{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0442514":{"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"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2024-05-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1966-03-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0442514\/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":" N__\nTEMPERATURES\nNelson   29 42\nI Toronto     32 36\n'  Calgary     22 37\ng Penticton   35 47\nVictoria\nWhitehorse .\nSpokane  \t\n.01\n.01\n.07\n32 43 .17\n15 32 .07\n28  42   .03\nFORECAST\nMostly sunny. Winds light.\nLow-high at Cranbrook 20 and\n40; Nelson area 25 and 40.\nPublished at Nelson, Uovernmen t, financial tradinjk and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 64\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-\n\\dink\n-M\n<ut-\n3JL\nMORNING, MARCH m 1966\n10 Cents\nNo. 284\nMURDER CHARGES AT COAST\nHeavy Seas Slow\nH-Bomb Removal\nPALOMARES BEACH, Sapln\n(AP) \u2014 Rough seas appeared\nSunday to have slowed the job\nof moving an American H-bomb\noff its precarious undersea perch.\nThe bomb had- been missing\nsince a B-52 nuclear bomber collided over this Spanish coastal\narea with a jet refueling tanker\nJan. 17. Three bombs fell on\nshore and were recovered. The\nfourth was located Wednesday\nby a midget submarine.\nIt is lying on a sharp slope\nabout 2,500 feet below the surface and in danger of sliding to\neven greater depths.\nTwo midget submarines are\ntrying to nudge it to an area\nthat would make recovery easier.\nWind squalls churned up the\nsea around Palomares Beach.\nEven the loading of steel drums\nfilled with radioactive earth and\nvines from the crash zone on\nshore had to be halted.\nPROMISES 'GOOD NEWS'\nMaj. - Gen. Delman Wilson,\ncommander of the 16th U.S. Air\nForce Division in Spain told\na crowd of 800 he hoped shortly\nfor \"good news from the governments of both Spain and the\nUnited States\" in connection\nwith the recovery of the missing\nbomb.\nThe people cheered Wilson\nwhen he said the payment of indemnity to those affected by the\ncrash of the B-52 bomber soon\nwould be made.\nIndonesia Regime\nGrounds Airmen\nSINGAPORE (AP)-The new\nmilitary regime in Indonesia\nhas grounded the air force and\narrested a former air force chief\nto prevent a new coup, reports\nreaching here said Sunday.\nThe reports, carried from Jakarta by well-informed travellers, said the new regime\ngrounded the air force because\nit feared it may try a revolt.\nThey identified the arrested\nformer air force chief as Air\nVice-Marshall Suryadama. He\nhad been telecommunications\nminister until last Friday when\nhe was detained, the reports\nadded.\nThey said the new military regime sent army troops to all airports In Indonesia during the\nweekend.\nThe troops removed vital\nparts from aircraft engines and\nslashed the tires of other aircraft to prevent them from being used, the reports added.\nSUPPORTED COMMUNISTS\nThe Indonesian air force has\nbeen considered pro-Communist\nsince last October's Communist\ncoup attempt, which was\ncrushed by the army soon after\nit was launched.\nSeveral air force units are believed to have taken part in the\nabortive coup and are reported\nto have given Communist youth\ngroup's weapons and military\ntraining. -\nAir Vice-Marshal Suryadama\nis considered a Communist, the\nreports reaching here said. The\nlast air force chief, Air Vice-\nMarshal Omar \u2022 Dhani, was accused of involvement in lats October's coup and now is reported\nliving in exile in Cambodia.\nVATICAN CITY (Beuters)-\nPope Paul asked. Sunday for\nprayers to be said for his Important talks  this week with\nGerman-China Deal\nWorries Dean Rusk\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 State\nSecretary Dean Rusk expressed\nconcern Sunday over West Germany's proposed deal to sell\nsteel mills to China.\nRusk was the first high-ranking U.S. official to speak publicly about the prospective sale\nsince it was announced last\nweek.\n\"We hope that our friends in\nWestern Europe . . . when the\ntime comes for action, take into\naccount the problems of peace\nIn the Pacific ocean area,\"\nRusk said on the CBS television-\nradio program Face The Nation.\nHe said, 'We are concerned\nabout anything that would lead\nPeking to believe that their\n(militant) policy is successful\ner anything that would add to\nthe strength of Peking until\nthere is some indication of\nchange in their policy.\n\"So, I would hope that our\nfriends in Europe would keep\nthis matter under review and\nbefore they get into a situation\nwhere they are producing 200,\n000,000 tons more of steel for\nPeking that they would give\nsome thought to the problem of\npeace.\"\nA spokesman confirmed\nThursday that the regime of\nChancellor Ludwig Erhard had\npledged a 350,000,000 - mark\nguarantee ($87,500,000) for the\nproject that would involve construction of plants for China's\nyoung steel industry. The plants\nare to be built by an international consortium of Western\nEuropean firms headed by a\nGerman company.\nChildren Celebrate\nBelated Christmas\nVICTORIA (CP)-The miracle\nof Christmas came true- Saturday for Suzanne and Christopher Baker.\nTinsel glistened on a Christmas tree in a sun room at the\nRoyal Jubilee Hospital where\nthe children had been in comas\nfor two months.\nThey were injured Dec. 22\nnear Medford, Ore., while driving with their family to California for a Christmas holiday.\nDoctors at first thought Christopher, 10, would not live and\nSuzanne, 13, might never recover from her coma.\nBut they did recover enough\nto be flown here Jan. 10. Together in the same room, they\nmade slow progress at almost\nthe same rate. A record player\nwas brought to their side and\ntheir mouths formed the words\nto their favorite songs.\nThree weeks ago Suzanne\nspoke. Within a week she was\nsitting up and talking to Chris\ntopher as he slowly recovered\nOn Saturday Christopher had\na special gift for his mother,\nMrs. James Baker. He looked\nup to her and said, \"Hi mum.\"\nYOUNG JIMMY MITCHELL, son ol Mr. and Mrs.\nI. H. Mitchell, formerly of Salmo, is shown receiving\nthe Royal Canadian Humane Association Certificate\nat ceremonies in Vancouver recently ior his rescue of\nShirley Tkachuk of Salmo, from drowning in the\nSalmon River in 1963.\nArrested After Body Found\nPartially Hidden in Brush\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Two men were,,charged with capital murder Saturday\nnight in connection with the beating and strangling of William Darryl Bohart, 31, who\nhad been awaiting trial on fraud charges.\nCharged were Arlie Durling, 31, and \u00a3 .ward Dow, both of Vancouver.\nThe pair was arrested several hours afier.police.found Bohart's body partially hidden in brush in Stanley Park Friday night,\nBohart had been free on bail,\nawaiting trial on a charge of\nconspiracy to defraud two banks\nof about $7,200 with cheques\nstolen from a Seattle trust company.\nTwo persons were questioned\nat the police station and later\nreleased. One of them was dental nurse Muriel Kennedy, 37.\nShe denied reports she tipped\noff the police concerning Bohart's death. Such reports, Miss\nKennedy  said,  \"may  as well\nsign my death certificate.\"\n\"These reports suggest I rat-\nfinked,\" she told reporters.\n\"That is completely untrue.\"\nPolice were maintaining secrecy on details of the slaying,\napparently hearing it might lead\nto a second slaying.\nStaff-Sgt. Bill Porteous of the\npolice   department's   homicide\nRussia and France\nMay Pay UN Deficit\nPope Paul Calls Pending Talks\nStep to Catholic - Anglican Union\nStage Pro U.S.\nDemonstration\nWARSAW (AP) - More than\n100 persons staged a brief pro-\nWestern demonstration Sunday\nwhen U.S. Ambassador John\nGrouski emerged from listening\nto a sermon preached by Stefan\nCardinal Wyszynski in Holy\nCross Church.\nGrouski, a Polish - speaking\nRoman Catholic, attended the\nservice with his wife.\nThe Polish government has\nhinted it will stop Cardinal Ys-\nzynski from making a trip to\nthe United States and Canada in\nAugust.\n29 Die\nOver Weekend\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nTraffic claimed all but two of\nat least 29 persons killed accidentally in Canada during the\nweekend.\nA Canadian Press survey from\n6 p.m. local time Friday to late\nSunday night also showed one\nfire death in Manitoba and a\nman killed in Ontario.\nQuebec's nine traffic fatalities\nincluded four persons killed in\na 100-mile-an-hour police chase\nnear Huntingdon, 40 miles southwest of Montreal. The victims\nwere occupants of a car pursued\nby municipal police.\nOntario and New Brunswick\nreported four road deaths each\nwhile Alberta and British Columbia each had three.\nMichael Ramsey, Archbishop Of\nCanterbury and leader of^the\nAnglican church which\" split\nfrom Rome 450 years ago.\nThe pontiff called the talks a\n\"beginning toward union.\"\nHe spoke of Ramsey's visit,\nbeginning Tuesday, when he\ngave his Sunday blessing from\nthe window of his study to\nthousands of pilgrims gathered\nin St. Peter's Square.\n\"It is not yet a visit of perfect\nunion but it is a visit of friendship and of a beginning toward\nunion,\" the Pope said.\n\"Therefore, we are moved,\nanxious and happy. Let us pray\nthat the Lord may grant to His\nchurch that unity of all Christians which He recommended\nto us so much.\"\nAn Archbishop of Canterbury\nvisited the Vatican only once\nin the last six centuries. This\nwas a courtesy call by Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher on the\nlate Pope John XXIII in December 1960.\nRamsey has been invited to\nstay in the Venerable English\nCollege   for   training\nRoman Catholic priests\u2014Itself a\njtetr o^how the atmosphere for\nChristian unity has improved as\na result of the Vatican council.\nAmong his party are two\nbishops \u2014 Canadian Bishop\nRalph S. Dean of the Caribou,\nexecutive officer of the. Anglican\ncommunion, and Bishop John\nMoorman of Ripon, England,\nsenior Anglican observer at the\ncouncil.\nRamsey's first meeting with\nthe Pope during his three-day\nvisit will be Wednesday morning and will be held in the\nVatican's Sistine Chapel\u2014where\nconclaves are held for the election of popes\u2014so as to under-\nlinethe importance of the talks.\nThe two leaders will have a\nlong private talk in the afternoon, and hold their third meeting Thursday..\nUNITED NATIONS (AP)-\nSome diplomats expect that before mid-year France and the\nSoviet Union will announce voluntary contributions to help\nwipe out the UN peace-keeping\ndeficit they themselves helped\ncreate.\nThe diplomats said so Sunday\nin predicting a special committee of 14 financial experts would\nagree this week on minimum\nand maximum figures as to the\nactual size of that deficit last\nSept. 30, the date chosen for\nthe committee study.\nThey said they expected the\ntwo figures will lie somewhere\nbetween $31,000,000 and 433,000,\n000. The committee report ia\ndue by the end of this month.\nHighly developed countries,\nincluding France and the Soviet\nUnion, have promised to make\n\"substantial contributions\" toward solving the financial difficulties. The committee's figures will be a guide in determ-\ning how much is substantial.\nThe deficit results mainly\nfrom refusal of several countries to pay General Assembly\nassessments for the cost of the\nUN peacekeeping forces in the\nMiddle East and The Congo,\nOf $121,000,000 due the United\nNations in back assessments,\nmore than $17,000,000 is charged\nagainst France and more than\n$60,000,000 against the Soviet\nUnion for the peacekeeping operations. But if the committee\nreports the deficit is between\n$31,000,000 and $53,000,000, each\ncan contribute a substantial\npart of the shortfall and still\nbe paying much less than its\nassessment.\nand robbery division had told\"\nreporters Friday night:. \u2022;;;\" '\u25a0'\nI wish to hell you people had;\nnot found out anything. We're liable to have another murder, by\nmorning.\"\nBut later police said the slay-:\ning of Bohart was not a gangland killing.\nThey said Bohart visited an.\napartment before the slaying\nwith three other men. A woman\nwas already in the apartment.\nToward midnight an argument'\nstarted among the three men.'\nThere was evidence of fairly\nheavy drinking.\nBohart was later attacked\nand a fight started.     \t\nBohart was slain only hours\nafter he was released from jail.\non $2,500 bail.\nCommon Market Entry\nBritish Election Issue\nLONDON (CP)-Brltain's possible entry into the European\nCommon Market has suddenly\nbecome one of the hottest issues in the campaign for the\nMarch 31 election.\nOpposition Leader Edward\nHeath has made Britain's entry\none of the Conservative party's\nEnglish main planks.\nReport Russian\nUnderground Blast\nWASHINGTON (AP)-An apparent Soviet underground nuclear test\u2014the second in five\nweeks\u2014was reported Sunday by\nthe U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.\nThe AEC statement said seismic signals recorded early Sunday \"were equivalent to those\nof a nuclear test in the low-in-\ntermediate to intermediate-yield range.\" But a spokes\nman would not say definitely\nthat the Russians had conducted\nanother test at their test site\nin the Semipalatinsk area of Soviet Central Asia.\nThe low - intermediate range\ncovers explosions have force\nequivalent to 20,000 to 200,000\ntons of TNT while the intermediate range covers 200,000 to\n1,000,000 tons.\nThe AEC made the same sort\nof announcement Feb. 14.\nThe Soviet Union has been\nconducting underground nuclear\ntests in the Semipalatinsk area\nfor some years.\nMeanwhile, public opinion\npoll findings showed Sunday the\nConservatives seemed. virtually\ncertain to suffer a smashing defeat at the hands of the ruling\nLabor party.\nWith only 10 days to go before the election, all the polls\nthe Conservatives have\nfailed to make any impact, in\nthe big popularity lead accorded Labor.\nSunday's poll reports Labor\nwith an 11-percent lead over the\nConservatives \u2014 exaotly the\nsame as when Prime Minister\nWilson announced the election\ndate two weeks ago.\nSupport for Labor is\nmated at 5H4 per cent, Conservatives at 40_ per cent, with\n7_ per cent for the Liberals.\nThis is the biggest lead given\nto any party at this stage of a\nBritish election and experts predict Labor could be the first\nparty since 1931 to win more,\nthan half the popular vote from\nthe electorate, which now totals\n36,000,000.\nThe Labor minister of transport, Mrs. Barbara Castle Sat\nducing the Common Market issue in desperation. Nothing\ncould show greater subservience\nto foreign governments, she\nsaid, than to go into the Common Market.\nFriday Prime Minister Wilson\nsaid:\n\"Given a fair wind, we will\nnegotiate our way into the Common Market, head held high,\nnot crawl in, and we shall go\nin if the conditions are right.\n100 Killed in\nUganda Quake\nKAMPALA, Uganda (Reuters)\u2014More than 100 persons\nwere believed killed Sunday in\nBwamba, eastern Uganda, in an\nearthquake which shook wide\nareas of the country.\nMany more were injured by\nthe quake, which demolished\nhomes and a dispensary in the\ntown near Fort Portal, about 150\nmiles west of Kampala, early\nSunday morning.\nNowlan To Return\nTo Commons Seat\nWOLFVILLE, N.S. (CP)-J.\nPatrick Nowlan, Progressive\nConservative member of Parliament for Digby-Annapolis-\nKings, will be back in his Commons seat today.\nMr. Nowlan left the Commons\nlast Tuesday as a gesture\nagainst Liberal reluctance to\nclear his late father from involvement in the Munsinger\ncase.\nAt his home Sunday, Mr. Nowlan said \"the duty to my constituents transcends my personal and emotional reaction to\nthe situation.\"\nHe said he had made his\n\"protest and point\" and he\nwould stand again after the\njudicial inquiry into the case is\ncompleted \"and ask that the record that carries this oblique\nreference be clarified.\"\nMr. Nowlan said he had re\nceived overwhelming sympathy\nfrom his supporters and constituents in his move but there\nhad been,. in some cases, misunderstanding as to \"the distinction between not sitting in\nthe House and resigning from\nthe House,\"\nOpposition Leader Diefenbaker brought the elder Now-\nlan's name into the Munsinger\ndebate in the Commons with an\noblique reference March 14.\nMrs. Munsinger later was\nquoted in reports from Munich\nas saying she never met George\nNowlan. \t\nJ. Patrick Nowlan last Tues.\nday asked the government to\nremove his father's name from\nspeculation about involvement\nwith Mrs. Munsinger, whom\nJustice Minister Cardin had -\nsaid was involved with two or\nmore Diefenbaker ministers.\nWinnipeg Said All Safe\nAs Flood Crest Nears\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Premier\nDuff Roblin Sunday reported\nsteady progress on flood preparations in Manitoba.\n\"As far as we can tell at present, everybody behind the primary dike is safe,\" he told a\npress conference.\nHe said a Red River flood\nurday accused Heath of intra- crest prediction of 26 to 28 feet\nin Winnipeg was unchanged and\nwas more likely to be nearer\nthe 26-foot level.\nPreparations for a higher\npeak were continuing, however,\nand the Canadian Army was to\nbegin sandbagging operations in\nthe Elm Park area of Greater\nWinnipeg Sunday.\nDiking  operations have dis-\nAstronauts Rest After Mysterious and Dangerous Space Journey\nBy JOHN BARBOUR\nCAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)\nWith dramatic color films spotlighting their ordeal in space,\nthe Gemini 8 astronauts got\ntheir first real day of rest Sunday\u2014the mystery of their dangerous hours apparently solved.\n\"The film makes all the other\ndetective work seem unnecessary,\" said Paul Haney, Gemini\ninformation officer.\nCommand pilot Neil Armstrong and pilot David Scott\nwent through a systems review\n\u2014then kicked the traces for\nsome real relaxation.\nThe filins of their fantastic\u2014\nand unscheduled\u2014space acrobatics were made public Saturday night on the heels of an\nannouncement that a short circuit in a manoeuvring jet\ncaused the wild gyrations of the\nspacecraft.\nScott and Armstrong watched\nthe films on television Saturday\nnight\u2014the first time they had\nseen them\u2014and Scott expressed\nsurprise that the films had come\nout because of the rapid changes\nin light and darkness.\nDOCKING WAS PERFECT\nThe films showed the steady,\nslow manoeuvres of the Gemini\n8 as Armstrong homed in on the\ndocking collar of the Agena\ntarget rocket. The docking was\nperfect.\nThen suddenly there was erratic movement, betrayed by\nthe quickening changes of sunlight as the spacecraft began to\nroll and flip.\nQuickly, Armstrong backed\nGemini 8 out of the Agena and\nthe gleaming white target\nrocket seemed to disappear to\none side.\nThe Gemini 8's motion became even more startling. The\nearth's brilliant blue and green\nimage tumbled across the\nspacecraft window with greater\nand greater speed. The small\nportion of the Gemini's nose in\nthe camera's view began to spin\nrapidly into sunlight-darkness-\nsunlight.\nShortly before it released the\nfilms, the space agency made\npublic the result of the investigation into what had caused the\nfrightening episode in space.\nA thruster set to give the\nspacecraft sideways motion\nfired for three seconds, then\nshut off three  seconds-,  then\nfired continuously. The crew\nwas unaware what the trouble\nwas. All they knew was that the\ncombined spacecraft was beginning to buck and roll.\nSpace officials complimented\nArmstrong and Scott on their\n\"extraordinary piloting skill in\novercoming this very serious\nproblem and bringing the spacecraft to a safe landing.\" They\nsaid no pilot error was involved.\nWhen the spacecraft separated, the roll continued. The\nroll was so fast that \"the crew\nrealized they were approaching\ntheir physiological limits.\"\nIt took almost 30 minutes for\nthe two pilots to get control of\nthe Gemini 8 again\u2014finally using a secondary control system\nand shutting off the main manoeuvring jets.\nThe space agency released its\npreliminary findings to shut off\nspeculation on the cause of the\nshortened flight and the fearsome tumbling in space. But its\nstatement said the short circuit\nwas only the probable cause for\nthe jet trouble, and it could be\nmonths before the real reason\nbehind the jet malfunction is\npinpointed.\nrupted traffic in some parts of\nthe city  and two transit; bus\nroutes have been altered as a\nresult.\nMEETING HELD\nThe provincial flood control\ncentre held meetings in flood-\nthreatened municipalities of\nGreater Winnipeg to acquaint\nresidents with the flood situation\nin their area.\nThe Red was expected to\ncrest at Fargo, N.D., 230 miles\nsouth of Winnipeg, Sunday. The\npredicted peak was 27.5 feet\u2014.3\nfeet above Sunday morning's\nlevel and three feet lower than\nthe 165 crest.\nAt Morris, 35 miles south of\nWinnipeg, diking of low-lying\nareas begins today.\nAt Emerson, on the Manitoba-\nNorth Dakota border, 4,000 feet\nof diking has been completed to\na level 788 feet above sea level,\nThis would bring it nearly three\nfeet above last year's flood\npeak.\nThe Red, meanwhile, remained frozen at Winnipeg : although puddles from melting\nsnow were beginning to form on\nits surface.\nI\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH 21, 1966\nPreparing for Services at Sacred Heart\n\"\"SERVICES RECOMMENCED SUNDAY in the Sacred Heart Catholic Church ior its Ukranian members\nunder'the direction of Father B. Lysak. Formerly of\nEdmonton, Father Lysak arrived in Nelson Friday\nevening.\nFather Lysak, within the Order of Saint Basil the\nGreat, conducted the High Mass in the Ukranian language, However, only some parts were sung in pure\nUkranian.\nAfter the Mass, the congregation and guests attended a luncheon banquet. Representing the city\nwas Aid. Kennedy Facchina who, on behalf of Mayor\nLouis Maglio and the council members, extended best\nwishes for the whole parish. He stated that the city\nwill co-operate with the newly re-activated group and\nexpressed his pleasure at their reopening. He also\nmentioned the volunteer work which saw the church\nana rectory built.\nGuest at the luncheon was city engineer, M. D.\nPuriak who encouraged members to exert themselves\nto the utmost In order to keep the parish strong and\nactive,\nA short speech of welcome to Father Lysak was\npresented by Mrs. Mary Bajowsky, president of the\nWomen's League. Serving as master of ceremonies\nthroughout the meeting and banquet, was Paul\nPryshlak.\nAfter the speeches, a slate oi officers was elected\nto the church's organization. President Paul Pryshlak\nwill be aided in his duties this year by Mr. Puziak as\nsecretary and Ray Carmen as treasurer.\nNew oiiicers were also1 elected for the Women'*\nLeague with the result that Mrs. Michalina Ludwlg\nwill be the president ior 1966 and the position oi\nsecretary went to Gloria Preshlak. Mrs. Ella Kashluba\nwill serve as the vice-president with the treasurer\nRose Bachynski.\nAlter the election, the meeting was adjourned to\nallow members oi the congregation and guests to\nmeet their new padre.\nEaster Egg\nDrive Aids\nChildren\nthe annual Elks Easter\n_gps Drive will be held this\nweek.\nOnce a year an appeal it\nmade to Nelson residents to donate to the Elks Purple Cross\nFund, established to help children In need,\nJOck Nlven, Exalted Ruler Of\nNelson Lodge No. 444, stated\nthat the Elks Lodge Is one of\nmore than 200 across Canada,\ncontributing to the Elks Purple\nCross Fund.\nThe Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of Canada\ngranted over half a million dollars In assistance to Canadian\nchildren In need during the past\n10 years. Contributions to the\nNational Fund from Nelson Elks\nhava made possible financial\nassistance to many children under 16 yean, whose parents\nwere unable to tak\u00ab <\u2022\u00bb\"\u25a0 \"f\nmedical or surgical attention the\nchild required. This fund has\nsupplied wheel chairs, hearing\naids, eye glasses, artificial\nlimbs, and numerous treatments, not covered by any other\nwelfare organization,\nMr. Nlven also stated that the\ndelegates at the 53rd Grand\nLodge Convention voted for an\nannual amount of $18,000 to bursaries for deaf students.\nNelson Elks will make a house\nto house canvass selling Easter\nEggs.\nCommons Hears Statement\nOn Sewer Proiect Loans\nIn a recent House of Commons tral treatment plants or both,\ndebate, Labor Minister J. R. for the collection and treatment\nNicholson made a statement con- of sewage from one or more\ncerning sewage treatment pro- municipalities\nject loans under the National\nHousing AOt.\nNicholson's statement mentioned an amendment to tha National Housing Act In December\n1\u00ab60 authorizing Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation\nto make loans to provinces,\nmunicipalities or municipal sewage corporations.\nThis act offered the loans\nfor projects consisting ot trunk\nIn continuing the minister Ot\nlabor's statement read, under\nthis provision of the National\n| Housing Act, such loans are\nmade in an amount not exceed\nIng two-thirds of the cost.\nThey ara made at a favorable\n| Interest rate, which Is currently\nm per cent for a term not exceeding the useful life of the\nproject, or 50 years.\nCentral Mortgage and Housing\nfor projects consisting oi iruu\u00bb    *-\u00bb\"\u2022\u2022-  .-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-=- -,.- j\", h-\nsewage collector systems, cen- Corporation Is also authorized by\nPlan July Camp\nAt Kokanee Glacier\nthe Said act to forgive 25 per cent1\nof the loan on the completion of\na projeet,\nIn order to qualify for forgive-\nnest of 25 per cent of the loan\nthe government believes that an\nextension should be allowed until\n[March mo.\nKaslo Resident\nDies Suddenly\nIn connection with the Centennial projects for B.C., the\nBoy Scouts have planned a\nweeks camp to be held In Kokanee Glacier Park from July\n30th to August 8th.\nThis project is being organized by the Regional Scout Executive and assisted by Bob\nClark, District Commissioner\nfrom Kettle Elver.\nThe project will probably involve clearing several hiking\ntrails in the park and possibly\nbuilding one or two foot bridges\nNelson Boys' Choir\nThrills Audience\nNew Priest Begins Duties\nAt Sacred Heart Church\nDrive-in\nWork Starts\nConstruction on a drive-i\u00ab ret-\nAfter a recess ot one year for\nthe congregation Father B. Lysak, O.S.B.M., newly appointed\npadre of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Nelson, arrived\nFriday to take on the duties of\nadministering a widely scattered\ndistrict. His responsibilities encompass the congregations of\nUkrainian Catholics in Creston,''\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar. B.C.\nTonight and Tuesday\n7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\nADULT ENTERTAINMENT\n\"AMERICANIZATION OF\nEMILY\"\nJamtS Garner, Julie Andrews\nCARTOON\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTrail, B-C.\nFREE\nELECTRIC CAR HEATERS\nTonight and Tuesday\n7:30 p.m.\n\"MOVE OVER DARLING\"\n(Color)\nJames Garner, Doris Day\nCARTOON and SINGLE\nCranbrook, Nelson, Trail, Grand\nForks and Castlegar.\nConducting his first mass In\nNelson, next Sunday will see the\npadre in Cranbrook. The distances between congregations will\n[pose his major difficulty and he\nmentioned that Easter Sunday\nwill see him travelling between\nNelson and Cranbrook in order\nto conduct both 6 o'clock and 11\no'clock services.\n\"Since the second Vatican\nCouncil,\" he stated, \"that services have been conducted in the\nvernacular or the language of the\npeople.\" Thus the masses will be\nsung in Ukrainian.\nA member o fthe Order of Saint\nBasil the Great, the padre began\nhis education at Mundare, Alberta, and continued his study of\nlanguages at the order's college\nat Grimsby in Ontario. His study\nof Philosophy was undertaken at\nGlen Cove on Long Island in New\nYork state. Taught by the Jesuit Fathers, tie spent four years\nstudying Theology in Rome at\nthe Gregorian University.\nOn July 5,1953 Father Lysak\nwas \"ordained to the piresthood\nand in 1954 he returned to Canada. He travelled to Edmonton\nwhere he spent eight years Serving four parishes   and  working\nduring the summer for the St. Basil's Villa.        .\nDuring these eight summers,\nhe saw over 3,000 children taught\nat the villa. They came to the\nlake to study courses designed to\nprepare them for their first communion and were instructed in\nthe histories Of their parent's\ncountry and Canada. Language\nstudies were also conducted.\nFather Lysak stated that the\nchildren had ranged In age trom\nseven to 13 years of age. He mentioned that it had been hard\nwork but very rewarding as the\ndevelopment of each individual\ncould be seen. They came from\nB.C., Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.\nCommenting on the work te It\nfaced with here, the padre stated\nthat the most difficulty will be\ne n c o u ntered in travelling\nthroughout the district and attempting to make complete visitations to his congregations. His\nmain goal will be to increase the\nactivity Of each parish in order\nto maintain their support and interest.\nSt. Paul'a \u2022 Trinity United\nChurch was filled to capacity\nSaturday night when the NelsOn\nBoys' Choir, Choristers and guest\nOerformer Bill Dyson presented\na well received and amply varied program of song.\nIncluded in the two hour performance was the ever popular\n\"Blue Danube\", which was sung\nby the entire Boys' Choir. This\nwas composed that evening Of 34\nyOung people ranging in age from\neight years to 13 years Old. The\ntaurant on a buifding site 500 ')0J\"!   Sangl   b'sidw the \"Blue\nyards from the Nelson bridge Danube\"   several   other   part-\non the North Shore, began this sonss- Their 8<mS\u00bb   dealt   wltn\nweek. subject  matter   from  Russian\nThe A 4 W 4rive-in, which will folklore to the comical \"Croco-\nevening was the singing of Bill\nDyson from Victoria. In his\ntreble voice he presented the\n\"Trumpet Anthem\", a much celebrated choral work, Well received for his performance, he\nwas called back for an encore.\nAccompanying the groups on\nthe piano was Mrs. Hugh Harbison while the trumpet part was\nplayed by Paul Gergcley. Choral\ndirection was supplied by Mrt.\nT. J. S. Ferguson.\nCelebrating their 35th anniv* .\nsary this May, th* NelSOn Boys'\nChoir will present another concert to mark the occasion.\nTo make this venture successful,\n12 to 16 Scouts throughout the\nregion are invited to take part\nand although part of this time\nwill be devoted to work, there\nwill also be sufficient time to\nexplore the park and glaciers\nand do some fishing.\nBasic requirements for the\nScouts will be: a minimum age\nof 14, no Scout grad requirements, must have previous\ncamping experience and be in\ngood health and willing to work\nFood and camping equipment\nwill be supplied though each\ncamper will be expected to supply his own personal gear. Uniforms will not be used during\nthis camp.and each participant\nwill have to provide his own\ntransportation to and from Nelson. Estimated coat will be approximately $12.\nDistrict Scout leadtr Gordon\nFleming who was Involved in\nan automobile accident recently\nis In good condition as of March\n14 and he is allowed visitors at\nthe present turn\t\nbe owned and operated by R. W.\nAllen ol Nelson, will be constructed In the latest Style with full\nplate glass frontage and partial glass siding.\nMr. Allen's lot will take up\nan area of 17,000 square feet\nand when completed will accommodate 37 vehicles in Its\nparking lot.\nMr. Allen will leave March 20\nfor Winnipeg where he will take\na 3-week training course.\nThe Nelson A&W will be one\nof 2500 in North America.\nKaslo lost a well known citizen In the sudden death of Mrs.\nF. S. Chandler on March 16.\nMrt. Chandler was born hi\nJune, 1889 and came to Kaslo\nas a bride in 1907 from London\nEngland. She has been active in\nmany organizations during her\nmany years residence in the\ncity.\nShe was one of the first members of the Kaslo Golf Club,\nwhere she took many prizes,\nMrs. Chandler also worked for\nthe Red Cross during the two\nWorld Wars and was a member\nof the Women's Institute, school\nboard, hospital auxiliary and\nSt. Mark's Anglican Church.\nShe will be well remembered\nfor her long years with the\nI.O.D.E. where she ran their\nrummage room for several\nyears.\nIn 1962, she was predeceased\nby her husband and In 1955 by\na daughter.\nSurviving Mrs. Chandler are\nher son, William Chandler of\nKimberley and two daughterss,\nMrs. Fred Lindstrom of Sloean\nCity and Mrs. Roy Green of\nKalso.\nAt tht time Of her passing,\nshe had 11 grandchildren and\n10 great grandchildren. One Sister, Mrs. Amy Bergln in the\nUnited States and another sister and brother itt London England, alto Survive Mrs. Chan-1\ndler.\nEvans Funeral\nServices Held\nFuneral services will he held\nWednesday, March 29, for the\nlate Mrs. Lily Alemeda Evans,\nwho died in Nelson oh Sunday.\nMarch 20.\nMrs. Evans was born in New\nBrunswick but came to Cranbrook at an early age, where\nshe married Daniel S. Evant.\nThe pair resided tn Cranbrook\ntor a number of years then\nmoved to Vancouver where Mr.\nEvans died. Mrs. Evans had resided in the Nelson area since\n1945 and had been organist in\nthe Baptist Church in Cranbrook\nfor a few years.\nShe is survived by 1 son, Dan\nSherman Evans of Campbell\nRiver and 1 daughter, Mrs. A.\nB. Neilson of Riondel and S\nTandchlldren. One of her brothers, Douglas Finnis lives in\nCranbrook. while Clarence Finnis is in Penticton.\nPlan Parking\nMeter Test\nA test is to be run on two\ntypes of parking meters. Thla\nwas decided after Aid. D. F.\nPorteous stated that a company\nproducing a manual variety had\noffered. to allow the test to be\nconducted for 120 days with their\nmachines at no cost to the city.\nRevenue would be turned over\nto the city. Meters presently\nused must be replaced. The dual\ntype or automatics cannot be\ntested without their purchase.\nCouncil approved the test.\nBrought to council was a proposal for the extension of transportation service to. six-mile with\ntwo trips daily. This will be done\non a trial basis with fares to be\ndetermined later. Council moved\nto allow this extension as an\nexperiment.\nPLANNED COOL HOMES\nEarly Egyptians cooled their\nhomes by soaking the walls\nwith water.\nFluoridation Successes\nReported bv Health Unit\ndlle\" song frOm \"Peter Pan\"\nwhich eight of the boys Sang as a\ngroup.\nUnaccompanied the Choristers\npresented the \"Merry Madrigal\"\nended the concert with\nBalfe's \"The Bohemian Girl\".\nTwo members of this group, Kit\nMurista and David HerblSon presented a duet by Purcell. In a\nvibrant bass voice, Donald Oddie\nsang solo, \"Hear Ye Winds and\nWaves\" to \"the appreciative audience. I\nOne of the highlights  Of  the'the earth's surface\nBoy Rings Alarm\nA small boy was responsible\nfor a false alarm fire call in\nmid-afternoon Friday, It was reported. Nelson fire department\nanswered the call to Victoria\nand Hendryx streets.\nCOLORS RISE HIGH\nThe  aurora borealls  occurs\nI between 40 and 130 miles above\nTONIGHT - TUES. ONLY\u2014Shows 7:00-9:00\nAll ABOUT A MAN WHO LOVES A GIRL.\nWHO LOVES A DOG...      :\nWHO'S CONVINCED HE'S A MAN!\nony   (teline\ni His;   ftauimari]\nKokan Tells Kiwanians\nOf Preventative Medicine\nRites Held for\nJ. M. Watson\nFuneral services for Jonathan\nMiller WatsOn Of 410 Josephine\nStreet, who died in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Tuesday,\naged 62, were held at the Thompson Funeral Home, Friday afternoon, The services were conducted by Hartland M. Cinch and\nInterment took place in the\nSoldiers' Plot in Nelton Mem:\norial Park.\nHymns Sung were. \"Jehovah\nGod, My Sht(*erd\" a*d \"JthO-\nvah, our Song,\" with Mrs. w. a.\nManson at the orgatt. Pallbearers\nwere J. H. Wynne, Thomas\nWynne Charlie Wynne, Led\nKnowlmayer, W. H. Stevens and\nAntonio Amoroso.\nWrfanriUtonderliil'\n.\u2022LARRY STORCH \u2022 MARTY INQELS \u2022 JULES MUNSHIN\nJACQUES AUBUCHON.,_ PIERRE OLAF\nCIVIC\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed While\nYou Walt\nPROMPT SERVICE\ntt Is Your Privilege te Chops*\nYour Pharmacist.\nCHOOSE\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\nPhone 352-2313\n6S\u00ab \"niter St., Nelson\n\"Our concern should not bel Chine, and hit body w*t *0t cOn\nfor the building of more hospitals ditioned to the mechanisedI en\n.    . ,,       \u00b0       ,    ...     _.ii       ,        ..    tali   \u00bbL.,.I_I   (Itnaai\nbut avoidance of th* misery'\nwhich made hospital! necessary,\" declares Dr. Peter KOkan\ndirector oi the Selkirk Health\nUnit in Nelson.\nDr. KOkan was speaking to the\nKiwanis Club in connection with\nNational Health Week, hit topic\npreventive medicine.\nHOspital Costs have become astronomically high and today\nCanada is-spending six per cent\nof the gross national product on\nhealth services, he said. Doctors\n\"are being worked to the point\nOf exhaustion\"\nWith life expectancy increased\nfrOrrt 40 to 6(1 years at the turn\nOf the CChtufy to 79 and more\ntoday, health concern had turned\nfrom diseases no longer deadly\nto increasing deaths from heart\ndiseases, the various cancers and\naccidents. The stresses and\nstrains of longer life had made\npeople more Susceptible to these.\nWhile control had been gained\nof communicable diseases, there\nwere dark clouds on the horizon\nbecause of changing environments that were making life\nmore hazardous.\nThere .was a tendency for man\nto become a slave of the ma\nvironment. His physical fitness\nwas deteriorating because he nO\nlonger walked even Short distances   and   ate   high-calorie\nfoods.\nAlcohol, once used at a relaxant or stimulant, wat nOw often\nused to relieve anxieties and\nfears and there was increasing\nmental illness. Our environment\nwas also becoming polluted by\nindustries which dumped their\nwastes Into water or sent them\ninto the air.\nCigarette smoking waa another\n| pollutant which Contributed to\nlung disease. Contributing to the\nunhealthy environment alto was\nthe Increasing number of industrial and traffic accidents.\nWhat could the ordinary Citlsen\ndo while medical research was\nconducted into more effective\npreventive medicines?\nHe suggested heart disease\ncould be prevented by increasing\nexercise, better diets and health\nhabits to help maintain a healthy, strong heart. Excessive food\nstored body fat which presented\nadditional loads on the heart. Additional stralnt and stresses\nshould be avoided.\nKiller No. 2, cancer presented\nproblem* but one-third of all\nknown cancert can now be prevented by prompt treatment.\nCigarette Smoking left the addict\nwith 10 timet as much Chance Of\ngetting cancer.\nKiller No. 3, accidents was\nreceiving more and More Study.\nNearly all accidenta Could be\nprevented and he urged more\nsupport of safety organizations.\n\"We mutt moderate Ourselves\nand think in terms of maintaining health rather than curing\ndisease,\" Or. KOkatt concluded.\nBrentford, Ont., teenagers kept\nbetter teeth by using fluoridated\nwater over a WH-yOar period\nthan Other areas which were\nfluoride deficient, the Selkirk\nHealth Unit reported recently.\nThis project, which began in\n1945, ran concurrently with two\ntests in the V. S. in Newburgh,\nN.Y., and Grand Rapids, Mich.\nIn the report, it was stated the\nthree-city Canadian Study compared the teeth Of Brentford\nteenagers who have had fluoridated water for 17_ years with\nteeth ot control groups In nattir\nally fluoridated Stratford and\nSarnla which Wat fluoride deficient.\nResults of the IMS thrte-way\nComparison of teenagers of 18\nand n the Selkirk Health unit\nreported -as follows: Percentage\nof children with decay-free permanent teeth: 11.60 per cent in\nfluoridated Brantford and 14.78\nper cent in naturally-fluoridated\nStratford against 0.41 per cent\nin fluoride deficient Sarnla.\nThe Unit also said that the rate\nof missing or irreparable teeth\nper 100 children: 37.62 in fluoridated Brantford and 41.85 in\nnaturally fluoridated Stratford\nagainst 1.1.33 in fluoride deficient Sarnia.\nDecayed, missing, filled rate in\npermanent teeth per child: 4.74\nItt fluoridated Brantford and 4.19\nin naturally-fluoridated Strattord\nagainst 10.44 in fluoride-deficient\nSarnia.\nThese three measurements\nshow expected dramatic differ\nences between experience in the\ntwo fluoridated towns as compared with the fluoride-deficient town, but show littte statistical difference between the effects of controlled and natural\nfluoridation.\nter supply, the health authorities\nand the practising physicians of\nBrantford and Stratford did not\nreport any ill effects either.\nIn summing up the health unit\nStated that \"In th* final Survey\nreported in the Journal of the\nCanadian Dental Association\n(August, 1965), Drs. H. K.\nBrown attd Myron PoplOve state:\n'No caset Of unsightly mottling\nwere observed among the children examined in Brantford and\nStratford. Neither did we observe\nany ill effects attributed to the\npresence of fluoride in the wa\nOur FIRST and MOST\nIMPORTANT\nRESPONSIBILITY\nIs the DISPENSING at\nMEDICINE and PROVISION\nOF PHARMACEUTICAL\nSERVICES.\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nComer Baker and Ward\nPh. 352-2613 Nelson\nGethoppin'\non Spring shoppin'\nIn The Courts\nHit and Run Charged\nSamuel . aittOff Of Nelton was\nCharged with hit and run driving. He pleaded guilty and wat\nfined \u00ab200.\n' In'family court, Judge Evans\nheard a juvenile charged with\nhaving possession of alcohol. He\npleaded not guilty and the case\nwas dismissed when he was\ngiven the benefit of the doubt.\nAnother case in City Court was\nthat of Mitchel Bragnolo of Nelson who was charged with '-v-\ning no licence plates on hit au\ntomobila. He pleaded guilty and\nwas fined 445.\nCrossing a single solid line\ncost Winlaw resident John Stoo-\nshinoff $10. He had pleaded\nguilty in a Provincial Court ses^\nsion before Magistrate Evans.\nNot producing a pink slip when\nasked to do so cost John P.\nMcCrea, Castlegar minor, $25.\nHe had pleaded not guilty but\nthe magistrate found him guilty.\nB. C. VOCATIONAL SCHOOL - NELSON\n(Sponsored by Federal \u2022 Provincial Government*)\nPREPARE NOW FOR A SUMMER JOB\nShort Upgrading courses in COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS tor people with Some knowledge in these fields\nwho with to brush up their Skills.\nCOURSES:\n60OKK|_PlN_.\nBUSINESS MACHINES.\nMACHINE TRANSCRIPTION.\nSHORTHAND.\nTYPEWRITING,\ncontinual intake from March 21st, i96i to May isth\n1966 inclusive.\nCourse termination date: June 36th, 1666.\nFEES: $15.00 per month.\nApply tO:\nThe Principal,\n116   I  l|UVipiai|\n?,t. Vocational School,\nP.O. Box 480,\nNELSON, B.C.\nPhone: 354.601.\nGet tn HFC\nShopper's Loan\nWhat'a on your spring shop.\nping list? New clothes . . .\nthings for the house ? Get them\nwith a Shopper'* Loan from\nHousehold Finance I\nFor larger expenses,\nborrow up to $5000\nwith up to 60 months\nto repay. And check\nOur lower rates on\nloans Over $1500.\nAetna m. lit, Itthrit hlnclpil ind Irtttnat aftiTara utat\naa prtmtt roiMiaal tul la aot inciud. w. taat af Ilia liuarinca.\n.   .     \u25a0  AaX-Mut-     '\n.   taditlllt'lniuiMM\nOS loans It low group rates.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANC\nNILION\n608 Baker Streets-Telephone 352-5575\n(ol J'-nphine above Burn lumber Store)'   '\nThe Notre Dame\nCurling Club of Nelson\nWould like to express their appreciation to\nthe merchant* and corporations of Nelson.for;\ntheir donations to the N-D.U.C.C. qnnual\nbonspiel.\nsample's Pharmacy\nPierre's Cafe\nWOolworth's\nSutherland'! Music Shop\nGodfreys' Ltd.\nCivic Theatre\nlimpseat-tetrt\nStiver King leverages\nPalm Balnea\nHlpperson't Hardware\nAtlas Brush Co.\nKen's Cafe\nWood Vallance Hardware\nHudson's Bay\nOliver's Book Store\nIrene's Ladlef Wear\nBe*'* Ladles' Apparel\nKootenay Cleaning Centre\nMilady's\nMCLeed't\nNelton Stationers and\nOffice Equipment Ltd.\nten* - Whlmster   Printing\nLtd.\n=C\n\u25a0J\u00bb>\n*\n ONE OF MANY colorful, animated scenea in British Columbia Centennial Committee. Centennial Caravan, which will be unveiled in Victoria Friday night, is Captain Cook's ship, The Discovery, at anchor in Friendly Cove,\nNootka, Electronic science brings history to life, art director E. F. Stidder, left,\nexplains to L. I. Wallace, general chairman of the committee, and Robert H.\nGillespie, executive assistant. The caravan, consisting of two 55-foot truck-\ntrailer units, is open to the public.\nCreston...\n$40,000 Money Bylaw\nReferendum Proposed\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH 21, 1966\u20143\nKimberley Awards Sidewalk Contract\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Kimberley\nCity Council awarded a tender!\nfor 1800 feet of sidewalk to the\nFabro Building and Supply Company at their bid of $258 per lineal foot of four foot walk.\nUnder this tender work is\nscheduled to start on Norton and\nHiggins streets as soon as possible.\nA tender from Toostrop Construction for a retaining wall on\nthe corner of Jennings and Spo\nkane streets was awarded for a\nbid of $4500. Under this an 80-\nlineal-foot wall, 11 feet high will\nbe built. A second tender had\nbeen received from Fabro fori\n$5400.\nBidding on a half-ton truck,\nSullivan Motor's bid of $2725 less\n$350 plus 5 per cent tax was\napproved.\nAn application for a loading\nzone in front of a local food store}\nwas received and after a great\ndeal of discussion, it was moved\nI CRESTON (Staff) - Creston\ntown council will go to the people\nwith a $40,000 money by-law to\npurchase equipment,\ni Financial chairman, Mayor\nH. L. Dodd, said it was the only\nmethod he could devise to secure this machinery without increasing the millrate. He will\ngive a full explanation next\nweek to the press of his proposals.\nCouncil went on record as\ncongratulating Creston Sawmills for its effort in trying to\neliminate fly ash. This was in\nanswer to a letter of complaints\nbom the Creston Valley Tourist\nrelative to fly-ash.\ni When It learned of the following financial successes, Council backed the Creston-Erickson\nCentennial committee's note for\nthe proposed $20,000 Centennial\nlibrary-museum complex.\nWith a population of 5200, gov\nernment grants of $1.00 and 60\ncents per capita; donations from\nLions Club $724; Lister, $50;\nPCSS grades, $75; donation, $5;\nfrom Grads, $75.00; donations\n$5; from Blossom Festival,\n$3000; CVTA, $1000; Kiwanis,\n$2000 for a total of $15,174.\nI This would leave a balance\nrequired of $6826 which would\nbe further reduced by pledges\nfrom the Royal Canadian Legion\nef $1,000, Lions Club, $2000 and\npublic subscription.\nThe remaining amount required of $3,826 would be obtained from special subscription lists and public donatins.\nI Department of Highways\nclaim the problem at Canyon\natreet and 10th avenue intersection is not one of signs but lack\nof RCMP enforcement on left\nturn violators.\nThey will make a summer\ntraffic count of the intersection\nand place the present signs in\na more conspicuous position.\nCouncil gave their support to\nthe Regional District's recommendation B.C. Hydro's property and plants be taxed for both\nmunicipal and hospital purposes.\nCreston council sees no reason\nwhy B.C. Hydro should not be\nC. \"Bill\" Shields\nPresident\nSHIELDS\nPontiae - Buick Ltd,\nA Good Man\nTo Know\nPH. 352-5505\nassessed for all purposes when\nother dam installations are now.\nbeing assessed.\nCouncil has under consideration two methods of keeping\ncitizen doing their frontage\nsidewalks clean either by assessing property owners or each\nclean-up.\nIn order to stop vandalism and\nsecure maximum civic safety,\nthe council did these things: Will\nuse old main street lamps and\nlight up Centennial Park; passed\na by-law prohibiting the sale of\nfireworks or their being set off\nwithin the civic limits; prohibit\nthe use of firearms, BB guns,\nair rifles within civic limits; install link fence around Pioneer\ncemetery.\nIn equipment matters, the\ncouncil will sell its old street\nsweeper and bristle-widening\nmachine, and at the same time,\nmake a down payment on a hard\nsurface roller which will cost\n$3500.\nThe three to five ton machine\nwill be brought back to Creston\nby civic equipment.\nValley Automotive Ltd. won\nthe tender for a compact car for\nthe fire chief. The used vehicle\nis a 1963 Ford Falcon priced at\n$1280, plus tax. Three garages\ntendered a number of cars.\nThe Texaco company won the\nbid for all petroleum requirem\nments of the town at $4132, for\nthe year. The volume was set\non last year's .requirements\nOther companies' bids were;\nBA, $4354; Shell Oil, $4179; Imperial Oil, $4285; Royaiite $4184.\nAs soon as a master switch\nbox arrives, the new street\nlights will be used.\nThese are also equipped with\nplug-ins for use of Festival colored street lighting.\nThe matter of a water line\nwhich poses a threat to Anglican\nChurch property will come under investigation.\nR. L. Morrison and Alderman\nG. Knezacek explained to council a number of properties which\nwill be changed to give more\norderly appearance and road\nallowances.\nAccounts passed for payment\ntotalled $11,200.\nNakusp...\nResidents Hear\nHydro Officials\nNAKUSP (Staff) - A meeting\nof interested people from the Village of Nakusp was held recently\nto inform citizens of what the\nB.C. Hydro plans to do to 2,000\nfeet of Nakusp waterfront.\nB.C. Hydro proposes to cover a\nslope of 1 on 2 and one-half with\neither rip-rap or soil cement.\nThis is not acceptable to the people of Nakusp since they feel if\nit is rip-rapped or soil cemented\nnow, the beach will be gone forever.\nThese citizens feel that the protection of their waterfront is for\nall time and therefore the cost\nmust be considered on a long\nterm basis. For this reason the\nlength of the Columbia River\nTreaty must be taken into consideration in computing the cost.\nA public meeting was also held\nto give the people of the district a\nchance to hear the engineering\nreport delivered by Mr. Brawner.\nThese citizens want a 1 on 7 slope\ninstead of the proposed B.C. Hydro 1 on 2 and one-half since the\nformer will give them 125 feet of\nbeach while the latter gives only 39 feet.\nA total of 22 families or busi-\nwill be affected if this 1\non 7 slope is made, over and\nabove those who are being bought\nout by the B.C. Hydro for the 1\non 2 and one-half slope.\nPeople of Nakusp feel that they\nmust have the 1 on 7 slope to give\nthem a safe beach along the\nwaterfront to attract tourist dollars.\nto place a 12-minute meter from\nin front of the liquor store at the\nparking spot in front oft he store\non a trial basis.\nIt was announced that the Spokane diversion costing $19,500\nwill be divided into two phases\nThe first phase involving installation of storm sewers will be\nstarted as soon as possible. The\nsecond phase will have to come\nafter the finalization of the\nbudget.\nMETER MAIDS\nIntroduction of meter maids\nwas discussed with the committee responsible proposing a full\ntime salaried position for the\nhours of nine to five o'clock,\nTuesday to Saturday. It was suggested that a female university\nstudent be employed during the\nsummer months.\nHowever, it was felt that a\nperson requiring training and\nuniforms could not be employed\nonly for an eight-month period.\nIn this connection it was also sug\ngested that the position of dog\ncatcher and meter reader be\ncombined into one good paying\njob entitled Canine and Car Control.     '\nMeanwhile the issue has been\nreturned to the committee for\nfurther study.\nOn the fluoridation question,\ncouncil approved an immediate\nstart on the setting up of fluoridation equipment.\nCouncil received and moved\nnoted the assessment from the\nRegional District. This amounted\nto $27,025.\nUnder the question of real estate the council instructed the\ncity clerk to arrange for someone in the city hall office to be\nenabled to give information pertaining to the price of lots and\napplications, this to be done in\nthe absence of the city assessor |\nDavidson.\nAID SKATERS\nA request for a grant from the\nKimberley figure skating club\nfor $300 was approved in principle by the parks board.\nIt was moved to send a letter\nto the community chest requesting some payment on grants.\nAnother request was received]\nby council came from the residents of the Swan subdivision for\na play park in the immediate\narea. It stated there are over 100,\nchildren in the subdivision. This\nwMl be considered in the 1967\nbudget. However, it was noted\nthat a park area has been designated behind the Viewpoint\nLodge block.\nAlderman C. Kinrade, of the\npublic relations committee, announced that they had after\nmuch discussion decided upon\nan illuminated scroll to be given\nto citizens in recognition of out-1\nstanding achievement. Council\nwholeheartedly approved this\nsuggestion and sample scrolls\nare to be drawn up for final\napproval by council.\nOn the question of the noon-\nopening of the city hall, the committee in charge reported itself\ndeadlocked and the issue will be\nheld in abeyance.\nA request will be made to look\ninto the matter of traffic after\nthe hockey game. It has been\nnoticed that it appears to be\npiling up at Waltinger and Mark\nstreets and at Archibald and\nWarren.\nUnder new business the Village\nof Marysville requested a reduction in electricity rates. Council\nreplied that no change in power\nrates is contemplated at this\ntime.\nfrom city auditor Max Tenenbein\nfor an increase in fees for the\n1966 audits. This increase was\napproved. Original fees for the\nCity of Kimberley books and the\npark board audit amounted to\n$1800 and -200 respectively. These\nnow amount to $2000 for the\nbooks and $250 for the park\nboard.\nA letter from R. M. Strachan,\nMLA, requesting support of a\nrecently proposed bill on air pollution was read to the aldermen.\nCouncillors replied that while\nthey were unanimously in favor\nof pollution control they would\nwish time to circularize copies\nof this for further study.\nA permit was approved for the\ninstallation of gas tanks at a\nKimberley tire construction site.\nBACKACHE and\nRHEUMATISM Pain\nAfter 21 twice as many women as men\nare made miserable by common urinary\nirritation caused by a germ, Escherichia\nColl. To quickly combat the secondary\naches, muscular pains and disturbed sleep\ncaused by Kidney and Bladder Irritations,\ntry taking 2 little OYSTEX tablets with\na glass or water 3 times dally for a few\ndays. OYSTEX is a cleaning urinary antiseptic, also-an analgesic pain reliever for\nRheumatism, Sciatica Pains. Headache.\n,. Backache, and muscular pains, Get\nAnother request was received oystex from druiBint, Feel better fast\nCreston...\nFruit Growers\nMeets Planned\nCRESTON (Staff)- Two meetings for the benefit of fruit growers will be held in Prince Charles\nSecondary School's Cafeteria, in\nCreston, on March 22-23, sponsored by the B.C. Department of\nAgriculture.\nAn introductory course for novice fruit growers, will be held\nin the cafeteria Tuesday, This\ncourse is being designed for\nbackyard and hobby gardeners\nwho wish to grow better quality\nfruit. Some of the topics which\nwill be covered are: sprays and\ntheir use, the recognition and\ncontrol recommendations for the\nmajor pests and diseases of fruit\ncrops, as well as,  pruning  and\nfertilizing.\nThe Cherry Fruit fly, which\nruins thousands of pounds of\ncherries annually, will be the\nsubject of the special fruit growers meeting on Wednesday.\nGuest speakers for these meetings will be R. S. Downing of the\nSummerland Research Station,\nand J. C. Arrand and J. A. Mois-\ney of the British Columbia Department of Agriculture in Vernon and Kelowna.\nBill Peters, horticulturist at\nCreston, will be program chairman.\nRossland...\nChamber Elects\nChapdelaine YP\nROSSLAND (Staff) - Andy\nChapdelaine was elected vice-\npresident of Rossland Chamber\nof Commerce at the regular\nmeeting held Thursday evening.\nThe election completes the\nslate of officers for 1966 with Don\nAdams as president and Roy\nFines, secretary-treasurer. During the meeting it was decided\nto complete several more of the\ncrossed-ski standards which will\nbe added to those already In\nplace in the downtown area.\nFlower baskets will again be suspended from the standard during\nthe  summer months.\nLack of directional signs at\nthe Sheep Lake junction of Highway 3 and 3B again came up\nfor discussion and a check will\nbe made with the Department\nof Highways.\nThis check will find out what\nprogress has been made in regard to having these erected.\nAlso in connection with the\nSheep Lake-Rossland highway, a\nletter was received from the\nHon. D. L. Brothers advising\nthat hot-mix paving would be put\non the road this summer.\nThe Chamber agreed to support the work of the \"Welcome\nWagon\" organization which has\nrecently started operations in\nRossland and a letter from the\npresident will welcome all newcomers to the city.\nThe meeting agreed to renew\nits efforts to obtain improved\nbus service for residents of this\ncity and the Greyhound company will again be asked to inaugurate a daily east-west run\nthrough Rossland by way of the\nnew Sheep Lake highway.\nFormer Sandon\nResident Dies\nFormer Sandon resident, Mrs.\nEugenie Petersen died in Spokane recently, after a lengthy illness.\nSurvivors ara three sons, Eugene of Sandon; Arthur of Spokane and Harwick of Spokane;\nand two daughters, Clara Dorey\nof Kellogg, Idaho, and Gunly\nPetersen of Spokane.\nHarrop . . .\nForm West Arm\nGun Club\nHARROP \u2014 A general meeting of the Harrop Community\nCentre was held recently, during\nwhich a new Gun Club was formed and named the West Arm\nGun Glub. The executive were\nelected and are; president, G.\nMcFarlane of Harrop, vice-president, T. Sicotte, of Sunshine\nBay, secretary, Miss G. Parsons,\nHarrop, field Captain, C. Lipin-\nski, Longbeach, Instructors; L.\nMartin, Procter, G. Martin, Sunshine Bay, M. Radulovich, Procter, R. Sutton, Harrop, Mac McKay, Balfour, F. Flegal, Long-\nbeach and M. Goble, Harrop.\nPress correspondent, J. Sutton. The 20-yard range is for\n.22 rifles. Shooting sessions begin at the Harrop Community\nCentre, when the ground has\nbeen prepared.\nThe aim of the Club will be\nfor proper instruction of fire\narms with emphasis on safety\nand other peoples rights and property as well as recreation and\ncompetition for awards presented by Dominion Marksmen of\nCanada.\nCranbrook...\nWoman Injured\nIn Car Crash\nCRANBROOK - Julia Walton\nof Creston was brought to Cranbrook by ambulance Friday afternoon, after the vehicle in\nwhich she was riding turned several somersaults and careened\noff the highway, four miles west\nof Cranbrook. Her injuries are\nnot believed serious.\nAn unidentified passenger in\nthe wrecked vehicle was brought\nto Cranbrook by private car,\nhowever he had sustained no serious injuries.\nNelson Man\nAttends Course\nMr. and Mrs. John DeJong of\nNelson attended the B.C. Artificial Insemination Centre triree-\nday technician refresher course\nat Milner, B.C.\nThe technicians attended lectures and took part in discussions\non reproductive physiology, basic steps of hard management\nand in new developments in artificial insemination.\nWASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson has signed a bill\nauthorizing $415,000,000 of foreign aid funds for South Viet\nNam and other world trouble\nspots. The White House said\nSaturday the measure, also\nauthorizes additional aid for\nLaos, Thailand and the Dominican Republic with most of the\nmoney \u2014 $275,000,000 \u2014 going to\nSouth Viet Nam.\nAn Important Message\nto all STUDEBAKER\nowners and buyers\nAfter serving the transportation needs of\nNorth America for more than 114 years,\nStudebaker has discontinued the manufacture of automobiles.\nBut, Studebaker of Canada, Limited wants\nall Studebaker owners and buyers to know\nthat it will continue to provide nationwide\navailability of parts and service.\nThis will be accomplished through Parts\nDepots, listed below, which are strategically located across Canada. If a servicing\ndealer does not have needed parts on hand,\nmost parts in most areas are available by\novernight delivery. More than $20,000,000\nworth of parts and accessories are inventoried in our North American warehouses\nto protect Studebaker owners' investments,\nand to assure them continued service from\ntheir cars. (Studebaker of Canada, Limited\nis still supplying parts for Packard vehicles,\nalthough production was discontinued some\nten years ago,)\nPARTS DEPOT LOCATIONS\nMontreal, Quebec\n6402 Cote de Liesse Rd.\nWinnipeg, Manitoba\n1474 Wellington Avenue\nHamilton, Ontario\n349 . errie Street\nVancouver, B.C.\n1098 Southwest Marine Drive\nThe national network of Studebaker Service\nDealers will continue in operation \u2014 with\nfacilities to perform any service your Studebaker may need. In communities where\nthere is no Service Dealer, any independent\ngarage can secure genuine Studebaker\nparts through the nearest Service Dealer or\nParts Depot.\nThe 2-year or 24,000-mile warranty on\nStudebakers will be honored by the dealer\nfrom whom you purchased your car or by\nany authorized Studebaker Service Dealer.\nYou need not have any concern regarding\nthis warranty; its obligations will be honored\nfor any Studebaker that is still within\nwarranty.\nThis continuation of service and availability\nof parts is your assurance that you will be\nable to maintain your Studebaker in good\nmechanical condition for many years.\nBecause it is, and always has been a fine\ncar, we are confident that you will continue\nto receive a full measure of value from\nyour Studebaker.\njk    Ch i_-|__-Kl-.lri_J>\n1_F      OF CANADA.LIMITED\nHAMILTON, ONTARIO\n'.    -,;,-. -    \u25a0\nffiMflftf\"'\"' \"    \u25a0\u25a0\"\"\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0'?(\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 :~     ~    \"~    -.-\u25a0-;.---.      - \u25a0- '\"..\"\" \u25a0      ';     \"\u2022       '\n NH00tt latlij \u00a3JVuti-\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nNelson, B.C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n.66 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except.\nSundays and holidays, in the centre of the Kootenays with\n^the largest daily circulation in the Interior of B.C.\nNews Editorial Pa\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS, THE CANADIAN DAILY\nNEWSPAPER  PUBLISHERS   ASSOCIATION,   AND   THE\nAUDIT BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for\nrepublication of all news dispatches credited to it\n'\u25a0'               or to the Associated Press or Reuters in\nthis paper and also the local news\n published herein.\t\nW\/iereivirfial for a\nComeback\n\"'.'\u25a0'.\u25a0' Ten years of wide awings in capital spending suggest that Canadian businessmen and Canadian government officials might well ponder the benefits of a recent\nSwedish experiment in removing the excesses from business cycle ups and downs.\nDuring boomtime periods, the Swedes urge their\ncompanies to set aside up to 40 per cent of pretax profits\nin a special reserve fund earmarked for the future capital\nspending. Almost half of this must be deposited with the\nSwedish central bank while the remainder can be added\nto working capital. The aim is to reduce inflationary pressure^, by postponing spending.\nWhen it's decided that.the economy is again in -\n.need of stimulation, a government board announces that\nthe funds may now be used. The projects thus financed\n\u2014may .\u00bb written off at once and the entire sum escapes\ntaxation. The scheme is voluntary, but the tax incentive\nprovides a powerful reason for participation.\nIndications are that the idea works well in practice. The first release of funds took place in 1962 when\nthere were signs that the Swedish economy was slowing\nand unemployment would soon begin to rise. Recent examination of the results shows that IS per cent of total industrial construction in the year following the release of\nfunds could be attributed to the reserves. Unemployment,\nin short, never had a chance to rise.\nCertainly the Canadian economy could do with a\ndose of similar medicine. Note the experience of recent\nyears.\nIn the boom of 1955-57, capital spending leaped\nahead in annual bursts of up to 28 per cent. Wholesale\nprices of industrial materials went up by a remarkable\n9 per cent in 1955. Living costs, which held fairly steady\nin 1954 and 1955, jumped 3 per cent during 1956 under\nthe pressures ol heightened activity.\nThen, as a result of overbuilding, outlays for new\nfacilities flattened out\u2014and unemployment rose from\n3.7 per cent to 7.8 per cent in the 18 months between the\nbeginning of 1957 and the middle of 1958.\nCurrently, spending is again leaping ahead. This\nis the third year of a new capital boom. Prices are rising\nfaster than at any point since the inflation brought about\nby spending at the time of the Korean War. There is a\nshortage of workers once again..\nOur erratic boomor-bust performance is in sharp\ncontrast to Sweden's success in stretching out its capital\nspending. It suggests that Canada might well consider\nsimilar moves now to skim the excess off the expansion\nond bolster business activity when it begins to falter.\nFinancial Post.\nMonday, March 21, 1966\n\"But I gotta follow them\u2014I'm the leader\nHave You Tried Qriticare?\nIn this highly competitive society, individual members of the public are accustomer to the flattering attentions of the men with something to sell, and their coaxing\nand their giveaways.\nPoliticians are a part of this gay'hurly-burly. They\nhave something they urgently want to sell\u2014their services\nand their ideas\u2014and are sometimes prepared to go to\nremarkable lengths to gain our approval, or even our attention. It is easier for the party in power; it can make its\nsales pitch with a tempting budget But what has the Opposition to offer but promises?\nThe executive committee of the Toronto and District\nLiberal Association may have hit upon the answer. It intends to open an office in the east end of the city at which\nsuch services as free legal aid will be made available.\nThe area, it should be noted, is one in which the\nLiberals detect a party weakness and so it may reasonably be inferred that the free legal aid is intended as an\ninducement. Which citizen, after all, wou]d be so heartless\nas to vote Conservative after a Liberal lawyer had plucked him from the jaws of Kingston Penitentiary?\nThe idea of having a friendly neighborhood ombudsman with party affiliations (Lei a Grit get you offl)\nis not without popular appeal, but how well does! it fit\ninto the present scheme of things? Will the Law Society\nor Attorney-General Arthur Wishart for that matter, take\nit to their hearts? \t\nThere is at present a system of free legal aid in\nwhich lawyers volunteer their services and Mr. Wishart\nhas indicated that a new government-financed system\nmay be ready next fall.\nDo the broad principles of competitive enterprise\napply here or are the Liberals undermining the whole\nthing with an arrangement which looks a lot like a loss\nleader? When Mr. Elmer Sopher becomes a special introductory offer we may have a better idea.\u2014Glob and Mail.\nThe Railways\nIn theory few Canadians will deny that the nation's\ntop-heavy and uneconomic railway system should be reorganized and its excessive costs reduced, as so strongly\nurged by the MacPherson royal commission. But once the\ntheory is applied in practice, even marginally, the railways and the government find themselves condemned for\ncurtailing transportation services, even those that are\nclearly superfluous.\nProtests of this sort, and some purely political manoeuvres among the opposition parties, induced the HouBe\nof Commons to establish a special committee on the passenger services of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The CPR\nmanagement, having made a sorry botch of its public\nrelations, welcomed this inquiry because it offered the\nchance to get the facts into the open gt last.\nThe first fact is that the CPR lost huge sums on its\npassenger services last year; the second that many of\nthese services are quite unnecessary; the third that the\nrailway in trying to diminish them, has followed precisely the report of the royal commission and the stated policy of the federal government.\nParliament's inquiry, so far, is limited to the privately owned CPR. It does not touch the publicly-owned\nCNR. But the transportation system owned by the Canadian people requires study just as much as its competitor,\nperhaps more.\nThe CNR did not follow the advice of the royal\ncommission and minimize its redundant services. On the\ncontrary, it expanded them on a vast scale in the belief\nthat they could be made profitable if they were offered\ncheaply enough. As an experiment in the mass sale of\ncheap travel, the CNR remodelled much of its equipment,\ncut its passenger fares drastically, provided free meals\nand presented the public with an attractive bargain.\nAs a result, traffic showed a rapid increase. At the\nbeginning of the experiment it appeared that the CPR and\nthe royal commission were wrong, that the passenger\nbusiness could be made economic if its prices were sufficiently low. It soon became clear, however, that this\nbold initiative, except in a few areas of special traffic den\nsity, was a financial disaster.\nAs the royal commission found, it is unrealistic to\nsuppose that the nation escapes the burden of redundant\nrailway services merely because they are supplied by\nprivate owners. All the machinery, materials and manpower used in these services are diverted from useful production\u2014this at a time when the national economy is under grave Inflationary strain. And as the Economic Council of Canada is constantly warning the nation, it cannot\nafford that kind of avoidable waste. '  \u2022\nThis advice was wise when the royal commission\nsubmitted it some years ago before inflation became a\nserious danger. It is still more valid now and especially\nvalid in the present year. Both the transcontinental railways face immediate wage demands which, if granted in\n\u25a0 total, would enormously .increase their operating costs\nand even if granted in part would increase them substantially. With or without a nation-wide railway strike next\u2022\u25a0-\nsummer wage rates are going up, to some extent anyway.\nHow are they to be paid? The railways cannot raise\ntheir passenger fares and freight rates significantly for\nthis would turn more of their traffic over to their competitors who enjoy large hidden subsidies in the shape of\nhighways, airports and other facilities built by public authority. Subsidies of more than $70 million a year are already being paid to the CPR and the CNR to cover previous wage increases and a suspended freight rate increase. Are these to be increased further at the taxpayers' expense?\nWinnipeg free Press.\nTeachers Ask Most Questions\nStamp Corner: Varied Shapes\nBy JEAN SHARP\nTORONTO (CP) - Teachers\nask 97 per cent of all the questions asked in school, says a\nU.S educationist who believes\nit should be. \u2022 the other way\naround.\nDr. Richard Suchman of\nWashington has developed a\nprogram for encouraging students at junior high school level\nto teach themselves. They use\nscientific research techniques\nof question, experiment, theory\nand  more question  in  science\nDr.   Suchman   demonstrated\nhis   Inquiry Development  Program .at a Toronto conference <\nattended by Ontario educationists and the press.\nHe  says  pre-school   children\ngahter facts for themselves and\nlearn by experiment. When a\nchild gets to school, the rules\nare changed, and he is expected\nto accept the correctness or incorrectness of information because of what someone tells\nhim. He is rarely encouraged\nto question or test information,\nmerely to repeat it at exam\ntime.\nDr. Suchman says his program teaches creative, analytical thinking rather than a set\nof facts. Students are not told\nanswers are right or wrong but\nare encouraged to formulate\nand test their own theories. .\n. The program includes brief\nfilms and equipment to demonstrate physics problem.\nAn ice cube floats in one glass\nof liquid, sinks in another. The\nchildren ask questions to be\nanswered yes or no. Was the\nliquid in both glasses water?\nWere both cubes frozen water?\nThe teacher may expand an\nanswer, but basically he substitutes for a laboratory and se=\nries of experiments by providing necessary background data.\nIf the class does discover one\nliquid was water, one alcohol\nand the water ice tube sank because it was heavier than alcohol, they are not even then told\nthey are right and that the experiment is finished.          .\nBy JAMES MANTAGNES\nStamps come in strange shapes\nthese days. The triangular and\ndiamond shaped stamps are no\nlonger unusual. In recent years,\nthere have been gold-leaf cir-\n-cirtar embossed stamps, 'island-'\nshaped stamps and map-shaped\nstamps. There are large square\nstamps, long narrow stamps and\nlarge rectangular stamps which\nlook more like.labels.\nIn  the  souvenir-sheet varity\nthere are small and large souvenir sheets with one, two or\n. more stamps  and  inscriptions\nHUBERT\nCanada's Art on Display\nMULHOUSE, France (CP)-\nThe arts, the industry and the\nhistory of Canada will be on display for 12 days early this summer.\nThousands of tourists are ix-'\npected from neighboring communities of Alsace in eastern\nFrance and from across the\nnearby borders of Germany and\nSwitzerland for the \"Canadian\nDays* being staged by this Al-\nsatia^city of 120,000.\n\"Wtare presenting Canada to\nthe Mulhousians and their visitors ta give them a chance to\nknow .that country and its\npeoplif;\" a senior city official\nsaid if in interview. \"It is part\nof ourV: program of world friendship. 'I\nEvefy two years, Mulhouse\nhonoii a different country. On\nprevious occasions, the city\nspotliejietd Italy, India and\nSweden.\n\"Although the actual celebrations this year don't start until\nMay 23, the local Chamber of\nCommerce is planning a trip for\na-large group of its members\nto Canada in April and the\nRCAF band from Marville,\nFrance, has already paid a\nwarm \u25a0 up visit here.\nTO DISPLAY ART\nArrangements have been\nmade for a series of public displays of Canadian arts. Contemporary art from across Canada,\nprinted fabrics from the University of Toronto, Eskimo\nKarsh, wood carvings and Canadian books are among the items\nchosen.\nMontreal conductor Jacques\nBeaudry will direct the Mulhouse Symphony in a series of\nconcerts and there will be recitals by Canadian artists living\nor \"studying in France.\nTRUPy, IF VDU WANT TO   N\nASK MESSMETHING.PON'T\nSHOOT AT ME FROM THE\nOTHER ENPOFTHE HOUSE--,\n-I FINP IT AUNOViMG .'JUST\nCOHAETOTHE ROOM I'M\n__.   IKI ANP ASK ME-\/\ny\n-_J\non the Borders. At. feast three\ncountries have issued stamps\nin small panes which together\n- \u2022 - -n (flu \"Mure, and more\nthan one country has issued a\n, d,.ips in one sheet.\nThe first stamp to vary from\nthe conventional square size\nwhich appeared in 1840 was the\nCape of Good Hope triangular\nstamp of 1853. For many years\nthis was the most unusual shaped stamp. Then the Australian\nstate of South Australia came\nout with a half normal size portrait stamp of Queen Victoria\nin 1883 and the state of Victoria\nthe same type of stamp in 1901.\nStamps of large format made\ntheir appearance late In the\nlast century as commemora-\ntives, twice as long as their\nwidth in a number of countries.\nDiamond shaped stamps have\nbeen numerous in the past few\ndecades from many countries.\nCircular design stamps with\nsquare sides have been fairly\ncommon for some years, printed\nand perforated in the usual manner. But it was the small British\nprotected kingdom of Tonga in\nthe South Pacific which jolted\nthe stamp worl in 1963 with circular embossed diecut stamps.\nThey were printed partly on\ngold leaf or foil paper, much\nheavier than usual, stamps.\nSince then they have appeared\noverprinted and have been copied by Burundi in Africa and recently by Sharjah in the Arabian Gulf.\nTonga was followed by Sierre\nLeone in 1964 with stamps on\nheavy paper cut in the shape\nof a map of the African country.\nLater that year, Tonga again\nIssued heavy foil stamps die-\ncut and embossed, in the shape\nof a heart and of the main island of the Tonga group. . .\nThere have been small stamps\nand large ones. The first larger\nthan normal stamps appeared\nfrom North Borneo in 1891 for\nhigh values. Egypt has had soma\nextra long vertical and horizontal stamps since 1925.\nFrance has had large format\nart stamps every year in this\ndecade. Belgium has had a number as semi-postal issues. But\nthe largest have come from Poland, which issued one in 1960\nmeasuring 3V_ by 4 inches, and\nsince 1961 has had several measuring 4Vt by 1 inch in size.\nThen there are special sets of\nthree or four stamps together,\nforming one motive or picture,\nwith each perforated section\nhaving a different value. Among\nthese are last year's stamps for\nthe New York World Fair by\nSharjah, last year's stamps of\nFrance for the firing of its first\nsatellite, and Hungary's 1961\nstrip of four stamps showing a\nview of the Danube River at\nBudapest.\nMiniature sheets vary from\none stamp to Cuba's 1960 Christmas stamp in a sheet of 29\nstamps in the shape of a cross,\nand East Germany's 1964 sheet\nof 15 stamps printed, on :a map\nof the country.\nSir Winston Churchill memorial stamps are coming from\na growing number of countries, recent ones received in Canada Including those of British Guiana (top left), Gambia (top\ncentre), and Malta (lower centre). New Zealand has a stamp,\nfor a Boy Scout jamboree (top right), Belgium a memorial\nstamp to Queen Elizabeth (lower left), and Great Britain a\nstamp showing anti-aircraft guns In action during the Battle\nof Britain in 1940 (lower right).  '\nToday in History\nThe rescue department of\nCivil Defence in British Colum-\n. bin is now devising a light rescue unit prototype for use in the\nprovince^.: When it is. complete,\nmunicipalities \u2022 will then be encouraged to obtain a similar\nunit. \u2022?>\u2022_.:: \u25a0\u2022 .:. \u2022-\u2022-. \u25a0\u25a0:. \u2022'.'\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMarch 21, 1966 .. .\nThe bloodless Aroostook\nValley \"war\" ended 127\nyears ago today\u2014in 1839\u2014\nwhen a truce was arranged\nbetween the British government Of New Brunswick and\nthe United States. The\nboundary between Maine\nand New Brunswick had\nbeen in dispute since 1783\nand war seemed immiment\nwhen the United States fortified the line it claimed. A\ncompromise treaty In 1842\ngave both Britain and the\nUnited States about 5,500\nsquare miles less land than\neach claimed. The last U.S.\nboundary claim, also made\nby Maine, was settled in\n1910.\n1621 \u2014 English  settlers,\nsigned their first treaty with   .\nIndians at Plymouth, Mass.\n1801\u2014British  forces  de- .\nfeated the French army of\nEgypt at Alexandria.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1916\u2014German units at Verdun completed their capture .\nof Avocourt Wood; Sir Sam\nHughes,  Canadian Minister .\nof  militia,, conferred  with\nLord Kitchener in London,\ndon,\nIQU1TOS, Peru (AP)\u2014A tourist in the market of this'jungle\ncity said $5 was too much for\na pair of Indian arrows. The\nshopkeeper agreed the price\nwas high but explained, \"They\nare imported from California.\n Cranbrook\nMayor and Mrs. George Had-\ndad and Alderman and Mrs.. Ed\nLeonard have returned to their\nhomes, in Cranbrook after a\nmonth's winter holiday trip. They\ntravelled to Vancouver, Victoria,\nsouth to Reno, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Tucson, then through to\nMexico. Their return journey\nwas via Los Angeles.\nDr. and Mrs. W. 0. Green\nhave returned to Cranbrook after a six-weeks' holiday trip to\nJohannesburg where they visited\nthe doctor's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Colin Anderson. They made the trip by\nair via Rome, and returned by\nway of Portugal where they toured for several days before returning to Canada.\nMrs. W. H. Stender has arrived\nfrom Crescent Beach to visit her\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Elmer Stender.\nAbout Ihe 1c\nown\nPHONE 3S2-3552\nIn honor of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nWeatherley, celebrating their\n25th wedding anniversary Wednesday night, Mr. and Mrs. D.\nF. Shaw entertained 14 guests at\na buffet dinner, followed by a\nsocial evening. The guests of\nhonor were presented with 25\nsilver dollars op behalf of the\nguests.\n. ... a\nHot cinnamon rolls were\nserved when the Unity group of\nSt. Paul's-Trinity held their annual Top o' the Morning coffee\nparty Wednesday morning, with\nabout 70 attending. The hall was\ndecorated in the St. Patrick's\ntheme and the individual tables\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliliiiilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nW. D. Ogilvie Honored\nWith Banquet, Gift\nHARROP \u2014 Several government employees organized a\nbanquet in the Procter Hall, honoring W. D. Ogilvie on his retirement from the Harrop ferry this month. The Procter Women's Auxiliary of the United Church catered to the affair.\nSeated at the head table were Mr. Ogilvie, district engineer R. White and Mrs.. White; District foreman C. Jeffs and\nMrs.Jeffs, Ray Ogilvie and Mrs. E. Piper.\nMr. White presented a gift of an arm chair to Mr. Ogilvie on\nbehalf of fellow workers and district friends and said \"Bunt\"\nwould be \"greatly missed by everybody, when crossing the Harrop Ferry.\" He added that \"many people felt better after a\nfew cheery words from him.\"\nBert Fitchett was master of ceremonies for the occasion.\nFilms and dancing followed the banquet.\nililllillliiiiiiiinniiiiiiiMlllllllllMlllilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllii\nwere centred by tiny Irish po\ntato men, togged out in traditional style.\na   a   *\u2022\nThe Jubilee and Excelsior\ngroups of United Church women\nserved refreshments Thursday\nnight following the choir concert\nat St. Paul's \u2022 Trinity United\nChurch when the choir and\nguests were entertained in the\nchurch hall.\n* *  *\nWhen the Hume PTA executive\nmet Wednesday they made up a\nnomination list of officers to be\npresented at the March 30 meet\ning. They also discussed sending\ndelegates to the PTA convention\nat Kelowna.\n* *  \u2022\nAfter a week spent in Van\ncouver Mr. and Mrs. J. A. C.\nLaughton left Friday afternoon\nto spend 10 days in Hawaii with\nfriends. They then fly to Tokyo\nto spend eight days in Japan\nbefore going on to Manila, Hong\nKong, Singapore, Bankok, Thai\nland, India, Egypt, the Holy\nLand and Greece. They then\nplan to take another tour\nthrough Europe, ending at Lon-\ndon where they will take a flight\nfor Montreal, stopping off at\nOttawa to visit realtives on their\nway home. They will have been\naway about three months, when\nthey arrive back in Nelson in\nJune. Mr. Laughton retired in\nJanuary, after practising optometry here close to 40 years.\nHints From Heloise\nBy Heloise Cruse\nDear Heloise:\nWhen I cook a large roast or\na ham, I slice some, put plastic\nwrap between the slices, and\nfreeze. Then I can take out as\nmany or as few slices as I need\nat any time (and quickly) because they never stick together.\nReader\n* * \u2022\nLETTER OF LAUGHTER\nDear Heloise:\nIf your dog won't take pills,\nput a dab of peanut butter on a\nvery small piece of bread, and\npress the pill into the peanut butter.\nBe sure, though that the dog\nlikes peanut butter!\nBeverly Sanford\n* *  *\nDear Heloise:\nI have an idea that I use and\nfind real good.\nWhen  knitting or crocheting\nHarrop Notes\nA whist drive was held on\nMarch 11 in the Harrop Community Hall. J. Sutton won the\nhighest score in the men's, consolation, E. Spigariol, ladies\nhighest, Mrs. J. McLeod cons.\nMiss J. Iwanik.\nwith two threads, I run the two\nthreads through an empty thread\nspool.\nThis keeps the thread or yarn\nfrom twisting or tangling.\nLida Schwendler.\na   a   a\nDear Heloise:\nWhen I; fill my lining for pillows withi shredded foam, I pin\nthe top.of the plastic bag (containing the foam) to the inside\nof the lining, and shake in the\nfoam.\nThe result is no spills of messy\nshredded foam. '.\nMrs. R. J. M.\nat   *   *\nDear Heloise:\nWhen polishing my toddler's\nshoes, I use a cotton-tipped swab.\nIt's also great for saddle\nshoes, since the applicator that\ncomes with the polish is sometimes too big to do a real neat\njob.\nBarbara DeRosa.\n*  *  *\nDear Heloise:\nTo lengthen a belt, I remove\nthe buckle first. Then I steal a\npiece of the dress material from\ninside the neck facing (where it\nwon't show) to cover the belt\nextension;   then  press  iron-on\ntape to the underside.\nGranma\nDear Heloise:\nI dropped a glass container of\nfurniture polish accidentally, and\nit broke . . . ruining my rug.\nI now use an empty plastic\ncontainer from dish detergent,\nand pour my polish in it.\nNow, it's easier to hold, is\nunbreakable, and I just squeeze\nas little as I want to use at a\ntime. This way, none is wasted,\neither.\nE. Pomerantz.\n.iniiiiimiiiiiiimitiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\nHarrop Honors\nMrs. Piper\nHARROP \u2014 W. A. members\nand friends in the district and\nNelson, honoured Mrs. E. Piper at a Tea held in the Harrop Hall on Wednesday. A gift\nwas presented to her on behalf of the Sunday School\nchildren and their parents and\na special gift from friends.\nThe Harrop Community also\npresented her with a gift.\nMrs. Piper came to Harrop\nin 1922 and taught school in\nthe Little Red Schoolhouse\nwith eight grades, for a period\nof seven years. Children and\nmusic have always been her\nparticular interests and she\nhas been responsible for many\nexcellent Christmas. Concerts\nheld in the district, Mrs. Piper\nhas been a member of the\nWomen's Institute ior many\nyears and also United Church\nWomen's Auxiliary. Nelson\nwill be her new home at the\nend of March.\niiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\n13 Tweenies\nEnrolled\nEnrollment ceremonies Were\nheld March-9 with Mrs. D. Preston, district commissioner and\nMrs. G. Balahura, Brown Owl\nenrolling 13 \"Tweenies\", Wendy\nShrieves, Tammy Koenig, Paige\nBloxham, Lorraine Best, Janet\nStrandquist, Dale Fleming, Colleen Monty, April Duncan: Sandra Duncan, Sandra Bobrownik,\nDebbie Welbourne, Julie White\nand Debbie McGovern.\nEnrollment was followed by\nthe \"Grand How\" for the\nBrownies and district commissioner.\nFirst year service stars were\npresented to Donna Jean Hickman, Kim Koenig and Kelly\nParkins.\nCheryl Todd told of. Brownies\nliving on Baffin Island and Linda\nHubbard, about the Brownies\nin Africa. |\nScrap books made by . the\nBrownies were on display and\nare to be sent to the Endicott\nHome' in Creston.'\nTea was served by members\nworking on Golden- Bar and\nGolden Hand, with assistance\nfrom Mrs. W. J. Perkins, Tawny\nOwl and Mrs. D. Duncan, Grey\nOwl.\nAt Boswell\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH 21, 1966\u2014S\nCouple Notes Qolden Wedding\nA turkey supper and dancej\nwere held in honor of Mr. and\nMrs. Charles Ar Koch of Bos-\nwell when they celebrated their\ngolden wedding anniversary.\nOpen house was held in the Boswell  Memorial  Hall,  with  200\nFruitvale WI\nPlans for\nConference\nFRUITVALE - Mrs. Grace\nGrieve was hostess for the\nMarch meeting of the Fruitvale Women's Institute. The\npresident, Mrs. H. Godin presided.\nPlans were made to attend the\ndistrict conference to be held in\nKinnaird on May 10th, and Mrs.\nAlf. Enderby was chosen delegate. - |\nNominations were sent in to\nboth the district and provincial\nnominations committees for the\ndistrict conference and the provincial conference to be held\nin Vancouver in June.\nThe members worked on dolls\nfor the handcraft meeting on\nMarch 22nd.\nTea was served, by the hostess,\nMrs. Grieve.\nattending. The supper was served by women of the Boswell\ndistrict.\nKenneth Schaub, master ol\nceremonies, opened the evening\n\/ilh the singing of \"0 Canada\"\nand grace was asked by Ernest\nWhitney. Toast to the couple was\nproposed by their son Albert\nKoch on behalf of the family\nand Mr. Schaub proposed a\ntoast on behalf of the community, presenting them with a\npurse.\nMr. and Mrs. Koch were married March 8, 1916 at Calgary\nand farmed in the Nanton district in Alberta until moving to\nBoswell in 1944.\nAndy Patton of Nanton, said\na few words on behalf of their\nold friends in that district. The\ndance and presentation of gifts\nfollowed the supper.\nAll members of the Koch family were oh hand for the occasion, Mr. and Mrs. Whitney\n(Pearl) of Victoria: Mr. and\nMrs. Roy Koch of Creston, Mr.\nand Mrs. Lloyd Phillips (Dorothy! of Nakusp: Mr. and Mrs.\nErnie Koch of Nanton: Mr. and\nMrs. Don Ransom (Bernice) of\nNanton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bur-\nndred (BerylI of Calgary; Mr.\nand Mrs. Percy McGregor (Sylvia) of Boswell and 19 grandchildren.\nOut of town guests included\nMrs. Nora Trumbley, Calgary;\nMR. AND MRS. CHARLES A. KOCH\nBucfcncr Photo.\nMrs. Era Blakely, Regina (Mrs. I Blake; Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nKoch's sister); Mr. and Mrs. Morrison, Nanton; and friends\nAndy Patton; Mr. and Mrs. John I from    Boswell,    Sanca,    Gray\nCreek, Crawford Bay, Riondel,\nCreston, Spokane and Lewiston,\nIdaho. .   i\nGroup Homes Better\nThan Foster Homes\nTORONTO (CP) - Group\nhomes are . replacing foster\nhomes in the Metropolitan. Toronto area as a means of providing a steadying influence for\nwards of the Children's Aid Society..\nThe Kurt Huebners in suburban Scarborough are among\nthis slowly growing company of\ngroup families where six or\nseven \"adopted\" children are\naccepted into the home.\nThe only oddity about the\nHuebners is that their brood consists entirely of teen-age boys,\nmany of whom still recall bitter experiences of foster homes\nwhere they were treated with\nscorn.\n\"We like the outdoors, camping, fishing, sports, and we felt\nthat the relationship with boys\nwas, for us, better,\" said Mrs.\nHuebner. 'Because of our interest, we thought we could give\nthe interest and encouragement\nthat boys need.\"\nThe Huebners, both in their\nmid-30s, have two children of\ntheir own\u2014Achim, 12, and Auria\n9. Other members of their group\nfamily include Mark, Tom and\nDavid, all 15; Greg, 16, and 17-\nyear-old John, who joined the\nCanadian Army six months ago,\nFIRM BUT GENTLE\nBoth trained in child-care\nwork in their native Germany.\nMrs. Huebner worked with slow\nlearners for several years and\namong her qualifications is a\ncourse in psychology which-\nplaces her in good standing\nwith the CAS.\nBut the ability to make a\nhome for adolescent hoys is\nmore than academic. Temper-\nment is a vital quality and Mrs.\nHuebner has that certain paternal flare, being able to counsel\nher children affectionately yet\ndearly define the limits to\nwhich they may go.\n_;\nAnd while Kurt Huebner is\nmuch quieter than his energetic\nwife, he is the head of the family and his word is law.\nAchlm accepts the succession\nof brothers as a matter of\ncourse. And Auria, who resents\ntheir teasing, readily accepts\nthem as brothers.\nIt was only recently that a\nclose school chum expressed\nsurprise that Auria's \"brothers\"\nwere not actually related to her.\nBut with all the relative problems, tha Huebners have adjusted from a family of four to\none of 11 smoothly with the aid\nof the Metropolitan Toronto\nChildren's Aid Society.\nRECEIVE ALLOWANCES\nTheir groceries are bought\nfrom wholesalers through an\nagreement with the CAS and the\nHuebners receive allowances for\nclothing, shelter and medical expenses.\nMrs. Huebner is also a salaried employee of the society.\nDick Lowery of the CAS, supervisor and caseworker, says\nfinancing group homes is no\nproblem.\n\"We have no objection to people who realistically are prepared to give something and get\nsomething in return\u2014and group\nhomes are better paid than\nstraight foster homes.\"\nBasic needs of a group home,\nsaid Mr. Lowery, are energetic,\nwarm parents, sensitive to the\nneeds of youngsters. They\nshould be good-humored, have a\nset of values and the ability to\nset limits, be creative and work\nclosely with the agency.\n\"This is a long-range idea,\nMrs. Huebner says. \"Many of\nthese boys will stay from the\ntime they come until they are\nindependent. That means that\nwe get to know and understand\neach other better than we would\nin the usual foster home.\"\nDear Heloise:\nI purchased an extra flour\nshaker to hold a mixture of flour,\nsalt, pepper, garlic and onion\nsalt, etc.\nEach time I want to flour and\nseason meat, before frying, all I\nhave to do is shake my ready-\nmixed preparation over the meat\nThis seasoned flour Is especially wonderful for making tte\ngravy.\nMrs. Lee E. Marsh.\nWillow Point\nThe regular monthly meeting\nof St. Andrew's-by-the-Lake\nEvening Guild was held at the\nhome of Mrs. F. Heddle. A report was heard on the World Day\nof Prayer Service. The merrtbera\nwere requested to save rummage\nfor a spring sale. A place to\nhold the annual summer garden\nparty was discussed.\nFollowing the meeting, refreshments were served' by Mrs,\nHeddle.\nLARRY ALDRICH\nPRINTED PATTERN\n.\nMost wonderful way, we know, to zip into spring is in a two-\npiece dress by LARRY ALDRICH. For beauty of cut and line,\nthe designs of this famous house are unsurpassed. Printed Pattern A939 has a paneled front jacket with a niftily curved belt\nin back. The slender falling skirt is eased.by gathers below the\nwaist. The slightly widened collar is spring's smartest. Sew it\nwith short or Vt sleeves in wool or wool knit, sleeveless in linen\nor shantung.\nPrinted Pattern A939 is'available in Misses' Sizes 10, 12,-14,\n16,18. Size 10 top requires 2 yards 35-inch fabric; skirt requires\n1% yards 35-inch fabric.\nSend ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern A939 to NJ_N. Pattern Dept., 60 Front St. W\u201e Toronto, Ont. Please print plainly\nYOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, STYLE NUMBER and\nSIZE\nNEW! NEW! NEW FOR 1966! See 57, new cream-of-the-col-\nlections designer originals in our new 1966 Couture Pattern\nBook. Plus 50c free coupon \u2014 apply to any $1 pattern in Book.\nSend 50c now for new Couture Book.\nBound in permanent\nhard ewers. 35,000\nwords of text, with\n128 illustrations,\nmany In full color.\nA special invitation reserved for readers of\nMson laUt} -fatus\nn\u201e_ ac_pf for FREE EXAMINATION\nTJ_EMA__NG OFTHENMON\nThe magrfffcer* ftrtroansteiy \u00abtat?_ fti * _Bdh^f?i_wsHte\u00abfflKfflW)HBttB\ntte __f_-thriHing '\u2022aat.iry \"f f_m_ian hi** _y \"1\"1 M_flwmeia. t__i___ntiart_in>\n1867\n1967\nIn CommemoraStm ef Ha\nOna Hundredth Anniversary\nat Canadian Confederation\nThe Canadian\nCentennial\nLibrary\npresents, aa never before, a s\npanorama of personalities and events\nthat shaped our nation's rise to greatnear\n0.j\na July . 196J, wa celebrate tha CenteMlet-at ear aatt&tttjn\u2014\n\u2022date that marks tha passing of ana hundred adventurous years. It It\naa opportunity for each one of us to look back wi_ pride, ad art tht\naas\u00bbtin\u00bb to look ahead to ow own odour nation's fotae.\nWhat better way to bring this swat occasion into focus tha to ante\nCanada's foremost authors, artists, photographers and editors ta\naxamina our Distinctively Canadian Way of _fe, both past and present!\nThis waa the idea that sparked creation of tha Canadian Centennial\nLibrary \u2014 . major publishing venture for Canadiana, by Canadians,\nabout Canadians \u2014 books -to be read and enjoyed again and again. \u2014\nwords that stir tha imagination, in pictures that highlight the most\ndramatic moments of our Century, these magnificent volumes will\nInspire, inform, entertain and amuse you aa has nothing- ever before\npublished. Moreover, through a special arrangement reserved for\nreaders ef this newspaper, your family can be among the first to\npreview th* cdorfnl volumes now being prepared for tide Mar aeritfc\nSRaStHMflsB CulHleKiWHiniiiip ynii tlWM\n.Copy of (Hs lavishly Hlmtrated Saga of our First\nHontad Yon. lot published, it it Jtm mmamm\nte tea dagi, -HhoBteBIiattat,\nHE __SNS OF THE MMHOB \u201e fin\nchronicle ef Canada's epic Century at\nChallenge \u2014 tte birth of a nation like no\nother; its lite to maturity and greatness,\nMis:\none hundred tab-eat jean fcom 867 ta B6X,\nH^tefciehastheenrnwef onrmemoHiHeCaitlaTf\/\nbeentoughttolif\u00ab\u00bb_ea!_igfi_yas__epag_e<\nthis stirring wlume. Tea dure tile excitement of our\nFounding Fathers aa they transcend all obstacles, boa\n_al and imaginary, to plant the seeds of Confederation.\nFascinating wads and intriguing pietaes t*e y\u00b0\"\nbehind tte Keren, as these men of diverse cnltaes ana\nconflicting ambitions meet to Kndle and aattm an\nwcommon spirit of understanding.\nHen is year opportunity\" to -see\" at first hand tfce\nagonizing Biel Rebellion; the monumental task of bonding the Canadian Pacific Bailroa. the hopeful aniw-\nof countless immigrants who traded despair for I\u2014to.\ndrip. So learn how well our Canadian heritage haa\nendu_rlaniidaeimpa^\"on_kli_ates(ifjeaeeanSwaft\nprogress and poverty,\n\u00bbmateh_tr.a_i\u2014erimrtittle\u2014sro*i_\u00bbrtrj_\n&na_an af_i_, yoa tvMnd-TOM-TOGO. THE\nNATION brimming with entertainment and tnfonni.\ntfon. Written by 'William KHbourn, eminent edncsta\nand historian, this fast-moving documentary is sKlMI.\ncomposed \u00abi ttesuneUvalyei^as-sswsii&rinBiaB\nMDBHpliJ, Be PMnoA KB -SmtfeaWalfa-.\nmauyinfuUcoloi,ffli___tD_e\u00abaBS\u00abM)ilM\u00bblBi*\nMeiggMKRa-\nt%t*tfm*ataa&aMMebl0}lba\nSfe ttafead Jfesoaaa EStta df the C__Sa_\nCentennial Eton, -Mogb, special arrangement wift\nMcClelland and Straatt, ante * poss_~ for leaders,\nefttisM\u00abspapertoobta_'VaffliieIand_\u00bb4comii\u00ab!\nloots on \u2022 tu-jae staripBoi. p-B, at ebout half Urn\nprice jut night expect to pt_ tan* aeedsr xeh*\netas. Bat even WMa sou \u00abm_te tetommg \u2022 \u00abub\u00bb\nec_hertofte\u00abe_%^attcOK_*y_^tt\u00aba_ia\u00bb\nfe^i_l_n\u00bbte\u00bbd\u00bbvT__i_aw\u00abil-\u00ab\u00ab^t\u00bb\nJut m * \u00abe flhrtw aftsafttr Seeanta fla.\ntHfcafe oekwr, ad mail a today, wJttout money; tha\n__fc-_o. ite\u00bbt\u00abitoWr\u00abI>&sbe.'(_lbeeeaWgn\u00bb\n\u00abtonr_Seadand\u00abniby_ftr\u00bbdaj~Its<o4_aa\u00bb\nte\u00bbiti__aia_^\u00bb\u00ab5p_sai_n_i_awfe-n^p_\u00ab\nand mailing, .at wH tten he entitled to nam ft\u00bb\nexamination .copies of fttarewlumeseatte. imp*\nabed, at h__ont_-tends, and tB_ttain ttemat _e\nan_top__\u00abttfa>ilieetini>ynnna\u00ab-i.\nOttawi. a_nm Waa I and anjattttjw\nsnbscripljon'itin_\u00bb<!i\u00ab^anaa\u00bbi_a_rlioto*i\nbe sent. Of\u00abii_e,ti>-eia\u00bbn_r_n_fflrn^<-Woa\nW_\u00bbanclyiamajcaaal3B_\u00bbtae_^^\n__pJyh.i_t_S__\u00ab.\nB_-i\u00bba>a\u00abagoB_M--fce-*\u00bb-B-db\u00abyia\u00ab^\nmonths before another p___g at 'Wane I an m\nB_sdole_ToawiadisaH!(*ta!*_B_^\nMtUXf\nTtoCaiwiisnCtnteaa-\n_b_ry__w_iiBHi_a_\njnaTJefoxa Edition with\nlimulated leather Hading\n(Siecltholmcilrf-i  .\nBeeeroBon Cn-UtClM\nmftffi WtVTON, _Ke_*C\u00ab_i\nA \"distinguished editorial board has been called\ntogether-tb direct the compilation of this series,\nEditor-in-Chief is Pierre Berton\u2014author, columnist\nand television personality. Design and art direction\nare by Frank Kewfeld, winner of 87 awards and\ncertificates of merit. Managing-Editor is Ken\nLefolii, former editor of Maclean's Magazine.\n\u00abtBHJWJNT, RMWSOMC MRMIKI Win\nTO INHANCt AW HOMUIIUltr\nEa_ volume in this series is intended to beVmaster-\npiece\" in itself\u2014vividly written, beautifully designed\nand lavishly printed on such high quality- paper as is\nusually reserved for more expensive books, takot\ntogether, they will f onn \u00bb permanent and handsomely\nmatched fibnuy set sou win refer to again ad again.\nSOME OF THE ILLUSTRATED VOLUMES NOW IN PREPARATION\n\u00a3 THE MAKING OF THC NATION\nA Century of Challenge\n\u2022fe KMEMBER YESTERDAY\nA Century of Photographs\n+ GREAT CANADIAN SPORTS STOCKS\nA Century of Competition\nif GREAT CANADIANS\nA Century ot Achievement\n\u00a3 THC CtNttNNtA. MOO GtMDt\nAContwy of Good Eating\n\u00a3 GMAT CANADIAN MINTING\nA Cenetny of Art\nft GREAT CANADIAN WRWWC\nA Century of Imagination\n<\u00a3 THI CANADIAN LOOK\nA Century of Sights and Stylet\n*\n..    '_      \"\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH 21, .966\nDynamiters Take Game Lead\nWith 54 Win in Spokane\nSPOKANE - Kimberley\nDynamiters took the first game\nof their best of seven Western\nInternational Hockey League\nfinal series with Spokane Jets,\nby edging the Jets 5-4 Saturday night in the American city.\nThe Dynamiters' new \"Nitro\nLine\" of Ken MeTeer, Dick\nVincent and Walt Peacosh accounted for all Klmberley'i\nscoring. MeTeer and Vincent\neach scored a pair of markers\nwhile Peacosh added the other,\nJohn Kenny, Don Scherza,\nFelix LaVallee and Jim Moro\nreplied for Spokane.\nThe two teams battled through-\nout the first two periods with a\n3-3 tie, but the visitors outscored\nthe Jets 2-1 in the final 20 minutes for the victory.\nA crowd of 3826 watched as\nreferee Sarge Sammartino disallowed a Spokane goal midway\nthrough the first period. LaVallee put the puck in the net, but\nit was called back as the officials ruled the Jet forward had\nkicked the puck into the goal.\nMeTeer gave the Dynamiters\na 1-0 lead late in the period,\nbut LaVallee tied the score\nseconds later.\nJensen Captures Main Event in NDU Bonspiel\n. AIRLINE\n\u25a0     CAREERS\nI* MEN AND WOMEN\nTo train for Reservationists,\nI Passenger Agents, Hostesses,\nStation Agents, Communica-\ntionists, etc. Good starting\nI salaries, pleasant working\nconditions, excellent chance\nI for advancement. High school\ngraduates, 17 to 35, get full in-\nI formation today about our\ntraining programs. Mail cou-\n\u25a0 pon.\nI Airlines Training\nDivision,\n.Atlantic School,\n| Box AC 9,\nc\/o Nelson Daily News\nl\nI\n\u25a0 * \u2014\u2022\u00bb \"\u2022\u00bb      \"   \u25a0\n\u25a0 Education _.....  I\nName\t\nAddress \t\nCity & Province .\nPhone Age.\nKEN McTEER\nVincent sent Kimberley a\nhead early In the middle session but the Jets rebounded\nwith a pair of markers for a\n3-2 lead, But penalties gave\nthe Dynamiters the opportunity\nto tie the game, when Tom\nHodges went off at 7:43 and\nless than a minute later LaVallee followed him. With the\ntwo players In the box, Vin\ncent and MeTeer combined to\neven the score going Into the\nfinal stanza.\nTwo goals two minutes and\nthree seconds apart gave the\nDynamiters the lead and from\nthere they hung on for the win\nand the one game advantage.\nThe Jets cut the margin to 5-4\nin the last minute of play when\nMoro tallied with Ken Willey of\nKimberley in the penalty box.\nBut the visitors shut the door\nand took the victory.\nSammartino called nine minor\npenalties in the game, five to\nthem in the first period aa he\nplayed a major role in limiting\nthe Jets to only one goal.\nDave Cox, Spokane's netminder who was the leading goalie\nin the WIHL over the regular\nseason, handled 30 drives in the\ncontest, only eight of them in\nthe first 20 minutes.\nThe series now shifts ta Kimberley for the next game on\nTuesday and then back to Spokane on Thursday. The fourth\ngame will be back in Kimberley on the 26th, and a fifth, if\nnecessary also in the Dynamiters' home rink on tha 29th. If\nthe aeries goes beyond tha five\ngames, the last two will be in\nSpokane on March 31 and April\n1.\nSUMMARY\nFirst Period \u2014 1. Kimberley,\nMeTeer (Peacosh) 15:24; 2. Spokane, LaVallee (Scherza, Turlik)\n15:56.\nPenalties \u2014 Passmore 12:44;\nWilley 16:41; Boychuk 19:25.\nSecond Period \u2014 3. Kimberley,\nVincent (Souter, MeTeer) 1:02;\n4. Spokane, Kenny (Hodges,\nBahr) 8:22; 5. Spokane, Scherza\n(Turlik, LaVallee) 14:47; 6. Kimberley, MeTeer (Vincent) 18:49.\nPenalties - Willey 1:67; Hodges 4:02; 17:43; LaVallee 18:30.\nThird Period \u2014 7. Kimberley,\nPeacosh (Vincent, MeTeer) 6:24;\n8. Kimberley, Vincent (MeTeer,\nPeacosh) 8:27; 9. Spokane, Moro\n(Turlik, Hodges) 19:36.\nPenalties \u2014 Vincent :23; Sinclair 13:17; Willey 19:16.\nSaves by:\nWardle    15  10  13\u201438\nCox     8  11   11\u201430\nKimberley,  including three to\nWilley.\nBob Wardle in the Kimberley\nnet kicked out 38 shots, 15 of\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNancy Sixth\nSTOWE, Vt.\u2014Nancy Greene,\n22, of Rossland, B.C., leading\nskier on Canada's National Ski\nTeam, finished sixth In the\nwomen's slalom event held\nhere Sunday with times of 43.30\nand 45,9) for an 89.28 total.\nMiss Greene, one of the top\nranked women alder* In the\nworld, failed to finish among\nthe top 13 In the overall standings of the competition.\nmillMIIIIINIMIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMII\n\"A\" EVENT WINNERS\u2014Lea Jenson and his rink captured the main\nprize In the Notre Dame Curling Club bonspiel with a 12-8 win over Jerome\nAlbo's foursome in the final between the two teams. Jenson (right, back) had\nWith him, Bonnie Cameron (left, iront); Lois Stenson (right, front) and Mike\nBrown (left, back).\nTHE MOST\nUNUSUAL MP\nIn the person of MP Pierre*\nElliot Trude&u, Lester Pearson has a formidable parliamentary secretary. Trudeau\nis equally at home in constitutional law, economics, yoga\nand parachute,-. In the Inner\nCircle of the Ottawa Establishment he is practically a\nlegend in his own time. Norman DePoe interviews Trudeau in Weekend Magazine,\nLAST OF THE\nBARE KNUCKLES\n\"Never, during even a presidential election, has there\nbeen so-much excitement as\nthere is - now\"... So wrote\na reporter on the Sullivan-\nKilrain fight of July 8,1889.\nThis week Andy O'Brien describes the 75-round ring epic\nthat ended an era in boxing.\nVOLUNTARY\nCONFINEMENT\nEight men on Vancouver\nIsland moved in on 105 acres\nof creeks, rocks and tree\nstumps. That was in 1964.\nToday they are hermits, settled into a way of life almost\ncompletely cut off from their\nfellow man. Staff Writer\nPatrick Nagle was allowed\nthrough the gates of the\nhermitage to visit these men,\nthe first such group to be-\nsanctioned by the Roman\nCatholic Church since the\nFrench Revolution.\nTHE BEAUTY       FROM PRODIGY\nAND THE BEAT  TO PODIUM\nA Canadian is the youngest\nprincipal conductor of a permanent orchestra in the\nWestern Hemisphere, the\nNorthern Sinfonia of England. Writer Robert Musel\ntells the success story of 21-\nyear-old Boris Brott, one of\nthe few \"wunderkinder\" of\nrecent years who has been\nable to maintain and mature\nhis precocious talents.\nNew York'a Greenwich\nVillage is notoriously known\nas the launching pad of the\nbeat generation. Staff Writer\nStephen Franklin visited the\nVillage apartment of model\nRory Flynn, daughter of the\nlate actor Errol Flynn, where\nshe lives with her painter\nhusband. Even for the Village, .the couple and \"pad\"\nwere bizarre.\nFare is Fowl\nShakespeare mightn't have appreciated the pun, says\nFood Editor Margo Oliver, but he would have enjoyed\nthese chicken recipes whose appeal is as universal as\nhis plays. And you don't have to be a member of the\njet set to travel around the world. With Margo'a\nChinese-shredded, French-sauteed, Mexican-style and\nMaryland-style chicken recipes you can cover 4 continents right in your own kitchen!\nBlack Giant of the Skies\n\"Irazu ... is one of the most electrifying natural\nphenomenon I have ever seen.\" A young Canadian, Dr.\nJoseph Maclnnis of Port Credit, Ontario tells what it was\nlike when he visited the active volcano that threatened'the\ncapital city of San Jose, Costa Rica in 1964. His incredible\nstory is in this week's Weekend Magazine!\n\"B\" EVENT WINNERS-Enao Timateo (right) and his rink captured first\nplace in the second event of the Notre Dame Curling Club bonspiel held over\nthe weekend by whipping runner-up Lou Jordan's foursome 21-6 in the final\ngame. With Timateo on the rink, are (left to right) Marka Frlzzell, Sandra Lee\nand Rick Hanna.\nMikita Pulls Black Hawks\nTo Within One Point of Habs\nJtoott iatlg -foaia\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nStan Mikita took up the alack\nSunday night as he set up a\npair of goals and scored one\nhimself to power Chicago Black\nHawks to a 4-2 National Hockey\nLeague victory over league-\nleading Montreal Canadiens.\nBobby Hull failed for the see-\non consecutive game to add to\nhis season record total of S3\ngoals. He didn't get a point and\nstill needs three to tie the record of 96 set by Dickie Moore\nof Montreal in 1938-59.\nThe victory gives the second-\nplace Hawks 78 points, one back\nof Montreal, which has six regular \u2022 season games remaining\ncompared with five for Chi\ncago.\nWINGS WIN\nThe race for third place also\ntightened as Detroit Red Wings\noverwhelmed Toronto Maple\nLeafs 6-1 in Detroit. The Leafs\nare third with 71 points. Detroit\nhas 68. Toronto has seven\ngames to play and Detroit five.\nBoston Bruins kept alive\nhopes of ending out of the cellar for the first time in six\nyears by edging New York Rangers 4-3. Bruins have 42 points,\nNew York 46.\nThe other Chicago scorers\nwere Bill (Red) Hay, Doug\nMohns and Ken Wharram. Dick\nDuff and Claude Laroie scored\nfor Canadiens.\nSTAN MIKITA\nDetroit ran up a 4-0 lead on\ngoals by Paul Henderson, Floyd\nSmith, Gordie Howe and Dean\nPrentice  before Kent  Douglas\nscored for Toronto. Alex Delvecchio and Andy Bathgate\ncompleted the Detroit rout.\nBruins took a 4-1 lead on two\ngoals by Johnny Bucyk and\nsingles from Bobby Letter and\nRon Stewart. Don Marshall,\nDoug Robinson and Gary Peters scored for New York.\nMikita'a efforts Sunday night\ngive him 74 points for the season, second only to Hull,\nSTARTED ROOKIE\nFor Wings, George Gardner,\n23, made his first NHL start.\nThe American League's leading\nnetminder was called up to give\nregular Roger Crozier a rest.\nDetroit also was missing de-\nfencemen Leo Boivin and Gary\nBergman, both sick.\nRookie Bernie Parent turned\nin a brilliant performance in\nthe Boston goal, holding Rangers in check in a hectic third\nperiod with several great stops.\nLeafs were in top form Saturday.\nLea Jensen drew to the edge\nif the two foot circle ta count\nfour In the fifth end and take\na 7-3 lead which he never\ngave up In winning the \"A\"\nevent of the Notre Dame Curling Club Bonspiel on Sunday.\nJensen went on to 12-8 win In\nthe final of the competition.\nJerome Albo was light on\nhis  take-out  attempt to set\nup the four eader for Jensen. Albo missed a takeout\nIn the sixth end and left the\nwinning rink counting a pair\nthat clinched the win.\nIn the seventh end, Albo was\nsuccessful with his double-takeout and counted four to move\nback into contention, but from\nthen on Jensen kept the house\nclear and counted two in the\neighth and another one in the\nninth before Albo took a single\nin the final end.\nThe winning rink, of Bonnie\nCameron, Lois Stenson, Mike\nBrown and Jensen, took singles\nin the first three ends, but Albo\ncounted three to tie It in the\nfourth.\nWith 87 rinks participating,\nEnto  Ttmoteo captured  the\n\"B\" event, Larry Bonertz the\n\"C\" and Terry Schmaltz the\nOutlaw.\nAlbo finished second in the\npremier event, with Brian Gilchrist's rink third and Dan Lous-\nier's foursome fourth.\nTimoteo had no trouble after\nthe first end enroute to his 21-7\nwin over runner-up Lou Jordan\nin the final of the second event\nJordan counted a pair on the\nfirst end, but Timoteo came\nback with four in the second and\nthree in the third to take a 7-2\nlead.\nJordan's foursome cut the\nmargin to 7-5 with three in the\nfifth, only to have the winning\nrink take one in the fifth and\nthree in the sixth to take the\nvictory.\nLeading 14-7 In the tenth\nend, Tfanatee's rink counted a\nbig seven to end the game,\nmissing the perfect eight en-\nder when Jordan made a takeout with his final stone.\nRandy Fabro skipped his rink\nto third place in the event and\nLen Kleine captured fourth.\nCurling   with  Timateo  was\nthird Sandra Lee, second Rick\nHanna and lead Marka Frlzzell.\nLarry Bonerta counted four\nin the second end that proved\nto be the margin of victory\nin  Ms  10-6  win over Mike\nThorpe In the final of the \"C\"\nevent.\nThe two rinks traded singles\nin file first two ends, Thorpe\ntook one in the fourth, but\nI  Bonertz salted the game with\nthree la the fifth for a 9-2\nlead.\nHe lrtade it 10-2 in the sixth,\nbut Thorpe cut the margin to\n9-7 with two in the Seventh and\nsingles in the eighth and ninth.\nBut the winning rink of Bonertz,\nBarbara Harman, Sue Rossini\nand Ben Rossini took one in the\nfinal end.\nThe rink skipped by Bryan\nReid finished third and Mel\nFuta's foursome captured fourth\nspot.\nTerry Schmaltz' rink, skipped by Pat Walls, rallied front\na 6-0 deficit after the first\ntwo ends, to take a 12-9 victory over Gerl Etmanskl's\nfoursome In the final of the\nOutlaw event.\nMiss Etmanski's quartet counted four in the first end and two\nmore in the second before\nSchmaltz got on the scoreboard.\nBut the winning rink, with\nSharon Maida and Noni Buckley filling out the foursome, rallied with four in the third and\na pair in the fourth to tie the\ngame.\nThe two teams matched singles in the next two ends and the\nrunner-up took a 9-7 lead with a\npair in the seventh.\nBut Walls rallied the winners and they counted three\nin the eighth to go ahead for\nthe first time by a 10-9 margin.   Schmaltz   took   another\none In the ninth and Walls\nchipped In off another stone\nto sit tor one In the final end,\nafter Etmanskl's rink had sat\ntwo stones in the house and\nset up a guard out front,\nHerb Wytinck's rink captured\nthird place with the fourth spot\ngoing to John Byrne's foursome.\n.Trophies and prizes were presented to all members of the\nfirst four rinks in each event\nafter the bonspiel ended Sunday evening.\nThe bonspiel was one of the\nmost  successful  Notre  Dame\n'spiels in years and continues\nto get better each season.\nResults of games In the \"A'\nevent on Saturday and Sunday; Blondln beat out Pepper\nthen lost to Jensen, who defeated Langston and Gilchrist\nto advance to the final against\nAlbo.\nGilchrist upset Fata and\nWytlnck before losing to Jensen.\nAlbo took wins over Thorpe,\nMorrison and Lousier to advance to the finals.\nMorrison   defeated   Simister\nbefore losing to Albo\nLousier beat McCallum and\nD'Archangelo to advance against\nAlbo. D'Archangelo defeated\nOlinger.\nAlberta Rink Seeks Sweep\nOf National Curling Titles\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont. (CP)-\nCalgary's Lee Green rink will\ntry to get Alberta a fourth national curling title this year\nwhen the mixed championship\nopena here today,\nWith the Canadian men's,\nschoolboys' and women's titles\nalready tucked away, Alberta's\nhopes of winning the mixed\nchampionship rest on the Green\nfoursome, including Kay Ber-\nreth, third, Rod Duncan second\nand Donna Clark, lead.\nGreen, a Calgary bus driver,\nskipped an Alberta rink to the\nchampionship last year at Toronto's Royal Canadian Curling\nClub and became the first rink\nto win the title without a defeat.\nThla year, however, Green\nhas two new members, Rod\nDuncan and Donna Clark who\nhave replaced Shirley Salt and\nhis wife, Vi. Mrs. Berreth is a\nveteran of last year's championship rink.\nThe Glen Harper rink repre-\nsenting British Columbia, will\nmeet Green in the opening\ndraw at 2:30 p.m. EST today.\nThe second draw of the day in\nthe week-long round robin event\nia set for 8 p.m. Alberta will go\nagainst the Art Woodley rink\nfrom Campbellton, N.B., in the\nevening draw.\nB.C. MEETS NOVA SCOTIA\nHarper, a member of British\nColumbia's representatives at\ntwo Canadian men's curling\nchampionships, will be going\nagainst Nova Scotia's Herb\nMacNeil rink in the 8 p.m.\ndraw.\nNova Scotia's opening round\nopponent is New Brunswick.\nBesides Green, Ernie Boushy\nof Winnipeg also has an opportunity to win the national mixed\ntitle for a second time.\nBoushy who skipped a Manitoba rink to the championship\nin the Inaugural event in Tor-\n_,\nPHOENIX, Ariz. CAP) - Jim\nMoElreatlh, averaging 93.82 miles\nan hour in his rear-engine Ford,\nwon the Jimmy Bryan 150 auto\nrace Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway.\n.     I.\nonto In 1964, meets Quebec and\nOntario at 8 p.m.\nBoushy, the only rink to win\na berth to the national final\nthree years in a row, finished\nthird last year behind Green\nand Ontario's Ray Grant from\nUnionville.\nSKIPPED BY TETLEY\nNorthern Ontario is represented this year by the Bill Tet-\nley foursome of Port Arthur\nwhile an Uxbridge rink skipped\nby Harvey Acton is representing Ontario.\nThey will meet in the opening draw. In the second round,\nNorthern Ontario takes on Quebec's Art Lobel foursome from\nLachute,\nSaskatchewan, represented by\nthe Ted Jurists rink, plays the\nLen Kalichak foursome of Newfoundland in the last round and\nPrince Edward Island, skipped\nby Doug Bell, in the second\ndraw.\nPrince Edward Island has a\nbye in the opening round and\nNewfoundland will sit out the\nsecond draw.\nIn the second event, Fabi\ntook victories over McCuttac\nand Shaw before being beati\nby Timoteo,\nTimoteo beat WlnkOloar an\nSchmaltz to enter the fin\ndraw against Jordan.\nSchmaltz beat Moore In h\nprevious game.\nJordan advanced to the fin:\nwith wins over Kennedy, Mosi\n(who previously beat Bonert!\nand Kleine.\nKleine  defeated  Vaydik  bi\nfore coming against Jordan,\nIn winning the \"C\" evei\nBenertz defeated Parkins, Ml\nLaughlln,   Held   and   flnall\nThorpe,\nEnroute to the meeting wil\nBonertz, Thorpe counted wii\nover Simister, McCallum ai\nFuta,\nFuta beat Boroday and Peppi\nbefore meeting Thorpe. Peppi\ntook a win from Langston, whil\nMcCallum beat Olinger.\nReid defeated McCurrach ai\nMoore beat Byrne in other\nevent games.\nIn the \"D\", or Outlaw evei\nSchmaltz emerged the wlnw\nafter beating  Shaw,  Mooi\nWytlnck and then Etmanski.\nMiss  Etmanski,  advandn\nto the final game, took win\nfrom WInkelaar, Olinger an\nByrne,\n011 n ger defeated Borody\nByrne beat Parkins and McCa\nlum who defeated Pepper\nMoore edged Moser; Wytinc\ntripped Blondln and Morrison\nand Morrison defeated D'Arcai\ngelo.\nIn the first draw of the Oul\nlaw competition, Etmanski bei\nSaunders; WInkelaar defeats\nKennedy; Olinger took a\nover Boyce, Borody emergef\nthe winner over Simister; Byrni\ntripped up Langston; ParkinL.\nsidelined McCurrach; McCuf\nlum handed Bennett his fin;\ndefeat; Pepper got by Vaydil\nand Moore defeated McLaughlin!\nTired? Sluggish?\nFeel Better Fast\nWhen you feel tired, sluggish;\nheadachy, all dragged out-a\nfeel better fast with Carter'!\nLittle Liver Pills. Gentle, euro\nCarter's Little Liver Pills have\nbeen helping Canadiana for\nwell over 60 years.\nEach tiny pill contalna\nCarter's exclusive formula thai\nhas a very special action on\nyour liver. This special action\nstimulates the liver bile. Keeps\nit flowing freely. Aide the\nfunctioning of your digestive\nsystem. Eases away that tired,\nupset, sluggish feeling. Help*\nyou feel good again,\nSo the next time'you feel\ntired, alusgish, headachy, take\nCarter's Little Liver Puis and\nfeel better fast. Carter's Little\nliver Pills, only 49&\nSki Slants\nWith the spring season trying to come upon us, skiers\nhave not been going to the ski\nhill during the week. As a result the ski lift will not operate\non Wednesday on the remainder of the season. It will however, continue to run on Saturday, Sunday and Monday.\nSeals, Totems\nBattle to Tie\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The\nSan Francisco Seals and the\nSeattle Totems battled to their\nsecond consecutive Western Hockey League tie game Sunday, a\n3-3 deadlock that left the fifth-\nplace Seals still seven points behind the fourth-place Totems in\ntheir tussle for a playoff berth.\nThe teams staged a 4-4 stalemate in Seattle last week. They\nmeet again here Friday night.\nSeattle's Jim Powers scored\ntwice In the second period after\na scoreless opener, but San Francisco registered three markers\non efforts by Gerry Odrowski,\nDel Topell and Wayne Connelly.\nThe Seals' 3-2 lead disappeared\nat 5:23 of the third period, however, when former Seal Larry\nLund scored on a tap-in.\nThroughout the remainder of the\nthird period and the 10-mlnute\novertime neither club could\nreach the'net.\nTRIED TEA COLD\nIced tea was invented at the\nSt. Louis World's Fair of 1904.\nB.C.TEL\u00ae\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONECOMPANY\nilli\nJAMES A. MielNNES\nNew\nAppointment\nAnnounced\nThe appointment of James\nMaclnnes as Director of Publli\nRelations in the British Colui\nbia Telephone Company Is\nnounced by J. Ernest Richard)\nson, Company President am'\nChief Executive Officer.\nMr. Maclnnes graduated froi\nthe University of British Columbia in 1950 with a Bacheloi\nof Applied Science degree\nmechanical engineering am\nbegan his career with B.C.TEl\nin June of the same year. B;\nJune 1955 he was Senior Engln<\neering Assistant and the follow'\ning year he became Dlstrlcl\nOutside Plant Engineer. He be\ncame Safety Director IA 1958,\nSince August 1963 he ha;\nserved as Coastal Division\nEngineering and Construction\nManager.\nHe is a member of the Association of Professional Engineers of B.C. and of the\nAmerican Society of Mechanical\nEngineers.\nI\n Astro's\nCould\nMan-Made Infield\nbe Decisive Weapon\nHOUSTON (AP) - The Astro's\nman-made infield has the potential to be a more decisive weapon\nin major league baseball than\nthe home-court advantage in\nbasketball.\nThat became apparent during\nthe weekend as Houston Astros\nand Los Angeles Dodgers tested\nthe wash-and-wear rug of synthetic nylon that is laid in 14-\nfoot strips in the Houston infield\nand held together by zippers.\nPut down where grass failed\nto grow under the Astrodome\nlast year the pool table green\nsubstance cost $2 a square foot\nand may cost opposing teams\nseveral ball games because it\ncan be manipulated to suit the\nAstros.\n\"We can adjust the field anyway we want it,\" said Judge\nRoy H o f h e i n z, the Astros'\nowner. \"Who knows? We might\nhave this little button down in\nthe dugout that could change the\ninfield depending on the opposing club.\"\nThe last part was Hotheinz'\nlittle joke, but the fact is the\nInfield can be manipulated\u2014\nmade faster or slower \u2014 by\nchanging the consistency of the\ndirt layer underneath the three-\nquarters of an inch of nylon carpeting.\n\"Why shouldn't it be the way\nhe wants it? The Dodgers roll\ntheir infield to make it hard and\nthe Giants have been known to\nwater their infield to make it\nsoft.\"\nWhat about the rules?\nNational League president\nWarren Giles, on hand as Astro-\nturf made its debut, said there\nis nothing in the rules that dictates \"in anyway the resiliency\nof the field or its composition.\"\nBut he did caution that the infield \"would have to remain the\nsame for all nine opponents.\"\nThat, of course, still would\ngive Hatton the option of having a fast or slow infield and\nwith the speed on the Astros\nhe's likely to leave it lightning\nfast as it now is. And that could\npresent numerous problems as\nit did during the two exhibition\ngames won by the Dodgers,\n\"Let's face it\u2014it's different\nthan grass,\" said Dodger first\nbaseman Wes Parker, who\nmade one error and had another\ngrounder bounce away from\nhim for a bad-hop single. \"For\nsomething that isn't grass, it's\na good substitute. But it's going\nto take getting used to.\n\"The difficult thing is the ball\nbounces one way on the grass\nand one way on the dirt part of\nthe  infield.\nFRENCH SKIERS SWEEP\nGIANT SLALOM EVENT\nSTOWE, Vt. (AP) - France\nscored a sweep of the men's\nand women's giant slalom races\nwhile disaster struck American\nhopes Saturday in the United\nStates Alpine Skiing Championships.\nJean-Claude Killy led a 1-2-3\nsweep for France in the men's\nevent when America's main\nthreat, Billy Kidd, crashed near\nNEW DELHI (Reuters8)-\nStarving Hyenas have killed and\neaten more than 20 children in\nSultanpur district, 400 miles\nsoutheast of Delhi, during the\nlast three months, it was reported Saturday. The Hyenas\nnormally feed on carrion but\nsometimes hunger drives them\nto carry off dogs, sheep and\nsmall children from villages.\nWARREN GILES\n\"We're, going to leave the infield up to Grady (Manager\nGrady Hatton),\" said Hotheinz.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON   (Reuters)   -  Results of soccer games played Saturday in the United Kingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nBlackburn 2 Leeds 3\nBlackpool 2 West Ham 1\nEverton 0 Liverpool 0\nFulham 3 Sunderland 0\nLeicester 1 Sheffield U 0\nMan United 2 Arsenal 1\nNewcastle 0 Chelsea 1\nNotts F 4 Stoke 3\nSheffield W 3 Northampton 1\nTottenham H 5 Aston Villa 5\nWest Brom 1 Burnley 2\nDivision II\nBirmingham 0 Bolton W 1\nBury 1 Wolverhampton 0\nCrystal P 1 Preston 1\nDerby 1 Man City 2\nHuddersfield 1 Charlton 1\nIpswich 2 Norwich 0\nLeyton Or 0 Portsmouth 0\nMiddlesbrough 0 Plymouth 1\nSouthampton 1 Rotherham 1\nDivision III\nBrentford 2 Walsall 2\nBristol R 2 Swansea 1\nExeter 2 Mansfield 2\nGillingham 0 Scunthorpe 1\nGrimsby 1 Workington 0\nMillwall 3 Brighton 2\nPeterborough 1 Queen's Pk R 1\nShrewsbury 0 Bournemouth 2\nSwindown 4 Southend 0\nDivision IV\nBarrow 3 Chesterfield 2\nBradford C 2 Darlington 0\nColchester 2 Tranmere 1\nDoncaster 1 Newport 0\nHartlepools 0 Torquay 2\nLuton 4 Rochdale 1\nPort Vale 0 Notts C 1\nWrexham 3 Bradford 2\nEnglish FA Amateur Cup\nSemi-Finals\nAlvechurch 0 Wealdstone 1\nWhitley Bay 1 Hendon 2\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nClyde 2 Dunfermline 1\nDundee U 5 Motherwell 1\nFalkirk 3 Aberdeen 0\nHamilton 1 Celtic 7\nHibernian 1 Stirling 0\nKilmarnock 1 Rangers 1\nMorton 0 Hearts 3\nPartick 4 St. Mirren 1\nSt. Johnstone 1 Dundee 0\nDivision H\nAlloa 2 Ayr U 1\nBerwick 0 Queen's Pk 1\nBrechin 1 East Fife 3\nCowdenbeath 0 Stenhousemulr 1\nDumbarton 2 Albion 0\nForfar 1 Queen of S 2\nRalth 3 Montrose 0\nStranraer 0 Arbroath 0\nThd Lanark 0 E Stirling 2\nIrish League City Cup\nArds 4 Cliftonville 1\nCrusaders 5 Distillery 0\nDerry City 2 (tolerable 4\nGlenavon 2 Bangor 0\nGlentoran 1 Fortadown 1\nLinfield 5 Ballymena 0\nSATURDAY SUMMARIES\nTORONTO (CP)-NHL Saturday:\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141. Toronto, Armstrong 13 (Douglas, Mahovlich)\n5:41; 2, Toronto, Mahovlich 30\n(Keon, Armstrong) 18:08; 3.\nToronto, Horton 8 (Armstrong)\n19:59. Penalties\u2014Stapleton 3:33,\nMacNeil 4:23, Pronovost 9:13,\nDouglas minor, misconduct\n10:44, Pilote 18:35.\nSecond period \u2014 4. Toronto,\nPulford 27 (Ellis, Kelly) 9:33;\n5. Chicago, Hay 18 (Mikita)\n13:30. Penalties \u2014 Nesterenko\n5:48, Vasko 8:33, Armstrong\n12:17, Jarrett 14:07.\nThird period \u2014 6. Chicago,\nWharram 24 (Mohns, Pilote)\n6:01. Penalties - Shack 4:40,\nToronto team penalty served by\nBoyer 10:34, Mohns 11:20, Mahovlich 12:07, Pilote, Hillman\n13:21, Mohns major, Douglas\nmajor, game misconduct 15:55,\nMaki 17:19.\nShots on goal by\nChicago 714 8\u201429\nToronto 2313 4-40\nAttendance\u201414,996.\nMONTREAL (CP)-NHL Saturday:\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141. Montreal, Provost 17 (Beliveau, J. C. Tremblay) 10:01; 2. New York, Goy-\nette 9 (Brown) 11:27. Penalties\n\u20149:17, Harper 16:48,\nSecond period\u20143. Montreal,\nLarose 14 (Price, Beliveau)\n11:55; 5. Montreal, Rousseau 27\n(Richard, Baton) 12:59; 6. New\nYork, Hadfield 15 (Fleming,\nRatelle) 13:19. Penalties-None.\nThird period \u2014 7. Montreal,\nDuff 18 9:12; 8. Montreal, Rous-\nseau 28 (Duff, Richard) 15:40.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nShots on goal by\nNew York 11 6 7\u201424\nMontreal 131312-38\nAttendance\u201415,300.\nis there a\nmoney problem you^\nneed to solve?\nNIAGARA\nKNOWS HOW\nGet cash now... for overdue bills, unexpected\nexpenses, any good reason. A Niagara counsellor\nwill talk over the amount and repayment schedule,,\nand tailor it to St your budget. We believe\nmoney and helpful planning go together\nLoans from $50 to $2500\nNIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITFP\n560 Baker St. 352-7232\nLionell Hebert Captures\nCitrus Open Tournament\nORLANDO, Fla. (AP)-Lion-\nell Hebert of Lafayette, La.,\ncame from two strokes behind\nSunday and won the $110,000\nFlorida Citrus open golf tournament with a 72-hole total of\n279, five under par:\nHe fired a final round two-un-\nder-par 35-34\u201469 to overcome\nthe two-stroke lead held by\nGardner Dickinson Jr., of\nDothan, Ala., leader after the\nsecond and third rounds.\nHebert won $21,000 prize\nmoney for the inaugural play\ning of this event.\nHebert, a consistent nioney\nwinner and one of the few pros\nwho has played every tournament this year, jumped to the\ntop of the 10 highest money winners with total official earnings\nof $27,647 for the year.\nThe last tournament Hebert\nwon was the Memphis Open two\nyears ago.\nTHREE TIE FOR SECOND\nBunched two strokes behind\nHebert at 281 were Jack Nick-\nlaus, Dick Lytle and Charles\nCoody.\nDickinson, who had been suffering back pains, said he took\nan opiate Sunday which made\nhim dizzy. He shot a final round\n38-37-75 to tie with four others\nat 283.\nLIONEL HEBERT\nHebert's game on the front\nnine was erratic. He birdied the\nClay Would Prefer\nTwo Week Delay\nBy JERRY GLADMAN\nTORONTO (CP) - Cassius\nClay said Saturday he would\nprefer a two-week postponement\nof his Tuesday, March 29, heavyweight boxing clash with Toronto's George Chuvalo.\nClay, ,who arrived here Friday\nto make final training preparations for the 15-round bout at\nMaple Leaf Gardens, said he\nwould like an extension because\n\"I haven't had the proper time\nto get ready for this match.\"\nThe 24-year-old Clay had just\nfinished an abbreviated workout\nconsisting of three rounds of\nboxing, during which he was\nknocked down by sparring partner James Ellis, three rounds of\npunching the speed bag and 1 _\nrounds skipping rope.\nEllis dropped him with a short\nright, but Clay's flop to the floor\nappeared more of a sitdown for\npublicity purposes than a legitimate knockdown.\n\"I got tagged with a right\nhand and I was stunned,\" he\nsaid. \"I wasn't hurt. You saw\nme get right up. But I was tired\nand I didn't feel right.\"\nNOT SO BOASTFUL\nThe image he is trying to\npress upon the public is far subdued from his usual boastful\nself. Most of the experts close\nto the fight game contend he is\ntrying to build up the gate by\ntalking himself down and praising Chuvalo's ability.\n\"I'm not underestimating Chuvalo,\" he says. \"He can punch\nand he's strong. I feel I can\nwin, but I'm only human and I\ncan be knocked down. I'll have\nto be in the best shape possible\nfor this fight.\"\nThe World Boxing Association,\nwhich recognizes Ernie Terrell\nas the world champion, said this\nwill not be a title defence. The\npromoters are calling it the\nFight of the Century or Fight of\nchampions. Chuvalo is the Canadian heavyweight champion.\nA crowd of about 200 showed\nup for his first public workout\nat the Lansdowne Athletic Club.\nAngelo Dundee, Clay's manager,\nsays the champ will work out\nevery afternoon right up to the\nfight.\nDuring the workout, Bob\n(Pretty Boy) Felstein, a Toronto\nheavyweight, showed up attired\nin a full dress suit, including a\ntop hat, tails and a cane. Accompanying him were members\nof his female fan club.\n'I just wanted to welcome\nClay to Toronto in the proper\nmanner,\" said Felstein, who is\nscheduled to box a six-rounder\non the card.\nFrance Sweeps\nSlalom Event\nSTOWE, Vt. (AP)-Guy Per-\nillat and Marielle Goitschel led\na French sweep of five of the\ntop six places Sunday in the\nmen's regular slalom and the\nwomen's slalom of the UN alpine and international ski championships.\nPerillat won the men's slalom, with Jean-Claude Killy second and Leo Lacroix third. Annie Famose was second to Miss\nGoitschel in the women's slalom.\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results\nof Rugby Union matches played\nSaturday in the United Kingdom:\nInternational Match\nScotland 6 England 3 (at Mur-\nrayfield)\nClub Matches\nBlackheath 22 London Scottish\n13\nGuys Hospital 12 Gloucester 5\nLondon Irish 11 Coventry 17\nRichmond 13 Moseley 14\nRosslyn Park 6 London Welsh\n11\nStreatham-Croydon 11 Old Mill-\nhillians 0\nWasps 11 Llanelli 10\nBath 9 Newbridge 12\nBradford 9 Nuneaton 3\nBridgend 24 Exeter 11\nBridgwater and Albion 3 Somerset Police 3\nBristol 15 Pontypool 3\nEbbw Vale 29 Cheltenham 9\nFylde 16 Birkenhead Park 5\nGlamorgan Wanderers 3 Mae-\nsteg 17\nHalifax 6 New Brighton 6\nLiverpool 3 Headingley 9\nNeath 25 Loughborough College\n11\nPenarth 11 Pontypridd 17\nPlymouth Albion 14 Devonport\nServices 8\nRugby 9 Notts 3\nSt. Lukes College 42 Old Merchant Taylor 8.\nSale 17 Manchester 6\nSwansea 5 Cardiff 6\nTorquay Athletic 8 Paignton 8\nUnited Services Chatham 6 Old\nAlleynians 75\nUnited Services Portsmouth 10\nMetropolitan Police 16\nWaterloo 10 Harlequins 29\nWeston - Super - Mare 16 St.\nThomas Hospital 0\nEdinburgh University 3 Northern 11\nEdinburgh Wanderers 6 West\nHartlepools 5\nHeriots FP 11 Northampton 10\nRoyal HSFP 11 Percy Park 6\nTaunton 21 Redruth 11\nfirst two holes, went over par\non the fourth, birdied the sixth\nand went over par on the eighth\nto make the turn in one-under-\npar 35.\nHe birdied the 10th and played\nregulation golf the rest of the\nway.\nThe tournament was in doubt\nuntil the last hole. The field was\nso closely bunched at the end of\nthe 36-hole cut\u2014only 10 strokes\nseparated the first and last\nplayers\u2014that any player turning in a hot final back nine\ncould have won.\nRandy Glover, Bob Shave,\nBilly Maxwell and Mason Rudolph finished the four rounds\ntied at 282. Four more were\ngrouped at 283\u2014Dickinson, John\nLotz, Al Besselink and Gay\nBrewer Jr.\nLEFT TOURNAMENT\nJulius Boros had to retire\nfrom the tournament after the\nthird round because of a pulled\nmuscle in his back. Dave Marr\nquit after the third round because of an illness in his family.\nArnold Palmer, who finished\nwith a 288 total, said his tee\nshots and irons to the green\nwere good but that \"putting and\nchipping has been giving me\nproblems all week.\"\nPalmer said he would pass up\ntbe Jacksonville and Greensboro\nOpens and go to Augusta for the\nMasters next month.\nthe top of the rugged Mansfield\ncourse.\nA freckled 16-year-old, Florence Steurer, out - classed the\nworld's best in the women's\ngiant slalom.\nThe men's course was lightning fast, speeded up by a\nchemical called snow cement\nwhich froze on the surface.\nThe daring Killy, 22, one of\nthe sensations of the European\nwinter season, sped down the\ntrack in 1:45.67, followed by\nteammates Guy Perillat, second\nin 1:45.76, and Georges Maudit,\nthird in 1:47.92. Kidd tumbled\nwhile favoring a sprained ankle\nand took a hard spill near the\ntop of the hill. He wasn't seriously hurt.\nThe spunky Miss Steurer also\nbeat out a French teammate,\nAnnie Famose, in winning the\nwomen's giant slalom in 1:14.20.\nShe led the field of 40 women\ndown the 3,200-foot course with\ndrop of 1,065 feet. Miss Fa-\nmose's second place time was\n1:14.60 with Traudl Hecher, 23-\nyear-old Olympic veteran from\nAustria, third in 1:14.78. Marielle Goitschell of France was\nfourth in 1:14.79.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH 21, 1966\u20147\nScotch Cup Championships\nBegin at Forum Tonight\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The\nScotch Cup international curling\nchampionships open here tonight.\nRinks representing seven\ncountries \u2014 France, Sweden,\nNorway, Switzerland, Scotland,\nCanada and the defending\nchampion United States\u2014all arrived here Friday night and\nhave been preparing for the\nfour - day event with games\nagainst local opposition in Vancouver area rinks.\nThe six visiting countries will\nmove into the hockey arena\nwhere the round-robin bonspiel\nwill be played \u2014 the Forum\u2014\nthis morning and afternoon for\nfurther practice against Vancouver opposition.\nCanadian champion Ron\nNorthcott of Calgary will miss\nthe benefit of a practice game\non the competition ice. The host\ncountry representatives will\nplay a final game this morning\nat the North Shore Winter Club.\nThe  28  competitors  relaxed\nSaturday at a dinner given in\ntheir honor by the provincial\ngovernment. They attended a\nchurch parade and then took a\nboat cruise Sunday.\nWhen the event gets under\nway at 8 p.m. PST today\u2014there\nwill be seven rounds of play followed by playoffs involving the\ntop four finishers \u2014 Northcott's\nCanadian champions will be out\nto revenge an upset loss to the\nUnited States in 1965.\nThe U.S. ended a streak of six\nstraight titles by Canada, dating\nback to the championships' start\nin 1959, when Bud Somerville of\nWisconsin defeated Terry\nBraunstein of Manitoba in the\nfinal last year.\nThis year, the U.S. representative is Dr. Joseph L. Zbacnik\nore Moorehead, Minn., whose\nrink curls out of Fargo, N.D.\nDr. Zbacnik, 23, operates his\nown dental clinic and his three\nrinkmates\u2014Bruce Roberts, Michael O'Leary and Gerald Tou-\ntant\u2014are all employees.\nNorthcott, 30, is seeking to\ngive Alberta a clean Bweep of\ncurling championships this year.\nEarlier, rinks from Alberta won\nthe Canadian schoolboy and\nwomen's titles.\nNorthcott, George Fink, Bernie Sparkes and Fred Storey\nwon the Canadian championship with a come-from-behind\nplayoff victory over Ontario\nMarch 11 at Halifax.\nJean Albert Sulpice of Me-\ngeve, France, Nils Petter\nWeidemann of Trondheim, Norway, Chuck Hay of Perth, Scotland, Olle Gewalt of Stockholm,\nSweden, and Paul Jundert of\nRigi-Kaltbad, Switzerland, are\nthe other skips in the tournament.\nHay will be making his third\nappearance and is the only skip\nwith previous experience in the\ncompetition.\nSulpice, 53, is France's first\nrepresentative in the tournament. He has won his country's\nchampionship nine times.\nQuesnel Tops\nTrail 7-0\nQUESNEL (CP) - Quesnel\nKangaroos of the Cariboo Intermediate Hockey League defeated\nTrail Smoke Eaters 7-0 here\nSaturday to win their best-of-\nthree Coy Cup semi-final series\nin two straight games.\nRod Gagnon and Bob Walker\npaced Quesnel with two goals\neach. Bob Willis, Irv Follack\nand Ken Duncan added singles.\nQuesnel advances to the B.C.\nintermediate final against the\nwinner of the Powell River-\nCoquitlam series.\nMeanwhile, in the other semifinal, Coquitlam Lumber Kings\nevened their series with Powell\nRiver Regals Saturday night\nwith a 7-5 victory. Regals had\ntaken the opening game 5-3 Friday night. The third game will\nbe played tonight.\nCoquitlam had a 6-0 lead midway through the second period.\nLen Ouelette scored twice for\nCoquitlam. Peter Schmyr, Ronnie Schmyr, Doug McKitrick,\nEd Chara and Al Parrish got\nthe others. George Chambers\ngot two for Powell River and\nBill Kabin, Bob Crawford, and\nGene Strueby got singles.\nRoyals Lead\nJuniors 2-0\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)-\nNew Westminster Royals handily defeated Kamloops Kings\n13-1 and 7-4 during the weekend\nto take a 2-0 lead in the best-of-\nseven British Columbia junior\nhockey final during the week\nend.\nThe Royals meet Kamloops at\nthe Interior city next Friday for\nthird game in the series. The\nB.C. champion will play Edmonton Oil Kings in the B.C.-Alberta\nfinal next month.\nWayne Goss scored four goals\nto lead the Royals to victory\nSunday in a game that saw New\nWestminster lead 2-0 after the\nfirst period and 4-2 going into\nthe third.\nGeorge Watson scored twice\nfor the winners and Ray Wall\ngot the other. Ray Sakakl, Ken\nRinaldi, Eric Shishido and Robbie Osborn scored for Kamloops, Okanagan League champions.\nBeleagured goal tender Harvey Budarick had to handle 53\nshots compared to 33 for New\nWestminster's Don Wallls.\nTHE MOST UNUSUAL MP\nIn the person of MP Pierre-Elliot Trudeau,\nLester Pearson has a formidable\nparliamentary secretary. Brilliant, a man\nof paradoxes, Trudeau is equally at\nhome in constitutional law, economics,\nyoga and parachutes, black ties and jeans.\nIn the Inner Circle of the Ottawa\nEstablishment he is practically a legend in\nhis own time. Norman DePoe interviews\nTrudeau for Weekend Magazine\nthis week.\nProdigy to Podium\nA Canadian is the youngest principal conductor\nof a permanent orchestra in the Western Hemisphere, the Northern Sinfonia of England. Writer\nRobert Musel tells the success story of 21-year-old\nBoris Brott, one of the few \"wunderkinder\" of\nrecent years who has been able to maintain and\nmature his precocious talents.\nLast of the Bare Knuckles\n\"Never, during even a presidential election, has\nthere been so much excitement as there is now\".\n... So wrote a reporter on the Sullivan-Kilrain\nfight of July 8, 1889. This week Andy O'Brien\ndescribes the 75-round ring epic that ended an\nera in boxing.\nBlack Giant of the Skies\n\"Iraza ... is one of the most electrifying natural\nphenomenon I have ever seen.\" A young Canadian, Dr. Joseph Maclnnis of Port Credit, Ontario,\ntells what it was like when he visited the active\nvolcano that threatened the capital city of San\nJos . Costa Rica, in 1964. His incredible story is\nin this week's Weekend Magazine!\nThe Beauty and the Beat\nNew York's Greenwich Village is notoriously known\nas the launching pad of\nthe beat generation. Staff\nWriter Stephen Franklin.\nvisited the Village apartment of model Rory Flynn,\ndaughter of the late actor\nErrol Flynn, where she\nlives with her painter husband. Even for the Village,\nthe couple and \"pad\" wera\nbizarre. Bizarre, but fascinating, as you will see in\nWeekend Magazine this\nweek.\nFare is Fowl\nShakespeare mightn't have appreciated the pun,\nsays\" Food Editor Margo Oliver, but he would\nhave enjoyed these chicken recipes whose appeal is\nas universal as his plays. And you don't have to be\na member of the jet set to travel around the world.\nWith Margo's Chinese-shredded, French-sauteed,\nMexican-style and Maryland-style chicken recipes\nyou can cover four continents right in your own\nkitchen 1\nVoluntary Confinement\nEight men on Vancouver Island moved in on 105\nacres of creeks, rocks and tree stumps. That was\nin 1964. Today they are hermits, settled into a,\nway of life almost completely cut off from their\nfellow man. Staff Writer Patrick Nagle was\nallowed through'the gates of the.hermitage to\nvisit these men, the first such group' to be sanctioned by the Roman Catholic Church since the\nFrench Revolution.\nJfoLscm\n S \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH _1,1966\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nMONDAY, MARCH 21, 1966\ni:59\u2014Sign On\n1:00\u2014News and Reports\ni:10-The A.M. Show\n>:40\u2014Farm Fare\ni:45-Chapel Ul the Sky\n1:00\u2014News\nl:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\nf:30-News\nJ:35-Wake Up Time\n1:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports Newa\n8:15\u2014Wake Up rime\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n1:35\u2014Morning Markets\nl:40-Wake-Up Time\n1:00-News\n1:10\u2014Road and Weather Report\nl:15-A.M. Spot\n):59-D.O.O.T.S.\n1:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Open Line\n1:55\u2014Assignment No. 1\n1:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Morning Melodies\n1:40\u2014The Archers\n1:55\u2014Assignment No. 2\n!:00\u2014Tommy Hunter\n1:15\u2014Sports News\n!:25\u2014News and Road Report\n1:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n1:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Jhon Drainie Tells a\nStory\n1:15\u2014Gordie Tapp\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:00-B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment No, 3\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Sports News\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n4:55\u2014Assignment No. 4\n5:00-The Rolling Home Show\n5:05\u2014News\n5:10-The Rolling Home\nShow Cont'd\n5:30-News\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40\u2014On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05\u2014National News\n6:15-Countrytime\n7:00\u2014News\n7:_H-Today's Editorial and\nSpeaking Personally\n7:S0-RPM\n8:00\u2014As Time Goes By\n9:00\u2014Country Magazine\n9:30\u2014Canadian Armed Forces\nAnniversary\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n10:15-Chapel in the Sky\n10:30\u2014The Best of Ideas\nU:00-Sign Off\nYour Individual Horoscope\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMONDAY, MARCH 21, 1966\n1:00\u2014News\n6:10-The Morning Show\n7:00\u2014News\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotional\n7:54-The AM Show Cont'd\n1:30\u2014Commentary\n1:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n1:00\u2014News and Report\n1:10\u2014Pacific Express\n1:44\u2014Playroom\n1:59\u2014Dominion Observatory\nTime Signal\n1:00-Along the Way\n1:55\u2014Assignment No. 1\n1:40\u2014The Archers\n1:55\u2014Assignment No. 2\n!:0O\u2014Tommy Hunter\n!:15\u2014News\n!:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n!:55\u2014Marine Weather\nl:00-John Drainie Tells a\nStory\nl:15-Gordle Tapp Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n!:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n1:30\u2014News\n1:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n1:30\u2014Off the Record\n1:55\u2014Assignment No. S\n4:0ft\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-Off the Record Cont'd\n4:40-Who Will Come With Me\n4:55\u2014Assignment No. 4\n5:00-Jazz 'n' Things\n5:3ft\u2014News\n5:4ft-0n Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Tempo Part Two\n6:45\u2014Rod and Charles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Today's Editorial and\nSpeaking Personally\n7:30-RPM\n8:00\u2014As Time Goes By\n9:00\u2014Country Magazine\n9:30\u2014Canadian Armed Forces\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Topic for Tonight\n10:30-Duke of Edinburgh\n11:00\u2014Scotch Cup Curling\n11:05\u2014Monday Concert\nl_no-News\n12:03-Land and Marine Weather\n12:05-After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\nI 1:03\u2014Music to 6 a.m.\nTUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1966\n6:0&-The A.M. Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Pacific Express\n9:44\u2014Playroom\n9:59 Time Signal\n10:00\u2014Along the Way\n10:55\u2014Assignment No. 1\n11:40\u2014The Archers\n11:55\u2014Assignment No. 2\n12:00-Ramblin' Man\n12:15\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Marine Weather\n1:00\u2014John Drainie Tells a\nStory\nl:15-Gordie Tapp Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Western Regional\nSchool Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30-Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment No. S\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Off the Record Cont'd\n4:40-Who Will Come With Me\n4:55\u2014Assignment No. 4\n5:00\u2014Jazz 'n Things\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40 On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n5:35\u2014Spotlight on Sport\n6:00\u2014Tempo\n6.-15-A Night From the\nNineties\n6:45\u2014Rod and Charles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15-Today's Editorial and\nSpeaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Christian Frontiers\n8:00-CBC Tuesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\nI0:30-CBC Tuesday Night\nPartH\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine Weather\n\u00ab:05-After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014Music to 6 a.m.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\n5:0O-Huckleberry Hound (C)\n5:30\u2014Highway Patrol\n6:00\u2014Ozzie and Harriet\n8:30\u2014Channel 2 Reports\n7:15-Monday Night at the\nMovies (C) \"The Raid\"\n9:00\u2014Man Called Shenandoah*\n9:3ft-Peyton  Place*\n10:00\u2014Ben Casey\nll:00-Nightbeat\n11:30\u2014\"Duffy of San Quentin\"\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\n7:00\u2014The Rifleman\n7:30-To Tell the Truth*\n8:00\u2014I've Got a Secret*\n8:30\u2014The Lucy Show* (C)\n9:00-Andy Griffith Show* (C)\n9:30-Hazel* (C)\n10:00\u2014Hollywood Talent\nScouts* (C)\n11:00-11 O'Clock News\n11:30\u2014Big Four Movie\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel I\n7:00\u2014Best of Groucho\n7:30-Hullabaloo* (Cl\n8:00-John Forsythe* (C)\n8:30-Dr. Kildare* (C)\n9:0O-Andy Williams* (C)\n10:00-Run for Your Life* (C)\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\nll:30-Tonight With Carson* (C)\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel I; Trail, Channel 11\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\npimples is looking for\nsomeone to help her\nWith her homeuork-so\nfill. HIPS FOR\nwhen \\ou nee. help with1\nyour arithmetic, wh.\ndon't you come id mtJ\n10:00\u2014Canadian Youth\nProgramming\n10:30\u2014The Friendly Giant\n10:45-Chez Helene\n11:00\u2014Butternut Square\n11:20\u2014Across Canada\n11:50\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Bachelor Father\n12:30\u2014Search fro Tomorrow\n12:45-Guiding Light\nl:00-Girl Talk\n1:30\u2014As the World Turns\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:30\u2014Alberta Game Farm\n2:45\u2014Let's Look\n3:00-To Tell the Truth\n3:25\u2014Happening on Take 30\n3:30\u2014Take Thirty\n4:00\u2014World in Contrast\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\n5:3ft\u2014Music Hop\n6:00\u2014Follow the Leader\n6:30\u2014Addams Family\n7:00\u20147 o'Clock Show\n7:30\u2014Don Messer's Jubilee\n8:00\u2014The Fugitive\n9:00\u2014Show of the Week\n10:00\u2014The Sixties\n10:30-\"X\"\n11:00\u2014News\nll:15-Viewpolnt\nCJLH-TV \u2014 Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n10:00\u2014Canadian Schools\n10:30\u2014Friendly Giant\n10:45-Chez Helene '\n11:00\u2014Butternut Square\n11:20\u2014Across Canada\n11; 50-CBC TV News\n12:00\u2014Noon Show\n1:00\u2014Premiere Theatre\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:3ft\u2014Around Town\n3:0ft-To Tell the Truth\n3:25\u2014Take Thirty\n4:00-World in Contrast\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\nTUESDAY\n5:00-Fireball XL-5\n5:30\u2014Sea Hunt\n6:00\u2014Dateline \u2014 Sports,\nWeather, News\n7:0ft-Windfall\n7:30-Let's Sing Out\n8:00\u2014Red Skelton Hour\n9:0ft\u2014Front Page Challenge\n9:30\u2014Dick Van Dyck Show\n10:00\u2014News Magazine\n10:30-The Public Eye\n11:00-CBC News\n11:15\u2014Final Edition\nU:20-#unsmoke\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nTuesday, March 22, 1966\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) - It is not like you to\nshift your responsibilities to another but you may have such inclinations now. Curb! Achievement, no matter how small, can\nonly be gained by your own\nconsistent performance.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Admonitions for this day:\nAvoid consternation and confu-\nsion. With great activity indicated, these could prove obstacles\nto success. Emphasize uncomplicated thinking and action.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 A good day for attaining some\nof your lofty ambitions, even\nthough certain projects may\nseem stymied for the moment.\nWith your gift of foresight and\nyour ability to take quick and\ndirect aetion when needed, you\ncan pull anything out of total\nstagnation.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014You may feel somewhat boxed\nin now, restrained where you\nwould like more freedom. Look\nwell before pressing beyond certain limits. Study the attitudes\nof your associates carefully.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 If you do not get the right\nstart now it may take more time\nlater to straighten things out.\nDon't be \"thrown\" by any challenges which may come your\nway. They can prove highly\nstimulating.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) - Within the framework of your capabilities, strive\nto improve efforts \u2014 especially\nin occupational matters. Don't\nfear to try new methods.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) - A fine outlook for\nthose of you who make the best\nuse of your talents and who are\nalert to good opportunities \u2014\neven small ones.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Put aside all\nthoughts of frivolity and concentrate on the business of the\nday. Don't make drastic changes\nin projects now running smoothly and don't overtax yourself,\nhowever.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 You\nshouldn't face many obstacles\nnow, but be on guard against\n\"little\" errors, misunderstandings. It is not like the Sagittarian\nto slight details, but you could\noverlook a few in your desire to\nget along with bigger things.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Originate and\ninvent, as is your wont, but do\nnot summarily reject the ideas\nof others. You may be able to\nwork with them in several productive ways.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Planetary\npects indicate new projects, some\nreconstruction in your life, but\nyou could lose out on good opportunities if you are lethargic or\nindifferent \u2014 a tendency now\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 There will be persons\nand things which could cause\nneedless aggravation and unwarranted delays. Handle all with\nthe Piscean's usual aplomb and\nknow-how.\nYOU BORN TODAY: A love\nof activity and deep interest in\nlife are outstanding in this Sign.\nYou are thrilled with fast-moving\nenterprises; often start them\nyourself; are a natural leader,\nbut  sometimes overly  aggres\nsive, impulsive and so ambitioi .\nthat you occasionally reach beyond your limitations. Your vitality and enthusiasm are excellent traits, of course, but there\nare times when you should \"simmer down\" and study things\nfrom a more realistic viewpoinl.\nYou are extremely fond of the\narts; could make a living at one\nof them, or enjoy them as an\navocation. Birthdate of Anthony\nVan Dyck, Flemish Painter.\n\"HIS NICEST DREAM\" \u2014This figure of French President\nCharles de Gaulle is on a float In the Mainz, Germany, Carnival parade. He is sitting on a fakir's bed ot nails and playing his flute while the entire world dances to his tune. The\nsign on the side of the float reads, \"His Nicest Dream.\"\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. River in\nKenya\nS. Church part\n9. Apple\ncenters\n10, One kind\nof oil\n12. Gentle\n13. Imitated\n14. Tip\n4. Roman\nmeasure\n5. Assam\nlanguage\n(.Theatrical\nproduction\n7. Taste\n8. Night\n9. Animal\nenclosure\n11. Decrees of\na sovereign\n18. Nickel: sym. 15. Java tree\n19. Large worm 16. Chafe\n20. Certain,\nathlete\n21. Muscular\n22. Long-haired\n17. Toward\n21. Brewer's\nvat\n22. Sycophantic\nreply\n23. Short\ncannon:\nabbr.\n24. Pet\n25. Pain-\nrelieving\ndrugs\n26. Brain\npart\n27. Angry\n29. Slice\n31. Draft\nanimal\n32. Squandered\n(away)\n33. Ogles\n____  ____\n_____  _____\nqb_h_ _l_ SH\n_m_    ___ H-\nID_   ________\n___-_<_ ____\n___ ___\n \u2014 --_a__a\na_ ___    _b_\n__ __ _____\n_____   __B_H\n____   __HH\nSaturday'a Answer\n34. Roman date\n38. Nestling\n37. Reputation\n39. Fuss\n42. Denial\n43. Exclamation\n(Pros    \u2022 . aubjrrl Xo ebuge by itnllone without notice.)\nox\n23, Pursue\n24, Contends\n(with)\n27. Melodies\n28. Sacred bull\n29. Intimidate\n30. Creek\n31. Possessive\npronoun\n32. River: Asia\n35. Retailer's\nabbreviation\n36. Prolonged\n38. Remain\n40. Mariner's\nterm\n41. One kind\nof chair\n43. Measures:\nHeb.\n44. Tolerable\n45. Marries\nDOWN\n1. Trips\n2. Tapestry\n3. Tidy _.   \t\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXTDLBAAXB\nIs   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophles, the length and formation ot the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nT BYZRS XN AJLDS Y 8ZROLK0\nRLJYHN  XH  VHM  GYLCKD.\u2014EYOU\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: THE POLITICIAN'S PROMISES\nOF YESTERDAY ARE THE TAXES OF TODAY. \u2014 MAC*\nKENZIBKING\n(C 1366, King Features Syndicate, Ik,)\nGIVING BABY BEST\nWelcome baby with a princely\ngift \u2014 this exquisite cover that's\nso easy to embroider.\nNew! Made of 9 blocks 8V.'\nx 11\" with lavish roses framing\nbaby. Embroider blocks separately. Pattern 678: transfer 9 motifs; directions.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coin\n(no stamps please) for each pat\ntern to Laura Wheeler, care ol\nN.D.N., Needlecraft Dept, 60\nFront St., West, Toronto, Onl\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUM\nBER, your NAME and AD\nDRESS.\nNeedlecraft Spectacular \u2014 20\ndesigns, 3 free patterns in neu\n1966 Needlecraft Catalog, Knit\ncrochet, garments, slippers; hat:\ntoys, linens. Send 25c. NEWI 11\nremarkable priceless quilts -\nduplicate them exactly from\ncomplete patterns in color in\nnew Museum Quilt Book 2\nMainly 2, 3 patches. Quilting mo\ntifs. 60c. Send also for Quid\nBook 1\u201416 complete patterns\n60c.\n0ABAA. ItfL WiiL\nTflwaon. TftoAtut\nPICK A PRINCESS\nWHAT LOVELY LINES - sure\nto fascinate all eyes. Sew this\nseam-superb princess with tha\nuniquely buttoned neckline in\nshantung or rayon to flit here\nand there all spring.\nPrinted Pattern 9297: Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 15\ntakes 3 yds. 35-in.\nFIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins\n(no stamps, please) for each pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nSend order to.MARIAN MARTIN, care of N.D.N. Pattern\nDept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto,\nOnt.\nGO, GO SPRING1 Be a swinger, send for our new, fashion-\nfilled Spring - Summer Pattern-\nCatalog. Choose one free pattei i\nfrom 125 \u2014 clip coupon in Cala\nlog. Hurry, send 50c for catalol\nnow.\n NELSON DAIL YNEWS, MON., MARCH 21, 1966\u20149\nIT* Canadian Forces needs\nyoung men NOW to serve as\nsoldiers, sailors and airmen.\nFlan your future \u2014 embark on\na challenging and adventurous\ncareer in the Canadian Forces.\nYou are eligible to serve if you\nare single, male, age 17-29,\nphysically fit, and have Grade\n8 education or better. For complete details on the many opportunities and benefits that\nare Immediately available see\nyour   ...\nCANADIAN FORCES\nCAREER COUNSELLOR\nat the\nROYAL CANADIAN LEGION,\nNELSON,\nMON,, 21 MARCH, NOON-8 P.M.\nor write to\nCANADIAN FORCES\nRECRUITING CENTRE\n2908 32nd Street,\nVernon, B.C.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nCOMPANION FOR LADY, 7:00\np.m. till 7:30 a.m. Ph. 352-6095.\n\u201466-71\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nG. Stenberg, phone 352-6892.\n-55-8C\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE HOMES\nTHE 1966 SAFEWAY\nAND GENERALS\nARE HERE!\nMany more on the way.\nIn Order To Make Room\nWe Must CLEAR\nOUR USED STOCK\nCcme in snd choose a dependable used, mobile. NO ft\u00a3 ASuN-\nA.LE OFF Eft REFUSED.\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS LTD.\nBox 1458 Phone 385-5047\nColumbia Avenue\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nYour AUTHORIZED SAFEWAY-\nGENERAL DEALER for the\nEast and West Kootenays.\n-59-tfn\n(Classified Ads Get Results)\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nONE OAS COMBINATION KIT-\nchen range and heater; one\n22-gal. Super Hot water tank;\ntwo propane gas cylinders; 1\nregulator. Phone 353-2293, or\nwrite Box 437, Kaslo, B.C.\n-65-70\nSIDES OF GRAIN-FED Bli_F,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 43c; sides of posk, cut\nand wrapped, 47c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston Phone 358-9001\nor 356-9769. -171-tfn\nf'Uti   l'h-   BEST    IN    USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, re\nfrigerators, television, etc. con\ntact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd\n574 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n-27-ttn\nELECTRIC RANGE, FULLY\nautomatic; refrigerator; 7-pee.\nchrome suite; 3-pee. bedroom\nsuite. Phone 352-3263, Nelsbn.\n-52-tfn\nPLASTIC PIPE - LOWEST\nPrices. Mac's Welding and\nEquipment Co. Ltd., 5ii Rail\nway Street, Nelson. B.C.\n-149-ttt\nCOMPLETE   SHOE   REPAIft-\ning butiit; sole stitcher, finishers, tools. Priced tb sell. \u2014\n376 Fourth Ave., Castlegar.\n-63-68\nFOR SALE BY CASH, LEON-\nard electric range; fully auto,\nsnd rotlsseiie. 4 mot. old. Ph.\n352-6915 between 5 and 7 p.m.\n1 SET CATTLE RACKS WITH\nlights; also S Briggs _ Stratton engine. What offers? Apply\nB6x 283, Trail: \u201463-\"\nTROPICAL FISH FOR _AL_'.\nPhone 352-6158, Wednesdays\nand weekends only.    \u201447-tfn\nFRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR\n\u2014 freezer across top. Phone\n  -66-87\nFOR SALE - ELDON AOAD\nrace. Phone 352-7683 after 5.\n-67-72\nMORTGAGES\nWE BUY AGREEMENTS FOR\nSale and First Mortgages.\nEmpire Acceptance Corp. Ltd\nNo. 110 \u2022 815 West Hastings\nSt., Vancouver 1, B.C. \u201456-tfn\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods sad services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN  LTD.\n(Studebaker Sales)\n113 Baker St.    Phone 352-3231\n\\  -tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave,    Phone 352-5355\n-tfn\nSHIELDS PONTIAC-BUICK Ltd.\nComplete Automobile Service\n7ol Baker St.        Phone 352-5505\n-10-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in  waterproof\nplywood.\n101 Baker SL      Phone 352-3135\n-tfll\nBURNS LUMBER CO.  LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n609 Ward St.      Phone 352-5571\nI Block South of Woolworth's\n-tfn\nK. & D. SASH & DOOR\nCustom Woodwork - Sash\nBox 62, Thrums, Phone 359-7349\n\u2014293-tfn\nContractors\nLsszlo Basiak, General Masonry\nStone   Brick   Cement \u2022 Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St        Phone 352-7692\n-239-tfn\nART RAVE8TE1N\nRenovations,  Cement  Wort\nand General Carpentry\nPhone 352-7439\ntfn\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2528\nTransistorized Ignition\n\u2014tta\nHealth Foods\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE\n\u2022    Health Thru Nutrition\n659 Baker Street\n\u201422-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL  ENGRAVING\n460 Ward St. Nelson. B.C.\nPhone 352-7521\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\ntfn\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters \u25a0 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 852-3552\n-Ul-tftl\nRadio and TV\nService\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\n-tin\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON   EQUIPMENT\n103 Anderson St.   Ph  352-5465\n-186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whltetey's Sport Shop\n418 Baker St.    Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLurry's Topsoil, 8Snd and Gravel\nPh 352-2355 Days   352-7576 eves\n-tfn\nVacuum   Cleaners\nELECTROLUX 8\u00bbl_> * Service\n711 Innes St        Ph. 882-7341\n.77 ltd\nWelding &\nWorks\nron\nASSUME\nPAYMENTS\n1963 GALAXIE\nSPORTS SEDAN\nV-8 automatic, radio, finished\nin gleaming black with red\ninterior. Low mileage, Simply\npay $400 down or your trade\nand assume payments of $58\nper month.\nSee Mr. Smith st\n170 BAKER ST.\nor call 352-3233 days or\n352-3539 evenings.\n-66-67\nWRECKING '57 M-TEOR, '87\nFord Station Wagon, '58 and\n'57 BuiCks, '56 Monarch, '60\nI.H.C. Carryall; '56 Pontiae.\n'56 Chev., '56 A-50, '55 and '56\nDodgei; good motors '58\nBuick, '51, '52, '54, '56 and\n6-cyl. Ford, '55 Plymouth 6, '54\nZephyr, Cottonwood Wrecking\nService, Phon* 352-5815.\n-23. tfi.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nIF YOU HAVE AN EQUITY OF\n$4000 or more In your present\ndwelling and are interested in\ntrading for a new, modern,\nEngineered Home, see us today \u2014 It may be possible to\ntrade for one of our six models\nunder construction. T. D. Ros-\nling & Son Ltd., 568 Ward St.,\nPhone 352-3581. -62-67\nURGE WATERFRONT LOTS\nat Procter, Kootenay Lake\narm. Reasonable prices. 10%\ndown, balance small monthly\npayments, Including 6% int.\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies,\nNelson. Phone 352-2425.\n-269-tln\nSPRING IS IN THE AIR AND\nthis market is good for priced\nright properties. If you are\nInterested in Selling or Trading\nyour Property contact Nelson's\nonly office specializing in Real\nEstate. T. D. Rosling _ Son\nLtd., Phone 352-3581.    -65-70\nSTOCK FARM FOR RENT AT\nSalmo. Approx. 1 mile from\ntown and schools. Electric\nlights, running water. Available May 15. Apply Mitchell,\n1837 W. 58th AvC, Van. 14.\n-66-71\nRENTALS\n4 ROOM FURNISHED SELF-\ncontained suite, private entrance, gas heater, range, H.\nwater, elec. fridge, available\nMarch 18th. 524 Innes St., $82\nmon. Ph. 332-5327. Bus. hrs.,\n332-7700 after. -65-tfn\nSUITE OF OFFICES WITH A\nwalk-in vault, at 459 Baker SL\nAlterations to suit tenant. \u2014\nPhone 352-5561. -9-tfn\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS AND\nsuites. Dishes, linen supplied,\nparking, 171 Baker Street.\n-208-tfn\nMODERN 2 BDRM. COTTAGE.\n4 miles North Shore, beach,\n$100 per mo. Available April\n1.  Phone 352-5779.        -67-72\nHALDANE APTS - NO PETS\nor children. Ph. 3524721\n-137-tfn\nOFFICE   SPACE   AVAILABLE\nfor rent W. Kalyniuk Agencies.\n.-206-tfn\nBASEMENT APT. FOR RENT.\nPhone 352-7541 after 3 p.m.\n-63-77\n3-RM. FURN. APT., HEATED\ndowntown. Phone 352-3782.\n-6247\n1958 DODGE 3-TON WITH\ngravel box. 1857 Dodge 3-ton\nwtih gravel box. Price $1750\ntor both. Can bo seen at\nKline's Motors. Phone 352-\n3917. -63-66\nDODGE 3-TON TRUCK, 1950\npanel, panel can be removed;\nsteel deck, new motor, now\ntires; Oil in good condition.\n$800. Phone 226-7547.     -66-71\nMUST SELL 1964 CORVAIR\nMonza 2-door. 4 - speed trans.,\nradio, extras. Good condition,\nlow mileage. Ph. 357-2209 after\n6 p.m. -67-66\n1960 BUICK LA SABRE, V8,\nauto., P.S., P.B., radio. One\ncareful owner. Can be financed. Phone Trail, 368-8419.\n-87-72\nFOR SALE - 1991 BEL AIR\nChev., standard 6, new tires,\ngood condition. $1450. Phone\n359-7535. -_57-72-\nOftDER YOUft TRIUMPH AND\nB.S.A. motorcycles, now.\nMotorcycle Centre, 902 Front\nSt., Nelson, B.C. ^67-72\n1956 METRO INTERNATIONAL\nWalk-In Van, good condition;\n1956 Volks, fair condition. -\nPhone 357.651. -50 .to\n1960 ZEPHYR FOR SALE. -\nExcellent condition, $606. Apply 523 VOrnOn Apart., room 10.\n-65-70\ni960 MON. SEDAN\/CHOPPED\ntop, rolled and pleated leather,\nelec. doors, Vt race motor. \u2014\nPhone 352-2180. -64-W\nFOR SALE-1956 FORD Vi-TON\npickup. 6-cyl., i960 engine.\nGood condition. $390. G. Craft,\nSouth SlOcOn. -63-68\nFOR SALE\u2014'61 VOLKSWAGEN.\nNew motor, 6 new tire*; v6fy\nclean. PhOne 852-7612. -62-67\n1956 PLYMOUTH  V\u00ab.   AUTO.,\nA-l. Cheap. Phone 352-7774.\n-6S-68\nMUST SELL 1965 PONTIAC. -\nNew condition, only 7560 mile*.\nPhone 352-6110. -34-tfn\n\u202262 CHEV.  2-DR.' H.T., 24,000\nmiles. PhOne 352-2617. -63-88\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE - 2 BEDROOM\nmodern home on one acre,\nYahk, B.C. All facilities, tele-\nvision, quiet location. Owner in\nYahk at Easter. Apply; Fritz\nIversen, Box U99, Prince\nGeorge, B.C. -65-67\nGRACIOUS 8 BEDROOM FAM-\nily home, 2 bathrooms, den,\nacres of storage, attached\ngarage. TSke Over St $100\nmonthly. Phone 352-7522.\n-67-72\nFOR SALE - 5 ACRES AND\nbuildings adjoining river and\nhighway. School store, phone,\npower, TV; In Sloean Park\nMike Kazakoff, Box 1476,\nphon* 865-7819 -44-67\nUPPER KASLO, 18 LOTS, LEV-\nel, good soil; small well-built\nhouse with basement; garage;\n$9000. Write Box 455, Kaslo,\nB.C., or phone 353-2540,\u201464-68\nFOR SALE-BAKER ST. LOCA-\ntion; commercial building. Immediate occupancy. Very easy\nterms. Wm. Kalyniuk Agencies\nLtd., Phone 352-2425.   -62-tfn\nFOR SALE\u20143-B.R. HOME IN\nCastlegar, $9800. Terms available. Phone 365-8328.    -66-71\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE -1968 T A Nt> _ M\nDump Trailer, SO ft. long, in\ntop condition. Sale price, $4250.\n1959 Kenworth conventional\nsingle axle tractor with 220\nCummins motor and road ranger transmission. Unit in very\ngood condition,  sale price,\n$9500. 1959 Kenworth COE\nTandem with 220 Cummins and\nroad ranger transmission. Sate\nprice, $12,000. Contact R. W.\nSchuster, 6004 Centra St. S.,\nCalgary, Alta., or phone 252-\n4584 days; 282-4956 evenings.\n-65-67\nSTEEL SHAFTING\nKeyiteel, Bart, Angles.\nChannels, Plate Allot Shafts.\nSTEVENSON\nMACHINERY LTD.\n310 Latimer St.\n-67-67\nVALLEV AUTOMOTIVE LTt).\nMasaey-Ferguson, New Holland new and used farm equipment. Parts, sales and service.\nPhone 356-2254. Creston, B.C.\n-283-tin\nSHU'I CASH -OR USED KUHNI\nture, antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and iewels Home Furni\nture Exchange Ph 352-6531\n418 HSII St.. Nelson. B.C.\n.SMI\nWANW TO 6UY - CATTLE,\nAll Wes. write Doug Barry,\n0\/6 N. A. Anderson, R.R. i,\nGrand Forks, B.C., Or phOne\n442-8605. -66-77\nS good Section Harrows,\nlever type, and tiller fur s-\npoint hitch tractor. Apply Box\n283, Trail. -68-68\nWANTED OLD AND NEW RA-\ndios, record players. Phone\n352-3952. --67-72\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAN-  FARM  SUPPLIES\nNOW TAKING ORDERS FOR\nday .ild'. ehttla;;. ready-to-Uy\npullets, Phone 352-3808.-56-tfn\nJohnny's Welding & Iron Works\nRiondel      Ph. 225-8285 Collect.\nOrnamental Iron Work\nGeneral Welding\n-50-tfn\nGURNSEY COW, JUST FRESH-\nened with' second calf. Phone\n352-2966..   \u25a0    '..:.:..    . -65-67\nJERSEY COW\/ FRESHENED,\n3rd calf. N. Wasilenkoff,\nGlade Ferry, -67-72\nNEW   AND   USED   3-PHASE\nmotors. All sizes. - COlemaO\nElectric. Ph. 852-3173, NaiSoft.\n-46-tfn\nFOR SAL_ - HEAVY DUTY\nelectric motor, 3 h.p. 3 phase\n- 22b volt. Apply Nelson\nbaiiy Newt. -49-tM\nINTERNATIONAL TD-14 CAT\nwith winch and hyd. dozer.\n$2,000. Can be teen at Kline's\nMotors. Phone 352-S917.-6S-66\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT WITH Option to buy: Acreage with good\nhome within 6-8 miles. Apply\nBox 296, Nelton1 Daily Newt,\n -62-67\n3 6R 4-B__ROOM HOME\n. wanted by a businets man and\nf family. Phone Mrs. ?hl\u00abdt at\n352-6852. -59-tfn\nLARGE  HOUSE,  PREFER-\nably in Nelson or within 16\nmilet Of Nelson. Ph. 352-2834.\n-65.67\n2-B.R. APT.; KITCHEN - 610\nFront Street. Phone 352-2943.\n-62-67\n2-RM. HEATED, FURN. SUITE,\nclose in. Suitable for one. -\nPhone 352-5252. -66-tfn\ni-RM. SUITE, LIGHT AND\nheat included, suitable for\ncouple. Phone 352-5037. \u201467-76\n2-BEDROOM UNFURN. SUITE.\nHeated. Phone 352-396S.-S4.to\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nAPARTMENT BLOCK, C_N\ntral location In Kimberley. A\nreal investment for retirement\nyears. Reasonably priced with\ndown to earth terms. Full particulars from: M.L.S. Cranbrook Agencies; Meb Reade.\nP.O, Box 849. -66-67\nFOR SALE - SMALL PORT-\nable laundromat in 22-foot\ntrailer. Priced for quick sale.\nApply P.O. BOx 63 or Phone\n359-7742. -65-76\nPROPERTY WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands\nCall or write Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgendes, NelsOn. Ph. 352-2425\n\u2014,31-tfn\nPETS,   CANARIES,  BEES\nWANT-- - ONfc BLACK\nmale Labrador puppy. BOx 94,\nThrums. Write Or phone 859-\n7798. -67-68\nPUREBRED    SIAMESE    KIT\ntens for sale. Phone 355-2245\n-6N7\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n1966 STARCRAFT fiOATS AND\nMercury OutbOards now in\nstock at KaslO Marine Service.\nDemonstrations anytime. Alto\nlots of used equipment. Phone\n353-2341, Box 458, KaslO.\n-65-tfh\nNEW AND USED OUTBOARD\nmotors at Coleman Electric.\nPh. 352-3178. -23-tfft\nUNFURN.   HEATED   SELF-\n... cont. apt. for one. Ph. 352-5626.\n-87-69\nSfctamt.\nlathj Sfrroa\nCirculation Dept., Ph. 158-3852\nBy earner per wees, m cents\nin advance.\nSubscription relet!\n_y mat) in Canada\nOutside NelsoA\none month    $ J.M\nThree months \u2014   \u00bb-w>\nsix months   ,\u2014  won\none year    1*00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonweal-\none month       $\u00bbm\nThree months     mo\nSix months       H.M\nOne year           3000\nBy Mailt0U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month      $ 2-58\nThree months    7 08\nSix months    i860\nOne year       .4 ot>\nWher* extra pottage it required\nabove tatei plus pottage.\nFor delivery by carrier in ft\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\nbrook,  phone  Mrt.   Stanley\nWill-am\nto Trail, Mrt w _. Spoonef\nto Kimberley. Mrt. A   w\nBrown\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nHouse\nCleaning\nDON'T FORGET YOUR\nPENCIL AND PAPER\nYour House Cleaning Supplies are\nnot complete without a pencil and\npaper to write down all those unwanted articles you have lying\naround cluttering up your home \u2014\narticles that are still in good condition, but no longer useful to you.\nTURN UNWANTED ARTICLES\nINTO READY CASH!\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n1\nFIRST UNI\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD UNI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nSEVENTH UNI\nEIGHIH LINE\n0 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group ef number* Or letter* count da 6ne word)   '\n0 Put Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\n9 Box Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(&6X 06 Nelson News)\nTO   CALCULATE   RATES,   USE   THIS   TABLE:\n\u2022at Line\n1 Insertion\n2 Consecutive Intertlens\n3 Consecutive Intertlens\n6 Consecutive Insertions\nIt Consecutive Insertlens\n$ .30\n,3S\n,4S\n.60\n1.83\n\u2022 Minimum charge It two lines\n\u2022 Add ISc for Bon Number\n\u2022 Take advantage ef the low tl* time rate\nNon-Contecutlve Insertions 20* a Line Fer Time.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nTOUR NAME .\nADDRESS  .\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run 4.\nBill Me ___\nPoynient Enclosed\nClassified  Advertising Department, Nelson. B.C.\n em\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., MARCH 21,1966\n\"Monday,\nMarch 21\n'\u2022\"_:*\nAnd WeAre Pleased\nTo Be. Open and\n.    Afcie to\nSERVt\nYou From 9:00 - 5:30\nPhone 352-2141 or\n-    Coll In at\nDRUGS\nUP.\nAnnounce Profit\nNoranda Mine\nTORONTO-(CP) - Net profit\nfor Noranda Mines Ltd. for the\nyear 1965 amounted toy$36,2 09,\n416, oi\u2022 $3.06 a share, compared\nwith $32,357,-34, or $2.76 in 1964,\nthe annual report disclosed Monday.'.\". ....'\".'..\":\nWorking capital at the end of\nthe year was':shown at $59,306,-\n000,\u00ab>mpared with $55,204,000 at\nUie;\u00abid:ofl9M.\n.The net profit was shown after\ndeduction of expenses, including\ncost of production and selling\n($152,473,196; compared with\n$125,226,384); depreciation ($8,\n647,48. compared with $8,349,\n939); a. fijinistration ($8,810,673,.\nconipared .with $8,483,997) and\nincome. and . production taxes\n($18,256,393 compared with $16,-\n514,632),.\nTotal revenue, including sales\nof metals and products and dividends and interest earned was\nshown at $234,146,174, compared\nwith $200,000,961.\n\"The world shortage of copper\nresulting in rising prices, 'Noranda said in an accompanying\nstatement, \"contributed to improved earnings, but were\nsomewtat offset by slightly\nlower metal productibn and\nhigher exploration and operating- costs.\"\u2014\nIt-noted that major projects\nstarted in the year including the\nsinking of twin shafts on the potash property near Saskatoon.\nProduction ...there is scheduled\nfor 1969 and \"estimated cost is\n$73,000,000.\" .\n\"Construction of the North-\nwood pulp mill at Prince\nGeorge, B.C;, a joint venture\nwith the Mead Corp. of Dayton,\nOhio, is on schedule,\" the statement said. \"Start-up of the $60,-\n000,000 project is scheduled for\nthe summer of 1966. . . .\nCigars Overcoming\nPrice Increases\nBy JOHN -ODD\nMONTREAL (CP) - Cigars,\ntraditionally. associated with financial success, fatherhood,' and\nbig business ;deal . are .gradually overcoming recent, price\nincrease .'setbacks to gain; acceptance ai.' something \u25a0 mere\nthan just a \"special occasion\"\nsmoke.\nThe real five-cent cigar has\ngone the way of the five-cent\nbeer, but Canadian. manufacturers say they are winning\nback public acceptance for their\nproducts by modern merchandising methods \u25a0 and increased\nadvertising\u2014often- slanted towards women;. ~\t\n\"It's not that we expect the\nwomen to' smoke the things,\"\nsaid a Montreal sales manager,\n\"It's just .that' women have al-\nways associated- cigars .with\ngangstertypes.\"\nHe said manufacturers are\nproducing milder, \"more elegantly-shaped* - cigars so that\nwomett will not object to their'\nhusbands* smoking habits.\n\"A man is going to think\ntwice before buying a 16-cent\ncigar if he knows he'll get in\ntrouble with-his wife,\" the sales\nmanager said. \"Prices :are up\nand we've got to piease them\nall.\"\nINCREASE PRICES\nThe five major cigar manufacturers in the Montreal area,\nthe cigar-making centre of Canada, increased the suggested\nretail price of most brands by\none cent in January. Other\nmanufacturers across Canada\nquickly, followed suit.\nA spokesman said higher labor costs made the increase\nnecessary.\nProduction costs have not increased greatly and most manufacturers maintain that cigar\nprices are not much higher than\nthey were in 1949.\n'Modern machines and technical improvements have enabled us to cut costs,\" said a\ncompany president.\nTotal Canadian cigar sales\namounted to about $500,000,000\nlast year, an increase of $50,-\n000,000 from 1964.\n\"Our most exciting year was\n1964, though,\" said a Montreal\nsales manager. \"When the U.S.\nsurgeon-general's report linking\ncigarettes and cancer came out,\nsales jumped almost overnight.\"\nDuring the year Canadian\nsales climbed to about $450,-\n000,000 from $350,000,000.\nMost manufacturers quoted a\nrecent market analysis that said\none out. of every six Canadian\nmen over 21 smokes cigars, \"at\nleast from time to time.\"\nLIKED BY OLDER GROUP\nRegular cigar smokers are\nconcentrated in the 30-and-over\ngroup, they said.\nMost popular across Canada\nis the 11-cent cigar, sales managers said. It accounted for 75\nper cent of all sales last year.\n\"This illustrates a trend\nbegun in the' depression towards\nsmaller cigars,\" a spokesman\nsaid!-\"This year's price increase\nhelped too.\"\nThe really expensive' stogies\nare mainly imports, running\nfrom 50 cents to more than a\ndollar for a Churchill - sized\nHavana. These models account\nfor about five per cent of the\nmarket while the cheapest\ncigars, selling fo rsix or seven\ncents, take about 15 per cent\nof all sales.\nRegular shipments of Cuban\ncigars and Cuban leaf still arrive in Canada.\n\"Some say the Jamaican product is good, but Cuban leaf is\ngenerally considered to have the\nbest taste,\" said a spokesman.\nHuge quantities of tobacco\ngrown in the Joliette area of\nQuebec and in southern Ontario\nare used by Canadian manufacturers for many big-volume\nlines.\nCigars made in Canada of\nCuban leaf are both consumed\nhere and exported. None go to\nthe United States where Cuban\nimports are banned.\nThe packaging trend in recent\nyears has been towards special\ncontainers such as aluminum\ntubes,.'glass jars with cut glass\nlids, and fancy beer mugs. One\nmanufacturer features reproductions of historical paintings\non the back of its boxes\u2014a\nbuild-up, he says, for Canada's\nCentennial.\nMost major manufacturers\nare located in the Montreal\narea.\nGeneral Cigar, a subsidiary of\nImperial Tobacco Co. of Canada claims about 50 per cent\nof the market. Simon Cigar, a\nsubsidiary of Consolidated Cigar\nCorp. of New York is believed\nto be the second with about 30\nper cent and Benson and\nHedges, a subsidiary of Philip\nMorris Inc. of New York is\nnext. All produce most of their\ncigars in Montreal.\nIndustrial Slide Halted\nCanadian  Market\nBy. LARRY DWORKIN\n. Canadian Press Staff Writer\n\u25a0Industrials appear to have\nhalted their recent slide on\nCanada's stock markets, making steady gains in the last\nthree days.\nAt Toronto during the week,\nhowever,' the \u25a0 industrial index\ndropped 1.46 to 166.05 a result\nof sharp falls Monday and-Tuesday, recording its fifth consecutive weekly decline.\nA' total. _f 20,820,194 shares\nturned, over compared with 18,-\n641,873 last week,.\n\u25a0 Many observers attribute part\nof. the . recent downswing to\npressures, by central banks in\nCanada and the United States\nto keep a tight rein on the expansion of the money supply.\nLast week the Bank of Canada raised its bank-rate to\nchartered banks to 5_ per cent\nfrom 4Vt per cent to curb inflationary pressures.\nOne area hard hit is the construction industry where housing starts this year are well below last year.\nMassey-Ferguson led the industrial decline, falling 27s to\n29% on 38,020 shares, partially\nas a result of the stock selling\nex-rights. The rights fell 25 to\n80 cents.\nPaper issues dropped 2.62 on\nindex to 121.43 when newsprint\nprice increases were rolled\nback to $5 a ton from $10.\nBathurst Paper was off 1 _ to\n22V4, Great Lakes 1 to 25*4,\nPrice Brothers _ to 45%, B. C.\nForest and Consolidated Paper\n_ to 22% and 39_, and Abitibi\n% to 12V4.\nOther industrials that took\nheavy losses were Algoma Steel\ndown 3Y4 to 64-, Dominion\nStores 1% to 22%, Imperial Oil\nand Interprovincial Pipe Line\n1_ to 52_ and 83_, and Alberta Gas 1% to 34%.\nU.S. Hedge Market\nHolds Steady\n, NEW YORK (AP)-Resump-\ntion of negotiations to end the\nnearly. 11-week strike at theEl\nTeniente copper mine in Chile\ncaused some slipping in the major hedge markets in the last\nweek,\nBut basically Uie hedge market was fairly steady since the\ntight supply continues, scrap\ncopper commands premiums\nand the Viet Nam defence,\nbuildup continues, to absorb cop'\nper,' according, to Ameri-\nOntario Security\nLaw Changes\nNews of the Day\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy tor this column accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nto next day's publication,\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\n_:.\u25a0:.. .. on request. Minimum two lines.\nWinner of Picture raffle, Blessed Sacrement Parish is Mr.\nB. La Freniere. \u201467-67\n_;. ^  tomorrow\nK.L.G. Hospital, Annual meeting, 8 p.m; \u201467_7\nBOY SCOUT APPLE DAY\nSATURDAY, MARCH 26. -67-72\nADULT SKATING\n8 I.M. TONIGHT\n::;\/.; \u201467-67\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\nDrive'with confidence\nDual controls. Ph. 352-5252\n,......_;: _49.n\nBINGO MONDAY 8 P.M.\nUKRAINIAN CATH. PARISH\nHALL, 1209 Hall Mines Road.\n-122 -il\nKIWANIS CAR BINGO\n. \u25a0 -   MAY 7th, 1966\n..'Watch for Details\n.'.'-.\u25a0\u2022.\":...-: -43-h\nPRESTO LOGS\n' CHOQUETTE FUEL\nFOOT OF BAKER ST.\nwv.'.:.*.'\u2022'. - -   -297-tfn\nBEGINNERS' GOLF SCHOOL\n\u2022 _\u2022;\u2022-. Monday's, 8 p.m.\nTrafalgar:Jr. Secondary School,\nCommencing Monday, March 21\n-66-67\nAnnual meeting Castlegar Sav\nin'gB';C-r'6'dit Union Monday,\nMarsh 21,1966. Legion Hall, 8:00\np.m., 'Castlegar. Bring a friend.\n$25.'door prize.- \u201466-67\nRegular meeting of the Nelson\nRod and Gun Club, March 22nd,\nEagles Hall,. 8 p.m. Persons interested in archery please attend.\n\u2022 .'.'.'.\u25a0-. _66-67\n\u25a0CARD OF THANKS\n\u25a0-We wish to express our sincere appreciation and thanks\ntd.-our .many friends for their\nkindness^extended to us at the\nloss of our son.\nLorne and Amy Blain\ni .      ., .AndFamily.\n-'.. ;:.. '.' -.7-67\nWedding invitations, social announcements and accessories,\ncan be seen and ordered at\nBLAKEMAN'S\n.- ;   ^47-h\nTICKETS FOR PAJAMA GAME\nMay be exchanged for seat\ntickets Monday through Saturday, 9:00 \u2014 5:00 p.m. at the\nCivic Centre office.        \u201467-69\n2 popular sizes of folding\nclothes horses. Also metal\nclothes line reels for clothes\ndrying in.wet weather... .\nHtPPERSON HARDWARE\n.'.-.\u2022-: -67-67\nGENERAL MEETING OF\nNELSON CENTENNIAL CLUB.\nMARCH 22, 7:30 P.M. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUILDING. EVERYONE Welcome\nTO SEE THE MODEL OF PROJECT ON DISPLAY.       -67-67\nBy KEN SMITH\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014An executive won't be able to slip hot\nstock tips to his wife under\nproposed changes to Ontario's\nsecurities laws. Even relatives\nand in-laws living with him\nwould be cut off.\nThe changes, introduced as\namendments to the Corporation\nand Securities Acts in the Ontario legislature Wednesday, would include tight controls on insider trading in which\nah executive uses information\nnot available to the public to\nmake a personal profit.\nThis has been a key area of\ncriticism levelled during the last\ntwo years at Ontario's securities laws.\n. \"It is in the field of insider,\ntrading that the house is being\nasked to go further than any\nother legislative body in the\nworld has done to date,\" Provincial Secretary John Yaremko\nsaid in introducing the proposed\nCorporation Act changes.\nDEFINITION WIDE\nThe changes include a wide\ndefinition of an insider:\n\u2014A director of a company.\n\u2014A senior officer, meaning\nchairman, vice - chairman,\npresident, vice-president, sec-,\nretary, treasurer or general\nmanager, or their equivalents.\n\u2014The five highest-paid employees pulling in more than\n$20,000.\n\u2014Any shareholder with more\nthan 10 per cent of the company's voting stock.\n\u2014Any associate, meaning\nwife, relative or in-law living\nwith him.\nEVERYONE DEPENDING ON\nCITY SERVICE FOR GARBAGE\nCOLLECTIONS IS REQUESTED\nTO PLACE GARBAGE CANS\nAT THE ORIGINAL PICKUP\nLOCATIONS.\nNOTICE\nThe first meeting of the West\nKootenay Stock Car Racing Assn.\nwill be held in the Trail Legion\nHall (upstairs) on March 23. at\n7:30 p!m. All last year's members and new members wishing\nto register cars for the 1966\"rac-\n:!,g season are urgently requested to attend. -^66-~\nLEADERSHIP\nDEVELOPMENT PROGRAM\nTopics -\nLeadership Methods \u2014 Qualities\nof a Leader.\nFilms -\n\"Leaders of Leisure,\" \"$1,(KM\nfor Recreation.\" Mondav, March\n21st, 7:30 p.m., South Nelson\nSchool. \u201464-h\n\u2014Even trust or estate in\nwhich the executive has a substantial beneficial interest.\nThe amendments would force\npersons falling within these categories to report every month\nto the Ontario Securities Commission on their transactions in\nthe company's shares.\nThe securities commission\nthen would be required to publish these details, so all shareholders could see. them.\u2022.'.\u2022\nFor people who wouldn't meet\nthe proposed rules, the amendments suggest tough penalties.\nFirst, they could face a maximum $1,000 fine in the courts.\nThen they would have to deal\nwith a potential double liability-\n\u2014to other shareholders and to\ntheir companies.\nThe amendments would provide that, shareholders could sue\nthe insider-torinydirect losses\nthey suffered, and the company\ncould hold him accountable for\nprofits he made on his dealings.\nWorld News\nACTRESS BURNED\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Eng.\nlish actress Martita Hunt, 66,\nwas treated for burns and shock\nin a hospital Saturday after her\nbed caught fire at her home\nhere. In the film version .of\nCharles Dickens' Great Expe .\ntations she played Miss Havers-\nham who was burned to death\nin her wedding gown.\nWIN FIGHTING RIGHTS\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - A\nthree-year battle over the fishing rights of reserve Indians\nended here last week in victory\nfor the Indians. County Judge\nGeorge Collins ruled that fish,\nand game laws do not apply to\nlands and waters where reserve\nIndians have' been given prior\nrights in a treaty. Judge Collins\nsaid in his judgment that Mani-\ntoulin Island is an area where\nreserve Indians have the right\nto fish guaranteed by tree!).\ncan Metal Market, daily newspaper of the metals industry.\nCopper bearing scrap prices\nresulted in fabricators increasing product selling prices. Wol-\nvering Tube added a surcharge\nof eight cents a pound, based on\ncopper content, for its tubular\nproducts.\nCopper futures closed Thursday at 75.55 cents for March\nand 62.60 cents for March, 1967,\nboth'prices nominal, compared\nwith the previous week's closing of 77.20 cents and 64.40\ncents.\nDealer copper was being\nquoted at a spread Thursday\nwith April.at.84-84.50 cents and\nJune at 82-82.50 cents. The previous week's closing prices were\n81-82 cents and 79-80 cents for\nboth positions.\nOn the London Metal Ex\nchange, Thursday's closing\nwere 84.88 cents for cash and\n82.25 cents for three months,\ncompared with the previous\nweek's 84.50 cents for cash and\n82.20 cents, for three months.\nPrices continued to hold for\nlead at 16 cents a pound and\nfor zinc at 14.50 cents a pound,\neast St. Louis, and 15 cents,\nNew York.:\nMajor metals prices:\nCopper\u201436 cents a pound, delivered; foreign 84.6 cents, nominal, New York.\nLead\u201416 cents a pound, New\nYork 15.80 cents, St. Louis.\n\" Zinc\u20141414 cents a pound, East\nSt. Lolusr 15 cents, New York.\nAluminum \u2014 24- cents a\npound, unalloyed ingots, delivered.\nNickel\u201477.75 cents a pound,\nelectrolytic cathodes, Port Col-\nborne, Ont, U.S. duty included.\nSilver\u2014$1,293 an ounce, New\nYork; 111% pence, London.\nAtlantic Sugar and CPR\ngained 1_ to 28 and 62%, Roth-\nmaris 1 to 28% and Wainwright\n1.75 to 3.30 on 213,200 shares.\nOILS WERE DOWN\nWestern oils continued down.\nBanff Oil led the group down\ndespite good reports of the\nRainbow Lake discovery in\nnorthwest Alberta. The stock\nretreated' 1% to 16%.\nCanadian Superior, Dome and\nHusky Oil slipped 1 to 21, 16\nand 12%. Pacific Petroleum\nwas off Vt to 11% and Central\nDel Rio % to 11%. Scurry Rainbow advanced 1% to 22.\nSpeculative oils were generally lower although Mill City\nclimbed 41 cents to 2.11,\nSpooner and Alminex 20 each to\n95 cents and 4.80.\nBase metals was the only major group to record gains, Hudson Bay Mining added 1% at\n81%, Pine Point 1 at 59, Denison\nand Inco % at 40% and 99, and\nRio Algom % at 20%. Noranda\ndipped. 1 to 51.\nMcINTYRE DROPPED\nAmong golds, Mclntyre\ndropped 2% to 89, Dome 1 to\n39%, Hollinger Vt to 24%, Campbell Red Lake % to 20% and\nKerr-Addison % to 10%. Giant\nYellowknife was up % to 12%.\nIn speculative mining, Tribag\nplunged 30 cents to 1.10, Consolidated Halliwell 21 cents to\n1.18 while Coulee rose 20 to 67\ncents and Con-Shawkey 11 to 72\ncents.\nOn index, golds were down\n1.24 to 166.29, western oils 4.07\nto 106.82 and the TSE 1.46 to\n156.96. Base metals, edged up\n.04 to 87.20.\nAt Montreal, industrials were\ndown 1.47 to 162.82, utilities 1.17\nto 148.36, papers 2.63 to 122.97.\nBanks were up .56 to 121.11.\nVolume was 5,772,990 shares\ncompared with 5,955,918 last\nweek.\nPromote Anglo-\nCanadianTrade\nBy JAMES NELSON\nOTTAWA (CP)-Both British\nand Canadian authorities last\nweek announced plans to promote more Anglo - Canadian\ntrade.\nSir Henry Lintott, British high\ncommissioner, .announced trade\npromotion plans extending \"far\"\ninto 1968 in an effort to encourage Canadians' toTmy more British goods.\nAmong his plans is a British\nweek to be celebrated in Toronto in the autumn of 1968. In\naddition to British goods for\nconsumer use, the plan involves\nbringing out to Canada the best\nof British theatre, music and\nthe visual arts, and making it a\ngay time for all.\nCanada's effort to boost sales\nin Britain had a much more prosaic ring.\nA group of Canadian government officials and businessmen\nwho visited Britain last fall issued their report on some of the\ndifficulties Canadian exporters\nmay run into in trying to get\ntheir goods onto the British market.\nThis was in the mundane field\nof ocean shipping, port handling\nfacilities on the other side, customs clearance, and road and\nrail transport within the United\nKingdom.\nNEED MORE THAN QUALITY\n\"A quality product at a competitive price is not in itself sufficient to sell in an export market,\" said the report of the Canadian export shipments mission to Britain. \"Goods must be\ndelivered in satisfactory condition, on time, properly documented, and using the most productive distribution techniques.\"\nOne of the advantages Canadian goods can have entering\nBritain, which is not available\nto non-Commonwealth countries\nsuch as the United States, is the\npreferential tariff treatment for\nCommonwealth goods.\nBut the report says that unless Canadian exporters are\ncareful about filling in the necessary documents, they may\nlose this advantage.\nFor instance, there are forms\nwhich have to be completed to\nshow the amount of Canadian\ncontent in the goods. It's not all\nright simply to bring American\ngoods into Canada, add a few\nfinishing touches, and send\nthem off to Britain as Canadian\ngoods.\n. 'The mission found that fundamental changes are taking\nplace in the British transportation industry and the marketing\nof goods in Britain, and there\nare indications that the tempo\nof these changes, will accelerate\nwithin the next few years,\" the\nreport said.\nMANY CONSIDERATIONS\nA lot depends on material\nhandling techniques. One thing\nthe new Canadian exporter to\nBritain frequently overlooks is\nthe smaller size of railway cars\nand highway trucks used in Britain. There is also a wide variety of port-handling and internal transportation rates to be\nconsidered.\nIn general, the report said,\nthe prospects for increasing Canadian sales in Britain are\ngood.\n\"The mission found evidence\nof a significant alteration taking place in the pattern and\ncomposition of Canadian exports to Britain. For long, Britain has been a leading export\nmarket for foodstuffs and basic\nmaterials.\n\"It now is expanding considerably as a market for Canadian manufactured goods of all\ndescriptions and exporters are\ncoming to realize that Britain\nholds promise of becoming a\nmajor outlet for their goods.\n\"According to the national\nplan issued recently by the British government, it is in the manufactured field that British imports are expected to increase\nto the greatest extent.\n\"However, it is in this field\nthat the mission found the greatest evidence of a lack of attention on the part of Canadian exporters to British customs requirements and procedures.\"\nCAN'T BE IMPOSED\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Education\ncan't be imposed on illiterate\nadults, Dr. R. Lee Henney, a\nUnited States educationist, said\nSaturday. He told a press conference it was \"cruel\" to teach\nan adult reading, writing and\nmathematics without providing\nbetter opportunities through\nsimultaneous skilled job training.\nFor The\nLATEST\nMEN'S\nFASHIONS\nIt's\nP'MORY'O\nC    LTD.     \u00b0\nTHE   MAN'S   STORE\n277 Canadians\nHold Sweepstake\nTickets\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Lincolnshire Handicap,\nfirst major event of the British\nflat racing season, will be\nwatched next Wednesday with\nmore than ordinary interest by\n277 Canadians.\nBreaking a long-established\ntradition, the first Irish Sweepstakes of the year is based on\nthe Lincolnshire rather than the\nGrand National Steeplechase.\nThe Grand National will be run\nat Aintree, England, Saturday,\nMarch 26.\nTickets on the 71 horses eligible for next Wednesday's Lincolnshire were drawn in Dublin\nWednesday, with 277 Canadian\ntickets listed by sweepstakes\nauthorities.\nFive of seven Canadian tickets listed Wednesday as being\ndrawn on the horse Resolved\nwere switched Thursday to Riot\nAct, the current favorite.\nHove the Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\n* LIMITED a_J\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nSQUIBB\nRUBRATON\nIron and Multi-iVtomin\nTonic\nHelps Prevent Anemia Due\nto Iron Deficiency.\n$2.75\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611 Bos 460\nIs Tax Increase\nNecessary in U.S.?\nNEW YORK (AP) - Will a ary.  Wages and salaries rose\nfederal income tax increase in\nthe United States be necessary\nto finance the Viet Nam war\nand halt inflation?\nThat was a big question in\nbusiness and financial circles\nthis week.\nTreasury Secretary Henry H.\nFowler said a \"moderate\" tax\nincrease may become necessary.   ....\nPresident Johnson said he will\nask prompt enactment of a tax\nincrease if higher levies are required to prevent-inflation. \\\n\u2022'The'joihtecondmiccommittee\nof Congress said there was increasing evidence a general tax\nincrease would be needed this\nyear to restrain inflation.\n.President' Johnson signed; a\nbill which .will bring the government about $6,000,000,000 in additional revenue over the next 15\nmonths.\nThe first effect of the legislation is to increase to seven per\ncent from six per cent the excise tax on car sales and to reinstate the 10 per cent on telephone calls, which had been reduced to three per cent. It also\nprovides for speedups in the collection of corporate and personal income taxes.\nPersonal Income climbed to\nrecords in February\t\nThe commerce department\nreported personal income ad--\nvanced by $4,000,000,000 to $556,-\n300,000,000 annual rate in Febru-\n$2,800,000 to $376,600,000 annual\nrate.\nThe department also said corporate profits increased by $1,-\n750,000,000 during the fourth\nquarter of 1965 to an annual\nrate of $75,250,000,000. It estimated national income, including corporate profits, at a rate\nof $571,000,000,000 for the fourth\nquarter of last year.\nThe newsprint price situation\nbecame scrambled. Last week\nCanadian producers initiated a\n$10-a-ton increase, putting the\nprice in the eastern United\nStates at $144 a ton and in the\nwestern United States at $134.\nThis week one producer announced a $7-a-ton boost and\ntwo others announced $5-a-ton\nincreases. Then two other pro\nducers who originally raised\ntheir prices $10 substituted $5.\nprices.\nCigarette manufacturers\nboosted the wholesale prices of\nmost brands 40 cents'per 1,000.\nThis will be reflected in a rise\nof about a penny a package retail.\nR. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.\nrescinded the increase at the request of President Johnson.\nGeneral Tire and Rubber Co.\nadvanced prices for passenger\ncar, truck, farm and industrial\ntires by one to three per cent.\nFirestone Tire and Rubber Co.\n-said-it would add 3 per cent to\nthe prices of most passenger\ncar tires.\nMail Your Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH   LINE\nFIFTH   LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH   LINE\nEIGHTH  LINE\nPLEASE NOTE:\nThe actual number of lines any given\nad will occupy when published depends\nupon the number of words used and the\nlength of the words.\nIt is possible therefore that an ad with\na substantial percentage of lengthy words\nin comparison to short ones, will, when\npublished, occupy a greater number of\nlines than indicated on the form above.\nThe form itself is only intended to\" be\nused as an indicator of the approximate\nprobable cost of any given ad.\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word)\ne  Put address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box number count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE APPROXIMATE COST,\nUSE THIS TABLE:\nPer Line:\n1 Insertion\t\n2 Consecutive Insertions     \u25a0  \u25a0 ,\n3 Consecutive  Insertions -\n6 Consecutive  Insertions   _____\n26 Consecutive Insertions\t\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20.  a Line Per Time.\n.20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum Charge Is Two Lines.\n\u2022 Add IS* for Box Number.\n\u2022 Take Advantage of the low 6-times rate\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nYOUR NAME\nADDRESS\nNo. of days ad to run .\nBill Me _ \t\nPayment Enclosed\t\nClassified Advertising Department\nBox 700\nNelson, B.C.\n>\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_1966_03_21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0442514","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 Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.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"}]}}