmerican League exhibition\nstandings.\nNew York Mets went to the\ntop in the National League\nstandings on Charley Neal's\nninth inning double that beat St.\nLouis 6-4. Frank Thomas' two-\nrun homer in the eighth had\ntied Ihe score for the Mots at\nSt. Petersburg.\nWYNN LOOKS GREAT\nEarly Wynn and Ed Fisher\ncombined for a two-hitter as\nChicago While Sox shut out\nWashington 3-0 at Sarasota. The\nveteran 42-year-old Wynn, who\nhopes lo win his 300th game this\nseason, yielded only a single in\nthree innings. Fisher did likewise in the last six. A triple by\nNellie Fox in the first inning\noff Dave Stenhouse drove in the\nonly run the Sox needed.\nMarcelino Lopez pitched two-\nhit ball for six innings and\ncontributed a two-run homer for\nPhiladelphia in a 9-2 trouncing\nof Kansas at Bradenlon.\nIn other games, Cincinnati\nblanked Los Angeles Dodgers\n6-0 at Vero Beach. Milwaukee\nwhipped   Detroit   6-1   at   West\nslugged Cleveland 12-11 at Tuc-\nBy DENNIS ORCHARD\nVANCOUVER   (CP)  \u2014  Four\nCreston Sets\nDeadline for\nRegistrations\nCRESTON-Al the first minor\n'jjj\" I baseball meeting of 1963, held in\nthe Royal Canadian Legion Hall\nMonday, it was decided to set\nSaturday, April 13, as the final\nregistration date for minor baseball players in Creston Valley.\nNo registration will be accepted\nafter that date and no boy will\nbe permitted to participate in\npractices unless he is registered.\nCoaches of the Erickson. Lister and Wynndel teams will be\nresponsible Ior registration of\ntheir players. Registration of\nCreston players will take place\nal Ihe Royal Canadian Legion\nHall on Saturday, April 6, between 10:30 a.m. and 12 noon.\nBoys unable to attend registration April 6 are asked to have\ntheir registration forms signed\nby a parent and to submit those\nforms, along with ihe fee, to J.\nE. Swales on or before April 13.\nOfficers of Creslon Valley\nminor baseball for 1963 are as\nfollows: chairman, L. Sweeting:\nsecretary-treasurer, .1. E. Swales\nand commissioner, R. Allen.\nAnyone interested in assisting\nminor baseball by coaching, umpiring, or in some other capacity\nis asked lo contact a member of\nthe executive. An attempt will\nbe made to hold an umpire clinic\nin the valley during the first part\nof April.\nit will still be with him in to-1 jury |js| and he may be back\nyou win when you have eight' touring masters of the game\nor nine guys who didn't get a i sent opponents to the sidelines\nshot, on the net all night?\" 1 Wednesday with the opening\nThe Leafs have only winger 1 snots o[ the Canadian badmin-\nJohnny  MacMillan  on  the  in-1 ton championships.\nnight's second game of the Toronto - Montreal semi - final and\nmaybe longer.\nThe often - ailing Montreal\ngoaltender spent an hour and a\nhalf Tuesday in the hotel here\nwhere all the Canadiens except\nhim stay regularly and returned\nto another hotel where he voluntarily isolates himself.\nA short while later he was on\nthe phone to coach Toe Blake\ncomplaining of an attack of\nasthma, the cause said to be the\ncarpets in the Canadiens' regular hotel.\nThe 34 - year - old goaltender\nhad treatments before the\ngame. Did it still bother him?\nCHEST TIGHTENS UP\n\"It sure did,\" he said as Canadiens practised Wednesday.\n\"My chest was all tightened up\ntonight. Latest reports were\nthat he was recovering well\nfrom an elbow injury he suffered a week before the season\nended.\nToronto manager - coach\nPunch Imlach is looking for a\ntougher time tonight.\n\"The Canadiens didn't play as\nwell as they can,\" he said Wednesday. \"I expect they'll be\nmuch better the next game, and\nwe'll have to play better too.\"\nHe credited the work of the\ndefencemen and the checking of\nthe forwards for Tuesday\nnight's victory.\n\"We made the Montreal forwards look absolutely inept at\nlimes,\" he said. \"Our offence\nsuffered a little bit, but it\nwasn't bad. As long as we keep\nplaying as well I'll be happy.\"\nIt was a predictable beginning for Erland Kops of Denmark, Scotland's Robert Mc-\nCoig and Ihe Thailand pair of\nChanarong and Sangob.\nAfter three rounds in the\nmen's senior singles they had\ndispatched eight Canadians to\nconsolation events.\nThe day took them to the\nquarter-finals along with top-\nranked Canadians Wayne Mac-\ndonnell of Vancouver and Jim\nCarnwarth of Toronto, and\nAmericans Jim Poole and Bill\nBerry of San Diego, Calif. The\nhis fourth seeding in the championship as he took Larry Lady-\nman of Winnipeg 15-9, 15-4 and\nBruce Rollick of Vancouver 15-9\n15-9.\nThe third seed, U.S. champion\nPoole was set against Rick Si-\nmonton of Calgary and Harold\nMoody of Montreal, and won\n15-4, 15-2 and 15-3, 15-10.\nMcCoig,  fifth  seed,  defeated\nJack Johnston of Winnipeg 15-4,\n15-4 and Robert Hunt of Vic-:\ntoria 15-7, 15-6. i\nBerry, the other California\nplayer here with Poole, was a\n15-5, 15-2 winner over Vancouver's Mel Chapman and 15-5,\n15-4 winner over Chin Wah Sin,\na Chinese student at the University of Saskatchewan.\nThe only top Canadian to\nhave   trouble   in   Wednesday's\nManitoba, B.C. Rinks Lead\nFirefighters7 Bonspiel\nTORONTO (CP) - John Mc-\nCorrister of Winnipeg, making\nhis second bid to capture the\nDominion Firefighters' Curling\nAssociation championship, led\nhis Manitoba rink in a pair of\nimpressive victories Wednesday\nand was in a first place tie\nwilh British Columbia after the\nopening two rounds.\nMcCorrister, named the outstanding second player 'in the\n1960 Canadian curling championships, upset John McDonald's Edmonton rink 10-8 in the\nopening round and then\ntrounced Southern Ontario, led\nin the second.\nMcCorrister lost.\nThe second - best player in\nbadminton, whose full name is\nChanarong   Rattan  -  Saeng\nSuang\ninto s\nSalmo Mixed\nBonspiel\nOpening Draws\nby Gord Watt of Brampton, 15-6 | \u201eob\nDEFEATS  THOMPSON\nou! to McDonald  in  the  1960 championships.\nBritish Columbia, kept pace\nwhen Larry Kralt's Vancouver\nrink downed Wall's rink 10-6\nand then trimmed Dick Hol-\nlier's Saskatchewan rink from\nSaskatoon 12-8.\nAlberta and Northern Ontario\nshare second place with a win\neach. Alberta defeated Northern Ontario 10-4 in the second\nround after Ron Smith's Red\nRock rink had beaten Saskatchewan 15-7 in the first round.\nSaskatchewan   and   southern\nOntario share  last  place\ntwo losses each.\nnext  round of  men's matches  singles   play   was   Carnwarth,\nwill be played tonight.\nWorld-champion Kops needed\nless lhan 20 minutes for each\nof the men he faced. Syd Low-\nIhian of Regina went down 15-1,\n15-5 in a warmup, and Ken Noble of Vancouver was drummed\n15-1, 15-4.\nHome-style meals in Vancouver's Chinatown Tuesday night\n\u2014their first since they left London a week ago\u2014were just- the\nthing for Chanarong and San-\nwho was forced to three sets\nby a rusty but wily Bert Fergus of Vancouver, finally winning 17-14, 12-15, 15-8.\nA minor upset was the stylish victory of Winnipeg's Jim\nPeters, who toppled fourth-\nseeded Canadian Ray Cornish\nof Stratford, Ont. 17-16, 15-0.\nTop-seeded Marjorie Shedd of\nToronto had easy going as she\ndefeated Sue Carr-Harris of Oakville, Ont., 11-2, 11-2 to advance\nto the quarter-final of the senior\nwomen's singles.\nHeading for a traditional final\nmatch against Miss Shedd was\nMrs. Joan Miller of Montreal,\nthrew   his   123   pounds who started up from the oppo-\n15-7,   15-1   victory over | site end of the draw by defeat-\nPlay continues today and the\nround - robin competition ends\nearly Friday. Quebec and the\nAtlantic provinces are not represented.\nBucs Clinch\nDivision Title\nSALMO \u2014 The Salmo Curling\nClub will hold its year-end Mixed\nBonspiel this weekend. Competition starts tonight and will continue through Friday and Saturday with the event ending Sun-\nI day evening.\nFollowing   are   the   opening!\ndraws: j    PORTLAND  'APi-The Port-\nTliursriay. fipm-G. Moir vs;,and    Buckal\u2122s   clinched    thc\nD.   Walerslreet:   T.  Callopy  vs\nJ. Blacklock.\n8 p.m.\u2014P. Strandberg vs R\nSwanson. Nelson; H. Beck vs\nO. Jensen.\n10 p.m.\u2014A. Gibson vs F. Fleming; M. Bush vs B. Taylor.\n' Western Hockey League's Southern Division championship Wednesday night with a 9-2 victory\nover Calgary.\nWinnipeg's Cam Thompson and ing Handi Douglas of Vancouver\na 15-2, 15-5 victory over Keith 111-1, 11-0.\nSpencer of Edmonton. i    In   men's   doubles,   the   top-\nSangob,  properly  named 1 seeded pair of Poole and Robert\nSangob Rattanusorn, justified I Williams of Buffalo, N.Y., moved\n1 into the quarter-final, but less\neasily than did third seeds Kops\nand McCoig.\nPoole and Williams defeated\nHugh Rothe and Geoff Atkinson\nof Vancouver 15-2, 15-3, and then\nChris and Bill Dalin of Kamloops\n15-7. 15-9.\nKops and McCoig meanwhile\nwere turning back Harvey\nBridges and Jack Newstead of\nVancouver 15-1, 15-4 and Winnipeg's Doug Hughes and Jim\nPeters  15-3,   15-4.\nThe two Thailand players, second seeds, were pushed to a\n15-6, 15-10 decision over Gordon\nHallstrom and Gordon Schmidt\nof Nelson, B.C. They also had\nsome uneasy moments belore defeating John Samis and Ken\nMeredith of Vancouver 15-9, 15-6.\nStrikes and Spares\nResults of Wednesday bowling:\nMatinee \"B\" League\nJoyfuls 3, Offbeats 4; Go-Getters 0, Jimmie's Gang 7: Cheerfuls 5, Alley Cats 2. High single\nwith ] and aggregate, Pat Niven of\nj Cheerfuls. 250 and 568. Team\nhigh single, Cheerfuls, 954; team\nhigh aggregate, Jimmie's Gang,\n2324.\nVariety Club\nDiehards 0. Hilltoppers 4; Five\nPins 3, Cheerios 1; Button Pushers 2, Rollettes 2. High single,\nDot Hird of Diehards, 291. High\naggregate, Phyllis Maglio of Die-\nhards, 624. Team high single and\naggregate, Hilltoppers, 955 and\n2570.\nONE UP\nBy Lew Saw\nFriday, 8 p.m.\u2014Mac McDonald, Trail, vs F. Webster, Fruitvale.\nSaturday, 7 a.m.\u2014R. Rowe vs\nH. Ridley; G. St.Germain vs\nA. Wlasiuk.\n9 a.m.\u2014L. Andrews. Fruitvale.\nvs D. Parson. K. Stahl vs D.\nMcPhee.\nA crowd nf 7399 turned out\nfor Gordon Fashoway night in\nhonor of the 16-year veteran of\nprofessional hockey, who has announced he is retiring as &\nplayer this season.\nNorthern Division\nW L T   F   A Pts\nSeattle 34 32 2 231 232   70\nVancouver 33 34 4 233 224 70\nEdmonton 23 44 2 211 308 48\nCalgary 23 43 2 225 273   48\n*AY THE HOCKEY\nttMOHMTOO    I\n\\    tone\/     y\ntsLr' _tr^\nmil\n(\u2022Jot\n@ffi5\nL   ..,,.,---;-.-_\n3-28 \u00ab*\u25a0> .\n .....  . ...,-.,,..\u201e.-_,,,..,,..,.\n'in*]\nCanadian Pitcher Better Known\nIn Florida Than Native Country\nSCHOOL CHAMPIONS \u2014 Cranbrook's Mount Baker School hockey team\nwon the Green Cup for the third year in a row by defeating Kimberley 8-S\nin the annual contest between the two schools. Members ol the Cranbrook team\nare; back row, left to right, Keith Cameron, Allan Tiller, Laurie Downey, Mike\nWheaton, Dennis Downey, Harry Brown, Dave Haley, Wayne Desharnais. Front\nrow: Fred Leibscher, John Knight, Jack Leggett, Jim Shwarok, Don Hebert and\ncoach Gene Turney.\u2014Larry Belzac photo.\nOlympics Should Not Be\nTraining Ground-Worrall\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Sports Editor\nThe federal government is not\nin the business of underwriting\nthe cost of sending teams to\ninternational competition and\nthe Olympics should not be\nused as a training ground for\ninexperienced Cana dian athletes, says Jim Worrall.\nThese points were made clear\nthe other night in Toronto by\nthe 48-year-old president of the\nCanadian Olympic Association\nwho has been involved in amateur sport in this country as an\nCANUCK WIN\nBOXES WHL\nSTANDINGS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nVancouver Canucks played to\na wide-open victory in their beloved Forum Tuesday, knocked\nover Edmonton Flyers 7-2 and\nboxed up the Western Hockey\nLeague's Northern Division\nstandings again.\nThe result left Canucks tied\nin first place with Seattle Totems\u2014and Edmonton in a like\nposition down the ladder with\nCalgary.\nFive games remain in the\nwaning schedule. Canucks have\nthree to play, Seattle two. They\nmeet each other on the season's\nfinal night.\nA crowd of 2,536 was out\nTuesday to see Canucks pile up\ngoals until they led 7-0 in the\nfinal.\nBuddy Boone scored twice for\nthe winners. Dave Duke, Ron\nMatthews, Phil Maloney, Jim\nBaird and Bob Kabel' had one\neach. Chuck Holmes and Doug\nMessier answered for Flyers.\nCentre Maloney also picked\nup four assists to move him into\nsecond place in the league's\nscoring race. He now has 88\npoints, eight b e hind leader\nGuyle Fielder of Seattle.\nathlete  and  official  for  more\nthan 30 years.\nThe Toronto lawyer pulled\nhimself up to his full six feet\nsix inches and told a gathering\nof amateur sports officials and\nathletes the facts of life about\nCanada's participation in big-\ntime competition.\nNEED $340,000\n\"This year,\" he said, \"we\nare faced with the prospect of\nsending a large team to Brazil\nfor the Pan-American Games.\nThen, in 1964, we are sending\nteams to Austria for the Winter Olympic Games and to\nTokyo for the Summer Olympics.\n\"We are faced with a budget of $340,000. Half of this is\navailable from the federal government.\n\"The -federal government\nshould not be asked to pay the\nentire cost.\"\nTlie government never has\nin the past and undoubtedly\nwon't be this time, but Worrall\nwanted to get his point across\nthat the organizations responsible for sending athletes to\nOlympics must be dependent\non \"generous Canadians across\nthe country, provincial governments, larger cities, private in\ndustry, private citizens and the\nsports-governing bodies.\"\n\"We look to the Amateur\nAthletic Union of Canada and\nother amateur bodies for substantial money to help pay\nthese costs,\" he added.\nWorrall, who competed for\nCanada in the hurdles in the\n1934 British Empire Sames and\n1936 Olympics, said that \"money was not easy to get and\nthere is a resistance on the part\nof industry which has other\ncommitments.\"\nGOOD ONES WILL GO\n\"But rest assured that never\nwill we leave at home because\nof lack of finances a worthy\nand worthwhile athlete whose\nefforts   would   have   made   a\ngreat   deal   of   difference\nany national team.\nHe pointed out that the best\nathletes in the world compete\nin the Olympic Games and then\ncame up with this punch line:\n\"The Olympic Games ore no\ntraining ground for the inexperienced athlete. One doesn't\nneed to send an athlete to these\ngames to get experience.\n\"We have today one of the\nbest crops of young Canadians\noutstanding in their various\nsports ... but my feeling is\nthat the place Canadians should\nbe trained, and should\u2014and do\n\u2014get competition, is right here\nin Canada. They must be given\nthe best coaching possible and\nso on before being sent to the\nOlympics.\"\nHe is optimistic that with\nproper coaching, facilities and\nadministration of amateur sport\n\"we'll find that our young athletes will come to the fore and\ndevelop into athletes of British\nEmpire and Olympic Games calibre.\"\nHe applauded the Royal Canadian Legion for the work it\nis doing in an effort to develop\ntrack and field coaches across\nCanada. \"It should bring big\nresults.\"\nBy PAUL RIMSTEAD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nIf railroad conductors are\nstill looking for the tall, skinny\nkid who used to throw rocks at\ntheir trains as they passed\nthrough Chatham, Ont., they\nmight try Florida.\nHis name is Ferguson Jenkins and he's still causing trouble by throwing things.\nHowever, he's graduated\nfrom the stone-throwing age.\nNow he tosses baseballs and\nthe people who don't like it are\nthe batters trying to impress\nPhiladelphia Phillies at their\ntraining camp.\nCan a d i a n baseball players\nare usually well known at\nhome. But Jenkins, who could\nturn out to be the best of the\nlot, is better known in Florida\nthan he is in his native country.\nThe six-foot-five 205 - pounder\nis one of the Phillies' best prospects.\nOne Philadelphia writer says\nJenkins, 19, has the best chance\nof cracking the Phillies' pitching roster this season.\nIf this should happen, the\nJenkins story would rival that\nof any of the meteoric rises in\nthe past.\nLast year Fergie pitched for\nChatham in a sandlot league\nand was picked up by the Phillies mid-way through the summer.\nSCOUTED BY TEACHER\nOne of his teachers at Chatham Vocational School, a\nformer minor league player\nnamed Gene Dziadura, tipped\nPhiladelphia off about the tall\nNegro kid with the fastball.\nThe Phils shipped him to\nMiami Marlins in the Class D\nFlorida State League and Jenkins, who had a 2-1 pitching\nrecord at home, was 7-2 there\nwith the incredible earned-run-\naverage of 0.96. He started\neight games, finished five,\nwalked only 19.\nThe Philadelphia bosses, obviously impressed, moved Fergie to Buffalo Bisons in the\nTriple A International League\nat the end of last season.\nIn 13 innings with tho Bisons,\nFergie fanned six men, walked\nfive and had a 1-1 won - lost\nrecord.\nThe Phils took him to his\nfirst spring training camp this\nyear and Jenkins, working in\nan intra-squad game, allowed\ntwo scratch singles in six innings.\nLast week he allowed only\none hit in three innings against\nDetroit Tigers.\n\"Jenkins looks real good,\"\nPhiladelphia manager Gene\nMauch says. \"I don't think\nthere's any question that he\nwill some day be a big league\npitcher.\"\nNEEDS SEASONING\nReports say Jenkins, despite\nhis lack of experience, compares favorably in form and\ndelivery with his big league\nrivals.\nHowever, making the Phils\nthis year isn't likely. The clubs\nhave to cut rosters and the\nPhils, with 20 pitchers In camp,\n11 with major league experience, have to cut to 10.\nThe odds haven't worried\nFergie.\n\"He (Mauchl hasn't told anybody yet,\" he said. \"But from\nwhat some of the other officials\ntell me, it looks pretty good.\"\n\"We want him,\" said Mauch.\n\"But it's not always a favor to\na boy to keep him on a major\nleague roster. Sometimes it\ndoes him more harm than good.\n\"Our decision will be what\never we feel is best for him.\n\"If we do send him out, it\nwill be to a team where he can\nwin. You have to go out and\nget confidence to become a big\nleague pitcher.\"\nPeople around Chatham feel\nFergie is a good pitcher\u2014but a\nbetter hitter. At Chatham last\nseason, he had 12 hits in 31\ntimes at bat, including two\nhome runs, for a .362 average.\nHe also plays outfield and\nfirst base.\nIf those conductors are still\nmad at him, it might be some\nconsolation to know they played\na part in developing a pro ball\nplayer\u2014one who might become\nCanada's best.\nThe tracks run past the Jenkins home and Fergie credits\npinging those box-cars for helping strengthen his arm.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28,1963 -- tf1\nTHEIR CROWNING GLORY\u2014Showing the fists with which\nthey won boxing crowns ln a championship show In Los\nAngeles, these three new tltleholders make up a happy trio\nafter the show. From left are Sugar Ramos of Cuba, who\nkayoed Davey Moore In the 10th to win the feather crown;\nRoberto Cruz of the Philippines, who won the junior welter\ndiadem by knocking out Battling Torres in the first round,\nand Luis Rodriguez of Miami, who won the decision over\nwelter champ Emile Griffith to take his title.\nPEEK-A-BOOM! By Alan Mover\nIF ahd wHEtfn\/eYMeer\nFLoyp PATTERSON\nWO\/t'T &\u00a3 BMMEP \/PM\nNsfA\/t9 * P\u00a3TR\/f\/ED\nLOOK M\/ce PSIKMS a\nOF\/ll1? m\/<-*-BOO P\u00a3PW~. \u25a0    v\n\/Pi\/sro\/V's CBPT SMOULPSo\\\nBY, r\/l\u00a3Re'9 MMK mM6HT\nTO WofiM\/iBot\/r.\nT\/l\/5 COMB\/MT\/O\/l\n., > OKU'TooK 2 Ai\/iMTl\nM''g-} ~ AHP6S\u00a3CtVi\nI    J,, \/I \/,.\u201e\u00ab..    fo\/:\/,{\/(,,\/\nne F\/\/&T T\/ME,\nHOCKEY'S HALL\nOF FAME\nMEMBER  DIES\nWHITE ROCK (CP) - Ernie\n(Moose) Johnson, 77, a member\nof hockey's Hall of Fame, has\ndied at this resort town 30 miles\nsouth of Vancouver.\nHe died Monday and funeral\nservices were held Wednesday.\nJohnson, a defenceman, played on three Stanley Cup champion teams \u2014 the Montreal Wanderers of 1907, 1908 and 1910.\nA native of Montreal, he joined\nWanderers in 1906 and In 1912\nmoved to the New Westminster\nRoyals. He stayed with the team\nwhen the franchise was moved\nto Portland and led Portland to\nthe league title in 1915-16.\nLater, he played with Victoria\nand Los Angeles, retiring in 1931.\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (Reuters) - Results\nof soccer matches played Wednesday night in Britain:\nFA CUP\nSemi-Final\nBirmingham 3 Bury 2\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nTottenham 2 Leyton Or 0\n(ppfd. March 16).\nDivision II\nChelsea 3 Derby 1\nNewcastle 0 Grimsby 0\nStoke 2 Swansea 0\n(ppfd. Dec. 22)\nDivision III\nCrystal P 0 Colchester I\n(ppfd, March 2)\n\" Division IV\nBradford 0 Southport 2\nCrewe Alex 1 Rochdale 2\nLincoln 2 Mansfield 6\n(ppfd. March 1)\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nClyde 4 Raith 2\n(ppd. Feb. 23)\nFalkirk 3 Hibernian 1\nHearts 0 Rangers 5\nKilmarnock 6 Celtic 0\n(ppfd. Feb. 2)\nDivision II\nDumbarton 2 E Stirling 2\nEast Fife 2 Albion 0\nMorton 5 Alloa 3\nQueen's P 4 Ayr U 1\n(ppfd. Feb. 2)\nHOUSTON COLTS\nWHITTLE ROSTER\nAPACHE JUNCTION, Ariz.\n(AP) \u2014 Houston Colts whittled\ntheir roster to 41 Tuesday, shipping eight players to their Pacific Coast League farm club at\nOklahoma City.\nSix of the players were off the\nColt National League roster and\ntwo of them, Jim Pendleton and\nMike White, were already owned\nby Oklahoma City.\nPendleton, 39, was a part-time\noutfielder for the Colts last year\nin their first National League\nseason and hit .246.\nThe others assigned to Oklahoma City were pitchers Jim\nDickson, Cliff Davis, Butch Mix-\non, John Haydel and Tom Wil-\nwerth, and third baseman Jim\nWynn. who has been a spring\nhitting sensation.\n%*>\nJMttrUnnef bit King ttdtwe* &in-tuat*\nFIGHTS\nBy The Canadian Press\nLondon \u2014 Henry Cooper. 188,\nEngland, knocked out Dick Richardson, 207, Wales, 5; Billy Walker, 193, England, knocked out\nJoe DiGrazio, 198, Philadelphia,\n3.\nNew York \u2014 Frank Narvaez,\n136, Puerto Rico, outpointed\nTommy Griffin, 133, Philadelphia, 8 _        \t\nSan Jose, Calif.\u2014Louis Molina,\n139, San Jose, outpointed Bobby\nScanlon. 138, San Francisco. 10.\nOREGON  STAR\nSIGNS WITH\nL.A.  RAMS\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Terry\nBaker, Oregon State's all-round\nathletic star, has agreed to play\nprofessional football with Los\nAngeles Rams.\nThe All - American quarterback, United States college\nplayer of the year in 1962, signed\na three-year contract with the\nNational Football League club\nTuesday night.\nTerms were not disclosed, but\nBaker is believed to have been\nguaranteed $25,000 a year plus\na bonus for signing. The first\ndraft choice of the Rams, he\nwas also picked by Oakland\nRaiders of the American League\nand was reported to have been\noffered $100,000 by Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League.\nSixth Ranked\nLightweight\nScores Decision\nSAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-Luis\nMolina of San Jose won a rough\nfight from Bobby Scanlon of San\nFrancisco on a close, unanimous decision Tuesday night.\nA standing room only crowd\nof 3200 in San Jose Civic Audi-\ntorum saw Molina, 139, pile up\nhis edge in the final five rounds\nover Scanlon, 138.\nIt was Molina's 25th victory\nagainst one loss, He is ranked\nsixth among lightweight con\ntenders by the. World Boxing\nAssociation.     i\n\u00ab\u25a0* OUR\nFIRST!!\nHelp Us Celebrate!!\ni.;\nPrices Effective March 28 - 29 - 30; April 1st\nChuck,\nTender.\nGrade A _..\nSTEAKS\nROASTS\nBACON\nLeg 0' Lamb.. 59c I Bologna\nCanada Choice. :.  *i%W    M I    In the Piece. Union E\nBlade.\nCanada\nChoice.  ...\nIn the Piece.\nLean,\nGood \u2014\nIb.\nIb.\nIb.\n42<\n39c\n49\u00ab\nib. 25c\nASORTED BLOSSOMS  *.*\u25a0>\t\nCOOKIES     Bador's Family Pack. 2} Ib. pkg\t\nPINK    SALMON      Clover Leaf. 7j oz. tin\t\nWHOLE    CLAMS     Clover Leaf. 15oz.rin.\t\nFLOUR     Robin Hood. 25 Ib. bag\t\nQUICK    OATS     Robin Hood. 5 Ib. bag\t\nFRUIT COCKTAIL   M.iwn-.. is\u00ab. \u00abn. __\nCUT GREEN BEANS m..\u2122,. \u00ab \u00ab.\u00ab\u00bb.\nFANCY    PEAS     Malkin'.. 15 oz. tin\t\nKING SIZE FAB  ^g\t\nVELVEETA    CHEESE      Kraft. 2 Ib. package.\nICE    CREAM      Palm. 1 gallon\t\nCOTTAGE CHEESE M\t\nPEANUT BUTTER   ^\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\t\n3 for 79*\n 99*\n3for89<\nji ^ m\n-Jl.77\n 49*\n2 for 49*\n3 for 59*\n\u201e3 for 59*\n 89*\nLAKwC    CwGb     Grade A, guaranteed freih. Doz.\n *1.19\n69*\n2 for 39*\n 89*\n 49*\nFresh Tomatoes\nImported. 14 oz. carton\n19c\nAsparagus\nCalifornia new crop\n2 ibs. 49c\nPink. Grapefruit\nSweet and Juicy.\n10 for 89\u00ab\nBananas\nNo. 1 Golden\n2 ibs. 29\u00b0\nCooking Onions\nB.C. No. 2\n10 lbs. 89c\nPotatoes\nB.C. No. 2\n20 lbs. 59c\nProduce and Confectionery\n317 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 352-3910\n \u2014*\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u25a0 \u25a0 . '     ' \u2022     \u25a0\u2022 ; \u2014 ~      '        ~ ~        : ; \u2014 .    -niigBJtSiS\npspn\nPPP7:\n10r~NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 1963\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeth Cop 2.60\nBralorne 5.80\nCanam .10\nCanusa .06\nCariboo Gold .85\nCowichan Cop .86\nCraig 18.62Vi\nGiant Mascot .73\nGranduc 3.85\nHighland Bell 2.75\nKamloops .WA\nKoot. B M .21\nMt. Washington 1.03\nNational Ex .05\nPend Oreille 1.70\nQuatsino .08\nReeves MacDonald 1.35\nSheep Creek 1.14\nSherritt Gordon 3.10\nSilbak Premier .30\nSilver Ridge .04\nSilver Standard .28\nSkeena .06V4\nTorwest .17%\nWestern Exploration .18\nWestern Mines 3.35\nOILS\nCalgary & Edmonton      21.75\nCharter 1.44\nHome 11.75\nPacific Pete 11.75\nPeace River Gas .21\nRoyal Can .07\nVantor .WA\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers Vt 2.15\nB C Forests 15.25\nB C Power 19.87V!\nB C Telephone 54.50\nCanadian Collieries 8.00\nCrestbrook 1.45\nCrestbrook Pfd. 41.00\nInt Brew B 5.37%\nMacM & Powell River 22.6214\nTrans Mtn 14.87V4\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk 28.25\nTrans Canada Com 24.75\nTrans Mountain Unit 15.00\nWest Coast Vt 13.00\nBANKS\nBk. of Mont.      65.62V4 66.62V4\nImp. Bk. of C.   63.25 64.00\nRoyal Bk. of C.  75.75 76.75\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.\n9.11\n9.98\nAll Can. Div.\n6.38\n6.99\nAmer. Growth\n8.12\n8.85\nCan. Inv. Fund\n10.41\n11.41\nCommonwealth Int.\n8.89\n9.74\nDiversified B\n4.27\n4.70\nFirst Oil and Gas\n4.46\n4.87\nGrouped Income\n3.53\n3.86\nIntnl. Mutual\n4.38\n4,76\nInvestors Growth\n6.74\n7 33\nInvestors Mutual\n12.46\n13.55\nLeverage\n7.44\n8.15\nMutual Accum\n3.67\n4.01\nMutual Bond\n7.32\n7.66\nMutual Inc.\n5.27\n5.76\nTrans Canada \"C\"\n6.26\n6,74\nUnited Ace. Funds\n6.01\n6.57\nKILLED BY TRAIN\nVANCOUVER (CP) - John\nAnagostou, 25, was killed and a\nsecond man injured Tuesday\nnight in a car-train collision\nhere. Police said the car struck\nthe first two units of a B.C.\nHydro freight train.\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1300 ON THE   DIAL\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1963\n:59\u2014Sign On\n:00\u2014The Morning Show\n\u2014Farm Fare\n:00\u2014News\n:05-Wake-Up Time\n:25\u2014Sports News\nI\u2014News\n:35-Wake-Up Time\n:00-News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Wake-Up Time Continues\n:30\u2014Opening Markets\n:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Count Your Blessings\n: 15\u2014The Archers\n:30\u2014District Road Report\n:35 Alan's A.M. Spot\n:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n:00-News\n:05-What's Tlie Song Contest\n: 10\u2014Baldwin Commentary\n:15~To Market With Music\n: 45\u2014Preview Commentary\n:50\u2014Morning Melodies\n:00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Morning Melodies Cont.\n: 45\u2014Cafe Variety\n:00\u2014Let's Sing Along\n: 15\u2014Sports News\n:25\u2014News\n: 30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n: 55\u2014Noon Markets\n: 00\u2014Free Time Political\nBroadcast\n: 15\u2014Shirley Harmer Show\n:30-What's On Tapp\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcasts\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05-Closing Markets\n3:10-Sports Spotlight\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n3:30\u2014Potpourri\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-Ebb Tide\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014The Highway Patrol\n5:40\u2014Campaign Report\n5:45\u2014Byline\n5:50\u2014Sport News\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Job Finder\n6:15\u2014Supper Serenade\n6:30-The Bible Speaks to You\n6:45\u2014Canada at Work\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Assignment\n8:00\u2014Radio International\n8:30\u2014Variety Showcase\n9:00\u2014Citizen's Forum\n9:30\u2014Canadian String Quartet\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n10:15-Chapel in the Sky\n10:30\u2014Christian Frontiers\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\n11:01\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nFRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1963\n: 00\u2014Morning Show\n: 35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n:00\u2014News and Report\n: 10\u2014Count Your Blessings\n: 15\u2014The Archers\n30\u2014Morning Concert\n59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n10\u2014For Consumers\n15\u2014Critically Speaking\n45\u2014Playroom\n00\u2014Off the Record\n45\u2014Win, Place or Show\n55-Austin Willis\n00\u2014Blye and The Boys\n25\u2014Showcase\nI\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014John Drainie\n15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n45\u2014Program Resume\n00\u2014National School Broadcast\n30\u2014News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Potpourri\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u20141 Love Paris\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014Tempo For Teens\n5:20\u2014World Amateur Hockey\n5:30\u2014Tempo\n6:00\u2014Max Ferguson Review\n6:30\u2014Evening Concerts\n7:00\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Assignment\n8:00\u2014Radio International\n8:30\u2014Canada's Big Bands\n9:00\u2014Free Time Politic?'\nBroadcast\n9:30-CBC Jazz Club\n10:00-News\n10:15\u2014Talking About Books\n10:3O-Late Night Theatre\n11:00\u2014The Scope of che Novel\n11:57\u2014News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n7:00 High Road\n7:30 Ozzie and Harriet \u2022\n8:00 Donna Reed Show \u2022\n8:30 Leave It To Beaver *\n9:00 My Three Sons\n9:30 McIIale's Navy\n10:00 Premiere *\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:30 Movie\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n30 Bachelor Father\n00 Perry Mason \u2022\n00 Twilite Zone *\n,10:00 The Nurses *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n111:30 Tonite Show *\nKBQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\n7:00 Best of Groucho\n7:30 Wide Countrv *\n8:30 Dr. Kildare *\n9:30 Hazel (C) \u2022\n10:00 Andy Williams (C) *\n11:00 Late Movie:\n\"Phoenix City Story\"\nCBC-TV - Nelson. Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\n2:00 Chez Helene\n2:15 Nursery School Time\n2:30 National School Telecast\n3:00 Loretta Young Show\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 Scarlett Hill\n4:30 News\n4:45 Intermezzo\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 The Scarlet Pimpernel\n6:00 Stanley Cup Hockey\n7:30 Film\n8:00 Defenders\n9:00 People of the Potlalch\n10:00 Wrestling\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n12:00 Test Pattern\n12:30 Monitor Seven\nStage Seven:\n\"Running Target\"\n2:30 Western Schools\n3:00 Loretta Young Show\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 Scarlett Hill\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 What's New\n5:30 Friday Island\nFRIDAY\n6:00 Sports, Weather, News\n6:30 A Look at Agriculture\n7:00 Dr. Kildare\n8:00 Political Talks\n8:30 True\n9:00 Tommy Ambrose\n9:30 Empire\n10:30 Tides and Trails\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 North Lethbridge Presents\n\"All The King's Men\"\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally Newt does not hold Itselt responsible In the event\noi an e.Tor In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAnacon Lead\nAumaque\nBarnat\nBase Metals\nBibis Yukon\nBuffalo Ank\nCampbell C\nCassiar\nCentral Patricia\nChimo\nCoch Will\nCoin Lake\nCons. Discovery\nCons Halliwell\nConwest\nCopper Corp.\nCraig\nD'Aragon\nDenison\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nElder\nGeco\nGiant Yel.\nGunnar Gold\nHarminerals\nHollinger\nHudson Bay\nHydra Ex\nIron Bay\nJoliet Que.\nJonsmith\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLeitch\nLittle Long Lac\nLorado\nMcLeod\nMalartic\nMarboy\nMaritime Mining\nMcKenzie\nMining Corp\nMulti Mins.\nMurray\nNew Hosco\nNormetals\nNorpax\nNorth Rankin\nOpemiska\nPine Point\nPlacer\nPreston\nQuebec Lithium\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\nSherritt Gordon\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con\nTaurcanis\nTeck Hughes\nTemagami\nThomp-Lund\nTorbit\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nWright Hargreaves\nYellowknife Beat'\nYoung Gold\nOILS\nBanff  Oils\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Delhi\nCanadian Devonian\nHome A\nMidcon\nNat. Pete\nNew Continental\nPacific Pete\nPetrol\nProv Gas\nSpooner\nStanwell Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\n5.85\n.64\n.25\n.05V4\n1.10\n.06\n.39\n2.18\n3.95\n10.75\n1.25\n.47\n4.25\n.2214\n.77\n.231-i\n4.25\n.15\n18.75\n.17\n11.50\n2.55\n2.14\n1.04\n27.37%\n12.62 Vi\n9.10\n.12%\n27.12V!\n54.25\n.27\n1.09\n.22\n.14\n1.37\n1.63\n1.81\n.92\n.85\n.12\n.45\n.33%\n14.12%\n.21\n1.15\n1.41\n2.84\n.10\n.35\n7.00\n12.25\n27.25\n7.80\n2.65\n.89\n10.25\n.43\n.85\n12.50\n.35\n3.20\n1.85\n4.85\n1.63\n.28\n1.65\n.72\n.64\n.38\n8.15\n1.53\n1.57\n.84\n1.15\n1.15\n22.00\n3.30\n3.40\n12.25\n.24\n1.82\n.32%\n11.75\n.62\n1.55\n.WA\n.39\n1.58\n1.50\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nAtlas St.\nBathurst Power\nBeatty Bros.\nBell Telephone\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers B\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCan. Cement\nCan. Malting\nCan. Packers B\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners\nCanadian Celanese\nCan Chem Co.\nCanadian Dredge\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chemical\nDom Textiles\nEddy Match\nFalconbridge\nFamous Players\nFord Can\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pfd.\nGen. Steel Wares\nGoodyear\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Ace.\nInt.  Nickel\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMetro Com\nMolson Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp\nShawinigan\nShell Oil\nSimpsons A\nStandard Paving\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Sleel\nWeston George\nWoodwards A\n.06\n40%\n48y4\n24%\n37%\n16%\n11\n55 Vs\n15%\n16%\n19%\n9\n36%\n74%\n59\n10%\n12%\n50%\n8%\n7%\n27%\n25y4\n20%\n49%\n14y4\n18'\/4\n19%\n36\n59%\n19\n174\n34%\n100%\n8%\n127\n41%\n14\n26%\n64%\n13%\nm\n29%\n12\n52\n31%\n20%\n9\n30\n16%\n31%\n10'A\n19\n44%\n19%\n5\n18%\n17\nInsurance Firm's\nPayments in B.C.\nOver $5,000,000\nRobert J. Petty, manager of\nMetropolitan Life Insurance\nCompany's Nelson district, reports that the company's payments to policy holders and ben\neficiaries in British Columba\nlast year amounted to $5,663,-\n532.\n\"On the basis of company-\nwide averages, about twice as\nmuch was paid to living policyholders as the beneficiaries of\ndeath claim payments,\" he added. Mr. Petty has just returned\nfrom New York City where he\nattended a business conference\nwith Metropolitan officials.\nOver the last five years payments to British Columbia policyholders and beneficiaries have\namounted to $24,491,115.\nMetropolitan paid out a record\n$1,986,000,000 to policyholders\nand beneficiaries last year.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Santa\nClaus' eight\nhelpers\n8. More\navaricious\n4. Bye\n6. Spread\ngrass to dry\n6. Scotch\nteocake\nT. Part of\nnavy\nrations\n8. Wavy: Her.\n9. Snick\nand\t\n10. Difficult\nto do\n16. Greek\nIsland\nVt. Syrian\nbishop's\ntitle\n18. Foot-\nlike\npart\n20. Home\nof\nLong-\nfellow'B\nEvangeline\n22. Link\n(pl.)\n23. Produces\nby labor\n(2 wds.)\n24. Arab gar.\nments\n26. Plank's\ncurve on\nship\n28. Hall!\n30. Place of\nworship\naaao aaiBa\nBargain eesmsh\nsbbbq manna\nsbbiie aasas\nannua . \u201e\nBBS des mmm\nannaa sibebh\nansa bis ebb\nnanus    -\n3HQHB QHBBH\n30SUB BEE@@\nannua nsaaM\n 1     aaQDi\nYcsterdiy'i Ahwm\n32. To desire\n33. White ants\nP.I.\n34. Ship's\nfloor\n35. Pen-name\nof Lamb\n37. Old Spanish: abbr.\n38. Discover\nACROSS '\n1. Jargon of\ncriminals\n6. Be still!\n11. Unite, aa\ncompanies\n12. Plant of\nbanana\nfamily\n13. To give up\n14. System\n15. Born\n16. Certainly\n17. Affix\n18.\" and\nPeasant\"\n19. Grayish\ntans\n21. Negrito\n25. Malt\nbeverage*\n26. Not tho\nvarsity\nteam\n27. Irish exclamation\n28. Capital of\nTurkey\n29. All the\nwarships of\na nation\n31, and\nouts\n32. Walk, aa\na duck\n35. Half ems\n36. Unfit\n37. Margarines\n39. Via,\nprincipal\nstreet of\nOld Rome\n40. Maple or\ncorn\u2014\u2014\n41. User of a\nyouth hostel\n42. Meat pie:\nBrit\nDOWN\n1. Girl's name\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work lt:\nAXTDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In thia sample A la used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters, apoa-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nM      PTTS      YTCNIAIOIATC      AN      AC-\nLACAIOEB      WGIIGH      1UMO      IUG\nWGNI      S QN JTI. \u2014 V M YMOEMB\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: CONSTANCY IS BUT A DULL\nSLEEPY QUALITY AT BEST.\u2014GEORGE FARQUHAR\nC 1963, King Features Syndicate, Inc.\n1\n7.\n3\n4-\nS\n%\nfa\n7\na\n9\nIO\n\"\n%\nIX\n'3\n%\n1 +\n^A\nis\n%\nlb\n17\n%\nIS\n%\n%\n%\n19\n20\nV\/\/t\n31\nii\n3.3\nst\n3S\n%\nlb\n*7\n%\n26\n%\n^A\n%\n\u00bb\u00bb\nlo\n%\n31\n32\n33\n34\n'^A\n39\n%\nSb\n1\n37\nJ8\nil\n%\n4o\n41\n%\n4a\nDEVELOP NEW FABRIC\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014Soviet scientists said today they have developed a germ-killing fabric\nthat can be used for everything\nfrom surgeon smocks to baby\ndiapers. The Soviet news agency\nTass said the fabric will destroy bacteria causing intestinal\ninfections, pneu m o n i a, fungi\nand certain skin diseases. It\nsaid the biologically active elements of the cloth will not wash\nout with soap and hot water.\n(DMsUl \"Up. LOilk\nWlcuiiott Mcxhibt\nPrinted Pattern\n9341\nCZ2EE9\nEXTRA-EASY !\nLean, spare shift \u2014 marvel\nof glamor in dress or evening\nlength. Tie it brilliantly with\nsash or cummerbund, or wear\nit straight.\nPrinted Pattern 9341: Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size\n16 takes 2% yards 39-inch; sash\n1% yards.\nFORTY CENTS (40c) in coins\n(no stamps please) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to Marian\nMartin, NDN, 60 Front Street\nWest, Toronto. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER and your\nNAME and ADDRESS.\nFREE OFFER! Coupon ln\nSpring Pattern Catalog for one\npattern free\u2014any one you choose\nfrom 300 design ideas. Send 50c\nnow for Catalog.\nMATCH-MATES\nKeep a new baby cozy in the\nluxury of this all-year set. Use\n3-ply fingering yarn.\nMom  will  be  proud  to take\nbaby  on  outings in  this lacy\npineapple    set  \u2014  jacket and\ncarriage   cover.   Pattern 756:\ncrochet directions for set.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coin\n(no stamps, please) for this patter, Nelson Daily News Pattern\nDept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNEWEST RAGE-SMOCKED\naccessories plus 208 exciting\nneedlecraft designs in our new\n1963 Needlecraft Catalog - just\nout! Fashions, furnishings to\ncrochet, knit, sew. weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern.\nSend 25c now\nClassified \u00bb.ds Get Resultsl\n  ; -r^-:\n.   \u25a0   .,\u25a0.-':. \u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 : :\u2014\n^       : \u2014  ~'~'~r'':^\u2014\u2014\u2014jga\u20149\n-117  I\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 19fr3^11|\nBIRTHS\nGRAHAMS - To Mr. and Mrs.\nR. E. Grahams of Dawson\nCreek, B.C., March 23, a daughter, i Mrs. Graham is the former\nAlice Ronmark.)\nLONG - To Mr. and Mrs.\nDonald Long, 703 Seventh Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, March 26, a daughter.\nHILLYARD - To Mr. and\nMrs. Donald Hillyard, 920 Silica\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, March 27, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nMALE   OR   FEMALE\nHELP WANTED\nGOOD MAN\nOVER 40\nTo fill vacancy in Nelson\narea. Worth up to $400\nto $1,000 in a month for\nright man.\nWrite J. V. Garner, Vice Pres.,\nTexas Refinery Corp., Box 711,\nFort Worth 1, Texas.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nFULL OR PART-TIME HOUSE-\nwives and mothers needed in\nsales. No experience needed to\nstart. We train. Wrile Mrs. E.\nC. Hearn, Avon Mgr., 15-3270\nLaburnum Dr., Trail, B.C.\nSTEADY EMPLOYMENT FOR\nhousekeeper to look after four\nchildren in Fairview home.\nPhone 352-5785 or apply 715\nNelson Ave.\nTEACHERS - SUMMER JOBS\nwith Exceptional Earning Opportunities in East and West\nKootenay areas. Write Box\n4966, Nelson Daily News.\niathj Sfatita\nCirculation  Dept.,  Ph. 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription rates;\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month      $ 2.00\nThree months -.._      5.00\nSix months       10.00\nOne year       18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month         $ 2.00\nThree months      6.00\nSix months    11.00\nOne year         20.00\nBy mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month       $ 2.50\nThree months      7.00\nSix months     13.00\nOne year           24.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,   phone   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillison;\nIn Trail. Mrs. W. E. Spooner\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac \u2014 Buick\nVauxball - GMC\n701 Baker St.        Phone 352-6641\n24 hour Wrecker Service\nFront End Aligning \u2014\nAutomatic Service\nBody and Paint Shop\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231\nRENAULT SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411        295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 8 a.m.\u20149 p.m.\nAcross Lake Phone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355\nAustin \u2022 Morris - MGA \u2022 Wolseley\nCars \u2014 Parts \u2014 Service\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE LTD.\nYmir Rd.    Ph. 352-7421    Nelson\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.       Phone 352-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\nCOLUMBIA   TRADING  CO.\n001 Front St. Ph.  352-5571\nZEEBEN LUMBER CO.\nYmir, B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling.  Serving  Nelson and  Dist\n1020 Davies St. - Nelson\nCleaning Service\nCLEANTONE\nProfessional rug, upholstery,\nceiling and wall cleaning.\nFree Estimates. Phone 352-2916.\nDUTCH \"CLEANING  SERVICE\nChesterfields, carpets cleaned\nin own workshop.\nFree Estimates. Phone 352-6323.\nContractors\nFor a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPE LEAF\nCONSTRUCTION\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nGOVERNMENT OF THE\nPROVINCE OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nDEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nNELSON - CRESTON\nELECTORAL DISTRICT\nBRIDGE PROJECT\nNo. 449\nDISMANTLING AND RE-\nERECTION OF NICK'S\nISLAND  FERRY\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSealed tenders, marked \"Tender for Bridge Project No. 449 \u2014\nDismantling and Re-erection of\nNick's Island Ferry,\" will be received by the Minister of Highways in his office at the Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C.\nup to 2:00 p.m. (Pacfic Standard\nTime) on Thursday the 11th day\nof April. 1963, and opened in pub-\nlice at that time and date.\nPlans, specifications, and conditions of tender may be obtained from lhe Deparlmenl of Highways, 635 Burrard Street, Vancouver, 1, B.C., or from the undersigned for the sum of ten dollars ($10) whicli is not refundable.\nNo lender will be accepted or\nconsidered which contains an escalator clause or any other qualifying conditions and the lowest\nor any tender will not necessarily be accepted.\nCHIEF ENGINEER.\nF. T. BROWN,\nDepartment of Highways,\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C.\nFile No: 326\nDate: March, 1963.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nEVER BRICK CONSTRUCTION\nGeneral Contracting and\nAlterations.\nPh.  collect 365-6651,  Castlegar.\nMOVING TO U.S.A. MUST\nsell immediately \u2014 8 rooms of\nhousehold furniture. Electric\nrange, refrig., T.V., washer\nand dryer, section chesterfield, bunk beds, etc., etc. No\nreasonable offer refused. No\ndealers please. 1018 Stanley\nStreet.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St.\nPh. 365-5342-Castlegar, B.C.\nBOYD C.  AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S.,  P.  Eng.\n218 Gore Street Nelson\nPhone 352-3341\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525\nPlastics\nPlastic  Laminating  \u2014  Custom\nWork \u2014 Fiberglas \u2014 Resins.\nSIMC'O PLASTICS\nPhone 352-7141, Ymir Rd, Nelson\nPrinting\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO   ELECTRONIC\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON  EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C. - Phone 352-5455\nChimney Cleaning\nKootenay Chimney Service\n702 Munro Street\nPhone 352-3027 or 352-6222\nCoal and Cartage\nTOWLER FUEL & TRANSFER\nDomestic Coals of All Kinds\nGeneral Cartage-Local Moving\nPh. 352-3031 394 Baker St.\ni\ni\nSporting Goods\nSIDES LIGHT STEER BEEF,\n200 Ib. average, 49c lb. Sides\nheavy beef, 275 lb. average,\n43c lb. Cut, Wrapped, Frozen.\nFree delivery to Nelson.\nWhitford's Meats, Ph. 356-\n2556, Creston.\nFOR QUICK SALE - AUTO-\nmatic electric ignition oil\nheater, 48.500 B.T.U. complete.\n23\" Admiral T.V., swivel cabinet. R.C.A. Whirlpool fridge,\n11 cu. ft. as new. No reasonable offer refused. Ph 357-9752.\nSIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c lb.\nSides or grain fed pork, 35c lb.\nBacon and hams. Newdan\nFarms, Creston. Ph. EL 6-9901.\nFree weekly delivery.\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n323 Vernon St. -- Nelson\n24-Hour BCAA Recommended\nWrecker Service\nPhone 352-3121\nNEW   CHEV.   BISCAYNES\nNEW CHEV. BEL-AIRS\nNEW CHEV. IMPALAS\nNEW CHEVY II SEDANS\nNEW CHEVY II STN. WGNS.\nNEW CHEVY II HARDTOPS\nNEW CORVAIR SEDANS\nNEW CORVAIR HARDTOPS\nNEW OLDS HARDTOP\nNEW ENVOY SEDAN\nNEW CHEV. Vi-TONS\nUSED  UNITS\n1\u20141962 F85 OLDS JETFIRE\n1\u20141962 RAMBLER\n13-1962 CHEV. STN. WGNS.\n2-1962 CHEV. BISCAYNES\n1-1962 CHEV. BEL-AIR\n13-1961 CHEV. BISCAYNES\n2-1962 CHEV. STN. WGNS.\n1-1961 AUSTIN\n1-1960 AUSTIN GYPSY\n2-1960 VOLKSWAGENS\n1-1960 MERCURY PANEL\n1-1960 FORD SEDAN\n4-1960 CHEV. SEDANS\n1-1959 CHEV. 2-DOOR\n1\u20141959 CHEV. SEDAN\n1-1959 CHEV. H.T.\n1-1959 CHEV. 'A-TON\n1\u20141959 DODGE H.T.\n1-1959 FARGO '4-TON\n1-1959 CHEV. STN. WGN.\n1\u20141958 FORD 'A-TON\n1-1958 FIAT SEDAN\n1-1958 BUICK SEDAN\n1-1958 PONTIAC H.T.\n1-1957 CHEV. SEDAN\n1-1956 BUICK H.T.\n1-1956 FORD PANEL\n1-1956 OLDS. H.T.\n1-1956 CHEV. 2-DOOR\n1-1956 FARGO '\/i-TON\n'60 AUSTIN 850. EXCELLENT\ncond. Better than 50 M.P.G.\nOwners leaving for U.S.A.\nMust be sold. 1018 Stanley St.,\nNelson.\n'62 CHEV. 6 CYLINDER STAN-\ndard, 13,000 miles. Immaculate. Will accept clean older\ntrade. Box 872 Castlegar.\n'55 CHEV. 4 DOOR V-8 STAN-\ndard 2 tone, radio and heater.\nCan be seen at Quality Produce, 78 Government Road.\n1961 9 PASSENGER VOLKS-\nwagen bus. Radio, good tires,\ngood condition. Ph. 352-2916.\n\u202261 TRIUMPH STATION WA-\ngon, '51 Chev. North Shore\nService, phone 352-2929.\n'46 JEEP, $350. NEEDS RE-\npairs. J. M. Johnston, Robson,\n5 miles from ferry.\n'55 G.M.C. PICKUP IN GOOD\nshape. $500. See at 207 Behn-\nsen St.\n'55 MERCURY MONTEREY,\nautomatic, full power, radio.\nSacrifice $475. Phone 352-6162.\n1960 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE.\nMake an offer. Ph. 352-2635.\n'53    PONTIAC.\nafter 5 p.m.\nPH.    352-5637\n1959 CHEV. STATION WAGON.\nPhone 365-4698.\nLUMBER SPECIAL -UTILITY\ngrade sheathing also 2x4s and\n2x6s, to clear at greatly reduced prices on load lots. Pass-\nmore Lumber Co. Ltd. Phone\nSouth Slocan 359-7221.\t\nO R G A N I Z A TIONS, HAVE\nyour business cards sealed in\nplastic any sizes up to 5'4x7'4\ninches. For prices write \"Sealing Service\" 338 Linden Ave.,\nNorth Kamloops, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1959 CHEV. 1M-\npala Convertible. Ph. 352-6805.\n'52-'54 FORD PARTS. REASON-\nable. Phone 352-5961.\nRENTALS\nWILL LEASE OR RENT\nlarge family home close to\nCentral School. 4 bdrms., auto\noil furnace, elec. H.W., 220\nwiring for dryer and range.\nHeated garage. Only reliable\nparties need apply. Box 4974,\nDaily News.\nDELUXE MODERN APT. 1 BR.\nliving room, bath and kitchen,\nelectric stove and fridge, excellent location, heated, $75\nper mo. unfurnished. No small\nchildren. Fleming Apartments,\nphone 352-3815 or 352-7514.\n3 RM. UNFURN. STE., GAS\nrange, also 1 furn. room. Will\naccept help with chores as\npart rent payment. Close in.\nPh. after 4:30 p.m. 352-6985.\nUSED   TRACTOR\nS-A-L-E\nCERTIFIED BUYS\n5 JOHN DEERE CRAWLERS\nWith dozers and winches, operator guard, arch.\nPRICED $2100 to $5100\n3 JOHN DEERE CRAWLER\nFRONT END LOADERS\nPRICED $2000 to $4000\nForks Extra $300\n2 SHAWNEE BACKHOES\nWith 2 Buckets. Dig 12 Ft.\nPRICED $950 each.\n1 FORDSON MAJOR DIESEL\nRUBBER TIRED TRACTOR\nWith Sherman Backhoe.\nPRICED $2200\nNew Front-End Loader and\nDozer for Above\n$1100 Extra\n1 2'i-TON FARGO TRUCK\nAl All Around - $475\n1 Heavy Duty LOGGING TRUCK\nVery Good - $1500\n1 Single Axle TRAILER - $500\n2 Tandem LOGGING TRAILERS\nat $1400\n1 MOBILE JAMMER\nWith Swinging Boom \u2014 $1000\n1 SKAGIT 2-DRUM WINCH\nOnly $950\n1 2-DRUM WINCH - $200\nAny of the above tractors\ncan   be   purchased   on   a\nrental purchase plan.\nALSO\nBe Sure and See the\nNew Model 50\nJohn Deere\nBackhoe\nCan Be Mounted on Any\nType of Machine\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Co.\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\nLOW WINTER RATES\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.\nweekly, monthly rates. Dishes\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker Street.\n1 BDRM. APT. FURN. OR UN-\nfurn. Heat and H.W. supplied.\nPrivate entrance on the level.\nVernon St. Ph. 352-5252.\nSIDE BY SIDE DUPLEX, 3\nrooms and bath, heated. Electric range, basement. Adults\nonly. Phone 352-7491.\n3 RM. HEATED APT. UN-\nfurn., fridge and gas range.\nAvail. April 1. Phone 352-6991\nor call at 718 Kootenay St.\nBRIGHT AND QUIET 4 RM.\napartment with bath room.\nSeparate entrance. Adults.\nPhone 352-7164.\nCASTLEAIRD\nSHOPPING CENTRE\nKINNAIRD, B.C.\nto lease\nHARDWARE STORE\nReady for Occupancy\nBAKERY\nProven sales and a tie-in\nwith Super Market\nPartially fixtured.\nYOUNG AGENCIES LTD.\nCastleaird Plaza,\nBox 169, Kinnaird, B.C.\nTRAILERS\n1961 10 X 50 TRAILER, 2 B.R.,\nfully furnished in Colonial\nstyle. Auto, washer, carpeting.\nReasonable. Ph. 173-R nights,\nNakusp.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nTANDEM DISC FOR 3 POINT\nhitch tractor. Also 4 wheel\nrubber tired wagon. Reasonable price. Apply Box 283,\nTrail, B.C.\nUSED MINING MACHINERY,\ncompressors, 20-lb. rail, pipe,\netc. Reply Box 4977, Daily\nNews.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - Posting\nits second 4,000,000 - share day\nin as many sessions, the stock\nmarket Wednesday gained further ground. Savings-and-loans\nand   steels   were   prominent.\nVolume rose to 4,300,000 shares\nfrom 4,110,000 Tuesday and was\nthe largest since Feb. 18 when\n4,700,000 shares changed hands.\nMore significant was that it\nwas the first time in more than\na month that there had been\ntwo sessions of 4,000,000 shares\nback-to-back.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average rose 4.35 to 684.73.\nThe California savings - and- \\ in junior issues\nloan holding companies continued to be stimulated by a\nreport that a series of mergers\nof the associations is expected in\nthe next several weeks.\nto a new 1963 high of 601.84,\ngolds .44 to 91.46, base metals\n1.14 to 201.41 and western oils\nto 117.78. Final volume was\n3,716,000 shares compared with\n4,083,000 Tuesday.   '\u25a0      '    .\nSenior base metals: were\npaced by Falconbridge, up Vs to\n5914 after hitting a new higll.of:\n59V8, and Noranda aheBd V4.\nAmong speculatives, Lorado I\nmade the most active, list. on\nabout 122,000 shares arid rose ,|\n17 cents to $1.80.\nWestern oils spent another\nfairly quiet session with Central\nDel Rio rising 15 cents \"to $8.45\nUSED COAL, WOOD, STOVE\nwith water jacket. Also used\noffice desk. Box 388, Kaslo.\nphone 353-2251.\nWANTED GARBAGE BURNER\n(annex heater). Ph. 357-9391 or\nBox 5157, Nelson Daily News.\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANT1-\nques. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531, 413 Hall.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" sq. 10c lb. Nelson Daily News.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED TO BUY LAKE-\nfront property suitable for\nhomesite. Write D. R. Parker,\n105A. St. APO, 845, New York,\nNew York.\nROOM AND BOARD\nOne Ton Cable Hoist\nJac-Lift Weighs 6V4 lbs.\nFor Cars, Boats, Industrial.\n$29.95\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\nUSED TRACTORS, SOME\nlike new. Also used farm implements, and used tractor\ntires. Apply N. P. Poisson,\nUpper Summer subdivision,\nKimberley, B.C. Ph. 427-2794.\n1960 440 DIESEL JOHN DEERE\ncrawler loader, bucket, forks\nand winch.. Completely overhauled. $5300. M. Pictin, Ph.\n357-9468, Salmo.\nGIBSON TRACTOR AND IM-\nplements for sale. Phone 359-\n7386.\nj \u20141956  Plymouth\n2-Door\n1\u20141955 Chev. Sedan\n$350.00 Each\nUSED TV SETS A-l CONDI-\ntion. Nelson Home Furniture\nand Appliances Ltd.. Nelson.\nPhone 352-6432.\nVIKING REFRIG. ONLY USED\n6 months. Must sell. $150.\nPhone 352-6836.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals.\n339 Baker St. Phone 352-3631.\n20   H.P.   OUTBOARD.\n352-2861.\nPHONE\n3 PIECE BATHROOM SET.\nPhone 352-7653.\nFred Whlteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street   Phone 352-7741\nSteam Baths\nNELSON STEAM BATHS\nExercise Centre - 369 Baker St\nTopsoil\nLorry's Topsciil, Sand & Gravel\n9th and Davies St   Ph   352-2355\nDays or 352 7576 Evens.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle within\napproximately 50 miles of Nelson, phone Nelson 352-6874\nNelson and District A.I\nCentre. 709 Third St.. Nelson\nPORK - WEANER PIGS FOR\nsale. Wvnndel Hog Farm, Box\n46, Wynndel, B.C. Phone 356-\nFOR SALE  170 SHEEP. G. L.\nAndrews, Box 92, Rossland.\n5 ROOM APT. UNFURN. -\nelectric stove, oil heat. Phone\nbusiness hours 352-5328.\n1-1955 VOLKSWAGEN   V4-Ton\nMany More Older Cars to Choose\nFrom. These must go. We need\nthe room. NO REASONABLE\nOFFER REFUSED.\nMUFFLER SPECIAL\n1954 to 1963 GM Car Mufflers\nReplaced\n95\nYour\nCHEV., OLDS, CADILLAC,\nF85,  CHEVY II, CORVAIR\nENVOY Dealer\n2 ROOM STE. FURNISHED.\nSuitable 2 girls or young couple. 116 Vernon St. Ph. 352-5602.\n3 ROOM APT. PARTLY FUR-\nnished. Reasonable. Apply 306\nVictoria Street.\nBRIGHT CENTRAL APT. AND\nNorth Shore cottage. Adults.\nPhone 352-6024.\n2 BDRM. HOUSE, ACROSS\nfrom Tarry's School. Phone\n359-7517.\n2 BDRM. HOME. APPROX. 12\nacres. Some timber, propane\nfurnace, water heater range.\nAt Brouse, 2 miles from Nakusp on No. 6 Highway. Phone\nT. A. Bennie, 153T, Naksup.\n1 BEDROOM COTTAGE AT 3\nMile N. Shore. Available now.\nPh. 352-7717 or 352-5073.\nONE BEDROOM HEATED AND\npartly furnished apartment.\nApply 1019 Latimer Street.\t\nHOUSEKEEPING 1 AND 2\nrms. Fur. Pri. parking. Ph.\nday 352-2015, evens. 352-6242.\nMODERN UNFURN. 1 BDRM.\napt. Heated. $68. Ph. 352-3417.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM $20 A\nmonth. Phone 352-7462.\n2 ROOM  FURNISHED  SUITE\nApril 1st. Phone 352-2696.\n2  BDRM.   APARTMENT.   PH.\n352-6148 mornings.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nFOR QUICK SALE 2 HOUSES\nand 20 acres land. Water, electricity, plumbing, outbuildings.\nFull price $6,500. Apply Voykin\nCoffee Shop, Passmore, B.C.\nPhone 359-7297.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAIL,\nfor gentleman April 1. Phone\n352-2657.\nBOARD    AND    ROOM    ON\nNorth Shore. Phone 352-7731.\nROOM   AND   BOARD. PHONE\n352-6352.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nPUREBRED BASSETT PUPS\nfor sale, ready to go. Abey's\nRanch, Lardeau.\nCOCKER PUPS $15.00 ALSO\nChihuahas $25.00. Bird's Kennels, Blueberry Creek.\nSEWING MACHINES\nDELUXE Z1G ZAG FROM\n$89.95. For a free home demonstration without obligation\ndrop in or call Simpsons Sears\nLtd., Phone 352-5531.\nAVERAGE RISES\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks advanced 1.1 to\n259.5.\nOf 1,297 issues traded, 670 advanced and 370 declined.\nEleven of the 15 most active\nstocks' rose, three fell, and one\nwas unchanged, American Motors.\nFour of the savings-and-loans\nwere numbered among the 15\nmost active issues and one of\nthem, San Diego Imperial\ntopped the list, rising % to 124\non 97,900 shares. Second was\nU.S. steel, up lVi at 46\",i on\n94,100 shares.\nAmong Canadian issues\ntraded, Hudson Bay Mining and\nDistillers Seagrams each rose\nVs while up ',\u00ab apiece were Walker Gooderham, International\nNickel and Aluminium Ltd.\nDome Mines dropped Vs.\nPrices on the American exchange were irregularly higher\non volume of 1,020,000 shares\ncompared with 910,000 Tuesday. Molybdenite rose Vs. Jupiter Corp. Vi and Fargo Oil\n1-16. Scurry Rainbow oil fell Vi.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket pushed ahead in all sections and the industrial index hit\na new high for 1963 during\nmoderate  trading Wednesday.\nIndustrials moved ahead\nnearly two points on index, base\nmetals more than a point and\ngolds and base metals each\nedged  ahead fractionally\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stocks\nmoved  up Wednesday on the |\nMontreal    and    Canadian ;ex-\nchanges.  Trading was moderate.\nAmong utilities, Shawinigan\nrose Vi to 30 in a turnover of\n13,148 shares. Bell was up Virto\n55V'\u00bb. '\u25a0'\u25a0'.\u25a0      \u2022\u2022\nOther gainers Included Aluminium, up li to 24%; Hudson's Bay Company,, up Vi to\n14',\u00bb; Du Pont, up Vi to 43japA\nIndustrial Acceptance, up Vi to\n26%.\nAmong papers. Consolidated\nPaper was up % loans.\" Among\nwestern oils Central- Del Rio\nrose 20 cents to $8.50.\nBanks showed losses, Mont-1\nreal at 66 and the Royal at |\n76'i, each falling 'A.\nIn a turnover of 5,970 shares, I\nMassey-Ferguson dropped Vs to |\n13%.  Also  down  was  International Nickel, falling Vi to 64%.\nIn mines, Alsof was up four\ncents to 54 cents and Fox Lake\nthe same amount to 23 cents.\nBoth traded heavily.\nThe indices were mainly up,\nindustrials rising 0.4^ to 120.0\nand the composite 0.3 to 119.9.\nHitting highs were utilities, up\n0.2 to 116.5 and papers, up 0.5\nto 104.8. Banks dropped 0.6 to\n125.1.\nWorld Briefs\nKILL TWO ABOARD TRAIN\nELISABETHVILLE, (Reuters)\nMen in Katangan military and\npolice uniforms Tuesday night\nstopped  a train between Rho-\nMain list advances werel!^ fnd   f^'\"yille   and\n.    .,-._,  ...,.,.   ,. ] killed two of the passengers,\nTRAILERS\nFOR SALE - ALL STEEL\nchannel frame boy trailer in\ngood condition. Box size 7' 4\"\nx 4' 1\". Price $45. Phone 352-\n9764.\nNEAR FRUITVALE-10 ACRES\ncleared wilh three separate\nhouses and garage on village\nwater system, gravel pit,\nfruit trees and electricity.\n$8,000. Apply Box 37, Trail.\nTWO BDRM. HOUSE, FIVE\nacres land, large bathroom,\nfurnace. Three miles from\ntown. Box 138 West Grand\nForks.   Phone  427-G.\nFOR SALE 40 ACRE PROPER-\nty. house, electricity, hot and\ncold water. Price $3,500. Nicholas Voykin, Passmore, B.C.\nSMALL HOUSE ON TWO NICE\nlots on Hoover St. Ph. 352-5496\nafter 5 p.m\n1960 4-DOOR SEDAN NOW Available. Sealed bids accepted\nby the Slocan Valley Credit\nUnion, Slocan Park, B.C. Deposit of 10% by certified\ncheque or money order must\naccompany bid. Highest bid\nnot necessarily accepted. Deposits refunded on bids not accepted. All bids must be postmarked not later than April 15,\n1963.\n(Continued next column)\nFURN. 2 ROOM STE. 140 BAK-\ner St. Phone 352-3384.\n3   RM.    APT.    CLOSE-IN.\nHeated. Phone 352-7674.\nCLEAN   SEMI-FURN.   5   RM.\nsuite. Phone 352-5198.\n3 BDRM. HOUSE ON GRANITE\nRoad. Phone 352-7653.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - SATURDAY NIGHT.\nShell necklace, keepsake. Ph.\n352-2747.\nBUILDING   LOTS  CN   NORTH\nShore. Price $1450. Ph. 352-6581\nLEVEL BUILDING LOTS. PH\n352-5418.\n2 BDRM. HOME ON 2 CORNER\nlots. Ph. Slocan 355-2267.\n16 FT. SHASTA TRAILER.\nContains heating unit, gas\nrange, cooler. Sleeps 6. Phone\n352-5219.\nPERSONAL\nDRUG SUNDRIES. NOVEL-\nties at tremendous savings.\nFree catalogue. Western Distributors, Box 24DN, Regina,\nSask.\nmostly fractional with Moore\nCorporation up a point to 52,\nDu Pont '\/\u00ab and Canadian Tire\nGains of VS went to Phantom\nIndustries, B.C. Forest and Consolidated Paper, and Walker-\nGooderham, Dominion Steel and\nCoal, Algoma Steel and Building Products all moved up Vi.\nBell Telephone, one of the session's most active industrials,\nrose Vi to 55'd after reaching a\nnew 1963 high of 551i in earlier\naction.\nLOSSES FEW\nLosses were relatively few\nand in a narrow range with\nTexaco Canada off 'A, Royal\nBank, Simpsons and Imperial\nTobacco all down V4 and Ontario\nSteel off 3i.\nOn index, industrials rose 1.80\nTwo men were arrested by I\nguards when they got off the I\ntrain at Elisabethville.'\nTO GET DEGREE\nEDINBURGH (Reuters) - |\nLord Beaverbrook, Canadian-\nborn newspaper magnate, will\nreceive an honorary degree ot\ndoctor of law at St. Andrews\nUniversity June 28, the university announced today.\nDIAL TO BRITAIN\nNEW YORK (AP) -I Direct\ndialing by operators between\nthe United States and^ Britain\nbegan today, the.American Telephone and Telegraph Company\nannounced.\nWANT  ADS GET RESULTS\nI\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nACT NOW ON PRE-SEASON\nspecials. New 16 ft. plywood\nboat $375, new 14 ft. plywood\nboat $275. '62 clearance specials on Mercury outboards.\nJeffery Radio and Appliances\nLtd.\nFormer Brewing\nHead Passes\nLONDON, Ont. (CP) - Word\nwas received here of the death\nin Barbados, W.I., Tuesday of\nHugh A. Mackenzie. 62, former\nvice-president and general manager of the John Labatt Limited\nbrewing company. _\nMr. Mackenzie relinquished I\nhis fulltime duties with the\ncompany in 1956 because of illness. He underwent two operations for cancer in Boston last\nyear.\nHe was an unsuccessful Liberal candidate in the constituency of London in the 1957 and\n1958 federal elections, campaigning despite a serious cancer ailment which reduced the\nstrength of his voice.\nA native of Toronto, Mr. Mackenzie was awarded the OBE\nfor his services during the Second World War when he served\nas assistant to Donald Gordon,\nthen chairman of the Wartime\nPrices and Trade Board. Mr.\nMackenzie 0 r g a n i z ed and\nheaded the division of \"simplified practices\" in the country's\nwartime economy.\nMel Beurge Motors Turn\n'iWffiHRW\nI\nI\nI On New And Used Trucks I\n52-7511    ~ I\n\u25a0n ssmnm- ms\n1963 ECONOLINE VAN\n1963 FORD i TON\n1963 FORD 4x4 WHEEL DRIVE\n1963 FORD 1 TON, long box\nLook At These Used Truck Buys\n1962 FORD i TON\n1960 FORD 4x4 WHEEL DRIVE\n1959 CHEV. i TON\n1960 FORD i TON\n1957 VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER  -\n1957 VOLKSWAGEN VAN .\n1956 FORD i TON\n1955 CHEV. i TON\nAnd Many Good Used Cars Now in Stock\nMel Buerge\nMOTORS  LTD. \"*'*\n352-7202 PHONE 352-7511\n \u2014-\u2014 \u2014 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2014 \u2014 - ; \u2014- ; . _ . . ___ _^_\n\u25a0\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., MAR. 28, 1963\nDictionary Doodles No. 4.\n\"Bore: A person who talks when\nyou want him to listen.\"\nBut It's really never boring when you shop In Mann's.\nThere's the courteous staff to wait on you, the complete\nline of drug store items for your shopping convenience.\nNew things coming in all the time, in fact so fast that\nwe can't sell the old lines fast enough.\nSo, (or a good time while shopping, come to\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nStranded Americans Face\nGlare of World Publicity\nBy BOB TRIMBEE\nWHITEHORSE, Y.T. <CP>-\nTwo Americans, forgotten by\nthe world after disappearing in\nCanada's northern wilderness,\nWednesday faced the glare of\nworld publicity.\nRalph Flores, 42, of San\nBruno, Calif., and Helen Klaben, 21, of Brooklyn, N.Y., now\nlook forward to seeing relatives\nthey haven't seen in weeks.\nThey were stranded 50 days\nin subzero temperature halfway up a 4000-foot mountain 75\nmiles southeast of Watson Lake,\nY.T., where they faced the fury\nof winter storms before being\nrescued Monday.\nBoth fell under constant ques-\nBritish Labor Leader to\nMeet Kennedy Thursday\nBy ARTHUR GAVSHON\nLONDON (AP)-Harold Wilson flies to the United States\nThursday for his first meeting\nwith President Kennedy since\nWilson was elected head of the\nLabor party last month.\nThe program he will outline\nincludes at least three sharp\ndepartures from allied policy.\nThey are:\nLimited recognition of Communist East Germany and recognition of Poland's title to\nGerman territory occupied\nafter the war.\nSoviet and U.S. withdrawal\nfrom a neutralized central European zone of controlled armaments made up of West and\nBast Germany, Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. Nu-\ndear\"$eapons would be barred\nfrom the area.\nCommunist China's admission\nto the United Nations in place\nof Chiang Kai-shek's nationalists.\nSome of Wilson's foreign-policy planks would swing Britain\ninto closer alignment with the\nKennedy administration. Others\nwould take Britain toward a\nmiddle position in the cold war.\nWOULD MAKE CHANGES\nIf the Labor party wins the\nnext general election in 1964\nand then presses its foreign policy program, it could begin a\nprocess of radically transform\ning inter-allied loyalties and\nEast-West rivalries.\nHere are some of Wilson's\npoints of policy based on recent\nprivate and public statements:\n1. Relations with the United\nStates:\nWilson wants to cancel the\n1962 Nassau agreement under\nwhich Kennedy promised to\nsupply U.S. Polaris missiles for\nBritish nuclear-powered submarines. He favors transferring\nAmerican bases on British soil,\nincluding the nuclear submarine depot at Holy Loch, Scotland, to NATO. He would like\na more Liberal American trade\nand tariff policy.\n2. North Atlantic Treaty Organization:\nWilson regards NATO as\n\"central both in our defence\nand foreign policy\" but insists\non a reform of the alliance and\nits strategy. Britain to begin\nwith should strengthen her contribution. Then NATO armies\nshould lessen their reliance os\nnuclear weapons by building up\nconventional power, as Kennedy\nurges.\n3. British defence policy:\n\"A labor government will not\nmaintain the effort to keep an\nindependent British (nuclear)\ndeterrent in being,\" Wilson has\nsaid. \"We would simply phase\nthem (Britain's force of H-\nbombers) out of existence.\"\nBIG\nTRADE-IN\nALLOWANCE\nWHEN YOU BUY A NEW\n\\imheam\nSHAVEMASTER\nELECTRIC   S HAVE R\nBring in your old Philishave, Bulova, Remington,\nRonson, Schick or Sunbeam Electric Shaver and\nwe'll allow you\n$11.80 off the price of\ntSmSmm shavemaster\nELECTRIC   SHAVER\nRATED THE BEST ELECTRIC SHAVER MADE\nRegardless of condition your old electric\nshaver saves you\nmoney. Trade now for\naSunbeamwith3REAL\nBLADES, \"comfort-\ncurved\" head, flip-top\nfor easy cleaning, in\ndresser case, or zlp-\npered travel case.\nSi NOW ONLY\n$21.95\nWith Trade-in\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE\nCOMPANY   LTD.\nWHOLESALE -- RETAIL\nNelson, B.C. Phone 3S2-7221\nA Labor government would\nresist fiercely proposals for the\ndevelopment of a purely European nuclear force. Wilson is\nconvinced this would dangerously weaken NATO by creating \"an alliance within an alliance.\"\nWANTS TEST BAN\n4. East-West relations:\nWilson's starting point for a\npossible cold war truce lies in\nhalting nuclear weapon testing\nand the arms race and strengthening of East-West co-operation\nin the United Nations.\n5. Berlin and East Germany:\nWilson urges a bargain: The\nAllies should give limited recognition to the Communist East\nGerman regime and recognize\nthe Oder-Neisse River line as\nthe final eastern frontier of all\nGermany. In exchange, Russia\nand her allies should accept the\nright of West Berliners to\nchoose their own form of government and society and the\nright of the West to communicate with the city and to station\ntroops there as custodians of\nthe deal.\n6. Commonwealth:\nWilson   intends   reappraising\nCommonwealth relations to repair the damage which he says\nBritain's partners suffered during the Common Market talks.\nHe plans a quick Commonwealth summit meeting at\nwhich old trading patterns can\nbe streamlined and refurbished.\ntioning from newspapermen\nMonday and Tuesday. So hectic\nwere the sessions that a Tues-'\nday night conference was cancelled to give them more time\nto themselves and a chance to\nrest.\nDepartment of Transport investigators compiling an official\ngovernment report also spent\nlengthy periods i nterviewing\nboth.\nDr. Nesta James said both\nhad rested well and had gone\nto sleep peacefully Tuesday\nnight. She said Flores suffered\na fractured jaw and Miss Klaben frost-bitten heels.\nThe girl's toes on her right\nfoot also were frostbitten and\nwill be amputated in an operation here. No date has been set\nfor the operation but Miss Kla-\nben's brother flew to Whitehorse form New York Wednesday.\nBoth survivors continued on a\nlight diet of milk, soup and\neggs.\nThe heavy questioning by\nnewspapermen placed both under heavy strain Tuesday. It\nprompted Miss Klaben to reply\nin answer to a question about\ntelegrams she had received that\nthey were from people \"who\ncapitalize on those who have accident.\"\nShe is contemplating the hiring of a lawyer to help her decide among countless offers for\nexclusive stories. Both she and\nFlores plan to write books about\ntheir experiences.\nThe survivors also tasted this\nnorthern centre's hospitality.\nMiss Klaben was given a colored cotton duster and a negligee by a group of Whitehorse\nwomen, and both have received\nget-well cards, fruit and flowers from other residents.\nNews of the 50-day ordeal, the\nlast 41 in which they had only\nmelted snow to drink, has\ncaught the fancy of newspapers\naround the world.\nBLOWN OFF COURSE\nThe couple left Whitehorse for\nFort St. John Feb. 4 and were\nblown off course by a winter\nstorm. The fuel supply in the\nplane's centre tank ran out\nwhile Flores was making a low\nsweep over the mountains to determine his position.\nBefore he could complete a\nswitch to a full front tank a\nwing tip caught a tree and the\nplane crashed at the 2,800-foot\nlevel of the mountain. There\nwas no fire.\nBoth were knocked unconscious for a lengthy period\u2014\nFlores estimated the time at between 30 minutes and an hour.\nWhen they regained consciousness the cold had already\nfrozen their feet slightly.\nA broken rib, head and facial\ninjuries and an injured right\nfoot limited Flores' mobility.\nMiss Klaben broke her left arm,\ncrushed her right foot and was\nunable to move freely.\nDuring the first month and\nthree days the couple remained\nin the plane, a factor veteran\nbush pilots say helped them\nconserve energy and played a\nsignificant part in their survival.\nBUILDS CAMPSITE\nFlores said he realized that a\ncamp in a clear spot was\nneeded if they were to be\nsighted and two weeks ago built\na new campsite on a knoll\nabout three miles from the\nwreckage. A week later he\nused a piece of the plane as\na toboggan to help carry seats\nfrom the plane.\nMiss Klaben walked behind\nthe toboggan partway and also\nhelped to pull it. She refused a\nride because Flores was having\ndifficulty walking himself.\nFlores then stamped out an\nSOS signal in the snow using\na pair of rough-fashioned snow-\nshoes. He also tramped out a\nlarge arrow pointing to the\ncamp. Six days ago he decided\nto walk out to the Alaska Highway\u2014the closest point being\nabout 60 miles away\u2014to try to\nget help. He had made about\ntwo miles in four days when\nChuck Hamilton of Watson\nLake, Y.T., spotted him and the\ncamp from the air.\nUnseasonably mild weather\naided rescue operations. Hamilton flew to within three miles\nof the camp to carry out Miss\nKlaben. A night earlier two Indians in a cabin 10 miles from\nthe wreckage went with a dog\nteam and found Flores.\nAfter spending the night out\nof doors they brought him to\nthe cabin Monday morning.\nTuesday the weather reverted\nlo its normal winter cold. It was\nsnowing, winds reached gusts of\n25 miles an hour visibility here\nwas reduced to near zero, and\nzero murk.\nBusiness Spotlight. . .\nCrown Corporation\nTo Build Truro Plant\nBy DON McLEOD Two months were spent ex-\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 Industrial amioing potential sites in Can\nHAD ONE QUEEN\nDenmark has had only one\nruling queen, Margarethe, on\nthe throne from 1387 to 1412.\nAnglican\nOutsells\nLONDON (AP) - A five-shilling paperback by an Anglican\nbishop that questions the old\nimage of God and casts doubt\non the virgin birth was stirred\na country-wide religious controversy.\nThe book, called Honest to\nGod, is outselling most of the\nlurid - covered paperbacks\nstacked beside it on newsstands\nthroughout Britain.\nIts author is the suffragan\nbishop of Woolwich, Dr. John\nA. T. Robinson, 43, a tall-\nbrowed intellectual.\nDr. Robinson's revolutionary\nviews have evoked cries of\n\"heretic\" and prompted some\ncritics to question whether he\nshould be allowed to stay in\nthe church.\nDr. Robinson calls on Christians to stop thinking of God as\nbeing \"up there\" or \"out there\"\nor, for that matter, anywhere,\nand says they must go through\n\"the agonizing process of detaching themselves from this\nidol.\"\nNOT ALWAYS VALID\nAs well as questioning the\nvirgin birth, Dr. Robinson holds\nthat Holy Communion should\nnot be deemed a withdrawal\nfrom the world, and says moral\nlaws are not necessarily valid\n100 per cent of the time.\nWhen the Student Christian\nMovement Press released the\nbook last week it printed 6,000\ncopies, and they were snapped\nup immediately. Now the publishers are thinking of printing\nanother 150,000.\nDr. Robinson's theme is this:\n\"If Christianity is to survive it\nmust be relevant to modern\nsecular man, not just to be the\ndwindling number of the religious.\"\nOn the eve of his book's release, Dr. Robinson announced:\n\"I am well aware that what\nI have said involves radical reformulation for the church in\nalmost every field\u2014of doctrine,\nworship, ethnics and evangelism.\n'A DANGEROUS PROCESS'\n\"This is a dangerous process,\nb u t immensely exhilarating.\nAnd the exciting thing is that\nit is not being forced upon the\nBishop's Book\nMost Paperbacks\nEstates Ltd., Nova Scotia\nCrown corporation set up to assist secondary industry, will\nbuild a plant in Truro at a cost\nof about $500,000 for Crossley\nCarpets (Canada) Limited.\nThe firm, a subsidiary of\nJohn Crossley and Sons Ltd.,\nHalifax, Eng., has announced it\nwill establish a carpet manufacturing plant in Truro employing\n100 persons. It is expected to be\nin production within 12 months.\nIEL will lease the proposed\n35,000-square-foot plant to the\ncompany. An unofficial estimate of the entire cost of the\nproject is about $1,000,000 including equipment.\nThe parent company, suppliers of more than half the\nBritish rugs and carpets sold in\nCanada, has been negotiating\nwith IEL since November.\nIEL general manager R. W.\nManuge said here Monday almost all of the plant's 100 employees, about half of which will\nbe men, would be Nova Sco-\nI tians. He said Crossley had in-\nI formed IEL \"there is every\nI prospect it will be able to purchase its main raw materials in\nNova Scotia, for instance, woollen pile yarn and cotton backing\nyarn.\"\nStanfields Ltd., a woolen manufacturing firm, and Federal\nProducts Ltd., a textile plant,\nare currently located in Truro.\nCITE LABOR STABILITY\nAn IEL statement says the\ncompany's decision to locate in\nTruro was based on the fact the\ntown is textile orientated, has a\nrecord of labor stability and facilities for service and repair of\nmachinery.\nThe plant, which will produce\na full line of carpeting for sale\nacross Canada, initially will get\nits yarn from England. An alternative to obtaining the raw\nmaterial from other Nova Scotia firms later is the expansion\nof the plant to include a spinning mill.\nViscount Garnock, director of\nCanadian operations, said the\nfirm had considered a Canadian plant for some time and\nthe tariff surcharges and devaluation of the Canadian dollar were main factors in the\nfinal decision.\nLord Garnock said the special transportation assistance\nprovided under the Maritime\nFreight Rates Act had been an\nessential factor in locating in\nNova Scotia.\nchurch from outside but is welling up from within.\"\nNot everybody was exhilarated as Dr. Robinson.\nThe archbishop of Wales,\nMost Rev. Edwin Morris, wondered \"how the hungry sheep\nof Christ are to be fed while the\nnext two or three generations of\ntheologians are enjoying these\nintellectual exercises.\"\nThe bishop of Pontefract, Rt.\nRev. Eric Treacy, called Honest to God a dangerous book\nlikely to disturb more than\nstimulate. ,\nAnd a layman began a letter\nto a newspaper: \"The thesis expounded by the bishop of Woolwich was expressed rather\nmore succinctly by Lenin . \u2022 \u2022\" I\nAll  were  not  critical,  how- j\never.\n'BOOK  HAS  VALUE'\nCanon Sidney Evans, dean of\nKing's College, London, and I\nhead of the theological faculty,i\nsaid:    . -j\n\"The book's great value is\nthat it will get people talking\nabout God and the nature of j\nGod. It will cause distress to a j\nlot of Christians who have 1\nnever been challenged to think i\nand talk about the way they\nregard God.\"\nA professor of medieval and\nrenaissance English at Cambridge University predicted Dr.\nRobinson's book \"will disturb\nmost of us Christian laymen\nless than he  anticipates.\"\n\"We have long abandoned belief in a God who sits on a\nthrone in a localized heaven,\"\nhe added.\nAnd from a lay peer came\nthis forthright comment: \"Dr.\nRobinson is right. We face social decay because the church,\nfrom pulpit and from the school\nan outdated image of God.\"\nRobinson has been bishop of\nWoolich, in southwest London,\nsince 1959.\nada before choosing Truro over\n15 other Nova Scotia centres.\nQUEBEC MADE BID\nThe Quebec government is reported to have made a strong\nbid to have the factory located\nat St. Hyacinthe.\nThe new branch will be the\nfirm's third overseas operation.\nA factory was opened last\nmonth in Durban, South Africa,\nand one had been acquired earlier in Australia.\nC. G. MacLennan, Truro director of IEL, said Monday various Truro bodies had been\n\"working on the Crossley project for many weeks.\"\n\". . . We are proud to be able\nto add the Crossley plant at a\nnew industry,\" he said.\nIEL said it has concluded a\n\"normal tax agreement\" with\nthe town for the new plant.\nThe 160-year-old English firm\nplans to have warehouse facilities at Montreal, Toronto and\npossibly two or three in Western\nCanada, including Winnipeg and\nVancouver.\nIEL last month announced\nproposed construction of a $2,-\n500,000 - $3,000,000 assembly\nplant at Dartmouth for Volvo\n(Canada) Ltd., a subsidiary of\nthe Swedish motor firm, Volvo\nof Sweden.\nPre-EASTER\nmum\nSAVE\nYOUTH SOUGHT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nare  hunting  for  a  duck-tailed\n| youth who slashed Jerry Miller,\n16, in a fight outside Hastings\nPark here Tuesday.\nUP  TO\n$30\nAll suits taken from stock\nond many are well known\nmakes such as\nWARREN K. COOK\nSHIFFER HILLMAN\nFASHION CRAFT\n39.50   Re9 Up\nVI\n49.50\nto 69.50\nReg. Up\nTo 79.50\n59.50   -\u00a39-Up\nTo 89.50\n\u00a3mory'\u00a7\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nMacmillan Claims Man's\nRights to Doll Up tor Date\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Macmillan, a dandy\nin white tie and tails, has\nchampioned a free male's\nright to get dolled up for a\nspecial date.\nBANKER NAMED\nKELOWNA (CP) - Bruce L.\nMearns, manager of the Kelowna branch of the Bank of\nNova Scotia, has been appointed\nOkanagan supervisor for Commonwealth Trust, A. G. Duncan\nCrux, company president, announced Wednesday.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c lino bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nHaigh Tru Art Beauty Salpn\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\nHear Peter Dewdney\nToday 12:10 noon CKLN\nHear Peter Dewdney\nFriday morning, 7:53 a.m.\nCKLN\nDrive With Confidence\nPhone 352-5252 Sterling Hotel\nNELSON   DRIVING  SCHOOL\nNew ladies summer styled\nhigh fashion shoes\nat EBERLE'S on Baker\nFree  Model  Contest,  Planes,\nCars, Boats.Enquire at\nHOBBY SHOP\nONE BEDROOM, KITCHENETTE AND BATHROOM FOR\nRENT. PHONE 352-3813.\nPUSH ON DRINKERS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\ncity prosecutor's office has\nadopted a get - tough policy\naimed at curbing an alarming\nrise in the number of drinking\ndrivers since the beginning of\n1963. Under a new procedure,\ncharges against repeat offenders involved in serious cases\nwill be proceeded with by indictment instead of summary conviction.\nGEORGE CADY - LIBERAL\nCommittee Rooms\n373 Baker Street. Phone 352-3505\nLovely new sweaters for girls\u2014\n$3.95 to $5.95.\nUp to size 14.\nTOT 'N' TEEN\nTop Knitting Yarns including\nall Mary Maxim Wools and Patterns.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nHear H. W. Herridge\nNew Democratic Party\nCKLN Radio, Fri., March 29\n6:30 \u2014 6:40 p.m.\nPeter Dewdney \u2014 Progressive\nConservative Committee Rooms,\nRoyal Bank Bldg., 415 Baker St.\nPhone 352-2118.\nAnnual meeting of the\nKOOTENAY LAUNCH  CLUB\nMarch 28, 8 p.m.\nChamber of Commerce Rooms.\nPETER DEWDNEY\nPUBLIC MEETING\nNELSON LEGION\nUPPER HALL\nTHURS., MAR. 28, 8 P.M.\nEVERYONE WELCOME\nTAGHUM CONCERT\nDate changed to Sat., April 13.\nSOCIAL  CREDIT  MEETING\nThursday, March 28, 8 p.m.\nCastlegar Legion Hall.\nSpeakers - MRS. EDITH VAN\nMAARION, MR. BURT\nCAMPBELL.\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nPublic Meeting, Rossland\n8 p.m. Saturday, March 30\nSpeakers:   Edith  Van  Maarion\nand Joe Sutcliffe.\nLarge shipment of corduroy and\nsatin cushions in large color\nselection.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nSt. Matthew's South Slocan\nSunday next 9:00 a.m. Holy\nCommunion < followed by breakfast Parish Hall).\nGift Day,. Tuesday, April 2\n10 a.nMo 6:00 p.m.\nPETER DEWDNEY\nPUBLIC MEETING\nNELSON LEGION\nUPPER HALL\nTONIGHT \u2014 8 P.M.\nEVERYONE WELCOME\nIn the House of Commons\nTuesday Macmillan tangled\nwith a lady who denounced\nthe male cult of hiring a suit\nfor a formal outing as snobbery.\nThe lady was Jennie Lee, a\nLabor MP and widow of An-\neurin (Nye) Bevan. Nye was\nalways an informal dresser,\n\"Would you not think,\" she\nasked the prime minister, \"it\nARRIVES FOR TALKS\nLONDON (Reuters) - Adlai\nStevenson, United States delegate to the United Nations, arrived here by air today from\nParis on a four-day visit and\ntalks with British ministers, officials and parliamentarians.\nStevenson, who is on a tour of\nWest European capitals, today\nwas to lunch with Prime Minister Macmillan.\nwould be a good beginning to\nask citizens on formal occasions to wear their own best\nclothes and not be subjected\nto the indignity of hiring\nthem?\"\nJUST GOOD  TASTE\nReplied the prime minister\n\u2014garbed at the time in\ncreased pants and a woolly\npullover under his jacket:\n\"I have always thought it\nwas a matter of good taste to\nwear the best clothes one\nhad.\"\nMiss Lee: \"You must be\naware that 99.9 per cent of\nthe men who are invited to\nofficial occasions are not in\nthe habit of wearing clothes\nthat, no doubt, the prime minister likes wearing.\"\nMacmillan rejected the suggestion that the government\nhad any responsibility for\ndress worn on official occasions \u2014 except, of course,\nwhere it concerned military\nofficiers \"subject to discipline.\"\n\"I hardly think it is necessary for me to initiate any\naction.\"\nACCIDENTAL DEATH\nPRINCETON (CP) \u2014 Leslie\nJames McLeod, 49, former\nRCAF wing commander, apparently shot himself accidentally\nwhile trying out a rifle he had\nbought for his son. police said\nTuesday. McLeod, found beside\nhis car with a bullet wound in\nhis head, died in hospital Monday.\nRead the Classified Daily\nHove the Job Done Right!\nUK GRAVEC\n\u2122 LIMITED        *\"\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nELIZABETH ARDEN\nColor Harmony\nNAIL  ENAMEL\nLIPSTICK \u2014 ROUGE\nIn Plastic Bag\n$2.50\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611\nBox 460\nSpecial Introductory Offer\non Rose Ballet\nfrom International Sterling\n32-pce. service for 8 \u2014 $199.95.\nYou save- $50.00.\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n431 Baker Street\nBUY THE BEST\nEddies No. 1 H.T. Rose Bushes,\nspecial 98c each.\n1 free rose bush with every order\nof 12 bushes. Climbing rose bush,\n$1.25 each. Order early.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCLEAVE \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Minnie Cleave of Kaslo\nwill be held at the Legion Hall,\nKaslo, Friday at 2 p.m. Mr.\nFrank Stelfox will officiate and\ninterment will take place in the\nKaslo Cemetery. Thompson Funeral Home.\nHOWIE \u2014BACK |\nEUROPEAN SPECIALS    g\nThe world championship didn't return with     ||\nhim but Howie says you can be a winner      \u00abg\nwith these buys ! j||\nNelson Prices Slashed |\nCHESTERFIELD SUITES \u00ab\n2 piece $100 50 E\nnylon covered. -     I ' *.>J\\s 0\nBEDROOM SUITE -a\n3 piece $170 50 1\nwalnut or sand     I#  r ..J\\J |\nROOM SIZE RUGS |\nFoam backed, $4.4. Q5 H\nplain or tweeds   H1^. w J \u25a0\u00bb\nCHROME SUITE E\nOne only 5 piece. %AQ QC  El\nReg. $69.95 -  *\u2666 7.7J |\nSPRING FILLED 5\nSimmons Deluxe, $AC\\ DO 1\nquilt top ^y.oo |\nCRIB MATTRESS |\nSpring filled, waterproof.                   $1*5 QC  B\nSize27\"x51\"  10.73 H\nCOMPLETE MAPLE BUNK BEDS f\n\u00a3!S_*119.50 and$129.50 |\nBaby\nCarriage\nVz PRICE\nSTERLING\nHOME FURNISHERS\n441 Baker St.\nNelson Phone 352-7711      |l\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_1963_03_28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0434689","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"}]}}