{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0434834":{"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":"1963-04-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434834\/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":" \u2014\u2014\u2014\nTEMPERATURES\nNelson 40 68 \u2014\nToronto 36 81 \u2014\nCalgary 34.44 .26\nPenticton 36 71 \u2014\nVancouver 40 60 \u2014\nWhitehorse 31 50 -\nSpokane 35 65 \u2014\niCSI\nPublished at Nek *\u00b0a<7 te tA\u00b0^ uncial, trading and education centre of the Kootenay-Golumhia area\n\u25a0 tiro i .  '. : _____:.\t\nWEATHER PRECAST\nKootenay: Mainly sunny, light\nwinds becoming southerly 15 in\nthe afternoon. Little change in\ntemperature. Low-high at Cranbrook 40 and 66. Crescent Valley 40 and 70.\nM\nVol. 62\n\u2022*\u2022\u00ab,\n\u2022 \u00ab\u00bb,                 B. C, CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 29, 1963\n\u2014Jan~->r^\t\n10 Cents\nNo. 7\nEight Perish as Planes Collide Over Skaha Lake\nUNDER THE B\u201415 \u2014 BINGOl The crowd at\nthe Civic Centre Saturday night attending the annual\nKiwanis Bingo session had filled up all the seats and\nlatecomers were finding the oddest places to perch.\nThe four above settled themselves on a bulldozer\nblade while others are in the cab on the driver's seat.\nThe bulldozer is one of those being used to clear the\nway for the new concrete arena floor. Around 2500\nNelson and district residents were on hand to try for\nthe big prizes.\u2014Daily News photo by Richard Cote.\n-Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMorse Men\nCelebrate\nMONTREAL (CP)-.. . .- ..\n  ,i# .  ?\nNo, that isn't the latest effort in the search for a simplified alphabet It's just the\nway Morse Men talk to each\nother.\nAbout 125 of them gathered\nhere Saturday night as part of\na continent-wide celebration\nby the Morse Telegraph Club\nof the 101st anniversary of the\nstringing of the first telegraph\nline from the Atlantic to the\nPacific.\nThere were about 80 other\nchapters of the club holding\nsimilar meetings across North\nAmerica and the old-time da-\ndit-dah men had a chance to\ntalk to each other again over\na special wire set up by the\nCNR and the CPR in Canada\nand Western Union in the\nUnited States.\nThe old-time Morse man has\ngrown in legend until he is just\na bit smaller than Paul Bun-\nyan \u2014 in a few years, he'll\nprobably be bigger. He could\nwork all day, drink all evening, fight all day and be back\non the job the following day.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMrs. America\nNamed Saturday\nMIAMI BEACH, Ela. (AP) -\nMarilyn Mitchell, 35 - year - old\nmother from San Diego, Calif.,\nwas named Mrs. America Saturday night.\nShe won a week-long series of\ntests of her skill as a housewife\nand mother. Wife of a personnel\nexecutive, Mrs. Mitchell is the\nmother of Shelley, 11, Rodney, 10\nand Kirk, 8.\nShe is five - foot - eight and\nweighs 130 pounds.\nDominica Protests\nInvasion to OAS\nTells Emergency Session Haiti\nPolice Made Arrests in Embassy\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 The Dominican Republic\naccused Haiti Sunday of aggressive acts imperiling the\npeace of the hemisphere, took its case to the Organization of American States and threatened to use force\nagainst the Haitians.\nThe Dominicans entered a detailed list of charges\nagainst the Haitians at the emergency session of the\ncouncil of the OAS, centring on a claim that Haitian police seized the Dominican embassy at Port au Prince.\nThe Dominicans charged also Haitian involvement\nin a plot to assassinate Do\nminican     President     Juan\nBosch.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHllllll\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Haiti's\nambassador to the Organization\nof American States, Fern Ba-\nguidy, announced Sunday night\nhis country has broken diplomatic relations with the Dominican Republic.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nThe Haitian representative,\nFern Baguidy, entered a brief\ndenial of all charges.\nBefore the meeting started,\nSanto Domingo radio broadcast\nthe text of a note to Haiti,\nthreatening to send Dominican\nnaval units into action against\nPort au Prince unless the embassy and ambassadorial residence were returned at once to\nDominican control.\nThe Dominican ambassador\nto the OAS, Arturo Calventi,\nsaid earlier \"we gave them 24\nhours from 7 a.m.\" Sunday to\nrestore things to normal.\nThe Dominican ambassador\nmade 12 charges against Haiti\nand claimed that a Haitian plot\nwas under way to assassinate\nBosch with members of the Trujillo family in on the plot.\nDe Gaulle\nShown on\nBy HAROLD KING\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 President\nCharles de Gaulle ended Sunday a seven-day tour of northern\nFrance during which crowds\nhailed him personally and demonstrated their backing for his\nnuclear arms policy.\nObservers on the tour said\ncrowds were as big and enthusiastic on this as on any of the\nother 17 whistle-stop trips the\npresident has made since coming to power four years ago.\nThere was no sign of the drop\nIn his personal popularity predicted by public opinion experts\nfollowing recent widespread\nstrikes in France's state-owned\nPopularity\nTour\ncoal mines and transport industry.\nAt Troyes, he drew long applause when he spoke ot a\nFrench independent nuclear deterrent and said: \"We must have\npower, not in order to dominate\nanybody or conquer anythirtg,\nbut to be fully prepared to protect ourselves.\"\nThe theme was one he used\nin speeches throughout the tour.\nIn every speech he stated that\nFrance's possession of its own\nnuclear deterrent as an established policy, advanced no arguments to justify it, and drew\nconsistent applause.\nCalventi said a message he\nhad received from his foreign\noffice just before the session\nopened indicated that two members of the Trujillo family, Luis\nand Rafael, travelling on Spanish passports,' had left Kingston,\nJamaica, for the Haitian capital of Port au Prince at 2 p.m.\nSunday.\nBoth are nephews of slain Dominican dictator Rafael Leoni-\ndas Trujillo. \u00a3>\nCalventi claimed also that\nHaiti has signed a secret commercial agreement with Czechoslovakia which he said \"will\nhasten Communist infiltration in\nthe Caribbean.\"\nCarmen de Bosch, wife of the\nDominican president, attended\nthe council meeting. She has\nbeen in Washington with a son\nwho underwent a minor operation.\nCalventi reiterated an older\ncharge that the mother, two\nchildren and two members of the\nhousehold of Francisco Benoit\nhad been machine - gunned and\nset afire by Haitian soldiers. Benoit had taken refuge in the\nDominican embassy.\nBenoit was accused of the\nkilling of three body guards of\nHaitian President Francois Duvalier last Friday when the\nhodyguards were escorting the\npresident's children to school.\nCalventi said Benoit had taken refuge in the embassy last\nThursday \"so it was totally impossible for him to have taken\npart\" in the slaying of the bodyguards.\nThe Dominican bill of complaints also cited the closing of\nthe Dominican-Haitian frontier\nlast week, the assassination of a\nDominican consul last February\nwithout any explanation for the\ncrime and the refusal of safe\nconduct to all but six of the 28\npersons who had taken asylum\nin the Dominican embassy since\nJune, 1962.\nCalventi demanded that the\nHaitian government \"rectify the\nsituation radically\" within 24\nhours and served notice that the\nDominican Republic reserved\nthe right to take all action necessary.\n2000 See\nChurch-Bound\nNewlyweds\nBALLATER, Scotland (Reut-\nt*t;s)\u2014A crowd of about 2,000\n-saw{ the. royal honeymoon couple \u2014 Princess Alexandra .and\nAngus Ogilvy\u2014arrive at nearby\nCrathie Church to attend a Sunday morning service.\nThe couple, staying at Birk-\nhall House, on the royal estate\nof Balmoral, drove ub in a prewar station wagon, Ogilvy at the\nwheel and his bride of five days\nbeside him smiling and waving.\nOgilvy, second son of the\nScottish Earl of Airlie, was\nwearing a kilt, and the princess\na camel coat and turquoise hat.\nSome of the sightseers brought\npicnic baskets and made tea\nwhile the couple were attending\nthe service.\nOfficials Seek\nBlast Cause\nROCKET CENTER, W. Va.\n(AP) - Officials of the U.S.\nNavy and Hercules Powder\nCompany of Wilmington, Del.,\nsifted the ruins at a rocket pro-\npellant plant Sunday in an effort to determine the cause of a\nblast that killed three men and\ninjured 10 others Saturday.\nThe bodies of the killed were\nnot recovered and a spokesman\nsaid he doubted they ever would\nbe.\nThe explosion at the Allegany\nBallistics Laboratory Saturday\nshook the ground six miles away\nand shattered windows as far as\nfour miles away. It also started\na fire, but that was quickely contained.\nFive of Family  Lost as Bodies,\nDebris Shower Boaters\nMan Swims\nTwo Hours,\n3 Others Drown\nALERT BAY, B. C. (OP) -\nJames Tarkanen, 21, swam for\ntwo hours in near-freezing waters Saturday to tell of the\ndrowning of his three compan-\nTarkanen, a husky 200-pound\nfisherman, staggered ashore at\nMalcolm Island near this settlement off the east coast of\nVancouver Island and about 200\nmiles northwest of Vancouver.\nExhausted but unbanned, he\nsaid he and Ronald Myntti, 20,\nThomas Shiels, 19, and Raymond\nSlid, 21, were flipped from their\n14-foot, kpjajilby., ^-.wsvjicafcijtit\nhalfway between Malcolm, and\nCormorant Islands.\n\"Tommy Shiels ahd Ron Myntti went down right away,\" he\nsaid. \"But Blid and I stayed a-\nfloat for quite awhile. Then I\nstarted to swim back to Soin-\ntula and I didn't see Jiim again.\"\nAll four men were from So-\nintula, a small fishing community near here.\n\"I do a lot of swimming but\nit was pretty cold and I was tiring when I finally reached\nshore,\" Tarkanen said.\nAn RCMP crashboat recovered the boat drifting about 300\nfeet off Malcolm Island. There\nwas no sign of the bodies.\nWorld News\nBriefly\nFORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -\nA vicious thunderstorm spurred\nby winds up to 98 miles an\nhour carved a widespread path\nof destruction through this north\ncentral Texas city Sunday.\nDamage ran into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.\nFRANKFURT, West Germany\n(AP) \u2014 West Germany was hit\nSunday by a wage strike that\ncould snowball into the country's worst labor conflict in\nmore than 30 years.\nPickets took up positions\naround midnight in the walkout\nthat will eventually affect 500,-\n000 metal workers in the industrial state of Baden-Wuerttem-\nberg. It could spread to the\nRuhr, economic heart of continental Europe.\nLONDON (AP) - Spy jitters\nare running high here and word\nspread Sunday that Britain may\nhave to adopt United States-style\nsecurity techniques before getting U.S. Polaris rockets.\nWoman Campaigns\nFor Legal Sweeps\nBy JOHN MATTERS\nCALGARY (CP)-Mrs. Mary\nEnglish, a doughty grandmother  who  already  has  col-\nNew Injections\nAid Fertility\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Five\nyoung wives thought to be sterile\nare pregnant or have given birth\nto babies after injections of a\nhighly concentrated hormone obtained from the human pituitary\ngland, it was reported Sunday.\nThe Sunday Mirror says this\nsuccessful trial was the result of\nfive years research by medical\nexperts of Birmingham and\nCambridge universities into\namenorrhea.\nAmenorrhea is the inability to\nproduce an ovum, or egg, for\nfertilization. A woman suffering\nfrom it is not truly sterile, but\nher capacity to become a mother\nis dormant.\nOne of the researchers is quoted as saying: \"It must be made\nabsolutely clear that this is not\nan over-all cure for the inability\nto have a child. It is a very new\nmethod and much more research\nneeds to be done before it can be\nmade widely available. When\nthis, is possible, the-number of\nwomen who can benefit will total\na few thousand.\"\nKELOWNA (CP) - Cal Wood\nof Vancouver won the B.C. -\nAlberta cribbage championship\nSaturday in the Canadian National Institute for the Blind's\ninterprovincial tourney.    N\nlected the names of 500,000 Canadians to support her campaign for legal sweepstakes,\nvisits British Columbia this\nweek to continue her battle.\n\"Some people think I'm a\nwicked old woman because I'm\nfor sweepstakes,\" said the dynamic, 52-year-old housewife.\n\"But I go to church and believe charity begins at home.\"\nThe idea that charity begins\nat home\u2014and Canadians should\nbe spending their money on\nsweepstakes in this country-\nstarted Mrs. English on \"operation sweepstake\" three years\nago.\nShe has organized 14 branches\nof the movement across the\ncountry and hopes to open two\nor three more when she travels\nthrough northern and central\nB.C. this week. Kamloops,\nPrince George and Prince\nRupert are on her itinerary.\nMrs. English, who has 15\ngrandchildren, travelled about\n18,000 miles last summer promoting her idea and before winter set in she had the names\nof 300,000 persons who want\nlegalized sweepstakes in Canada.\nAlthough she has had financial support from some of the\nbranches, most of the expenses\ninvolved in her travels have\ncome out of her own pocket.\n\"That's why I'd like to win\nthe Irish,\" said Mrs. English,\nwho was a cook at Newcastle-\nunder-Lyme in England before\nshe and her husband came to\nCalgary and went into the hotel\nbusiness ZVi years ago.\nComplain Over\nLumber Imports\nATLANTA (AP)\u2014Lumbermen\nfrom Georgia, Florida and Alabama complain that imports\nchiefly Canadian shipments, are\nbreaking the financial back of\nthe United States lumber industry.\nUrging sharp cuts in imports,\nthe, lumbermen. testified, at .#\nhearing Saturday of the U.S.\nSenate commerce committee.\nSenator Strom Thurmond (Dem.\nS.C.)  conducted the hearing.\nR. R. Cook, owner of an Atlanta lumber firm, said Canadian government-owned timber-\nlands and lower wages make\npossible shipment of lumber into\nGeorgia at prices lower than he\ncan meet.   '\nCook asked for a drastic cut\nin imports, a label on lumber\nto- identify the country of its\norigin, equitable freight rates\nand a requirement that all tax-\nsupported agencies use domestic\nlumber for-their needs.\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 Eight persons, five of them\nfrom a family out joy-riding, were killed late Saturday\nwhen two private aircraft collided over Skaha Lake,\nPieces of wreckage and bodies dropped among the\ndozens of boaters but for the first warm day of spring.\nLate Sunday only one body and parts of two others\nhad been recovered. Both aircraft were located in deep\nwater and their positions marked with buoys.\nThe dead were identified as Richard Parmley, 49,\nhis wife Margaret, daughters Rebecca, 17, and Lorinda, 8,\nand son Richard, IS; Ernest Ralph Hanson, 19, a friend of\nRebecca's and pilot Earl Sibley, who flew here earlier in\nthe day from Calgary.\nEd Lewko of Edmonton, piloting the second craft was making\nhis solo flight.\nWitnesses to the accident \u2014\nthere were many \u2014 said the\nParmely aircraft, a twin-engined Aero-Commander, was apparently preparing to land when\nit was clipped in the tail by Lew-\nko's Cessna 140.\nThe smaller plane fell apart.\nThe tail section dropped from\nthe Commander and the plane\nwent into the lake at a screaming, 60-degree angle.\nIt exploded after sinking into\nthe lake.\nSkaha Lake is about five miles\nsouth of here. The remains of the\ntwo aircraft were about 250\nyards in from the lake's east\nshore and close to Penticton's\nairport.\nThousands watched salvage\noperations Sunday from Highway 97 which parallels the lake.\nLike  Saturday,  the  sky  was\ncloudless the temperatures were\nin the high 60's.\nFifteen exhausted skin and\nscuba divers suspended their efforts to recover bodies late Sunday and were to be relieved in\nthe deep water today by a navy\ndiving team from the coast.\nNot with her family Saturday\nwhen they accepted a plane ride\nto Kelowna with a friend was\nJenny Lee Parmley, 14. She was\nin a state of shock and being\ncared for by relatives.\nThe accident was the worst air\ncrash ever in the Okanagan. In\n1958 three officers died on a\nmountain ahove Skaha when an\nRCMP Beaver crashed while\nsearching for a murder suspect.\nDepartment of Transport investigators from Vancouver\ncame here Sunday to begin a\ncrash investigation. It was expected to take several weeks.\nDr. T. G. How, the department's regional director of air\nservices, said the planes were\nflying under visual flight rules-\nthey had no radio contact with\nthe ground.\n'COPTER HITS\nPOWER LINE\nThree of Five\nAboard Killed;\nTwo Injured\nELLENSBUHG, Wash. (AP)-\nA U.S. Army helicopter hit a\npower line north of here _*i)d\ncrashed in flames Sunday afternoon, killing three of the five\nmen aboard.\nThe two others were injured.\nOne of thejn, Lt.-Col. Raymond\nL. Latimer, 54, of the Fourth\nInfantry division at Fort Lewis,\nWash., was reported in critical-\ncondition at Valley General Hospital here.\nThe other injured man, a Seiv\ngeant, was walking down a private road to a farm house to report the accident when he wap\npicked up by a police car. The\nsergeant, unidentified, was reported in good condition at El-\nlensburg General Hospital,\nThe Ellensbung Police Department said the helicopter had apparently taken part in an armed forces show at the EUensburg\nairport.\nCharged With\nPostman's Death\nGADSDEN, Ala. (AP) - A\n40-year-old father of six children has been charged with first\ndegree murder in the roadside\nslaying last Tuesday of Baltimore integration pilgrim William\nL. Moore.\nCastro Getting Royal\nTreatment in Russia\n:...\u00bb\u00bb\nBy GEORGE SYVERTSEN ..\nMOSCOW (AP) - Premier\nKhrushchev led Fidel Castro\ninto Moscow Sunday for one of\nthe most elaborate receptions\never given a foreign visitor. He\nassured the bearded Cuban\nHOFFA WINS\nON FOUR LOCALS\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) -\nTeamsters Union President\nJames R. Hoffa, personally directing the campaign, scored a\nvictory over the AFL-CIO for\nthe second time in a key representation election that was the\nbiggest challenge his leadership\never faced.\nThe National Labor Relations\nBoard announced that the Teamsters won hy 4893 votes to 2550\nto maintain representation of\nfour Teamster locals with 8200\nover-the-road truck drivers, local\ncartage drivers and dockmen in\nPennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland.\nFire Permits\nNeeded After\nMay 1\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Penmits\nwill be needed for outdoor fires\nwithin half a mile of a forest,\nor woods, starting next Wednesday in an attempt to trim losses\nin the coming forest fire season.\nThe fire permit restriction imposed May 1 may remain in effect up to six months.\nAbout 25 per cent of British\nColumbia's forest fires-which\ncause an average $3,000,000 damage and cost about $5,000,000 in\nfire fighting annually, are started by negligent campers and\nsmokers.\nPermits are not required for\nfires set in approved facilities\nin provincial camp and picnic\nsites.\nPanther Back in Cage\nAfter Two Days' Freedom\nPARIS (AP)-A black panther that sent shivers, through\na Paris suburb for two days\nwent back to its circus cage\nSaturday night\u2014a wet and angry animal.\nThe escaped panther's reign\nof terror ended when three animal trainers flushed the snarling, clawing jungle cat from a\nhiding place under a girls'\nschool.\n\"I thought he had me a\ncouple of times,\" said trainer\nJack Rex, who directed the capture in the cramped, Z'fs -foot-\nhigh area beneath a one-storey\nwooden school.\nUsing a heavy net for protection, the trainers managed to\ndrive the panther out of an\nopening and into a waiting steel\ncage. Twice the panther attacked Rex under the school.\n\"He went for my neck both\ntimes\" said the veteran trainer.\n\"I was on my back with just\nthat net in front of me. If I\nhad relaxed he would have had\nme.\"\nA cheer went up from several\nhundred onlookers when the\npanther leaped into the cage.\nThe big cat's eyes flashed\nhatred and he clawed and\nsnarled at the bars as a waiting crew quickly loaded him in\na truck to return to a nearby\ncircus.\nFear had ruled the Paris\nsuburb of St. Denis since Thursday night when the panther\nbroke out of a cage. Rex, who\nhad received the panther from\nBangkok, Thailand, just two\ndays before, had warned:\n\"The panther hasn't been fed\nsince Wednesday. He wouldn't\nnormally attack a man \u2014 but\nhe's starving and deadly dan-\nberous.\"\nThe St. Denis community\nsoon.learned that. JPriday evening a workman leaving for his\njob almost stepped on the panther crouched in a dark apartment house corridor.\n\"He was on me in one bound\n\u2014all I saw was a black blur,\"\nsaid Ali Hancochlne, 33. He\nwas treated at a hospital for a\nbadly bitten shoulder and arm.\nleader that the Soviet Union\nstands shoulder-to-shoulder with\nCuba against the United States.\nWhisked to the top of Lenin's\ntomb, in Red Square soon after\nhis arrival from Murmansk,\nCastro received the cheers of\nthousands and declared his conviction his regime could not exist without Soviet support.\nBut despite the 21-gun salutes\nand a Soviet space shot apparently timed for his Moscow arrival, Castro displayed little of\nthe spirit that usually characterizes his' public appearances. He\nsmiled rarely and appeared inattentive at times.\nAnd although he credited the\nRussian revolution with making\npossible his own rise to power,\nhe added pointedly: \"This does\n40 KILLED IN\nRED GUERRILLA\nATTACK\nSAIGON, South Viet Nam -\nAt least 40 South Vietnamese\ntroops and a U.S. army sergeant\nwere killed in an attack by a\nstrong Communist guerrilla\nforce in Kontuin province, it\nwas reported Sunday.\nAn American military spokesman said an estimated two battalions of well-equipped Viet\nCong communist troops swooped\non a government battalion and\nan artillery platoon early Saturday.\nIn addition to the 40 dead the\ngovernment lost an unknown\nnumber of missing and 25 wound\nnumber of missing, and 25\nwounded.\nnot mean that the Soviet Union\nmade this (Cuban) revolution.\"\"'\nCastro flew into Moscow after\nspending the morning inspect-\ning Soviet missile-carrying submarines at Murmansk, where\nhe landed early Saturday.,nfter\na secret flight from Havana.\nGREETED BY CHIEF\nKhrushchev greeted Castro at\nthe airport. It was their first\nencounter since Castro' reported falling-out with the Soviet leader over the withdrawal\nof Russian missiles from Cuba\nlast fall.\nA motorcade sped them into\nMoscow for the Red Square\ndemonstration, climaxing a carnival \u2022 like atmosphere in a\nsunny Soviet capital decked out,\nin May Day decorations and\nblue and white Cuban flags.\nCastro seemed to come to lifp\nonly when acknowledging the\ncheers of the crowd.\nAtop Lenins'tomb, Khrushchev\ndeclared he was pleased to\ngreet in Red Square \"the envoy\nof the American continent's first\nsocialist revolution.\"\nRecalling last year's Cuban\ncrisis, Khrushchev said the Soviet Union's support for the Cubans had avoided a clash tha):\ncould have touched off a world\nwar.\nIn his 45-minute speech, Castro made no mention of the Soviet missile withdrawal from\nCuba and his only reference to\nthe crisis appeared to be his\nstatement that \"the imperialists would not have stopped\nshort of an open invasion of our\ncountry if it were not for the\nSoviet Union.\"\nAnd in This Corner \u2666 . .\nPERTH, Australia (AP) \u2014 Three hundred and seven year*\nago the Dutch sailing ship Gilt Dragon went down near a reef off\nLedge Point, 60 miles north of Perth.\nIn a sensational anniversary discovery, skin divers Sunday scooped up handfuls of pieces of eight they believe went down\nwith the ship.\nThe divers brought up about 50 coins, found 40 feet down\nabout 554 miles off shore.\nThey reported that a cross could be distinguished on one\nside of the coins and the letter \"P\" on the other.\nMost of the coins were scattered on the ocean floor.\nBesides the pieces of eight, the divers found four jugs qf\nglazed pottery, all with a biwhlskered face stamped on them,\nand several ivory tusks taken from a pile of about 300.\nCAMPOBASSO, Italy (AP) \u2014 Pasqualino Lombardi came\nhome after working out of town and found he was just in time for\nhis own funeral.\nAuthorities said it happened this way:\nPasqualino's brother, Giuseppe, went to a Rome clinic for\ntreatment of a serious illness. For some reason, he was registered as Pasqualino.\nHe died. The body was returned here in a casket, and services for the supposed Pasqualino had just begun when Pasqualino returned.\n___: :\t\n \u25a0\u2022-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 --  \u25a0 \u2014 : : i ___ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0_,-,\u25a0 '__ ;  \u25a0      '' ll-------------------------------______________________________________llill,^\n \u2022' \u25a0'\u25a0mmrn'mmHrm\n2\u2014NELSQN DAILY NEWS, MPN., APRIL 29> 1963\nTrail Drama Takes VSfest\nKootenay One-Act Honors\nMfl^jL;. (Staff) - Trail entry,\n\"stark and ' tragic story and\nspiced with, imaginative crea-\nj|()p,\" caught th? eye o! adjudicator' Sam Payne and the N.C.\nTaylor Trophy as the best one-\nact 'pliy-'Wlttie West Kootenay\nDrama Festival here,\n\u25a0''\"ffle\"Trail Clylc Theatre per-\n}6rmance!' termed excellent by\nthe adjudicator, also captured\n' Ihfe best supporting actor honor\nin the persottof Al Douglas Scott\nas \"Forse\" and the best director\naward in the person of Harry\nLoscombe.\"' Gordon MacDonald\nas \"Louie\" received honorable\nmention lit ike best actor cate-\ngory\u00a3\u00bbhich was awarded to Ken\nGaylor.for hik role in'the Fruit-\nHale Community Players' production of \u25a0\u25a0 \"Devil Among the\nSigns.\" The Fruitvale . players\nalso received, the best visualize\naward for. \"Devil.\"\nMiss Lynn. Stafford of the\nGrand Forks Community Players\nfor her role in \"Anastasia\" while\nEileen Elsdonof Kootenay River\nPlayers was presented with best\nfemale supporting actress award\nfor her portrayal in \"Everlasting Flower.\"\nJoe Irving of the Kinnaird\nLittle. Theatre's production of\n\"Overlaid!\"\/..rejejved honorable\nmention-lh.'tte' best actor category while. 7Mrsj7j!nld Gaylor\nof Fruityale's' \"Devil Among the\nSkins\" \u25a0 jec'eived. honorable mention for best supporting actress.\nThe \"Trail ^}ay...will not compete in the provincial one-act\ndrama festival to be held in\nPenticton during the last week\nof June.\nCreston Man to\nBe Transferred\nEric B. MacDonald, assistant\nhorticulturist in the Penticton\narea for the past year, will be\ntransferred to Creston effective\nMay 1. Mr. MacDonald will gradually take over the work of J.\nE. Swales who will be transferee to Penticton during the summer.\nIS OLD HELP\nArcheologists have determined\nthat rope was in use in southeast Asia as long ago as 4,000\nBC.\nTONIGHT - TUES. - WED. \u2014 One Show Only 8 p.m.\nEXTRA\nCOLORED CARTOON\nCIVIC\nCOLOR by DE LUXE\nSEE THIS SPECTACULAR SHOW\n'\"   FOR ONLY *J.OO PER CARLOAD\nShthliqilL Drive-In\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY\nApril 29, 30, and May 1st\nn\n\"Escape From Zahrain\n\u25a0 ?V        Yul Brynner, Sal Mineo\n.PIUS  Short   \"SPRING   IN   SCANDINAVIA\"\n-- CARTOON\nHelp the Associated Canadian Travellers\nTo Help Others.\nBRING THE WHOLE FAMILY\nFOR ONLY $1.00\n-.-..-.-..       You'll  Enjoy This One\nNeed appliance\nmoney P\nBet an HFC\nShopper's Loan\nShop now for the new appliances you need. Buy\nwherever bargains are\nbest. Pay on-the-spot with\ncash from HFC. Budget repayment sensibly.\n. -?-i,- -\u25a0''   ...-'\nLife Insurance available\nat low group rate\nAM'HT\nMONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS\nor\n36\n30\n20\n12\n.0*11\nmonths\nmonths\nmonths\nmonths\nSinn\n$\t\n$\t\n$ 6.12\n$9.46\n550\n23.73\n32.86\n51.24\n751V\n31.65\n44.13\n69.21\n1000\n41.45\n58.11\n91.56\nIA00\n60.88\n68.81\n94.11\n146.52\nim\n:83.71\n94.62\n129.41\n201.46\n2500\n95.12\n107.52\n147.05\n228.93\nIr-rJudt tha coil of life In\nI HOUSEHOLD FINANCE\n;_l. J. 0. Hindson, Manager\nl\\1$>;-''\\. \u00ab08 Boker Street Telephone 352-S573\nNELSON\nPROUD WINNERS of one-quarter of a new car are the three Nelsonites\nand a- resident of Blueberry Creek. Beaming president of the Kiwanis Club A.\nJ. Hamson, left, had only one set of keys to present to Phillip Sherstobitoff\nof Blueberry Creek, Mrs. S. T. Lewis, Bernard Diplock and Gerry Cahill, all\nof Nelson, Saturday in the Civic Arena. Between 2200 and 2700 bingo players\nBaw the group decide not to play off for the car, but to split the proceeds from\nthe sale of the car. \u2014 Nelson Daily News Photo.\nWelding Sparks Believed Cause\nOf Castlegar Landmark Fire\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 An early\nCastlegar district landmark was\ndestroyed by fire Saturday night\nprematurely when the old Celgar\nmill, the former Waldie mill,\nwas levelled about midnight.\nThe dry kiln, boiler walls and\nan old office building are all\nthat remain of what was originally built as the Edgewood\nLumber Company in 1910 by William Waldie, senior.\nThe old mill continued operations under that name until 1928\nwhen it became the William\nWaldie and Sons Lumber Company Ltd. an industry which\nwas taken over by the Celgar\nDevelopment Company Ltd. in\n1952.\nFrank Murphy, fire chief of\nthe Celgar Department believed\nthe fire started after some welding had been done in the dry\nkiln during the afternoon.\nHe reasoned some of the\nsparks landed in the sawdust\nand smoldered, igniting the\nbuilding.\nThe firemen and security\nguards from Celgar watched the\nfire.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight - Tuesday\n\"WALK ON THE WILD SIDE'\nNo Admittance ta\npersons under 18*\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE - IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTonight - Tuesday\n\"SECOND TIME AROUND\"\nDebbie Reynolds - Steve Forrest\nShow Times 8:20 p.m.\non IHE\nComing This\nSATURDAY\nThe 4\nPLAY\nBOYS\nPlus 1\nRecording on\nSouvenir Label\n9-1 Adm. $1.25\nLAY MO\nIt's\nQUEEN CITY\nFUELS\nfor the\nQUEEN OF FUELS\nVESTA\nPhone\n352-5018\n\"We wetted down the area we\nwanted to keep and let the rest\nof it go. It was a control fire\nto some extent,\" Chief Murphy\nstated.\nThe fire was visible to district residents about 10 p.m. and\nwithin a short time the flames\nat the old mill were 40 feet in\ndiameter.\nCedar Street in Castlegar located directly across the Columbia River from the mill fire\nfound people watering down their\nrooftops to discourage any live\nashes which floated across the\nriver. Some partially burned\npapers were found in central\nCastlegar four blocks from the\nriver although the evening had\nbeen calm.\nFauquier Man\nSuccumbs at\nCastlegar\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Mrs. Charles\nWilson, a resident of British\nColumbia for 34 years, died in\nCastlegar and District Hospital\nage 75, Saturday.\nBorn in Austria, she eame to\nCanada at the age of 15 and settled in Regina until 1810. After\nspending three years in North\nDakota, she moved to Canada\nagain, this time settling as a\npioneer in Fauquier, B. C.\nSeveral years later she became a resident of Taber, Alta.,\nand then Coleman. In 1928, she\nmoved to Cranbrook where she\nmade her home for 30 years.\nAfter 1958, she moved to Castlegar.\nBesides her husband, Charles, she is survived by three\ndaughters. Mrs. A. Bukovec of\nCranbrook; Mrs. M. Parsons of\nTrail and Mrs. William Smith\nof Oliver: a sister, Mrs. B.\nGreenwood of Invermere; four\nsons, Nick Oswald, and Frank\nOswald df Castlegar and Joseph\nOswald of Detroit, Mich., and\nLouis Oswald of Cranbrook.\nNelson Hotelman\nFlies Safely\nAbove Skaha Lake\nFor a few hours Saturday, a\nfear that a Nelson hotelman\nmight be involved in the Skaha\nLake air tragedy permeated the\nNelson Hotel.\nEight persons were killed Saturday when two planes collided\nabove the lake. At first, Air Rescue operations in Vancouver believed a Nelson aircraft was involved.\nG. E. Peters, manager of the\nLord Nelson Dining Lounge, had\ntaken off from Nelson earlier\nthat day and his flight plan had\nhim designated for Kamloops.\nMr. Peters landed safely at Salmon Arm and his safe arrival\nwas immediately flashed to Air\nRescue to clear up the misunderstanding.\nMr. Peters flew back to Nelson.\nThere was little activity at the\nsite during the fire but earlier\nin the day the Kiwanis Club had\nremoved planks with the p'ermis\nsion of the company.\nCompany officials said the old\nmill was in the process of being\ndemolished. One storage shed\nhad been torn down and the old\nsite was being gradually aban\ndoned since transfer of its oper\nations to the Westley site in the\nsummer of 1961.\nThey said the company had\nplanned to burn the old mill and\nthat the burning had come prematurely.\nIt is believed an estimated\n$900 worth of equipment belonging to George Jones, who was\nunder contract to demolish the\nbuilding, was lost.\nFire Chief Murphy said he had\nno knowledge there were any\nworkmen's tools in the building\nat the time of the fire.\nWidow of\nFormer News\nPublisher Dies\nMrs. Katherine E 11 zaheth\nPayne, former well known resident of Nelson and widow of the\nlate F. F. Payne, died recently\nin hospital at Vancouver, age\n65.\nRev. Ross Brackwell officiated\nat the funeral service April 23\nat Chapman Funeral Home and\ncremation followed.\nMrs. Payne moved to Vancouver after the death of Mr.\nPayne, publisher of the Nelson\nDaily News, who died in 1949.\nCar Wrecked,\nPassengers Okay\nTwo youths suffered minor\ncuts and abrasions after their\nsmall foreign vehicle was totally\nwrecked on the North Shore Sunday afternoon.\nDriver, Peter Eaton, 19, of\nLongbeach and his juvenile passenger were two miles south\nof Balfour when Eaton was negotiating a corner lost control\nof his car.\nHis car skidded on the shoulder, turned around and bounced\ninto the ditch and landed right\nside up facing north, direction\nit was proceeding before the\naccident.\nRCMP would not release the\nname of the juvenile passenger\nas charges may be pending.\nExecutive Commissioner Witnesses\nFruition of Scout Scheme at Trail\nTRAIL \u2014 A man who addressed meetings in Nelson and other\nKootenay areas five years ago\nurging a new concept in admin;\nistration in scouting, Saturday'\nwitnessed the successful fruition of the district reorganization, carried out during the past\ntwo years on an experimental\nbasis. . .\nAt the annual banquet of the\nKootenay - Boundary regional\ncouncil of the Boy Scouts of\nCanada attended by ISO representatives, from all parts of the\nKootenay, Fred J. Finlay, chief\nexecutive commissioner from\nOttawa, was guest speaker. He\nsaw the charter for the new\norganization which he had pre\nviously signed, presented by J\nPercy Ross, provincial executive commissioner, to regional\npresident M. H. Mason of Trail\nOne of six such regions in\nB. C\u201e Kootenay-Boundary was\nthe first rural area in Canada to\nbe reorganized. One of the functions is to bring top authority\ncloser to home.\nMr. Finlay said the experiment had proved to be most successful and that they were very\nhappy with results.\nThe guest speaker, who was\nintroduced by W. J. Banigan of\nCastlegar, assistant regional\ncommissioner, spoke of the work\nmovement around the world.\nHe spoke of experiences at world\nand purposes of the Boy Scout\nconferences he had attended at\nNiagara Falls, Cambridge, England and New Delhi and the Inter-American scout conference\nat Caracas, Venezuela, embraced by North, Central and Soutli\nAmerica.\n\"Canadian scouts salute scouting around the world,\" Mr, Finlay said was the international\ntheme and slogan of scouts in\nCanada.\n\"The   international   organiza-\nR. A. Howe Dies\nAl Vancouver\nReginald Ashley Howe died at\nShaughnessy Hospital in Vancouver Saturday, age 85 years.\nBorn in Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, England in 1878, he\ncame to Canada in 1896 and lived\nin various places on the Prairies\nprior to coming to Nelson in\n1900. Here he operated an electrician's shop on Stanley Street.\nIn the First World War he\nserved overseas with the 51st\nBattalion and on his discharge\nreturned to Nelson. In 1935 he\nmarried Florence Mabel Shepherd and worked for the city as\na sub-station operator until he\nretired in 1953.\nA long time member of the\nLegion, having a 25-year pin, and\na member of the Eagles Lodge\nfor 55 years he is survived by\nhis wife in Nelson and a brother\nRufus in Vancouver.\nMotel Expands\nAl Castlegar\nOpening of a coffee shop and\ndining room to seat 50 persons\nis expected about May 15, Mr.\nand Mrs. Cecil Gorse, operators\nof the City Centre Motel, at\nCastlegar.\nThe expansion also includes\nconstruction of suites, furnished,\non the upper storey, and is located at the west end of the\nmotel.\nPlans are already being made\nfor a banquet room with a capacity of 70 persons. The couple\nbuilt the motel close W two\nyears ago.\ntion was born in 1921. It was very\nwell conceived and has been\nrightly called the first united\nnations of the world. Its pattern calls for equal membership\nfor all countries regardless of\nsize.\"\nThe common aim of scouts\nand leaders, promotion of world\nbrotherhood, can be seen in action at world jamborees.\n\"Mingling with others from\nthe four corners of the earth,\nand putting ourselves in another\nperson's place and looking at\nourselves from his point of view\nis an important step towards\nworld brotherhood.\" said Mr.\nFinlay. \"The need above all\nalse is to get to know the other\nfellow. Then we may be able,\nthrough knowledge and friend\nship, to break down the barriers\nof mistrust and misunderstanding, wherever It may be. The\nworld is getting to be a very\nsmall place and our important\nwork is the making of every\nman, every other man's neighbor.\"\nReelected council president,\nwas M. H. Mason of Trail; first\nvice-president Don Mars of\nCreston, second vice-president\nJ. S. Hamilton, Nelson, third\nvice-president R. M. Porter,\nKimberley, treasurer Frank Ai-\nkins, Nelson. Included to serve\non the council are R. Johnson,\nNelson, Mel Thompson, Castlegar, Dr. J. Carpenter, Nelson,\nDr. N. P. Jennejohn, Nelson,\nAl Taylor, Nelson and Stanley\nFraser, Cranbrook. One or two\nOverflow Crowd Sees\nFour Win 1963 Car\nAn overflow crowd jammed\nthe Civic Arena for the fourth\nannual Kiwanis Club car bingo\nSaturday night, and for the first\ntime a large number of participants were required to stand.\nKiwanis and rink officials\nrushed every available chair in\nthe Civic Centre building to the\nfloor of the arena as the crowd\ncontinued to pour in past the\nstarting time of 8 p.m., but were\nunable to accomodate everyone.\nEstimates of the crowd ranged\nfrom 2300 to 2700. Club officials\nsaid preliminary estimates of\nreceipts indicated the total\nwould be closer to the lower figure. Civic Centre manager Fred\nBoates said the arena seats 1574\npeople and that nearly 1000\nchairs were placed on the floor.\nSome players sat on bulldozing\nequipment being used in connection with reconstruction of the\narena floor.\nClub qfficials explained that\nthe floor work now under way\nhad made it difficult to set up\nmore seating accomodation.\nThe car was won by four persons \u2014 Mrs. S. T. Lewis, Bernard Diplock and Gerry Cahill, all\nDST Changes\nTransportation\nSchedules\nDaylight Saving Time arrived\nin Nelson in an outburst of warm\nspring weather, and automatically brought its inconveniences\nconcerning .public transport\ntimetables,\nCanadian Pacific Railway will\ncontinue to operate its trains on\nPacific Standard Time, meaning all trains arriving and leaving Nelson will be doing so an\nhour later than the winter schedule. The trains east leave Nelson at 7:45 PDT and the train\nfrom the east arrives at 10:45\np.m.\nThe Kootenay Lake ferries remain on standard time, hence\nthe ferry departing from Balfour\nwill leave at 7 a.m. PDT, an\nhour later than PST.\nThe Greyhound Bus Lines will\ncontinue its service on Standard\nTime but will announce its schedule on Daylight Time for customers, meaning buses will arrive and depart an hour later\nthan on PST.\nof Nelson, and Phillip Sherstobitoff of Blueberry Creek. They decided to sell the car and share\nthe proceeds.\nJust about as excited as the\nfour car winners put together\n1 was 16-year-old Brian Reid, who\n! won the boat and motor. The\n\u25a0 son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Reid,\n712 Hoover Street, he had lost a\ntie-breaker game in a match for\nthe boat prize two years ago;\nand last year was within one\nnumber of getting a bingo for\nthe car.\nThe four car winners called\n\"bingo\" as the 60th number was\ncalled; and the boat call came\non the 53rd call.\nA camping set was won by\nDoris Plotnikoff, and other winners were Mrs. F. Pho, Mrs.\nJohn Bogaard, M. J. DeLooze,\nR. Valcourt, L. Kolle, M. Van\nRuyskcnvelde, Mrs. Vi Nelson\nof Trail, Mrs. H. L. Couling,\nJohn Konkin of Remac, Larry\nSamuelson, Mrs. D. Dvorak,\nJohn Arishenkoff, Einar Linn,\nLorraine Smith, Mrs. Zaccharias\nand J. Kabatoff.\nParticipants came from all\nparts of the district, some from\nas far away as Grand Forks.\nOne official estimated that 40\nper cent of the players were\nfrom the district.\nProceeds will be devoted to the\nclub's major project, low-rent\nhousing for senior citizens.\nSEEK BETTER CROPS\nPredominently a g r i cultural\nSouth Korea has established two\ngiant fertilizer plants to get better crop yields.\nYour Prescriptions\nDispensed Promptly.\nWHILE YOU WAIT\nOR BY DELIVERY\nTHREE DRUGGISTS TO SERVE YOU\nSAMP LE S   PHARMACY LTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n639 Baker \\t.      Nelson      Phone 352-2313\nMacmillan,\nAides Consider\nFuture Policies\nLONDON (Reuters! \u2014 Prime\nMinister Macmillan mustered\nmore than 30 of his chief aides\nto his official country retreat\nSunday to continue the Conservative party's \"big think\" on\nfuture policies.\nThe weekend exercise opened\nSaturday at Chequers mansion\nin Buckinghamshire, 55 mileS\nwest of London, and was attended by nine top members of the\ncabinet.\nIt has touched off speculation\nthe prime minister may be planning a general election this fall\ninstead of late spring 1964.\nThe majority of politicians\nstill think Macmillan will wait\nuntil next year to give his government a chance to rebuild its\ndiminished prestige with the\nelectorate.\nTo the people of Nelson and District\nwho gave us such overwhelming support at the\nCar Bingo Saturday night:\nThank\nYou\nYour support has given the Senior\nCitizens' villa project a grand start.\nThe Kiwanis Club\nof Nelson\nLast Rites Held\nFor F. G. Robinson\nFuneral service for Frederick\nGeorge Robinson who died in\nNelson Thursday was held Saturday at the Thompson Funeral\nHome.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc. of the Church of\nthe Redeemer officiated. Interment followed in Masonic Plot,\nNelson Memorial Park.\nMany friends from South Slocan as well as Nelson attended\nas did members of the Masonic\nOrder.\nHymns sung were \"The King\nof Love My Shepherd Is\" and\n\"Abide With Me.\"\nPallbearers were B. McFadden, O. Bellanvance, A. Gibson,\nC. Barrett, G. Hall and E.\nStromstead.\nmore from the East Kootenay\nare to be added to the council.\nDuring 1962 an increase In the\ninterest of adventure camping\nwas evident. Discussion took\nplace on the acquiring of a regional camp site suitable for\nthe needs of the area. One such\nplace is a 400-acre site on the\nKootenay Lake, past Ainsworth.\nA good number of training\ncourses were held during the\nyear. A series of training courses are to be held during 1963\nunder the leadership of assistant\nregional commissioner, J. D.\nFlamank.\nAn announcement was made\nthat Rev. P. Collins, assistant\nscoutmaster of Third Rossland\nScouts, had been elected on the\nB.C. Council for Canadian GM\nGuides. Twenty - nine Queen\nScouts received certificates from the lieutenant-governor\nduring April. They are, Trail-\nRossland, Robert Haggerty, Pat\nCallaghan, Archie Staats, Raymond Andrews, Ricky Fillmore,\nPaul Hinton, Tom Elliott, Geoff\nSmith, Grant Bristow, Kettle\nRiver district, Robert Hama-\nguchi, D. Hamaguebi, Allan\nTrumpour, T. Imai; Nelson district, Robert Tremblay, Bob\nGustafson, Dave Hamilton, Terry Roberts, Mark McCandlish,\nTim Allen.\nDuring 1962, Wolf Oub James\nArthur Kelly, 10, of Trail, received the Gilt Cross from Governor General George Vanier\nat Ottawa for initiative and for\ngood judgment while making a\nrescue at Ohristina Lake.\n\"ACTIFED\"\nFor the relief of Congestion\nassociated with Hay Fever\nand Colds.\nToblets $1.25 and $1.95\nSyrup $1.95\nSold at\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613      Nelson\nREPAIR\nHEADQUARTERS\nFor\n\u2022 GARDEN   TILLERS\n\u2022 POWER   MOWERS\n\u2022 CHAIN SAWS\nComplete Line of Parts for\nClinton, Briggs & Stratton\nand Lawson Power Products\nHOMELITE\nSALES & SERVICE\n432 Stanley St.    Ph. 352-5225\nENVOY\nthe years ahead\nl HEARING\n%i3^\nSo inconspicuous! Women-\nwear it In tho hair. Men\u2014wear\nK with a tie clasp\u2014Zenith's most\nversatile Hearing Aid. Advanced\ndesign reduces Interfering\nnoises. Sparkling clarity with\nfull-powered 4-transistor circuit.\nLight weight\u2014only 1 ounce with\nbattery.\nYginnL\n'\"UVING SOUND\"\nHEARING AIDS\nCome in or Call lor Frll Demon ilntta\nSKI    VIEW DR.VE-.N\nOpens for the Season\nTODAY, APRIL 29\nOpen 12:00 Noon to 10:00 p.m.\nOpening, Special:\nFREE HOT DOGS\nTROUBLE?\nWhen In need of plumbing\nor heating replacement or repairs,\nor a gas fitting job . .  .\nFor Prompt, Efficient Service\nCALL US AT 352-2454\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\n351 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-2454\n___Jj\t\nJ\n \t\n , ,\u2014.\t\ngQ\nA FACELIFTING to the Central School was\nstarted April 22 as part of another stage in the long-\nterm $800,000 school expansion program, of Nelson\nSchool District No. 7, approved by ratepayers December, 1961. The renovation program is being done by\nCreighton Construction Ltd. of Kinnaird working on\nplans provided by architect David P. Fairbank. As\n$188,000 was provided for the school in the referendum many features were deleted, modified or changed by the school board to comply with the bylaw\nmonies. Workmen are shown tearing off the southwest corner of the building facing Mill Street. The\nschool is expected to be completed by September 1.\nProbation\nAfter Death,\nSermon Subject\n\"Probation after death\", was\nthe subject of the Sunday service at a 11 Christian Science\nchurches.\nThe opening scriptural passages were from the sermon on\nthe mount: \"Blessed are the\npoor in spirit: for theirs is the\nkingdom of heaven.\" (Matt. 5:3)\nRelated readings included lines\nfrom the Christian Science textbook: Willingness to become as\na little child and to leave the\nold for the new, renders thought\nreceptive of the advanced idea.\nGladness to leave the false landmarks and joy to see them disappear\u2014this disposition helps to\nprecipitate the ultimate harmony.\" (Science and Health with\nKye to the Scriptures by Mary\nBaker Eddy.)\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Classified\nWhat\nIs It?\nIT'S  A  PIECE  OF AN\nI N G L I S\nWATER    HEATER\nIf the p\\crp of metal you\nrcceivp in the mail this week\nfits the piece cut from the\nInfills water lieater on display at the Inland Natural\nGas Offiee, 607 Baker Street,\nyou will win the gas water\nheater free of charge,\nDrop Into the Inland Natural Gas office loday and try\nyour luck. No purchase required.\nTrack Removal Ceremony\nPlanned by Trail May 25\nTRAIL \u2014 Saturday, May 25,\nwill mark an historic occasion in\nthe life of municipal Trail.\nThat is the date selected by\nMayor Joseph Palyga and CPR\ndivisional superintendent George\nMeldrum for a ceremony signifying the removal of railway\ntracks from the Rossland Avenue and downtown areas.\n\"I am sure it will be a most\nhappy day in the history of\nTrail,\" said the mayor.\nTlie mayor said he had appointed Aid J. H. Nicholson to coordinate arrangements for the\ncelebration.\nThe West Trail Improvement\nAssociation has been advised of\nthe selected date, and invitations to attend have gone out to\nCominco president W. S. Kirkpatrick and CPR president and\nchairman N. R. Crump.\nThe mayor said the actual\ntrack removal would begin on\nthe Monday following the celebration, and would be completed\nwithin a week.\nPurpose of track removal is\nto make way for limited urban\ndevelopment in West Trail and\nconstruction of an arterial high\nway serving the new Columbia\nRiver bridge.\nThere has been agitation for\ntrack removal for many years\nbut pressure has been continued\nat high intensity over the past\nfive or so years.\nTlie project was ultimately\nmade possible by Cominco's provision of land in Tadanac upon\nwhich the CPR is constructing\nRequiem Held\nAt Cranbrook\nFor Mrs. Foisy\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Requiem was\nheld Saturday at St. Mary's\nChurch for Margaret Teresa\nFoisy who died at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Wednesday at the age of 88 years.\nShe was the widow of William\nLouis Foisy and they lived at\nElko and Cranbrook for many\nyears. She had lived in Nelson\nsince 1943. She is survived by\none daughter, Celina May in\nNelson.\nRt. Rev. A. L. Mslntyre celebrated requiem and burial was\nin the Roman Catholic Cemetery.\nBOARD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES\nOF SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 9, (Castlegar)\nThe Board of School Trustees of School District\nNo. 9, (Castlegar), was advised by the Deputy Minister\nand Superintendent of Education on the 26th day of April\n1963, that Mr. W. R. Brown has withdrawn his application\nfor a review of the Board's decision to terminate Mr.\nBrown's appointment effective the 30th June, 1963, as\nPrincipal of the Stanley Humphries Secondary School.\nThe Board has noted further the press report that\nMr. Brown has accepted an appointment as Principal of\nthe new Vocational and Technical School in Kelowna.\nThe Board therefore considers it appropriate to make the\nfollowing statement:\nAs a consequence of action taken by Mr. Brown in\nFebruary, 1963, in relation to certain pupils in the secondary school and because the Board has not been satisfied for some considerable time now with aspects of the\nadministration of this school by Mr. Brown, the Board\nrequested the Deputy Minister and Superintendent of\nEducation on the 20th February, 1963, to undertake an investigation into the secondary school administration. In\ndue course three School District Superintendents of unquestioned experience and ability were appointed by the\nDeputy Minister \"to evaluate the nature and causes of\nthe breakdown in relations with the parents, the Board,\nand the District Superintendent, and make recommendations to restore a working relationship\".\nUnder cover of a letter dated the 12th March, 1963,\nthe Board received a copy of the report of this committee\nfrom the Deputy Minister and Superintendent of Education, prepared by the Chief Inspector of Schools for the\nProvince of British Columbia.\nThe report showed that the committee had made a\ndetailed investigation of those matters which were causing concern to the Board and that the Board's cause for\nconcern was not unfounded. The report contained a series\nof recommendations which the committee felt should be\nimplemented by the Board in co-operation with Mr.\nBrown and the District 'Superintendent. Efforts to carry\nout the committee's recommendations quickly proved to\nbe fruitless and on the 25th March, 1963, the Board decided in the best interests of education in the district to terminate Mr. Brown's appointment as Principal of Stanley\nHumphries Secondary School.\nThe Board regrets that it has been so widely and\nincorrectly stated that the Board's decision to terminate\nMr. Brown's appointment was based solely on recent disagreements between Mr. Brown and the Board. Such is\nnot the case. The Board acted in the knowledge of the\nduties imposed upon it by the Public Schools Act and in\nan awareness of its responsibility to ensure the best and\nfullest educational opportunities to children in the School\nDistrict.\nP. A. JACOBSON (Mrs.)\nChairman,\nBoard of School Trustees,\nSchool District No. 9, (Castlegar),\nnew facilities. The CPR transferred its downtown right-of-way\nto Cominco, and the company is\nto give the land to the city for\nredevelopment purposes.\nIt is expected that highway\nconstruction will begin within\nmonths.\nDepartmental crews are putting final touches to a survey\nand then the provincial government will acquire property it requires.\nIn the meantime, the mayor\nsaid the right -of - way, after\ntracks and ties had been removed, would be graded smooth\nand thrown open to parking.\nIncidence of\nApple Scab Spore\nBrings Out Spray\nDuring recent rains, apple\nscab spores were detected in a\nspore trap located in Creston\nValley, advises J. E. Swales,\ndistrict horticulturist of Creston.\nIn view of the relatively heavy\ndischarge of spores that occurred, Kootenay apple growers are\nadvised to have their spray\nequipment ready for action.\nIt is recommended that where\na protectant spray program is\nto be followed, an apple scab\ncontrol spray be applied just as\nsoon as weather conditions permit in Creston Valley and early\nsections of the Kootenay-Arrow\nLakes district, points out Mr.\nSwales. Some growers may wish\nto delay spray application until\nmore growth develops, which\nwill be quite satisfactory providing those growers realize [\nthat anple scab infection could |\noccur if the trees are wet for a\nsufficient length of time.\nApplication of the first pro- j\ntectont spray in later sections of j\nthe Kootenay-Arrow Lakes dis- j\ntrict could be delayed for several days.\nApple growers who intend to\nfollow an eradicant spray pro- [\ngram for apple scab control\nshould apply the first control'\nspray as soon as possible.after\nan infection period occurs.' More\ndetail on eradicant sprays and\ninformation relative to determination of infection periods is\noutlined in the 1963 tree fruit\nspray calendar.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 29, 1963--3\nBomb Threat\n'Work of Crank'\nVICTORIA (CP) - An anonymous letter written to a Victoria\nnewspaper said suburban View\nRoyal and the Victoria Press\nbuilding will be bombed if High*-\nways Minister Gaglardi does not\nresign.\nRCMP said the letter, received by the Colonist Saturday, was\napparently the work of a crank.\nSigned, \"Pro Gaglardi Resign-\nsaid, \"This area was picked by\ndraw. Soo nwe will change.\nDon't worry. You will never\ncatch us.\"\nThe letter was partly written\nand partly printed.\nDaily News photos by\nRichard Cote\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFire Snuffs Out\nFamily of Five\nCAP D'ESPOIR, Que. (CP)-A\nmother, father, and their three\nchildren died early Sunday when\nfire destroyed their recehtly -\nbuilt home in this village on the\nBaie des Chaleurs.\nThe victims were Arthur Gale\n40, his wife, Marcelle, 31, and\ntheir children Linda 9, Larry 7,\nand Joyce 2.\nFRAGMENTS OF CONNECTING RAMPS arc all the\nremains of an early Castlegar\ndistrict landmark, (top), after\nbeing levelled by fire Saturday\nnight. The old Celgar mill, the\nformer Waldie mill was In the\nprocess of being demolished\nalthough the fire was unscheduled. The middle picture depicts a fire ball comprised of\nsparks swirling like a tornado\nsome 40 feet in diameter. Easily seen for miles the bulwark\nof destruction sent its lights to\nthe far ends of the valley. Old\nwagon wheels (bottom right)\nremains from the original\nbuilding the Edgewood Lumber Company In 1910. The old\nmill continued operations under that name until 1928 when\nit became the William Waldie\nand Sons Lumber Co. Ltd. an\nindustry taken over by Celgar\nDevelopment Company In 1952.\nSpokane School\nBand Visits\nCastlegar\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 In a return\nvisit members of the West Valley High School Band from Spokane were guests of the Castlegar Stanley Humphries Secondary School Band Friday and presented a concert Friday night.\nThe Castlegar band four weeks\nago visited the West Valley High\nSchool in Spokane and played a\nshort concert for students ot the\nschool in the afternoon, and in\nthe evening presented a concert\nfor the public.\nBand members are billeted at\nhomes of members of the host\nband.\n24 Canadians to\nMission Field\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Twenty-four\nCanadians were appointed Friday . for missionary work in\neight different countries by the\nboard of world mission of the\nUnited Church of Canada.\nThe missionaries, drawn from\nvarious trades and professions\nincluding medicine, business\nand teaching, will leave for their\nnow posts either next fall or the\nfollowing spring.\nAll except four missionaries,\nappointed to Trinidad and Jamaica for three-year terms, will\nserve lor five years.\nRuth Honegger, 27, who has\nworked in a mission hospital at\nBella Bella, B.C., and has done\nsocial work in Vancouver, is being sent for clinical work at a\ncommunity centre in Hong\nKong.\nRev. and Mrs. Russell M.\nYoung of Maryfield, Sask., have\nbeen appointed to work in India.\nAppointed to India are Rev.\nand Mrs. Vernon R. Wishart,\nEdmonton; and Dr. and Mrs.\nDavid M. Kennedy, Vancouver\nand Powell River, B.C.\nDr. and Mrs. Alan S. Richardson, Prince George, B.C.; Dr.\nand Mrs. Trevor J. Thompson,\nBurns Lake, B.C. will do mission\nwork in Angola.\nK. D. MacKay\nOf Cranbrook\nPasses at 81\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Kenneth Duncan MacKay, who came to Cranbrook and began a tailoring business in 1927, died Thursday at\n|St. Eugene Hospital where he\nhad been a patient since a fall\nin mid-December. He was 84\nyears old, and had engaged in\ntailoring work for 71 years to\nthe day he had the accident.\nBorn at Havelock, Ont., as a\nyoungster he began apprenticeship in tailoring, and followed\nthis trade at Regina, Grand\nForks, N.D., Moose Jaw, and\nVancouver, before coming here.\nHe worked in various partnerships and most recently in Bill's\nMen's Wear until last December. He was a lifelong Liberal\nand had recently been made an\nhonorary life member of the\nCranbrook Liberal Association.\nHe was also a sports enthusiast\nparticularly interested in hockey. He was a brother of the\nlate Mickey MacKay.\nHis wife, the former Jessie\nAlice Watson, died here in 1951,\nand he continued his home on\nFifth Avenue until two years\nago when he established a trailer court home on 14th Avenue.\nWatch For Our\nAnniversary Sale\nCOMING SOON\ni\u00a3dttyl5a\u00a3 (Eom|Mttg,\nSurviving are three sons, William W. Mackay, Cranbrook;\nKenneth, Kimberley and Douglas, Los Angeles; three daughters, Mrs. O. W. Shook, Winnipeg; Mrs. James McCarthy,\nMoose Jaw, and Mrs. Charles\nClapp, Cranbrook; 17 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Two sisters also survive.\nRev. Albert Henderson officiated at the funeral Saturday\nat McPherson Funeral Chapel\nand burial was in Westlawn\nCemetery.\nUse this easy to read schedule to help you plan\nyour next trip in British Columbia. Whenever you\ntravel, fly Canadian Pacific \u2014 the fastest, most\ncomfortable way to get there!\nr\ni\nEastbound \u2014 Daily\nLV Castlegar 11:30 a.m. AR Cranbrook-Kimberley 12:10 p.m.\nAR Calgary 1:10 p.m.\nWestbound \u2014 Daily\nLV Castlegar   4:15 p.m. AR Penticton 4:55 p.m.\nAR Vancouver 6:15 p.m.\nLV Castlegar   3:40 p.m. AR Vancouver 5:10 p.m.\nAll times local\nI\nI\nI ,- I\nSee your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office.\nFLY\nTRAINS\/TRUCKS\/ SHIPS\/PLANES\/HOTELS\/TELECOMMUNICATIONS\nWORLDS MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\n\u25a0FOR   INFORMATION   and   RESERVATIONS-\nVIPOND FOR TRAVEL\nTRAIL - NELSON\nCRANBROOK\nin CASTLEQAR...\nOPENING SOON!\nUltra-Modern\nCOFFEE SHOP \u00bb\u00bb DINING ROOM\nNow nearing completion as an addition to the many\nservices now available at the\nCITY CENTRE MOTEL ca.,..g.r, b.c.\nOpening Date to Be Published Soon,\nFacilities at this time will make the City Centre Motel one of the most complete\none-stop accommodations In the West Kootenay.\n\u2022\nBE SURE YOU  WATCH   FOR OUR OPENING!\n_________________________________\n \u2022\u25a0.-''\u25a0\u2022\u2022-.- \u25a0..  !\u2014: :\u2014-~^\nHtlsaw latltj Bfeuia\nEstabUshed April 22. 1902\nNelson, B.C.\n-. PubUshed by tho NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre ol the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\n: and for Payment of-Postage in Cash.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON. Editor,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DA1LV NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTbe Canadian Press is exclusive!, entitled to the use for lepublication ol all news\ndispatches credited to It or to The'Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\n\u25a0: Monday, April 29, 1363\nCominco Leads the Way\nStraws in the Wind\nA former mayor speaking in\nVictoria suggested that Vancouver\nIsland should secede irom British\nColumbia. It was his contention that\nthe Island supported the rest of the\nprovince;\nWhile we might have no objection to Vancouver Island seceding\nfrom British Columbia we refuse to\nbelieve-that it supports it. On.the\ncontrary we should like to suggest\nthat the Kootenays support the rest\nof the province.\nCertainly there is no other single\nenterprise in the whole province\nwhich can equal the size and\nachievements of the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company of\nCanada, our own familiar Cominco.\nIt is the colossus which dominates\nthe province.\nIt is never static but year by year\nits activities are extended and its\nplants enlarged. This year it proposes to spend $20,000,000 on the\nexpansion of its plants. The installation of the third generator at Waneta\nis now almost complete, at Trail an\naddition to the chlor-alkali plant is\nunder way, at Kimberley a second\nunit of the fertilizer plant as well as\nan expansion of the electro-thermic\npig iron production plant, so that\nthe whole area will benefit from an\nincreased payroll.\nThe company's decision to Bpend\nmoney in extensions of its activities\nproves beyond doubt that it has faith\nin its ability to prosper despite the\ngloomy outlook of pessimists. This\nshould encourage others to follow\nits example and to meet the future\nwith confidence.\nBy MARY MacDONALD\nIn Ecclesiastes 3-1-2, it says\n\"To everything there is a\nseason, and a time to every purpose . . .\" Now, to some It\nmight appear odd that I would\nquote the Book in connection\nwith the stock market, but I\noften think that a good deal of\nthe \"woman's intuition\" that\nsome claim I have, is based on\nthe early years I_ spent reading\nin the Bible.\nIn one form or another, time\nand again, you-find the-same\ninjunction in it \u2014 that there is\na time, and a place, for everything.\nThis week is such a time. An\nexcellent long-term capital gains\nopportunity exists that we should\nact on.\nWhen I make this recommendation, I know-too that\nthere will be some who say I\nshould not recommend liquor\nstocks. Frankly, I don't feel\nthat way at all. Because not a\nsane person in the world- today\nwould argue with me that\nliquor in moderation Is immeasurably less harmful than\ncigarets, even in moderation, or\nhalf   a   dozen   of   the   other\nPower of Pres\nDo newspapers affect the outcome of elections?\nWhile it is conceded that the unbiased reports of political events in\nthe news columns are the chief\nsource of information upon which\nthe electorate makes its decisions, it\nis popularly supposed nowadays\nthat the \"power of the press\" is vastly overrated, and that, in fact, the\nattitudes taken by the editors of the\nnation's newspapers no longer have\nmuch effect on the way their readers\nvote.\nThis, of course, is utter nonsense.\nIt is true in the sense that newspaper editors no longer can act as\n\"king-makers\" as they appear to\nhave done in less sophisticated\ntimes, when newspapers drew up\nslates of \"approved\" candidates and\nthundered denunciations of politicians of differing political stripe; all\nthis, rumbustious nonsense went out\nwith the old-fashioned party newspaper, supported by a political machine and inherents of that party. In\nCanada- today, no newspaper editor\npresumes to tell his readers which\nway to vote. The function of the\nmodern editor is to set forth, as best\nhe can, the issues which are to be\ndecided, if any, and to set forth, as\ncandidly as possible, his views on\nthe. men and policies involved and\neven, ii he is sufficiently gifted or\npresumptuous, on what course of\naction should be adopted. Some\nreaders will agree, others disagree,\nwith ..the. editor's views, but by set-.\nting forth his own thoughts the editor\nhas helped to crystallize those of his\nreader's.\nThere is one exception to this generalization, however; in Toronto, the\nera of. ferociously partisan and paternal editorials has somehow survived like, some dinosaur from an\nold and.dreadful past. There, newspapers still have the gall to instruct\ntheir dutiful readers to vote this way\nor that, and they pursue their individual yendettas with a malevolent relish and zest worthy of a\nHearst or a McCormick.\nCurrently the wonder of this\ntended only to be read by the ad-\njournalistic age is the vitriolic campaign of the Globe and Mail to unseat Prime Minister Diefenbaker. It\nis no secret, of course, that some of\nthe top figures in Canada's business\nworld, encouraged by certain discreet gentlemen in the United Slates\nwith big'holdings in Canada, look\nupon Mr. Diefenbaker as a dangerous man-who must be got rid of at\nall costs, and accordingly even the\nusually Tory Telegram and the\nGloberthose:mirrors of Bay Street,-\nmight be expected to fall dutifully\nin\" _iiie,' But what has-been.so sur-.'\nprisinq is the virulence of the \"hate\ns in Elections\nDiefenbaker\" campaign, which has\nspilled over into the controlled radio\nand TV outlets and has been taken\nup, one hopes quite innocently, by\na large segment of Canadian publishing and broadcasting media. It\nhas become an obsession with the\nGlobe; for months, its editorial cartoons have dealt with scarcely anything else, and the shrillness of its\neditorial comment verges on the hysterical.\nMaybe there was a good case to\nbe made against Mr. Diefenbaker,\njust as there is one to be made\nagainst any government of fallible\nhuman beings. But it will not be\nmade by crying ruin to a Canadian\neconomy which is obviously buoyant and stable; by attributing venal\nmotives to a man of manifest moral\ndedication; by arousing hatred and\nridicule toward a leader who, whatever his faults, is unquestionably an\nable, honest and sincere man.\nSuch bitterness ultimately awakens in the hearts of readers who\nhave been exposed to it too long, a\nfeeling of sympathy and fellow-feeling which may well override any\nmisgivings they may have felt for\nthe quality of Mr. Diefenbaker's\nleadership. As a nation, we do not\nadmire bullying nor encourage the\nkicking of a man when he is down.\n\u2014Daily Packet and Times.\nng i:\nNo Place To Skimp\nTourism in Canada is generally\nrated as a $2000 million-a-year business. But too frequently it is shrugged\noff as a marginal local activity while\nin reality it is a major contributor\nto national wealth and a major\nsource of good job opportunities.\nCurrently, as a special report\nshows, the industry is attracting\nsome big sums of investment money,\nespecially for historical restoration\nand plushy motor hotels. Jt is also\nstill a remunerative field for the\nsmall businessman and the manager-proprietor for whom it provides\nthe opportunities of a genuine growth\nindustry,\nBul tourism has now come to the\npoint where sophisticated market research, accurate measurements of\nsales potential, \"product\" sampling\nand a host of better management\ntools are needed to foster future\ngrowth.\nGetting these things done won't\nbe easy in an industry composed of\nthousands of relatively small units\nSpread thinly across a continent.\nBut the provincial governments,\nwho are already deep into tourist\npromotion, might find a few dollars\nspent on research and education\ncould produce a big pay-off over\nIhe years.\u2014Financial Post,\ncreature comfort industries in\nwhich we invest our money.\nAt this moment, we are entering a period in which the major\npopulation age-group, comprising children born soon after the\nWar, are leaving adolescence\nand entering their twenties.\nThese are the biggest market in\nNorth America today.\nHabits change with increasing\nage. In adolescence, the drink\nfor social occasions is a carbonated beverage such as Coke,\nSeven-Up, Pepsi or some other\npopular brand, consumed with\nthe casual flourish that hides\nthe anxieties and uncertainties\nof the teen-ager. At twenty or\nafter, though, there are other\npressures, other styles. Beer\nbecomes a relatively safe means\nof relaxation, and particularly\nwith young home-makers who\nadmire the European touch,\nwine before, during and after a\nmeal. After the thirties, spirits\ngain the ascendancy.\nIn the roughest of percentages,\nover 50 per cent of our North\nAmerican population is today\ndeserting the soft-drink milieu\nfor beer and wine conviviality.\nTo the investor, this is extremely important.\nFor a good many years, the\nbrewing industry has enjoyed a\nperiod of-relative stability. Two\nchanges now lie ahead of it \u2014\nthis prodigious increase in the\nnumber of consumers, and in\nthe really long term, perhaps\nthe most Important factor of all,\na natural expansion into pharmaceuticals, for which they\nhave the equipment and know-\nhow, hitherto unrealized.\nI therefore predict during the\nnext few years, a massive expansion in the brewing industry,\nand subject to normal portfolio\nlimitations, the purchase of\nbrewery shares.\nCanadian Breweries, the\nworld's largest, has now a total\nof 19 breweries, and half the\nCanadian market, as well as 6\nper cent of the consumption in\nthe U.S., and seventh largest in\nBritain, where it owns the\nfourth largest number of pubs.\nTwo new breweries are under\nconstruction \u2014 one in Nassau,\nand a second in Forth Worth.\nMany of the plants have been\nshrewdly designed to have unused capacity, and their earnings per share should increase\nNew Dam Will Wash\nAway Pioneer .History\nWENATCHEE, Wash, (A.P) -\nRiver rapids,, homes and or-'\nchards won't be the only things\nwhich will disappear next month\nwhen a new lake rises on the\nColumbia River behind Wana-\npum Dam.\nA page of pioneer history\u2014a\nrumored treasure of $85,000 in\ngold dust and nuggests sacked\nin deer skin \u2014 also will be\ncovered.\nThe gold, hidden by a group\nof prospectors returning from\nBritish Columbia in 1876 as they\nfled Indians on the warpath,\ncannot be found.\nIt was cached somewhere\namong the rocks, caves and potholes along the east bank of the\nriver between Trinidad and\nBeverly,,, the legend goes.\nREPRINTS STORY\nThe tale was told in the\nWenatchee Daily World recently. The newspaper reprinted\none of its own stories, which ap\npeared Sept. 30, 1921.\nThis is the way the story\nwent:\nThe prospectors were trekking\ndown the Columbia on the way\nto Oregon. When they reached\nthe vicinity of Trinidad they\ndiscovered the Indians were on\nthe warpath. Their guide persuaded them to get rid of their\nhorses, bury the gold and make\ntheir way home on foot.\nThey buried their equipment\nin one place and marked it with\na pile of stones. The gold was\nburied nearby, and a rough map\nwas drawn to help relocate the\ntreasure when the party returned the next spring.\nNO ONE LEFT\nBut the Indian' uprising continued    several   years,    some\nmembers of the party died, and\nothers were too busy to return.\nFinally no one was left except\nEliza Turtle Of Salem, Ore.,\nwho, as a small child, was with\nher mother and father in the\nparty of prospectors.\nAll she had to go by was the\nmap her father drew long before, but she spent parts of six\nsummers searching the area.\nAs the years went on and\nnothing was found, the belief\ngrew that the treasure was a\nmyth. But the tale came to life\nagain in the 20s when Ted Williams and Ervy Webly stumbled\non a cache of saddles and other\nequipment.\nThey set a trap for coyotes\nin a cave about a mile from\nthe river and 200 feet above the\nwater level. A coyote was trapped, and in its struggles to get\nfree it dug a hole in the bottom\nof the vave, uncovering part of\na saddle.\nWilliams and Webly dug and\nfound the remains of two\nsaddles, a rosewood box containing documents, a child's\nbrush, comb and hair ribbon, a\nlong-stemmed pipe, a pair of\nold - fashioned spectacles with\nsquare lens and other personal\nbelongings.\nWilliams said he was convinced these were the things\nburled by the prospectors. The\nWorld quoted him in the 1921\nstory as saying:\n\"We talked with cowboys who\nhad acted as guides for her\n(Mrs. Turtle) . . . This convinced me that there must be\nsomething to the tradition, so 1\nhave spent some time digging\naround in the vicinity to see if I\ncould discover the buried gold\nalso.\nWOMAN GONE\n\"I finally found someone who\nknew Mrs. Turtle's name and\naddress and went to Salem\nwhere she was supposed to have\nlived. There I found that she\nhad moved and no one knew\nwhat had become of her.\"\nWilliams said there was other\nevidence showing the treasure\nexisted\u2014that the loss of the gold\nwas reported to the U.S. Mint\nin San Francisco and the branch\nmint in Seattle. He said that\nwas done in order to trace the\ngold in case someone found it\nand took it to a mint.\n\"No one has ever done so,\"\nWilliams said, \"and therefore I\nam confident that the gold still\nreposes in the deer skin sacks\nwhere it was hidden.  ...\"\nInterpreting the News\nAs the nature of a health problem makes it likely that any organization created, will have to\nremain ready but inactive for\nlong periods of time, the responsibility for organizing ,and ad-\nm i n i s t rating an ..emergency\nhealth service has been given to\nthe existing official health agencies. \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0     \u2022'''.\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nItaly, one of the most venerable countries of European civilization yet one of the youngest\nin terms of national unity,\nelects its fourth republican parliament . at the weekend and\nhardly anybody is confident\nabout the outcome.\nEssentially, the nation's first\ngeneral election since 1958 will\namount tb a referendum on the\n\"opening of the left\"\u2014the daring innovation in Italian politics\nlaunched early in 1962 by Premier Amintbre Fanfani.\n\u2022 Fanfani, a shrewd, pragmatic\nman of the moderate left, is a\nleading figure-of the Christian\nDemocratic party which has\nprovided the backbone of every\nItalian government since  1946.\nBecause-- none of the eight\nnational parties had an absolute\nmajority in parliament, the\noutgoing government comprised\nan alliance of Christian Democrats, Democratic Socialists and\nRepublicans.\nThe   \"opening   to   the   lett\"\nHUBE\n\"Mother is just about to board the plane for Europe,\n'Biit\"8he\"rfaytf she'll give you one more\nchance to apologize,\"\nsignified a drastic change since\nfor the first time it brought into\nassociation with the government the Socialist forces\nheaded by controversial Pietro\nNenni, a Marxist-trained left-\nwinger.\nNOT IN CABINET\nThe Nennin Socialists support\nthe government, though holding\nno ministerial posts in it, in\nreturn for promises of legislative reforms. If the \"opening to\nthe left\" receives solid electoral\nassent in the voting Sunday and\nMonday, the Socialists will start\nclamoring for cabinet places.\nThe significance of the \"aper-\ntura,\" or opening, was that it\ndetached the Nenni Socialists\nfrom t h e periphery of the\nCommunists under Palmiro To-\ngliatti, who held 140 of the 596\nseats in the last parliament.\nIn Italy as in France, the\npresence of a large and influential Communist party has\ngenerally forced governments\nto be more conservative than\nthe mass of voters may have\nwished. One of the surprising\nthings about Italy is the continuing strength of the Communists in a country whose national income doubled during\nthe 1950s, but now that the\nSocialists have moved toward\nthe centre of the political spectrum Communist influence may\nbegin to decline.\nMany of Fanfani's supporters\nrecoil at the thought of links\nwith the Socialists and dislike\nthe changes already produced\nunder the new deal, such as\nnationalized electricity, educational moves, old-age pensions\nfor housewives and new tax\nlegislation.\nThey would prefer a \"clean\"\ncentre-left regime, uncontami-\nnated by Socialists, but electoral arithmetic may rule this\nout.\nReflecting a 2,000,000 increase\nof 596. Party standings in the\nold house: Christian Democrats\n273; Communists 140; Socialists\n84; Monarchists 25; Italian \"Social Movement (neo-Fascist) 25;\nSocial Democrats 23; Liberals\n16; Republicans 7 j others 3.\nover the next ten years without\ncapital expenditures. Canadian\nBreweries shares, at $10.50 per\nshare, are selling at 15 times\nearnings and pay 3.9 per cent\nat this price.\nLabatts on the other hand has\n20 per cent of the Canadian\nmarket, and own 46 per cent of\nLucky Lager Breweries in the\nUnited States. Very important\nis the fact that they have just\nacquired a drug manufacturing\nsubsidiary, the Delmar Chemical company of Quebec, and are\nthe pioneers in Canada of the\nbrewing companies' intrusion\ninto the pharmaceutical field.\nAt $16.50, paying 3 per cent the\nshares are selling at 16.5 times\nearnings.\nA small independent brewing\ncompany which is doing well is\nInterior Breweries at Cranbrook,\nselling at $6.00 and paying 30c\nand yielding 5 per cent.\nGrowth of wine sales in Canada for the last ten years has\nbeen unspectacular and steady,\nbut is due for bigger increases.\nThe best - known stock is\nBright's, which has increased in\nvalue from $19 in 1957 to $95 today, and pays annually $1.00\nper share. In B.C.. where wine\nis becoming almost as popular\nas in Quebec, we have Growers'\nWine, which was founded 39\nyears ago for the fanners by\nmy father and two oilier public-\nspirited British Columbians.\nManagement is excellent, and\nat $16.50, with the probability of\nan increased dividend this year,\nthe stock is a good buy.\nThese shares are, therefore,\nmy recommendation for this\nweek, to take advantage of\nmodern trends in living, about\nwhich f promised several weeks\nago, that I would from time to\ntime point out the investment opportunities involved in these\nchanges.\nYour Individual!\ntoi\"\"\u00ab\"\nBy Frances Drake\nLook in the section which your\nbirthday comes and find what\nyour outlook is, according to the\nstars,\nFor Tuesday, April 30, 1963\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\u2014Don't clobber anyone for\ndoing or not doing something\nwhich displeased you. Overlook\nas many criticisms and errors\nas good sense permits.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Generally, aspects urge a\nfreer attitude toward giving, endowing, rewards. Spur the lagging incentive of another, lt\nwill benefit more than a condemnatory censure.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014Medicine, nursing, hygienics;\nbanking, investments; new well\nthought out ventures advance.\nYour keen mind and ability to\ndevise fresh, quick methods can\nreap long-term profits.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014A better day than you may\nthink at first. Things should turn\nout as satisfactorily if you will\nmaster your emotions. Seek the\n\"sleeping\" gems.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014Certain of those \"pleasant little games\" can be alarmingly\nhazardous. Know why you\n\"should\" accept or reject and\nwhich means is honestly best.\nCredit where due!\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Looking backward\nwith regret can become time -\nconsuming and unprofitable. But\nreviewing smartly to make sure\nyou will avoid old errors is commended. Think twice before\nspending, borrowing. Mild aspects.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Obliged to do some\nannoying chores? Think up a\nnew approach, a different dressing. You can lighten burdens if\nOntario Legislature\nProgram Now Law\nyou wish. Neither be over-anxious nor indifferent.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 You may be\nquite determined, in your own\nsilent way, to insure a secure\nfuture way of life. Original\nthinking will smooth the way.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) - When\nasked for use of your Inborn\ncleverness and studied skills,\nyou are proud to assist. Do not\nmind if today is a driver. You\nwill just achieve more !\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 An early start\ncan save energy, nerves, and\navoid re-tracing steps later. Do\nnot let ornamentation beguile.\nLook into the heart of things;\nsearch for true values.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Don't allow\nyour enthusiasm to get the\nbetter of you. Your ambition\nshould be controlled when its\nrealization makes you ruthless\nwith others.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You may wonder\nwhere your ideas come from\nnow. If you follow them up to\ntheir logical conclusion, however, you should be content.\nYOU BORN TODAY rate a\ntop position of trust and responsibility when developing your\nintellectual capacity, controlling\nemotions. You are artistic and\npractical at the same time; may\nfall into stubborn and inactive\nperiods you later regret. Aim at\nconsistency. Develop a hobby to\ncomplement your intelligence\nquotient and your life will be\nhappy. You have tremendous\nlatent powers, could achieve in\nunexpected and extraordinary\nfashion. Birthdate: Sir John\nLubbock, English astronomer.\nBy DENNIS ANDERSON\nTORONTO (CP)-A legislative program highlighting portable pensions, minimum wages,\ncolored margarine, and financial aid to farming and industry\nbecame law Friday night as the\nOntario legislature prorogued.\nIn the final hours of the session, opened Nov. 27, speculation increased that an Ontario\ngeneral election will be called\nthis year.\nPremier John Robarts noted\nhis Progressive Conservative\ngovernment enters the fifth\nyear of a five-year mandate in\nJune. But he did not say when\nan election will be held.\nThe Conservatives hold 65 of\nthe legislature's 98 seats. There\nare 24 Liberal members and\nfive New Democrats.\nWhen the next election is\ncalled, 10 new ridings will come\ninto existence in Metropolitan\nToronto. The redistribution bill\nwas one of 207 passed in the\nsession's 67 sitting days.\nLast week brought a renewed\nexchange on the Northern Ontario Natural Gas stock promotion inquiry.\nSTIRS UP COALS\nLands and Forests Minister\nKelso Roberts stirred the coals\nwith a statement to the House\nWednesday.\nMr. Roberts, former attorney-\ngeneral who ordered the Ontario Securities Commission to\nreopen the NONG investigation\nlast August, told the House new\nevidence indicated an elected\nmunicipal official had received\npromotional NONG stock while\nthe company was negotiating a\nnatural gas franchise with the\nofficial's municipality.\nNDP Leader Donald C. MacDonald said Thursday the\nelected official was Mr. Justice\nLeo Landreville ol the Ontario\nSupreme Court, former mayor\nof Sudbury.\nElmer Sopha, Liberal member for Sudbury, demanded Friday that the government either\nbring charges against Mr. Justice Landreville or make public\ninformation which might clear\n\"the cloud of suspicion.\"\nAttorney-General   Fred   Cass\nsaid no report on the NONG investigation can be expected for\nsome months.\nHOLD HEALTH HEARINGS\nA representative committee\u2014\nto include members of the labor\nindustry and medical fields-\nwill hold public hearings and\nprepare recommendations for\nthe government on medical services insurance.\nThe government's draft bill\non medical care insurance,\ngiven second reading but not\nenacted at this session, will be\nused by the committee as a\nworking paper. The committee's\nreport will be the basis for a revised bill to be presented for\nlegislature approval.\nThe report of Mr. Justice Wilfrid D. Roach's royal commission investigation on organized\ncrime was . tabled during the\nsession.\nLiberal Leader John Winter-\nmeyer accepted the finding that\nthere was no link between gamblers and the attorney-general's\ndepartment, but said the report\nproved allegations about the extent of organized crime in the\nprovince.\nAs a result of the report, the\ngovernment introduced legislation aimed at tightening supervision of social club charters-\nfound by Mr. Justice Roach to\nhave been used at times as a\nfront for gambling operations.\nCharters of another type\u2014incorporating horse racing associations\u2014figured in charges by\nMr. MacDonald that lieutenant-\ngovernor - Designate W. Earl\nRowe had signed a false affidavit to the provincial secretary's department.\nAttorney - General Cass said\niesto\nFrank Slide\nFRANK, Alta. (CP) - Sixty\nyears ago 66 people were buried alive when Turtle Mountain,\nwhich sometimes still groans\nand sputters, tipped its top.\nCeremonies to commemorate\nthe most spectacular rockslide\nIn Canadian history were held\nin this Rocky Mountain town\nduring the weekend. Among\nthose present will be survivors\nof the tragedy which occurred\nearly in the morning of April\n29, 1903.\nAn estimated 90,000,000 tons\nof limestone swept over two\nmiles of the valley, burning\nhomes, a coal mining plant,\nrailway track and 3,200 acres of\nfertile land to a depth of 100\nfeet.\nMost  residents   were  asleep\nwhen   an    overhanging    ledge\nplunged down the valley.\nSLIDE HITS TOWN\nThe eastern part of the\nCrow's Nest Pass coal mining\ntown was in the path of the\nslide.\nSurvivors and other old-timers will reminisce at a luncheon\nSunday in the Turtle Mountain\nHotel. They may even look like\nFrank residents of 1903, for Old-\ntime dress is optional.\nThere will be a parade to a\nlittle burial plot which marks\nthe graves of three skeletons\nfound in the 1930s when a highway was built across the fallen\nrock and debris. Clergymen of\nall denominations will participate in the services.\nthere was no evidence to indicate impropriety in the revival\nof a dormant racing charter\nused to get racing days for\nWindsor Raceway.\nThe government introduced,\namong other things:\nPortable pensions legislation, requiring a minimum standard plan for all firms with\nmore than 15 employees by Jan.\n1, 1965. Portable pensions permit a worker to change jobs\nwithout losing his accumulated\nbenefits or employee-employer\ncontributions.\n. An agricultural rehabilitation and development act, in\nline with federal legislation, for\nfederal-provincial projects.\n. A loan guarantee fund with\na development agency to provide financial, managerial and\ntechnical aid to qualifying industries.\n. Junior farmer establishment\nloans to give young farmers\nlow-interest, long-term financing in setting up their own\noperation,\n. Minimum wage amendments\nallowing an hourly instead of\nweekly rate structure.\nIn connection with the minimum wage amendments, Labor Minister Leslie Rowntree\nannounced that rates of 85 cents\nan hour for women $1 an hour\nfor men and $1.25 an hour fi)r\nconstruction workers will b_m\neffect by June for the inddt>'.\ntrial area around Lake Ontario\nbetween Oshawa and Niagara\nFalls.\nMargarine colored a slightly\ndarker shade of yellow than butter was expected to be on Sale\nas a result of another awn!\nending the 13-year prohibition;\nagainst sale of a pre-coloreij\nspread.\nToday  J\nIn History\nApril 29, 1903 . . .\nThe little coal mining village ot Frank, Alta., was\nobliterated 60 years ago today \u2014 in 1903 \u2014 when an\nestimated 70,000,000 tons of\nrock crashed down in a\nlandslide from Turtle Mountain above the village. Only\na handful of persons survived and 66 persons perished when slabs as big as\nhouses fell 7,000 feet. The\nslide was estimated at 500\nfeet deep, 4,000 feet wide\nand 1,300 feet high.\n, 1946 \u2014 Twenty-eight Japanese leaders were indicted\nas war criminals.\n1857 \u2014 The first electric\nlocomotive made a trial run\non the Baltimore and Ohio\nRailroad.\nI\n ~      :   \"\"-\nPRINTED PATTERN    A548      sizes io-ib\nTake one curvy princess sheath, one daring, flaring cape\ncoat \u2014 together, they add up to the most exciting costume on\nthe Spring-Summer scene. Both parts are surprisingly simple\nto sew, thanks to clever seaming by Mr. Blackwell of California. There are no waist seams to the dress; the cape-coat\nis made of twin circles of fabric seamed together. Make the\ndress one color \u2014 the cape-coat in check, plaid or contrast \u2014\nOR make dress and cape to match in shantung, linen, double-\nknit wool or jersey.\nPrinted Pattern A548 is available in Misses' Sizes 10, 12.\n14, 16 and 18. Size 16 requires 3Vi yards 35-inch fabric; cape-\neoat requires 3% yards 54-inch fabric.\nSend ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern A548 to Nelson\nDaily News, Pattern Dept., 60 Front St. West., Toronto. Ont.\nPlease print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE.\nBy PATRICIA RUSAK\n' TORONTO (CP) - \"Children's feet don't need to be\ndressed\u2014they just need to be\nprotected.\"\nThat's the word of an orthopedic specialist here who says\nthat often children are brought\ninto his office wearing shoes\nmodelled like their mother's.\n\"But the only style that children's shoes should have is the\nshape of the foot \u2014 and that\nhasn't changed since Adam and\nEve.\"\nA child's foot is triangular-\nwide at the toes and narrow at\nthe heel. Shoes should also be\nthis shape to allow free movement of the foot while protecting it from bangs, slivers, cuts.\nEach time we step, the bones\nof the foot naturally move sideways and up and down and it\nis this suppleness which enables a person to walk over uneven: surfaces without pain, the\ndoctor-explained.\nThe sifcck.of walking should\nbe absorbed evenly by all five\ntoes as they spread, \"ff this is\nnot allowed, callouses develop\non the underside of the foot.\"\nAnd normally the toes of the\nfoot grow in a straight line\nfrom their base. Improperly fitting shoes, and especially those\nwith sharp pointed toes, squeeze\nor direct the toes toward a line\nin the centre of the foot.\nWearing such shoes, children\ncan develop bunions and callouses on the sides of the toes\nin as short a time as from two\nto three months, the doctor\nsaid.\n\"If a small child grew up\nwearing such restricting shoes,\nhe would require operative correction by the time he Was 13\nor 14 years old.\"\nMothers have a tendency to\nprovide infants with too-rigid\nfootwear, the doctor has discovered.\n\"The only time restrictive\nfootwear should be worn by\nchildren is when it is being used\nto correct some deformity.\"\nRunning shoes and sandals\nare good in the summer because they give more freedom\nto the foot.\nWhen a child is first learning\nto walk, run and jump around,\na light boot will help him along.\nBut by the age of IVs or three,\nwhen the child has acquired a\nbit of poise, boots are unnecessary for the normal foot, the\ndoctor said.\nTURNED-IN tOES\nWhen a child has turned-in\ntoes or flat-looking feet, parents\noften feel the child must have\ncorrective shoes. But these are\nnot always necessary.\n\"Most children are born with\ntheir toes turned in. Eighty-five\nper cent of these respond on\ntheir own by the time they are\nabout 18 months old. Small\nwedges can be put in the shoes\nof the other 15 per cent to help\nthem correct the deformity.\"\nAnother common fault with\nthe feet of young children is that\nthey are \"hypermobile\" \u2014 the\nligaments in the foot are not\nyet strong enough to support\nthe arch and the child will walk\non the inside of the foot, making him look flat-footed.\nWhen    this   happens,    some\n41-Month-Old\nBaby Baptized\nAt New Denver\nNEW DENVER - The 4V4-\nmonth-old daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. J. L. Irwin, Patricia\nMonica, was baptized at a ceremony Easter Monday, with Rev.\nStephen Lee officiating in St.\nStephen's Anglican Church,\nwhich was decorated for the\nEaster Festival with lilies and\ndaffodils.\nMrs. W. Jupp and Mrs. F. H.\nAngrignon stood proxy for the\nbaby's godparents. Miss Mary\nE. Butlin and Miss Doris H.\nButlin of St. Albans, England.\nThe baby wore a long white\nVCS5\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 29, 1963\u20143\nChildren's Shoes Should\nBe Natural Shape of Foot\nEskimo Girl Back\nFrom Nigeria, Ghana\nBy EDNA BLAKELY\nOTTAWA (CP)-Mary Pane-\ngoosho, a 23-year-old Eskimo\nwho returned Thursday from a\nthree-month trip to Nigeria and\nGhana, says she had to explain\nmany times that she was a\nCanadian.\nMany West Africans thought\nthe Canadian Arctic was a separate country and others\nthought all Eskimos came from\nGreenland.\nIt wasn't only Nigerians and\nGhanians who asked questions.\nsmall  elevation  on  the  inner j christening robe made by her Domm of Canadians working or\nside of the heel in the shoe will\ncorrect the deformity.\nThe doctor says he has 10\ntimes as many women as men\npatients with foot trouble. He\nattributes the differ ence to\nwomen's high heels which jam\nthe feet as far as possible into\nthe front of the shoes.\n\"When you wear high heels,\nthe foot is constantly downhill.\"\nAbout five of every seven\nwomen have some form of foot\ntrouble often caused by ill-fitting shoes in childhood.\nlate maternal grandmother over\n40 years ago.\nFollowing the ceremony, tea\nwas enjoyed at the home of the\nbaby's parents.\nOut of town guests included\nMr. and Mrs. William Jupp,\nGary, Eleanor and Jennifer of\nNakusp.\nAPPEAR WITH LUCY\nBoth Lucille Ball's children,\n12 - year \u25a0 old Lucie Arnaz and\nDesi, her 10-year-old son, have\nappeared on her television show.\nteaching in Africa who had\nnever met an Eskimo asked\nquestions about the Eskimo way\nof life.\nDuring her visits to dozens of\nschools, the vivacious Eskimo\nfound text books which referred\nto Eskimos \"the same as here\n\u2014out of date.\"\nNOT SO HOT\nMiss Panegoosho said in an interview she found the African food hot but the weather,\nalthough about 90 degrees every\nafternoon, not as hot as she had\nexpected. At home in Pond In\nlet, Baffin Island, the temperature often drops to 65 below\nzero during winter.\nShe said Africans were surprised to learn Eskimos kept\ntheir homes warmer than white\npeople kept theirs.\nThe children thought Eskimos\nwere only two or three feet\nhigh because the doors to snow\nhouses looked that small in pictures they saw.\nMiss Panegoosho has a trim\nfive-foot, U4-inch figure.\nShe was the guest of the\nGhana government and her trip\nto Nigeria was arranged by the\nCanadian government.\nIn Ottawa, the brown-haired,\nbrown-eyed northern affairs employee edits Canada's only Eskimo language magazine, Inuk-\ntitu, which means the Eskimo\nway.\nIS SHORTEST ROUTE\nFrom its tropical lowlands to\nits snow-clad wilderness in the\nnorth, Sikkim presents the\nshortest route from China to the\nIndian plains.\nDREW THE LINE\nTwo British scientists Charles\nMason and Jeremiah Dixon surveyed and marked the line between Maryland and Pennsylvania\u2014the Mason-Dixon Line-\nin 1767.\n\"HOW\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE\nDESTROYS FEAR\"\nThis free lecture is given\nby\nOTTO G. ZIEGENHAGEN,\nC.S.B., of Chicago,. IU.\nMember of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother\nChurch, The First Church of\nChrist, Scientist in Boston,\nMassachusetts\nTHURSDAY, MAY 9\nat 8 p.m.\nHUME HOTEL\nSilver Room\nFirst Church of\nChrist, Scientist\nNelson, B.C.\nWELCOMES YOU\nFree   Transporation   352-2890\nSeek Husbands\nFor Women\nPrisoners\n\"f.       By RUKMINI DEVI\n.Canadian  PreBS  Correspondent\n|i; BOMBAY (CP) - The prob-\nJim of unwed female prisoners\nserving short sentences is worrying provincial governments in\n1 India.\nUnder the prodding of social\nwelfare workers some jail administrations have launched a\ncampaign to find suitable hus-\nt bands  for  the  erring  women\nI within their walls. The theory\ni is that matrimony is one sure\nway to rehabilitate them once\nthey have finished their terms.\nMaple Sugar\nTradition\nCarried On\nOTTAWA (CP) - They've\nbeen making maple syrup at\nGovernment House since the\nSecond World War days when\nsugar was short.\nThis year was no exception\nat the home of Canada's Governor-General. The maple trees\non the spacious grounds were\ntapped and the sap was turned\ninto syrup in an old greystone\nbuilding that once was a stable.\nIn a good year, more than\n800 gallons of sap are collected,\nand this yields about 20 gallons\nof syrup.\nMost of it is set aside for\nuse at Government House, but\nThe jail department of Uttar I\nfare workers to help 500 eligible\nspinsters in the state's prisons\nand lock-ups. All are serving\nshort sentences for minor offences ranging from petty\nthieving to violent brawling.\nAt a meeting of social workers in the town of Allahabad\na speaker was cheered when\nshe said; \"Any young man who\nmarries one of these girls will\nhave the added satisfaction of\nmoulding the life of a forlorn\nwoman along the right lines.\"\nMEN INTERESTED\nThe Social Welfare Association said the response has not\nbeen disappointing. A recent\nweek  saw  the  celebration  of\nSlovak School\nTeaches Old\nWorld Custom\nMONTREAL (CP) - Every\nSaturday afternoon, more than\n60 Canadian - born children of\nSlovak origin attend the Canadian Slovak School in Montreal.\nThe school, started four years\nago by the Canadian Slovak\nCultural Centre, wants to help\nenrich Canadian culture by\n\"teaching our children the heritage and customs of Slovakia.\"\nMrs. John Dvorsky, president\nof the women's auxiliary of the\n1 centre, said many children had\nnever heard the Slovak tongue\nbefore  coming  to  the  school,\ni which   teaches  them   the  Ian-\n1 guage. dances and folk music\nof then- forefathers.\n\"They   have   grown   up   in\nI homes where their families intermarried with the English,\nFrench, Germans and Italians.\"\nj Others came from homes where\ni Slovak was the first tongue.\n\\ Mrs. Dvorsky, born in Canada\nof Slovakian parents, said very\noften the children were wrongly\ntold in public schools that they\nwere Czechoslovak\u2014not Slovak.\nj    She referred to the fact that\nthis year several tins will be\nPradesh state has enlisted the j sent to two \u00b0f Governor-General ] the  Czechs  and  Slovaks were\nservices of some top social wel- and  Madame Vanier's  grand-  separate   nations  before  their\nchildren, who live in Paris.        j union in 1918.\nMme. Vanier delights in visit- j \t\ning the building where the\nsyrup is processed, and on a\nrecent visit took a turn with\nthe two-pronged netted branch\nused to \"scum\" the boiling\nsyrup.\nThe Vaniers are fond of\nmaple syrup on their pancakes,\nand Government House chef\nJean Zonda also uses liberal\nhelpings of it in one of his\nspecialties, souffle d'erable.\nTapping the trees in the Government House grounds was\nstarted when the Earl of Ath-\nlone was governor - general,\nfrom 1940 to 1945. In those\nSecond World War years sugar\nthree post-prison weddings. One  was  in  short  supply,  particu-\nof the grooms was a university j larly in England, and some of\ngraduate.\nIn   West   Bengal,\nprison   authorities   said   they\nwere receiving a sizable num-\nthe syrup was sent to Bucking-\nthe  state ' ham Palace-\nThe tiny kingdom of Sikkim\nber\" of \"inquiries \"from\" young i in the Himalayas lies trapped\nby geography between India and\nChina.\nmen wanting to marry prison\nbrides.\nThe city of Amritsar in the\nPunjab recently rolled out the\nred carpet for a young man\nwho sought the hand of a fair\nex - prisoner. The couple was\ntaken in procession through the\nstreets. A fund of 800 rupees\n($1601 was raised to help the\nnewly-weds set up home. The i\nhusband has organized a cycle\nworkshop and said: \"I cannot\nbe luckier in marriage.\"\nGuild Lines Up\nWork for- Spring\nTea, Sale\nBALFOUR - Members of the\nGuild to St. Michael and All\nAngel's Church made plans for\ntheir annual tea and sale of\nhandwork at a meeting held at\nthe home of Mrs. J. Walden.\nCompleted items were handed\nin, with many members donat- j\ning additional items.\nChurch cleaners for May will\nbe Mrs. Stainton and Mrs.\nNelson.\nContest winner was Mrs. E.\nA. Noakes\nThe new lamps on the pulpit\nand the lectern are being Installed by the vicar, Rev. W.\nEdington, and are in memory\nof the late Amanda Anderson.\nNext meeting will be at the\nhome of Mrs. N. Murray.\nAinsworth\nAINSWORTH - Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Mackindoe have returned to\ntheir home at Christina Lake after spending six weeks in Ainsworth. Robert Sorvden has returned to Hope.\nDennis McGill and relatives\nIrom Arrow Park spent the\nweekend in Ainsworth.\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Anderson\nof Creston. accompanied by Mrs.\nJohnson of Wyndell. were vis-\ntors for a day of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. A. Anderson.\nMr. and Mrs. Tatanlego of\nTrail are visitors for two weeks\nin Ainsworth.\nThe modern way to be\ntraditionally correct\nThe Bouquet\nInvitation Line\nWedding Invitations\nTWmo-engraved awiea .*\u00bb__\u00ab>\nThermo-Engraving looks and feels like\nhand engraving, but costs about half as\nmur.h\u2014and it's ready within ihe week.\nThermo-Engraving eliminates the copper plate that makes band engraving\nso costly and time consuming. Select\nfrom our giant catalogue, of flawlessly\ncorrect papers. 11 distinctive styles of\nlettering. Weddings priced as low as\n$9.(10 for 50 and $13.50 lor 100. complete with double envelopes and tissues.\nCome in and see our complete catalogue! 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We invite you to visit our studio and\nlet us help you capture and record your most\ncherished day!\nRenwick's Portrait Studio\n577 Ward St.\nJewellery Headquarters for\nWeddings and Engagements\n\u2022k DIAMOND RING SETS\nir DOUBLE RING WEDDING SETS\nir Complete Stock of Special Gift Items\nGift Items to Suit Every Type of\nWedding or Shower\nTED ALLEN'S Jewellery\nNelson, B.C.\nWe're Wise to the Ways\nof Weddings!\nreality when you visit our\n|p  Vow dream wedding becomes\nBridal Salon.\nSee our collection of exquisite Gowns and smart Trousseau   I\nFashions.\nHALOS, CHAPEL and FLOOR-LENGTH VEILS\nHEADDRESSES MADE TO ORDER\nillinery & Dress Shop\nPhone 352-3044\nPhone 352-5033\nFloral Decorations\nfor your Wedding ...\nExquisite floral arrangements for any wedding. 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The letter*\nhave an elegance and individuality only the finest hand en-\ngraving can match.\nThermo-engraving (raised lettering)\nCoils about half as much as hand tneraving, because it eliminate* the copper plate that makes hand engraving so expensive\nAND IT'S RE4DY WITHIN THE WEEK\nOf course you can order matching enclosure cards,\nreception, response, thank you and al home cards, etc\nSeleci from our giant catalogue of flawlriily coned\npapers. 11 distinctive style* ol lettering. Weddings\npriced \u2022\u00bb low as SO for 5^.00 and 100 lor $13.50. complete with double envelopes and tissues.\nThe largest and most complete\nselection of Wedding Stationery\nin the Kootenays ...\n\u2022 Engraved Wedding Invitations   7'  ',\n\u2022 Wedding Stationery     {   ', (*\n\u2022 Thank You Cards      i    7\nAsk to See Our Sample Catal^giipf '-teda^   \u25a0\nJfolamt latig 'mm'i\nPrinting Department\nPhone 352-3552\nw\n\u25a0        \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0-       -\u25a0'-\u2022\u25a0'      \"!      \u2022\u25a0--\"\u25a0-       '\u25a0 ,.-..:.-. \u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022 \u25a0       :       ,     ,\n\u25a0-'\u25a0:\u2022\u25a0-\u25a0 -. '\".      .       '\n___________________________\nJim\n____________________________________________________________________\n '-\u2022\nhi\u2014\n\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2022. :\u2014\u2014\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 2*, 1983\nCards, Athletics Lead Majors;\nYanks Move Into Second Spot\nMoose Skowron\n. . . first NL homer\nBy THE ASfSOClATED pfcuAA ing fun that gave Pittsburgh -\nSt.' Louis ahd  Kansas City, relief  pitcher Elroy Face his'\nrepresentatives from the state second victory. It was the third\nof Missouri, showed the rtet of straight loss for the Mets.\nthe major leagues how it was     Ron  Santo  hjt  fl  ^.^\nHORNETS\nBEING SOLD\nPITTSBURGH (AP) - John\nH. Harris has announced he is\nselling Pittsburgh Hornets of\nthe American Hockey League to\nBruce Norris, president of Detroit Red Wings of the National j ,*a\"n'd\" 5.Tmd~took\"wer\" second\ndone Sunday. Each wis in first\nplace ih its league.\nThe Cardinals made it seven\nin a row, defeating Los Angeles Dodgers 9-6, while the\n6-5 for their sixth victory in the\nlast eight starts.\nPittsburgh kept pace with the\nCardinals in the National\nLeague, defeating New York\nMets J-2 fbr their fourth straight\ntriumph. Milwaukee climbed\ninto third place, sweeping the\nthree-game series from San\nFrancisco Giants 3-1. Houston\nColts nipped Cincinnati 3-2 to\nmove into ninth place past the\nMets. Chicago Cubs topped\nPhiladelphia 4-1.\nWhitey Ford won his first\ngame of the season as New\nYork Yankees shut out Cleve-\nI\nHockey League.\nHarris disclosed the transaction in a letter to sportswriter\nJimmy Jordan of the Pittsburgh\nPost \u2022 Gazette. The Hornets\nserved as a Detroit farm club\nduring the 1962-63 season.\n\"It is my opinion that the only\nway Pittsburgh can have a club\nworthy of the city is by the entire responsibility being placed\non the Detroit club,\" Harris said\nin the letter.\n\"On this basis I am, as of\nMonday, selling my entire interest to Detroit.\"\nThe Hornets returned to the\nAHL in 1961 after a five-year\nabsence. Harris started the\nteam in the league in 1936.\nDetroit and Harris had a verbal agreement for operation of\nthe club last season, but no\nagreement had been reached on\nthe amount of control the Red\nings would exercise in the\n1963-64 season.\nplace in the American League\nrace, one game behind the\nAthletics. Boston loomed into\nthird place with a 4-3 and 6-2\ndoubleheader sweep of Chicago\nWhite Sox. Detroit blanked\nMinnesota 4-0, and Los Angeles\nedged Baltimore 3-2.\nWINS FOURTH STRAIGHT\nKen Boyer drove in three runs\nwith a pair ot homers to enable\nrighthander Ernie Broglio of the\nCards to register his fourth\nstraight victory over the Dodgers. Broglio now has a 3-0\nrecord for ' the season. Bill\nSkowron hit his first National\nLeague homer for the Dodgers.\nHenry Aaron socked his seventh home run and Warren\nSpahn spaced 11 hits for his\nfourth triumph in the Braves'\nvictory over Juan Marichal of\nthe Giants.\nBill  Mazeroski looped  an\neighth inning  single  to  score ] \"'.\" '\"\"'f       ,,    ,\nBob Skinner with the tie-break-1 Jlm Kaat was the loser'\nhdme run in the eighth and\nErnie Banks followed with a\nsolo blast as the Cubs rallied\nfor four runs against Chris\nShort to overcome a 1-0 Philadelphia lead. It was, the second victory for Bob Buhl.\nBob Aspormonte singled home\na run in the ninth inning to\nbreak a 2-2 tie with Cincinnati\nand give the Colts the rubber\nof the three-game series.\nTIE BALK RECORD\nIn line with National League\npresident Warren Giles' order\nto the umpires to modify enforcement of the balk rule, only\none such infraction was called\nin the senior circuit. That was\nsufficient, however, to boost the\nleague's total to 76, equalling\nthe record for most balks in one\nseason, set in 1950. Don Schwall\nof the Pirates was responsible\nfor the record-tying feat.\nA four-run eighth inning enabled the Athletics to achieve\ntheir come-from-behind victory\nover the Senators. A single by\npinch hitter George Alusik\ndrove in the third run of the\ninning and a sacrifice scored\npinch runner Bobby Del Greco\nwith what proved to\nwinning run.\nFord, loser of his first two\nstarts, allowed only two hits in\nseven shutout innings before\ntiring. Hal Reniff finished. All\nthe Yankees runs were scored\nOn homers. Ford hit one, too,\nas did Hector Lopez and Joe\nPeptione, off Cleveland loser\nJimer Grant.\nJim Bunning pitched a five\nRon Santo\n. . . three fun homer\nstarts Cubs rally\ndoubled home the winning run\nin the 12th inning of the opener\nand collected three hits, including a run-batted-in single in the\nsecond game, In which Bill\nMonbouquette (2-2) pitched\nfive-hitter.\nRodgers Takes Tops\nSpot in Texas Open\nNelson Blanks\nGrand Forks\nIn WISL Action\n. SAN , ANTDI0, Tex. (Afo-\nPhll Rodgers, i-S-ytar-old junior\npn, tbf pro golf tour, won tht.\n$0,000 TexAs Open Snndiy with!\na 72-hole score pf 268, winding\nup with a birdie-strewn six-un-\nder-par 65.\nRodgers, the blonde, chunky\nex-collegian on the tour his third\nyear, birdied seven of the last\n17 holes\u2014three of them in a row\n\u2014to win his fourth tournament\nsince he started following the\ncircuit.\nHe won $4,300.\nJohnny Pott had & 47 for 270\nand second money of $3,000. He\ncreated some excitement when\nhe came into No. 17 just a\nstroke back of Rodgers but\nmissed a three-foot putt for his\npar, killing his chances.\n\u25a0the victory was the first df\nthe year for Rodgers. He started\nPut the final round Sunday by\ngoing one over par on the second hole, where he was in a\ntrap. But after that he never\nfaltered, picking up birdies on\nthe fourth, eighth, ninth, 10th,\n14th, 15th and 17th holes.\nGETS PAR\nHe was short of the green on\nthe par-three 18th but chipped\nup to within three feet of the\npin and sank his putt for par as\nthe tremendous crowd gathered\naround the green and gave him\na thunderous ovation.\n\"I played well and I really\nputted,\", he declared as he sat\nhappened on 17 I hid to give\nup.\"\nBruce Crimptoi. of. ^ustrilia\nand Bobby Nichols of Midland,\nTex., tied for fourth place with\n274. Both closed out with 69s\nand won $1,300.\nTied for sixth were Bob Bu-\nden, Jerry Steelsmith and Gene\nBone, all with 275, while PM-\nmtr Wound up tied for ninth at\n276 with Doug Sanders, Who\nclosed with a 66.\nAl Johnston of Montreal finished out of the money with a\n285. His rounds were 67-74-72-72.\nCanadian Entry\nSAO PAULO, BfazU (Ct-kt)\nThe Argp III, Canada's entry ih\nthe dragon class yachting at the\nPan-American Games, was disqualified in Sunday's race\u2014the\nthe Games championship.\nArgentina won Sunday's dragon class race while the United\nStates took the star and flying\nDutchman runs and Brazil won\nin snipe, finn and lightning\nclasses.\nThe result of the dragon class\nrace was held up when a three-\nday protest was lodged by the\nU.S., Brazil and Canada against\nthe Argentine boat Tango,\nwhich crossed the finish line\nfirst.\nSeals Even WHL Finals\nWith Overtime Victory\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP).-San\nFrancisco Seals edged Seattle\nTotems 6-5 in overtime' Sunday\nnight and evened their best of\nseven playoff for the WHL championship at one game apiece.\nSeattle had won the opCner\nFriday night 3-2, also an overtime contest. The next two\ngames of the series will be play-\nJunior Ball\nPractice Today\nThe first jurtior baseball practice of the seasbii is scheduled\nfor 6:00 p.m. today at the Civic\nCentre ball grounds.\nAnyone interested in trying\nOut for the team is asked tp attend.\nin the clubhouse and waited for j   The  judges later   confirmed\ni ._._._\u00ab.,   The Nelson Savoy Soccer^Clnb, | Pott to linish.  \"It isn't over | Argentina as the winner with\nbe  the  playing a fast passing game, out- J yet,\" he grunted, but then he j the   U.S.   second   and   Brazil\nclassed Grand Forks 6-0 in Wes- j llea|,d that Pott had lost a stroke third. Canada was disqualified,\ntern International Soccer League j on 17' j    The Canadian boat, with Dr.\n\"Now, I'll talk about it,\" he  Samuel   MacDonald   of   West-\nsaid, and gave a rundown on j mount, Que., at the helm and\naction here Sunday.\nThe victory gives the Nelson! \"'\"' \"\"\" ,?\".\"ti\u00b0 \"\"'\"\"'\n, ..__..__\u2022-._\u25a0__ h's Sreat finishing round,\nteam a three pom   \"j* <\u00ab*     Arnold Palmer? the defend-\nGrand Forks in their battle for j    ch      im and ,he      tour.\nfourth place in league standings ;nament   favorite   _   win   his\nand a berth in the playoffs.\nJoe Karascz and Bob Swinton.\nwith two goals each, and Walt\nhitter fnr'n'ptmu'TtHWnp'nni! Cherenko gave the Savoy club a\nsix Twtas For   I sf rsvictory   big W half time lead over the j had changed his grip, foot po\nsix lwins ior nis lirst victory.;   _* l .. .       ^ ......... I sitinn and made several other\nfavorite   to   win\nfourth   straight    Texas  Open,\nwound up with a 67 for 276.\n\"My iron play was what beat\nme,\" he said, explaining that he\nstrong but inexperienced visiting\nNelson Bowladrome\nSUMMER HOURS\nEFFECTIVE TODAY\nWeekdays - 6 p.m. to Midnight\nSaturdays - 2 p.m. to Midnight\nDean Chance went the distance for Los Angeles. Shortstop Jim Fregosi doubled home\nthe run that gave the righthander his second triumph of the\nseason.\nCarl   Yastrzemski   was   the\nteam.\nPeter Dorion and Lynn Watters\nof Montreal as crew, had been\nin second place in the over-all\nclass standings after the third\nrace.\nStandings were not immediately announced following Sunday's regattas.\nThe Canadian entry in the fly-\nPAN-AM  BALL\nGAME ENDS\nIN FIGHT\nSAO PAULO, firazil (AP)-\nCuba crushed Brazil 17-3 Sunday in a Pan-American Games\nbaseball game that ended in a\nfist and bat-swinging melee between Cubans and Brazilians\noutside the stadium.\nCuban reporter Manlo Alvarez\nsuffered a broken nose when he\nwas struck with a bat.\nThe incident was the first of\nits kind since the Pan-American\nbaseball tournament started\nApril 21 with a 13-1 Cuba victory over the United States.\nCries of \"professionalism\"\nwere shouted at the Cuban Sunday by partisan Brazilian fans.\nCuban officials last week denied\nrumors that there were professionals on the team.\nThe hooting by Brazilian spectators apparently led to the row\nafter the game.\nMAIDS LOSE\ning Dutchman class, with Tony! FOURTH GAME\nVegers and Andre Baby aboard,, .\nfinished   third   Sunday   behind!    SAO PAULO, Brazil (CP-AP\nthe U S  and Brazil I \u2014 Canad8 s women s basketball\nHarry Jemmett of Kingston, jteam took another drubbing at\nadjustments trying to snap out\nIn the second half Nelson slow- if a m!ld\u201eslum0 lhal hf* rid\"\n.        ..    ,,              \u201e     . i den with him for a month,\nend considerably giving Grand]    Jack F,eck had g dosing  ^    _  ______\t\nForks several good scoring op-1 to win thjrd  money o[ $2,000 Ont., sailing the dingy in the finn  'he Pan-American Games Sun\nportunities but the visitors failed J with m for 72 Mes class   {inished   fourth   behind  day. losing 60-40 to Brazil.\nto capitalize.                            |    \u25a0\u2022] thought sure I was going to Brazil, the U.S. and Argentina.     The Vancouver Maids, Cana-\nLen Bousquet notched the lone  wjn the tournament because I Canada has no entries in the  dian   senior   champions,   now\nbatting star of Boston's twin  goal for the home team in the was one-putting every green,\" star, snipe and lightning have lost all four starts in the\nvictories over the hite Sox. He I second half.                              j said Pott. \"But when that thing classes.                                      competition.\nCanada Has Big Day at Pan-Am Games\nAthletes Grab Gold in Three Events\nSAO PAULO, Brazil (CP-AP)\n\u2014Two Ontario high school girls\nand eight brawny oarsmen from\nthe University of British Columbia won three goal medals at\nthe Pan-American Games Sunday, bringing Canada's gold-\nmedals to four.\nThe winners:\nNancy McCredie, 18, of Bramp-\nREADY CASH\nfor house repairs\nCanadians everywhere use Niagara loans, up\nto $3,000.00 or more, for many worthwhile\nthings. Why don't you ?\nThe dependable source of Cash\nNIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED\n560 Baker Street\nI. A. FOLLIS, Loan Manager\nBranches Throughout B.C.\n382-723!\nday's 200-metre freestyle. Sharon Pierce, 15, of Prince Rupert,\nB.C., was fourth.\nEileen Weir, 17, of Toronto,\nwon the bronze for Canada in the\n100-metre backstroke where\nMary Stewart, 17, of Vancouver,\nmedallist in butterfly and freestyle sprints, finished sixth.\nTwo bronze medals in skeet\nton, with a record heave in the!shooting \u2014 the individual third-\nwomen's shot put.\nAbby Hoffman, 16, of Toronto,\nin the women's 800-metre run\nwhere Canada also got the\nbronze medal when Noreen Deul-\ning of Winnipeg finished third.\nAnd the University of B.C.\ncrew from Vancouver in the\neight-oared final \u2014 premier\nevent of rowing.\nCanadians, having their most\nsuccessful day at the forth Pan-\nplace finish by Barney Hartman\nof Ottawa and third in the team\nstanding \u2014 boosted Canada's\nmedal totals so far to four gold,\n12 silver and  17 bronze.\nThe United States, taking it\non the chin in one or two embarrassing spots, nevertheless\ncontinued to dominate the overall picture, ending Sunday with\n65 gold medals, 26 silver and 16\nbronze in the trophy bag. Can\nAmerican    Games,    also   wonlada's totals are second best in\nsecond-place   silver   medals   in | the 21-country competition,\nthe men's 800-metre and women's 400-metre freestyle swimming relays, and bronze medals\nin the women's 400-metre freestyle and 100-metre backstroke\nswims.\nThe silver - medal \u2022 winning\nmen's relay team was made up\nof Ralph Hutton, 15 and Sandy\nGilchrist, 17, both of Ocean\nFalls, B.C., and Aldy Meinhardt,\n19, and Ed Cazalet, 21, both of; her back last week,\nVancouver. STANDS AS RECORD\nThe women's silver-medal re- Miss Hoffman, a frequent win-\nlay team included Sharonjner during the recent indoor\nPierce,   Prince   Rupert,   B.C.,!track  season  in  the  U.S.  and\nMiss McCredie, a five-foot, 10-\ninch 175-pound grade 12 student,\nheaved the shot 50 feet three\ninches for her victory, beating!\nthe previous record of 48 feet\ntwo inches by more than two feet\nand beating her own previous\nbest by nearly four feet.\nThe Belleville-born champion\nhad recovered from difficulties\na 20-year-old school teacher, was\nthird in 2:14.8 in the gruelling\nwomen's run which saw several\ncompetitors collapse at the\nfinish.\nVancouver's powerful rowing\ncrew stroked the 2000-metre distance in six minutes, 16 seconds,\nand finished nearly four lengths\nahead of Brazil and Uruguay to\nwin its gold medal.\nThe U.S., which won four of\nthe seven rowing events Sunday,\nfinished fourth in the premier\neights. Argentina and Uruguay\neach  won  a  rowing  gold.\nIn the meet's second day of\ntrack and field competition, the\nU.S. was a frequent loser, suffering its greatest humiliation\nwhen Cuban Enrique Figuerola\nwon the 100-metre dash \u2014 a U.S.\nspecialty. Ira Urchison, the No.\n1 U.S. sprinter here, finished\nthird behind the Cuban and Ar-\nquimedes Herrera of Venezuela.\nWIN FOUR GOLDS\nU.S. athletes, however, did\nwin four gold medals in the stadium, James Johnson winning\nthe 400-metre run; Dave Tork\ntaking the pole vault with a\nGames-record jump of 16 feet,\n% inch,  Robert  K.  Humphrey\nEileen Weir, Toronto, and Lynne\nPomfret    and   Mary   Stewart,\nVancouver.\nFINISHES THIRD\nLynne Pomfret, 16, of Vancouver, who won a bronze medal in\nthe 200-metre freestyle Saturday also finished third in Sun-\nshe was having with a muscle in; winning the discus and Edith\nMcGuire winning the women's\n100-metre final.\nIn the latter, Maureen Bar-\ndoe of Hamilton, only Canadian\nto reach the final, finished sixth.\nThe U.S. took all 16 swimming\ngold medals \u2014 including four\nwon Sunday \u2014 and picked up\nthree of the four golds in diving,\nincluding men's and women's 10-\nCanada, was timed in 2:10.2,\nstands as a Games record since\nthis was the first running of the\n800-metre distance test.\nThe Toronto runner finished\n10 metres ahead of Lea B.\nFerri of the United States, who^ metre platform titles Sunday.\nfinished in 2:13.6. Miss Deuling,\nCanada, wilh its four swimming medals Sunday and a silver and two bronze won in the\npool Saturday, had six silvers\nand nine bronze medals in the\nswimming competition which\nended Sunday. In addition, the\ndivers picked up a gold and a\nsilver.\nVenezuela and Uruguay also\ngot into the gold-medal-winning\nact Sunday with Gregorio Carri-\nsalles of Venezuela winning cycling's individual road race title and Uruguay taking the team\ntitle in the same event.\nCanada's entries in the cycling road race finished far back,\nwith Ian Mahon of Vancouver\nin 13th place and Aurelio Bat-\nfello of Montreal.24th.\nDiver Tom Dinsley, 22, of\nVancouver, who won Canada's\nfirst gold medal here when he\ntook the men's springboard diving championship, finished fifth\nSunday in the 10-metre platform, won by Olympic champion Bob Webster of the U.S.\nJUDY FOURTH\nJudy Stewart, 19, of the Toronto suburb of West Hill, silver medallist in springboard,\nwas fourth in the women's platform event, slipping back in\nSunday's optional dives after\nplacing third in Saturday's compulsory program.\nLinda Cooper of the U.S. won\nthe event with Nancy Poulsen\nof the U.S. second and Mexican\nMaria Teresa Adames third.\nPeter Bakonyi, Hungarian-\nborn Vancouver real estate\nsalesman, reached the finals of\nthe men's individual epee fencing competition Saturday, but\nfinished sixth in Sunday's final,\nwon by Frank Anger of the U.S.\nOn   Saturday, swimmers\nbrought Canada three medals,\ntwo of them in a single race.\nFINISH TOGETHER\nSandy Gilchrist, 17, and\nRalph Hutton, 15, both from the\nout cox and Argentina took the\nfours  with  coxswain.   Canada\nentered only the eighths.\nU.S. DOMINANT\nIn Saturday's opening track\nand field program, the U.S.\nwon three gold medals while\nChile and Argentina took one\neach:\nAlberto Suarez, Argentina,\nwon the 5,000 - metre run in\ngames record time of 14:25.7.\nDoug Kyle of Calgary was\nfourth in the field of 10 with\na time of 14:30.8.\nMarlene Ahrens, Chile, won\nthe women's javenlin with a\nthrow ol 163 feet 9\\4 inches, a\ngames record. Pat Dobie of Saskatoon, throwing poorly, finished fifth with a distance of\n115 feet 6Vi inches.\nDave Davis, U.S., won the\nshot put with distance of 60 feet,\nnine inches Gene Johnson, U.S.\ntook the high jump with a leap\nof six feet 11 inches, a Games\nrecord and Willy White, U.S.\ntook the women's broad jump\nwith a record 20 feet, two\ninches. No Canadians contested\nthese events.\nArgentina also got a cycling\ngold medal when Carlos Vas-\ned here, Tuesday And Wednesday.\nNick Mickoski Scored the winning goal Sunday night at 5:59\nof the sudden death Overtime\npefiod when he rammed a 15-\nfooter straight past Tot&m goalie Al Millar after taking.a pass\nfrom Orland Kiirtenbach. Jim\nPowerfe and Don Chlpka each\ntallied twice and Bob Sabourin\nonce for the Totems.\nSan Francisco scorer* in addition to Mlokoski were Al Nicholson, Paul Jackson, Tom Thurl-\nby, Duke Edmundson and Ray\nCyr, all scoring the opening\nperiod.\nThurlby's goal at 16:38 which\nmade tlie score 3-1 came with\nGeorge Korlik of Seattle in the\npenalty box. It wai the first\ninfraction called in 93 minutes\nof play between the clubs.\nFriday night's game was without penalty.\nThe innovation of starting the\nSunday game at 7 p.m., an hour\nearlier, lured a crowd of only\n6944 to the Cow Palace. Attendance at the Friday game at\nthe usual time was 8936.\nSeattle, down 5-1 at one point\nin the opening period, came back\nto score four successive goals\nto tie the game at 5-5 in regulation play while Millar kept San\nMAROONS TIE\nPICKUP PRO\nCLUB\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Winnipeg\nMaroons, home after a licking\nIn the Allan Cup final at Windsor, played to a 5-5 tie Sunday\nwith a selection of pros reared\nin Manitoba.\nThe Maroons' opposition Sunday was composed of 17 former\nManitoba Junior League players\nrepresenting the Eastern Professional, Western and American Hockey League.\nThe pros held 3-2 and 4-3 period leads. They outshot Maroons\n28-27.\nScoring for Maroons were Lou\nJoyal, Mike Daski, Jim MacKenzie, Shorty Melanchuk and\nTommy Rendall; for the pros\nHowie Hughes, with two, Bryan\nHextall, Ray Brunei and Jimmy\nJohnson.\nAbout 2000 fane appeared to\nwelcome home the Maroons who\nlost the best of seven Allan Cup\nfinal 4-1 to Windsor Bulldogs\nIn the welcoming home contest\nthe Maroons were without Ross\nParke and Gary Aldcorn who\nwere still in the east. And Fred\nDunsmore suffered a broken\nnose in a first period collision\nwith Joyal and missed the rest\nof line game.\nFrancisco from getting through\nwith several fine saves.\nBILL WAKEHAM\nMAKES   FINALS\nOF TOURNEY\nVICTORIA (CP) - Two amateurs scored impressive victories\nSunday to set up the youngest-\never flhil ih the 14 year history\nof the Vancouver island open\ngolf championships.\nThe final, to be played next\nSunday, brings together Bill\nWakeham, 22-year-old defending\nB.C. amateur titleholder, and 17-\nyear-old Gary Smith.\nWakeham defeated professional ROn MacLeod, the defending\nIsland Open champ, 4 and 3 in\nOne of Sunday's 36-hole semifinals.\nSmith, considered a strong\ncontender for the Canadian Junior Gold Title when it is played\nhere in August, beat veteran Dr.\nGeorge Bigelow 8 and 7.\nBaseball\nStandings\nNational League\nW L Pet. GBL\nSt. Louis\n13   6 .684\nPittsburgh\n11   5 .688     Vt\nMilwaukee\n12   8 .600   U4\nSan Francisco\n10   9 .526      3\nLos Angeles\n10 10 .500   3'4\nChicago\n9 10 .474      4\nPhiladelphia\n8   9 .471     4\nCincinnati\n6 10 .375   5M_\nHouston\n7 13 .350   (iVs\nNew York\n6 12 .333   6V4\nAmerican League\nW L Pet. GBL\nKansas City\n12   7 .632      -\nNew York\n8   5 .615      1\nBoston\n9   6 .600      1\nBaltimore\n10   7 .588      1\nChicago\n7   7 .500   2V4\nLos Angeles\n9   9 .500   214\nMinnesota\n8 10 .444   3%\nDetroit\n8 10 .444   3\"4\nCleveland\n5   8 .385      4\nWashington\n5 12 .294      6\nStrikes and Spares\nEagles were victorious in\nMen's Commercial League\nchampionship play here Sunday.\nThey defeated Head Pins by 454\npins. Eagles' scores were 1094,\n1093, 904, 1194,, 1015, handicapped 1075 for a total of 6375. Head\nPins rolled 922, 984, 1248, 996,\n1036, handicapped 736, for a total\nof 5921.\nEagles team members are Bill\nCartwright, Bill Gardiner, Jack\nBond, Bob Smith and George\nLane. Head Pin personnel are\nPete Fahlman, Charlie Robertson, Paul Bjornson, Al Threatful\nand Gino Maida.\nTHREE MEN ON A COURSE\u2014The chase Is on and the three\nare umpire Larry Napp, Chuck Schilling (No. 2) of Red\nSox and Bob Rodgers, Angels' catcher. Chuck was trying\nto get back to third but waa out ln game In L. A.\ncoastal pulp and paper town of | quez won the 1,000-metre time\nOcean Falls, B.C., finished second  and  third respectively  in\nthe 1,500-metre freestyle won by\nRoy Saari of the U.S.\nLynne Pomfret took her first\nbronze in the women's 200-metre freestyle, won by Robyn\nJohnson of the U.S.\nThe U.B.C. oarsmen \u2014 cox\nDavid Overton and oarsmen\nDaryl Sturdy, Marc Lemieux,\nPete Browne, Tom Gray, Eldon\nWorobieff, Tom Stokes, Roy\nMcintosh and Don Dewar\u2014left\nno doubt about their supremacy\nin the big-boat final on Juruba-\ntuba Dam.\ntrial   sprint   title   in   1:09.\nGames record.\nSWEEP PISTOL CONTESTS\nThe U.S. postil team completed a gold-medal sweep by\nwinning the Olympic silhouette\nrapid-fire class. The Canadian\nteam finished seventh. Dave\nDoig of Brandon, Man., placed\nninth and Bill Hare of Ottawa\nwas 20th in the individual rapid-\ngire pistol competition won by\nCecil Wallis of the U.S.\nIn other action Saturday:\nPuerto Rico trimmed Lethbridge, Alta., Nations 84-74, giving the Canadian team its sec-\nBrazil was second in 6.31.4,! ond loss in three starts in the\nnearly 16 seconds behind the\nwinners. Uruguay was third in\n6:32.8 with the U.S. and Argentina far behind.\nU.S. winners were Seymour\nCromwell in single sculls Bill\nKnecht and Bob Lead in double sculls Conn Findlay, Ed\nFerry and coxswain Charles\nBlitzer in pairs with coxswain\nand Charles Bower, Charles\nHoltz, Ted Nash and Geza Berger of the Lake Washington\nRowing Club of Seattle in the\nfours without cox.\nUruguay won the pairs with-\nmen's   basketball   competition.\nGordon   Fester   of   Edmonton\nwas top-scoring Canadian with i\n20 points.\nThe U.S. handed Canada its\nthird loss in waterpolo, trimming the Canadian team, made\nup mostly of Hungarian immigrants, 9-0. Canada has won\nonce.\nCanada's five-man gymnastics team placed third after the\nfirst six compulsory exercises.\nThe U.S. led with 341.30 points,\nCuba was second with 318.70\nand Canada third with 273.45.\nNOTICE\nPursuant to Section 199 of the Motor Vehicle Act (1960 Statutes) all road restrictions in\nthe following Electoral Districts will be lifted\neffective 12:01 a.m. Wednesday, May I, 1963.\nGRAND FORKS-GREENWOOD DISTRICT\nROSSLAND-TRAIL DISTRICT\nNELSON-CRESTON DISTRICT\nKASLO-SLOCAN DISTRICT\nCRANBROOK DISTRICT\nCOLUMBIA DISTRICT\nFERNIE DISTRICT\nOverload permits may be obtained in the\nabove Districts effective May 1, 1963.\nApril 26, 1963\nNELSON, B.C.\nD. F. MARTIN,\nRegional  Highway Engineer.\n \t\n : : :\t\n \u2014-s\n1 .   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   ; \u25a0\nmm\nBIG MAN IN N.Y.-That\nwould be Jim Hickman, outfielder of the New York\nMets, whose hitting has\ngiven the club some bright\nmoments after eight straight\nlosses. Hickman, who played\nwith Portland in 1961 and\nwas drafted by the Meta\nfrom the Cards, hit only .245\nin 140 games for the Mets\nlast year but now is among\nleague's leaders.\nBASEBALL RESULTS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nAmerican League\nSATURDAY\nMinnesota      003 050 010 - 8  11\nDetroit 000 130 000- 3  52\nStigman (2-2) and Battey; Regan (1-3), Foytack (5) Lary (6)\nFaul (8) and Triandos. HRs:\nMin-Battey (3); Det-Colavito (2).\nCleveland 100000 000- 1 61\nNew York     100 210 04__- 8111\nDonovan (1-2), Allen (6) Nis-\nchwitz (7) and Romano; Terry\n(3-1) and Howard. HRs: NY-\nPepitone (3) Tresh (3) Boyer\n(2).\nLos Angeles   000 000 020 \u2022 2 5 1\nBaltimore      011 000 20x - 4 10 1\nKansas City 100 002 004- 710 0\nWashington    000 010 011- 3 90\nPfister (1-0), Willis (7) Wyatt\n(8) and Bryan; Kline, Duckworth (0-2) (4) Daniels (8) Boul-\ndin (9) and Leppert, Retzer (9).\nHRs: Kan\u2014Bryan (2); Was \u2014\nPiersall (1) Hinton (3).\nNational League\nPhila. 000 020 000- 2 72\nChicago 10030000x- 4 90\nCulp (2-2), Green (4) Lopez\n(5) Duren (5) Brown (8) and\nDalrymple Jackson (3-2) and\nRanew.\nNew York      001 000 000 \u2022 1  31\nPittsburgh      010001 OOx- 2102\nHook (0-3), Mackenzie (8) and\nWorld Vault Record\nSet at Penn Relays\nBelinsky (0-3), Grba (8) and ,Shen? Gibbon  Q-0)  and Pafr\nc\u201ej_,' i.i.   ._r_.M_._i..   _\u2022__,,   haroni.\nE.  Sadowski;   McNally   (2-0),\nHall (9) Stone (9) and Brown,\nHRs: LA-E. Sadowski (2); Bal-\nBrandt (3) Gaines (1).\nChicago 001 031 000 \u2022  5 9 1\nBoston 003 600 OOx- 9 110\nHerbert (DI, Debusschere (4)\nPeters (5) Zanni (8) and Martin;  Conley, Lamabe  (1-0)  (5)\n.\"\"d Willman. HRs: Bsn-Malzone\nid).\nNiagara Falls Advances\nTo Memorial Cup Finals\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)\nNiagara Falls Flyers, led by\nthe four-goal performance of\nWayne Ma'xner, advanced to\nthe Memorial Cup finals Saturday n i g h t by walloping Espa-\nnola Eagles 13-0.\nFlyers won the best-of-seven\neastern Canada final series 4-0.\nThey now meet Edmonton Oil\nKings in the first game of the\nfinals at Edmonton May 2.\nBesides his four goals, Max-\nner also collected three assists.\nGary Harmer, Terry Crisp and\nGary Dornhoefer were two-goal\nmen with singles going to Bill\nGoldsworthy, Bill Glashan and\nDon Awrey.\nOutclassing the Northern Ontario champions, Flyers took a\n5-0 lead in the first period and\nwere ahead 8-0 after two periods.\nGoalie George Holmes, a native of Niagara Falls, made his\nfirst start for Flyers and\nstopped 31 shots. He was second\nReception\nHeld for Allan\n(up Winners\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP) - A\ncivic reception for the victorious Windsor Bulldogs hockey\nclub which was to have been\nheld early next week took place\nSaturday at city hall.\nThe team members were\ndriven in shiny convertibles to\ncity hall where they were welcomed by Mayor Michael J.\nPatrick and council members.\nThe cavalcade, accompanied\nby wailing sirens, waving pennants and cheering fans, wound\nthrough downtown streets\nshortly after noon and ended at\nGeary Auditorium where a banquet was held for the team,\ncivic officials and local sports\ncelebrities.\nNo bands were available for\nthe hastily - assembled parade,\nbut tooting auto horns, cow\nbells, and exuberant Windsor-\nites filled the noise gap.\nEmbraced by Bulldogs team\ntrainer Bill Mitchell in one of\nthe lead cars was the Allan\nCup, cause of the celebration.\nWindsor won the cup Friday\nnight by beating Winnipeg Maroons 3-2 to win the best-of-\nseven series, 4-1.\nOHA MAKES\nSKATE GUARDS\nCOMPULSORY\nTORONTO (CP) - The Ontario Hockey Association decided at its annual meeting Saturday to make heel skate guards\ncompulsory for all OHA players\nand establish an injured players' fund.\nThe skate guard ruling applies\nto all eight OHA series: Senior\nA, Junior A, Intermediate A, Intermediate B, Intermediate C,\nJunior B, Junior C and Junior\nD.\nIt was felt theat tlie guards\nwould reduce injuries.\nThe association also decided\nto establish an injured players'\nfund for players who suffer major injuries which take away\ntheir means of livelihood or curtail  their playing  career.\nBOURNEMOUTH, England\n(AP) \u2014 Mrs. Ann Haydon Jones\nof Britain defeated Norma Bay-\nIon of Argentina 6-0, 1-6, 9-7 Saturday to win the women's singles title in the British hard court-\ntennis championship.\nMARRIED YOUNG\nFrank Fontaine of the Jackie\nGleason show married his wife,\nAlma, when he was 17 and she\n16. They have 11 children.\nMilwaukee\n000000 032 001-  614 2\nSan Francisco\n010 300 100 000-  5 92\nHendley, Fisher (4) Lemaster\n(5) Piche (7) Raymond (3-2)\n(9) Cloninger (12) and Torre,\nCrandall (6) Sanford, Constable (8) Bolin (8) Pierce (9) Larsen (9) Pregenzer (9) Perry\n(0-1) (12) and Haller, Bailey\n(10,' HH: Mil-Menke (2).\nCincinnati 000 000100- 1 6 0\nHouston 000 000 000- 0 32\nO'Toole (4-1) and Edwards\nJohnson (1-3), McMahon (9)\nand Bateman.\nSt.   Louis 00 003 000 - 3  5 1\nLos Angeles   000 000 000- 0 33\nWashburn (4-0) and McCar-\nver; Sherry (0-1), Richert (7)\nRoebuck (9) and Roseboro.\nstring goalie for Montreal Junior Canadiens during the season, playing against Niagara\nFalls in the last two games of\ntheir Ontario Hockey Association provincial final series.\nIn ringing down the curtain\non hockey, for the season at the\nFalls, the standing - room - only\ncrowd of 3,363 ran the atten-1    HAMILTON,   Bermuda   (CP) | __ __ _____    _ _ _____\ndance  total  to  105,574  for  35  The United Kingdom won the because ot a wind o[ u mlles\nworld racing championship for | an hour ^ he)ped push him\nWins World\nhampionship\nPHILADELPHIA (API-Brian\nSternberg vaulted 16 feet, five\ninches for a world pole vault\nrecord Saturday at the Penn\nRelays but indicated it was\nhollow triumph.\nOne newspaper head lined\nSternberg's feelings about his\nfeet perfectly: \"Shucks! Was\nOnly, With Glass Pole.\" The 19-\nyear-old University of Washington sophomore opposes the\nglass fibre pole, but uses it.\n'It's a case of, if you can't\nwin, join 'em,\" said Sternberg.\n\"If they're going to use the\nfibre-glass, I want to be the\nbest,\" said the 170-pounder.\nHis vault eclipsed the recognized outdoor record of 16-214\nset last June by Pent! Nikula\nat Ksuhaua, Finland. It was an\ninch higher than the unofficial\n16-4 of last April 10 by John\nPennel of Northern Louisiaia\nState.\nOnly outdoor vaults are recognized for world records.\nTHREE MARKS SET\nSternberg's record was one of\nthree world marks shattered\nSaturday, and another was bettered but won't be allowed because of wind.\nAl Oerter of New York broke\nhis own discus record and a\nquartet from Arizona State lowered the mile relay record in\nthe Mt. San Antonio relays at\nWalnut, Calif.\nIn the same meet, Bob Hayes\nof Florida A and M ran the\nfastest 100 metres in history\u2014\n9.9 seconds\u2014but it won't count\ngames.\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Reuters) - Results\nof Rughy Union matches in the\nUnited Kingdom Saturday:\nCounty  Championship  Final\nWarwickshire 13 Yorkshire 10\nCLUB MATCHES\nBarnstaple 6 Stroud 6\nBedford 9 Bath 3\nBristol 19 Sale 12\nExeter 15 Penzance and Newlyn\n17\nHeadingley 9 Notts 0\nNewton Abbot 16 Cheltenham 0\nNorthampton 37 Old Alleynians\n8\nNuneaton 18 New Brighton 8\nPlymouth 51 Camborne 3\nSt. Ives 32 Paignton 0\nTaunton 34 Penryrt  10\nFalmouth 3 Bridgwater and Albion 6\nRedruth 9 Gloucester 15.\ninternational 14 - foot dinghies K       the track.\nduring the weekend. |\t\nThe U n i t e d States yachting\nteam finished second in the four\nnation round-robin series and\nCanada, previous champions,\nended in a last-place tie with\nBermuda.\nThe U.K. team had seven victories, the U.S. five, and Canada and Bermuda three each.\nIn the last day's racing Saturday, the U.K. team of Barry\nPerry, Stewart Morris, John\nPrentice and Michael Peacock\nbeat Bermuda 33V4 points to 27.\nCanada beat the U.S. 33V4 to\n27 the U.S. beat Bermuda 30Vi\nto 29, the U.K. beat Canada 2914\nto 28, Bermuda beat Canada\n3114 to 29, and the U.S. beat\nthe U.K. 31 'A to 29.\nCanada's team was composed\nof Ward McKimm and Dave\nKirby of Ottawa, John Fisher\nof Montreal, and Jack Barber\nof Toronto.\nSWIM 5PECTACU1ARS\u2014Two of the stars of the American\nswim team, competing in the Pan-American Games in Sao\nPaulo, Brazil, are seen after terrific performances. They\nare Kathy Ellis of Indianapolis, who tied the record for the\n100-meter butterfly, and Steve Clark of Los Altos, Calif.,\nwho cracked the 100-meter free style mark.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) - Results\nof soccer matches in the United\nKingdom Saturday:\nFA CUP\nSeml-Finals\nLiverpool 0 Leicester  1\nSouthampton 0 Man United 1\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision 1\nBlackburn 6 Birmingham 1\nBlackpool 3 Arsenal 2\nIpswich 2 Burnley 1\nMan City 1 West Brom 5\nTottenham 4 Bolton 1\nWest Ham 1 Everton 2\nWolverhampton 2 Fulham 1\nIRISH LEAGUE\nBallymena 5 Cliftonville 1\nBangor 3 Coleraine 1\nCrusaders 1 Glentoran 4\nDerry City 3 Ards 2\nGlenavon 0 Distillery 2\nLinfield 2 Portadown 2\nDivision II\nBury 0 Walsall 0\nCharlton 0 Derby 0\nChelsea 2 Preston 0\nLeeds 3 Cardiff 0\nLuton 3 Plymouth 0\nRotherham 3 Newcastle 1\nStoke 0 Middlesbrough 1\nSunderland 1 Huddersfield 1\nSwansea 0 Portsmouth 0\nBristol R 3 Watford 1\nCarlisle 0 Coventry   1\nCrystal P 2 Port Vale  1\nHalifox 2 Bristol C 5\nHull City 2 Shrewsbury 2\nNorthampton 5 Southend 3\nPeterborough 0 Notts C 0\nQueens PR 2 Millwall 3\nSwindon 2 Bournemouth 1\nWrexham 1 Reading 1\nDivision IV\nAldershot 2 Stockport 2\nBarrow 2 York City 1\nBradford C 2 Workington 2\nDarlington 1 Crewe Alex 4\nHartlepools 0 Chester 3\nLincoln 3 Rochdale 0\nNewport 2 Doncaster 4\nOldham 2 Brentford 1\nOxford 3 Mansfield 0\nSouthport 0 Gillingham 0\nTorquay  2  Chesterfield   1\nTranmere 2 Exeter 1\nSCOTTISH  LEAGUE\nDivision I\nAirdrieonians 4 Dundee U 2\nClyde 2 Motherwell 3\nDundee 1 Raith 1\nDunfermline 1 Celtic 1\nHibernian 0 Falkirk 3\nKilmarnock 2 Aberdeen 2\nRangers 5 Hearts 1\nSt. Mirren 4 Queen ol S 0\nThd Lanark 0 Partick 1\nDivision I\nArbroath 1 Morton 0\nAyr U 4 Forlar 2\nBerwick 1 St. Johnstone 3\nDumbarton 1 Cowdenbeath 0\nEast Fife 2 Queens Pk 1\nE Stirling 2 Stirling 0\nHamilton 1 Brechin 0\nMontrose 2 Albion 0\nDupas Picked\nTo Win Title\nFrom Moyer\nNEW ORLEANS (AP)-Odds-\nmakers have installed veteran\nRalph Dupas a slim 7-to-5 favorite to wrest the world junior middleweight crown from\nchampion Denny Moyer tonight.\nFor Dupas, the 27-year-old\nNew Orleans fighter famed for\nhis fancy footwork, it will be\nthe third\u2014and perhaps last-\nshot at a world title.\nThe 13 - year \u2022 veteran of the\nring was knocked out\u2014one of\nthe two kayos in his career-\nby champion Joe Brown in a\nlightweight title fight in 1958.\nLast July, Dupas lost a close\ndecision to welterweight champion Emile Griffith.\nMoyer, a clean cut 23-year-\nold who looks more like the boy\nnext door than a world champion and father of three girls,\nwill be defending the title In the\nrecently-created division for the\nsecond time.\nThe Portland, Ore., fighter\nwas recognized as junior middleweight champ last October\nafter defeating Joey Giambra.\nDupas will carry a 98-17-6\nrecord into the 15-round fight.\nMoyer has 35 victories and\neight defeats.\n*\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u2022*\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nAmerican  League\nAB R   H Pet.\n35 5 14.400\n60 14 22 .367\n58   8   21 .362\n36 4 13.361\n34  5   12 .353\n14.\n16.\nCausey,  KC\nAllison, Min\nAparicio, Bal\nLeppert,  Was\nTresh, NY\nRuns\u2014Allison,\nRuns  Batted In\u2014Allison\nHits\u2014Allison, 22.\nDoubles \u2014 Yastrzemski, Boston, Phillips and Triandos, Detroit, Battey, Minnesota, Howard, New York and Hinton and\nLock, Washington, 4,\nTriples\u2014Hinton, 4.\nHome Runs\u2014Wagner, Los Angeles, 6.\nStolen Bases\u2014Aparicio, 6.\nPitching\u2014Pena and Fischer,\nKansas City and Cheney, Washington, 3-0, 1.000.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Barber, Washington, 31.\nNational   League\nAB R H Pet.\nCovington, Pha 30 8 13 .433\nDemeter, Pha 58 9 23 .397\nHoward, LA 61 10   24 .393\nEdwards,  Cin       49   6   19 .388\nWhite, St. L 68 14   26 .382\nRuns\u2014Flood, St. Louis, 19.\nRuns Batted In\u2014Boyer, St.\nLouis, 17.\nHits-White, 26.\nDoubles\u2014F. Alou, San Francisco, 7.\nTriples\u2014Altman, St. Louis, 3.\nHome Runs\u2014H. Aaron, Milwaukee, 6.\nStolen Bases\u2014W. Davis, Los\nAngeles, 6.\nPitching \u2014 Nottebart, Houston, Friend, Pittsburgh and\nWashburn and Simmons, St.\nLouis, 3-0, 1.000.\nStrikeouts\u2014Koufax, Los Angeles, 33.\n{\nOerter, a 265-pounder, hurled\nthe discus 205 feet, 5% inches\nto break the record of 204, 10H\nwhich he set July 1 at Chicago.\nThe Arizona State team of\nMile Barrlck, Henry Carr, Ron\nFreeman and Ulis Williams ran\nthe mile in three minutes, 4.5\nseconds. The old record of 3:05.6\nwas set by a U.S. team on the\nsame track in 1960.\nWhistle Part\nTheir Lives\nChamp, Challenger Eorruhftaf\nRemain Even in T\u2122lW?**\nChess Tournament\nMOSCOW (AP) - The 16th\ngame of the world chess championship match between world\nchampion Mikhail Botvinnik and\nTigram Petrosian scheduled for\nSaturday, was postponed.\nSoviet news agency said Petrosian was indisposed and unable to play.\nBotvinnik beat his challenger\nin their 14th game to tie the\nscore at 7-7.\nEach now has lost twice, won\nSAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-\nAfter listening to the same old\nferryboat whistle for more than\n30 years, the residents of\nDigby, N.S., and Saint John\nrather hate to see it go.\nWhen it was learned that the\n\u00ab..!.\u201e..\u201e   u_,ien0i   ,\u201ew\u201ei,   has\ntwice and drawn 10 games in plied the Bay of Fundy since\nthe 24-game series. I im\\i, was to be replaced by the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 29, 1963\u20147\n6,800-ton  Princess   of  Acadia,\nthey had an idea.\nThe Digby Boat Club and\nDigby Kiwanis Club asked that\nthe familiar old whistle be installed on the new ferry.\nThe CPR, which runs the\nferry as part of its Maritime\nrail service, says it's willing to\noblige but there's a problem.\nK. R. Perry, superintendent\nhere, says the whistle aboard\nthe Helene was built to operate\non \"saturated steam at 350 degrees\" while the Princess of\nAcadia runs on \"superheated\nsteam at 800 degrees.\"\nTechnicians are working on\nthe problem, Mr. Perry -says.\n\"For residents of Saint John\nand Digby the Helen's whistle\nis part of their dally way of\nlife. We will try to keep it that\nway.\"\nOCCURS RARELY\nThe transit of Venus, when the\nplanet can be seen passing in\nfront of the sun-occurs only\nfour times every 243 yean. Tlie\nnext transit Is due in 2001\n\u25a01\nsPilil\n..^...IIPSisSSK*\ni\u00a7iH.iiii\u00a7ili\nlilftfpPBfBftt\nHill\nMost of the world lives in darkness\nHard to believe, but true. Yet more than 70% of\nthe countries of the world impose complete or\npartial censorship on their newspapers.\nIn these countries, Freedom of the Press is lost\u2014\nand with it, people have lost their voice in government. Protest against such curbs is quickly muzzled.\nFortunately, in Canada, Freedom of the Press is\nunchallenged. It is a Canadian birthright that must\nbe guarded.\nFew Canadians realize that our press has no special\nprivileges. The rights of the press are the same as\neach person's rights. The individual and the press\npossess identical freedoms and identical responsibilities under law.\nOur newspapers require no permission to operate.\nThey have no obligation to any governmental body.\nThey have free access to all the news. They are\nresponsible only to you, their readers.\nHistory records that when free people are deprived\nof their easy access to news they lose their say in\ngovernment. Consider this the next time you pick\nup your daily newspaper. Truth and freedom are\nnecessities you can't afford to'lose. Guard them I\nPublished by The Nelson Daily News,\na member newspaper of the Canadian Dally Newspaper Publishers Association.\nAN INFORMED PUBLIC IS THE BEST GUARANTEE OF FREEDOM\n____________\n_______\n\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\n_______\n______\n-, \u2022-.-._:-\n____________\n ^m^mw^\u2014\u2014\u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014w^l\u00a5\"''\"\n; \u2014 -r-r\u2014. T-r. ; -\u2014-\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 29, 1963\nA\nR\nC\nH\nI\nE\n^f THAT RUNS\nI'VE GOT A       V  IN YOUR\nGREAT 7HING      7   FAMILY\/\nGOING.' I'M        S \u2014-^\nRAISING WORMS.'\/         V\nH7*\n12?,\nCT        1\nlllf-a\nP\nHlVl\nmUmi \\Ltfti      1\nt4SW l\nJmrWrt^mS^Z.\n\"^7!\n, _*>\nHS AIRCRAFT ATTACK CARRIER U.S.S.SH1L0H PREPARES'\nTO JOIN THE SIXTH FLEET IN THE MEDITERRAMEAN.\nSummer Jobs Becoming\nScarcer for Students\nBy ROBERT RICE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nIt's getting harder for university students to find summer\njobs. Main reason appears to be\nthat university enrolment is rising faster than opportunities for\nsummer employment.\nIndications are that many university students will find it hard\nto get a job this summer. Or, if\nthey \"do find work, it may be for\nonly part of the four months\nfrom spring exams to fall enrolment.\nWhile the outlook varies, this\nseems to be tlie concensus of\nuniversity placement officers,\npolled in April in a Cross-Canada Survey by The Canadian\nPress.\nMany students are still scrambling for jobs to help them meet\nacademic costs that average\nmore than $360 a year for tuition\nin a general arts course, and\nmore for courses like engineering and medicine. About $1,000\nis needed by residents at most\nuniversities for room, board and\ntuition.\nBORROWING LIKELY\n\"Many students will feel the\nfinancial   squeeze   during   the\ncoming academic year,\" says\nBruce Wells, placement officer\nat the University of Western\nOntario in London. \"An increasing number of students will\nhave to borrow funds to finance\ntheir education costs.\"\nUniversity students are finding some potential jobs grabbed\noff by high school students.\nSays one placement officer:\n\"Employers prefer to hire high\nschool students at $1 an hour\nrather than a university student\nat $1.50.\" ,\nThe tourist industry takes\nmany university students. Hotels, summer camps and resorts\nall have openings for students\nbut these jobs are filled quickly.\nHotel and camp pay ranges\nfrom less than $200 a month to\nmore than $500, depending on the\ntype of work, skills, location and\nexperience. Resort workers\nearn less, but their meals and\nlodging generally are free.\nStudents in specialized fields\nsuch as engineering, forestry,\nscience and mathematics have a\nbetter chance of finding a job\nin their chosen field. But even\nhere the situation varies across\nthe country.\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nMONDAY, APRIL 29, 1963\n58\u2014Sign On\n:00\u2014The Morning Show\n: 40\u2014Farm Fare\n:45-Chapel In the Sky\n:00\u2014News\n05\u2014Wake Up Time\n30\u2014News\n35-Wake Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\nI5-Wake-Up Time\n:30\u2014Opening Markets\n:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Count Your Blessings\n: 15\u2014The Archers\n:30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n:00\u2014News\n05\u2014What's The Song Contest\n: 10\u2014Baldwin Commentary\n: 15\u2014Now I Ask You\n: 45\u2014Preview Commentary\n: 50\u2014Morning Melodies\n: 00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Morning Melodies Cont.\n;55\u2014Austin Willis\n: 00\u2014The Chuckwagon\n: 15\u2014Sports News\n: 25\u2014News\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n: 55\u2014News\n:00\u2014John Drainie\n: 15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n2:00-B.C. School Broadcasts\n2:30-News\n2:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:00-News\n3:05-Closing Markets\n3:10-Sports Spotlight\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Cornucopia\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Musicaie\n4:30-Countdown\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05-The Highway Patrol\n5:40-On Parliament Hill\n5:45-Byline\n5:50\u2014Sports News\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Job Finder\n6:15\u2014B.I.S.\n6:30\u2014Junior Chamber of\nCommerce Roundtable\n7:00\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Assignment\n8:00\u2014Radio International\n8:30-Summer Fallow\n9:00\u2014Broadway Holiday\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Chapel in the Sky\n10:30\u2014University of the Air\n11:00\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nTUESDAY,\n6:00\u2014Morning Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Count Your Blessings\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Musicaie\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15\u2014The Reith Lectures\n10:45\u2014Playroom\n11:00\u2014Off the Record\n11:40\u2014Interlude\n11:45\u2014Cafe Variety\n12:00\u2014Chuckwagon\n12:10\u2014Piano Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Shirley Harmer Show\n1:30\u2014What's on Tapp\nAPRIL 30, 1963\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00-B.C. School Broadcasts\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014T-Can Matinee\n3:30-C#rnucopia\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Tempo\n4:30-Countdown\n5:00\u2014Tempo For Teens\n5:30\u2014Tempo\n8:30\u2014Critics At Large\n7:00\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n8:00\u2014Radio International\n8:30-Hancock's Half Hour\n9:00\u2014 Business Barometer\n9:30\u2014Red River Jamboree\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-The 4th Estate\n11:00\u2014New Records\n11:57\u2014News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n7:00 Search For Adventure\n7:30 Dakotas *\n8:30 Rifleman *\n9:00 Stoney Burke *\n10:00 Ben Casey\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:30 Movie\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n7:30 To Tell the Truth *\n8:00 I've Got a Secret\n8:30 Lucille Ball *\n9:00 Danny Thomas *\n9:30 Andy Griffith \u00bb\n10:00 Password *\n10:30 Stump tlie Stars \u2022\n11:00 11 O'Clock News\n11:30 Tonite Shw *\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Highway Patrol\n7:30 Monday Night at the\nMovies * IC)\n\"The Hunters\"\n9:30 Art Linkletter *\n10:00 David Brinkley's Journal\n* IC)\n10:30 King of Diamonds\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Late Movie\n\"Mr. and Mrs. North\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson. Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\n2:00 Chez Helene\n2:15 Nursery School Time\n2:30 Sing Ring Around\n2:45 Friendly Giant\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 This Living World\n6:00 Bazaar\n7:00 7 o'Clock Show\n7:30 Don Mcsser's Jubilee\n8:00 Danny Thomas\n8:30 Garry Moore Show\n9:30 Festival\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nTUESDAY\n12:00 Test Pattern\n12:30 Monitor Seven\nStage Seven\n\"Duffy of San Quentin\"\n2:30 National Schools\n3:00 Loretta Young Show\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 Scarlett Hill\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Georgia\n5:30  Mike Mercury\n6:00 Sports, Weather, News\n6:30 Father Knows Best\n7:00 Gunsmoke\n8:00 Car 54\n8:30 Perry Mason\n9:30 Front Page Challenge\n10:00 The Other Man\n10:30 The Country Capers\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Late Night\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nWATERLOO ENGINEERS SET\nBest - set students are the\ntrainee engineers of Ontario's\nUniversity of Waterloo, where\na co-operative program provides\nfor alternating four-month periods in the classroom and in\nindustry.\nWhile some students are willing to take any kind of work\u2014\nwith an income target of at\nleast $50 a week\u2014there are a\nfew who have specific ideas of\nwhat they want to do.\nJ. E. Andoff, director of student personnel services at Hamilton's McMaster University, reports that one student wants to\nbe a summer pilot. Another,\nbitten by a go-north bug, signed\non as deck hand on an Arctic\nsupply ship.\nREGIONAL OUTLOOKS\nHere's the outlook by provinces as reported from the\ncampuses:\nNewfoundland: About 600 Memorial University students are\nseeking summer work. Placement officials said it was too\nearly to say how many would\nsucceed. Pay rates in the St.\nJohn's area were expected to\nrun between $50 and $70 a week.\nNova Scotia: More than 2,500\nstudents applied for summer\njobs and about 700 were still\nseeking placement at mid-April\nAverage pay runs between $200\nand. $300 monthly, or about $80\na month plus room and board\nat Atlantic resorts.\nNew Brunswick: At least 500\nof the 2,200 University of New\nBrunswick students were still\nsome of these said prospects\nlooked hopeless. While most of\nthe forestry students were set,\nonly about one-third of the engineering undergraduates reported success.\nPrince Edward Island: Most\nstudents at Charlottetown's St.\nDunstan's University find summer work in the tourist industry\nboth in and outside the province.\nMany hold the same summer\njob from year to year, passing\nit on to an undergraduate\nfriend at graduation.\nSCARCE  IN  MONTREAL\nQuebec:    McGill   University\nSt-'^F*1^.   nnrti\u00abi,l\".-lv   ti'-ls   Pn4\nmen in the earlier years, are\nhaving a uaiu _...... &<_i__..b _,_....-\nmer work in Montreal. However,\nLaval University students at\nQuebec report b e t ter luck.\nEmile Simard, director of the\nNational University Placement Service, says 70 to 75 per\ncent of Laval's 7,000 students\nwill have jobs by mid-June and\nmore will find work later.\nOntario: University of Toronto\nplacement officer J. K. Bradford reported a few students\nlacked job prospects in mid-\nApril \"but we hope to have a\njob for nearly everybody by the\nend of exams\" in May. But the\nColumnist Turns Up\nQueerest Things\nBy HAL BOYLE\nNEW YORK (AP)-Things\na columnist might never know\nif he didn't open his mail:\nIt was once believed that\nkissing a donkey would relieve a toothache . . . and\nhad no permanent ill effects\non the donkey.\nLu n a r pockmarks: The\nmoon has 30,000 counted craters, and is. believed to have\nscores of thousands more. . . .\nScientists aren't certain whether they were caused by the\nimpact of meteors or resulted\nfrom volcanic activity.\nInnocent victims? . . . Some\ninvestigators say man's slow\npoisoning of the atmosphere\nby pollutants has resulted in\nan increase of cancer among\nanimals as well as human beings. . . . Particularly noted:\nA rise in lympathic cancer\namong. North European cattle.\nOur quotable notables:\n\"When billing and cooing results in matrimony, the billing\nalways comes after the cooing:\"\u2014Tom Masson.\nMothers, do you have\ntrouble getting your children\nto take bad - flavored medicine? . . . Well, have the little\ndarlings hold an ice cube in\ntheir mouth first. . . . That'll\nreports were less encouraging\nat Sudbury's Laurentian University and at Western Ontario in\nLondon, where opportunities\nhave been reduced because tobacco acreage on 'farms near\nLondon\u2014normally a good summer job bank\u2014has been cut 40\nper cent this year.\nManitoba: Placement officials\nat University of Manitoba handle about 4,500 job applications,\nincluding bids from graduates\nseeking permanent work. But as\nusual there are more applicants\nthan jobs.\nDEMAND IN SASK.\nSaskatchewan: University of\nSaskatchewan officials both in\nSaskatoon and Regina report the\ndemand for students to fill summer jobs has been excellent.\nAlberta: Construction work,\noffices and resorts in the Rockies offer job opportunities for\nUniversity of Alberta students\nbut many do not hire immediately after the spring examinations, causing many students to\nwait for a few weeks.\nBritish Columbia: Most of the\nUniversity of British Columbia's\n12,000 students are looking for\nsummer jobs, with forestry,\nfishing, mining, pulp and paper\nand summer resorts the major\nsources of work. John McLean,\nUBC director of personnel services, said some 2,000 students\ngenerally fail to find jobs and\nare forced to \"mortgage their\nfutures\" by borrowing next\nyear's fees.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nDOWN\n1. Baby carriage: Brit.\n2. Midianite\nking: Bib.\n3. Contents of\nsmelters\n4. Flatters:\ncolloq.\n(2 wds.)\n5. Half\nan. em\n6. People of\nBern\n7. Children'*\ngame\n8. Ritual\n9. River\nthrough\nStratford,\nEng.\n10. Little Italian boy's\nname\n14. French\ncheese\n16. Departure\n19. Astronomer's\naid\n20. Machine\npart\n21. Farewell\n22. Circulated\n24. Insane\n25. Japanese\napricot\n26. Weight:\nIndia\n28. Seedless\nplant\nSO, Italian car\n32. Farmer's\nproperty\n33. Be still:\nr-\"\nA\nP\nK\n1\np\nA\nT\nF\nR\nA\nX\nI\nO\nfc\nW\nA\nP\nF\nc.\n1\nO\nEll\nA\nP\nI\nN\nE\nA\nr\np\nS\nE\nS\nA\nL\nI\nE\nA\nS\nT\nH\nF\nF\nT\n|\nA\n1\nF\nX\ni\nT\n?\n1\n5\nT\n1\nL\nE\ne\nD\nE\nG\nV\nI\nu\nA\nI\nC\ns\n3\nV\n3\nX\ny\ni,\nI\nF\nV\n1\nD\nR\nO\n|\n=>\nA\nv-\n1\n^\n)K\n?\nn\nv\/\n?\n1\nA\nN\nC\nT\nBo\ni\nF\nP\nE\nN\nE\nE\n?\nB\n0\n1?\nI\nSlitunlay'tJ  An.w.r\n34. Toward\nand within\n35. Mince\n37. Break\n , as at\nthe racetrack\n33. Grease\n39. Kill\n41, Rubber\ntree: Mex.\n44. Cry of pain\nACROSS\n1. Surgical\ninstrument\n6. Leather\nthong:\n11. A showing\nof an old\nmotion\npicture\n12. Relinquish\n13. To incite\n14. Circus\n(2 wds.)\n15. Becomes\nexpert in\n17. Captain's\norders to\nhelmsman:\nabbr.\n18. To live\n20. Suffragist\n Chap.\nman Catt\n23. Small\nostrich-like\nbirds\n27. Stop!\n(naut.)\n28. A sweetheart: si.\n29. BUI of fare\n30. Bird ,\nfor garden-\n31. Matches\n33. This one:\nLat.\n36. Crosses\nout\n40. Not\ninjured\n42. Egg-\nshaped\n43. A mink\none,\nperhaps\n44. Grand\n , as at\nthe Met\n45. Expects\n46. Actress\n Hlller\nDAILY CliVPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nA X Y D L B A A X R\nIb    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nUZVYJFKM  XU  JFPXBJVM  C\nRCPPJB  ZI.  PJREJBCRJFP  CFG\nF Z P  Z L  XFKZE J.\u2014V. H.   V R X P Q\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: man IS A PLIABLE ANIMAL, A\nBEING WHO GETS ACCUSTOMED TO EVERYTHING.\u2014\nDOSTOEVSKI\n(01863, King Features Syndicate, Ins.)\n1\n__\n3\n4-\n5\n1\nto\n1\n8\n9\nO\nII\n%\n1\n15\nVA\n14-\n15\n\\lo\nft\n>7\n^\n^,\nVA\nIS\n19\n%\nV\/A\nVA\n20\no.\\\nTL\n%\n13\n24\n25\nlie\n27\n^\n58\n15\ni\n30\n%\n%\n%\n31\n\u25a0i %\n^\nVA\n'^\nri\n3+\n35\nfA\nZip\n37\n38\n39\n40\n41\n^\n41\n43\n^'\n44\n45\n%\nlb\nhelp  desensitize  their  taste\nbuds.\nPower of the press: Tho\nHotel Edison reports the item\nmost requested of room service by guests is\u2014a newspaper.\nHow to tell the sexes apart:\nMen dress to look like other\nmen; women dress to be\nlooked at by other women... .\nMen spit flecks of cigarette tobacco off their tongues;\nwomen pick them off.\nThrifty tip to housewives:\nIf you are short one egg in\na recipe, just replace it with\none teaspoon of cornstarch.\n. . . Your husband will never\nknow the difference.\nDo you know the most common first name in the world?\nEngland it used to be William. . . . Now in both Britain and the U.S. it is John.\nQhsAL Ifft With,\nTftwdotL Vnwdin.\nPrinted Pattern\n9293\n9-17\nSEWING BUY\nMade for each other, and for\nYOU\u2014this willowy sheath and\nits ring - collar coat, Quick,\nsimple to sew, and it looks so\nvery smart, so exclusive 1\nPrinted Pattern 9293: Jr. Miss\nSizes 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13\ndress take 3 yards 35-inch; coat\ntakes 3% 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.\n%udlwutgt b\u00b1\n3buxhtL (jJImk\/L\nPRETTY PETS\nEnjoy yourself, inspire a little\ngirl to learn to embroider these\ncharming motifs.\nPretty pets in quick cross-\nstitch for pictures, pillows,\nlinens. Pattern 699: transfer\nsixteen 1 x \\Vs to 6% x mi-incli\nmotifs; directions.\nTHIRTY-FIVE jCENTS in coin\n(no stamps, please) for this pal\nter, Nelson Daily News Pattern\nDept., 60 Front St. West, Toron\nto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and AU\nDRESS.\n\u25a0\u00a5\nI\nt\n McDOUGALL - To Mr. and\nMrs. Walter McDougall, 923 Cedar Street at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, April 27, a\ndaughter.\nAVIS - To Mr. and Mrs. Walter Avis, 1623 Ward Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital, April 27, a daughter.\nSANDERS - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRae Sanders, Nelson, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nApril 28, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nMEN WANTED\nFor excellent District in Nelson. Highest Commissions. Sales\nexperience not necessary. Best\njob of its kind. Write Rawleigh's,\nDept. BB135, 589 Henry Ave.,\nWinnipeg 2, Man.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWORLD'S LARGEST COSMETIC COMPANY has immediate\nopenings for energetic women\nto earn excellent weekly income. Apply to: Mrs. E. C.\nHearn, Avon. Mgr., No. 15-3270\nLaBurnum Dr., Trail, B.C.\nHELP WANTED\nMALE   OR   FEMALE\nTEACHERS - SUMMER JOBS\nwith Exceptional Earning Opportunities in East and West\nKootenay areas. Write Box\n4966, Nelson Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPIANO TUNING AND RE-\npairs. G. Stenberg, registered\ntuner. Phone 352-6892.\nWILL TILL GARDENS. PHONE\n352-2439.\nWANTED TO RENT\n2   OR   3   BDRM.   HOUSE   IN\nNelson. Phone Balfour 179.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM    AND    BOARD    FOR\ngentleman. Phone 352-6352.\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nel\nson, B.C., not later .than 11:00\nA.M. Local Time on the 13th day\nof May, 1963 for the purchase of\nLicence X90214, to cut 1,744,000\ncubic feet of: fir, larch, spruce,\nlodgepole pine, balsam, cedar\nand trees of other species on an\narea situated: Northwest of Lot\n3637, Sage and Beaver Creeks,\nSimilkameen Division Yale Land\nDistrict.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the\nKETTLE\/P.W.C, which is fully\ncommitted, this sale will be\nawarded under the provisions of\nSection 17 (la) of the \"Forest\nAct\" which gives the timber sale\napplicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from Forest Ranger, Bea-\nverdell, B.C., from the District\nForester, Nelson, B.C., or from\nthe Deputy Minister of Forests,\nVictoria, B.C.'\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nSTARTED PULLETS OF LEG-\nhorn and heavy breeds. Please\nplace orders 2 weeks in advance of delivery. Phone 352-\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874, Nelson and District\nA.I. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician.\nFOR SALE, FOUR YEAR OLD\ncow. Freshened April 18. Apply Sam Podovelnikoff, Valli\ncan, B.C,\nFOR SALE OR TRADE FOR\nmilk cow, black mare. Gris-\nwolds, Box 592, Kaslo.\nCOW FOR SALE. FRESHENED\n3 weeks with third calf. Phone\n357-9376, Box 137, Salmo.\nPASTURE FOR RENT. PHONE\n352-6170.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\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 \u2022 MGA - 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. \u2014 Nelson\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\u2014Local Moving\nPh. 352-3031 394 Baker St.\nContractors\nJ. SAWADA CONTRACTING\nGeneral carpentery cabinet\nwork. Phone 352-3432.\nFer a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPE LEAF\nCONSTRUCTION\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St.\nPh. 365-5342-Castlegar, B.C.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK\n.    B.C.L.S., P. Eng.\n!18 Gore Street Nelson\nPhonej 352-3341\nFurriers\nDEE'S LADIES APPAREL\n535 Baker St. Phone 352-2955\nRenfrew Furs Agent for Sales \u2022\nRemodelling - Repairs -Storage\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525\nInvestments\nDoherty Roadhouse & McCuaig\nBros.\nMembers: Leading Canadian\nStock Exchanges\n335 Bay Street, Toronto, Ont.\nRepresentative:\nHarry D. Harrison.\nPhone 352-3525\nPainting\nand Decorating\nWARD'S\nPainting and Decorating\nFloor Sanding and Finishing\nFree Estimates\nPhone 352-3726 - Nelson, B.C.\nPrinting\nNELSON  DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters - 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\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley'i Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street  Phone 852-7741\nSteam Baths\nNELSON STEAM BATHS\nExercise Centre - 369 Baker St.\nTopsi\nOil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand & Gravel\n9th and Davies St. Ph. 362-2355\nDays or 352-7576 Evens.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nBARGAIN OFFER\nOWNER MUST SELL\nTHIS WEEK\nCOMFORTABLE    three - bedroom home close  to schools\nand city centre. Economically\nheated by hot water heating;\nnew   220   wiring,   completely\nfenced in back        Si^lOO\nyard. Reduced Price**1   vu\nOnly $750 Down\nFAIRVIEW: Third Street\nLOVELY two-bedroom home\non a large, level, neatly landscaped lot. This home is all\non one level with a full basement including rumpus room;\nit has a large kitchen with adjoining nook, comfortable living room with a fireplace, and\na completely built-in back\nporch. Heated by a gas hot-air\nfurnace   and   complete   new\n\u2122ing- $12,000\nPrice  T      '\nWill consider all offers.\n$3000 Down\nFAIRVIEW\nATTRACTIVE 1-B.R. home situated on four corner lots. Has\npart basement with new automatic gas furnace and hot\nwater tank. There is room to\nbuild a second home with approximately 60 ft. of frontage;\nsecluded and quiet location. \u2014\nExtremely good $6700\nbuy at \t\nKOOTENAY   STREET\nBEAUTIFUL Hz - storey, 4-\nB.R. home on three nicely-\nlandscaped level lots. Has double plumbing and a full basement suite. Hot water heating\nwith an automatic oil furnace;\nnew hot water tank; fully in-\n\" $15,000\nPrice    ^      '\nUPHILL\nLOVELY SIDE-BY-SIDE DUPLEX \u2014 only ten years old,\non two nicely landscaped lots.\nIncludes on both sides: living\nroom, kitchen, bedroom and\nbath. Full basement and laundry facilities. \u00abI A Oflfl\nPrice, ONLY  *' 4'UUU\nCEDAR ST,\nMODERN 4-B.R. house, only\n7 yrs. old, on a 60'xl00' lot.\nHas a full basement, automatic\ngas furnace and is wired for\nan electric $12,000\nrange. Price   ... '\nBUILDING LOTS\nIf you are looking for a building lot \u2014 please inquire today.\nWe   have   several   good   lots\navailable.\nSELLING YOUR HOME ?\nList Now With\nAGENCIES\nLTD.\n582 Ward St.      Phone 352-7217\nSITUATED PRIVATELY ON\nthe upper side of the street\noverlooking lower Fairview\nand North Shore, on 254 landscaped lots is this comfortable,\n2 large bedroom home, with 2\nlarge windows looking out of\nthe living room. Full basment.\ngas furnace and garage. You'll\njust love its appearance with\nwroughl iron fence decorated\nwith hanging flower pots. Only\n$10,500. W. Kalyniuk Agencies.\nPhone 352-2425.\nCOMPLETELY REDECORAT-\ned modern 4 rm. bungalow 12\nbdrms.) on choice location\nnear Christina Lake Inn. Additional l'\/z acres available, excellent location for motel or\ntent camp. For full particulars\napply 384 Baker St., Nelson, or\nphone 352-2687.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES,\nsee us for Hotel, Motels, Resort, Store and gas station with\ncabins, Business block, other\ncommercial listings. T. D.\nRosling and Son Ltd. 568 Ward\nSt.\nATTRACTIVE 1 BDRM. COT-\ntage, automatic oil heat, patio,\ngarden fruit trees and view.\nPhone 352-2326.\nWANTED ACREAGE WITH OR\nwithout house. Close in. Apply\nBox 6011, Nelson Daily News.\nLOT 40 X 120. 900 BOCK FALL\nSt. Phone 352-2002.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nBUNGALOW ON 30' LOT,\nFirst St., Fairview. Three\nrooms. Good location, minimum building, low price inc.\ngas range and heater. $2,900\nwith $500 down, $40 per M. plus\ninterest. T. D. Rosling and Son\nLtd., 352-3581.\n5 ACRES REVENUE PROP-\nperty, large home, 2 rented\nhouses, also 1 partly finished\nhouse and some fruit trees.\nApply to Mrs. Rose Kosiance,\nCreston, B.C.\n44 ACRES ON SALMO, NEL-\nway highway, 4 rm. house and\noutbuildings. $5000 cash. Apply\nGus A. Anderson, Willowhaven.\nWANTED FOR PERSONAL\nuse 3 bdrm. modern house\nwith dining area. Contact William Kalyniuk at W. Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Phone 352-2425.\n10 ACRES WITH 2 BEDROOM\nhouse. Light, water. Barns\nneed some fixing. Lister. $3800,\nApply John Knackstedt, Gray\nCreek.\nFURNISHED 1 BDRM. HOME\non 3 lots. 3 yrs. old. Full basement. Oil furnace. F.P. $7000.\n720 Innes St., Nelson, B.C.\n6 ROOM HOUSE WITH 2 ATTIC\nrooms, glassed in back porch,\nfull basement, oil furnace. Apply 1208 Hall Mines Road.\nPRICE WANTED ON TRAIL'S\ncity limit properties for sale.\nCash or credit? Apply Box\n5813, Nelson Daily News.\nTWO BEDROOM HOUSE ON\ntwo corner lots. Ideal summer\nhome. Reasonable. S. Tagami,\nBox 56, Slocan. Ph. 355-2267.\nLAKE FRONT LOTS $500 DOWN\nnear Long Beach on Kootenay\nLake. William Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-2425.\n41 ACRE FARM, QUICK SALE.\nApply Walter Bloodoff, 1324\nVancouver St. Phone 352-6561.\n2 BDRM. BUNGALOW ON 2\nlots. Uphill $6000. Ph. 352-7370\nevens.\nGOOD HOME FOR 2 PUPS. AP-\nply Gordon Pereversoff, Shore-\nacres.\n3 BDRM. HOUSE FOR SALE.\nPh. 352-5890 3 - 10 p.m.\nFOR SALE. LEVEL BUILDING\nlots. Phone 352-5418.\nPERSONAL\nPATRICK ARCHIBALD HAMILTON, formerly of Rossland,\nB.C., or anyone knowing his\nwhereabouts is requested to\ncommunicate with Mrs. Muriel Oretta Hamilton, at 510\nLeeson-Lineham Bldg., Calgary, Alberta.\nKOKANEE DETECTIVE\nAgency, Agents Kootenays and\nOkanagan. Domestic, Civil,\nCriminal. Address confidential\nenquiries to aforesaid Agency,\nBox 163, Kelowna. Mr. J. Crozier, Manager.\nDRUG SUNDRIES, NOVEL-\nties at tremendous savings.\nFree catalogue. Western Distributors. Box 24DN, Regina,\nSask.\nPERSONAL SUNDRIES & Supplies. 60% savings. Free price\nlist and sample on request.\nBox 8, Station C, Winnipeg.\nMACHINERY\nAGAIN LEAD THE FIELD\n1 Year Warranty\nNew \"S\" Blade\nNew Bottom Muffler\nAnti Scalp Disc\nSafety Spin Starter\nGrass Catcher Bag\n4 Cycle Engine\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Co.\nLtd..\n514 Railway St     Ph. 352-5301\nWelding and Machine Work\nNew   and   Used Machinery\nWelding Supplies\nSTEVENSON MACHINERY\nLTD.\nPhone 352-3561\n S.\t\n'55 MACK DIESEL LOGGING\ntruck and trailer; '59 Peers 25\nton, 8\" brakes, 10' heavy duty\nbunks; '56 15-ton Columbia, 8\"\nbunks; %-yd. P. & H. with heel\nboom and shovel front. Box\n1025, Creston. Ph. 356-2070.\nFORD 8N TRACTOR FOR\nhire, Plowing, discing, or what\nhave you, Phone 352-2485 preferably after 4 p.m.,\nD2 CAT IN GOOD RUNNING\norder. For further particulars\ncontact 905 Edgewood Ave.,\nNelson, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n1958 FORD CUSTOM RANCH-\nwagon, dual range A.T., 352-\nV8 engine, custom radio, padded dash, S. belts, clock, backup lights, spotlight - mirror,\nblockheater, wheeldiscs, new\nwinter tires, engine, body in\nexceptional condition. Reasonable. Write E. Lawrence, Can-\nex, Salmo.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '57 Plymouth, '54\nVolkswagen pickup, '53 Consul, '53 Zephyr, Plymouth,\nFords, Chevs., Pontiacs, %-ton\nFargo. Good motors, '57 Dodge\nV-8, '53 Zephyr, '52 Pontiac,\nPhone 352-5815, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road.\nBEACON MOTORS LTD. PON-\ntiac \u2014 Buick \u2014 Acadian \u2014\nVauxhall - GMC. 701 Baker\nSt. Phone 352-6641. 24 hour\nwrecker service. Front end\naligning \u2014 Automatic service.\nBody and paint shop.\nNEW '63 CHEV. BISCAYNE\nSedan, 8 cylinder, standard\ntransmission. Bids in writing\nto J. Malantine, Airline U\nDrive, Glenmerry, Trail, up to\nMonday, April 29th, 1983.\n'60 THAMES VAN. EXCEL-\nlent condition, low mileage,\ngood rubber. $1100. Ph. 352-\n7409, 824 Silica Street.\nSPECIAL 1956 CHEV. 2-DOOR.\n6 cyl. std. custom radio. Full\nprice $365.00. Phone 352-6111\ndays, 352-2042 eves.\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts incurred In my\nname by anyone other than\nmyself. J. L. Heroux.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nHEWESCRAFT ALU MINUM\nboats, 10 - 18 [t. models. Your\nbest value in boats. Also several good used boats and\ntrailers. Marine supplies and\ngasoline. Jorgenson's Boat\nRental, North Shore, Nelson.\nFOR SCOTT OUTBOARD EN-\ngine Sales and Service and\nBoats see Mac's Welding &\nEquipment Co. Ltd., 514 Railway St., Nelson, B.C.-\nFULL LINE OF STARCRAFT\nalminum runabout and cruiser\nboats now on display at Kaslo\nMarine Service in Kaslo.\nBOAT HOUSE FOR RENT OR\nsale. Apply 300 Baker.\nOPPORTUNITIES\nBUSINESS\nESTABLISHED BUSINESS FOR\nsale. A real money maker. 1\nman can handle. Owner leaving country, i Ph. even. 352-\n2916. I\n'61 TRIUMPH STATION WA-\ngon, '52 Pontiac, '51 Chev.\nNorth Shore Service, phone\n352-2929.\n1961 9 PASSENGER VOLKS-\nwagen bus. Radio, good tires,\ngood condition. $750 down, take\nover payments. Ph. 352-2916.\nJAGUAR MOTOR AND TRANS,\netc. A-l cond. Best offer. Ph.\n352-3051.\n1962 T.R. 4. BLACK WITH\nwhite top. Excellent condition.\nPhone 352-2087 after 5 p.m.\nWANTED JEEP IN GOOD CON-\ndition. Apply Box 54, Montrose, B.C.\nFOR SALE 1956 V4-TON CHEV.\npick-up. Very good shape. See\nAlex Bojey, Perry Siding, B.C.\n'56 PLYMOUTH. SEDAN V-8,\nAutomatic. Best bid. Phone\n352-7232.\n'55 CUSTOM LINE FORD. NO\nreasonable offer refused. Apply Harry Wasilenkoff, Glade.\n'52 METEOR 4 DOOR. SEE AT\nKline's Service, Ymir Rd.\n'61 CHEV. CONVERT. SUPER\nstock. Phone 368-9728, Trail.\nRead the Classified Dally\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCOMPLETE FOUNTAIN UNIT\nwith automatic carbonator,\nmotors, fruit and syrup coolers, water and soda arms, and\npressure gauges; three slide\ndoor display cases; glass\ncandy display unit for bars\nand boxes. Priced to sell.\nAvery-Carr Pharmacy Ltd.,\nPhone 356-2151, Creston, B.C.\nFREEZER SPECIALS - FILL\nyour freezer now with pork at\nlow price. Daily lean grain fed\npork, whole or half, 29c per lb.\nCut and wrapped 32c per lb.\nSides of grain fed choice beef,\n49c lb. Also cheaper beef.\nNewdan Farm, Creston. Phone\n356-9901; after 5:30 356-9769.\nFree weekly delivery.\nSIDES LIGHT STEER BEEF,\n200 lb. 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.\nA-l USED G.E. 21-IN. CONSOLE\nT.V., 30-day guarantee, $135;\nused washers, $10 to $27.50;\nused chrome set, $22.50; used\n30-in. Kenmore range, $115;\nA-l used Roto-Tiller, $65. Mac-\nleod's Ltd.\nLARGE RANGE SUITABLE\nfor camp or lodge. Walk-in\nsafe door. Windows, doors,\nplumbing, bricks, lumber and\nwiring. Contact Roy Kilford,\n524 Vernon St. Ph. 352-6822 or\n352-7774.\nBOY'S BICYCLE, PERFECT\ncond. Glider roadster, geared,\n3-speed, $35. Ph. 352-7473.\nDURO WATER PUMP, FOOT\nvalve, controls and 84 gal.\ntank. 500 gals, per hr. Apply\nL. Sammartino, ph. 392, Balfour.\nUSED TV SETS A-l CONDI-\ntion. Nelson Home Furniture\nand Appliances Ltd., Nelson.\nPhone 352-6432.\nSIDES OF HEAVY PORK. 100-\n125 lb. average, 25c lb. Newdan Farm, Creston. Ph. 356-\n9901. Free Delivery.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals.\n339 Baker St. Phone 352-3631.\nUSED 2-YR. OLD. ELECTRIC\nhot water tank. Ph. 352-2994 or\ncall at 1521 Ward St.\n4 X 12 BERLIN PLANER. AP-\nply Voykin Coffee Shop, Pass-\nmore.\n50 LB. P.S.E. .COMPRESSOR\nincl. St. tank. Apply 514\nObservatory.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FUR-\nniture, antiques and old gold.\nHome Furniture Exchange.\nPhone 352-6531, 413 Hall St.\nWANTED BEAM SCALE TO\nweigh up to 200 lbs. Contact L.\nRiedel, Kootenay Bay.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" sq. 10c lb. Nelson Daily News.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nCOCKER PUPS $15.00 ALSO\nChihuahas $25.00. Bird's Kennels. Blueberry Creek.\nK 9 REG. BOARDING KEN-\nnels, Fruitvale Highway. G. A.\nCrawford, prop. Ph. 367-2483.\nWANTED - GOOD HOME FOR\nPurebred German Shepherd.\nApply Box 84, Crescent Valley.\nBEES AND-YOUNG QUEENS\nfor sale. Walter Swetlishoff,\nBox 77, Crescent Valley,\nLIGHT    BEEF.    100-200   LBS.\nside, 45c Ib. Ph. 352-6866.\nPOOL TABLES. 405 FALLSST7,  4 MONTH CHIHUAHUA MALE   FURN. SUITE SUITABLE ONE\nNelson. dog, tan. Phone 352-5857. girl. Phone 352-7195.\nTWO BEDROOM BUNGALOW,\n5 rooms, $80.00; cutest little\none bdrm. bungalow, oil heat,\n.$60.00 also one.and three bedroom apartments from $35 to\n$85. T. D. Rosling & Spn Ltd.,\n352-3581.\nMODERN APT. 1 B.R., LIV.\nrm., bath and kitchen, electric\nstove and fridg. Lawn and\nshade trees. Ph. 352-3815 or\n352-7514.\nLOW WINTER RATES\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.\nweekly, monthly rates.-Dishes\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker Street.\n2 BEDROOM APT. IN CASTLE-\ngar. Wall to wall carpet in\nL.R., near schools on Juniper\nSt. Phone 365-5149.\n1 BDRM. APT. FURN. OR UN-\nfurn. Heat and H.W. supplied.\nPrivate entrance on the level.\nVernon St. Ph. 352-5252.\n2 RM. APT. FURN., ALSO ONE\nlarge housekeeping rm. wit':\nfridge. Ph. days 352-2015, even.\n352-6242.\nMODERN UNFURN. I BDRM.,\napt. Heated. $68, Ph.-852-3417.\nSEPARATE APT. ON NORTH\nShore with beach facilities. Vs\nmile from bridge. Phone 352-\n5205.\nSMALL SELF. CONT. STE. 1\nblk. off Baker. Private entrance, auto heat. Ph. 352-2155.\n2 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE, 2\nblocks off Baker St. Ph. 352-\n2696. Apply 614 Victoria St.\n1 BEDROOM COTTAGE. WIL-\nlow Point, fully modern. Phone\n352-7484.\nONE BEDROOM HEATED AND\npartly furnished apartment.\nApply 1019 Latimer Street.\nAVAILABLE MID-MAY FOR 4\nor 5 months, 2 bdrm. furn.\nhouse. Phone 352-2594.\n3 RM. STE. WITH PRIVATE\nbath. Also rooms at low rates.\nRoyal Hotel. 330 Baker Street.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM $2C A\nmonth. Phone 352-7462.\nFURN. 2 ROOM STE. 140 BAK-\ner St, Phone 352-3384.\n2 RM. CABIN FOR RENT. 125\nSilica St. Phone 352-7541.\nBRIGHT   CENTRAL   APT.\nAdults. Ph. 352-6024.\n2 BEDRM. HOUSE. MILL ST.\nPhone 352-3426.\nSatiij\nCirculation Dept., Ph. 332-3552\nPrice .per single copy. 10'cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\n.-, Id, advance,  j '--'\u25a0\n_  Subscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada ',\nOutside Nelson\nOne month    _'_  $ 2.00\nThree months _._....-.....     5.00\nSix months       10.00\nOne year   \u2022 -. \u2022\u25a0_\u25a0\u2022\u00ab.   18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month   ...,\"....-....''..7.-. $ 2.00\nThree months  :..-.....;.. - 6.00\nSix months _...._:.:..:..).::.....   11.00\nOne year     \u2022\u25a0\/\/-''\u2022'jL  'W-W\nBy mail to TJ.S,A! of\nForeign Countries -,\nOne month  ....,;.. f 2,50\nThree months     ....  _      7.00\nSix months   \u201ei ..\"13.00\nOne year  ......*,..\u25a0\u2022 24.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus.postage.\nFor delivery by liai'rieSll-l'Bran-\nbrook,   pbone . Mrs.-.\nWillisbn; 'V:\nYoung Piper\"\nTo Leave\nQuayside Post\nVICTORIA (CP) - A comely\nVictoria lassie will return to\nVictoria's ferry docks for the\neighth summer this year- and\nthen will fold her bagpipes and\nnae come back again.\nLona Donaldson, began piping\nto greet tourists' on ferritts at\nthe age of 11. Now 18, she will\ngraduate from high.-school in\nJune and after7her quayside\nstint at $22.50 a.week this summer she plans to go to the provincial mental institution at\nEssondale to train as a psychiatric nurse.\nDuring the past, summers she\nstruck up acquaintances wilh a\nhost of travellers, including celebrities Bob'Hope, Dale Evans\nand Sebastian Cabot.\n\"I think last Christmas f must\nhave got cards from-every state\nin the union,\" she said.   ,\nBuyinj\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u25a0N\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINE\n* Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word)\n* Put Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\n* Box Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE RATES, USE THIS TABLE:\n. Per Line\n1  Insertion\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n$ .20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add 15c for Box Number\n\u2022 Take advantage ot the low six time ro-\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 201 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified A;5\nTOUR NAME.\nADDRESS\t\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run\nBillTMe '___ -   \u25a0\u25a0:\u2022} \"i-S;\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson\n.Classified Advertising Department, Nelson,\n*\n\u2022\n_______________________________________\n_______________________\u25a0\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 29, 1963\nExclusion From Common\nMarket Hit Britain Hard\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nTORONTO (CP) - Britain's\nexclusion from the European\nCommon^ Market, and the\nthinking that promoted it, are\na severe setback for the cause\nof Western integration, Dr. Pie-\nter Lieftinck, executive director\nof the world bank and the International Monetary Fund, said\nFriday.;' 7\nAddressing the Canada Netherlands Council, Dr. Lieftinck\noutlined adverse economic and\npolitical results that may come\nfrom what he termed \"the dominating influence of a continental concept\" in Europe.\nHe said the new trend set by\nthe United States trade expansion act clearly opens up broad\nperspectives for further integration in the world economy provided the U.S. initiative is im-\nMoon Threatens to\nAffect U.S. Election\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nmoon threatens to affect the\n1964 U.S. presidential election\nA lively debate is under way\non the big question:\nShould the U.S. spend $20,.\n000,000,000\u2014more or less\u2014on a\ncrash program to land men on\nthe moon in this decade?\nPresident Kennedy says yes\nSome others, notably Republi-\ncans, express grave doubts. The\nscientific community is split.\nIt is evident that Kennedy is\nfollowing closely the arguments\nof his critics that too much\nmoney is being spent on space,\nat the expense of other scientific undertakings and such\nearthly needs as education and\nhousing.\nHe expressed the suspicion at\nthis week's press conference\nthat if budget cutters succeed\nin slashing space funds, they\nwon't allot the savings to things\nlike education. Then, he said,\nWhen the Soviet Union makes\nanother big breakthrough in\nspace, his critics will ask: \"Why\ndidn't we do more?\"\nHe said it would be a mistake\nto \"arrest\" the space program.\nThe U.S. he said, had enough\nresources to do what needs to\nbe done, in space and education!\nSOME COMPLAIN\nMeantime, a number of\nSenate Republicans complained\nthat the space program threatens to cut unduly into the domain of private enterprise. For\nexample, Senator Wallace F.\nBennett (Rep. Utah) said he was\ninformed that eventually 60 per\ncent of all physical scientists\nwould be working for the government.\nThis was disputed by James\nE. Webb, director of the National Aeronautics and Space\nAdministration. Making a pitch\nbefore the Senate space committee for NASA's $5,700,000,000\nbudget for the coming fiscal\nyear, he said 90 per cent of\nNASA's work would be done by\nprivate industry and universities.\nVice - President Lyndon B.\nJohnson is also fighting against\na NASA budget cut. Space is no\ngimmick or gamble, he says.\nFor one thing, he adds, it is\ncreating new jobs, new products, new inventions of use on\nearth\u2014the country is on the\nthreshold of \"an historic new\nboom.\"\nDr. Philip H. Abelson, a leading physical chemist, suggests\nthat stress be placed first on\nexploration of the moon by unmanned vehicles and electronic\ngear\u2014a vastly cheaper undertaking than manned flight to the\nsatellite.\nFew scientists doubt that man\neventually will'go to the moon,\nthough there's manyan argument as to when and how.\nThere's no doubt, however,\nthat the moon will figure in political oratory during the 1964\npresidential campaign.\nplemented with imagination and\nrealism and meets with sufficient goodwill on the part- of\nher trading partners.\nThe U.S. and Canada and the\nextended European Common\nMarket together account for 90\nper cent of the free world's industrial production and, Dr.\nLieftinck stated, a trans-Atlantic fusion of the two great industrial nuclei would generate\na mighty quantity of economic\nenergy and trade.\n\"It is clear, however,\" he\nadded, \"that the refusal to admit England and other members of the European Free\nTrade Association to the Common Market has dealt a blow to\nthese conjectures. At the moment, it would seem that the\nU.S. vision of a broad Atlantic\neconomic integration has largely lost its foundation.\"\nAssessing likely results in regard to trade with the Soviet\nbloc, Dr. Lieftinck said the possibility of establishing a united\nfront of all of Western Europe\nin trade negotiations with the\nSoviet bloc seems more remote\nthan ever.\nAnd, he added, \"the less\nagreement there is in the West\nin seeking constructive solutions\nin the field of trade for the problems of underdeveloped countries, the more inclined those\ncountries will be to accept the\nalternative possibilities offered\nthem by the Soviet bloc.\"\nHe said there is danger that\nthe inward-looking elements of\nthe European Common Market\nwill gain the upper hand and\nthat the countries of the European Free Trade Association will\nconcentrate to an increasing degree on trade with other parts\nof the world and turn away\nfrom the continent.\nThis might not be unwelcome\nto Commonwealth countries in\nthe short term but it was questionable, over the long - term,\nwith their industralization developing, that they would find\nmuch advantage in it.\nU.S. Photoprapher Says\nPress Cuba Attacks\nBy LARRY OSIUS\nWASHINGTON (AP) ' - A\nfree - lance photographer who\nclaims he took part in a bombing raid on Havana says he'll\npress the attack on Communist\nCuba \"at every opportunity.\"\nMore than eight hours after\nAlexander Rorke Jr. of New\nYork gave reporters his account of a low-level bombing\nrun over a Havana oil refinery, the Cuban government\nechoed most of his story and\nsaid it holds the United States\nresponsible.\nThe state department at first\ncast doubt on the whole matter.\nWidows Receive\n$1,123,146\nLOS ANQELES (AP) - A\nfederal judge has awarded $1,-\n123,146 in damages to widows\nof seven of the 49 persons killed\nin the collision of a commercial\nairliner and a military jet over\nLas Vegas five years ago.\nForty - seven civilian passengers aboard a United Air Lines\nplane and two air force officers\nin the military jet died in the\nfiery crash April 21, 1958.\nPhouma Flies\nTo Plaine\nDe Jarres\nRock From  Northern Quebec\nMay Help Visitors to Moon\nBy JOHN E. BlfcD\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Three tons of\nrock from northern Quebec may\nhelp the first earthlings who\nvisit the moon or the use of\nunderground nuclear blasts for\npeaceful purposes.\nThe rock was gathered last\n-winter by scientists from the\nDominion Observatory, probing\nfor traces of two huge meteors.\nThe team,.headed by Michael\nRobert Denge, a geophysicist,\nran a 3Vi-month drilling operation through the ice covering\nClearwater Lake in northern\nQuebec.\nTwo craters, believed created\nby meteorites which plunged to\n:earth between 50,000,000 and\n100,000,000 years ago, form the\nlake. It is located 800 miles\nnorth of Ottawa and 80 miles\neast of Richmond Gulf on the\neast coast of Hudson Bay. One\ncrater is 20 miles in diameter\nand the other 14.\nMr. Dence said that core\nsamples of rock obtained below\nthe base of the craters provide\nfurther evidence that they were\ncreated by meteorites and are\nnot of volcanic origin. He said\npreliminary evidence shows\nthat some core samples contain\n\"fresh glass\" and that the glass\nmay contain fragments of meteorites.\nFUSES ROCK\nThis type \"of material would\nbe formed after a meteorite\nstruck, fusing the rock in the\narea of impact and turning it\ninto a lava-like material. As\nwell, rock under the floors of\nthe craters is highly fractured\nand the larger crater has a central peak.\nMr. Dence said most well-;\nformed moon craters about the\nsize of the large Clearwater one\nhave central peaks. Craters on\nthe moon also are believed to\nhave been caused by meteorites\nmany millions of years ago.\nFurther study of the evidence,\nMr. Dence said, will be useful\nin studies of craters on the\nmoon. All such knowledge would\nhelp man to know more about\nthe moon before he gets there.\nMr. Dence said this type of\nevidence also will be,useful in\nobtaining a better appreciation\nof the future use of nuclear explosions for peaceful purposes,\nsuch as creating harbors or digging canals.\n\"The more we know about\nnaturally - formed craters on\nearth, the better equipped we\nwill be to predict the outcome\nof man-made -underground nuclear explosions,\" he said.\nLONDON (AP) - United\nStates firmness succeeded Friday in postponing higher transatlantic air fares.\nBy ROY ESSOYAN\nVIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -\nNeutralist Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma flew Saturday to\nthe troubled Plaine des Jarres\nto seek settlement of a month-\nlong crisis which threatens uneasy peace in this Southeast\nAsian kingdom.\nThere was little hope he could\nwork out any final settlement\nof differences dividing various\nfactions of his shaky coalition\ngovernment.\nNeutralists and pro - Communists Pathet Lao commanders\nin the strategic Plaine des\nJarres have been accusing each\nother of violating a ceasefire\nagreement reached last Sunday.\nIndependent observers have\nreported sporadic exchanges of\nfire climaxed by what neutralist Gen. Kong Le described as\na concerted artillery barrage\nagainst his positions Thursday.\nNO FIRING FRIDAY\nNo firing was reported Friday on the Plaine, 110 miles\nnorth of Vientiane.\nSouvanna was accompanied\non his flight by British Ambassador Donald Hoson and Soviet\nembassy First Secretary Yuri\nKuznetsov. Soviet Ambassador\nSergei Affanassev was unable\nto make the trip because of a\nstomach disorder, Kuznetsov\nsaid. Britain and the Soviet Union are co-chairmen of the Geneva conference guaranteeing a\nneutral Laos.\nSouvanna also was accompanied by international control commissioners from India and Canada.\nAt Khang Khay, Pathet Lao\nheadquarters from which Kong\nLe was forced to withdraw earlier this month, Souvanna is expected to meet three top Pathet\nLao negotiators, his half-brother\nPrince Souphanouvong, Nouhak\nPhoumsavan and Gen. Singapo.\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 Premier\nKhrushchev has assured the\nUnited States he will support\nneutrality for Laos. But there\nwas no indication whether he\nagreed with President Kennedy\non concrete steps to halt the\nfighting in the tiny Southeast Asian kingdom.\nKhrushchev met with U.S,\nUndersecretary of State Averell\nHarriman for 3Vi hours Friday\nand received a personal appeal\nfrom President Kennedy to restore peace in Laos. A communique issued later said simply:\n\"The president and the chairman of the council of ministers\nreaffirmed that both governments fully support the general\nagreement on the Laotian question about which there was an\nexchange of views between\nthem at Vienna (in 1961) and a\nA five-per-cent increase in the | mutual understanding reached.\"\nround-trip economy rate was to j    Neither the communique nor\nhave gone into effect Monday.\nIt now appears there will be no\nincrease until the middle of next\nmonth.\nU.S. embassy officials indicated\nhow the discussions proceeded\nor whether any concrete action\nto stop the fighting in Laos was\nagreed upon.\nHarriman and U.S. Ambassador Foy Kohler went to see\nKhrushchev after talking for\nV-k hours with Soviet Foreign\nMinister Andrei A. Gromyko.\nPEKING (Reuters) \u2014 The\nChinese Communist party newspaper People's Daily claims the\nUnited States and some other\ncountries of the Southeast Asia\nTreaty Organization were\n\"working even more brazenly to\nintervene directly in the internal affairs of Laos.\"\nIt was commenting editorially\non U.S. 7th Fleet movements\nnear the Gulf of Siam, and\nJune's SEATO e x e r c i ses in\nThailand, Laos' neighbor.\n\"Such frenzied activities of\nUnited States imperialism and\nher followers are bound to\narouse the serious attention of\nall countries and peoples interested in the Laotian question,\"\nthe editorial says.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nV\nIC GRAVE$\nUNSUCCESSFUL LANDING \u2014 Wreckage of the training plane perches atop the suburban\nhome in Gloucester, England, and two test pllota flying tt axe dead. All in nouse escaped.\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nAfter Havana radio broadcast\nthe Cuban government's statement Friday night the department had no comment.\nAssociated Press correspondent George Arfeld said in a dispatch from Cuba there were no\nvisible indications that the Nico\nLopez refinery outside Havana\nhad been bombed. He said usually reliable sources had expressed doubt there was a raid.\nHavana radio said \"the Cuban government holds the\n(United States government responsible for these pirate attacks and the consequences that\nmay come from them.\"\nIt said a formal diplomatc\nprotest was being prepared.\nAs outlined by the Cuban government, the raid took place at\n10 p.m. Thursday night. Rorke\ntold reporters the plane started\nits bombing run at 8:55 p.m.\nand was over the refinery for\nfour minutes and 40 seconds.\nVERSIONS MESH\nIn most other details the two\nversions meshed. Rorke and the\ngovernment statement said a\ntwo-engine plane approached\nfrom the north, flew over the\nNico Lopez refinery, dropped a\n100-pound bomb and several napalm fire bombs then flew\nnorthward.\nHavana radio said none of the\nbombs exploded. Rorke said he\nthought he heard the impounder hit a refinery tank but\nhe was unable to see any damage. He said he was filming the\nraid, but that the film turned\nout poorly.\nHe said the plane was\nlaunched from an island \"south\nof Cuba.\"\nWith him on the raid, Rorke\nsaid, were an American businessman, an American student\nfrom Massachusetts Institute of\nTechnology and a Cuban exile.\nNone was identified further.\nHe said he had participated\nin leaflet raids over Cuba in\nOctober and December, 1961,\nand would return \"at every opportunity.\"\nRorke said U.S. customs authorities have impounded his\nyacht, the Violynn III, which\nhad been used by Cuban exiles\non 11 sea raids against Cuba\nbefore British authorities seized\nit in the Bahamas on March 31.\nReynolds Fitted Well\nInto Gunsmoke Family\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40e line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nOpen till noon every Monday.\nMac's Flower Shop, Ph. 352-5410\nOpen every Monday till noon.\nEBERLE'S\nHELP THE MENTALLY ILL\nRenew your membership in the\nMental Health Association.\nOpen Every Monday Until Noon.\nPhone 352-5035\nCoventry's Flower Shop\nBradley Travel Agencies\nTel. 352-3212\nFor Travel and Baggage\nInsurance.\n14\" square Corduroy cushion,\ncentre buttons. In all colors at\n$1.79 each.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nPOT LUCK LUNCHEON\nCanadian Legion Thursday, May\n2, 11:30 - 1:30. $1.00.\nSponsored by Order of \u25a0'\nthe Royal Purple.\nCARD OF THANKS\nA sincere thank you to friends\nand neighbors for their kind\nconsideration and floral tributes\nduring our recent bereavement\nin the loss of our beloved husband and father, Mr. Edward G.\nKidd. A special thank you to Dr.\nMorrison, Medical Clinic, Selkirk\nHealth Unit, Harold Mayo and\nstaff, Canon Silverwood, RCMP\nmembers and Thompson Funeral Home.\n-Mrs. F. M. Kidd\nDick and George.\nATTENTION PARENTS\nImmunization clinics for smallpox only, for children entering\nschool in Sept. will be held at\nthe Selkirk Health Unit, 503\nFront St., on May 2nd from 10 to\n11 a.m. and from 2 to 3 p.m. and\non May 3 from 10 to 11 a.m.\nOther booster doses will be given\nin June.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nWILSON -. At Castlegar Hospital Saturday, April 27, Veronica, aged 75 years, beloved wife\nof Charles of Castlegar. Funeral\nservices will be held Tuesday,\nApril 30 at II a.m. from the Chapel of the Castlegar Funeral\nHome, Rev. Father E. A. Bro-\nphy officiating. Interment in\nPark Memorial Cemetery, Kinnaird. Arrangements entrusted\nto the Castlegar Funeral Home.\nFIGHTS\nMelbourne \u2014 Kid Oliva, 126,\nArgentina, stopped Osei Renner,\n127,  Ghana, 7.\nLos Angeles \u2014 Tony Valenti,\n157, Boston, knooked out Willie\nTurner,  160,  Fresno, Calif-g.\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Burt\nReynolds is a lean, good-looking\nFloridian who has made good\nat a difficult assignment: Joining the Gunsmoke family.\nThe quadrumvirate of James\nArness-Dennis Weaver-Amanda\nBlake-Milburn Stone is perhaps\nthe tightest troupe in television.\nThey have worked in close association for eight years. Their\nfan following approaches a cult.\nLast year Gunsmoke faced a\ncrisis when Dennis announced\nhe was leaving the series for\nthe greener pastures of his own\nshow. Since Gunsmoke represents an investment of many\nmillions, there was great concern about replacing the gimpy\nChester.\nThree hundred rugged young\nactors were screened. Burt\nReynolds returned from a New\nYork play to join the horde a\nfew days before the decision\nwas to be made. Arness listened\nto him read some lines, nodded\nand Burt was one of two actors\nchosen.\nGOT MOST RESPONSE\nThe idea was to put both in a\nshow and see which one drew\nthe most response. Burt, who\nplayed a part-Indian, won.\n\"There was a flood of mail\nfrom Indians and people in Florida,\" said the Palm Beach boy.\nSo he got the job. But what\nabout joining the team?\n\"Jim was for me from the\nstart, so that was no worry,\nhe said. \"I don't mean we are\nclose friends, because nobody\ngets close to Jim. That's the\nway he is.\n\"With Milburn and Amada, it\nwas another matter. They had\nbeen pulling for the other actor\nto win, so there was some resentment. But in time we became the closest of friends, as\npeople often do after an initial\nantagonism.\n'As for Dennis (who returned\no na limited basis when his\nshow didn't sell), I hardly know\nhim. We've only done two shows\ntogether.\"\nBurt plays Quint Asper, the\nDodge City blacksmith who is\nsometimes made a victim of\nIndian-hating citizens.\nStanfield's\nGrand-Slam\nGOLF\nSHIRT\nPatented \"Free Swing\"\nunderarm gusset, nylon\nreinforced. Extra long\nshirttails that stay tucked in.\nMachine Washable\nMade in white and a\nvariety of colors.\nEMORY'\u00a7\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nFidel Castro Says Murmansk\nWelcome His Greatest Moment\nMOSCOW' (AP)-Cuba's Premier Fidel Castro said Saturday\nhe will cherish the memory of\nhis ear-splitting welcome in the\nArctic city of Murmansk as\n\"the most exciting moment of\nmy life.\"\nThe Soviet news agency Tass\nsaid thousands greeted the\nbearded Cuban on his midnight\narrival for a first visit to the\nSoviet Union. Castro said he\nwould guess all 200,000 of the\ncity's population had turned out\nto meet him.\nLeading them was First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan,\nwho went to Havana last autumn to smooth things over\nafter Soviet Premier Khrushchev said he would withdraw\nRussian rockets.\nNeither Castro nor Mikoyan\nmade  any  mention  of those\nevents in their speeches today,\nwhich were broadcast by Moscow radio.\nOUTSHOUTS  TRANSLATOR\nCastro began calmly and\nslowly, but was soon outshout-\ning his Soviet translator, who\nhad begun shouting at the very\nbeginning.\n\"We feel,\" Castro said, \"as\nif the arm's of the Soviet Union\nhave been opened to embrace\nus. . . .\n\"I am impatiently looking\nforward to making an acquaintance with your industrial life.\"\nCastro began his speech by\npraising the people of Murmansk for their \"great sacrifices\" during the Second World\nWar, when the port was one of\nthe main entry points for the\nPremier Jagan Blames\nPoverty on Capitalism\nREGAINING PARTIAL USE OF SEVERED HAND-Asslsted by\nDr. William D. Shorey at Presbyterian St. Luke's Hospital\nin Chicago, Arthur Holmes, 4!!, lifts a weight aa part of his\nphysical therapy program to regain partial use of his reattached band! The hand was reattached tn a lVi-hour\noperation after tt waa severed completely In a bindery accident The little finger and part of the hand had to be\nremoved later. The most recent surgery rejoined three\nflexor tendons and a median nerve.\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Premier\nCheddi Jagan of British Guiana\nsays \"capitalism and imperialism\" are the root cause of poverty and insecurity in underdeveloped countries.\nAnd these two factors, he\nsaid, can be present even without maintaining the country concerned as a political colony.\nThe left - leaning premier\nmade his remarks Friday night\nin an address prepared for delivery to the Winnipeg Press\nClub. A general strike prevented him from leaving his\nSouth American country and\nthe speech was delivered by his\nwife, the former Janet Rosenberg of Chicago who went to\nBritish Guiana in 1943 after her\nmarriage.\nHe declared the law enacted\nby his ruling People's Progressive party demands that workers vote by government - supervised ballot for the union they\nwish to represent them.\n'SUGAR KINGS OBJECT'\n\"The sugar kings would brook\nno interference with their unlimited domination, in particular, over their company union.\"\nPremier Jagan, whose country's economy is based on an\neconomy of sugar and bauxite\n(tin) ore, said imperialism has\n\"fashioned and subjugated the\nstructure of our economies for\nits own advantage as a raw material base, as a market for in\ndustrialized goods and as an\narea for the extraction of super\nprofits.\"\nBut while prices for minerals, metals and agricultural\nproducts had dropped' by as\nmuch as 40 to 50 per cent in recent years, costs of imported\ngoods rose by 11 per cent.\n\"We want no only political independence. We want also economic independence and social\njustice.\"\nQUESTONS PRESS' ROLE\nPremier Jagan's speech, to an\naudience of newspaper men and\nguests, said many are beginning\nto \"seriously question the role\nof the press.\"\n\"Can there really be freedom\nof the press under the present\nsystem? Is press ownership and\ncontrol leading 'to thought and\nideological control? Is the press\nopposing social change so necessary in our times?\n\". . . Will the revolution be\npeaceful or non-peaceful? Will\nsocialists like me be allowed to\nbring about our millenium by\npeaceful means? Or is Fidel\nCastro's way of armed struggle\nthe only way out?\n\". . . Whatever you decide,\nremember this: The people are\nindestructible. You may beat\nthem, detain them, imprison\nthem and toll the bell for them,\nbut they will rise again, not\nmysteriously b u t inevitably.\nAnd we who speak for them\nand voice their aspirations will\nnever be silenced.\"\nvast quantities of supplies that\ncame from the West.\nSTRESSES SOLIDARITY\nHe also launched into a brief\ndeclaration about the need for\nsolidarity of the international\nworking class and spoke about\nwhat he called the merits of\nMarxism-Leninism.\nMikoyan spoke only a few\nwords: \"Long live the leader of\nthe Cuban revolution\u2014the people's hero\u2014Fidel Castro.\"\nMoscow prepared an ecstatic\ngreeting for the first man to\nwave the banners of communism in triumph over any country in the Western Hemisphere.\nCastro and Mikoyan boarded\na train which will bring them\ninto Moscow Sunday morning.\nHAVANA (AP) - Complaining that not enough students are\npreparing for careers in agriculture, Premier Fidel Castro\nsays \"there is not a devil left\nwho wants to milk a cow.\"\nCastro made an unscheduled\nappearance at Havana Univer-\nsith shortly before he left for\nthe Soviet Union Friday.\n\"Gentlemen\" he said, no one\nshows up here to study agriculture when we are a country that\nlives off agriculture.\"\nHe said 3,000 students are\npreparing for diplomatic careers and only 100 are studying\nagricultural engineering.\nHe lahsed out at bureaucratic bungling stifling production\nand at labor absenteeism.\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION.\nDispensed   While   Yon   Wait\nFREE DELIVERY\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611 Box 460\nPHONE\n352-3031\nFor the Finest\nCOAL\nAll Reliable Brands\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nIt's Holiday Time\n*vr\nEnjoy Your Holidays But Don't Miss\nImportant \"Local\" News items\nUse The\n\\\\\nHOLIDAY PACK\"\nHave the Nelson Daily News saved for you by your carrier boy. \u2014\nPhone 352-3552, or ask him to save your paper till you come back,\ngiving him the date of your return. He will deliver the back copies\nalong with the current issue on the date specified.\nOur carriers are anxious to give this special service to their\nholidaying customers.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\/\/\n\t\n\"\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0-    '' : 1 _BWww\u00bbi&' id-AmM. - '___\n__\n\u25a0\n-   \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0.-- --'\u25a0\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_04_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0434834","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"}]}}