 29 Lives;
Damage $1,600^00
NACOGDOCHI8, Tex., Jtn. 6 (AP)—Property damage from
tornadoes thit ripped through thli tlmber-rloh lut Texu ana wis
estimated unofficially todiy In excels of $1,800,000 whllt diathi from
tht itorm rote to 21. •       .*• „-'  ,
* Four Iddltlonal diithi wtrt reported today afUr the high
winds struck Friday night, Injuring hundreds tf others and (living it
lent 740 families homelm. *)-
Approximately IM penoni In the
itorm area remained ln hoipital.
The hardest hit areas were Nacogdoches tnd. Nacogdochei County,
where 10 ire deed; Palestine, ibout
60 miles from here, ind Anderson
'County, 14 deed; Clawson and Angelina County, 3 dead; SL Paul-Sluia,
2 dead
More than 100 homei were demolished by the storm ln Nacogdoches and at least SOO persons are
homeless, Dr. T. E. Ferguson, County Red Cross Chairman, estimated.
Min funeral servicei were held
today at Palestine for itorm victims.  ,
ltl Washington, the Red Cross
said tonight surveys ihowed 469
homei md other bulldlngi destroyed and SOD badly damaged in Friday night's tornado in East Texas.
A Headquartera ititement uid It
had obtained priorities tor 1,750,000
board feet of lumber which it estimated, it. sufficient for| immediate
emergency coDstructlbn requirements in-the five-county area.
Break Up Troops
Protesting
U.S. Demob Cutback
BY JOHN GROVER
MANILA, Jan. « (API- -Military
police today broke up a crowd of
several thousand, angry American
loldlen who wera mirchlng on
the Commanding General's Headquarters in proteit agalnit the
War Department's innounced
•lowdown In demobilization.
Other Informal mau meetings nf
loldiers quickly formed at separated points Iji Manila. The men were
urged by soldier speakers to attend
a general protest gathering Monday night at the City HaU.
Half-a-doren groups published
mimeographed pamphlets attacking
the War Department and Army
"Brass Hata" and urging soldiers lo
complain to Congressional Committees due here soon on various
Investigative missions.
One outfit, was assessing its men
two pesos each for a fund to buy
advertising in United States newspapers to "turn tbe heat on the
Brass Hats."
One of the demonstrating groups,
made up of, several thousand soldiers, began marching toward thc
Manila Headquarters of Lt.-Gen. W.
D. Styer, Commanding Army forces
in the Western Pacific. Military policemen dispersed them.at the Quezon Bridge, where traffic was tied
Up for a half hour.
Later thousands ol soldiers demon stratcd in orderly fashion on
Rizsl Avenue, the chief rendezvous
of off-duty troopi.
Other crowds formed spontaneously near Riial Stadium. Nichols
Field and other points ln the city in
noisy demonstrations.
Tht loldler resentment wai
touched off by War Department
announcement in Waihlngton Friday that oveneai troop requirements for the next tlx monthi
would exceed the rate of replice-
ment, >o that men eligible for dl*
charge might be delayed tt long
ai three monthi In returning
home, even though ihlpping spice
now Is admittedly available.
COMMUNIST
CHIEF CONFIDENT
OF CEASE FIRE
CHUNGKING, Jin. 8 (AP)-
Otn. Chou en-Lai, chief of the
Communist dtlegation to Chung-
Chlna'a civil strKe woyld be ordered prior to next Thuridiy'i
unity conference,
Oen. Chou laid that he, Gtn.
George C, Marihall, United Statei
ipeclal envoy to China, tnd Gen.
Ching Chun, the Nitlonil Gov
ernment'i representative, would
meet tomorrow add probably
makt "Important decisions."
Gen. Manhall formally signified willingness to serve on the
committet of three to work out
details for bringing peace to
.China and restoring communication!, t
Dr. Lo Lung-Chl, spokesman foe
Chini'i Democratic Lugue, in-
anounced a draft of a cease-fire
order wis being considered by
both sides.. Mi said the proposed
order would not apply to Man.
churia.
Exclusion of Manchuria from
the truce draft wai seen ai in in-
dlcitlon the Communists wire
reconciled to its being taken over
by the National Government.
Dr. Lo Lung-Chi's statement
came after Gin. Chou called on
leaden of the Democratic League,
to whom hi reported on 8ltur-
diy'i meeting between the Gov-
ernment and Communist negotiator
No Gas Price Boost
for Ontario
TORONT9, .tin. t CP)—M. W.
McCutcheon, Pricei Boird Deputy Chilrmin here, nld yesterday
"no Increase in gisollne pricei li
contemplated . for Ontario." He
wu commenting on a report from
Edmonton that 8, C. Steveni, manager of Imperiil Oil Ltd. then
todiy announced an Increase •(
45 centi I barrel on Turnir crude
,je!a^*f^lwi»iwri<w ___^
t*i« Incrtew n^lti anty tt the
■Mlrhr Pr-rvlneer and iee\ net
■ tffect Ontario "ilnpe nd. .•'*••""
li paid on crude oil  brought to
Ontario." Mr. McCutcheon said.
Crowds Demonstrate *
at Funeral for
Assassinated Senator
SUSPECT ARRESTED
•ECK TO BUY HOSPITAL
CHILLIWACK, DC, Jan. 8 (CP»
—The Chilliwack Hospital Board is
attempting to purchase the Military Hospital at Chilliwack which,
lt ia reported, will bf close some
time during January.
Indians Favor
Single Voice
RIGINA, Jan. « (CP)-Rlpn-
•eotitlves of Saskatchewan's Indians returned over the weekend
tb reservations throughout the
province after palling a resolution Frldiy favoring the establishment of a ilngle organization
to speak for all of them.
Northern Saskatchewan Indlam
will hold a conference It Duck
Like, U miles Northeast of Saskatoon, Jan. 10, when they will
bi uked to pan upon a coniltltu-
tlon drifted for tha Ind'in Feder-
ation and Join with their brothers
South of Prince Albert In littlng
It up.
The body will bi known as thi
Indian Federation of Saskitchi-
win.
The decision of thl 60 delegates
to pren for their rights li Canadians marked the first tlmi
since thi signing of thl Qu'Ap-
pelle Treity In 1174 that they hid
done to. By that treaty thi Indians surrendered 75,000 square
miles of lind to thi Crown.
■y FRIO W, KRIEF
CAIRO, Jan. 1 (AP)—Thouiandi
of youths ittending the funeral of
Amln Osman Pasha, Wafdist Senator end' former Vlmnce Miniiter.
clamored tonifht tor revolt against
the Government and shouted "Down
with Nokrashl Pasha."
Police arrested a 23-year-old suspect, reported to be the ton of a
high Government official, ln connection with the assassination of
Oiman Pasha who died early today
from three gunshot wounds Inflicted In his back In crowded Opera
Squar* Saturday.
It wai reported without,confirmation that the luspect was a member
of the Mltr El Fatah (Green Shirts)
youth movement which is oppoied
to the present Government.
POLICE INTERVENE
Crlei of "Down with Nokrashl,
the criminal," broke.out when the
Prime Minister arrived at Osman
Pasha'a home. Eyewitnesses tald
some demonstrators spat upon policemen escorting the Prime Miniiter. Police broke up tile demonstration tfter one policeman wu
injured and 10 youths arrested.
' Demonstrators were carried on
the . shoulders of their fellows ln
the mile-long procession in which
the coffin wu carried aloft in the
Motion cuitom. Large crowds lined
the funeral route.
Osman Puhl, who wu ln the lut
Wafdist (Nationalist) Cabinet for
a year until October, 1944, had the
reputation of being pro-British.
The Wafdist P»rty hu not a representative in the present Government, accused by somt Egyptians
of being backward ln pushing
claims for withdrawal of British
troopi from Egypt and the Nile
Valley.
Thii Is the third time in about •
yeir that a public figure has been
slain in Egypt. The others Were
Lord Moyne, former British resident Miniiter, and Prime Minister
Ahmed Miher Pasha. An unsuccessful attack wu made Dec. f,
just awontft He[, oi>
A**%W__tW_m*. +*tii t
grentae hurled at
The itttek on Osman Puha wu
the second attempt on his lift
within t yeir. The tint took plice
outilde hii home when he vu assaulted by two youthi who tried to
stab him.
 .'   , .—■
Fa
Razes. Buildings
FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Jan. -
(AP)—A firt described by plo
neer residents ii the "worst In 40
yun," dettroyed four wooden
bulldlngi In thl hurt of thli city
Saturday night and cauied i lots
estimated by firemen  at 1800,000.
In 16 bilow weither, tha fire
■preid rapid ly ind wu checked
only whin It niched the Empress
Theitre, flnt eoncreti building
!    In ltl pith,
PUBLIC SAVINGS
PLANIN
FAIL IS LIKELY
Individuals Put
$10 Billions in
Bonds During War
ASK CONTINUANCE
By D'ARCY O'DONNELL
Cinidiin Preu Staff Writer
OTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CD-Individual Canadians, who during the war
put into Dominion Government aecuritiei billions of dollars in all
likelihood will be given the opportunity to continue such investments
it wu learned tonight.
No decision has been made u
lo the type of public uvlngi program, but it is expected a decision
will be reached before Fall.
Officials are sure of one thing-
no peacetime progrim will compel Canadians to save through investment ln government securities.
It il estimated the savings of individuals In certain liquid loans
now total more than $10,000.0-0.0-0,
an Increase of more than $7,000,000,-
000 since 1838—the first year before
war started. The country Invested
$13,301,000,000 ln war loans, Victory
bonds and savings certificates.
Some felt that after the war,
Canadlani would want to discontinue their Investments ind ipend
u thty liked. Such hu not been
tht out. Proof of thli comes from
Finance Miniiter Ililey who uld:
"Suggestions have come to me
from many quarten thtt suitable
facilities be provided by the Government for a continuing uvlngi
progrim to commence next Autumn when final Instalments In
the Ninth Victory Lean have been
paid. . . Thlt matter Is btlng given cireful study."
Mott employees were said to
favor the payroll deduction method ef building up savings.
lor/Million
Threatens in 111
Four hundred thousand workeri
are Idle in US. labor disputes. Strikes now threatening would increue
the total to almost 2,000,000.
Major labor development!:
Electrical—C.I.O. Union sets Jan.
15 for walkout of 200,000 employee!
of General Electric, Westlnghouie
and General Motors Electrical Division; G.E. makes new wage offer,
but Union reircts It.
Railroads—Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen postpones strike after President Truman creates Emergency Board to investigate ttlta
co llnei dispute.
Steel—Fact finders tell U.S. steel
■nd C.I.O. Union to reiume negotiations at once, will ask Preiident
to broaden scope of Inquiry to en-
tl Pith.   ■ | tire Industry facing threat of C.I.O.
Exploding ammunition on: steelworkers strike.
shelves of i hirdwire itora In Communications - Expect break
oni of thi dtatroyid bulldlngi 1 early this week ln Union'i threat
kipt flrimin bick foe iome tlmea,, call countrywide telephone work-
and itray bulleti broki three plate ] eri walkout ln sympathy with West-
glut windowi en thi oppoilte ern Electric itrike.
siii tf thi itreit. Meat    packing—US. Conciliation
Bulldlngi on thl opposite tide ! Director calls Chicago conference in
of tha blue from thi Empreri attempt tn ivert itrike of 200.000
Thlitrt wen saved by a change c.I.O nacklnghouit workers set for
In thi wind ind effort! of thi!jan
Fairbinki and Lldd Fin Depart
mints, aided by scores of volun
tain.
DIGS IN GARBAGE DUMP FOR FOOD
Demands Financia
Im
For Provinces
\        i'
Ontario Proposes Dominion-Provincial
Co-pwjinating Committee, Board of
Technical Advisers, Adjustment Fund
SEES DANGER FEDERAL SYSTEM LOSS
TORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP) — The Province of Ontario to
night de-ponded fiscal autonomy for the nation's nine prov-;
inces.   It expressed outright opposition to complete surrender
to the Dominion Government of Provincial powers to tax
personal jond corporation \r\-*-~
Thls starving German woman ll digging In tht mow In I gar-
- dump looking for garbage tlm. 8ha * *""
ly for any nutftntene thet rrtay be reft.
,},,. ..JO,.,,,.   UVI KW, >BWI,HS,   >■ o,..,„ri   ,,,   to*   „™n   ...  w a,. -
bage dump looking for garbage tlm. She scrutinizes each tin carefully "
Year
It CoftCfiY«blef
ion a Possibility
come and estates in return for
fixed grcrits-in-aid based on
population.
Opposition to Dominion Government proposals for a new financial
agreement with the Provinces and
Ontario's counter-proposals are
contained in I 12,000-word submission prepared tor the Domlnion-
Provinciil Conference and made
public by Premier Drew. Copies
nave been airmailed to Prime Minister Mackenzie King and all Provincial Premiers.
The lubmlsslon demandi for
thl Provlnct! t share In penonil
Income tnd corporation taxes and
urges tht Dominion to vacate entirely iuch tix fieldi u succession
duties, gisollne, amusement, rice
track parl-mutueli, security trim-
fen tnd electricity. It asks effective recognition of Provlnclil priority In mining md logging tix-
•tlon,
'The ilmoit inevitable result" of
•cceptance of the Domlnion'l pro-
posals "would be the ultimate*1
abandonment of the Federal system
in favor of a unitary system of gov-
trnment in Canadi."
It was axiomatic thit the power
to tax is the power to govern "and
tf the Provincial Governments, and
in turn tht Provincial Legislatures
Britain's Roads to Meander on
New Highways Designed for Enjoyment as Well as Utility
■y JAMES McCOOK imenti
Canadian  Preu Staff Writer       I said:
LONDON, Jan. fi (CP>- German!
"autobahnen"—wide, itraight, con-!
crete-surfaced highways reminiscent j
of the Roman roads which left their
mark in Britain—will not serve ai'
a model for thli country's post- |
war road system
A.   J.   Barnei.   Miniiter   nf   W»r
Transport, discussing road Improve-
QUICKIES    . .*.    By Km Reynoldi
in   the   Houae   of  Commons
-you're Mnnift'i Mad wtth
■ -MMriuiforr
a News Want i
"Our roada muit bt deilgneri to
enable th« motor-lit, cyclist and
hlktr not only to reach their del-
tlnatlon swiftly, easily and in
comfort, but to anjey avtry moment of tho Journey."
This Involves preservation of
tha amenities, with iwieplrtg
curvai that bring the traveller In
light of beauty spcts; the continued pauago of roadi through
iome romantic vlllagei Instead of
bare countryilde; the planting 6f
shrubs along the highways and a
firm determination to avoid
choosing road sites by drawing a
•tralght pencil line on I map ba
tween two points.
Mr Barnei. with these quillfica-
tloni In mind, received house approval of ■ Trunk Roadi BUI. In
10M the Trunk Roads Act transferred to the national government
tht responsibility for 4*458 mllei of
road end the new bill adds an iddltlonal 9685, Including 7M miles
In Scotland Before IMS responsibility (or the roada waa vested In i
large number of local highway authorltlei with Inevitable difficulty
in maintenance, improvement atd
extension
The ntw bill empower! the minuter to m.tke iiibftantii] change) in
road dtlign. Improve side roada to
Increase the safety and convenience
of their Junction with a trunk road.
construct bridges or tunnels over
or under navigable waters and take
responsibility for the condition of
bridges on the trunk roads.
The trunk roadi under national
control represent only i imall fraction of the Britlih road mileage—
110,000—and iome memberi uld ln
debate they believed the government should Uke charge of a far
greater share. They noted an estimate that theie roads would be
carrying 12,000,000 motor vehicles
by \**ei. The government should
enforce some uniformity in surfacing ni motorist! often found Ihem*
ie-lvei In a ikld before they knew
the road lurftce had been changed.
A member aid lhe I^indon-Blrm-
Ingham road. 110 miles long, had
23 typei of surface.
Mai, p    f,_Thu
nemwr-^-er Thifi
Conn v*tlve
td<n Thifsk **\4 Malu\ ob-
I'fttd tip any suggestion thaUoed*
'  uld he allowed to meaptftT,
*    I see it. Ihe modern rott
k   road,  li  not  the   road
iters made, that <UwOtd
ige to village, that wo
little village streets,
used as a trunk
traffic endangers ttfft'
Wdrrf* and doei nil
inglng the produce
to the port quick];,1
•
-a	
NEW YORK, Jan. 8 (API-ThrK.
strlkes nnd more thin 1,000,000
workers out—that will be the picture In the United States next week
unless walkouts scheduled by three
bin C.I.O. unions are averted.
Additional work stoppijei threatened would hike the preient total
nf idle ln labor dispute! from approximately 400.000 to near tha 1,-
000.000 msrk.
These are lhe walkouts scheduled for next week:
Jim. 14-700,000 C.I.O. United
Steelworkers
Jan. 1H-300.000 CIO. Packinghouse workeri
There la the additional threat
thlt lJi.OOO American Federation af
Labor meat cutteri wit] loin the
Conffren of Induitrlal Organization! in Ibe packh.ghouie strike.
The Notional raderatlon of Tele-
phen* Workeri (Ind I Is leeWng
■uthorlzation for a strike call to
-KJO.00O telephone workeri across
the country. The C.I O. Firm Equipment ind Metal Workeri Union li
eipected to innounce tomorrow a
dite for JO.000 employee! of 11 In-
'rrmtlnnil Hnrveiler Company
pl»n(i In the Midwest tn leave their
)ob«.
By PRESTON GROVER
BOMBAY, Jan. 6 (AP)—For India, 194. promliei to be the moit
momentous year In hiitory,
.Conceivably India might obtain full Independence In the next
12 monthi, or the might chooie a slower courie and progreu toward
self-government through a constltutlon.il convention In complete ind
friendly cooperation wlth.Brltaln. 8he might divide Into two Indlai—
one governed by Hindus and one by Moslem,.
'   And, If conflict! arose which frustrated the hopei ind plant of
India's political leaden, thera might be a revolution.
The end of the Second Great War automatically eliminated all
reasons for restraining political developments long held in check.
The   Viceroy,   Viscount   Wavell,*	
made a final futile attempt to bring
the Moslem League and the all-
India Congress into agreement on
the unity of the country.
Elections for the Central Assembly showed that India's major
parties had split on religious lines
to greater degree than anticipated.
In the Central Assembly elections,
taper than 500,000 of the country's
400.000,000 residents voted. It was
known generally as the "rich man's
election" because only wealthy
property owners and a small number of others qualified under the
limited franchise.
According to a tabulation by the
Times of India, the Moslem League
headed by Mahomed Ali Jinnah
polled M per cent of the Moslem
vote ln Moslem areas, while in predominantly Hindu areas, the All-
India Congress Party candidates
drew nearly 8fl per cent of the votes.
Eome observers predict that by
March there will be bloody uprisings and thit the full force of the
Britlih Army itlll in uniform In
India will b« required to suppress
It, If suppression Is poulble.
Woodworkers
loHold
Strike Vole
tions to the Dominion proposals:
1. Ontario could not accept ths
proposition that a concentration of j
financial and administrative powajy
provides a satisfactory solution
Canadian economic and social prob-**
lems.
2. Provincial fiscal autonomy can
only be preserved by each Provin-j
cial Government having power w
impose its own taxes. ' ,
3. Each Province should be \ett\j
in a position to increase its tax rev*
enue by use of flexible and productive  revenue  sources  without recourse to appeals to the Dominion
Government.
4. There should ba alternatlvr
lourcet of revenue available ttt
the Provlncei ihould alcoholio
beverage profits and gasoline tax
revenue decline.
5. Financial stringency undo*
the Dominion proposal, would exert preuure on tha Provlncei ttt
retort more extensively to consumer taxes whloh have been
generally regarded ai nuitanc*
tixei and tend to restrict tha flow/
of trade by creating Interprovln.
clal tax barrlen.
8. Payment of large unconditional
subsidies to the Province! violated
the principle that a governnltn^
which Is autonomous in its assign-
Oi»iF»iaMMWtaS3Jft2.,a*l
7. TW Dominion Government's
proposed subsidies for the relin-* ^^
Qulshment of Provincial tax sourcea I
are based on an Index of grosa na* ■
tional product which involves cer» I
tain arbitrary adjustments and e«U*
mates which might be difficult faf |
the Provinces to check. f
Newly weds Lose
All in Blaze
KIMB6RLEY, B.C.-The home
of Mr. ind Mrs. Royce Jolle at
Meadowbrook, Just Cut of Klmberley, wae completely destroyed by fire, including all Its contents, while tha couple were
spending the evening with friendi
tn Klmberley. The fire Is believed
to hava originated from an over-
heeted stove.
They had been married In December and had lived In the huoie
for only three weeks. It conteln-
od alt their furniture and their
wedding presents.
VANCOUVER, Jan, fi (CP) -
Backing up a three-point 1946
agreement program, delegates to
the ninth annual B. C. district convention of the International Woodworkers of America (CIO) today
decided to hold a strike vote and
raise a $100,000 emergency strike
fund.
Harold Pritchett. PresMent, told
Unionists, representing an estimated 30,000 workers In the Province's
basic woodworking industry, that
"this is the heart of this convention."
"Let us raise a strike fund of
$100,000 or more," he said. "Then
We can go to our international officers, to the CIO and the Canadian
Congress of Labor and say that thc
Woodworkers are prepared to lead
the struggle to Implement the Atlantic Charter, and we can spark
the whole nation to carry on the
struggle for better conditions."
The three-point agreement Includes a 40-hour wi-ek, 20 cents an
hour Increase in waees and Union
security, including the Union shop
and check-off of Union dues. The
agreement was adopted by the dele
gates as the basic program on recommendation of the wages and contract committee.
The convention decided to send
a telegram to A. R. Mosher, CCL
President, requesting hlip to call a
special wage conference of CCL
Unions as soon as possible, at which
the IWA program would be presented.
PEER WOULD ABOLISH
HOUSE OS LORDS
i,ONDON, Jan. « (CP) - Lord
■trabolgl. Uabor peer, told a Youths'
Cltiienshlp meeting Saturday thlt
"if I had my wiy I would abolish
tb' Houm of 1 ,,.,'<"
Hold-r of one of thi moit renown-
•d hiriditary titles In England. •
kiromtcy rreittd In till. Lord
Strabolgl ilio declired '1 do not
■link there ll my Justification
a-hatioevir for hereditary Natl In
If Haul* of Lordi."
| Hindu to Appear on
Murder Charge
VICTORIA, Jan. 6 (CP.-Bnhma
Singh, 80-yeir-old Victoria Hindu,
will   appear   in   Police   Court   to-
Ptof. Harold Laskl, chairman of the j morrow morning on a charge of
LASKI NOT TO II
DRIVEN INTO
CHOICE OP FRIENDSHIPS
JCELTY. Scotland, Jan. fl (CP>-
Labor Party Executive Committer.
tald tonight he waa "not prepared
to be driven . . . Into making a
cholc* between friendship with the
Unlttd Statea and friendship with
tha Soviet Union"
Speaking to a small-town Scot-
tiah audience. Mr. Laskl aaid:
'Our business is to make firm
murdering flO-ycar-old Sunda Singh,
whose battered and blood-stained
body waa found In a lane near hla
home here early Dec. 27.
Detective Inspector John Rogers
said accused his made a statement
to police, but did not reveal its contents.
Dr. John H Moore, who conduct
friendship wllh the Soviet Union, led a post-mortem, uld that Sunda
I am not prepared to be driven, as Singh had been stabbed ln the neck
the Conservative Party w.*"t- 't and that he died from the s'.&bbinx
drlv* the Labor government, into which severed the external Jdfular
a choice .. .** I vela.
turn lot an annual payment on a
fixed basis, they would place themselves in a legislative straight-jacket from which they could only escape by abandoning still further
power in return for added payments
it same future date."
URGE8 COORDINATION
COMMITTEE
The submission urges the permanent establishment of a Dominion-Provincial co-ordinating committee made up of the Prime Ministers of the 10 governments or
their appointees and a Dominion-
Provincial economic board- of technical advisers.
It proposes establishment of a
national adjustment fund, created by contributions from each
province of 10 per cent of Its corporation and personal Income tax
and succession duties Income, to
be divided among the Provinces
on the baste of fiscal need to be
determined by the Co-Ordlnating
Committee, It Is estimated the
fund will amount to at least (20,-
000,000 annually.
Oher proposals Include: Uniformity of Provincial succession
duty legislation; collection by the
Dominion of personal Income and
corporation taxes for the Provinces; equalization of provincial
corporation taxes; payment of old
age pensions to all over 65 without a means test; assumption by
the Dominion Government of full
financial responsibility for the
employable unemployed and 76
per cent of the cost of eeslttanoe
to unemployable unemployed; cooperation by all governments and
Individuals In bringing expansion
of tha nations' export <A1&
The submission was the fifth official reaction from a Provincial
government to the Dominibn's proposals, first made before the Dominion-Provincial Conference last
Aug. fl and discussed further at a
meeting of the Steering Committee
ef premiers late In November.
The Dominion Government proposals called for: new Dominion-
Provincial agreements on taxation
and subsidies without surrender of
Provincial rights; Dominion subsidies to be increased to $12 per capita as of the 1941 census and to br
lurther Increased in accordance
tvtth rlsej In population and value
of gross national production: the
Provinces to refrain from levying
taxes on personal income, corporations or estates; thr Dominion to
assume full responsibility for payment of pensions of $30 monthly tn
■11 persons over 70 and to share
(vlth the Provinces in paying pen-
ilons for needy persons aged 65-70
and Health Insurance; the Dominion to extend Unemployment lnsursnce and pay unemployment asslst-
ince to uninsured employable un-
tmployed; the Provinces to look
after unemployables and self-employed persona wno need relief; the
Dominion to make grants to Provinces and municipalities for works
projects timed to conform to a plan
of maintaining full employment, the
Dominion to enlarge Ita activities
in basic surveys of national re-
sources and to assist Provinces In
certain development schemei such
as construction of roads Into new
areas.
11   OBJECTIONS
Tbe submission offered 11 obj:c-
SUBSIDIES   INADEQUATE
8. The Dominion's subsidies art
inadequate. When the cost of tha
proposed health services are addett
to Ontario's curtailed  1945-46 bucU t
get, the result would be a deficit ott!
$15,000,000.
9. The Dominion subsidy to One .
tario based on gross national prodU j
uct per capita  would not rise aa
rapidly as the Province's revenue |
trom -direct taxes owing to the efr
feet of progressive tax rates.
10. Decentralization of service* I
provides the best assurance that!
flexibility, vigor and efficiency _t)
public administration will be pre-.J
lerved.
11. A   shnrt-term   agreement   ll
proposed,   but  continuation   of  tha <
centralized power to levy personal
income and corporation taxes an&j
succession duties for another thre*i
years would operate against a re^-*
i version to Provincial taxes In thean
1 fields.
Judge Forin
Injured
VANCOUVER,  Jan. 0  (CP)  -•
Judge J. A. Forin, 84, Is In hoipital   suffering   a   possible   broken,
pelvis after being itruck down by
a taxi In the South Granville Dl* ,
trict today •
Judge Forin had e record of tf
years on the Bench In Britlih Co-
lumbla when he retired In 1B2t\
A native of Belleville, Ont, ht
came to B.C. In 1889. He waa appointed to the County Court Iff
the Kootenay District In 1896 and
lived In Nelion for many yeara.
< Burn fo Death    |
ROCHESTER, Minn., Jan. •
(AP)—Four penoni were burned
to death and one Injured today In
a rooming house fire.
Police identified the dead at
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Giles, retire*
■■Salvation Army workers, no permanent addreu; William Carroth-
era, Glenboro, Man., and Charlea
Flenn,  Miden  Rook, Wis.
Mrs. Harvay Richardson of Cox-
heath, N.8., suffered Injurlea
whlrh required hospital treat- |
ment
The Weather
Tfmp-riturti -  Min.  3-.0,  Ml***.
377.
Situr-iy-Mln M. Mix. M.I.
FortciH.     Koot«n»y:     Mod'rit*
winds, rlmirty with lntermiltmi
mow. D<" 'it partly rlciudy wil»
srMrrod ■ v show*™ Mondiy aU
trmoon. -.lightly mlWir.
*
	
J
 mr"   ■%t-'; j. '•'
2 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONPAY, JANUARY 7,IMS
Reuters Charges "Smearing" by
Stale Department Document
: WASHINGTON, Jan. J (AP) -
Jteuters Newi Agency itld Saturday lt had been smeared and Ita
Integrity Impugned ln a State Department publication.
Tht document ls a "memorandum
ttt pott-war International lnfor-
itlon program of the United
I" prepared by Dr. Arthur W.
" ' on. Its release was delayed
f Week to give Reuters time to
The 3,000-word reply, by
iophtr Chancellor, Reuters
. itril Manager, also **••* released
& the Department.
.} (Dr. MacMahon devoted a section
it tht memorandum to Reuters and
Mr, Chancellor said it leaves the
Impression the agency is associated
in some way with the British Oovtrnment, receives special privileges
or assistance from the' Government
pot available to other news agencies,
uid "conditions" its news to favor
British interests.
j "This ls not true," Mr. Chancellor
kid.
I Some of the main points in the
memorandum to which Reuters ob-
i jtcted, tnd its answers:
CHARGES LACK OF EVIDENCE
j Dr. MacMahon: "Some advantage
may itlll lie in the tradition of international news service, traceable
Jtt turn to Britain's position and
overseas involvements. Locally
tnd without prompting, British businessmen in foreign cities could influence tn Individual newspaper to
tubicribo to Reuters' service."
T Mr. Chancellor: "I do not know of
One single case of any newspaper in
lay country ln the world being in-
guenced to subscribe to Reuters in
ie way suggested by Dr. MacMahon, and I submit that Dr. MacMahon has not one shred of factual
evidence Whereon he bases his
.generalization . .
j Dr. MacMahon: "As to Reuters, lt
il denied that this agency receives
jmy Government subsidy." A foot-
JKtt quotes Guy Ray, second Sec-
fettry tt the United States Em-
:y In Mexico City as laying ln
ptcmber, 1844, that'the editor of
newspaper EI Universal told
ot signing a contract with Reu
tt a price to cheap "that he
_Jd not decline the offer."
!M_. Chancellor: No editor attend
the negotiations. The price was
a month.
MacMahon: Quoted Nelson T.
in, United States Minister to
at writing in October,
that American news received
Auitralia goea first to London
' "is thence transmitted through-
the -Empire, conditioned by
IUCh processes of selection and manipulation u the Britiih new agen-
'*t iuch at Reuten give it."
Mr. Chancellor: Quoted i tele-
from R. A. Henderson, Chair -
mtn of the Auitralian Aiiociated
Press, laying Mr. Johnson's statement wu demonstratably false so
Jar u Australia and New Zealand
wet* concerned. The telegram said
tt* Auitralian Associated Press
Btintalns ita own bureau ia New
York tnd that 30.8 per cent ot its
Mai tervlce came from the bureau.
It laid tho Australian Associated
Preti subscribes to the Associated
mtl of America, that "Reuters have
Sever covered American news for
ttt Australian newspapers," and
thfte papers never have drawn
their American newi through London.
Dr. MacMahon: Cited a letter
trom Asuncion, Paraguay, in November, 1944, Hying: "There Is reason to believe that the Reuters news
Strvice, which is alegedly 'sold' to
One local newspaper, is, in fact, be-
ing given to that newspaper free of
Charge."
Mr. Chancellor: Reuters allows
ttt newipiper El Pals to take an
tbbreviated service from Rio de
Janeiro without paying for it In
return, the paper acts ss Reuters'
OOITespondent in Parsguay for
Which Reuters makes no payment.
•AYS WILLING TO DISTRIBUTE
NEWS AT A LOSS
Dr. MacMahon: Mentions an Office of War Information report from
ttl representative In Beirut in August, 1844, as saying it wu obvious
tttt Reuters "sre willing to take
t lots If they can get British news
presented in the press here"
Mr. Chsncellor: Dr. MacMahon
"uses sn inaccurate gossip-based re-
Toast-Tea
il jTv.WARH
George Bernard Shaw once
defended vegetarians, of whom
b< Is one of the most militant,
against the chnrge that their
diet would tend to make them
meek and lacking in courage.
H« pointed to the rhinoceros,
the buffalo and the bull, whirh
are among the moat ferocious of
anlmali, and rioted that they
wera all vegetarians. More recently he continued the argument, pointing out that if an
acorn is buried it will some
time in the future explode into
a magnificent oak whereas If
you bury a iheep you have nothing but decay Perhaps it
might be called to his attention
that a sheep is quite as vegetarian ni an ncorn.
Gooderham-' Worti
Limited
TORONTO, ONTARIO '
port ln order to try to associate
Reuten publicly with British propaganda activity." He quoted a- ttlt-
gnm from Reuters Manager for
Palestine, Syidt and Lebinon which
laid Reuters' Beirut office wu
cloied Dec. 81, 1845, because it
had been operating at a loss.
Mr. Chancellor said this wai a
"cast iron, example of the fact that
Reuters will not operate in any
territory unless costs are covered
in accordance with our principle—
apparently sneered tt by Dr. MacMahon—that news must be paid for
at the receiving, not fhe sending
end, -because news paid for at the
sending end ceases to be news and
becomes propaganda."
South Africa
Needs More
People—Smuts
CAPE TOWN-South Africa has
been given "a colossal push forward
by the war" and her Industrialists
should take the opportunities presented them for increasing her
trade, Premier Smuts told the convention of the South African Federated Chamber of Industries at
Pretoria.
There is no need to fear that any
new international trade agreements
will have an adverse effect on the
country's progress, the Premier
said. Industrialists could go ahead
with confidence and they would
have the backing of the Government.
"We want more people and we
want full employment for them in
the future," Field Marshal Smuts
added.
The plea for a larger population
by increased immigration was taken
up by Minister Askew, who said
industries in the future would depend upon increased internal demand from a greatly increased European population. While many were
relying upon increasing non-European purchasing power this poten
tial field would only develop grad
ually.
GROWTH FRUSTRATED
Mr. Askew said the.Union was
lagging behind other countries in
far-sighted immigration and the
country's growth was being frustrated. The health of non-Europeans
should demand the attention of industrialists as they provide the reservoir of labor required by industry.
S. F. Waterson, Minister of Economic Development, stressed the
potential market for South African
goods within the African continent.
He urged expansion of trade with
other African territories and said
the Government wanted every effort to be made to maintain and
expand close wartime collaboration.
Russia has agreed to accept a
goodwill mission from South Africa
consisting of industrialists, economist!, artists, trade unionists, engineers, medical men and others which
will visit the Soviet Union next
April.
Arrangements for the mission are
in the hands of the South African
Friends of the Soviet Union and the
Government is being asked to cooperate by releasing state experts
to accompany the mission.
FOOD FOR  BRITAJN
Thousands of food parcels are being packed at Durban every week
for Britain. Firms are employing
special staffs to cope with the work
and one firm alone is despatching
12.000 parcels monthly.
Ninety-nine per cent, of the parcels are addressed to Britain and
the rest to the continent. Many of
the senders are British soldiers,
either now in the Union or those
who passed through during the war
and left deposits to send regular
parcels.
Ice Break Frees
Streets of Water
ROCKFORD, HI., Jan. « (API-
Ice Jams ln the Rock Rivtr, thlt
backed up as much at five feet of
-water In tht residential and bull-
nesi diitrict here, broke early today relieving t flood condition
which necessitated evacuation of
more than 100 famlllei.
Mixed Bowling
Goes Into Second
Half Thursday
Drawi for the second half of the
Mixed Bowling League schedule,
which begin at the Gellnas Alleyi on
Thursday, follow:
Jan. 10—
7 p.m.—Spltfirei vi Mustangs vs
Troopen.
0 p.m.—Tars vi Bomberi vi B-_D_.
Jan. 17-
7 pjn.—Bomben vt Mustangs vi
BM.
9 p.m.—Spltfirei vi Tin vi Troopers.
Jtn. 34: ,
7 p.m.—6pltfl.es vs Tin vi BM. -
II p.m.—Bombers vi Mustangs Vl
Troopen.
Jan. Slc-
7 p.m.—Tan vi Bomben vi Troopers.
0 pjn—Spltfirei vi Muitengi vi
B29.
Feb. 7-
7 p.m.—Spltfirei vi Bomben vi
Mustangs.
9 p.m.—Tars' vi B29 vi Troopen.
Feb. 14-
7 p.m.—Tan vi Mustangs vs B29.
9 p.m.—Spitfires vs Bombers vs
Troopers.
Feb. 21-
7 p.m.—Spitfires vs B29 vs Troopers.
9 p.m.—Tars vs Bombers vi Mustangs
Feb. 28-
7 p.m.—Bomberi vi B29 vs Troopen.
9 p.m.—SpllJirei vt Tan vi Mustangs.
March 1—
7 pjn.—Spitfires vi Tin vi Bomben.
9 p.m.—Mustangs vs B29 vs Troopen.
Mirch 14-
7 p.m.—Tan vi Muitingi vi Troopers
9 p.m.—Spltfirei vi Bomberi vs
B29.
Seek Killer of
13-Year-old
WINNIPEG, Jan. 6 (CP)—Challenged by one of the most baffling
crimes in Winnipeg's history—the
shooting of 13-year-old Roy Ewan
McGregor late Friday—the police
tonight have thrown all their resources into a city-wide search for
the slayer.
The young schoolboy was found
shot to death in a Fort Rouge District coal and wood yard, a short
distance from his Clark Street home.
He had been shot twice, through the
head and in the stomach, A trail
of blood for a distance of more than
60 yards in the mow-covered yard
led to the coalbin where workeri
found his body.
Mayor Garnet Coulter announced today a reward of $500 has been
posted for information leading to
the arrest of the slayer.
Chief Constable George Smith,
who termed the killing "a very
unusual and ghastly crime," ruled
out the theory that young McGregor
may have been slain by a Juvenile gang or an acquaintance.
"There is no evidence to indicate
he was killed by anyone who knew
him, I believe he was killed by
someone unknown to him," the
Chief iaid. "There U also no question of an accident It wu murder
and nothing elie."
- -m-f*e* ' ^\~ '  ^   ■
Atom Secrets
Major UNO
Assembly Issue
Pearson Getting
Build-Up
as Secretary
LONDON, Jan. S (CP) - The
problem of atomic energy will bt
i major topic when tha United Nations Organization's General Aiiembly convenes Thundiy.
Amtrlcan sources slid tht issue
of safeguarding atomic secrets while
working out International controls
through the United Nation! mty
(orce a big power review of the
plan agreed upon at Moicow last
month.
Representatives of Great Britain,
fhe United States and Russia, which
forked out thi Moscow plan for
dealing with tht atom probftm, presumably would be\the flnt to take
up any questions arising here ln
that connection.
Tht queitlon being raised among
the American delegates to the assembly meeting Is whether Britain
and Russia will Join with the United States In the assurance that "full
security" will attend the United Nations handling ot atomic tnergy
problemi.
At Moicow the Big Three agreed
that tbt United Natloni Assembly
ihould wt up a commlulon to pro-
pott control ot atomic energy to the
Security Councii.
Senator Arthur Vandtnburg, Mlchigin Republlctn, md iome ot thc
other American delegates were understood to htve raised theie points.
1. The Moicow plan says the proposed United Nttioni itomlc energy
commlulon ihould "inquire into til
phases of the problem." Doti thi;
mem the commissllon couW demand from the United Stitei information ibout itomlc energy
which under Preiident Trumtn's
policy it ii holding u ''• sacred
trust."
2. The agreement says the commission should provide for exchange of information, peaceful
control!, elimination of atomic weapons tnd effective safeguards, including inspection. Should the listing of these problems in this order
give only tig-end importance to
safeguards and inspection, or are
the safeguards to attend each phase
ot the problem?
PEARSON  FAVORED
Canadian, United States and Latin American delegates srrlved Saturday.
Justice Minister St. Laurent,
hud of the Canadian dtlegation.
••Id thi Domlnlo group will .titer the conference with the spirit thlt the Interests of Canada
will best bi served by peaceful
and proiperous condltloni over
the whole world.
Meanwhile t survey dlicloied
London ntwipapen ire giving a
big build-up to L. B. Pearson,
Canadian Ambauador In Washington, for tha Secretary-General-
ship of tha United Natloni.
BRAZIL, CLOSES
PORT
AFTER INCIDENTS
MONTEVIDEO, Jan. 8 (Reuters)
—The Brazilian government Saturday ordered closing down of Uru-
guayana Port, Brazil, on the Argentine frontier, hairing all traffic between the two countries at that
point
It was learned that Incidents had
broken out during the day at Paso
De Los Llbres. Argentine town
across the Uruguay River from
Uruguayana, but no details were
available.
Brazil's only rail link with Argentina is at Uruguayana.
CANTERBURY TO
VISIT CANADA
LONDON, Jan. fl (CP Cable) -
Rev. G-eoffrey Francis Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, will visit Canada and the United States next
September, it was announced tonight.
He has accepted an Invitation
from the primate of the Anglican
Church of Canada to ittend a general synod at Winnipeg Sept. 4 and
from the presiding hiihop of the
Protestant Episcopal Church in the
United States to attend a general
convention at Philadelphia Sept   8.
(Anglican Church sources In Canada said this would be the first time
an Archbishop of Canterbury has
visited the Dominion. However,
there have been visit to Canada by
Archbishops of York In 1019 and
]a_*t year.)
It is expected that Dr. Tisher. at
.SB one of the youngest Archbishops
of Canterbury in modern times, will
visit other Canadian and United
States cilles and perhapi Newfoundland. But a Church of England
source said a detailed Itinerary has
not yet been prepared
Slim Summerville
Diet at 51
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. fl (AP) -
George J. (Slim) Summerville, 51,
one of Hollywood's top comics and
character actors, died last night at
his home Bfter suffering two strokes,
Confined to bed for several days,
I he had shown a slight improvement
Must before his death.
He had appeared in few pictures
I recently. "Lift'i loo short," he once
| explained,  "to work  all  the time,"
| All he wanted out of the movies
was  "just enough to cover eitpen-
, ses and let me get in SOme fishing."
Independence had alwayi been
one of Sllm'i notable traits. Born in
Albuquerque, N.M., he was not yet
in his teem when he ran away to
; make his fortune. For aix yean he
knocked about the United Stales,
Canada   and   Mexico,   riding   from
i one job to another "on the rodi,"
1 Then he came to California looking
for a job, and found a career.
i He was twice married, fint to
Gertrude M. Roell. ln  IW7. Their
; son,   Elliott  George,   wm  born   In
11932 Divorced In 1916, he was married the following year to Eleanor
i Brown, a nurse who had attended
him in in illness. Hla aecond wife
was with him when he died.
615-Pound Block
Bear Shot   '•
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore, Jan.
( (AP)-Hunters Harold Brleeo and
Marvin Roeder returned with I
black bear weighing 616 pounda
and meaiurlno seven feet five
Indus from head to till, Tho specimen, believed to ba ol rooord
alto, wil (bout tt yeara .old.
Would Outlaw
Political
Propaganda
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (AP)-
Dr. Arthur W. MacMahon, State Department consultant, recommended
Saturday thlt the United Sates seek
an International agreement'outlawing "political propaganda" by foreign governmental information ag
encies.
The suggestion was contained ln
a 135-page report prepared by Dr
MacMahon giving the results 'of a
a nine-month study on ''the postwar international Information program of the United States."
Dr. MacMahon urged the curb
on propaganda as one of the "minimum objectives the United States
ihould favor" in an international
agreement aimed at increasing the
flow of information between countries.
William Benton, Assistant Secretory of State for Publlo-Affairs, said
Dr. MacMahon's memorandum was
"not a statement of departmetnal
policy" but a working paper for
further study.
SEEKS   8TANDARD8
Dr. MacMahon said it Was "urgently desirable" that the United
States seek an accord setting up
"minimum standards of behavior"
auch agenices should be required to
observe in transmitting their dispatches to other countries.
In addition to the "abstention-
from-political-propaganda" requirements he listed as the two other
minimum standards:
1. "Reasonable requirements" for
registration of "foreign information
agencies."
2. Identification of the auspices of
tho material Issued by them.
Dr. MacMahon urged a differentiation between the standard of con
duct that should be prescribed for
privately-owned and governmental
information agencies.
"Otherwise a broadly-drawn
guarantee, assuming it were ob
tainable, might confer on govern
ments novel and unwise extrater
ritorial privileges," he said.
Dr. MacMahon proposed that both
governmental and private agencies
be allowed "substantially the same
access to information and transmission facilities."
SUGGESTS AIDS
Other steps which Dr. MacMahon
suggested u likely "to help news
"gathering" were:
1. Elimination of censorship of
outgoing dispatches.
2. No "barring, molesting or Intimidating" of correspondents.
3. Abolition of "discrimination as
to rate, priorities and other aspects of communication service."
Dr. MacMahon did not continent
specifically on suggestions by American newspaper leaders that correspondents be granted special international immunity as protection
against interference with their
work.
DONCASTER. England (CP) -
Donraster Amalgamated Collieries.
Limited, plan a 1.1.375.000 enlllery it
nearby Plgburn and a M.SOO.OOO village of 800 homes, tt is announced.
TRANSPORTATION—Passenger ond Freight
FREIGHT TRUCKS
LEAVE NELSON DAILY
At 10:30 om. — Except Sunday
Trail Livery Co.
M   H   MclVOR,  Prop.
Troil—^Plione 135        Nelson—Phone 35
SPEEDY GOALS YIELD Til
PORT ARTHUR, Jan. 0 (CPl-
Winnipeg Monarchi tallied twice
within 19 lecondi in the third period to earn n 4-4 tie wilh Port Ar-
thur Fly era in an exhibition junior
hockey jame here Saturday night.
About 2500 naw tht game
BODY FRESHNESS
Banish odour
tblt pleasant
easy way
Why endure _ .
atrong imelllng eotpa when a dally
bath with frairrant. mildly medicated
CutlcuraSoap removes gi ime and odour
imtantly.leaveayou feeling wonderfully
clean and confident! Finish with fra
grKU, boraiad Cutlcura Talcum to tb-
•orb perapiration, guard again* offending. Huy Cutlcura toriayl
Frogs, Pigs, Dogs
ond Horses
Sold by War Assets   '
MONTREAL — Even frogs were
employed in Canada'i war effort
and War Aaaeta Corporation has
announced the disposal of 75 of
these amphibians to the Department
of Health. Province of Ontario, for
use In the laboratory at Ottawa,
Theae froga were survivors of n
larger number native to South Africa and flown to Canada where
they performed useful service by
indicating the progress of experiments carried out by the Royal Canadian Air Force at the Rockcllffe
Station. The South African frogs arc
more delicate than Canadian members of the genus and require a constant temperature of 70 degrees to
survive outside their native
marshes
The sale of frogs adds aonther
item to the list of unusual surplus
material aold by War Asaets Corporation, a list which includes horses,
sled dogs and pigs. The horses formed leveral lota including pack animals used by the army In British
Columbia, and complete with names
and regimental numberi.
The dogs had been used by United Statei forces in tha Northwest
Territories and aold by War Aueti
Corporation which handlei all U.S.
nirpluiei in the Dominion. The dogs
ire now hauling sleds in the Yukon.
Th* plga, 83 of them, represented
a contribution to wartime economy
nn a RCAF itatlon in Newfoundland
When the Canadiana left the liland.
lhe porken were sold to tha Royal
Air Force group on taking over.
Victoria 90-Year-Old
Recalls Days of
Indians in Outpost
VICTORIA, Jan, 6 (CP) - The
olden dayi when there were more
Indiani on the itreets of Victoria
than white men and when saloons
kept open all-year-round with two
shifts working were recalled today
by Frank Partridge as he celebrated
his 90th birthday.
Mr, Partridge is one of two survivors of about 400 men, women
and children who left their homes
in the British Isles aboard a China
Clipper ship and travelled to Victoria in 18C2 to establish themselves
in what was then an "outpost" It
took the ship five months to make
the Journey.
Hia father worked for the Hud-
ion's Bay Company on Wharf Street
in Victoria and his mother taught
in the first school in Esquimalt,
When he left school he learned the
printing trade at the Victoria Col-
oniit, and later joined the Provincial Government Printing Office
where he was employed for 3*5 years
until superannuated-
Mr. Partridge said: "People were
truly democratic In those days.
They were happy and friendly. They
knew how to live with one another Today everybody aeemi to
be thinking of the almighty dollar."
uce
War Qualities in
Peace Says Forbes
Discussing benefits he said issued
from war, Rav. H. Stewart Forbes,
the miniiter ot St. Paul's United
Church, Sunday evening, uld that
while "war is I particular demonstration of ihe power ot evil in the
world," he could,enumerate > goodly number ot benefits. It united, a
country; it was an effective solution
to the problem of unemployment; it
put more money Into circulation,
even if there were fewer things to
buy with the money; it meant that
with victory many of the country's
rivals are destroyed. War appealed
to the gambling and adventurous
spirit in man. War had given women an opportunity in many new
spheres of life. War had Improved
the health of tht; people, even in
war-torn England. Science ,had
made mighty advances.
These benefits gave a false conception of war, Mr. Forbes' aaid,
but still from war came some fine
qualities and for these a moral
equivalent should be sought. It was
Prof. James who said that to get
rid of war, society must be furnished with a moral equivalent
JUNGLE LAW WRONG
Before the war men were discussing this, and saying that, deprived
of the necessity of struggle, man
lost his virility and endurance. The
Nazis said war was a "biological
necessity," that man could not dispense with war.
The blasphemy of all this thinking was that it declared that to be
good and strong, men must revert
to the life of the jungle. "There is
a natural man and there ls a spiritual, and God forbid that we should
desert the spiritual for the natural,"
the speaker commented.
He mentioned fodr qualities that
had been most evident In Canadian
men and women In the services, and
said they were* essential.
Duty came before everything
else, even life itself. For the sake
of duty, they were expendable. It
was a good thing to know, and
know early in life, that one could
not do just as he pleased. There
was one's duty to God, which could
not be escaped. "Let us never think
we can," Mr. Forbes said. And there
was one's duty to his fellow men.
Children should learn they had obligations to their parents, even as
parente to children, and husband to
wife, and wife to husband. Too
many homes were broken up because the man or the woman had
never learned there was a duty involved. There was a duty citizens
owed to their country and to the
world. The duties of peacetime were
more difficult and arduous, for they
were individual and moral and
spiritual.
HONOR ONE OF ESSENTIALS
Mr. Forbes spoke of honor, and
recalled how his colonel ln France
had told his men that the honor
of the company was in their hands,
and they were to keep it clean and
unsmlrcbed. In the army there were
things soldiers did not do, because
they wore the King's uniform. Hf
spoke of the honor won by the Canadians, and about the "Roll of
Honor" in the church, which must
fill members with pride and humility, and viiij\ ;. determination that
thoae who remained should in all
things be honorable. This honor
must be tought for at whatever cost
He described courage as a quality
prominent ln battles, where terrible
demands were made and accepted.
And more terrible demands would
be made, and even greater courage
would be required. "We need the
unflinching courage that Jesus ex-
! hibited.. We need men and women
willing to surrender security for
service, who are willing to dare to
1 be in the right two or three," he
1 said. "Passive decency is not
enough."
Faith, Mr. Forbes tald, was the
most important of all, and as essential in peace as in war. People
without faith'were alwayi, "lonely
and tired and lost."
SPIRITUAL VIRTUES VITAL
j These were spiritnai virtues, and
they would be needed during this
year of peace, even more than in
tho years of war. Christ came that
these virtues be reproduced in man.
"The time has come for a lasting
peace, but peace will not come unless men see it as their duty, and
1 individually pledge themselves, honorably and courageously to support
the faith which tbey hjjve received," Mr. Forbes concluded.
The Choir sang the anthem. "What
Arc Tieso'" and Mrs. A. J. Bradshaw sang "Suffer the Little Children."
Com Brooms to
Cost More
OTTAWA, Jan. S (CP)-Scarce
and precious corn brooms are going
io be more expensive ai • reiult ol
the removal of an Import subsidy
on broom corn, the Pricei Board
said today. Increases will be approximately 28 cents on (1 brooms and
about 42 cents for tbe larger $150
kind-
Break-Up of
Dom.-Prov. Talks
Not Threatened
OTTAWA, Jan. 8 (CP) — Health
Minister Claxton, speaking for the
Federal Government, said tonight
that Ontario' proposals to the Dominion-Provincial Conference, made
public in Toronto, would be. "carefully considered" by the Qovern
ment and the Conferenoe*! Jcononv
ic Committee, of which he li Chairman.
"The Dominion proposals were designed to foster condltloni ta Canada in which we could have high
employment and a high national
income," said Mr, Claxton. The
discussions at the conference ao
have shown that the Governments
of all Provinces, without exceptioa,
wanted to secure those objective-.
- "The Conference fortunately ts
concerned with means, not ends, ft
is hoped that the discussions will
proceed speedily to find the belt
means of reaching our goal."  .
Mr. Claxton was aiked whether
the Ontario brief, because of ita
opposition, might lead to a breakup
of the Conference, such u occurred
during the first conference in 1941
when the Ontario delegation, led
by Mitchell Hepburn, then Premier, withdrow on the ground wartime was not the' time to'remold Uie
constitution.
"Oh no, not at all," he replied
and referred to his expressed nope
In the statement that the discussions would "proceed speedily" to
find the best means of reaching tbe
Conference goal.
CONFERENCI DATE!
OTTAWA, Jan. « (CP) — Dates
of forthcoming and previous meetings  of  the  Dominion  Provincial
Conference follows:
Forthcoming:
Economic Committee—Jsn. 8.
Coordinating Committee- Jan. M.
Previous:
Economic Committee — Dee. 14,
IMS.
Coordinating Committee—Nov. M,
30.
Plenary session—Aug. 8-10.
Dress Sale
CONTINUES
at
FINK'S
READY-TO-WEAR
50 Children's
KINDERGARTEN
SETS
Natural finish. Ret). $4.95
Sale $3.79
FINK'S
FURNITURE
Blaze Brings
Death fo Two
NEW YORK, Jan. 8 (AP)-rire-
men fought flamee ln a crowded
lower lait Side tenement which
caused two- deaths and injured several others tonight Eighteen families fled the six-storey building.
Dead were Slgmimd Koltko, 68, In
whose third-floor apartment the
blaze was believed to have itarted,
and an unidentified woman.
Britain Will Be
Bigger Market Than
Ever—Morrison
OTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP)-Rt. Hon.
Herbert Morrison, British Deputy
Prime Minister, continued hli
"Know Canada" tour in Montreal
tonight' after ■ Saturday ipeech
here in which he itld it wu certain
that as the British financial position
improved there wpuld follow a
progressive relaxation of Import
controls,
"Potentially our country is a bigger market than it has ever been
for all types <rf goods from all
sources," he said.
He said Britain waa looking forward to the day when ahe could
again enjoy thu good thingi of life.
The first banana he had leen since
1939 was the one served him on a
Canadian train the other day.
Britons however were not going
to be content to have the government hand them things on a silver
plate, these things must be worked
for. "Our people know they can't
be consumers and not producers."
Turn Up Safe
VICTORIA. Jan. 6 (CPl-Search for
Joseph Pedneault of Victoria, who,
with hu two som, Philip nnd Eugene, wai believed loit while on a
boating trip last Thursday, ended
when the party returned home Saturday night.
Fears for their tafety were expressed by Mri, Pfdneault when hrr
huiband and ions fajled to return
home Thursday night as prevlouily
planned.
WOULD DEMAND BRITISH
WITHDRAWAL
JACOBARAD, Sind. India, Jan 6
(Reuters)—Pundit Jawharlal Nehru,
former President of the All India
Congreu, said in an election ipeech
today that if Congress accepted office in the new Indian Legislative
Assembly, i* wmild demand that
Britain withdraw from India,
REGINAN   DIES
TORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP) - Mrs.
Amy Gordon Gibboni, 78, widow of
Albsrt Gibbons, founder of the Regina Trading Company of Regina,
Saik., died here Saturday. She wai
born in Kenilwortb, Ont., and lived
in Reglna for 25 years.
In Scotland a decree of divorce
dissolves a marriage at once, while
in England neither party is frre to
re-marry until six months have expired.
Manila Troops
"Browned Oil"
MANILA, Jan. 8 (AP)—Morale tr,
American armed forces now ln the
Pacific Is at its lowest ebb since
the United States entered the wu,
It has reached a point where efficiency and discipline are bein-f. undermined seriously. Officers as well
aa men are being affected by slowly-
corroding resentment against the
War Department and top army
commanders for demobilization
mixups.   r
The only war cries you heir from
Johnny Doughboy over here ere
howls of anger against "the big
brass" for keeping him ln uniform
for what he feels are needless weeki
and months.
"Going home" has developed Into
a service-wide psychosis, a sort of
mental epidemic that ls threatening
to turn the remnants of what five
montha ago wae the world's most
powerful army into a stranded mob.
Last August there probably wu
not a power in the world that could
have stood up to the strength of the
United States Army. Today, In Iti
present mood, what is left of that
army would nave a tough Job kicking ovet ta aboriginal tribe on the
warpath.
TO BUILD POWER
PUNT FOR
YEULOWKNIFI
YELLOWKNIFE. .N.W.T, ft*, t
(CP)—A new 9,000 h.p. hydro electric plant pn Big Spruce Lake and
Snare River, 100 miles North of
here, which will ease a serious power ahortage ln the Yellowknife mining area, will be built In the Spring
at a coat of "several million" dollars, it was reported by Giant Yellowknife Gqld Mlnea Ltd., Setts-
day.
Surveys ior the new power site
are almost completed.
The plant is reported to be pert
of a power development planned by
the Giant Yellowknife Gold Mines
Limited for coming years wiUv- a
capacity of 15,000 horse power.
• HOT HITS TflAlM
VANCOUVER, Jan. « (CP) - Police are investigating the firing of
a shot through the window of a '
British Columbia Electric Railway
Company interurban train aa it approached Marpole Station late Saturday. Two windowi in the rear oi
the train were shattered. No one
waa injured.
PIUS APPEALS
FOR AID FOR
WAR ORPHANS
VATICAN CITY. Jan. « (API-
Pope Plus Saturday lasuad an encyclical latter appealing (nr aid lor
homaltaa children and War orphans
Tha encyclical is dated today. Jan
t, the Feast of tha Iplphany, which
eommemoratea tha glfte of tha Three
Wise Men to tha Infant Jesus
The letter, addressed to all Ro-
man Catholic bishops, uld there
are up to 1.000.000 children who lack
lhe necesaitlts of life and are suffering from cold, hungtr and disease
"On thtlr behalf wa order the
bishops everywhere to appoint collections and In general to exhort
lhe (slthful to come tu thi aid of
in, . pi_or children"
SAILOR TAKES A
CRACK AT
BEAUTY BUSINESS
RIOINA (CP) - Old mIU will
hardly brlievt it, but a former Royal Canadian Navy man-and a drill
initruclor at that—Is (olng to take
a whirl at ihe beauty supply bua-
Incss.
Hf ii Dave Dion. U, of Rtglna,
who ii tiling his wrvica aratuitiu
.,:> help finance hU undertaking
i htrt. Mort than that, anothtr br,
'Norman Blrkett, also of Reglna and
| SI yaars of igfl, n going to work
with DIM.
The two are having a !itt!» trouble finding a loratlon fnr an nffirf,
! but they art going right ahead. Al
1 ready, Mile. Jeanette Dorion of
I Montreal has bten hare tn dtmon-
stratf thalr producti at a dliplay.
| Said a n#wipaper ttffict wag when
thi* newi cams out: "The boys wtrt
probably memberi of Ihr pprmanent
and wavy navy."
THREATIN RETALIATION
1.ATAVIA, Jan. t (CPl-Brltlsh
source, .said today an R.AT, Dakota
I transport plane dropped 20.000
leaflets over a SO-square-mile area
South of the mid-Java city of Seni-
aranc. threatening retaliation for
the continued ulirlllng o( the Sani-
erang airfield by Indonesians.
The leaflets -.'rimed the people to
•evacuate   vlllagei   used   by   armed
.bands, becauie thry were liable to
be ihelled inci bombed
\    The situation In -lavs  wss  com-
fisraiively quiet, wtth seme sntp-
Dg snd hand-iTcnadr throwini reported in Hiutenr.org. 30 miles South
| of Batavia
The slbn'.rosi hai the longeit
wlngspresd of sli birds, often ,L14
fee|
l/Panetratas
Ime Into branck-l
tdbu-rill, ltl imcM
Bust-Known Home Remedy
| You Can Usi Has Special .
Pinitri»lne-$tl_«litl«iH«V,    ,..
AetlM.lutWirl-ilqrtFta-. 7.7   ''
KltfcMlatae
aksstMlMkssr-
     _        - fK« m. t utM.
midtelnil vifon -—~^ nsraMaj pwttke
Heme-pnved, VepoRub'l special prnftr._tliig.stimulating
action start* to work mighty fast—and keeps on working for
hours—to relieve iuch miseries of coldi ■___ coughing apaaro,
bronchial congestion, muscular tightness. When you rub
Vlcka VapoRub on throat, chest ana back,
and ttt the 11. nits -you'll know why tt ls a 1
f-unilystandbylnsomanymllllnnsofhom-a.
Crand for ehlldrtn and grownups. Try It.
VapoRub
 . ■     '
	
 China Recognizes
Independence
of Outer Mongolia
By  SPENCER   MOOSA
CHUNGKING, Jan. 6 (AP) - The
Chinese Foreign Office Saturday
announced that China has recognized the independence of Outer
Mongolia, which voted for independence in a plebiscite provided
under terms of the recent Sino-
Soviet Treaty.
President Chiang Kai-shek's government meanwhile tightened Its
grip on industrially-rich Manchuria.
A Chinese dispatch reported National government forces, transported by air, were due Saturday to
take over Changchun, capital of
Manchuria—weather permitting.
Reports from Peiping said a Chinese mayor and hii staff already
had taken over the administration
of  Harbin,  important   Manchurian
j industrial city, although troopa had
not yet reached there becauie unfavorable weather had delayed
icheduled transport-plane flights.
Ground forces meanwhile waited
| near Mukden for orderi to enter
that city.
Peace parleys were to be resumed
by Chinese Commuhbt and government delegatei at Chungking today
or Sunday.
The Communists; who fad protested and were making an issue ot
a National army drive into Jehol
province in the North, today reporttd Iresh advances of their own in
Southwestern Chantung province.
They claimed capture of the highway towns of Yuncheng and Kiiyeh
and of five National stronghold? on
the Tientsin-Pukow railroad North
of YUncheng,
California Hotel Only Place Where
Warmth and Food (an Be Had in   v
Paris by Persons ol Moderate Means
By   DEWITT   MACKENZIE
PARIS, Jan. 6 (AP)—California
H.tel stands at the cross-roads of
United States trade with Europe—
a home-like little hotel through
which paBS the Marco Polos who
seek to buy or sell and accordingly
follow the routes to various parts
of a continent which is so changed
by war that exploration is an adventure into the unknown.
The Cllliornia's unpretentlousness
belies Its present importance, for
it affords temporary shelter and
food not only to businessmen but
to diplomats, writers, artists.
It is, about the only hotel in all
Paris where warmth and food can
be had these days by persons of
moderate means.
The answer to this anomaly, In
a capital which is just about stripped of normal accommodations, is
that the hotel's service is sponsored
by the American State Department,
which -buys food ff&m the United
States Army and thus can cater at
moderate prices to transient Americans.
The alternatives to the California
are the scattered black-market hotels which charge prices that would
stagger a millionaire.
By black-market hotels I mean
those which purchase their food,
wines and coal from the black markets and fix their prices accordingly*
In one of these places you may
pay $20 for a fairly modest dinner,
and if you like good wines the sky
is the limit of your bill.* '
At the American hotel are members of the diplomatic service, on
their way to various European posts,
There are merchants who have various wares to market, and there are
others who would like to buy. United States business houses in France
are beginning to reopen, and their
employees register at the California
while they search for places of their
own.
The recent devaluation of the
franc was calculated to give French
trade a fillip. Just what the effect
will be remains to be seen, but it
looks as though it would be a considerable time before French pro-
d'/:ti will be available for sale.     ,
Everything    depends    on    when
ppippappaj
Himmler Pictured
as a
Fumbling Coward
PflOMOTlD AT TRAIL: F. C. Reniom, left end J. H. Heronve,
right who received new appointment! at the Consolidated Mining A
Smelting Company of Canada, Ltd., Jen 1, Mr, Ransom was promoted
from Acting Superintendent to Superintendent of the Refineries,
while Mr. Hargrave wai ippolnted Acting Superintendent of the
Smelter.
MUNICIPAL AUTHORITIES PONDER
HOW TO RAISE CIVIC VOTE
TORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP)-How to
get them out to vote ls the problem confronting Toronto municipal
leaders, surveying the vote in Tuesday's civic election in which only I
93,069—a mere 25.6 per cent—oi
363,479 eligible voters marked ballots.
It's not that Toronto people don't j
think they should vote. Seventy- j
five per cent of those questioned ln
an opinion survey thought that to
make sure of good municipal government at least 80 per cent of the
quayfied voters should go to the
polls.' It's the' performance that's
lacking. •
The problem Isn't new. In only
one of the last six elections has the
number of voters topped 30 per cent
That wai 1944 when 143,110 of 363,-
185 turned out, a percentage of
39.4.- The six-year average is 26.96.
Suggestions for improvement gen-1
erelly centre on a change In the
voting date. Controller David Balfour urges' that Jan. 2—Instead of
New Year's Day—be the election
date and that lt be a civic holiday.
But Fred Hamilton, a former controller, suggested Dec. 31 instead.
In 1937-3B Toronto did change Iti
polling day to the first Monday in
December—the date favored by the
majority of Ontario cities — but
there were fewer voters than in
preceding and succeeding New
Year's Day voting.
A five-year municipal voting average for 11 leading Canadian cities
places Toronto ninth. The average
for all 11 is 35.14 with Ottawa leading at more than 50 per cent. Then
come Saint John, N.B.—and Quebec
nipeg, Hamilton, Montreal and Van-
in the 40-50 bracket, Victoria, Wln-
couver With from 30 to 40 per cent.
Calgary and Edmonton trail Toronto
in the. 20-30 section.
100,000 New Jobs Provided in So-
Called Depressed Areas of Britain
WHEN YOU NEED CASH
jjot emetjenclel!
0***e ike M*«tUT ftymttrt
Mm t fc ti t th i y** ittt
Wh-rn you
tare*
You reply
tor   eecT\ month
♦ 25
<_ 50
»10O
»2_0
6 monthi
12     "
6 monthi
12     "
18     "
6 months
12     "
18     "
24     "
6 montha
12     "
18     "
24     "
*4.25
2.15
8.48
4.30
2.91
16.96
8.60
6.82
4.43
33.92
17.21
11.64
8.86
Monthly raoiYminta IncJuds
IntarMt
By  JOHN   DAUPHINEE
Canadian Pren Staff Writer
LONDON, Jan. 6 (CP) - One
hundred thousand new jobs have
been provided in Britain's so-called
"depressed areas" where 1.000,000
men and women were out of work
before the war.
This Is the first stage in » scheme
for dispersal of industry which wa_|
drafted by the wartime Coalition
Government of Prime Minister
Churchill and is being put into effect
by Prime Minister Attlee's Labor
administration.
The emphasis so far has been on
light secondary industries. Later
an effort will be made to provide
new basic heavy industries on
which, in the long run, full employment will depend.
SOO NEW FACTORIES
.About 300 new factories already are
assured for South Wales. Northeast
England. West Cumberland and
Scotland where pre-war reliance on
a narrow range of production made
the unemployment situation most
acute.
In charge of Ihe Board of Trade
program is businesslike Sir Philip
Warter, former Director of Shipping,
and motion picture companies, who
handled warehousing for the Food
Ministry earlier in the war. Now
he is Controller of Factories and
Storage with the Job ol leasing
Government-owned premises so as
to provide maximum employment
in peacetime.     ,
The need to disperse war factories
to avoid concentration of important
targets for enemy bombers and to
take advantage of available labor
has been helpful in taking new work
to the depressed areas. Large manufacturing concerns have been attracted by the existence of luitable factory premises.
NELSON BRANCH
Whan tou ut Uctd with t financial
emergency a panonal loan at tha bank
U often your aatiett (olutioo. Such
loans may ba paid back by convenient
monthly initalmanti ana can ba
arranged for amount! as low ai $25.
Endorser! ara not necettarily required. Study tha adjoining table to
■aa how inflipamive it ii to borrow
from tha Royal Bank.
MIWa-wNfWUwUetiwwwyWaac*
THE ROYAL BANK
OF CANADA
S. A. MADDOCKS, Manager
France's production' can be Increased, since she has few large
stocks ofi hand now. That production must hinge on the availability
of raw materials. Those aren't to
be had in Europe and consequently
must come from other parts of the
world—and when you say "other
parts of thc world" the thoughts of
the business man naturally centre
on North and South America if he
is thinking of early supplies.
As things now stand, many countries of Europe are not even in
position to engage in barter trade.
Lieut. Jcstley
Becomes Partner
Vancouver Law Firm
H. Lyle Jcstley has been discharged from the Royal Canadian Navy,
where he was serving as a lieutenant and has become a member of
the legal firm of MacDougall, Morrison *_ Jestlcy it Vancouver.
Mr. Jcstley before enlistment ln
thc Navy wis with the legal department of the C. M. __ S. Co. it
Trail.
By GEORGE TUCKER
NU1BNBEHO, Jtn. 6 (AP) -
Hclnrich Himmler, once-dreaded
chief of tha S.S., wu pictured Saturday aa a fumbling coward who
"•lowly came apart" and ipent hii
lut dayi ai a shivering wreck with
a vial of poison constantly at hit
fihgertips.
Otto Ohlendorf, Hlmmler'i former aide, said ln an Interview that
the 44-ycar-old Gestapo chief lived
in a tiny cottage on the outskirts of
Flensburg during the final dayi'of
the Third Reich, and that he hoped
in vain to make a deal which would
■ave hii life.
Himmler committed suicide May
23, IMS, three dayi after hii capture
by the Britiih intelligence, by swallowing the contents of a vial of
potassium cyanide.
Ohlendorf, who appeared Thursday ai a witness at the-war crimes
trial here, laid that Himmler sent
Walter Schellenberg, chltf of the
security police's foreign Intelligence
■ervice, to Sweden to try to convince Uie Weitern poweri that the
S.S. was the only group remaining
which could maintain order ln Germany.
"His only occupation was to
come Into Flensburg at least three
timei a day and ask: 'Any news
from Schellenberg?'" iaid Ohlendorf.
"I wai with him In Flemburg and
saw him ilowly come apart, a man
turned slightly craven, bent on laving hlmielf through an artificial
intrigue, but always with a vial of
pdtassium cyanide at hli fingertips."
Ohlendorf said that once ln
Hlmmler'i climb to power the Gestapo chief had plotted to overthrow
Hitler, but had been turned back
'by his fear of Hermann GoerinV
36
NILSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7,1946 — *
Unionism Spreads to Westminster...
M.P/s May Ask.0-Hour Week,
Overtime Pay, Living Wage
By  JAMES  McCOOK
Canadian Preu Staff Writer
LONDON, Jan. 6 (CP Cable)-
Brltlih M.P.'i are dlicuiilng the
pouibillty of forming a new organization to be called the Memben of Parliament Self-Protection Trade Union, Haydn Davies,
Ltbor Member ef Parliament for
Bt. Ptncru tnd Induitrlal correipondent ef thi London Sttr,
writei In t itory carried by the
newipipen.
Back-benchers, Mr. Dtvlll Ityi,
ire conilderlng for t 40-hour
week, t living wtge and payment
for overtime. Hii itory addi that
memben are over-worked in the
Houie by dutlei from 10:30 a.m.
to midnight and have no reit at
weekendi becauie their conitlt-
uenti and correspondence take all
their time.
Mr. Davies may have written
with his tongue in his cheek but
members generally said they were
weary when the last session, which
started in October, ended Just belore Christmas.
In 11 weeks, 53 House sittings
were held and 30 were spent discussing   legislation,   nine   on   the
budget and nine on special debates
and the Conservative censure motion.
NO SIGN OF LETUP
Forty-one bills were presented
and 20 were passed through all
stages to become law.
Looking ahead, the memberi can
see no sign of relief as the legislative mill keeps grinding. A bill to
nationalize Britain's coal. mines
already has been Introduced.
Herbert Morrison, Lord President of the Council and leader of
the Government in the House, how
is in Canada and no one can complain that he has failed in his promise to speed business. Opposition
members think the pace cannot be
continued, but the Government
proposes to quickly .implement
measures for nationalization of civil aviation, cable and wireless
communications, and gas and electricity, apart from general revision
of social insurance legislation, reorganization of hospital services
and provision for a state health
plan.
In addition there will be another
budget in April and the mass of
ordinary Parliamentary business to
be dealt with.
Midlands Has Prospects of More
Work Than Workers ior Years
Sees Pitfalls of League as
Lessons for New Peace Organization
By JO>*H  DAUPHlNW "" l
Canadian Pnu Staff Writer
NOTTINGHAM, England, Jan, 6
(CP)—Expanilon of engineering
and other Indmtriei during the
wir promliu to guarantee more
work than workers for lomi yean
In the North Midland region.
Induitrlal expert! report that
labor ihortigei—and iome icir-
city of materllll— ire delaying the
reconvenlon to civilian output of
itaple manufacture!.
Few areis In the British Isles
have a more diversified production
than the region centred on Nottingham and embracing Derbyshire,
Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Rutland and Northampton and the Soke of Peterborough.
The North Midlands have two-
Ihirdi of the hosiery lnduitry and
nearly one-hilf of the footwear
trade.
War needs brought a sharp increase in engineering and even
though it Is expected not more than
[half the increase will remain ln
peacetinfe the area's labor force will
be permanently larger than in prewar years.
WANT WOMEN WORKERS
Now there iB strong competition
for workers among engineering
plants and the older staple industries which had to curtail their out-
. put after 1939. The building and
building materials Industries also
must be bolstered if an acute hous-
j ing shortage is to be met.
The most serious bottleneck is
women labor. In Nottingham there
were 4600 -women in the engineering trades before the war and 19,400
last year. In the same period the
number in the textiles trade dropped from 30,700 to 14,400. Now en-
'■ gineering still wants most of its
women and textiles planti are trying to increase their staffs to the
pre-war level.
The problem will become more
acute as supplies of yarn become
greater, permitting all-out production.
f l: ■- ii i mi t ii 1111 n i ii ii ii i ii ii 111 ii ii in ii ■ tin i it i ■ it ■ i ii i i ii in 11 iiiiniii ti
\ COKPORATrD   tit MAY 187a
Headquarters for
WORK CLOTHES
Bone-Dry Jackets
Heavy duty duck impregnated with oil and interlined with
oilskin.  Fully waterproof and long wearing- Sizes 38-42.
*7.25
Bone Dry Pants
Roomily tailored from the same material as the jackets
and interlined with oilskjn.   Size 32 to 40 waist.   Pair:
'5.50    •
Plaid Shirts
Strong work shirts in colorful plaids for sport or work.
Practical coat style with reinforced main seams.   Sizes-
1416 to 17V2.
•1.59
Horsehide Gauntlets
Genuine horsehide with tough stiff cuffs.   Strongly sewn \
and welted for extra strength.
•139 *
111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
Birmingham Program Would Convert
Slums Into Modern Residential Areai
BY JOHN  DAUPHINEE
Canidlin Pren Staff Writer
BIRMINGHAM,' England, Jan. 6
(CP) — A scheme for ripping out
one-half square miles of slums in
downtown Birmingham and turning the space into modern residential centres, has been sent to City
Council — first step in a 30-year,
£100,000,000 (S450.0O0.000) replan-
nlng job
If the whole program ls carried
out thii industrial city of 1,000,000
population will be one of Britain's
beautiful towni.
The Initial project covers Duddes-
ton and Nechells, a triangular zone
just Northeast of the city centre
where more than 5000 of 6600 homei
have been declared unfit for habitation. Four more slum areas, further heritages of Birmingham's
mushroom growth during the industrial revolution, will be tackled
later.
On Jan. 10. 1920, at Geneva,
Switzerland, the League nf Nations began its eventful but indecisive life. Twenty-six years
later, to the day. 51 countries inaugurate in London a new effort
to provide collective lecunty
through International organization. In the light of League ex-
We Can Now Make Delivery of
=CROW'S NEST=
= FURNACE COAL=
Phone 33 Today
and avoid tbe possibility of being.
out of coal
WEST TRANSFER CO.
ESTABLISHED IN 1899
pfrioncf-K, what are thc chancei
for the Unitrd Nations'1
Charles   Foltz,    who  Ior   years
covered the  old  League (or The
Associated   Press   and   who   hai
been in Europe continuously (or
10 years, has written a seriei of
five stones on the renewal of the
international    pcact    effort,    the
spur   provided   by     the     atomic
bomb, the specific problemi which
the  UNO   takes fiver from thfe
Lear ie,    the    League    activities
I    which   will   continue   under   th*
I    new organir^tion and the U.N.O.1!
,    chances fnr effectiveness
Following is the first story,
BY CHARLES FOLTZ
Aiiociated Preu-BUff Wrltir
■ The Venailri Peace Treaty and
the covenant of the League nf Nations went Into force Jin, 10. 1P20
On the sane diy^this year, 2fl years
I later, the United Nationi Auembly
meet* for theiint time.
Bad n igury1 Those who knew
lhe oM Lengue and now work for
lhe neV think not, They think it
rather a reminder of old pi tf a 114 on
the 21-year rnad to war, a repetition
of which they iftek tn avoid
SMUTS APPROVES
The gi.ir.ti who built that __*■-
«ue Wilsnn, Lloyd Genrge and
Clemenceau are dead, and only a
few  nf  the delegatei  who  worked
OVER 100 MILLION BOTTLES
SOLDI VERY EFFECTIVE FOR
MONTHLY PAIN
I.ytliiJ* Ptnkhma'aVnitibllCampoaag
DOES MORE lhan __!»-■• n_wl-.T pata
_hm due lo torn.*- functional p«1-d_!
„«lutlw_rr*. ll iko ettiren tceeaeljany
nr. weak, tirrd. ntreeta. cranky .eel_n|l —
nl turh nature, f-nkhitnl Cr«»p<»ad
I, r oleeine ,_•<_•.„» -one ol lha mn_*
tetetrtteimllclnmremtm, buytol
with them now work for the new
U.N.O.
One li South Africa'! Field Marshal Jan Christiaan Smuts, fighting
exponent of world cooperation
against aggression. He told The Associated Tress that he considered
the UNO. Charter a far better weapon against aggression than the
covenant he helped draft In 1919.
Another is China's Wellington
Koo, one of the lesser delegatea at
the conferences when the League
was born. While his countrymen
died under Japanese bombs he
pleaded In the League Councils and
Assemblies for help he knew they
could not give.
Savin years ago, after ona of
thoae appeals, I lunched with him
at ■ Oenivi restaurant. With tha
mild emphasis characterise of
him, ha made a prediction:
"China will fight on. Soon ths
world will ba at war. You will
win and wa will win. Than wa
will maat In Geneva again and
forel a League with auch itrength
In Its armi that no nation will
dan to dify It."
Mi wai thi flrit Chairman ot
thi Commlttii In  London which j
thli Winter tumid San Frincli'
co'i World Chirtir Into a living
organisation.
Many other delegates on the new
U N 0. committees remember whal
happened to the League. Those from
C-echoilovikta ind Ethiopia remember how futile were their ap-,
peali to Ihe old League agalnit aggressors who swallowed them. Albania and the Bpanlsh Republican!
appealed uselessly, too. Austria had
not time to appeal.
All that wai at Geneva
The United Nations will not ao
back th're. at leait it will not eitah-
tlsh ltl headquarter! at O-miva i
though the Stria city might urea
ai Uu European regional headqmr- i
tart.
Fellow Workers
Honor G. James
on Retirement
KIMBERLEY, B.C. - George
James of Chapman Camp, long time
employee of the C. M, At S. Co. at
the Concentrator, was honored by
fellow workmen with the presentation of a silver cocktail set, accompanied by expressions for happi-
iii+s for the future years, upon his
retirement from service with the
company.
Well known throughout the district where he has lived for the past
forty years, Mr. James has long
been famous in the community for
hu musical skill as a one man band
Announce Increase in
Canned Poultry
OTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP.-Incrcase
ln the ceiling price of canned poultry was announced Saturday by the
Prices Board. The announcement
said the adjustment was being
made because generally higher
prices had prevailed on poultry
used for canning since meat rationing was re-imposed last September.
The new order, effective Jan. 7,
will result in an increase to consumers of between nine and 11
cents a pound for most of the products affected, such as jellied chicken. The rise will not, however,
affect consumer prices until products sold by processors or wnole-
salers after Jan. 7 reach retail
stores.
Increases for other types of canned poultry will vary according to
quality and there also will be some
variations in the seven zones into
which Canada is divided.
Meantime  the business area It- 11
self will be sliced open to permit rerouting of principal streets and ent I
the serious traffic congestion of tea \
cent years.
TO MOVE 7000
The present population of D*itk'
deston and Nechells is 21,000, thett |
homes jammed in among 15 big
factories, 100 small ones, nearly 800
cheap shops and 60 "pubs." Ultimately 70O0 persons will be moya
ed away to cut out overcrowding-1
Cost of this one program has herm .
set at £15,000,000 ($67,500,000) and
it will take years to complete. t\_ ■')
land and buildings in the one-halt
square mile will be bought by the '
city. Section by section the structures  will be torn down and- replaced. All factories will be rebuilt
in a triangular space at one end.
One major arterial road will pan 'I
through Duddeston and Nechelie, |
splitting the area into two almost
equal parts. On each side a self-contained residential area will be formed, wilh its own shopping district,
theatres, schools, churches, community centres and parks.
^ GETTING UP
tfe^fycuVMr*?
Ilra_>rr.:n|findijiu
only hill rtited, itill
weir j—if your Jeep
ii broken by fitful
tossing uid turning
—four kklneyi Buy
betihlimc.  When
yourkidmyi fit out
•f ir-Ur. your i_mb
anally lulferi.   Ti Up Jter Ubm
renin ■ normal condition, eaa Doi_*»
Kidni, Pilli.  Doddi hrfp thi kkknyiH
rid of poiiona ud unit sols ia ymr
lyitem. Then yaw I
-you ua enjoy reiliul _n_r___i I
ind iwike reireihed ind ready (h _
Hay. GetDetfiB___yn_i tatty. 14*
Ottawa Miners Report
Good Showing
SLOCAN CITY, B.C.-Jack Birk-
quiit and Albert Oleson are ln town
from the Ottawa Mine. They report
. a nice ihowing of high grade ore
' at the mine.
I!
PARIS-Robert Valeur. director
nf the Trench Presi jnd Information
Service ln New York, hai been appointed Consul General by the
French Government and li leaving
the United Statei ifter 19 yenrs. He
founded 'Trance Forever", the
Fighting French Committee in the
United States, early In Ihe war
Previous to that he taught In an
American unlvenlty.
PARIS—Tha appointment of Gen-1
er«l Chomel ai Chlaf nf Staff to
Oeneral d« Giulle hu been announ-
eed. During the war the new Chief
of   Staff   wai   active   in   Western
France organlilng the Maquis and )
alw   ltd   an  airborne   division   in ,
Southwestern Frinre
ASTHMA
tttt •■ Maura/ tiiscU
mtnmtwmtttt
Briatheaiy of Canada Ltd.
7M Granville St     Vancouver
J
 I — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1946
tv
slo Presents
to
ler Veterans
KASLO, B. C. — Kaslo welcomed
:ier boys back with a concert, presentation ceremony and dance.
F. McGibbon as chairman opened
the concert in the school auditorium
With a (ew words of welcome before
htroduclng the speakers. Gene Leveque gave a French Habitant recitation. E. \Vardle gave several comic
songs and Mr. and Mrs. Primrose
favored with two vocal duets. Mr.
Westerland with a recitation and
a black face vocal number brought
Uie program to a close. The chairman then introduced Mayor Webster
Who welcomed the boys on behalf
.tt the City of Kaslo. F. H. Abey for
'ihe Canadian Legion, Mrs. McGib-
■ tmn for the Auxiliary to the Legion,
Mrs. J. Tonkin for the IODE, Mrs.
McGUlivary lot the Women's Insti-
' lute,' Mrs.  Armitage  for  the  Red
. Cross and G. Baker for the Board
; of Trade each spoke on behalf of
' their organizations.   *
[.  G. D. Bowker then made the presto entatloni- of souvenir billfolds each
I engraved with the recipients name
i/ahd the City of Kaslo crest. Over
i 40 returned men pnd women were
I there to receive their gifts. To those
• not able to be present the billfolds
• will be mailed. K. Abey responded
. With a few words of thanks on be-
I half of the returned men.
• After the concert the Drill Hall
'Was opened to the public and a
monster dance was enjoyed by all
attending. Excellent music was provided. A delicious lunch of turkey
' sandwiches, cake and coffee was
aerved at midnight after which two
turkeys were won by Bert Dryden
and J. R. Tinkess. The dance ended
at 2:30.
[Conned Fruit,
Vegetables
in Short Supply
'".OTTAWA—Weather conditions ln
*W-S handicapped both the seeding
k«nd the harvesting of crops that are
Ilargely canned with the result that
(the pack this year is disappointing,
tile Dominion Department of Agri-
Culture has announced,
f Estimates made by the Department place the 1945 pack of beans
(Jreen or wax I at 900,000 cases,
JM.OOO below that of 1944. Only
900,000 cases of corn were canned,
J81,000 less than last year, and 400,-
000 below tbe five year average of
19-0-44. Canned peas at 2,900,000
eases this year are down 700,000
CUes ln comparison with 1944, but
are 100,000 cases above the five
Tear average.
The drop in canned tomatoes is
substantial this year. It was only 1,-
MO.OOO cases, which is 1,982,000 cases
slown from 1944. Tomato Juice Is
KM going to be as plentiful in the
tjext several  months for the  1645
Sack   wss   only  2,300,000  cases,  I
rep of  1,942,000  caVes fro*  Ust
year. Other tomato products, such as
Jiulp, puree, paste and catsup are in
ower supply compared with 1944.
. The report concerning canned
ajruit for this year is as bad as that
« vegetables. Only 36,000 cases of
apricots were put up, 58,000 cases
MSS than last year's pack. The
Cherry crop in 1945 was a failure in
lastern Canada, but was good in
British Columbia. The total pack
was 40,000 cases, a drop of 66,000
cases.
While It was expected early in the
r Summer that this year's peach crop
r would not be up to the average, actually it turned nut good. The 1944
total pack w:,s 819.000 cases and
1949 was 550.000 cases, only 69,000
below last year. The crop of pears
Mtl poor and only 320,0(10 cases
'were canned or about half the quantity packed last year. Tlums were a
lallure in Ontario, but good in British Columbia. This year's total pack
Of 280,000 cists is down 48,000 cases.
Nakusp Legion
fntertoini
Veterans Kiddies
NAKUSP, B.C. - A Chrlstmu
party wu given by Legion members and Legion Auxiliary members for children of returned ..veterans. Carols were sung, accompanied by Mrs. A. Dunn at the piano.
Games were enjoyed until the 4r-
rlval of Santa Claus who presented
gifts of novelties, candy and ice
cream. Afternoon tea wu served to
the mothers present. The hall was
decorated for the occasion with
streamers and gayly decorated
Christmas trees.
258 Births in
Nelson in 1945
There were 258 births in the city
during 1945, a drop of almost 50
from last year when 307 were registered. In the district there were 19
registered hlrths in 1945 and 50 in
1944.
Deaths in the city were the same
for the two years, 92, and in the
district 33 deaths were registered
in 945 and 64 in 1944.
Six more marriages were solemnized in the city this year than last,
the figures being 91 ahd 85, respectively. District marriages were also
up with 12 ln 1045 and seven in 1944.
During December there were 29
births, 15 deaths and nine marriages
in the city and two births, no deaths
and two marriages llf the district.
During the same month in 1944
there were 20 births, three deaths
and seven marriages in the city and
eight births, five deaths and no
marriages in the district.
■■ [■ 5fc
Kaslo Couple
Mark Golden
Wedding
New Westminster Miss
Weds Fernie Man
HOSMER, B. C. - A quiet wedding took place in Fernie at the
home of the bride's uncle, when
Miss Eileen Russell of New Westminster became the bride of George
William Fenson. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fenson of Fernle.
The bride looked charming ln a
brown suit with green and brown
accessories.
After the ceremony a wedding
breakfast was held with many relatives present.
The young couple left for a honeymoon at Lethbridge. They will
make their home in Hosmer where
the bride teaches school.
SALMO
Troops on the Move
By The  Canadian   Preu
'<   Homeward bound:
•Arrived __,t Halifax-S.S. Scythia
(Baturday) with 3444 members of
Canada's armed (ones
' Due at Vancouver-.. S Richmond
Park (Monday) with 19 Canadian
Army officers.
'Due at Saint John—SSi Hnmp-
Stead Park iMondayi with three
Canadian Army officers.
. Luigl Bocchenni. Italian com-
Jjoeer, wrote 12.. siring quintettes,
91 string quartettes. 54 string trios,
JO symphonies, and cello and violin
pieces.
Fl*! WHY TO rUN riMTY
lertr plinninf it ihr wtrt* rut iiMf-iini
■uccnt  Wi*c nr i [-.linnmi will »t r-u
rich  .1...':*■   !i fxf  ■--■.■-   I     !   Tstcrfll
IncttttsTi, prmltii tum in (jmc-iian |-f
dent tr\r,te-s meter food »ii(t(-tir« for
the million* al nn-lf r-iiinmln-il •("*'!
Klflff lfl« p-Klplt Of iwh.'l 1 " nut ifl Wbo
•re (OuiMinf on oar h-flf fnr it»eir nty
mf-m-tl. B-n-r* «n«l gifu too can coe>-
tribute -night il<r in tt-n -Hfort.
F»ffT   ttlitntt   tnd   rn-mrnffi ul    prywtl
ibmild it our  I'M* Snd tod Niitwiy
Borah   ''-"■ '   ■    '  I    i    '.1'wImi    hip  ti   il
V^-riwU.  Flower end Homef-Jini wv-di
tt ■*,-■ II m I'limi, ■>)-.*-.!■(. Fran * ! oth-rr
Ntirtm _••_*•■ k Mini f.i-w mf-poi-M Mmr
ftun t\tttt\* fi-duffd Send roHiT (Thm*
•bo *td**ttd (.-im ut in r'41 will rtcem
Cuilo-ft vitbo-uf tr-trtt )
S***d ttttUi ttt Mar Cfy el *m
lUt Seed mi Smttty *%—*.       1%
DOMINION SH D HOUSE
Gt'or-'ctown. Unt.
SALMO, B.C.-William Kubak of
Vancouver is visiting his father.
Mrs. T. Hitty and Mrs. Pete Shel-
off had as their guest their brothet
J. Markin. who attends U.B.C, Vancouver, and who has been visiting
his home at Thrums.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Moore and
Mrs. Cede Esche were visitors to
Sheep Creek.
R. Dsuphinaus was a visitor to
Trail.
Mrs. D. Reld, Erie, is visiting her
parents at Trail.
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Hanson and
daughters Marion and Lois, spent
New Year's visiting relatives in
Nelson.
Spr. Bill Klovance has arrived
from the Coast to visit his wife at
the home of her parents, Mr. and
Mn. J. W. Hearn.
Mrs. McDearmid of Silverton is
visiting her son and daughter-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall McDearmid.
Laurence Kraft is visiting in Nelson.
Bill Jones of Trail visited friends
In Salmo and her mother in Ymlr.
A dance was held New Year's
Eve in the KP. Hall, sponsored
by Knights of Pythias. Music was
supplied by Mrs. Russel Binning,
John Thomas and Bill Sheloff.
Miss   Joyce   Bremner,   who   attends   Normal   School   at   Vancou-
i ver, is visiting her parents, Mr. and
I Mrs. Archie Bremner.
SALMO, B.C.—R. Salisbury, who
spent a few days in thc city, has
returned home.
I Mr. and Mrs. Bill Batten and family have returned home from Nelson
where they were guests of Mrs. Batten's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Boates.
They were accompanied home by
Rudolph Boates who was their guest
for a feaf days.
1 Miss Dolores and Miss Joyce Mc-
Ginnes, who were guests of Miss
Joan Scribncr for a week, have returned to their home in Nelson.
D. Reir of Erie was a Salmo visitor.
' Pte. Jim Greenwood of Medicine
Hat. Alta. is visiting his wife and
I baby at Uie home ot har parents
| Mr. and Mrs. P. N. Peters.
Miss Doreen Gibbon. Nelson, was
a guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Doug Gibbon.
| Donnie Wilde of Trail is visiting
j his mother. Mrs. V. Gibbon and
| sister, Alta.
Mr, and Mrs. Fred Binning and
daughter. Anita, of Nelson, visited
friends in town over the New Year
holidays
C. H Scrlbner was a city visitor.
Pte. Bill Peters, stationed at Vancouver, is spending a leave with his
parents. Mr. and Mrs. P. N. Peters.
Mr and Mrs. Warren Rotter were
shoppers to Nelaon  Monday.
D. Gilbertson spent Monday in
the city.
S McLellan and daughter Yvonne,
of Nelson visited the formers two
brothers, Jim and Jack Mcl_«llan.
Mrs J. Helps and her brother A.
Stavast of Apex, visited friends in
Salmo and relatives at Park Siding.
Miss Joan Kraft, who was a guest
of Mr .md Mrs. Hager Renwick.
Nelson, during the holiday season
lisi returned home.
r Llndatrom, Meadows, was a
or in Salmo over the holidays.
Mr and Mrs. Dave McDonald,
oati as their guest over the
holiday season their daughter, Mrs.
Hrett of Wynndel. has left for her
home She was accompanied by her
silti*. Mrs. Charlie Kublikl. who
will be her guest for several weeks.
Miss Berfiadlna Feeney is visiting
relatival in NeUon.
Miss Jean Avery, who visited
Miss Helen Speira, Ymlr, haa re-
.iinicd home.
Cbsnes end Filly Scribncr were
. m.i.rl io Trail.
KASLO, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. Wil
Ham J. Roberta celebrated their
Golden Wedding anniversary at
their home ln Kaslo Dec. 24. The
setting waa suggestive of the occasion with golden-colored weddipg
bells, candles and motifs. The table
was centred with a two-tier wedding cake decorated with gold
leaves. Several bouquets of flbw-
ers presented by the family and
friends added to a beautiful setting
being in yellow and bronze shades.
Mrs. Roberts corsage was rose
buds and (tarnations tied with gold
tibbon held with her brooch, a Golij
Transvaal Sovereign dated 1885, the
year of her marriage. Mr. Roberts
ivore a pink carnation in his buttonhole.
Many anniversary cards, telegrams and gifts were received from
tar and near. A beautiful trl-lamp
was presented by a number of local
Mends, who also presented a scroll
txpressing their high esteem of the
couple through their many years
residence in Kaslo. Mr. and Mrs.
Roberts voiced their appreciation.
A. number of other gifts were presented by the family after which
music and a recitation written for
the occasion were much enjoyed.
Members of the"immedlate family
present were Mrs.-Forde, Vancouver; Mrs. G. M. Paul, Trail; Miss
Alexa Roberts, Edmonton, Alta.;
Miss Flora Roberts, Kaslo; Thomas
Roberts, Fairbanks. Alaska; and Alfred Roberts, Vancouver, Mrs.
Forde was accompanied by her husband and two sons, Jack and David,
and Alfred Roberts by his wife
and two sons Tommy and Terry.
Miss May Haggart of Nelson and
Miss Iris Clarke of Kaslo Joined
the family at dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Roberts were married at Johannesburg, Transvaal,
South Africa, in 1895 returning* to
England to live four years later. In
1914 the family moved to Kaslo
tvhere Mr. and Mrs. Roberts have
lived since at their home on B Avenue.
Elks Raise $100,000
for Children's Fund
TORONTO-The lodges of the
Benevolent and Protective Order of
Elks of Canada and Newloundland
have passed the $100,000 mark in
their fund raising for the relief of
war-orphaned children in Great
Britain.and on the continent, Mr.
Justice J. C. McRuer, chairman of
tbe Canadian Committee of the Save
the Children Fund announced.
Contributions from the Elks helped make possible the Fund's shipment to France this month of five
thousand gallons of cod liver oil,
Mr. McRuer said. As well, they
have accepted Jull responsibility
for the support, this year and probably next, of 100 refugee children
now being sheltered in Sweden. This
project alone costs them $9600 annually.
™Pir!ri$?r'':' ■:,'-•':■ ™rwPZWr**W*<'
■   '_/ v    ' '   ■■■    '_■ '.'.'■
Hiller Appeared
lo Be Married Iii
Irregular Manner
BERLIN, Jan. 8 (AP) - Adoll
Hitler, alwayi a law unto himself,
appears to have been married to
Eva Braun in an irregular manner
by a man who was not a professional marriage clerk.
A search of official records'falled
(_. turn up any real clue concerning
Walter Wagner, who was said ln
documents found by Allied intelligence officers, to have performed
the ceremony.
City officials expressed doubt as
to the regularity of the marriage
and said they had never, heard of
a marriage clerk in Berlin by that
name.
Herr Neumann, supervisor for
Greater Berlin's hundred-odd marriage clerks, said he knew them all
by name and his guess was that
"Goebbels brought some functionary of the propaganda ministry to
the Chancellory air raid shelter and
Hitler made him a marriage clerk
on the spot.
Records of the Central Personnel
Office of the Berlin city administration showed that no Walter "Wagner
had ever been marriage clerk or
municipal councillor.
. Nine persons bearing the name
were listed in the citizens' registry
of Greater Berlin with occupations
ranging from chimney sweep to police m&jor, but there was no hint
that any were qualified to hear the
nuptial vows.
NYLON8 FOR THE BRAVE: When a Philadelphia shop offered
1000 palra of nylons, one pair to a customer, almost 1000 women waited
the 6:30 a.m. opening of the ahop, from* before dawn and 22 cops were
needed to keep the line in order. Here are the firtt lucky buyers waving their treasures
Hollywood Gossip
Betty Grable's Legs to Be Hidden;
Says  Bing   Is  Chronically  Lazy
NAKUSP
NAKUSP. B.C.-Mn. James Par-
rish of Los Angeles, who was called
on the death of her father, the late
George Hood, left for her home
Wednesday. She was accompanied
by her mother, Mrs. Hood, who will
remain in Los Angeles for the Winter montha.
Pte, Gordon Watson of Salmon
Arm is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
W. G. Battershall.
Reg Barlow returned to Rosebery.
Miss Charlotte Barrow of Nelson
was the New Years guest of her
parents, Mr, and Mrs. M. Barrow.
J. Hempsced arrived from Nelson
Monday and will do the night
watching for the C.P.R. yards,
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Larson returned from Vernon Saturday.
Iv-Cpl. H. G. Gardner, who recently returned from 2-ft years service overseas and has spend the
Christmas holidays with his family
here, has gone to the coast where
he expects to get his discharge.
L-Cpl, H. G. Gardner spent several days in Trail.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Larson returned  from  Vernon  Saturday.
Miss M. Staniforth, P.HN, returned from VernomWednesday.
Mrs, L. Holand of Passadetia is
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, Jan, 5 (AP) —
Betty Grabb's legs will be hidden
in her next picture but it isn't her
idea,
In "The Shocking Miss Piligrim,"
- film about 19th century Boston,
her famous legs are concealed from
the camera's scrutiny by period costumes. -
"People will'probably think it
; odd," she observed. "They might
[even think I've become bow-legged
or something,"
She hasn!t, believe me.
Nor has she any high-faluting
ideas about going dramatic.
"People should stick to what they
know best, arid I'm certainly no
dramatic actress," she remarked.
There is no hope, then, of Betty's
lapsing into character parts as she
grows older.
"I've made a promise to myself,"
the guest of her brother and sister-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. J, Grigg.
j She will visit for some time before
I leaving for'overseas, Mrs, Grigg me:
j Mr3. Holand at Arrowhead.
] G. P. Horsley has gone to Trail
! and Rossland,
j Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Bristol of
' Penticton are in town. Mr. Bristol
has taken over the Leveque Barber
Shop hvre.
Miss Hurd and Miss G. Hamilton,
United Church Missionaries from
Lemon Creek were Nakusp visitors,
guests of Mr. and Mrs, 1\ W. Somers,
j Pte. Jean Battershall, WD., ar-
I rived from the coast Wednesday and
•ii the guest of her parents, Mr, and
Mrs. W. G, Battershall.
Ralph McPhee arrived Wednesday fmm overseas.
she said, "that the minute I start to
slip, I'll quit. So far I've continued
going upward by slow degrees. But
the minute I start heading downward—that's all, brother."
The Kraft-Crosby battle is out in
the open now that the radio-program sponsor has filed suit to determine its right to the Groaner's services. From a source close to Bing,
I learned that his reasons for not
wanting to return to the Music Hall
are threefold:
1. Bing is chronically lazy.
2. Bing claims he is doing the
radio show for practically nothing
because of taxes. He would like to
devise a payment system that would
allow him to keep some of the
money. •
3. Bing thinks It would benefit
both himself and the sponsor to
break up and get a fresh start. ■
NELSON COUPLE: Mr. and
Mn, Frederick Brown, popular
Nelion couple who were married
In October. Mrs. Brown was formerly Mlsi Davlna Richardson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David
Richardson, Roaemont, while the
bridegroom li the aon of Mr. and
Mrr. William Brown, 708 Third
Street.—Renwick Photo.
PARIS—Ben Chennouf during the
session of the French Constituent
Assembly held to elett a President
declared that all Moslem deputies
wnuld vote for General de Gaulle
because it was due to him that they
had seats and had been freed from
enemy  occupation. <
Electronic Device Aids Blind to "Feel" Light
Taghum School
Concerto Success
I TAGHUM, B.C. - The Christmas
program   of   the   Taghum   School
: Concert included the singing of
carols and the dramatization of the
songs,     "Minstrels"     and     "Jingle
I Bells."
Three plays and an acrostic were
presented. There were also several
i recitations, including a choral reading by Grade Five and a Monologue.
The following children presented
ithe program: Florence. Elizabeth,
George and Donald Wn__pp>, Delores.
; Herbert, Donald and Roland Lancaster. Jack. Helen and Mike Kani-
gan, Billy and Peggy Eferikoff, Fred
land Kathleen Moojelsky. Fdith and
! Alice  Kellogg.  Jackie  and   Phyllis
1 Zibert, Billy and Olga Pepin. Helen
Maras, Doreen McCauley. Elizabeth
Wilson. John Hoobonoff, Polly Pop-
off and Lauree Andrrws.
George Wapplc acted as chairman
A    ladies    crmmit'.ce    served    a
dainty lunch after Santa distributed the gifts from the beautiful tree
The   people   of   the   community
helped   to  make  it an  outstanding
| concert.
The teacher. Miss Ma Graham,
was director with Mrs. Andrenon
ns accompanist.
Chnr.ukah, which the Jewi celebrate from Dec. 11 to Dec 18, commemorates the reconsecration of the
.Jerusalem temple by the Maccabean
brothers.
KIMBERLEY
KIMBERLEY, B.C.-Gnr. S. F.
Warmlngton arrived home from
overseas after an absence of seyaral
years.
Miss Patsy Galbrafth of Invermere. spent the holidays with her
parents here.
Barney Ralph spent New Year's
Day visiting friends In Nelson.
Lloyd Patience of Fort McMurray is the guest of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Patience.
Ed Shannon of Creston visited
relatives In the city during the holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Levirs were
'honored by their friends, who gathered at their-home to wish Mr. Ltv-
; irs the best of luck'In his position
I as inspector of schools In the'
i Prince George District. The evening
i was spent in singing and dancing,
and as a token of friendship and
: esteem Mr. Levirs was presented
with a gift.
i Mrs. H, Deitz returned to the I
city after an extended visit at Van-1
I couver, she was accompanied by her
| son, George, who is attending U.B.C. i
Ernest Harlow has returned from
Vancouver and Nelson where he I
visited relatives.
Mrs. F. J. Nemrava who hai been
a patient in the Holy Cross Hospital
for the past three weeks arrived I
home for the holidayi i
Mr. and Mrs. J. Luchansky of
Lethbridge spent the holidays in I
town viaiting their son and daugh-1
ter-in-law. \
Miss Tralnor !s spending the holi-i
days at her home in Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Stafford of Camp'
left for Vancouver where they will,
m»ke their future home,
Miss Pauline Abbott, of Winder-;
mere, is spending the holidays here
with her parenrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Shaw of Wasa
were Klmberley visitors.
Miss Joyce Buckman spent the1
holidays with her parents at their'
Kootenny Lake home,
Charles Smithers, home on leave
from the Army spent several days'
in the city the guest of his sister'
and brother-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. A :
Caldwell,
Sgt. Bertha Johnson of Ottawa
has been hnm*» on leave visiting
hT parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Johnson.
E A. Glendon Brown. RCNVR,'
arrived home from Shelbourne, NS
Staff Sgt. H G. Greenman was
amongst those who landed at Halifax on the Mauretania.
Miss Francme Bar re, who has
hern attending the Convent at
Pincher Creek, is spending thc ho:;-
davg with her parents here.
Mr and Mrs. W. H Slender of
Cranbrook. and Mr. and Mrs. G
Leslie and Misa Agnes Leslie spent
the New Year's holiday in the city
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. Simp-
ion of Lower Blarchmont.
Mr and Mrs. H, Miracle and Infant son of Creiton, visited friends
in the city during thr week
Mr and Mrs W. Lloyd have re-
turned from Vancouver and the
Okanagan.
Bobby Lye. who is attending
U,B C,  ii spending the  holidayi  in
town visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Percy Lye of Upper Blarchmont.
Miss Evelyn Shannon of Calgary
spent the Christmas vacation with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs, R. Shannon, t
Car] Schuler of the R.CA.F,, stationed at Calgary, spent a leave
with his wife and family.
Lloyd Hogarth arrived in the city
from Vancouver where he is attending U.B.C, to spend the holidays with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Dupuis and family of Chapman Camp Hit to spend
a month in New Westminster where
she will be tbe guest of her sister,
Mrs. Hutton.
Mr. Engler, wl^o h&s been a visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Fergle for the past three
weeks, left for Vancouver.
W. Angrove hag returned from
Summerland where he was called
by the death of his father.
, Gus Flegel returned to Nelson
after spending the Christmas holidays in the city, the "guest of his
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs, S, Flegel,       .   •
Albert Moisson arrived from Eastern Canada on leave, to spend the
vacation with his parents.
Lac. Fred Scott of St. John, B.C..
spent Christmas with his wife and
family.
Mr. and Mrs, J. Paehal of Kipling. Sask., is spending several
weeks in the city the guests of the
latter's brother and sister-in-law,
Mr, and Mrs. N. Moore.
Mrs. Paul Motek and children left
to join Mr. Motek at the coast,
where they will make their home
in future.
Mrs. Lang and Miss Barbara Lang
of Nelson were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs, Doug Langpf Camp.
Miss Marian Carlson of Harrogate, visited here the guest of her
aunts, Mrs, West and 'Mrs. Richardson.
Ed Guille of Camp motored to
Calgary where he spent Christmas.
FO. Alex Branch, D.F.C, and Mrs.
Branch, of Lethbridge. spent their
honeymoon in Kimberley, the guests
of Mr, and Mrs. Ernie Nesbitt, of
Happy Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Richter, their
daughters, Mrs. Ray Johnston, and
son, where recent guests at the,
home of Mr, and Mrs. iftonty Moll.
Students mbme from U.B.C. for
the holidays included Miss Edith
Angmve, John and Bill Poole and
Nicky Banks.
Mrs. A. Sgrn was hostess to the
CW.L Bridge Circle, winners were
Mn Fskra. 1st, Mrs. S. Warming-
ton 2nd. At the conclusion of play
dainty refreshments were served.
No Longer Thinks
Her Husband
Is a Genius
By  Personal   Advisor
"Dear Personal Adviier—
"My family were all practical
people. My father had a wood and
coal yard ,and though we were well-
to-do, my mother did all her own
work and home was delightful. How
often I've thought regretfully about
it.
"When I went to the big city and
lived in a settlement house, I met
an entirely new type of person. All
of them seemed to be hanging on
one of the arts. They painted, they
played various musical instruments,
they wrote, and claimed they were
unsuccessful because their stuff was
too good for the critics. I fell in lovt
with a man who wrote.
"Full of hope in those early days,
I agreed to work to support my hus*
band and myself until he was appreciated by the public. We've been
married fifteen years. In that time
he has sold not more than a halt
dozen things.
"Now I know he's never going
to amount to anything. He has no
initiative, no pep, no faculty for
getting along with people. He hai
seen me wade through snow all
Winter, almost pass out with the
heat in Summer, pay all the household billi and always he is complaining. The world is too crude to
| appreciate him. I'm too dumb to op-
! preciatc him. His friends are too Jea*
I lous to appreciate him.
"There'3 no other man in my life,
nor on the horizon, but I want a
home to myself and not hear any
jmore  about   unappreciated  genius.
j Your column impresses me as having plenty of common sense. What
would you do?
"L.M.G."
As you recognize the fact your
husband will never be able to earn
his salt by writing, the sooner you
adjust your life to this conclusion,
the better for you; also ,the better
for him. Perhaps he could turn hi«
attention to something more profitable than writing a half dozen
things, which have been accepted, in
fifteen years. And it will be* good
for his morale to have to learn to
stand on his own feet.
When a woman finds herself married to a man who hag been chronically unsuccessful in some of the
arts, it would be better for him, and
for the* community. If he would apply himself to something practical.
He could then continue to write
in his leisure.
SANTA VISITS AT
HOSMER SCHOOL
CHILDREN'S PLAY
HOSMER PC. — An enjoyable
concert was held by the school
children under the leadership of
Miss Eileen Russell.
On the program was songs by the
class; recitations hy Mikey Hudock,
Fred Hutchison and Victor Hutchison; and plays by Victor Caldwell,
Susy Hutchison, Harry Hutchison,
Clare Higgins, Lilian Hutchison,
Norma Fink, Francis Garluc, Arthur Hutchison and Joe Garluc.
Santa Claus distributed gifts, apples and oranges and dancing finished off the evening, Mike Camille
furnished tha music.
LONGBEACH
LONGBEACH, B. C. - Mr. ar.d
Mrs. O. Ward have had their niece
and nephew, Marthella and Duffy
Franklin of Creston visiting them
for a few days.
Peter Husum has returned to Regina after spending the holiday season with his wife and family. H»
was accompanied by his wife.
Jack Sager, on leave from tht
Coast sp«nt some time with hli
brother-ln-ltw and sister, Mr, n_l
Mrs. A. r-tlltt T
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkln of Trail w_r«
visitors to Longbeach.
Mr. and Mrs. S. Ashby and daugh-
er, Joan Clake of Willow Point,
were visitors at the home of Commander and Mrs. B. A. Smith.
Margery Ward has spent her
Christmas holidays at home with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Ward.
Mr. and Mrs. Helmutch Feller and
family were visitors at the home of
the former's brother and sister-in-
law. Mr  and Mrs. A. Feller.
The pupils of Longbeach School
held a Christmas party In the
school house. An excellent program
was given under the direction of
Mrs. McNown. each pupil contributing an item. Santa Claus gavj
nut presents and candies to the pupils.
DRINK
Mm^m
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
dtrnhfoh
dioilAQWWQA
By   BETSY   NEWMAN
iMIllHllllllllllltnillHIIIHIIIIIUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllll'llllllllllllllllllll
In my early days of cooking and
baking until nearly the preient, I
never baked a pie crust first rxcept
in ra»<M where the filling waj completely conked and p-nure-d in \ht
baked crust, then the meringue pti'
on and browned In a sl-iw oven. !
emildn't we how a cnut that had
hern b.ikrd could br kepi fmm
burning when a filling wai put in
and thr wholr thing baked ajftin
Fnwlbly *nni<- of vm n*»w r-»*>_i
will hflVP the txmr* frrl;ng. no in
'hr two pte renpes Im giving y<v*
_-"xiay. gi> bui Hy ahratl and ynu
■will come out all right Putting th"
.inbaked crust into a very hot oven
for in minute* or sn and th«n low-
Ting the heat when tou are baking
a custard mi« rle. u*ed !t do the
trick, but the faking o( the rru«t
first is better
Invantor Byron Brown, of Santa Monica, Calif. dimonstrtt-H a
new ilactronlc devlca to aid tha blind. Hil mother Is the "patient".
Wt-arort oan "fast" light, ho etyt Th« devlc-t lo an «yo glass equipped
with light wnntive selenium which trommlti tound to tho hood-bona
bohlnd the ear when an obstruction comoo bttwoon It and tha light.
Woarors rrnist bc educitod to Ita usa, however.
TODAY'S  MENU
Pork   Chops Arple  Sauc*
(*<hbage and Onion Sa'.id
Boiled Pire
Pumpkin or Squash nr
Sweet Potatna  pi a
Coff-H
'   CABBAGE AND ONION SALAD
Shred    the   rahhage    ard    rui    the
I onions into very thin nn|»   S#»? •;
with sprinklings nf salt, eelery salt,
pfpprr and paprikn. mix with rr.av-
nnnol.Mi   or    French    dressing   ._
serve nn wlad green*
PUMPKIN   OR   SQUASH   PIE
I ij r ip rw>ked pumpkin .n
'uuaih. 1 cup milk. -% cup sugar,
IMeatpo-in   cinnamon;   '-i   ieaspofn
■»!!Si':i"'\    yi    'ej-iprw^n    TT.trt,    '-|   \rA
sp-v-n ul!. 2 rgi*. 2 tablespoon,*
butter,  pas'ry
Heat pumpkin rr "-quash, milk
<lgar, s;'!rr» and »a!! in, a doub'r
[tniler. add b**a'en egg« and ltu"*-r
and mn  well   Pour !he h *i filling
into a deep baked pastry shell ail
bake in n mMerate oven iSSO de
greet F1 about 30 minu'es.'or until   filling   sets
SWEET   POTATO   PIC
m nipt bailed, rired s» ee.  po
tato-ev  1  nips  milk,   v_i  eup «ugar
i*, iea«p-"-nn ginger. S teaspoon <»H
2 eggs, 3 (ablMp'vins butter, paitrv
Heat tweet p-olaloo*, milk, su|a-
finger  and  sjlt  in  a doublo boiler '
Pour torn* of tht hot mlitnr* inM
Ihe   beaten   eggt,   mn   all   tngrlher
and   add   butter    Pour   hot   fllllna
into a deep bak-^d pastry shell ip1
_»ake in » rrM-Wate oven  <M d
frees  F>   fnr  about   30  minutes  rr
until hllini set*.
(jood Eating for flu* Lunch l!ox<hM
ttnJ %o e**ry to mix!
All IRAN RAISIN BREAD
\\ CMTs HV-M-HI
1 ftp trmmi f-_\  rw
• U*-U-T- ■ ■_■ m*it*H
tkcr*-n»nt
] r**h XeWcwxt
All Bna
il-f nrpe liMM H-nr
* 1»»t-v- r.*.-*k;f.,l
p-i-wi-Wr
\'-. ■• «r.-   . .. .
H*e
Brut rijj well. Add (Uigur, nv*tMe-»,
milk, ahnrt-ening (melted and o-^le.))
iinri All-Bmn. mn well; let aUnil until
meet rd nt-niatun. ia taken up ftft
Aour. btkmg powder, a*lt and on-rio
bf ther; and t-n firet fniitiir-a with
nuaitia; rtir ofthr until flour dwappetw*,
IWkft in r**w**A ln«/ pun ltne-rl with
wated    pepr
(I'O* Y j iibo,
In
'   1  I
hi i'-I-Ts!'-    i 've-,0
Y-ftn tr*-<\ and eo different! Till*
rifh hmwn \<-%i htx* that KnoTenly
nuUikefla.Tur-.n1v Kelio-ggt All-Hr»a
oangne and that marvel-'inly soft,
light AH-Hran tenure. JVrfeet fnr th«
limoh bouaa t-_pramM it'a parked with
nourishment and keep_a/fe*V -.'tin th«
nvipe now and get Kellnma All-Bran
(mm ymir gmrer t-n-Miv. yennvrnient
"•*• Ma-Te bv Ketlogg, T/mdoaj
lanjtU. Hdpa keep you regular —
Mfura-V
^ylAH-Bran
	
 I
mimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi
JUST RECEIVED
Small ihlpment
B^PJ^^^'WWWfSpi'PP^^J'^^P
Men'* Black Coif
SKATING
OUTFITS
Sizes 6 to 11. Set:
fg.TS
R. ANDREW
"fit CO.
Leaders in Footfashion
• llllllll 11111111 III ITI 11111111 ■ _■ I ■ M ■ IIT
PARIS—Wilful German sabotage
during the occupation has increased
the risks facing the French merchant marine. Of 639 lighthouses
Which marked French shores for
coastwise shipping, 13S were destroyed In target practice as well as
ISO buoys.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
MALCOLM'S FURS
Storage
Repairs — Alterations
6S9 Baker St      Phono 960'
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
For Reliable) Witch Repairs
consult—
491 Baker St.
"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS*1
SCIENCE
AND
IEALTH
Science hai discovered more
than forty food elements ln
milk . . . little wander so
many of your recipe* siy ''Then
add milk".
Pacific Milk li vacuum packed, that miana farm-freshness
trom the beautiful Fraser Valley . . . and Irradiation means
added sunshine Vitamin D.
IPacificMilk
•Irradiated and Vacuum Packed"
i *0*MM6A*____*i___________
Year'i Births in
Rossland Area 104
ROSSLAND, B. C, Jin. 6—Vital
statistics for the Rossltnd Registration DUtrict for December 1949, as
recorded at the Courthouse, are,
births seven, deaths, none and marriages, one; aa compared with nine
births, two deaths and two marriages in December, 1944.
For the year 1949, births were 104;
deaths, 2; and marriages 21.
The Weather
Across Canada
Weather across Canada to 9 p.m.,
P.S.T., Jan. 6:
Min. Max.
Kelson  30 37
Montreal  „  34 48
Toronto   35 57
North Bay   37 47
Port Arthur  34 36
Kenora  27 —
Winnipeg  20 26
Brandon  16 22
The Pa>  ,.  13 19
Regin*   6 14
Saskatoon   -5 20
Prince Albert   6 17
North Battleford _  -5 20
Swift Current   6 23
Medicine Hat '  3 30
Lethbridge   23 35
Calgary    20 27
Edmonton   14 29
Kamloops  18 32
Penticton    _  24 36
Vancouver   _  31 38
Cranbrook     16 35
Prince George  8 29
Prince Rupert  31 41
Seattle   33 40
Portland    36 44
Spokane  27 37
Chicago   43 49
San Francisco  -  44 59
Los Angeles  47 65
Former Kimberley
Minister Marries
KIMBERLEY, B.C.-Of interest in
the district was the news of the
marriage of Captain James S. Coulter to Marjorie Annabelle Russell,
daughter of Major and Mrs. J. D.
Russell. The ceremony took place
Dec. 22, in Knox Presbyterian
Church, Montreal, Que.
Captain Coulter was well known
here several years ago. as minister
of the Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Palmer
of Port Crawford
Dies in Nelson
Mrs. Margaret Palmer, 80, a resident of Port Crawford until two
months ago when she moved here,
died early Friday morning.
Born ln Ireland she lived at Port
Crawford for 34 years. She came to
Canada in 1890, settling first In
Bellevue, Ont., and lived ln Winnipeg for a time.
Her husband, Owen Eugene Palmer, predeceased her 10 years ago.
She ls survived by a daughter,
Mrs. W. King at Port Crawford; a
son, Earl Palmer at Winnipeg; a
brother, Andrew Moore at Fort
Erie, Ont, and two sisters, Mrs. R.
Kelley and Mrs. M. Pamberton.
Longbeach Lady
Dies Here
Mrs. Bella Jane Mlddleton, of
Longbeach, wife of John W. Middle-
ton, died suddenly Saturday morning. She was formerly resident at
Creston and Nelson.
Born in Scotland 60 years ago, she
came to Canada in 1911 settling in
Castor, Alta., and then coming West
to Revelstoke. She later moved to
Creston and after a short time returned to the Prairies to Rosetown,
Sask*. In 1917 she came to Nelson
find lived here until five years ago
Ivhen she moved to Longbeach.
She was a member of the United
Church of Canada and was an active Red Cross worker.
She is survived by her husband,
three daughters,' Mrs. Otto Seidal,
Milwaukee, Wis., Mrs. L. Jukes,
Vancouver and Mrs. H. Lancaster,
Taghum; and two brothers, Thomas
of Winnipeg and Francis in Scotland.
Kimberley Girl
Wed at Coast
KIMBERLEY, B.C. - Solemnized
at Vancouver, B.C., Dec. 28, was the
wedding of Helen Jane Masich,
third daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J
B. Masich of Kimberley, who became the bride of Clinton John Hill
of California. They will reside at
Britannia.
LSON
By MRS. M. i. VIGNEUX
Charge (or engagement announcement! on thli page b $1.50
lests ol their son-in-law
Rossland Social ♦ ♦
By MRS. F. Q.  BRAY
ROSSLAND,   B.C.,  Jan.   6-Dick I therine MacLean of the Post Office
Johnston, who represented the Se- i staff.
nior Sunday School of St. Andrew's I    Mrs. E. L. Hedley and family left
United Church, at the Session of the \ Saturday to  make  their home  In
Boys' Parliament held in Vancouver recently, returned to Rossland
Wednesday by way of the Canadian
bus route.
Miss Mary Lou Leckie and Miss
Betty Jean LaFace, who accompanied Mr. LaFace to Seattle on Christ-
Day and spent the holidays
there with relatives, have returned
to Rossland.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Craig left
Friday**'for Vancouver, where Mr,
Craig is attending B.C. University.
Mrs. Cratg is the former Miss Ca-
USE THIS FORM
to Order Extra Copies of The
Nelson Daily News
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Cranbrook,   where   Mr.   Hedley  ls
Government Agent.
Mr. and Mrs. Besso have as their
guests their daughter, Pte. Irene
Besso. C.W.A.C, of Nanaimo, and
their son, Pte. Gilbert Besso.
Mrs. Harry Murdoch and children have returned from a holiday
spent with relatives in Oliver.
Tpr. Ray Brown, who recently
returned from Overseas, and has
J been spending his leave with his
parents, Mr, and Mrs. Henry Brown,
Second Avenue, left Thursday to
report at the Coast.
Spr. Harry Douglas, who recently returned from Overseas and has
spent his leave here with his wife
and family, left Wednesday to report at Vancouver.
Sgt. Lome Roberta, B.E.M., who
recently returned from Overseas,
and has been the guest of his mother, Mrs. R Lidstrom, LeRol Avenue, left Wednesday to report at
I Vancouver,
; Pte. and Mrs. Andy Guenard and
son Robert, who spent the holidays
at Burton, guests of Pte. Guenard's
mother, Mrs. E. Guenard, returned
to Rossland Thursday. Pte. Guen.
ard left for Calgary to rejoin his
unit.
Cpl. Stuart Elmore, who spent his
Christmas leave here with his family, has rejoined his unit at London ,Onl.
Mr. and Mrs. Glyn Langdale, who
spent the Christmas vacation at the
hnme of Mrs. Langdaie's parents,
I Mr. and Mrs, J. A. Wright. LeRol
Avenue, left Thursday for Vancouver, where Mr. Langdale attends
BC. University.
Austin Bathie. who has been the
guest of his mother, Mrs. L., Lai-
lett, and Mr. Laslett, left Thursday
for Edmonton, where he will be
the guest of his uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Dewar. Austin
plans to take an educational course
at the University of Alberta.
AB Jackie 2>ntner, R.C.N.V.R,
who has spent hil Indefinite leave
here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs
A. Zentner. left Wednesday to report at Vancouver.
Miss Ginny Atkinson, left Monday for Salem, Ore., where she attends college. Miss Atkinson spent
the holidays here visiting he mother. Mrs. R. Austin. LeRol Avenue.
Miss E. Ball of the High School
staff, who spent the Christmas vacation at her home in Penticton,
has returned.
Mrs Mellor-J.angdale ll holidaying in Vancouver where her husband is
AB Denis .Lalonde. R.C.N.VR. accompanied by Mrs. Lalonde, left Sa-
tuttay  for  Vancouver for  a holi-
»l Basil Llttley entertained at
a rharmingly arranged birthday
party Wednesday night on her
.sugh'er Margaret's seventeenth
birthday Contests, games and danc-
'ng rse-r. *njnyed. followed by l
daintv s-ippte Th_ tea table was
attractively decorated with seasonal motifs and centred wtth a pret-
tilv rlfrnrn'. _ birthday cake topped with 17 lighted candles Those
attending were the Misses MarV
Lou Ircsl*. .toyre Heaton. Francs, Bray, .lean MrMartin. June Palmer. Ma'ion Manning. Edith McNab, Tat Ewlng. Muriel Llttley.
and Rnd Llttley. Gerald Walters.
Boh Ewlng. Dusty Slnrlilr and Ger-
rv Littler The hoiteis waa assisted
hv Mrs   Arthur Littler
JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE
Now On nt
FASHION FIRST LTD.
LUfiLOW-COLDWEIA
At five o'clock In the afternoon
of December 30, '1949, at the'Unlted
Church Manse, Trail, Rev. J. H.
Warr solemnized the marriage of
Mary Elizabeth, only daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Coldwell of
Strathmore, Alta., to John Edward
Ludlow, Jr., eldest ion ot Hr. and
Mri. J. E. Ludlow, 609 Cedar Street,
Nelson. For the' ceremony the
bride chose a' two-piece turQUolie
blue suit with accessories to match
—her conage beiig of red rosei.
They were attended by Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Edwards of Nelson.
The groom is the Bon of pioneer
residents of this Province, Thp
bride is a graduate nurse of OaU
Hospital, Lethbridge, at present
on the staff of Kootenay Lake General Hospital.
• Miss Evelyn Ball, who teaches
at Hope and spent the holidays with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Ball,
Silica Street, has returned.
• Mrs. Arthur Barnes of Willow
Point visited' town Saturday.
• C. F. Armstrong, Jr., who
spent the holidays at Uie home ol
his grandmother, Mrs. Armstrong,
Front Street, left Saturday to resume his studies at U.B.C, Vancouver.
• Mrs. Arthur Perrler and her
sister, Miss Enid Etter, returned
Saturday from spending the holidays ln Seattle with their sister.
• Venerable Archdeacon Fred
H. Graham, and Mrs. Graham, Terrace Apartments, returned Friday
from Trail where they spent the
holidays at the home of their son-
in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
James Bryden.
• Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Carpenter,
who spent the holidays at the home
of Mrs^Carpenter's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. A. N. Winlaw, have returned
to Vancouver, where Mr. Carpenter attends U.B.C.
• Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smillie,
who spent the holidays here, returned to Grand Forks Saturday.
• Carl Lindow of Salmo spent
Saturday in Nelson.
• Miss Rosalie Triggs, who attends U.B.C. in Vancouver and has
spent the holiday at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Trlggs, Willow Street, returned to
the .Coast Saturday.
• Stuart Macintosh, who spent
his vacation at his home on Hall
Mines Road, has returned to Edmonton where he attends the University of Alberta.
• J. N. Jarbeau, Sr., who spent a
week at his home on Latimer Street,
has returned to Cranbrook.
• Miss Catherine Argyle returned Saturday to Vancouver where
she attends U.B.C, after spending
the Yuletide holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Argyle, Observatory Street.
• Miss Ann Bloom, Carbonate
Street, has returned from spending
the Christmas and New Year's holiday in Seattle and Vancouver.
• Mils Mavis Fletcher, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Fletcher of
Ainsworth was in the city Saturday
enroute to the Coast after spending
the holidays with her parents.
4 Misi Lindow of Salmo visited
town Saturday enroute to the Coast
where she attends U.B.C, after
ipendlng her holidays with her
parents
son are gu.
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wally
Woodall, 801 Victoria Street ■■ They
plan on leaving this week tor their
home.
• Mrs. J. Fisher of Hall vlilted
town at the weekend.
• Shopers ln the city Saturday
Included Mrs. William Wlnstanley
and her son Peter ot Crescent Valley. .
• Hugh Mlddleton of Willow
Point visited Nelson Saturday.
•: ldr. and Mrs. J. Dickinson of
Claresholm, Alta., who are on a
couple of months vacation were in
town Saturday from Ainsworth
where they spent the past couple
ot weeks et the home of Mrs. Dickinson's brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. George Truscott. They
lett Saturday tor Chilliwack to visit
Mr. Dickinson's brother for a few
days before proceeding to Vancouver where they will visit for a few
weeks with a niece of Mrs. Dickinson's.
Joseph Koluk of Trail visited
on Friday.
•
Nelson
• George Hoover, who spent the
holidays at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Hoover, Front
Street, returned to Vancouver Saturday where he attends U.B.C.
• Miss Nora Tralnor, who teaches in Kimberley, returned Saturday
after spending the Yuletide holidays
at the home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Trainor, Stanley Street.
• E. W. Wlddowson, Vernon
Street, has returned from spending
a couple of weeks at the Coast.
• Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Armstrong,
late of Trail, are at present with
the former's mother, Mrs. E. Armstrong, Front Street.
• Mrs. R. L. Oliver, Fairview,
left yesterday for Crescent Valley,
where she will resume her duties as
teacher.
• Mrs. F. McKinnon and daughter, Miss Elizabeth McKinnon, who
haVe visited in Vancouver with the
former's son, Leo and Clifford and
their families, returned to Nelson
Saturday night.
• Miss Dorothy Marian James
of South Slocan, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry James, was married
at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, on Dec. 31
to Donald, Roy McAlpine of Trail,
youngest son of Mrs. S. Wilson.
They will reside in Trail.
el-Bay
Pressing lor
Electrification
SIRDAR, B.C.-The matter of electrification between Wynndel and
Crawford Bay is being pressed with
determination by an able body of
men, supported wholeheartedly by
residents. It is considered a practical, and ln time profitable, utility can be created.
HOSMER .
HOSMER, B. C. — Miss PoUy Kof-
tinoff of Grand Forks spent the
holidays at the home ot her sister,
Mrs. Roy Dixon.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex St. Denis and
family of Fernie spent CHrlstmas
Day at the home of the latter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fink.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Eberts and
family of Natal spent Christmas Day
at the home ot the latter's parents,
Mr. and Mri. F. C. Wlldman.
Mr. and Mri. W. Wlldman of Fernle were viiiton at the F. C. Wild-
mans.
Charles Fink of Crows Nest ls
spending the holidays at his parents
home.
Miss Yvonne Poirler is ipendlng
the holidays with her parenti, Mr.
and  Mrs.  H.  Poirler.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Wlldman and
family spent New Year's at the
home of the former's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. F. C. Wildman.
Miss Eva Poirler ot Mlndapore is
spending the holidays with her parents Mr. and Mrs. H. Poirler.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence de Jarden
of Waldo were visitors at the Fink
home.
ELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1946 - •
Former Kimberley
Woman Diet
KIMBERLEY, B.C.-Word wu re
celved ln Kimberley of the sudden
passing of Mrs. Mary Edmonds,
mother of F. H. Edmonds and R. H.
G. Edmonda of Kimberley.
Mri. Edmonds was well known
here where ihe lived for many
years, prior to leaving for the coast
in 1933. Funeral services were held
ln Vancouver.
Trail Patriotic
Donates $2275
to Red Cross
TRAIL, B.C., Jan. 0—A total of
(2379 waa donated to the Canadian
Red Cross Society by the Trail and
District Patriotic and Welfare Society during the month of November, a statement of receipts and disbursements shows.
Subscriptions to the Trail Patriotic Society during the month were
$3832.30. Total receipts were $4990.63
and added to the October balance of
$2563.37, made a grand total ot
$7556. i
Other dilbursements were to: Canadian Welfare Committee, $200;
Trail Community Chest, $500; Victorian Order of Nurses, $200; Salvation Army $200; J. H. Schofield
Chapter I.O.D.E., $50; Arthur Chapman Chapter I.O.D.E., $150; Queen's
Canadian Fund, $100; Administration $102.48. This left a balance of
$3778.52 at the end of November.
Onifa Ok
1240 ON THE DIAL
MORNING
7:30—0 Canada
7:31-Musical Reveille (CKLN)
8:00-CBC News
8 15—Breakfast Club
8:30—Breakfast Club
8 44—C.P.R. Train Time
8:45—Toast and Coffee Club
CRANBROOK, B.C. — The mar-        (CKLN)
riage took place at Creston of Alma I 9:00— BBC News
McClure, public health nurse in the I 9:15—At Your Service (CKLN)
Cranbrook   district,   to   Constable i 9:30—At Your Service (CKLN)
Health Nurse,
MountieWed
MONDAY, JANUARY 7
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
•   Mr. and Mrs. J. Hall of Erick-' Burwel! Avenue.
Donald M. MacRae, R.C.M.P., Cranbrook detachment. Rev. B. Ennals
of Creston performed the ceremony and the couple were attended
by the bride's brother. Surgeon-
Lieutenant W. G. McClure, R.CN.
V.R.
The groom, who grew up at Max-
ville, Ont., has been stationed here
for the past three years except for
a few months in 1945. The bride
grew up at Duncan, V.I., ls a graduate of the University of British Colombia, and has been public health
nurse here since 1943. She will continue in this post until end of the
Spring school term.
They are making their home on
9:45—Some Like It Sweet
9:59—Time Signal
10:00—Morning Visit
10:15-CKLN Press News
10:30—Musical Roundup (CKLN)
10:45—Organ Reveries (CKLN)
11:00—South American Way
ll:15r-Lefs Dance (CKLN)
11:30—Soldier's Wife
11:45—Memories in Song
AFTERNOON
12:00—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:25-The Notice Board (CKLN)
12:30-CBC News
12:45 Matinee Memories
1:00—Modern Minstrels
1:15—December Stories
1:30—Old Favourites (CKLN)
1:45—Old Favourites (CKLN)
2:00—From the Classics
2:15—Songs For You
2:30—Robinson Family
2:45—Downbeat
3:00—Don Messer
3:15—Mirror for Wojnen
3:30—The Magic Chord
3:45-Swing Time (CKLN)
4:00—Design for Listening
4:15—Design for Listening
4:30—Stock Quotations
4:45—Top Bands
5:00—Sacred Heart Programme
(CKLN)
5:15-Haigh's Little Show (CKLN)
5 30—Peerless News (CKLN)
5:45—Musical Program (CKLN)
EVENING
6:00—Classical Moments (CKLN)
6:15—Muilcal Program CKLN)
6:30—This Is Canada (CKLN)
6:35—Cavalcade ot Melody
(CKLN)
7:00—CBC News
7:15—Canadian Roundup
7:30-Ta!k
7 45—Recital Time
8:00—Musical  Program   (CKLN)
8:15— Musical Program (CKLN)
8:30—Harmony House
9:00—Community Hal*
9:15—Community Hall
9:30—All-Star Dance Parade
(CKLN)
9:45—Musical Program (CKLN)
10:00—CBC News
10:15—Neighbourly News
10:30—God Save the King
iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.il   | |
FreemaN
FURNITURE CO.
The House ot Furniture Valuei
Phone lis . Nelson
BUY ON OUR
BUDGET PLAN
Termi ln accordance with Wartime Prices and Trade Regulation!..
■:■ I ■ ■ i 11 ill I ti 1111 ■■■ i in mn
Lake Freeze
Threatens Wild
Fowl al Sirdar
SIRDAR, B.C-WIth Duck Lakt
frozen over, the feeding of the many
wildfowl in thia area is beginning
to look lerloui. Unless there ll a
thaw loon to clear the Ice, feeding
will have to be resorted to. The
situation of the birds' needs Is being watched.
Almost every day during tht
week snow has fallen until a blanket of about seven inches Is covering
the ground on the lower levels. At
the present depth logging li easy,
but any more will react to disadvantage in thla form of work.
■ 11 ■ 1111 ■ I ■, 1 11 ■ ■ 11 ■ ■ 1 [ ■ 1 1 ■ 111 i 11
SPENCER SUPPORTS
For health garments and
figure control, see
MRS. THEA A. GIBSON
110 Kerr Apts, Nelson.
Illlllllllllllllllllllinilllllllilllli,ilium
' ■>
WE 8TILL HAVE A FIW
WOOL DRESSES
Sizes 11 to 20 iV
$15.00 to $22.50 n
MILADY'S FASHION SHOPPI
+Am*++m*mmm*^*^~-_(r'-~,mf ■■<
PASTEURIZED
MILK
IS SAFE FOR CHILDREN
lOOTENAY
Valley U
AIRY
LISTEN TO
*A*___t_   »TQiay  riLLin
IIP
THIS IS
CANADA
mt Mimm   on
PURITY FLOUR PURITY OATS
for.
CATARRH
BRONCHIAL ASTHMA, ANTRUM, SINUS ALSO
CATARRHAL AND BRONCHIAL COLDS!
What is LANTIGEN?
Lantigen Ii i specially prepared dissolved
nctine and bu beea used succesifullr in
the treitment of various diseases. Lanugtn
if oot a patent medicine, Lantigen is a
bacterial tacrine in a dissolved state, ii
devoid of drugi tnd safe to take. Lantigen
ia a natural aid. It it produced from tbt
bacteria ***;hkh are peculiar to the particular disease requiring treatment. Ia the
Sreparation of Lantigen the organisms are
ettroyed by a process of dissolution thus
releasing the active principles from the
bacterial bodies. Being in a completely
dissolved atate the vaccine ia operative
locally by obsorptioa into the tissues of
tht tongue, tonsils, throat, and the intestinal tract and is further operative by
means of its distribution throughout the
lyitem. More than 190,000 people In
Australia have enjoyed relief from tbt
distressing affects of catarrh and allied
conditions.
A Dissolved Vaccine
to be taken by mouth
MAIL- THIS COUPON TODAY
1 ■nili»n ll <-liLMt frnm DRUGGIST'S onl....Tf tncehttlo.
»M- niil thli co-Poo Hired 10:
UNT1GIN I.ABORATORIFS,
II RICHMOND ST. l_ Room HI. TORONTO I, ONT.
or >6ocambiis-m___Vr.VANcdi.vtR.bc
PI f'r. Sonlwol LANTIGEN	
tea tht UMioKol of	
Ntw	
'■''•".	
CMyea Tom	
Tb* 0__MofDTU.il D-OgflMll	
If rem wtM ttrCau InftaiMlioa oris. tt-
Price. $6«0
PER BOTTLE
AN EMINENT PHYSICIAN
Writing in the "British Medical
Journal," jpeaki as followl in the
issue of January 15, 1936: ''In my
experience, the oral antigens have
been mostly employed for cases of
Catarrhal infections, rheumatic conditions and catarrhal enterocolitis.
Clinical response has been quite
definitely marked." Thii important
statement, however, heralds the dawn
of a great release for Catarrhal
sufferers.
DO THIS TODAYI
Go to your Druggist and get details
about the LANTIGEN treatment
which will be most effective in your
case, and which will help to prevent
a recurrence of this complaint.
mlTRIIUTOMi
MSLTBY BROTHERS LTD. ■ 5 In* kit, Torartt
Um* t SANDS - 511 Cm* SL, YacNW
J. L WASSON    • ' _HS5l.Si.it .oka, N.I.
I
LANTIGEN     LANTIGEN     LANTIGEN     LANTIGEN       LANTIGEN     LANTIGEN z
 $ ttam Bally JJma
Established April 22. 1902.
British Columbia'*)
Most lnttretting Newspaper
Publlihed every morning except Sunday by
tha NEW8 PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED. 286 Baker St. Nelson. Britlih Columbia.
Authorlied ei Second Clasi Mall,
Poitoffice Department, Ottawa
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
MONDAY, JAN. 7, 1946.
Time to Demobolize\
Government's Wartime
Employees
The Government at Ottawa is rapidly demobilizing the armed forces, and
the speed at which the operation is being carried out meets with the approval ol servicemen and women as well
as of the general public.
It is to be hoped that there will be
an almost equally rapidly demobilization of many of the tens of thousands
of Federal Government employees who
were added to the service to deal with
the business of the war.
Employees of the Dominion Government before the war totalled.44,000
and the annual payroll was $88 millions. These figures have risen to 150,-
000 people and the payroll to $229 millions, which is'about half our total prewar budget. It canriot be expected that
tht number of Government employees
can be reduced to that of pre-war days.
Some of the employees are in permanent new departments—Unemployment
Insurance is an example; Veterans Affairs 1» another; we cannot yet abolish
the W.P.T.B.But this country of 12
million people cannot continue for long
to carry the burden of 150,000 Federal
Government employees costing $229
millions a year.
The Subsidy to the
Wheat Growers
When price ceilings were established the price of wheat was fixed at 77
2-3 cents. It is now $1.25 in Canada.
Flour and bread prices remain the
same.
We are "saving" 2 cents on a loaf
of bread, but we pay the difference in
■-taxes out of which the flour subsidy
is paid. Last year'the subsidy amounted to $48.8 millions, money which went
to the wheat farmers to make up the
difference between 77 2-3 cents a bushel and $1.25.
The subsidy policy arose ai a necessary element ln maintenance of price
and wage ceilings, and it was a sound
policy. It kept down the price of bread
for all of us, greatly to the benefit of
thoae with small incomes and chiefly
at the expense of those who pay the
large part of the taxes.
Subsidies as a permanent peacetime
policy are a doubtful expedient and
tend to create ills greater than those
they offset, but in times nf economic
stress, such as those arising out of the
war thev are the lesser of two evils.
It Is a Matter of
Self-Protection
The Moscow Conference agreed
upon an atomic control commission, on
which Canada is to have membership,
to make specific proposals:
(a) For extending between all nations the exchange of basic scientific
information fnr peaceful ends;
(b) For control of atomic energy
to the extent necessary to ihsure its
use only for peaceful purposes;
(c) For the elimination from national armaments nf atomic weapnns
and of all other major weapons adaptable to mass destruction;
(d) For effective safeguards by
way of inspection and other means to
protect complying states against the
hazards of violations and evasions
Thc Foreign Ministers agreed that
tho atomic commission should seek the
elimination nf all wi\.pons capable of
mass destruction nnd such mmplete
supervision and inspection as wnuld
assure law-abiding natinns agaihst the
risk of criminal attacks. A commentator observes thai "some day n true
world community may develop frnm
the understandings reached at Moscow" and goes on tn observe:
"It cannot he ton strongly emphasized that permanent security is tn be
had onlv by Die nations Hiving to a
world authority some part nf the national sovereignty that they have treasured in the past .Safety cannot be
found in na'.iuial is-!,.tion. Collective
*ecurity requires that humanity shall
.',   ■
police the hemisphere end develop \oy
alties that extend beyond national
boundaries."
It li true that "collective security
requires that humanity shall police the
hemisphere and develop loyalties that
extend beyond national boundaries",
but in defining these loyalties we
would do well to be pretty realistic
about it. No people can be expected to
be as solidly loyal to all countries as
to its own. To develop loyalties beyond
national boundaries must therefore involve the propagation of loyalties to
maintenance of law and order and preventing war, not for the benefit of other
nations but for the benefit of one's own.
We must be brought to understand
that disorder and injustice in, for example, the Balkans, must be brought
to an end because if it is not it will
hurt us; that we must stop preparations by Ruritania for aggression
against Mauretania, not for the benefit
of Mauretania, a consideration which
would leave most of us cold, but for
the benefit of ourselves. We do not
maintain municipal and provincial police forces because of abstract love of
law and order but because we know
that if we do not support the police
against criminals it may be our home
or our family which may be the victim
of burglars or thugs.
	
.•
Verse
AULD  LANG SYNE
By   Ettrlck
They'll be jethered at the Tron the nlcht,
An' doon 1' Keliae square,
Tie greet the New Yeir'i comin'
(An' A wuih that A were there!)
An' when the knock ll chappin' twal
They'll drink balth deep an' lang
An' lyne the nlcht'll echo
Wi' mony i cheer an' sang.
But for yln whae greets the New Yeir
An' a' that miy brfa'
There'll be twa that's lookin backward
Tae the Yeir that's list awa'.
No Jilt this yeir. but a' the years
Thai's bedded i' the Jauld
That hauds the words an' thochts an' deeds
We ken ere we grew auld.
Tbe laddies' ployi, the callants' pranks,
Oh! the tar off carefree days,
When the warld wm drenched i' lunshine
An' we dreamed o' wreaths o' bays.
Nae maitter what the New Year brings—
Honor or wealth or fame—
We ken youth's carefree rapture
Wull never come again.
The first o' winter's curlln'
"   The first fresh rain o' Spring,
An' the purple o' the heather
Whan the grouse were on the wing.
It's a grand wush, It's a grand wush
But a Guid New Year maun twine,
Nae maitter hoo ye look at it
Wr thochts o' Auld Lang Syne.
Weel. Tegi!   The knock hai chipplt wil,
Gloom, tak' yer thocts an' flee:
The New Yeaf's here, let's tak' a chance
An' greet it cheerily.
Fill up yer glen in' nae heel tips
Tae freens balth far an' neir,
Richt free the bottom o' ma hert,
"A HAPPY QUID NEW YEAR".
Lakeside Park
-Becomes Vocal
I im practically deierted now, but what
memories I hive! Whit a glorious seaion I
have had, what crowds, what laughter and
merriment by the younR, what peace and quiet
fnr the elden in the shade of my itately
cnt'.onwoodi!
On my velvet swards, sur.bathers absorbed
health md energy. Young and nld disported
themselves in my sun-kissed waters I bellowed my blissingi lavishly for the heilth
and enjoyment of my patrons, Pirties and
picnics naturally find ln me an Ideal venue
where they find every convenience for their
comfort
Perhaps my favorite gathering was "The
Old Timers' Ticnir" I was then at my best.
On that diy were gathered the pioneers, their
wives ind children and grandchildren—the
men ind women who helped to ihipe ind
build the beautiful city of Nelson: the men
whose foreiijht prevented the axe from cutting down my slately trees, for whit would
I be without them'  The men who planned me
■ nd laid the founditinn of ■ retreit thit any
city would he proud of
Great improvement! hive been mide in
mi in the lut few years, ■ wile Council hiving recognlred my many chsrmi. Every year
sees in idded Improvement. My promemde
givei me dignity, and ilm provide! i fine
view of the swimming ind aquatic iporU.
From my headquirters here I envisage ■
splendid promrnid* along the entire water
fronts with shad . trees, paride, gardens, re-
gitti ficllitlei, and many other attrirtions
Whst an opportunity to live for beautlflca-
tion It will he i happy day when my vision
materializes
Mot the less! of my attractions ire my
lovely gardeni More ire seen the touch and
taste of an experienced hand  The bright beds
■ nd borders give me an sir of peice and refinement, enhancing my beauty My green-
houie too was a splendid and nermiry ln-
nnva'ton. md is all tile year round full of
plant life Thounndi of leedlings ire raised
here for Nelson's parks and boulevards, while
tn the Summer It is a bower of hemty with
many varieties of rholce flowers observed
and admired hy many nf my visitors
In the Fall chrysanthemums are a superb
specialty I am Indeed gratelul for surh in
■cqulillinn. The gardener's lodge and refreshment booth make me a complete unit
No doubt other Improvements ind extensions will be nrrled out In the neir future,
perhaps i pool for the youngiten ind regular
muslr 1 hivi pleasure In extending my thlnki
for those responsible for my upkeep, whlrh
is most essential for the continued enjoyment «nd well-being of my patrons
*_b.,l  Mile
?'? Questions ? ?
ANSWERS
Open te arty raider Namei et penom
uking que.rt.oni will net be publlihed.
There ll no charge for thli service. Quei-
tloni WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY
MAIL except when there li obvloui neoei-
llty for privacy.
Reader, Nelaon—Will you pleaae give me a
tilt of the different wedding anniver-
tarles?
Flrat year, paper; lecond, calico cotton;
third, muslin, leather; fourth, silk, books;
fifth, wood, clock.; sixth, Iron; seventh, copper, brass; eighth, bronze; ninth, pottery;
tenth, tin; eleventh, steel; twelfth, linen; thirteenth, lace; fourteenth, Ivory; fifteenth, crystal; twentieth, china; twenty-fifth, illver;
thirtieth, peerl; thlrtjriflfth, coral, Jade; fortieth, ruby; fiftieth, gold; fifty-fifth, emerald;
'sixtieth, diamond; seventy-fifth, diamond.
Anxloui,  Castlegar—How   can  I get rid  of
cockroaches?
To get rid of cockroaches, Just the shelves,
tables, floors, runways and hiding places
frequented by the cockroaches with commercial sodium fluoride, a white powder obtainable at most drug stores. It should be applied by means of a dust gun or blower.
Sodium fluoride ls poisonous to humans and
animals.
Reader,  Nelson—Would  you  please  tell  me
the names and addresses of factories that
take old woollens plus a certain amount
,   of money and make blankets for you?
You can send your old woollens either to
Fairfield Mills, Winnipeg, or Bukeland Bros,
3573 Main Street, Vancouver.   Fairfield Mills
make blankets at about the following prices:
Seven pounds (old knitted goods, underwear,
etc., made of wooll makes a 4-pound blanket.
Grey blankets cost $1.75  each, and postage,
and pastel-colored blankets $2.25 each,  and,
postage.   Freight is paid both ways on shipments of 100 pounds or more wool.   The material sent must be real wool.
Interested—Has the word "Salmo", any significance?
"Salmo" is the Latin name for salmon.
Possibly the name was conferred by the Great
Northern Railway, when it built its Nelson-
Fort Sheppard line. About 1930 the Canadian Geographic Board changed the name of
Salmon Valley to Salmo Valley, a move almost universally approved.
Press Comment
KOOTENAY OUT IN THE COLD
According tn figures tabled in the House
of Commons recently by Finance Minister
Ilsley a fairly extensive program of public
works has been provided for in British Columbia.with supplementary estimates of almost a million and a half dollars provided for
the'projects. Of interest to Interior B.C.
residents, however, is the bald fact that none
of this money will be spent other than on the
Pacific coast.
Under supplementary estimates the Dominion Government has planned a program of
public buildings, construction, repair and maintenance of which will cost Just under $1,000,-
000. For harbors, wharves and other similar
work the estimates provide about $300,000.
The Dominion Member for Kootenay West,
H. W. Herridge, received considerable publicity over'his opposition to the members'
salary grab which was passed in the Cnm-
monj but so far as can be learned he had
nothing to say about the failure of the Government to provide anything in the supplementary estimates for construction or repair
work In this riding.
Mr. Herridge should be familiar with the
extenaive'water traffic on the lakes of Kootenay Wast as well as with the possibilities fnr
tourist and other traffic on Kootenay waterways now that the war Is over. Why then
was nothing said about this extensive area
when these estimates were introduced'?
Mr. Herridge, of courie, is not a Member
of the Dominion Government nor is hr a supporter of any party, other than his one-man
People's CCF, group, fn the House of Common*. This is r great handicap both to Mr,
Herridge and to the residents of Kontenay
West, but he might have raised his voire in
protest, for the record at leas! The example,
however, should serve to remind residents of
this area that an independent representative
under t great
port frnrfl none
nf the other 2*44 members. -Trail Time1'
in the Dominion House suffers under ■
handicap   He can count on suppo
Looking Backward
10   YEARS   AQO
(From Dally Newi, January 7, 1936)
Miss Ruth Orr, who has been taking a
year's course in public health nursing in
Montreal, has returned to Nelson owing tn
the Ill-health of her father. Capt, F. I, Orr.
Postmaater R M Manahin yesterday reported there was considerably more Christmas
mall this year than last
2ft   YEARS   AGO
fFrom  Dally  Newi, January 7,  1W1)
C.  H   King  of Grand  Forks,  Superintendent of Dominion Police, Is Staying in town
George Horstead. who will represent the
West Kootenay Poultry and Stork Association
at the annua! mooting of the British fnlumhii
Poultry Association at Vancouver, has been
asked hy the Trail Association to ar' ns i*s
representative
40 YEARS AQO
fFrom Daily Newi, January 7, IW I .
Germany's fa tent views with regard tn
Ihe Mororro situation are offensive tn France,
according to official Information rrrrivrd in
London from Berlin If persisted in, European
complication* may result, with Great Britain
supporting Krfinre and  involving Italy,
Etiquette Hints
The corrto* way to answer a telephone
rail In a busmen offire wh-»n ihe voice at the
other end of thr wire aiki. "Who ji this
ipeaklng." la to say; "Alice M. Mr, Jnnes'
secretary" You may my "Mils Allrt M"
Lf you l-.i.er.
	
Changeover In   j Prince Rupert Beco mes Qateway
Cycles Big
Ontario Job
to Treasure Trove of Northwest
TORONTO—H it goei throu|h.
Southern Ontario'! switchover from
all-cycle power to the 60-cycle energy uied almost everywhere cite
in North America will be one of
the biggest end most complex Jobs
of reconversion on record, James
H. Joyce writes In the Financial
Post.
No one yet knows the entire cost
of the change, but Toronto has
estimated its Share at 138,000.000
and It's easily possible that for the
entire Niagara division of Ontario's
Hydro the bill may run over 100
millions of dollars.
Conversion of the 2J-cycle motor
that has to be specially designed for
the "island" adds to costs all along
the line—to the costs of the firm
that makes the motor, to the cost
of the Southern Ontario manufacturer who uses lt, and to the costs
of consumers anywhere In Canada
who buy the vast range of products
made in the "island."
But besides affecting the pockets
of most consumers in Canada, the
conversion of the 25-cycle island
provides a significant economic laboratory. The problem is substantially similar to "slum clearance." Here
you have the same problems ss in
overcrowded areas — 25-cycle motors, generators and transformers
are functioning. As ln efforts to
clear slums, It looks as though
methods of financing the change-1
over will play a key part ln pre- j
paring nn acceptable plan. So far
none of the groups most directly ,
affected has made a proposal for
financing the change.
CLASSIC BLUNDER
Why the Niagara division has
clung fo 25-cycle power goes back
to the first days of Hydro when it
was thought that 25-cycle would
ultimately become the most generally accepted frequency for alternating current. That proved to be one
of history's classic blunders, and I
occasional later efforts to swing to!
have always floundered on the ques- j
tion of cost, now again being ln-
the 60-cycle power used elsewhere
vestigated by Ontario Hydro.
Difference between 25 snd ' 60-
cycle is that in alternating current
the energy in each wire changes
from positive to negative many
times a second. If the change from
positive to negative and back again
occurs 25 times a second, you have
25-rycle; if it changes 60 times a
second you have 60-cycle power.
Generators, motors and transformers have lo be specially designed for
the change in cycle.
AERIAL VIEW OF THE PORT OF PRINCE RUPERT
Bookworm Urge
! Invades France
PARIS—The increasing thirst for
books which haa been grnriuilly
turning Canada Into a nation of
part-time bookworms has apparently sprVnd to France. This ls a war-
Mme phenomenon, since before 19-19,
the average French family generally
regarded literature aa the professional scholar's or dilettante's special preserve rather than as one of
life's staples.
Now because of the urgent need
fnr some form of "escape" and tho
growing curiouslty about a wide
range of subjects, reading has he-
come a social necessity. Characteristically, jp a country which has
produced many famous novelists,
the novel is in great demand though
librarians report many requests for
i historical  works.
, To the French publisher, plagued
by the acute paper shortage, the
I current boom in literature is some-
I thing of a headache. To him, all
j editions are limited ones, he can
' k-^cp nothing in stock; his new
| books are sold in advance sales he-
■ fore they fin tn press-and his
I shelves remain uninvitingly bare.
; There is no temptation to browse
around rental libraries for they ac
.Imnt! a rushing business. They have
increased   their   rates  and reduced
1 their loan periods but Frenchmen
cheerfully pay mnre and read more
I quickly.
Nor   are   many   hooks  gathering
'dust In the *9 public libraries in
Paris Official figures show these
libraries circulated 2.947,595 bonks
in 10-44. an increase of 280.OO0 over
thp "43 figure   In the second trmn-
| dissement which tops the Hit with a
'44 circulation  of R1.179 books. 21!.
.were loaned for every 100 residents.
|    Only the sacred fastnesses of the
■ Blhlintheque National*-, world fn-
1 mous  for   Its   rare   collections  and
huge archive*, remain as hushed as
ever Most nf the foreigners to whom
! thf   Bibliotheque    was   a   sort    nf
■ sanctuary, have vanished To the
| newer, younger and perhaps busier
■ book lovers, the library is a little
inaccessible and Its ancient reputn-
■tlnn as a temple of higher learning
somewhat overpowering*
A relluloae factory has been p'.t
'hark in operation in the French occupation rnn<» of Oermany and a
synthetic   leather   factory will icon
be opened
By STAFF 8ERGT. RALPH H.
BROWNE
Forty mllea below the Southern
tip of Alaaka, and as far into thc
Canadian Northwest as a rail line
can carry you, lies the young and
kicking port of Prince Rupert, B.C.
Five hundred miles closer to the
Orient than any other port In the
Western Hemisphere, it has, what
many mariners claim, the third best
harbor in the world, the other two
being Halifax, Nova Scotia, and
Sydney, Australia.
That'3 Prince Rupert. During the
war it was veiled in a mist oi. secrecy designed to keep the enemy
guessing. Now that the war is over
every Canadian and American
should be familiarized with this
springboard to the Far East which
cut many miles from the sea-roada
to Tokyo, and played an important
role in winning the "Battle of Supply."
Scattered over Kaien Island eight
miles long, near the mouth of the
Skeena River, Prince Rupert has
been a far-flung outpost of the
Northwest. It is more than 500 miles
North of Vancouver. It is 700 miles
Northwest of Edmonton across the
Rocky Mountains. There are no
other cities of any size between.
Prince Rupert, with a normal peacetime population of flOOO inhabitants,
now in the neighborhood of 10,000,
is the biggest town for hundreds of
miles in all directions.
With Canada's consent the U.S,
Army built the Prince Rupert Sub-
Port of Embarkation, a $16,000,000
installation which is being turned
over to the Canadian Government.
During the war troops of the U.S,
Army Transport Corps pushed more
than a million-and-a-half tons 1W
supplies through Prince Rupert.
These supplies included everything
from bullrozers for the Alaska
Highway to jeeps for Kiska and
Attu. More than 100,000 torn of high
explosives were sent directly into
the Pacific, the lethal cargos being
dropped on the Japanese homeland
within a matter of days following
their departure from the port.
While Prince Rupert is in no way
.a new port, its development to large
proportions as an outstanding outlet on the Pacific and main stop on
;a major Northwest transportation
'route, has finally brought to realization a 30-year-old dream of pioneers of Western Canada.
i Prince Rupert came into existence
; during the early part of the century
through the efforts of Sir Wilfrid
Laurier, Prime Minister at that
time, and Charles Melville Hays,
j railroad president, to promote the
i Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, and
j provide additional West coast out-
i let for Canada.
JPLAYED  PART  IN
j WORLD WAR   I
j A drydock and shipyard was built
' in 1914 at a cost of $3,000,000. The
! population of the city begin to
climb, The importance of this shipyard was realized in World War II
l when the Allies were in desperate
j need of all classes and types of shipping. Thirteen 10,000 tons class ves-
1 sels, two 1500 ton craft, and four
; minesweepers were built in the
j Prince Rupert yards. More than 400
vessels pulled into the drydocks for
repairs of all kinds. Now the 'construction of a $3,000,000 passenger
| liner in these yards is under consideration. Vhis boat will replace
'the S.S. Prince George which was
I destroyed by fire in Alaskan waters
last September.
Flihlng It the major Industry of
|    Princt Rupert, bringlno In an annual Income to the town of six to
eight million  dollars. The flihlng
Industry hai been developed until
Prince Rupert hai become the cen-
1    tre  of  the   largeit   freih   halibut
1    builneii In the world, at well as
|   a sizeable amount of salmon can-
I    nlng.
: The forest wealth of Prince Rupert has yet to be developed on a
| Urn scale. The potential mineral
wealth  has   never  been   evaluated
but one recent editfnn of an interior
i weekly featured three separate stor-
. ies of new  "strikes"  on  the  front
page! Several  mines  are operating
In the interior with gold, silver and
lead being in the fore of production.
J5even out of every ten minerall
known to man can be found in producing quantities in this area. Near
Vanderhoof evidence of uranium,
source of radium and the element
which gave birth to the atomic age,
has been located,
In the "Ground-Hog" country'
which lies between Prince Rupert
and Hazelton, one of the largest
anthracite fields in the world la located. In tests this anthracite prov
ed to be of higher grade than that
mined in Pennsylvania. And thii
field, which is more than iQViS
times larger than that in Pennsylvania is, as yet, wholly undevelop*
ed.
Since VJ-Day, 050.0p0 bushels^!
wheat have been loaded aboard vei*
sels for Russia and Britain. In view
of Prince Rupert's proximity to
Vladivostock, it would not be surprising to find regular runs between Prince Rupert and Siberia.
Far from being a r»ere outpost on
the far flung Northwest Canadian
frontier, Prince Rupert is finding
itself simultaneously, the "Gateway
to Alaska," and the "Gateway to
the interior." Prince Rupert is nbw
thr hub of the Northwest treasure-
hold of the American continent.
The port ii Ice-free the yeaf
around. That li tomethlng hardly
anybody from the reit of tht
country will believe. Prince Rupert gets the full benefit of the
Japaneie current, io the weather
li mild the year round, even
though It li further North than
Dutch Harbor.
Completely land
bor is big enough
the whole British
and free of big v
It ran handle the
going vessels at e
tide. The port fa
world's best,
The people and
continent are |.
Northwest and Pr:
rectly in line with
locked, 'he ha>
to accommodate
fleet «t on*- time,
raves and storm*
largest of ocean-
ither high or low
cilltlei equal  th*
industries of th»
inking into the
.nee Rupert is <ty»
their sights.
Bloody Butcher of
Fort Santiago
Condemned to Hang
MANILA, Jan, 8 (APi-I.t Col
Seiichi Ohta, known as "the bloody
butcher of Fort Santiago," has been
condemned to hang for his war
crimes.
The U.S. military commission
which convicted and sentenced
Ohta  today  said:
"He is not being held guilty of
one crime but fnr a systematic series of crimes, committed over a
period, which became a definite pattern."
Ohta was commander of the Japanese secret police in Manila, which
operated a torture mill at Fort Santiago  during the occupation
Witnesses described Ohta as
most feared man in Manila "
Compromise Required of Nations
if World Peace to Be Achieved
By JAMES LANSDALE HOD30N
or of finding a home :
erations   on   which   tl
If on one of these December days   __
,   .     . l      .    .   , .     , , trunk md w,    lepc -
in London, when dusk closet in about '    _
3:30 in the afttrnoon and Big Ren
looks warm and cheerful with h;s
great farr ht up. you turn right near
the Ho'it?  ^f  Commons and  walk
past  Westminster   Abbey  you   will
come upon an archway on your left
ar.d  a  plgn.   "De3n   Yard"   If  you
walk  through   tha  arch  you   find
yourself in  a  spacious square,  the
Abbey forming  the left of it, ar.d
e de]
tare
For myself I think there is much
to be said in favor <■' the United
Sta'cs. Americans at** pr.ncely host*.
Mor on ver, I can i mag. re nothing'
more likely to reinforce America'!
determination to take he' rightful
share in world affairs ard eschew
isolationism thsn th*1 fa*-' that sht
is the heedquar'ers of thes«- 51 na-
tions   Str.v;ng   after   pear*-   .i--i   §
"the
>n,_iare l.-
uth 'parked carsi i
fairly new now and
Deaths
By  The   Canadian   Pr.et
PASADENA. Calif - George
Woolf, 36, -Canadian-born ]ockey
who won almost every American
turf classic during his riding career
ROCHFSTFK, N Y Dr Max Poser, 7S, one of the world'i leading
mlscroscoplits,
TORONTO - William Mowbray,
70, for more than V) years a teacher
nf English at I'pper Canada College
VANCOUVER Thomas Wilkinson, who served on Vancouver City
Council ln 1935-36 as alderman.
In 1940, there were In Canada 110
daily newspapers, 6 tn-weekJiM.
__ bi-weeklies and P71 we-pklielC
N
across the far side Mhe S'
self is dotted
stor.e building,
well lit
This li Church House, where 51
nationi sent their men to work _n
the preparatory commiiiion of the
United Nations Organiratlon This
Church House Is where the House
of Commons temporarily sat when
the Houses of Parliament were Mitred and before the repair* were completed enougn fnr 'he Common, to
sit in the House 0f Lords, as th-y
do pnW
It wu a mighty small plare for
them to occupy In Churrh H >u*e.
hut there they contrived to rfn the;:
buslneia. It was In thp very c >n-
ference room where the House ■■!
Common* |^t that I wat-"he*_j ns thi
delegatei mad» ip*e*-hei on the sur**-
left of where the United Natnni
should hold their p*rmarvnt a«-
scmbhei As yri-1 kr.iw lhe t'ni.H
States. Ihe race of r«-'s erA the
nation of nation*, will heve ;he Nm-
hr
firmer   rea.'.'y   :
"f man.
FACT FOR REJOICING
or hood
Efficient Forces to Quard Peace
By   JACK    BRAYLEY
Cinadian   Pren   Staff Writer
OTTAWA. Jan t\ iCP. - The
New Year will (md Canida dissolving th^ moit powerful armed
itrtngth In her hiitory and build
lng a ntw compact organliatlon
on an Interim nucleui after a
yaar that brought the and of the
war.
C a n a ri a ' ■ parmamnt armed
forcei organlaatlon will ha mora
than five tlma* bigger and re1*
lively mora efficiently *quipperl
for combat than the pre-war force,
Th« permanent forcu ire to
hava a itrtngth of about 6S.000
man, oompared with a pet wir
■trmgth of tP.AOO and Indication!
■rt that tha r*»rv* Mt-up will
ht iiibitantlally itrongtr than 'hat
In Auguit. 1*39.
Here  I*  the   picture;
Navy   Not   ltl*  than   10.JOO  men
manning two cruisers, two aircraft
rarr.ers, a dozen destroyer* and in-
ciliary craft Behind thi* will bl
a reserve of ifl.000.
Army-Between m.nnn and 25.00(1
_/nen barked by n reierve of st
divisions whose numerical strength
is not given. The Canadian Army
Active Force will rnntlii of a hri-
gade group of at lent three Infantry divisions, two armored r»gl-
men's, an artillery format inn and
ancillary trnnps ready tn ftght rs
a   complete  unit.
HCAF Between ttftno and 20,
OOO men fnr If) iquadrnm Thi
squadrons will ronai«t of four twun-
ber, thret fighter, two transport
and one reconnaissance Th'^e alsn
will be a reserve nf unspecified
.strrhitth modelled along the lines
of tha  re*erve army
Interim twn-year volunteer f<>rr.»»
hive been *et up to tide ovtr  the
military m»'h;nery until lhe attivn
fnirei e*f estaMlihfd MeR acrepted
In the Interim force* have b*en ■«•
*ur»d *h»Y »i)l rm taktn on ta*
ptrmar.ert t.repg.h and have up te
March ill to make op their mind*
APRIL  IS TARGIT
Meantime repatriation demobilisation ail rehabilitation -*<f t*-e
p-rik sirt-rg'h of TRI ono iren a** I
women It going or. » '*\ r**:'.*
IM noo men b- -ught home fr-m VT
Hay, Mav R. to Nov JO and the u- .
get u to ha\e all p-erannnrI m v-' <rth-
weit Europe, *,.ith txreptiin -f ''
pupation and admini*t[a'nn men,
home by Apr:', 2fl
The general plan of rihat.;:■• .' ■>••
laid down br the Given men 1 h_i
untangled m<>«( of its *••.•'_ th*
vetfln entering riviiian life *'th
muslcting • oi( hfnefit-t _ n-'r!
health ird pr ftumnil and -.-national trailing
lift
'he l.p
down
is rrn.rml
nf :he V;
he  yeari
rr   ':■»■■
He I Sta
t_ial  so
It ii from
« >«Htri
■'» of lh*
fines:
.tat'-ments
on  the
:rf_"p»nd*
mre ar
d dignitv
ar* 1  Ithe
'v nf mux
have
dr.iwal
after W
rmanatel
from the
■■rid War
Amer i'
League
>r.r wai
ii   with"
nf Nalion*
»   IfTTibl*
rlisjste
i-.'me
.   hrr  r!\i\
thr      hea
,j    ;,-■,.-,
of    ih«
League
'-'■meth
S       l-1-r-re.T
rg   ' ■   rr)-
ire   rr v r
s   'o   mi
hum g  thoie  mo-Tien' ■
rrurial    pr iblrm    will    be
w,th   1  know p i rr, .. r th
whit   thev   •.'.;'.'   d is.- Hi   n
.1    -tlTI   |
wrrstlei
an  ynu do
!  "if flflt
meet i-
but  I  !
■  nf t>   ,1
;.'  Mt    P
.r- b'v
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-.pport*
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nf   th"
r r: i' ] y
nat nr.
n-'y  "f  s
Bvrnr.
•yarr^rt,   h
made   on
rx-.rz   M
ard M'
h»   fib]
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y ihnujht
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'ci of tht
it thrir
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thonty
g"tv     '  1     3
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;ir.| '" rw
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erei£*-1
world
Hr-W.   f
r   I  f-nd  i
wa-'e •*■»''
or   irtHan
I,*--   )-(•   9-h;"V(HL
r     ran    'he    rrob-
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irrminding
the    t'
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ever h*
tattafarto
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i»- 'h on*
Its* the
that    lj
nations a
thsi  -a-
p p; e p .
'<-■     a"
ei   lo UT
event*.
there   r
•,U*t    he    -i
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-
 PORTS
rings Rap Hawks lo Take Over
I Place as Bruins Drop
DETROIT,  Jan.   6   API-Detroit
Wings icored three times in
) first period tonight and hung on
nose out Chicago Black Hawks.
I, In a National Hockey League
me   that  delighted  a  crowd  of
232 fans. The loss left Chicago
d with Montreal for the League
jj
lineups:   •
Chicago: Karakas, Wares, Hami!-
i, Gee, Hamill, Grosio.
Detroit: Lumley, Jackson, Stew-
L Carveth, Ros-fignol, Liscombe.
Chicago   Subs:   Mariuccl,   Smith,
Bentley, Allen, D. Bentley, Coo-
r, Kaleta, Horeck.
Detroit Subs: Couture, Watson, E.
runeteau. Lindsay, Brown, Howe,
nllett, Armstrong.
(Keferee—Frank (King) Clancy;
nnesmen—Doug Young and Stan
IcCabe.
lUMMARY-
'irst Period:
U,    Detroit,    Llicombe  (Stewart.
farveth)   7:15:   2,-   Detroit,   Howe
Stewart) 15:33; 3, Detroit, E. Bru-
leteau (Brown) 18:18.
Penalties — Brown,   D.   Bentley,
fares,
eeond Period:
4,  Chicago, Kaleta   (Smith)   5:24;
Chicago, Smith (Horeck, Allen)
a
Penalty-Hollett.
Third Period:
Scoring—None.
Penalties — Mariuccl, (major),
Howe.
CRIPPLED BRUINS SLIP
NEW YORK, Jan. 6 (CP)-The
onsurging New York Hangers walloped the crippled Boston Bruips,
4-2, tonight belore a crowd of 15,-
417 fans in Madison Square Garden. The defeit dropped the Bruins
' out of third place in the NaUonal
Hockey League as Detroit Red
Wings moved up by upsetting Chicago, 3-2.
Lineups:
Boston: Bibeault, Crawford,
Church, Reardon, Bauer, Dumart.
New York: Rayner, N. Colville,
Juzda, Laprade, Watson, Lynn Patrick.
Boston Subs: Egan, Cain, Henderson, Gallinger, Guidolin, Shill, McGill, Flamon, Dclmonte.
New York Subs: Murray Patrick,
Heller, Shibicky, Mac Colville, Warwick, Goldup, Pike, DeMarco, Leswlck, Henry, Bill Moe.
Referee— N. Gravelle; Linesmen
Sam Babcock ond Bill Schorr.
SUMMARY-
Flnt Period:
1, New York, Warwick (DeMarco,
Moe) 4:10; 2, Boston, Cain 14:48.
Penalties — Moe,   Heller,   Guidolin 2.
Second Period:
3, New York, Shibicky (M. Colville) 3:40; 4, New York, Leswick
(Heller) 4:23.
Penalty-Church.
Third Period:
5, New York, M. Colville (Pike)
5:16: 6, Boston, Guidolin (Gallinger, Shill) 6:32.
Penalties—Juzda, .Guidolin.
If ft Minora Blades1.
Ilnora has a   real   "«dge" ovtr
r low price blades. In fact, It's the
arpeit double-edge blade In Its
ast. One shave will convince yoo.
Firs YOU*
DOl/flU-EDGE RAZOR
OFFER CUCCINEUO
MANAGER'S POST
ABERDEEN, S.D., Jan. 6 (AP)-
Joe Flaten, Acting President of the
newly-organized Aberdeen team of
the Northern Baseball League, said
Saturday he had wired Tony Cuc-
cinello an offer to become manager of the club .Cuccinello was released Friday by Chicago White
Sox.
LONDON (CP) — Bob Morris, who
played "Jerry" of Nobbier and Jerry, in the famous old-time music-
hall sketches, is dead. He was approaching BO.
.   t     ,
British Soccer
Results
LONDON, Jtn. $ (Biuten)-Re-
suits ot soccer matches played in
Britain Saturdiy wire:
FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION CUP
(Third Round)
Accrlngton Stanley S, Manchester United 2. "    •
Aldershot 2, Plymouth Argyle 0.
Birmingham City 1, Portsmouth 0.
Bolton Wanderer. 1, Blackburn
Rovers 0.
Bradford 2, Portvale 1.
Bristol City 5, Swansea Town 1.
Bury 3,   Rochdale  3.
Cardiff City 1, West Bromwich
Albion 1.
Charlton Athletic 3, Fulham 1.
Chelsea 1, Leicester City 1.
Chester 0, Liverpool 2.
Chesterfield 1, York City 1.
Coventry 2, Aston Villa 1.
Grimsby Town 1, Sunderland 3.
Huddersfield Town 1, Sheffield
United 1.
Leeds United 4, Middlesbrough 4.
Lovclls Athletics 2, Wolverhampton Wanderers 4.
Luton Town D, Derby County 6.
Manchester City 6, Barrow 2.
Mansfield Town 0, Sheffield
Wednesday 0.
New Castle United 4, Barnsley 2.
Northampton Town 2, Millwall 2.
Norwich City 1, Brighton and
Hove Albion 2.
Nottingham Forest 1, Watford 1.
Preston Northend 2, Everton 1.
Queen's Park Rangers 0, Crystal
Palace 0.
Rotherham United 2. Gateshead 2.
Stoke City 3. Burnley 1.
Tottenham Hotspurs 2, Brentford
2.
Westham United 6, Arsenal 0.
Wrexham 1, Blackpool 4.
SCOTTISH   LEAQUE
Dlvlilon "X"
Aberdeen 5,<_Queen's Park 0.
Clyde 0, Rangers 1.
Hibernian 4, Falkirk 1.
Morton 4, Hearts 2.
Motherwell 2, Kilmarnock 2.
Parlick Thistle 0, Celtic 3.
Queen of South 5, Hamilton Academicals 1.
Third Lanark 3. Saint Mirren 1.
SCOTTISH  LEAGUE
Division "B"
Albion Rovers 2, durifermline
Athletic 0.
Alloa 6, Raith Rovers 0.
Ayr United 10, Stenhousemuir 1.
Cowdenbeath 2, Airdrieonians 3.
Dundee United 4, Arbroath 1.
Eastfife fl, Dumbarton 2.
Saint Johnstone 4, Dundee 1,
LEAGUE   THREE
(Northwest Region Cup)
Oldham Athletic 1, Crewe Alexandra 1.
(Northeait Region Cup)
Darlington 1, Carlisle United 3.    ,
Halifax Town 2, Hartlepools United 5.
(South Region)
Bournemouth 4, Bristol Rovers 3.
(North Region)
Walsall 4. Clapton Oflent 3. i
'
Nothing Like If on Continent Says
Ice Fantasy Star About Civic Centre
Bobby McLean, one of tha star'i
of the Ice Fantasy to bl held at
the Civic todiy, ll Impressed with
Nelson's Civic Centre. Ke said lut
night thit hi hid seen nothing like
it on thli continent, ind he enthused on the wonderful possibilities
It ottered youngsters here.
Mr. McLean tl looking forward to
performing at the Civic thli evening. A friendly man, who Jokes
about hli receding hairline, and
attributes this to an act he does on
the Ice In which he skates, partly
on hli head, he is extremely modest
about hli own personal accomplishments, and laid nothing about his
having been holder at one time of
13 ipeed skating championships.
FORMER WORLD TITLI8T
Hailing from Chicago, Mr. McLean is also a former world's speed
skating championship holder. He at
present holdi leven title... He has
toured throughout Canada, the
United States, Europe and the British Isles andsjn the capital citiea of
most countries.
Ariane Ll Valllant ot Switzerland, English Gold Medallist, spent
two years ln Englind entertaining
memberi ot the armed forcei during the war, and hu lince toured
the ' United Statei entertaining
troopi. She alio hai skated ln most
capital citiei ot the world.
Ken Wlllock, in entertainer who
takei part in a duet with Eleanor
Lanthier, hails from Montreal. He
hai been lerving with the Canadian
Army overseai, in most of the
European theatres of war, and received his discharge September
lait. He holdi the skating championship for Montreal.
There are many other outstanding
professional ikaters in the group,
among these being Gloria Haupt,
who according to the other artlits,
is a real fav.nrte with the audiences,
with her boogie woogie number. The
artists said for iome of the girls
this was their first time on tour, although they have entertained in
many large cities. According to their
friends they are really enjoying
themselves.
PRO SUSPENSION
TO HOLD IN
AMATEUR HOCKEY
TORONTO. Jan. 7 (CP1-W. A.
Hewitt, Treasurer of the Canadian
Amateur Hockey Association, saitt
today any players under suspension
by a professional club would not
be permitted to play with an amateur team until the suspension was
lifted.
(In Calgary yesterday D. P, McDonald, President of the Western
Canada Hockey Association, a C. A.
H. A. League, said Al Pickard of
Regina*, C.A.H.A. Vice-President
had warned him Gordon Pettinger,
who played for Regina Caps of the
Western Association Friday night,
Is under suspension by a professional club and that further use of
Pettinger would result in suspension of the Regina Club along with
any team playing against them).
Mr. Hewitt uid he had not been
Informed of the Pettinger case but
that Mr. Pickard as regional vice-
president was empowered to enforce the suspensions.
Pettinger, under suspension by
Cleveland Barons of the American
Hockey League, would be automatically reinstated to amateur ranks
if cleared by the professional club,
he added.
NANAIMO, B.C.. Jan 9 (CP)-
Down 8-0 at the 10-mlnute mark in
the second half, Royal .Canadian
Navy conceded Nanaimo the first
round McGavin Cup senior soccer
match here. By their victory, Nanaimo now qualifies to meet Victoria Toppers in the second round
ix\ the capital city Jan. 13.
Hockey Schedule
Ice schedule of the Nelson Amateur   Hockey   Association  for   this
week is as follows:
MONDAY—
No Kid Hockey,
TUEBbAY-.
8 to 9:00—M.R.K. Juves vs Legion.
9 to 10:00—Juvenile Rep practice.
WEDNESDAY—
5 to 6:00—Dodgers vs F.A.C. Midgets.
FRIDAY—'
4:45 to 5:45—M.R.K. vs Panther
Bantami
sAturday-
7:00 to 8:30—F.A.C. vl M.R.K.
Midgets.
8:30 to 10:00—Brum vs Panther
Bantams.
10:30 to 12:00—Bantam Pool.
NELSON HOLDS
LEAD AGAINST
ALLCOMERS
LOS ANGELES, Calif.. Jan. 8
(AP)—Tournament favorite Byron
Nelson met and matched all challengers on a wind-swept course today to retain his lead at the end of
the third round of the 72-hole Los
Angelei open golf tournament. His
one-over-par 72 for the Riviera
course gave him a 54-hole total of
212—two strokes ahead of his closest rivals.
Pressing Nelson for the lead position were defending champion Sam
Snead of Hot Springs, Va., and Jim
Ferrier, Chicago, each with 214 for
the three rounds.
Hockey Scores
By Thl Canadian  Preu
NATIONAL LEAQUE
Chicago S, Toronto 0.
Boston I, Montreal 4.
AMERICAN LEAQUI
Indianapolis 1, Hershey 2.
St. Louli 2, Pittiburgh 9.
Buffalo 5, Cleveland 8,
U.S. LEAQUE
Tulsa 2, Omaha t.
Minneapolis 1, Dallas 4.
E.U.S, LEAGUE
Philadelphia 9, Boiton 9.
NORTHERN AMATEUR
HOCKEY LEAQUE
Fort Francei Athletics 4, Duluth
Cooleraton 11.
SOUTHERN SASKATCHEWAN
JUNIOR
Reglna  Abbotti   5,   Mooie   Jaw
Canucks 10.
WESTERN CANADA
SENIOR
Edmonton   Flyen   2,   Saikatoon
Elka 3.
QUEBEC 8ENIOR
Shawlnlgan Falli 3, Ottawa 13.
(Sunday)
Quebec 3, Shawinigan Falls 5,
Ottawa 8, Valleyfleld 3.
Hull 5, Montreal Royals 6.
PROVINCIAL   LEAGUE
Lachlne 3, St. Hyaclnthe 4.
Sherbrooke at Vidorliville postponed, loft Ice.
Cornwall at Drummondville post-
poned, soft ice.
(Sunday)
Drummondville   at   Victoriaville
postponed, 10ft Ice.
St. Hyacinth 1, Lachlne 5.
Cornwall 5. Sherbrooke 8.
OHA JUNIOR A
Toronto St. Michael's 5, St. Catherines 1. '
Gait 11, Hamilton 3.
Young Rangers 5, Oshawa 1.
EDMONTON JUNIOR
Edmonton Canadians 11, Edmon-
top Maple Leafs 1.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1946 - 7
JUMPERS SOAR
141 AND T48 FEET
BEAR MOUNTAIN, N.Y., Jan. 6
AP)—Art Devlin, veteran ikl jumper from Lake Placid Sno-Birds,
outclassed a crack field today to win
the Torger Tokle Memorial Jump
named In honor of the champion
United States Jumper killed in action In Italy last March.
Devlin made two beautiful leaps
of 141 and 149 feet for 321.1 points.
CONN STARTS GRIND
FOR LOUIS BOUT
HOT SPRINGS, Ark, Jan. « (AP)
—Heavyweight Billy Conn went
into training Saturday for his June
bout with Champion Joe Louis.
Juvenile Reps
Rap Juniors M
Nelson Juvenile Rip hockey team
hammered thl Juniori 7-1 ln in exhibition game at thi Civic Saturday ivenlng,
Thi Juniori showed plenty of
speed, but they always bumped up
againit a stonewall defence and the
stellar goaling of Al Sllverwood,
who has illowed only one goal to
get by him in the list three games
The juvenile defence pairs, Pitts and
Clark, and Ross and Longden, are
showing better form with each
game, and Ross's body checking in
this last game proved almost, too
much for some of the Juniors. Elmore, subbing in the Junior nets,
had a buiy time ai the winners
drove pucks all around him, and he
did well to hold the score down.
Magllo icored two goals, and Hyssop, Clark, Perrier, Maclntyre and
Stuart one each. F. Koehle, Maclntyre, Clark and B. Koehle earned
assists,
Lang scored the lone Junior goal
unassisted, with but two minutes
to go in the linal period. Buzz MacDonald drew the only two penalties.
Teams were:
Juvlnlei—Silverwood, goal; Longden, Pitts, Clark, Ross, ferrier, F.
Koehle, Hyssop, Maglio, Stuart, R.
Koehle, Brett, Maclntyre.
Jublors—Elmore, goal; R. MacDonald, Hielscher, Hooper, Boates,
Lang, Cathcart, R. Wanlck, Bone,
G. MacDonald, Hood, Waters.
Referee, Bill Holland; Timekeeper, Don Chambers; Scprer, Van Linden.
FRANCE'S REPRESENTATIVE
LEADS CHESS TOURNEY
HASTINGS, England, Jan. 9 -
(Reuterl)-Dr. S. Tartakower of
France by winning an adjourned
game today took a clear lead of half
a point at the Hastings Chess Congress which ends Wednesday. However the eventual winner was still
in doubt, with only a point separating the flrit five.
Dr. Tartakower had 6^ points. He
was followed by F. Ekitrom of Sweden with six points. There is a
triple tie for third place between
the two Americans,'Arnold Denker
and Herman Stelner, and Doctor
Max Euwe of Holland, all with 5V4
points.
MOOSE JAW, Sask., Jan. 8 (CP) I Enloa'd.'31 Co_C*c'
—Undefeated   so  far   this
VICTORY FOR CANUCKS      IENFILADE LEADS F,ELD
 '   Jan. 9 (AP)-
V. Whitney's
season, specdy filly, WOn the »29,000 Santa
Moose Jaw Canucks overwhelmed Susana Stakes by five lengths Sat-
Hegina Abbotts 10-5 in a Southern ; urday from the favorite, Honey-
Saskatcheman Junior Hockey Lea-' moon, of the Louis B. Mayer stable,
gue game here Saturday night for I Levonslte, owned by Mrs. Max Fac-
their 12th victory. ' tor, was third.
ENGLAND BESTS FRANCE V
IN OPENING RUGBY
PARIS, Jin. 8 (Reuters)—England today defeited France 19-8 ln
the first Rugby Leigue International between the two countries since
the wu.
WARNEKE TO UMPIRE
LOS ANGELES, Janf 8 (AP) -
Lon Warneke, former Chicago
Cubs pitcher, hu ilgned to umpire
in the Pacific Coast Baseball League thli year Preiident Clarenw
Rowlmd iaid Saturday.
STILL THE
CIGARETTE   SENSATION
£mp0^^^/frw
• ••
00^^
BY ensuring safe storage for perishable foods... by making food display
attractive yet hygienic, in shops and restaurants—modern, electric commercial
refrigeration contributes to good marketing, good housekeeping and good healthl
It helps the housewife—by making shop
ping easier and protecting foodstuffs. It
helps the storekeeper —by improving
merchandising and by preventing waste
and spoilage. It helps the farmer —by
displaying and preserving the freshness
of his produce up to and at the point-
of-sale and so stimulating demandi
GENERAL fp ELECTRIC
Commercial Refrigeration
Equipment
The heart of good commercial refrigeration equipment is the refrigerating unit.
Sturdy, dependable General Electric
units designed for use in display cases
of every type and size, in cold storage
lockers and in refrigerated transporta
tion, are the solution to every commercial
refrigerating problem. They are backed
by full, nation-wide servicing facilities.
Canadian General Electric is ready to
assist you no matter what your commercial refrigeration needs may be. t
CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC
CO.
LIMITED
HEAD OFFICE   -   TORONTO
s\W
 TODAY'S News Pictures
KAI-SHEK'8 SONl Chiang
Chlng-Kuo, ion of Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek, who hu gone to
Moscow for consultations on Man-
ihurla. There Is a pouibillty that
he may consult for developments
that have occurred In the light of
the Big Three Foreign Ministers'
conference. Chiang Hai been active for eaveral weeki at hli fath-
«r*i ohlef diplomat.
CREATED "HERBIE-*: Sergt-
MaJ. Bing Coughlln, creator of
"Hcrlile" and hli pall In the famoui "Maple Leat" cartoons, hai
been awarded the HBE for meritorious lervice with the Canadian troopi In Europe. Born In Ottawa, Ont, Bing had been working In Philadelphia prior to the
war.     >
ON U. 8. WARSHIP: Edith
Cramp, pharmacist's mate flrit
class, attractive daughter of Major
and Mri. Edmund Cramp of Chester, Pa., li the flnt girl to go
aboard a U. 8. warship on active
duty. She li serving aboard the
assault transport "Hendry", which
■ailed from San Diego, Calif., for
Pearl  Hirbor. ■
8HIPPED WIFE OVER IN GLIDErfi   Lieut Jean Qoppert of
the airborne troopi greets hli wife ihortly after her arrival on air-'
liner DC-4 at LaGuardla airport, New York, They were married In
London on May 11, 1945, and ihortly after he wai ordered to France.
Lieut Goppert packed hli wife In a box and ihlpped her over In a
glider. For thli impetuout gesture the paratrooper wai fined $200.
Goppert li on a 20-day leave from hli Florida bate. After ipendlng
Chrlitmai In New York, hit wife will go to the home of hli parenti
In Edna, Texai. >
HOME FROM OVER8EA8:
Gunner W. A. 8wope who har
teen service In France, Belgium,
Holland and Germany, returned
home on the Queen Elizabeth. After a ihort visit with hli listen,
Mri. Vernon Voung and Mn. John
Bonacci, Gnr. 8wope left for Cranbrook to ipend hli leave with hli
mother, Mrs. G. Swope and iliter,
Mn. W. Walmiley.
LONE WOMAN ON WORLD TE8T FLIGHT
ARRIVES IN ENGLAND: (Section Officer Patricia
Mary Liddell. widow of the late Captain Ian Liddell, V.C, li pictured talking with Air Vice-Mar-
thai Flddtment on their arrival it Blackbuihe air
drome, London, Eng., trom Montreil, Que. it was.
the last lip of a successful try-out for world flights
of a new type Lincaster plane. Mrs. Liddell. the
only woman on the flight wit personal assistant
to Flddament.
^llDo'ltEfefyTime
And how long did he
keep her? ju^t about
as long as it took vou
to read this -
^MAROOMPM- AHEM - W%
TAl-^E A LETTER, MISS
CUDDlE-lVl SURE
YtxJ AND I WILL GET
ALONG VKjy WELL
TOGETHER
IIj nt*snjc>6£
'!AV,TH*HA(,ER
I  .y-t im_ lf*< naryttt jTwfKATt i—   ■"***>e l«"itS 'Mil
yv>
fyo/gutsTiTfie&t,
VARIED STITCHERY: Variety
Ii the tpice of needleworkl Small
motlfi to embroider on towelt,
icarfi — all llneni — give them
Individuality!
Embroidering,these flower motlfi li satisfying, relaxing handiwork! Pattern 540 hai tramfer of
18 motifs 2%x2?i to 4'/tx10 inch.
Send TWENTY CENTS (20c) In
for thli pattern. Print plainly
colni (stamps cannot be accepted)
8IZE, NAME, ADDRESS. STYLE
NUMBER.
Send your order to Daily News
Pattern Department, Nelion, B. C.
tWixMon   TnaMin
TODDLERS' OUTFIT: Practical
play outfit for your wee flirl or
boy, Pattern 9391 Includes overalls, jacket-blouse And peaked cap,
plus directions for making play-
suit—all eaiy sewing!
Pittern 9391 comes in sizes 1, 2.
3, 4, 6. 8. Size 6 overalls, jacket.
hat 1' i yarda 54-inch; ' 2 yard
contrast. t
Send TWENTY CENTS '20c)  in
cdni istamps cannot be accepted)
thii    pattern,     Print    plainly
Print
ADDRESS,
STYLE
for
SIZE.  NAME,
NUMBER.
8end your order to  Dally  News
Pattern  Department, Nelson, 8. C
AUNT HET
I "I'd have worrird n.f sirk ehnW.
.my _m><= r\,--p. for onr th:ng If tt
! was riu- :.' happ-r, ;' would havr
happfnrH rich! h-»r" a', home in a
' wrrrk  or  s^mfthlng "
"Some New Year's
Resolutions" Is
Sermon Subject
| NAKt'SP FIT Mnndiv n-.fht It
11 11 ; ■'' » N■"■*• Year's Wa'.hn:jhl
irigh! rt-)-.-,-r -.,, brld Htv Pnvrv's
kilbpr-' -.ii; rl-rr.t cltv.- Year's
i Resohltl -r\. "
Sale of Yule Logs
Nets $25 for
i Junior Red Cross
j    NAKUSP   PT  -Twenty-five doi-
I Isrs wa, raised hv Division II of
|!.»k.i«p S-h"n| hr sale nf Yul* logs
This find will fn to the .tumor Red
Crott for ihr Linden Aalt on Fund
Thr  '••   i'   :,   "vr -o-t   '.    .'.I'    ll   "
VIM"- a    TIC     v |'h    1   lnl.1   'f   SVI
•hlp< r-'t-ri in 1»40 icainil 4032
ibit Hslilax.
LIBERATED BRITISHER FINDI DREAMS DO COME TRUE:
When Corporil Charles Bennett ot the Royal Engineers thought of his
wlte In London wnlli ly.ng In a Japanese prison eamp he always pictured her In a rid dress. Just to make lure she has that red dress
when hi arrived home lometlme thli month the corporal took the flrit
ooportunlty to do a bit of shopping after arriving at Debert Military
Camp along with more lhan 3000 othir Britishers, last week. Hera
the corporal get! "Just the dress I'm looking for", from a saleswoman In
a naarby Truro. N. 8.. departmental store.—Canadian Army Photo.
PARIS—Generil Krx>nl|. Trench , PARIS-Dlrert riilwiy lervice
repreeentitive on the Commiulnn between Ninles end Bordeaux has
of Tour in Berlin me*1e I! plain In . __„__, .„,,h ,h. „„.„,., „i
a recent itatement thet Trance b"n rmm*1 'vt'h ,h* op*n"1* D'
wanted the problem ol governing • temporary bridge croiilng two
Ihe Rhine and Weitem Germeny forki of the Mre River In the Do
cltlrd before that nf a central gov- partmmt nf Vendee Tbt new all-
r-nment wi, tackled Me suggested mrlal stnirt -rr. slid to br the !-_-.r■
-, pleb file might be held lo d"- "St nf Its kind In Fir. r- i< "I.C
i-rmln# whether Genrans thcmiel- '.--' long end required l.'i.) I_iu '»(
ves favored centnliutioo. ,iteel I
A Oermin girl reelgni henelt to ■ generoui delouiing ipraylnf
w,th DDT powdrr ai a German Red Cron aur,_> priperis her fee
evacuation, wit'i othtr Berlin children In the British lone, to special
cai-nri fer t*-e W'ntrr, Vhis mass evacuation is known ei "Opiritlell
Et^r ". and Its purpose is to prevent wholesill stirvatlon among thf
chlltnn.
 s- ■ ''    ■
[■
b '}   A
i .   afc
SIPIED
s
h'.cne 144
PERSONAL
K_Ll' V. AKiJD
PORTUNlTY FOR A BOY, 16
tors, to learn a _,uod ii.ue in a
toady basin-.-s wnich __> not sun-
set to lay-offs. Uo not appiy un-
you really want to learn a
rade that you con slay witn.
fight work in pre.s. stereotype
nd mailing department of daily
liwspaper. Apply William Brown.
lllson ___ News, after 9 pi\i.
WO_ - GIRL " W1TH~S0ME
tuowledge of bookkeeping. One
hat likes to sew and who makes
ier own clothes. Singer Sewing
Jachine Co. _ 	
VNTED - GIRL FOR HOUSE-
rork. Apply Box 1245, Rossland.
^DY WORK" FOR" CHAMBF.R-
nald. Pay by the hour. Ph. 234.
MACHINERY
Special low rates for non-commercial advertisements under
this classification to assist peo-
lle seeking employment. Only
,15c tor one week (6 days) coven
any number of required lines.
Payable In advance. Add 10c U
box number is desired.
[AN
SITUATIONS WANTED
i POSITION
5 ye
eleo-
AGE 34 DESIRES
anywhere. 5 years gas,
trie hoisting experience.
mine, mill and acid plant main
tenance. 4 years truck and mobile
mechanics, Box 4187, Da[ly Nev/s.
HANDY MAN, EXPERIENCED,
with fourth class steam papers,
wishes to get a position in Nelson
or close in. Apply Box 4715, Daily
, flews.	
KPERIENCED CLERK DESIRES
position in hotel or store. Apply
Jtoxm^DailyJtews^	
CPERIENCED    TEACUP    REA-
Jer deiires position in local cafe.
Write BoxJllVDally News. _
USSSMAKING - WILL SEW IN
our home or mine.	
_JUNG MAN DESIRES EMPLOY-
*ent in Nelson. Ph. 338-X.
IVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
THE ItVHICH „,..„*
:hick5 give w>"1"
Earlier hatched chicks are
needed next season!
h will -pay you to °"^e'
before 31st Jan., 1946
Write for further particulars
JX N, LANPLEYTRAH-IE. B.C
I Vernon, B. C.
(Branch Hatcher?)
IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE
SALE
Two and Three Block
Sawmills
Two and Three Saw Edgers
Circular Inserted Tooth
Saws
Pulleys-Solid and Split.
Shafting—Bearings and collars
Pipe, Black and Gal. All sizes.
Pipe Fittings—Valves etc.
Pumps.
Mine Rails
Hoists, single and double drum,
large and small.
Cable and Chains.
Motors, single and three phase.
Compressors.
Steam Engines
Stopers and fcrifters
Jack Hammers.
Interior Distributors for
Spear & Jackson (B.C.) Ltd
Saws,  bits,  holders,  mill  supplies. Challenger Power Chain
saws
Lawrence Manufacturing
Co. Ltd. '
Power units, logging donkeys,
road making machinery.
Johns-Manville Co. Ltd.
Building materials.
The Glidden Company Ltd.
Paints, varnishes and lacquers.
Interior Agents ton
Evinrude Outboard Motors
Electric Lighting Plants
Case Industrial and Farm
.. Products.
Nelson Machinery
-St Equipment Co.
214 Hill St Pbone IB
Mintog, Milling and Sawmill
Machinery. Building and Contractors' Supplies.
"If It's Machinery You Want,
Consult Us".
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Aimer Hottl Opp C.P.R  Depot
FOR SALE -NATIONAL CASH
register. J. Chess, 524 Vernon St.,
Phone ___.
25c Ll0NS Phwut25c
P.O. Box 434. Vancouver
Any 8-exp. roll developed ind printed 55': Reprlnti 3c. Free 5x7 coupon.
	
PUBLIf NOTICES
"	
fluffonShampoo,   rou£
Clairoil, Notox dyei, tints available at beauty ihopi, or Weitern
Beauty Supply, 1001 First St. W„
Calgary.
WH6 IS STALIN? NlXT WAR
1940? Read Armegeddon-MUleni-
um, 100 pages, postpaid, 50c. "Da-
clan," 207 Williams Bldg., Vancouver.
ATTENTION SCHOOL BO"ARl)
secretaries We have a large itock
of newsprint, mimeo and bond
paper and can fill any order Immediately. Daily Newi Printing
Dept., Nelson, British Colombia.
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-
td (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. Reprints 3c each. For your mapshoti
choose Kryital Finish Guarenteea
non-fade prints. Kryttal Photos
Wilkie. Saskatchewaa Eitabliihed
over 30 yean.
LET THE AMAZING FORTUNE
teller help you with your family
problems. Lucky .days and fortunes told with six questions for
one dollar. Please write with ink
to Mdme. Albina, 143 Rupert Ave.,
Winnipeg.	
STOP ITCHING TORTURES OF
eczema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's foot and other skin Irritations with Elik's Ointment No 5
prescription ot noted skin specialist. Itch relieved promptly, ski _
healed rjuleklv or monev refunded, $1.00, $2.00. Mall orders filled
promptly. Order today from Elik's
Medicine Co.. Dept. 42, Saskatoon.
Sask
AUCTION SALE
Timber Sale XJ8123
Then will be offered for sale it
Public Auction, it 13 o'clock noon
on Monday the 18th day of February, IMS in thi office of the District Forester at Nelaon, B.C., the
Licence X38123, to cut 11,431,000
f.b.m. of White Plni, Spruce, Hemlock, Cedar, Fir, Larch ind Balsam and 170,000 lineal feet of Standing md Midi Cedir Polis and Piling on an area lituited on Koch
Creek, Koptenay Land District.
Two (2) years will be allowed for
removal of timber.
"Provided anyone unable to attend the auction ln person may
submit tinder to be opined at the
hour of auction and treated as one
bid." '
Further particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister of
Forests, Victoria, B.C., or the District Forester at Nelson, B.C.
WANTED, MISCELUNEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or Iron. Any quantity. Top pricei
paid. Active Trading Company,
91(1 Powell St.. Vancouver. B.C.
STOP SUFFERING FROM FOL-
lowing stomach Disorders: Acid
Stomach, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Coated Tongue, Bad Breath, Sicl;
Headaches, etc. Use Elik's Stomach powder No. 2, prepared by
experienced Pharmacist It must
give immediate results or money
back, $1, $2. Elik's Medicine Company, Dept. 42, Saskatoon, Sask.
ed. Sl.OO. $2.00. Mail orderi filled
promptly. Order today from Ellk's
National Single and Double
Drum Gasoline Hoists
Ideal  for  Log  Loading,   Land
Clearing, Dragline and Building
Construction.
NATIONAL MACHINERY CO.
LTD.
.   .       -.Vancouver, B£.
"ALL BUYERS OF BABY
CHICKS IN 1946.
Tour future profits from poul-
Rr will be determined by the qua-
, pt itock you buy. Our new
intoy tann, backed by thirty
ars poultry breeding expen-
ice ls devoted exclusively to the
production of strong, healthy,
iroductlon-bred stock. Only birdi
m this farm are used to produce
wr bibr chicki ln White Rocks.
LOJ?. Sired White Leghorns and
lew Hampshires. Write for our
Uuatrated 1948 price list
MfPLEBY POULTRY FARM
i™     Mission Clty^BC.	
BTes-Tquality ro.p.-sired
Rhode Island Red and New Hamp-
Ihlre Chicks at my regular price
of $4 for 25, $8 for 50. $15 for 100
Book   your    1948   Chicks    now
IEORGE GAME, RO.P. Breeder,
Irmstrong, BC
RBER CHICKS NOW. R.OP. SIH-
ld White Leghorns. R.OP. sired
New H.-mpshitcs. Lcghorn-Hamp-
Aire crosses. Austra-White crots-
G. T. Armstrong. Surrey
Centre. BC.
5fr~SALE-3 FRESH YOUNG
oows, 4 and 5 years old. Apply R
C. McNown, Kokanee.    	
,.. SXLE1 FRESH COW. APPLY
Alex Chernoff, Thrums. B.C.	
RENTALS
antoTto "rent piano by
the month Care of ume guaranteed. Ph. W. Jackson, 488-R, between 5 and 7 p.m.	
aSTed-apt, furnished ok
infurnlihcd. for c<nipl«. No children. Phone 1096. ,	
bison Sathi Xtvoa
telephone im
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lie per line per Insertion
44c por line per week <6 con
tecullvc Insertions for colt of 4)
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(26 timet)'
Minimum 2 llnei per Insertion
Box numbers lie extra. ThU
roven any number of tlmej
PUBLIC (LEGAL! NOTICES.
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ftayahlt In advance
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By carrier, per v.rek
In  advance »
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Side regular  "tee,  arr.i
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Where extra p^taee Is required
One month «t Wl ""i** m " "*•
$4 00 •'> mm.Ihs W00. ore jrar
tl*,_>
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
OF RELIABLE MINING
MACHINERY
Mancha Trams and Mucking Machines, Mine Rails,
Pipe, Compressors, Rock-
Crushers, Ball Mills, Stopers, Jack Hammers, Valves.
Vancouver Sales &
Appraisals Limited
846 Beach Avenue
Vancouver, B. C
CAMPBELL LOANS
GIVE YOU
LITE   INSURANCE    AT   NO
EXTRA       COST.       LONGER
TERMS AT REDUCED RATES
FROM $20 TO $1000
CAMPBELL
FINANCE CORPORATION
LIMITED
WANTED   -   SMALL  BILLIARD
table. Box 1, Broadwater, Lower
Arrow Lakes.
SKATESTBOYS', SIZE 2 AND 12.
Lady's, size 6. Phone 598L.
SHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR-
gan. Nelson. B.C.     	
FARM, GARDEN & NURSERY
fiESTCO^
Dynamiters Slap Down Smokies
S-3 in Fast-Skating,
Tight Back-Checking Exhibition
KIMBERLEY, I. C, Jan. 9-Klmberley Dynamiter! hammered
out ■ decisive 8-3 vlotory ovar Trtll Smoke Eaten In a Wast Kootenay Sanlor HOokty League unto hare latt night
Smoke Eatira matched Dynamlten In tha firtt two ptrlodi and
play wm mora or Ittt on tvtn terms but tht looal turn took ovtr
complete commtnd In tht Ittt atttlon and Trail Juit couldn't cope
with tht fttt-ikltlng tnd tight back-checking of tht Klmberley squad.
Dynamiters opened the scoring In the Initial period and held a 2-1
advantage alter the centre session and outscored Smoke Eaten 6-2 in
 —i—■ »the finale. The teams meet here
NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1946 — 9
SPORTS
(ADDITIONAL SPORT ON PAGE SEVEN)
WALNUT TREES-FREE CIRCU-
lars available. Write Jack Gellit-
ly, Canada's leading producer ot
new and better nut trees. Box 19,
Westbank, B.C. ^^
ROOM AND BOARD
WANTED BY STUDENT-BOARD
and room in exchange tor light
household duties. Box 4510 Dally
News.
560 Baker St.
Above fink's
Phone 1095
Ready-to-Wear
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
WHY NOT CHANGE YOUR FIRE
insurance on Household Etfecb to
a FLOATER ALL BISK 'OLICY.
This protects you against Fire and
Theft and many other haiards,
either at home ot travelling. Ask
us for particulars. C. W. Apple-
yard k Co.
WE HAVE A NUMBER OF EX-
eeHtnti ftrrot for sale ln the Eastern Irrigation District at Brooks,
Alta. Write us for particulars.
GARROW AGENCIES, Brooks,
Alberta. „______
WANTED TO RENT-FARM SUIT"-
able for mixed farming, with fair
house and outbuildings. Must be
near school. K. S. Brown, R R. 2,
North Road, New Westminster.
FOR SALE - IMMSDIA^E POS
F.A.C. Bantams
Beat Dodgers M
F.A.C. Bantams, in one of their
closest games to date, defeated the
Dodger Bantams 7-3 in a league
game at thc Civic Arena Saturday
morning. The Dodgers became Just
the second team to score three goals
against Goalie Koehle of the
F.A.C.'s, who pulled off some smart
saves to rob the Dodgers on several
different occasions. Grundy in the
Dodger net had a lot of pucks to
stop and played his best game to
date.
Jimmy Todd, was again the big
noise on tl* F.A.C.'s first line, and
he drove in six of the seven goals,
and aided in the other one, scored
by his team mate, Ron Brown. Rod
Carmichael, the third member of
this line, added three assists, Brown
also being in on an assist. Brian
Johnston got the other two assists.
Lawrence Ludlow, Jack Woodall
and BuddV Mayer scored the Dodger goals, with Chursinoff and Ludlow earning assists.
IP penalties Brown, Davis snd B
Johnston were sent off for the winner!, with Delfuppo doing time for
the Dodgers.
Teams were:
F.A.C—Koehle, goal; Johnston,
Todd, Brummitt, R. Carmichael.
Brown, B. Carmichael, Cooper, O-
genski, Davis and Langridge.
Dodgers—Grundy, goal; Johnson,
Ludlow. Woodall, Stringer, Mayer,
Lythgoe, Posnikov, Chursinoff, DelPuppo, B. MacLean.
Referees, Fred Leeming and Jim
Ringrose;     Timekeeper,    Warrior;
With lhe Legion
Bowlers
Canadian Legion bowleri renew
action on the 10-pln alleys Tuesday
when play for the Bob Main Cup
begins. Play ln the mixed bowling
competition will be on a points
basis, highest total to win the Cup.
A 20-schedule begins Jan. 8 and
winds up Feb. 22.
Players arriving after the second frame has been complete will
be penaliied, taking the opposing
team't low score. Games begin at
7:30 p.m. sharp.
The teams:'
A. Oliver, Mrs. J. Annable, S.
Wigg, Mrs. D. McGinn and R.
Wools.
R. Olsen, Mrs. J. Edwards, W.
Leslie, Mrs. T. Stemson Snd K.
Musfelt.
A. Kraft, Mrs. A. Dingwall, O. Anderson, Mrs. C. Deferro and H.
Miller.
E. Bowkett, Mrs. A. Kraft, N.
Bradley, Mrs. V. Musfelt and J. Hendren.
V. Graves, Mrs. G. Mills, E. Anderson, Mrs. R. Olsen and T. Parkinson.
R. Riley, Mrs. V. Graves, J. Bradley,  Mrs.  R.  Smith and  S.  New-
«"■
J. Hamson, Mrs. J. Chapman, C.
Cummins, Mrs. S. Newell snd P.
Vecchio.
W. Duckworth, Mrs. C. Cummins,
Bert Musfelt, Mrs. A. Oliver and
F. Donnenworth.
The schedule:
Jsn.   8—R. Olsen vs V. Graves.
Jan.   9—R. Riley vs E. Bowkett.
Jan 10—A. Kraft vs A. Oliver.
Jan. 11—J. Hamson vs W. Duckworth.
Jsn. 14—R. Riley vs A. Oliver.
Jan. 17—E. Bowkett vs A. Kraft.
Jan. 18—V. Graves vs W. Duckworth.
Jan. 21—E. Bowkett vs R. Olsen.
Jan 22—V. Graves vs A. Oliver.
Jan. 24—J. Hamson vs A. Kraft.
Jan. 25—R. Rllty vs W. Duckworth.
Jan. 28-J. Hamson vi R. Olsen.
Jan. 2»-R. Riley vs A. Oliver.
Jan. 31—W. Duckworth vs I. Bowkett.
1—V. Graves vs A. Kraft.
4—W. Duckworth vs R. 01-
5—J. Hamson vs V. Grsves.
7—E. Bowkett vs A. Oliver.
8—R. Riley vs A. Kraft.
11—J. Hamson vs J. Bow-
Feb.
Feb.
sen.
Feb.
reb.
F.b
rcb.
kett
Feb. 12—R Olsen vs A. Oliver.
Feb. 14—W. Duckworth vs A.
Kraft.
Feb. 15—R. Riley vs V. Grsves.
Feb. IB— R. Olsen vs A. Kraft.
Fe^. 19—E. Bowkett vs V. Graves
Feb. 21—J. Hamson vs R. Riley.
Feb. 22—W. Duckworth vs A
Oliver.
session, 5-roomed house, Fairview,
$3250.    Apply    Box   1119,   Daily
News. 	
SIX-ROOM HOUSE FOR" SALE- | Scorer, N. Hyssop.
On car line, near ichool. Ph. 957Y.
HOUSE-FO-TSALE. S. P. POND.
Phone 827-R.
AIR COMPRESSORS. WE HAVE
for Immediate delivery from stock
Schramm 210 cu. ft Diesel driven portable compressor; also
Schramm 210 cu. ft and 105 cu.
ft gasoline driven portable compressors, all self starting. Purves
E. Ritchie k "Son Ltd., 658 Hornby, Vancouver.
AUTOMOTIVE.
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
NATIONAL PORTABLE isrW-
MILLS are strongly built for economical production to suit Western Canadian timber. Manufactured by NATIONAL MACHINERY
CO. LTD.. Vancouver^j.C.
PAINT SPRAY COMPRESSORS"
complete with hose and guts, In
stock. AIR EQUIPMENT SERVICE LTD, 1401 Homby SL, Van-
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
A88AYtRS  AND  MINE
^REPRESENTATIVES
E. W WIDDOWSON k CO. ASSAY-
ers. 301 Josephine St, Nelson.
ft S ELMES. ROSSLAND. B. C,
Assayer, Chemist, Mine Rprsntve.
THE WEST KOOTENAY ASSAY
Office. 410 Kootenay St. Nelson.
aTj BUIE, Independent Mine Rep-
ruentallve. Box 54. Trail. B.C.
.   GENUINE
CHRYSLER PARTS
AND ACCESSORIES
tor    all    CHRYSLER    BUILT
CARS and TRUCKS.
Largest stock ln Interior.
PEEBLES MOTORS
Ltd.
FOR SALE - 1935 CHEVROLET
Maple Leaf 2-ton truck. Dual it nr
wheels, good rubber, with or without steel box and hydraulic hoist
Will take trade or cordwood. Ap-
ply Moynes Motors. Trail. B. C
Sealed  beam   headlight-.
City Auto Wreckers. Nelson. BC.
FOR SALE, MISCELUNEOUS
Market Trends
Chinook Halls
Winter Sports
again Monday night.
Calles led the Dynamlttrs with
four goals. Seray, a ntw pltyer,
Slugg, Sullivan and Sanderson netted tne others. Buckna, Nichol tnd
Menzies scored to Trill. ,
Tht game started off vtry ttit
tnd Scodellaro tnd Nash both made
many sensational stops, At 9:10
Calles opened the icorlng for Klmberley on a perfect pas trom Brown.
As the period drew to a close, Klmberley on a perfect pau from Brown,
own tone and only sensational goal-
tending by Scodellaro kept Kimberley trom scoring again.
Starting the second period, Trail
applied terrific pressure and hit
the post twice. Nash, playing as
he did 10 years ago for Port Arthur,
was kicking them out from every
angle, then in a flash it wis Kimberley swarming all over Trill.
Scodellaro kicked out six or seven
shots from close range, but finally
Seray poked it ln. At the 17-min-
ute mark of the second period Buckna got in the clear as he returned to
the Ice after serving a penalty and
beat Nash with a shot to the corner
for Trail's first goal.
REFENCE FALLS APART
On the first play of the third
period Calles scores on a pass from
Redisky. Trail's second goal was
on a very classy combination effort,
Nicol from Kwasnie and Marshall.
Then the Trail defence fell spirt,
and in the next 17 minutes Kimberley beat Scodellaro five times,
while the best Trail could do was
score twice. In this period both
Nash and Scodellaro made many
brilliant stops and every goal that
was sc.red was earned. Had it not
been for the very clever goal-tending, the score could have been
much higher.
Klmberley had two new players
in their line-up, Redisky snd Seray.
Redisky looked very good, especially
at breaking up Trail playi. Seray
also fits ln nicely.
The three stars chosen by Hugo
Mackie, former Dynamiter star,
were Calles, Buckna, Nash. Referee
was Chris Sorenson, Judge of Play,
Puffy Kemp; Official Scorer, Art
Mackie.
Summary:
First period—1, Klmberley, Cslles
(Brown) 9:10,
Penalty—Zak.
Second period—2, Kljnberley, Seray, 10:00; 3, Trail, Buckna (Kwasnie) 17:00.
Penalty—Buckna.
Third period—4, Klmberley, Calles   (Redisky)   :20;  S, Trsil, Nicol
(Kwasnie, Marshall) 3:40; J, Kimberley, CaljM, TM; 1, Klmberley,
Slutt  (Wilson, Holditch), »:18; 8,
Kimberley, Calles (Slugg, Sullivan)
10:00;  9. Trail, Meniies, 12:10;  10,
Kimberley,   Sanderson,   (Redisky)
13:40; 11, Klmberley, Sullivan (Seray) 15:50.
Lineups:
Trail — Scodellaro, Crowder.
Barnes, Cronie, Buckni, Menzies,
Anderton, Marshall, Luke, Marshall, Kwasnie, Nicol and Kwong.
Kimberley — Nash, Johnson,
Brown, Calles, Sullivan, Redisky,
Sanderson, Holditch, Slugg, Wilson,
Seray and Zak.
Vancouver Canucks Seem Certain
lo Finish Atop Northern Section
of Pacific (oast Senior Puck Loop
VANCOUVER, Jan. « (CP) - A
scoring average ot almost tlvt goals
in etch game has lifted Vancouver
Canucks Into a comfortable lead in
the Northern section of the Pacific
Coast "Senior Amateur, Hockey League.
With the teams just past the half
way mark In their schedule, the
Canucks look like a certainty to
finish the season ln first place.
Most of the Vancouver scoring
punch is concentrated in four for
a points system It used ln establish'
ing the standings. Vancouver has
.688, New Westminster .552; Portland .467 and Seattle .400.
In the Southern section Oakland
(.737) leads by a wide margin with
the others ln the following order:
Los Angeles .529; San Diego .444;
Hollywood .368; and San Francisco
213.
If Vancouver or New Westminster
gain affiliation with the C.A.H.A.,
they will be allowed to enter the
wards—Bill Carse, Ab McDougall,! Allan Cup playoffs and would meet
Alex Pringle and Andy Clovechuk. | the West Kootenay Senior Hockey
Carse has 18 goals and 24 assists;
TUcDougall 26-13; Pringle 23-16; and-
Clovechuk, a late starter, 26-11,
In the point-scoring race these
Canucks are bunched from fourth
to seventh. With tht exception of
Carse, a playmaker, the Vancouver
scorers all have more goals than assists.
The two leading point makers
havt more assists than goals and
both play for Portland — Eddie
Shamlock 26-32 and Red Carr 18-29.
After an early season spurt, New
Westminster Royals, coached by
Cltrenae Moher, have slid back a
bit but they still hold a safe margin
in second place. Portland is third
and Seattle fourth.
Because the league's two divisions
play a different number of games—
58 in the Northern and 38 in the
Southern—a percentage rather than
League winner ln the first round.
The Pacific Coast League is affiliated with the United States Amateur Hockey Association.
In the only junior league ln the
province, New V/estminster Cubs
has been surging ahead in recent
weeks and now 'are only a half
game behind the League-leading
Nanaimo Clippers who went .far
ahead early In the schedule. The
loop's other team, Vancouver White
Spots, are IVi games behind New
Westminster.
The junior league jumped trom
B to A classification this season in
hopes of entering tho Memorial Cup
playoffs but a series' with Edmonton
Canadians showed none of the Pacific Coast teams is of Memorial Cup
calibre and there is some doubt a
British Columbia-Albertt playoff
will be staged.
Canadiens Win Over Bruins Rough
on Players; Five Are Casualties
NEW YORK-Scattered favorites
continued to reach for recovery in
Saturday stock market although an!-
With Stane
and Besom
CRANBROOK, BC-The heavy
snow which began late in October,
has gradually been disappearing
mation still was lacking and many here as the pre-Christmas Chinook
leaders backed Into slight^ losing continued over the first week of There will be no Nelson Curling
territory. January.   The mild spell broke up club games for the Collinson Cup
WINNIPEG—Rye futures prices a December of unusual severity i Monday night due to the Ice Carni-
on the grain exchange were lrregu-  during the early weeks val. Cup games continue during the
lar Saturday in sympathy with Chi-      Students home for the holidays: remainder of the week. Draws for
cago   There wu some commission ' from various schools at the Coast the games are
house and local demand. were disappointed in the mild wu-
At the dose prices were V, high-   ther which spoiled skiing, skating
er-i, lower with May $1,924; July   and curling they had anticipated.
$1.81., and Oct. $1.60. Ice  In  the  two  rinks   built  up
United Kingdom took 320.000 bu-  during December, softened quickly
shels of wheat in  thc only export   »nd   only   occasionil   skating   and , McLaren, E. W. Kopeckl vs L. De-
transactlon reported. «"■'"•«   *«"?  P°"ible  dlJ,rl"|*   <hl\ sireau.
CHICAGO — Moderately strnni fortnight. Snow was suitable Ior, 9 p m _j. Thorns vs A. R. Moore;
demand held grain futures prices 'kung only at the higher levels al.g Bo,tock v, H. Wassick; S. Hay-
higher  most   of  the  time,  despite  a considerable distance (rom town. - don y, j B Gray. j H Allan v, H
MONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CP)-Mont-
real Canadiens thumped Boston
Bruins 4-2 before 12,665 fans Saturday in a fast, bruising National
Hockey League contest which proved disastrous to both teams as five
players were injured.
No. 1 casualty was Bruins' star
ptvotman Bill Cowley who suffered
a compound fracture of his left
wrist in the lecond period and may
be out of hockey "for the rest of the
season."
Bill Durnan, Canadiens" star
goalie, broke his right hand by
stopping a Bobby Bauer shot In the
third period and after a lO-mtnute
visit to the Clinic, returned to finish
the game. But he will now be out
if tht MWtf to at leait a-month.
Botton'i tamed "Kitchener Line"
will be completely disorganized for
the next few games. Bauer aggravated a shoulder injury and will
have to rest for ah '"Indefinite period." Milt Schmidt suffered a hip
injury ,and Defenceman Murray
Henderson was reported to have a
lorn ligament ln his back.
Lineups:
Boston: Brlmsek; Egan, Henderson; Cowley; Cain, T. Reardon.
Subs: Crawford. Gallinger, Guidolin. Dumart, Schmidt, Bauer, McGill, Church.
Montreal: Durnan; Bouchard,
Lamoureux; Lach; Blake, Richard.
Subs: HiUer, Harmon, O'Connor,
Benoit, Reay, nilion. Peters, K.
Reardon, McMahon.
Referee: King Clancy. Linesmen:
Pean Bennett and Ken Mullins.
Summary:
First period:
1. Montreal, Blake (Lach, Richard)
10:33; 2, Montreal, O'Connor 14:00;
3, Montreal, Blake iLach)   18:01.
Penalties:  Guidolin,  Benoit.
Second period:
4, Boston, T. Reardon (Cain) :80;
5, Boston, Cain (McGill) 10:S2; 9,
Montreal, Blake (Lach, Harmon)
19:30.
Penalties: Bouchard, Egan.
Third period:
Scoring: None.
Penalties:  Guidolin, Lach.
Tuesday:
7 pm.—W. Brown vs 1. Laughton; T. S. Jemson vi W. R. Dunwoody; G. S. Godfrey vi R. D.
Hickey; T. E. Homershsm vi J. P.
HAWK8 OVERRUN LIAM
TORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP) - With
Max Bentley acting as trigger man
on two deft passing plays and vat-
em Mike Karakas performing brilliantly in goal, Chicago Black
Hawks swept to a 3-0 triumph over
Toronto Maple Leafs Saturday before 13,795 fans.
Bentleys' two goals, coupled with
a late third-period tally by Clint
.Smith, enabled the hustling Hawks
to remain on even terms with Montreal Canadiens In the National
Hockey League's leadership race.
Canadians defeated Boston Bruini
1-2.
Chicago: Karakas;.R. Hamilton,
Wares; M. Bentley; D. Bentley, Kal
ieta. Subs: Marluccl, Smith, Allen,
Cooper, Gee, Grosso, Hamill, Horeck.
Toronto: McCool; Stanowskl,
Goldham; Apps; Stewart, Bodnar.
Subs: Pratt, Davidson, Taylor, Hill,
Carr, Schriner, Metz, J. Hamilton,
Dickens.
Referee: Bill Chadwick; Linesmen: Eddie Mepham Jim Primeau.
Summary:
First period:
1, Chicago, M. Bentley (D. Bentley, Allen) 6:00.
Penalties: Davidson, Cooper.
Scoring: None.
Penalties: R. Hamilton. Goldham,
D. Bentley, Bodnar, Grosso (raajort,
Schriner (major).
Third  period:
2. Chicago, M Bentlev (Kaleta)
9:47; 3. Chicago, Smith (Allen, Horeck)   13:31.
Penalties: Stanowskl, Bodnar
considerable distance from town
In town the heavy holiday traffic ^....h
on packed snow snd warm winds
has formed single ruts down to the
pavement which makes driving difficult, particularly at the intersections.   Highways are bare in places
.   .rA,A   but  ice  continues on  serene ot the
Commission    houses   were   «ood   ^   ^^   §(   ^   illiludeJ
early profit-taking in wheat folio-
inc  reports  of afirly  Kood  genera
rains In the Great Plains region.
Wheat rallied after tha inltla
liquidation was absorbed snd show
ed  fractional  gains at times
 C HIR OP HACTOR8
J. COLIN McLAREN, D C dH-Jto-
practlc X tay Splnography. Strand
Theatre Bldg, Trail tfg^PKja
mAMONP~pRiLLeR~a
NATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING
CO. LTD. Drilling and Bit Service. Box 508, Rowland, B.C
E^OINTtRS  Affb iuRVlYO^f
it W HAGGEN. MIHI-.G AND
Civil Euslneer BC Lend Survivor Rmslard snd Grand Font.
Bo^^FFEcOTgTJoT^sT, ■ i___±L£l
Nelson nr Surveyor. Engineer : PIPE - JTTTIN(_T5 -TUBES, Sn
— ~-_ r_==_m-===m_W~*u' rial low prion Arllve Trading
INSURANCE  AND REAL ESTATE       ,..     ,,„   ,,,,wp||   S|     V«ncoT_>rr
CHAS'F MciiAKlVy. rNSURATRX , j^"^ vSfn'HOlISfHOI.1) AR-
_ "i-11 '-''"If .rh^_'?i_«_ .__ '    tides Pav len at Ark Store
"  machinist!  (________<-^____.__--t_»- __
LOST AND FOUND
BUILDERS!
Wt ctrry the most complete stock
in tha province of
Sash, Doors, windows, Frames
Immedlste ihlpment from 300 sliei
and designs
All sash and windows art
dipped In the famoui
WOODLIFF.
WOOD PRESERVATIVE
and need no priming coat
before Installing
They will not
SWELL, SHRINK OR  WARP
Out-of-town orders ihlpped
promptly
North Shore 5ash «nd Door Co
North-Van. II C
buyers of rye and gains of around
a cent a bushel held throughout
most nf the seuion.
Wheat cloied unchanged lo S cent
higher,  corn  unchanged  «t $1114
ceilings; oits H to  1 cent higher,
VA  higher,  birley  un-
lower
rye   '\   to  lit
changed to V«
Dodger Hidgets
Blank Panthers
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPEG, Jan 6 (CP)-Gnln
quotations.
Prev
Open High Low Cloie Close
Mar     1114 192S 190S 1924 191
July     1"!     1824 1"0** l»l'» "OS
Oct.        - -     IM     1604
Oata: (All futures at celling prlrel
of 314 1
Cash prices:
Oils 2 2 c w 514. »x 3 c w. 314
3 c.w. 514: e« 1 feed 514. 1 feed
314; 2 feci 504: 3 feed 49. trark
514.
Rye 1 c w I 924, 1 rw 1934. 3
co- I HI4. re) 2 c w. 1 J74. 4 r w
HIS. truck 1924. »
Scrrenlngc   $12 50  ■   ton
L. S. Bridley n T. A. Wil-
lace,
Wedneiday:
7 pm—J. J. McEwen vs C. H.
Marshall; F. Ewing vl F. H. Smith;
P. E. Poulin vs H. Horton; A. B.
Gilker vs A. Ronmark; H. Greenwood vs G. Fleury.
9 pm—A. S. Horswill vi E, C.
Hunt: H. .1. Witchell vs H D. Harrison. W. Laishley vs R. A. Peebles;
A H. Whlteh.ad vs A. Jeffs; A.
W»terj vs H. M. Whimster.
Thursday:
7 pm—K. McRory vs R, D. Wallace, W. Marr vs G. Ronmark; A. R.
Moore   vs   W.   R.   Dunwoody;   J
$175r000 Deal Sends Catcher
Cooper to Giants From Cards
Mr. Stoneham added.
Only twice before has as much
as $175,000 In cash been involved
in a player deal. In 1938, the Cards
sent Pitcher l))u.y Dean to the Chl-
■y SID FEDIR
NEW YORK, Jsn. 6 (AP) — In
one of the three biggest money deals
In baseball history. Catcher Walker
Cooper was sold today by the St.,
Louis Cardinals to the Now York i c*i" Cub' for imm in ca,h "nd
Giants for $175,000 in cash.
Confirming the "most publicized , ,rnt joe Cronin to the Boston Red
secret" nf the winter season. Giant Sox (or tjVn LtTy tni „ ,um ln
President Horace Stoneham Insisted cash variously reported anywhere
that no players were involved in the   from $150,000 In $2110,000.
, three additional playen.   After the
19.14 oimp.-iiKn, Washington Senators
Dodger  Midget.  k.pt   tt.lr   24   ; «£   » f"'   ___%_?£__
irti/s     \osiri    nvor    !h»    H»f"..nf1     DlftCC "•__..
gime  lead over the i«-ond place       . R ^.^
9 pm.--R. Foxill vs A. E. Murphy;
„   W. Brown vs J. J. McEwen; L. De-
The g.
FA.C'i   when   they  walloped
Panther Midgets 9-0 In another Mid-
let League game Siturday morning
rhe game was featured by numerous penalties. 10 being handed out
eau vi A. G. Harvty; G, 8. Oodfrey vs T. S. Jemion; T. H. Bourqut
alto.
grther. six to the Dodgers snd   v» J  P- McLar">-
Friday:
7 p.m.—A. O. Ritchie vs. H. D.
Harrison; W. Ltlshley vs A. Jeffs;
A.  H   Whitehead  vs H   M. Whlm-
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine Shop   acetylene  and
electric welding,  motor  rewinding
Phone 593 324 Vernon S^
STTTVFrrfS-Ws MACHINE SHOP- I
Rneciallsls In mine and mill work
Machine  work,  light add  heav)
Electric   nnd   Arrtvlenr   welding
7r« Vernon St   Nelson Ph OS '
Z_i____l_i_ ACCOUNTANT
WotrW M~ifo'9aW5
Chartered Acroimtant
115 Victoria SL Trail Ph   »M i
s«f hNb~HANi_r Ifowfi™1
wk ftrY sT.l.i. and rxrHANr.fi
Whst have you* Ph   M'   Ark Store.
I.O.ST - LADY'S BLACK SEAL
muff Reward if returned tn Box
1033. Dc-llr News
IUSINISS   OPPORTUNITIES
PAINTER AND DECORATOR
wants Jobcr industrious partner
Small Investment only. Chance
for ex-rervice-nan wanting to
learn tnde Box 29M Dally New,
four to the Punthari
Johnny Bichynikl paced the
Dodgerl with thru goali. Hyuop
tr'.tlng two, while Staples. Stedilr,
M,.rea and Trlckett got one each
Assist* wrnt to Stedilr with two.
Hyssop, Staples and Stainton one
each In penaltlei Stainton wai
ihis.d three tfm.i. Kennedy. Hyssop and Mores one oarh Iteming, vi J. Laughton; R. McRory
Misuraca. Zemik and Jackman took Haydon.
ihe Panther penaltlei.
deal and the purchase of Cooper is
not contingent on when the best
catcher in baseball is discharged
from the United States Navy. He
May 2 and Is stationed at Lambert
Field, near St. Louis.
"However, we hope that Cooper
will be out of the Navy by April."
Record House Sees
Shamrocks Fail
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.,
Ill certainly the biggest deal
we've ever made," Mr. Stoneham
said.
It is probably the first time In aU
baseball history that a single player
past his 30th birthday-he will be
31 Tuesday-was bought for cash
well up ln lix figures.
ELKS CUMBER INTO
FIRST-PLACE TIE
SASKATOON, Jin. • (CP) -
Saskatoon   Elks, maintained   thalr
Jan. 8
(CP)--Plavlng   before   the   largeit ,'
house of the season, the San Fran-; undefeated record on home Ice and
Cisco   Shamrocks   dropped   a   close   moved  Into  a first place tit  with
.t«r. H. J Witchill vs H. H. Suther-' e,n
land. A. S Horswill vi J. B. Gray
9 pm- P. E. Poulln vl G. rieury;
A   H  Gilker vs II. Farenholti; T. H
Smith vs C   H   Marshlll, F   Ewing
S
thc   Oakland   Oaks
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Teams ware:
1 Dodgeri-Milr. goal. Mores, Slain-
I ton. Stedile, Trlckett. Bachynski
NEW YORK. Jan. 8 (CP) Tht 1 Kennedy, Hyuop, Staplea.
Canadian dollar wai unchanged tt | panther*-Dnail, goal; Mliuraca
a diicounl of 9 318 per cent In j Warlor, Mannlngi, Turnbull. Leam-
termi of UnlUd Statei fundi In! mc. Strong. Jerk-nan. 7,-vnlk
rloalng foreign exchange deallngi Referees
Saturday     (Ottawa    Foreign    Ex- j Mash   and
Wolves Take Tight
Battle 6-3
LOS   ANGELES,   Calif.,   Jan.   8
(CP)—Hollywood Wolvn capturtd
a dote 8-9 victory from Los Ang tin
I _ro.    Hyuop.   Ron | Monarchi In see-itw Southern dlv-
Jim   Ringrow.   Tkn«- | islon Pacific Coast Htckty Leigut
1 Calgary and Edmonton In the Weft-
minutes of overtime b)' a 4-J KOrt I Ctl__. ^^ Hofk      j ,
in s Southern division Pacific Coal  ,       d|        w||h  ,  ,_, yM        ov,r
..ague   game   hert   I"** j Edmonton Flyers More 4100 fins
at the Arena here Saturday night.
Coming from behind a 2-1 deficit
at the ertd nf the first period. Elks
equalised the score In the second
pfriod and scored the winner in the
first half of the third.
Hnckry     L<
night
Guy Rnarh scored two for thr
Oaka and Ed Olson and John Rav-
nak supplied thr others. Bucky
Buchanan icored a hat trick for
Shamrocks, banging In all three of
hla teama goa'.j.
change   Board   rates   I.OS-Sil   per   keeper and Scorer. Ed Barhynakl      game here last nl^ht
cent dis I The pound starling was  has been in Iht irrvice ilnce las
unchanged at $4034.	
ST. JAMES WINS
Pair by Koch
Flattens Skyhawks
NEW WESTMINSTER, BC, Jan
S (CPi-Paced by Bob Koch, who
Dtde Klein lnl Al Keating ltd I banged   in  two  last  period   goals.
tha Wolves each acorlng a pair tnd ■ Hew    Wntmlhitar    Royals    over-
Jo« Del Monti and Blink BtUinger threw the San Diego Skyhawki 3-3
PHILS OFFICIAL DIES
PHILADELPHIA. Jan. 8 (API -
Jimmy Hagan. Philadelphia Phillies' road arrrrtary for nrarly 30
years, died today. Hr was 58
He ininrd the Phllilra as an office
boy In 1903. Previously h« was a
copy boy In the sports department
>oy In the a
old Evening
wnHAM   Ilncoln CPS-Wlthim      MINNEAPOLIS. Jan. 8 (CP)-A mlUd  tht  o'hirt.  Pit tXyin  ww in an Inler-dlvHlonal Pacific Coast I of thr old Evening Irlrgraph
mai£trtttt niWC*rUtr«t w- not  St     Jamei.    ..iburb.n    Winnipeg, top Monarch ,com with two gotlt, Hockey Leigue glm. hire last night,    During   hi.   43   yeses   with   the
ftEA~.m'   PABT/lB   BUBIWIflU   A- _™J~7l orri.Tm a"I thhTyear ,,    hockey team d.f.atld thi Unlvers- while Hirry Blick. Nick Ev.nlhen      Ollie Dorohoy netted Royals o her   Phils.   Hagan   served   lhe   tram   In
M,ta,nl   WHtr  M .    A   llicl,    fmrTTo Tun"   ,Z tr"!l."open   .It  ot  Minnesota 7-4 in an axhlbi- and John Richardson accounted for   marker whllt Cat S.eirnM and Orv   every   official   capacity   lav.   that
Hon game herr Saturday night. singletons                              *          , Smith were Skyhawki mirkimen.    I nf manager ur president.      ,
aids, ll.« 425   Roisland
two hours CCra on Bojing Day.
_^__
 -
*******
	
•*emmmmmmmmm
10 — NILSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7,1941
'HiiminiiiHinmin: im»niimi>ww«wwwiwuiH;"*.'"!'iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii
^-JackOawon
U-jhforlJugl,-
ift Louise ftanJjf/ Pi'erto
H-PpyBut Seller
inJ
<-***f!!£P*»w**CM**-*_IW J
ROBERT HUTTON-JEAN SULLIVAN ALAN HALE
DONALD WOODS • ANDREA KINO oir.ci.d et
Sci.in Pliy by Loom Rindill PI.non From     MICHAEL   CURTIZ
hii Book "Rouihly Sp.ikln,- . Muilc Compoi.a end Ad.pUd by Mm IMMr
Lateit World Newi
Cartoon:
"Tale of Two Mice"
TONIGHT, TUE., WED.
Shows at 7:00-8:57
Civic
_llll_IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIItlll_ lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
TONIGHT - TUESDAY
Complete Showi
7:00-9:13
God Is Subject of
Lesson-Sermon
God was the subject ot the lesson-
sermon in all Churches ol Christ,
Scientist, on Sunday.
The lesson-sermon included the
following passages from the Bible:
"Whither shall I go from they spirit? or whither shall I flee from tncy
presence? 'f I ascend up into heaven, thou . e there: if I make my
bed in hell, behold, thou are there."
Psalms 139: 7, 8.
Among the selections from the
Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health With Key to the
Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy,
was the following: "The God-principle is omnipresent and omnipotent. God is everywhere, and nothing apart from Him is present or
has power."
iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii   |      r  L!na|
Postpones
Emergency Meet
OUR STOCK or
OFFICE
STATIONERY
is complete.
Mann, Rutherford
DRUG CO.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Rossland Legion
Auxiliary Installs
ROSSlAND, B. .fl, June 8-The
■y MORRIE LAND9BERG
TOKYO, Jan. « (AP)—Premier
Jljuro Shldehara's storm-tossed cabinet, weathering the first shock of
Oen. MacArthur'a political purge,
Saturday postponed until ' Sunday
a scheduled emergency session to
discuss ways of-comoliance.
The cabinet's chief secretary Indicated tht government might attempt to remain ln power by reorganization rather than resigning
Ladles Auxiliary to the Canadian en matte. Tokyo newapapers spec-
r__.__.__,- u.u'». t.n,,.™ h,,.!*... ulated that the new Allied directives
Legion held its January business untouched  only the
meeting ln the Legion Hall Thursday night, the President, Mrs. T. 0.
Wood, presiding, when plant were
made for the social evening for
Jan. IT with Mrs. D. McMillan and
Mrs. P. McLellan as hostesses.
Mrs. Gresley-Jones, Past President, installed the following officers
for 1948: President, Mrs. R. Donaldson; first Vice-President, Mr_. H.
Davis; second Vice-President, Mrs.
E. L. Walker; Secretary, Mrs. H.
Evans; Treasurer, Mrs. W. C-
Brooks; Membership Secretary, Mrs.
C. Funk, Standard Bearer, Mrs.
Joyce Smith.
Those present were Mrs. T. G.
Wood, Mrs. R. Richardson, Mrs. E.
Draper,.Mrs. R. Donaldson, Mrs. H.
Douglas, Mrs. C. Lillydale, Mrs. E.
E, Turner, Mrs. D. McMillan, Mrs
Gresley-Jones, Mrs. J. Bradley,
Mrs. W. Martin, Mrs. H. Matthews,
Mrs. C. Funk, Mrs. W. C. Brooks,
Mrs. E. L. Walker, Mrs. Joyce
Smith, and Mrs. H. Evans.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
NEWS OF THE DAY
Rates: 22c line, 27c line black fact
type, larger type ratei on request
Minimum two llnei. 10% discount for prompt payment.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Welcome Home Service meeting
postponed until Jsn. 14.
     »
For Insurance, See Ron Somers,
302 Baker St. Phone. 1112.
AU wood from Paterson Mill cash
on delivery from now on.
A patent gives an Inventor or
his heirs the exclusive right to
make, use and sell his invention for
17 years.
ASH PANS
for your furnace or range
made to order.
LES BROWETT
(Formerly Maber's)
Phone 1152      510 Kootenay St.
Plui:
'TEN CENTS A DANCE'
iiHiHiniiiiiiiiiimiHiHiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii
The Sarcebruck - Sarreguemines
railway has been reopened to traffic by the French occupying force.
— 1946 RESOLUTION —~
to keep my
halT styled by
Haigh
Tru-Art
L. R. Downing C. J. Harris
"ROSELAWN CHAPEL"
Crematorium-Branch at Kaslo
NELSON FUNERAL CHAPEL
LTD.
(Successors to Somen Funeral
Home).
702 Baker St.     Phone 252     Nelion
wwfweeifffttffwiwun
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Suit* 205
MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING
N.Y.P.A.   pot-luck   supper,  Tues
Jan. 8, 6:30, Trinity Hall.
Srentier himself and Foreign Min-
iter Yoshlda.
The secretary, Dtizaburo Tsugita,
who may himself be out of a job
as the result of the drastic Allied order to eliminate all who led Japan
into war, said that drafting of emergency imperial ordinances to carry out the directives had delayed
the session scheduled today.
Shidehara, still confined to his
home by a cold, was not expected
to attend tomorrow's meeting, and
the question of ministerial resignations was not officially on the
schedule, Tsugita reported. Unofficial discussion of the problem appeared inevitable, however.
Discussing the prospective purge
with Japanese newspapermen, Tsugita gave the impression, they reported, that the cabinet would try
to carry on after removal of several ministers.
The newspaper Yomirul named
Tsugita as a former leader of the
Imperial Rule Assistance Association, one of the organizations whose
members are denied, by the new Allied decrees, any public office.
Fined $100 for     .
Supplying Liquor
ro on Indian
CRANBROOK, B. C, Jm. '(J -
Charged with supplying liquor to
in Indian, Frank Holmberg ot
Cranbrook wu found guilty ln district pollct court, ana was fined
1100 tnd costs.
Comtable R. Shlell prosecuted
the charge before Magistrate C. R.
Ward. He and Constable C. T. S.
Qualte made the arrest when they
found an Indian in the vicinity of
the Holmberg home ln postesilon of
a bottle ot Kin. The Indltn, Johnny
Mike, testified to making the purchue.
Alan Oraham was defence counsel ln the hearing.
Radio-Telephony
in British Trains
LONDON—A new lyitem of mobile radio-telephony having the advantage ot not being connected with
fixed stations, hit been perfected
by the Britlih Home Office. The
system, which operates on very
short waves, wat originally designed for uie In police cars patrolling
large towns, and it has proved very
satisfactory. It has now been Improved, enabling the crew and passengers in an aircraft to be in radiotelephone contact at all timet with
terminal airports at any distance.
This system Is to be used ln trains
also, to enable passengers to hold
important long-distance conversations during their Journey. Very
high frequency radio-telephony hai
previously been regarded as having
a limited range, but the use of the
new system enables the range to be
extended to an unlimited distance,
by the use of automatic relay stations.
Out of 221 secondary schools in
the French zone of occupied Germany 191 have been reopened with
a normal attendance of students.
United Action on Wages by Large
Pari of Organized labor Possible
Driver Recounts
Fare Tried Oui
Gun on Poles
EDMONTON, Jan. 6 (CP)-Cecll
Boggiss, taxi driver admitted Saturday hi> wat the man that drove Edward Tkaczyk 59 miles trom Edmonton io Holden, Alta., where
Tkaczyk's. 30-year-old wife was
ihot to death last Thursday night.
Tkaczyk, alleged to have afterward attempted to commit suicide
by ihooting himself, ls charged with
the murder of hit estranged wife.
He wai reported recovering from
head wounds in hospital here.
"When the Mountles came around
to see me about it Friday, it was
the first I knew there had beeh any
ihooting," said Boggiss. "1 had. no
Idea he had anything violent ln
mind."
"Thli Tkaayk came to the cab office around 4:30 Thursday aftei-
noon," 'Boggiss said. "He wanted to
know how much it was to Holden,
and was told $35. He paid cash."
Boggiss itated he then drove
Tkaczyk to the Elephant Exchange
where he bought a rifle, then went
to another store where he bought
some shells.
"He went over to see the man
he works for, and we sfarted for
Holden about 6 o'clock. This fellow
kept telling me about the rifle and
of how he was going to go trapping
with his brother in Northern Ontario Friday morning . . . Twice qn
the way he got me to stop the ca>\
and he got out and tried the gun. I
guess he fired about seven shots at
telephone poles. I thought it was
odd but I was only the driver."
Boggiss said Tkaczyk told him
about his wife. "He said when he
went overseas in the Army they
had two children, and when he got
back there were four children."
After arriving at the farm home
of Mrs. Tkaczyk in Holden. Boggiss
said he returned to Edmonton, leaving Tkaczyk there.
in I ■ iti mil I ii i»i in ii ill 11 ill ill I ll ii	
' We earry a full stock of
LANTIGEN'
A   for   common    Coldi.   Sore
Throat
B for Catarrh, Bronchitis. Sinus.
C tor   Rheumatic, Neuritis and
Sciatica
D toe Boils. Carbuncles,
E for Hay Fever.
F for prevention  of  Whooping
Cough.
$6 ptr treotment
At. Your Rexall Store
City Drug Co.
Bex 480                 Phone M
il i ■ ii lim ii IM in in llll l ■ i ill ill it 11 ii r
Late Point Grey
Alderman Once
North Shore Rancher
Thomas Wilkinson, alderman for
Point Grey for the 1935-38 term,
who died in Vancouver Jan. 5, was
well-known In this diitrict, having
lived on the North Shore where
he owned the property eventually
purchased by J. B. Stallwood.
Mr. Wilkinson came first to British Columbia from Regina in 1913
but did not settle here until 1920,
leaving for the Coast four years later. During his term as alderman
he fought for the establishment of
new Industries and hydro-electric
development both for cities and
province.
ii min mi 111 iii im iiiiimiiM
Work Clothes
Headlight Overalli
Carpenter Overalli
Khaki rami
Guaranteed your mono
worth or your money I
EMORY'
LIMITED
The Men'i Stow
iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii
Wt still hive fresh eggs.
Wright's Grocery. Phone 41.
By JACK WILLIAMS
Ctniditn Press Sttff Writer
OTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP) — United
action on wages by a large group
of Canadian organized labor loomed
as a possibility Saturday with the
disclosure of A. R. Mosher, Presi-
dent of the Canadian Congress of I ^__ bring tome measure of r"elax-
Labor, that consideration  Is being 1 „,,„_ ^.T,, u ...u. »_,„ .—_.___
tlve 1944 figures, was on the position of the union.
While there is a growing under-
the-surface agitation for new wage
demands on the part of Canadian
Labor Federal officials are trying
to mould amendments to the wartime   wage   control  order   which
Hospital Auxiliary meeting at the
Nurses' Home, Friday afternoon.
Get your Jumbo and Ideal Calendar Pads at Kootenay Stationers.
SNAPS EXPERTLY ENLARGED.
VOGUE STUDIO — 460 WARD 8T,
Piccadilly London Smoking Mixture, 35c a pouch at VALENTINE'S.
Ellison's Laymore Mash will produce more eggs at less cost. Ph. 238
given by the Congress to a wage
conference.
Should such a conference be held
and reach agreement it presumably would be the voice of the 300,-
000 members of C.C.L. unions.
ation, making it easier for workers
lo get small increases without interfering with price ceilings.
The margin In which wagei can
move without affecting pricei la a
debatable point and vtrlei ln different industries, but it is not expected
my large scale increases will become generally available is a result of the wage control amendments. One suggestion is that Increases of up to two ptr cent should
be allowed without specific authority.
Why not give us a call to Increase
your fire insurance protection today? - C. W. APPLEYARD.
The People's CCF annual meeting. Election of officers. Eagle Hall,
7 p.m tonight. Partner whist 8 p.m.
REMEMBER   2S5
THAT'S  OUR  PHONE  NUMBER.
FAIRWAY   MEAT   MARKET.
Ths policy of organized labor
toward poit-wtr wages ranks as
one of the biggest queitlon marks
in the preient Canadian situation.
Thtt labor wtnts higher wagei is
to be taken for granted, but whit
steps It li prepared to take to gtln
higher wtgei It another Question.
On the other side of the picture
are the employers, who are concerned over the possibility of labor
unrest upsetting conversion plans
and of high wages disturbing the
competitive position of Canadian
products in export markets.
lonsTnd" cmpl."". TthTlaTer j""' ""   '» '""" ___
stages of thp War crntred more mi   ^^■■■■■^■■■^■•■h
miiMiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
LOUIS BON DER UD
912 SIXTH -STRUT
PAINTER AND DECORATOR
FOR  ORDERS
PHONE   1188 AFTER •  P.M.
Veterans of World War II, Special
meeting for you at the Canadian Legion, Tues, Jan. Sth, 8 o'clock. All
come!
recognition of unions than on wages
For example, the Ford Motor' Co
strike at Windsor, which has sent
time-loss figures as the result of
strikes for the first 11 months of
1945 soaring to far above compara-
ADDITIONAL RESERVED
SEATS
Will Be Available Tomorrow Night for Hte
ICE CARNIVAL AT THE CIVIC CENTRE
Chain will be placed on platforms on the ice, and will
be on sale at $1.50. Rush seat holders can obtain these
extra reserve chairs by paying an additional 50 cents-
Those improvements to your property—are they covered bv insurance7 If not see BLACKWOOD
AGENCY today.
111111111111111111111m11.Hmm1111111.11.il
We hive Just received a  largo
shipment of
COCO MATS
$1.35 each
Home Furniture   Exchange
G.E. EDISON MAZDA
LAMP GLOBES
All sizes.
NELSON ELECTRIC—Ph. 260
All bright and new. the Koffee   llllllll tllllllllllllllllltl 1111 Mill I MM M MM Summer Coats
PHONE tt*
We Call For and Deliver
Men's, ladles' suit* ladiei'      _s_\_
Dresses, plaio m****k>
Men's and  Ladles' Cl.fR
BRITISH FIRM TO
BUILD IRAQ BRIDGE
LONDON - A United Kingdom
firm of engineers h_;ve begun work
on a two million pound road, end
railway bridge across the River
Tigris at Baghdad,-reports the London Daily Telegraph. The work "has
priority over other developments
in Iraq by the desire of the Iraq
Government.
It It's Electric
F. H. SMITH
Phone 666      351 Baker St.
MORE RESERVE
SEATS FOR
ICE FANTASY
A record crowd expected for the
New York Ice Fantasy today and tonight, the Civic Centre management has arranged for additional
reserve seats. Chairs will be placed
on platformjs on the ice and rush
seat holders will be able to obtain
them by paying the difference.
After the collapse of the Roman
Empire good roads disappeared
from Europe for some 12 centuries.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Hot Tasty Meals
AT THE
Melon Dew Cafe
111 r 1111 e 11 r 111 1111 ■ 1111 111111111
W. W. Powell
Company, Limited
The Home oj Good Lumber J
Telephone 176
Wholesale and Retail
Foot of Stanley Street
{RENE'S
MILLINERY
(Mri. K. H. Grenfell)
Phone 50 569 Ward St
JANUARY
CLEARANCE
ENTIRE STOCK CLEARING
AT
20*. DISC0UN
i««»S»8S»8<«Sis«re«-!3-y_^aws;
ROSCOE
AND
FOURNIER
GARAGEMEN
SKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE
Phone 12} Nelson. B. C.
SSSSSSKSaSKSSS&JSBKSSS
1 A! CAMPBELL & Co.
Chattered  Accountants
Auditort
542 Baker St. Phone __:_
imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCI  AERVICE
"Distinctive Tuneril Service"
515 Kootenay St Phone Ml
iiiiiiiiii.ii. iiiiiHiiiiHiiimiiiiiimimii
Announcement
66 TAXI
NOW LOCATED AT THE
ORIGINAL
I       *
1
Golden Gate Cafe
FOR PROMPT, COURTEOUS TAXI SERVICl
PHONE 66
JIM SMITH (Proprietor)
Kounter is ready to serve you with
Sandwiches, Pie, Steaks, etc. Next
to the New Grand Hotel.
URGENTLY NEEDED
by returned Air Force officer and
wife, I child, housekeeping rooms,
suite or house. Box 4823, Daily News.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Violin recital and lecture by Harpy  Adaikln,  Feb.  13, iponiored   by
Nelion PTA and Muilc Teachen.
STAR TAXI
Day Phone MM
For   your   convenience.
After 10'o'clock phor.e 204-X.
Stand at Wait's News Stand,
ICE SCHI
FOR WEEK OP JAN. 7 -
sDULE
13, INCLUSIVE
MONDAY
4 00
New
York I
ce Fantisy
ROfl
New
York Ice Fantasy
TUESDAY
2 30-
I 00
Tinv T
oil
4 00-
8 00
Children's Skitlni
7.H0-
ll 00
Senior
Hockey
8 00-
10 00
Junior
Hockey
WEDNE8DAY
2 00.
\ no
Adult Skating
S 00-
d.OO
Junior
Hockev
fi 10.
730
Senior
Hockey
R !.',_
10. IS
Skatln
! Club
THURSDAY
2 Ml ■
4 no
Tiny T
il>
i m.
r, oo
Children'l  Skating
7 00.
g oo
Figure
Skilini Club
_> 00-
moo
Senior
Hockey
Friday
i vtr
S 4.1
Junior
Hockey
I Mi
7 *
Senior
Hockev
ll IS-IDU
Adult Skitlni
SATURDAY
700
-■ ;r
Junior
Hackly
Skilli-.g Club
1 OO.
j oo
Fi|ur»
112
400
Children's Skalinl
i on
io mt
Senior
Hockey Gime
SUNDAY
13 4.1
itt>
r'.|uri
Skilini Club
! 15
S IJ
Skitlni Club
New Year Special. Oil changed in
your washing machine, lubrication
and checkover. all for $1.M. Phone
SKILTON, 91, for Beatty Service on
aU makes.
All Risk Insurance We write It
againit Fire, Theft, Water Dnmagr
Smoke Damage, and other hazard*
on your furniture. Get our rates Robertson Realty.
You can have your tips and
Downs at
CLERIHIW8   BEAUTY   LANE
We forecast more beautv for vou
.S36 Josephine St Phone  1143
Wanted—Small farm suitable for
chicken ranch with buildings and
water rights. Between Nelion an 1
Balfour or Procter. Cash State
price. Apply Box 4820 Daily Newi
Soil-Off- the perfect liquid rlen-
ner — Make* house-cleaning n pleasure. Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping: cleans all painted surfaces,
hardwood floors, linoleum, etc Use
tt Uke dinting. Get a bottle today at
Hippemon'i
FUNERAL NOTICE
Funeral services for the late Mr«
Bella .lane Middleton will be held
from the Thompson Funeral H-unr
Tu-Hriay at J pm. Rev T J S. Fer-
guaon will officiate Interment will
b* tn the Nelion Memorial P^rk.
FUNERAL NOTICE
Funeral t-trvice* for the late Mn
Margaret Pilmer of Port Crawford will be held from the Mlulon
Churrh at Port Crawford Wednesday at 2 10 pm Mlia L Hetherlng-
ton will offleiate Interment will
b« in tha Port Crawford Omitury
Funflrai mtui gem en ta ara under
tht direction of tht Thompion Fu-
R. NADEAU
LICENSED PLUMBER
Phone 1157 - 615 Victoria St.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
FLEURY'S   Pharmacy
Preicripnom
Compounded
Accurately
Med Arts Blk
PHONE 25
iimiiimiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiin.miiniiiiin
KOKANEE
SERVICE STATION
■ nd GARAGE
Expert Repair Work
Promptly Dont.
Gu,   Oil,  Wllhing.   Grilling.
Opposite  ...ink  of  Montreal
■ fflfflllllVIIIVMIIIIIIII
C. W. Houn N. A. Houn
KOOTENAY GIFT SHOP
.3d BAKTR ST
DEVELOPING, PRINTING
ENLARGING     PICTURE
FRAMING
■ __u_i_-i--i_>_ii--i--i-i--i-»a-i-»_-i--i->---,--i--i--i-i--H
Hovt tht Job Dont Right
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
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PREVENT  CHIMNEY   FIAEI
Have ynur chimney cleaned it
iejnl once i yeir
DUSTY RHODES
CHIMNEY CLEANER
Fnr prompt inrl efficient lervlri    i
Phone 113. ifter 4 pm.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIII !
Lat#i.  Popular
SHEET MUSIC AND FOLIOS
McKAY & STRETTON
Limit*
PHONE M4 NILION
___- ___ i-EMflRE CLEANERS I DYERS
IIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMMI
ASK YOUH GROCER FOR
HOOD'S
Supremo Milk Bread
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Hudion, Ejipx ond Terraplane
PARTS AND SERVICE -
SMEDLEY GARAGE CO.
Next lo Poll Offlce-
508 Vernon SL Nelion
Hive  Your  Furniture Eipertly
Recovered .: thi
NELSON UPHOLSTERY
413 Hall SL Phoni IM
ELLISON'S REST FLOUR will
makt  brtad you'll bt  proud
to Mrr. to your frltiwlt.
MEN'S OXFORDS
tt
The Bootery
■ ■ ■ ■ _p—■ in
Wt  opteiti • r_..r.i>-«
BODY  ind   FINDER
rtEPAIR  IHOP
Elt i mi til lli.lr flnn.
fUTHBERT
V MOTORS, LIMITEO  I
IHIIHIMMimMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllMIII
For Reliable Watch Rtpoln
PROMPT  satvicx
HARVIY'S
TODAY AND TONIGHT
FROM MADISON SQUARE GARDENS
NEW YORK CITY
ThwyoAL
9jC£, JtiTiKthLSJip
The most outstanding Professional Ice
eyer to tour Canada—Starring
Show
CLhluonsL -ts, Valiant
OF IWITURLAND
BhirioL QiaiiL
■ill'A  SKATING  PARTNER  FO
IONJA  HINIE'I SKATING  PARTNER  FOR S YIARI
FORMER WORLD'I SPEED SKATING CHAMPION
Ai Will ■■
60 PROFESSIONAL SKATERS
PICKED FROM THI IEIT IN CAN ADA AND U. \ A.
A Broadway Musical on Skates
NELSON CIVIC CENTRE
M ATI NEE 4 P.M. TONIGHT 8 P.M.
CHILDREN 25c RESERVED  $150
ADULTS 75c RUSH Sl.OO
NO RUIRVID MATS CHILDREN 50c
All Pri-M Includt Tm — Door Open at 7:15
mniMimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiH I j^pi
