 *-*
ies Bevin
Ukraine Charge
By JOHN PARRIS I   The council adjourned until Sat-
LONDON, Fib. 7 (AP)-Ftr.W« ifter hearing Foreign Min-
elan Iterettry Bovln of BrIUIn'1,ter Eelco Van Kleffeni of the'
InaWeTTd '*ll.» tant-gM to . Ok- Neth«rl.nd.,t.U tblt British force.
ralnlan ehargt In the United Nl- went [»••> tbe area with the MB
tions Security Couiftl that Brit- conunt of hU government.
Ith aoldieri were used te suppress It wai the iecond time in ■
the national movement of tin i Security Council meeting that Mr.
Indonesian people. Bevin had shouted "He" at Soviet
"I give you the Me that we aver chargei that Britiih troopi abroad
attacked the Indonesian move- were used to suppress a popular
ment—all the (acts are agalnstjdemocratic movement, During the
you," Mr. Bevln iaid, banging the Russian-British discussions on the
table ind ipeaklng directly to the Greek cue earlier this week Mr.
Bevln'had cried "lie" to charges
Uknlnlan    Foreign    Commlnar,
Dmitri Manulliky.
. M. Manulliky opened the councll'i
session with a statement: "The ea- UW
lence of the Ukrainian declaration
on Indonesia is that lt considers it
Inadmissible that British troops
ihould be used for suppreeilon of
the national movement of the Indonesian people."  ,
He proposed that the council
lend a special commission to the
Netherlands East Indies for an
that British troops in Greece were
endangering world peace and iec-
M. Manulliky outlined hli case
at a council session which lacked
the tension noted in the Britiih-
Russian exchanges In the Greek
case, which the council disposed of
last night.
Mr. Bevln ipoke quietly for the
most part. He said Gen. MacArthur
sent British forces to Indonesia to
the-spot" lnvestitatlon, but he ipeel- clean up the Japanese, deal with a
flcally said the Ukraine did not ask'Japanese-trained "Fascist force" in
withdrawal of British troopi from the area and rescue interned civ
the islandi. Mans and war prisoner!	
Qardiner Sees U*K*
Need as Basis for
Expanded Production
OTTAWA, Feb. 7 (CP)—Agriculture Minister Gardiner returned today from food-ihgrt Britain to report the United Kingdom Government had indicated a desire to continue to buy Canadian food sur-
pluies "on a baiti which should encourage an expansion of production."
Stepping from an R.C.A.F. aircraft which brought him from Montreal following a trans-Atlantic
flight, Mr. Gardiner declined to
comment on the critical food ahort-
agei facing Britain and other war-
ravaged European nations, stressing
he first would have to report to
the Cabinet
In a prepared- statement, Mr. Gardiner referred  to food  ihlpmenti
Canada hai lent to Britain during
the war, and added:
"Now that the war li over we will
continue to lupply her with all we
have.
Mr. Gardiner noted that contract!
for tha shipment of bacon, beef,
cbeeie and egga all terminate at
tiie end of thli year or ihortly
thereafter, but declined to eitlmate
how long the new contracti would
run or to diicuii prices and quan-
In his statement, thc Minister aaid I A Ufi   Afl   Til
Canada has cooperated with Britain LHI1I/ ItVI   IV
"In every poulble way" throughout
the war, with Canadian farmen
producing "to the limit, and Canadian shipping and processing planti
doing a "marveloui Job/1	
Sunspots Eoresh<a$ow Harsher
Weather. Qroiictiw Dispositions
Scientists See More Flu, Parqlysis, Poor Crops, Short Summers
DUCKS FOR HUNTERS
OTTAWA, Feb. 7 (CP) - For
aeveral years at least, tha world
can reilgn Itiilf to colder and
longer Winters, shorter Summer!,
poorer crop! and grouchler dispositions, coupled, iclentlsts lay,
with greiter prevalence In diseases such ai Influenza and In-
fantlla paralysis.
Sunspots — those dark blochei
which fleck the face of the sun,
which hava been causing tha bun
and crackle In radloe and playing
tricks with telegraphic communications, have come Into their own .... ,,.._,. .,, ,.,.,.,,
again. The ipoti, recurring heavl- •*JNlf",T MAXIMUMS
ly In cycles every 11 yean or lo,
have Just itarted to approach their
maximum, icheduled for 1918 or
1949,
Not until about 196S, whan the
number of sunspots swing again
to tha low side of the cycle, can
the world expect real relief, according to tha scientists. Then
thera ihould be fewer stormi,
warmer weather, better radio reception, abundant crept and happier and healthier people,
line ef lift aa effected by thl sun-,of the sun. They ire accompanied
•pot cycle,, aid modern studies by high-level clouds of very high
of the fluctuations In weather,'temperatures, called "faculae,"
cropa and magnetic disturbances'which, during total eclipses of the
lend mere and more weight to the sun, have been measured ai reach-
sun ipot theory,
Dr. Ralph E. DeLpry, solar physicist it the Dominion Observatory
here, believes almost everything is
affected in some way by sunspots.
Cropi and growth, generally, are
subject to a 19 to 25 per cent variation during the average cycle.
EPIDEMICS COINCIDE WITH
In 1(97, a maximum tunipot year,
the number of cases ot poliomyelitis
in 38 states in the United Statea wu
about three times greater than the
average numbtr In he. preceding
yean back to the minimum ln 1923.
The great influenza epidemic of
1817-18 also coincided with a sun-
spot maximum, and scientists quote
similar examples In the case of pulmonary tuberculosis, meningitis and
other di senses.
Sunspots actually are large whirl
Such, In rough, It science's out- winds running rampant on the face
lng ai far as 10,000,000 milei from
the sun's surface.
GIVE OFF RAYS
Theie "faculae" and the accompanying spots, block off iome of
the lun'i radiation, but the more
important part of their affect on the
earth is their liberation of ultraviolet riyi.
Ultra-violet light given off by the
faculae ia free to radiate towards
the earth. Thui a maximum sun ipot
period li accompanied by more ultra-violet light
The ultra-violet rays, meeting
the rare, low-pressure gases on
the fringes of the earth's atmosphere, liberate electrons, which
dlicharge through the rare atmosphere and give off light, causing
our "Northern* lights," disrupting
the performance of compasses, and
causing other magnetic disturbance! which affect radio and telegraphic operation.
BLOCK USE OF
LABOR LACK
HITS EXPANSION
IN AUSTRALIA
Thousands of Jobs
Advertised, Workers
WOMEN GET RAISES
SYDNEY, Auitralia, Ttb. t (Reuten)—Auitralla is suffering from,!
tabor shortage and though thouiandi df young people are leaving
school after final examination! and
thouiandi more are coming out of
the lervlcei, employer! cannot find
lufflclent labor to fill the barest requirement! of expansion.
Yet they are faced with the paradox of "ihortage amid plenty"—of
hundreds of men and women applying for specific Jobs and reTuiing to
lake any other. Thouiandi of Jobs
re advertised dally while "situations-wanted" columns are nearly
empty.
MACHINES  IDLE
BUTTER OUTPUT
DROP CONTINUES.
OTTAWA, Feb. 7 (CP)-A continued decline In Canadian butter
production, during January wai
reported today by the Dominion
Bureau of WMIitlci, itlirlng ipae-
ulatlon that the Canadian butter
ration tf ilx ounces weekly might
be further reduced.       ,   .
Continuing • four-months  di-
line, butter output
ary went down to "
1 1J.8. per otnt
w
U.S. Packers
WASHINGTON, Feb. 7 (API -
The Fedetal Fact-Flnding Board ln
Ihe meat-packing wage dispute tonight recommended a general wago
increaie of 10 cents an hour for the
90,000 production employees of the
five major American meat-packing
companies.
Machinery lies Idle In textile fac- Agriculture Secretary Anderson
lories while thouiandi of itrvice-1™0""1**1. •?• w<«" V^y £•
men are told through statements r«c0_mm'nd» 0,V! t°'>"»T»w to he
tn the    newspapers that lulti can- w»8«   Stabilization   Board,   	
not be provided for them In less
than three, four or even five
. months
Employers; anxloui to reestablish
their export trade before rival-countries capture the field, complain
that female labor«hai let the country down. ,
In many cases they have gone
near W conceding the claim for
equality of pay between the sexes.
giving women 80 per .cent of men's
pay.
Manpower officials admit that
many ex-servicemen who spent
long periods in itrenuoul effort
In the tropic! leek ioba geared to
the tempo of army life—Jobs involving quick movement, constant
thange and meeting large numbers
•f people.
Officials are unable to forecast
when conditions will return to normal.
Seek to Avoid
Duplication in
Cow Testing
Stabilization Board, which
must approve them before they can
be effective.
There are more than 178.000 employees in the United States meat
packing IndKlMry, the Fact-Flnding
Board laid." i
Of the IB-cent Increaie, the Board
proposed that five cents be absorbed
by the companies without price or
subsidy relief. It recommended that
Ihe Government approve price or
subsidy relief covering the other
11 cents.
American Federation of Labor
Union officials in Chicago said they
would recommend acceptance by
their locals. There was no comment
Immediately from the Congress nf
IndUitrlil Organizations Union ln
rolved or from the companies.
OBTAIN HOMES
Soldier Settlements
Spring Up in Place
of Intended "Farms"
TO TRY AGAIN
OTTAWA Feb. 7 (CP)-Dlicoo-
tinuance of soldier settlements on
the outskirts of Canada'i big cities
will be the lim of tbe imall holdings clauie of the Veterans Land
Act in thl coming yeir, officials
Stay Yamashita
Execution
HART CONFIDENT
TOKYO, Fib. I (Frldiy) (AP)-
A spokesman for Oeneral Mac-
Arthur announced tony thlt thl
U.8. Secretary of Wtr has ordered
a stay of execution for. Lt,,Gen,
Tomoyukl Yamashita pending action by Preiident Trumin on a
clemency plei. Yamashita hil
been condemned te death en the
gallows ti * war criminal.
Only yeiterday MacArthur hid
affirmed the court martial finding
In Manila .
vin
his farmer ad-
illlpplnes.
Feb   T aa
ehllioK," the wt'i''dfcettor, cajledj r a'p>" ConSS   Hy Ve ports from
•thinly • .camouflaged    housing Unjtjd stalt»rC-a_» Guard  Head-
scheme." quarters and Ul'Alaska Steamship
The original aim war to establish Company lift imetrtiln tenlght th?
veterans in the low-income bracket^ total number orptnu-s unaccount-
on the outskirts of cities or towni ed for jn Se.wridldng of the liner
so they could keep hens, bees, grow] Yukon, but^both agreed 484 had
(lowers or engage in some oth«r;been ****___•
form of small business that would Coast OMrd Httdtauarters hire
lupplement their pay. However, the'said only •♦ven War* unaccounted
flood of applications from veterani,'tor and tkere Wis a possibility
these m_Hn bt iboird some rescue
many desiring nothing more than 1
home, turned lt away from that objective and ih molt cases tended tl
sprout what would amount to communities of soldiers.
Mr. Murehijon laid housing shortage! left., little alternative. Now
heading Into the flnt full year of
peace, the aim will be to get back
to the original objective.
The target for small holding! In
194fl is settlement of 8000 veterani,
boat whkt had not yet reported
The 484 lurvivorl wire landed at
Seward, where they hid embarked
Sunday nliht for Seittl*.
At mi-might, seven houn after
sailing, the Yukon strucki rocks
In Johnstone Bay and Capt. C. I.
Trondien ran her hard aground to
prevdnt sinking. Monday night,
after tbe Coast Guard cutter Onondaga had removed 48 women and
rhildren, she broke in two.
Three men washed overboard and
including    commercial    fishermen
Some 3000 will  take over  bouses] tjjffl^" by •  tug.  They  said
In those soldier communities which offi fcelieved others had been swept
begun In  194J.  It is In  the <nm u,e breaking ship by the gale
other cases that attempts will  be
made to separate them.
Vancouver Shippers
Plan Fleet of
20 Park Freighters
VANCOUVER, Feb. 7 (CP.-The the l,enDle °< So""1 America." h
__..____ .... miA     "TV.-,—   *_.„*'-....___.    tk.    __.■___-.,. 11 ___.,.   „.
Says Americans Wish
More UNO Power
for Little Nations
SPOKANE, Wash., Feb. 7 (AP)-
Dr. Ramlro Colliio of Havana, Cuba, International President of the
Lions Club, said today ln an Inter*
view that Latin American countries
will support the United Nations Organization te the fullest but he add-
-d that most of them oppose discrimination against small nations.
"Some things like the Security
Council, which is composed of representatives of the five most powerful-nations, are not understood by
driven waters, but the Coast Guard's
latest report still had no announcement oi bodies being recovered.
The Alaska Steamship Company
ltt Seattle placed the number of
milling at 19. as shown by its pal
ON FINANCING
"Holds for Grant on
Basis of 1941
B. C. Taxation
Slum Clearance Plan
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP)-A gen
era] outline of the discussions of the
Coordinating Committee of the Dominion-Provincial Conference during the lut three meetingi of the
Cinadian Prlmt Minister and the
rrovlndal Premier! will hi made to
Mr. Hart said he would explain tn
tleneral termi but not ln detail tbe
submissions of tht Dominion Gov
>rnment and the proposals present
ed by him for British Columbia.
Confidence that an agreement
vould be reached on financial sr
rangements between the Province
and the Dopilnlon Government before March 31, 1M7 was expressed
loday by the Premier on his return
lo his office after a month-long holl
day in Arizona and the latest Do
mlnion-ProvinclaV discussions In
Ottawa which wound un last Friday
WANTS GRANT BASED
ON TAXATION
The above photograph miy look
liki thl splitting of an atom, but
actually It la just mother marvel
of radar. Duck hunters wbo now
equip themselvel with guns, shells,
"blinds," miy In the future idd to
their equipment portable radar sets
to detect their quarry inflight
Depleted here bi reproduction
of whit appeared on Trans-Canada
Air Lines radar cathode viewing
screen it Winnipeg during the duck
hunting season; Flights ol ducks are
clearly discernible on the screen.
Rtcently it T.C. A.'s radar establishment, operators noticed tiny
objects moving across their viewing screens. S. S. Stevens, superin
tendent of communications tnd
electronic development nld that it
flnt the object! on tilt screen wtrt
thought to bt small training craft
"But thty wore so small they would
fade out, then re-appear. Then we
discovered thett dots wtrt ducki
and geese. We picked them up it
altitudes of 1,500 to 2,000 feet."
"At the peak of tht season there
were thousands of them. Wt could
closely trace their flight"
Individual ducks cin be picked
out within I tin mile radius. However, thty are nearly always In V
formation or in a straight lint, In
which cast thty ctn be detected
up   to  twtnty or  thirty  milei.
Face Task of Saving
Millions From Famine
By The Cinadian Preu
Food expert! aad government official! throughout the world today
opened a drlyc to solve urgent food
Ihortagei | wgtfch   have   ibruptly
000,000   people  tn  the  next   few
months.
RESERVES HARD HIT
A serious complication ln the iltuatlon arises from .tht fact that ex
porting countries managed to ship
enough food, 10,000,000 to 15,000,000
person! may starve to death.
In i crisis which has been developing for years but which only was
realized clearly within the last few
days, the world turned to Canada
"WE WANT TO GO
HOME" STRIKE
GAINS RECRUITS
To Stay Off Overseas
Jobs Until Replaced
or Force Withdrawn
2 STATIONS HIT
By JACK SULLIVAN
Canadian Prtu Staff Writer
DOWN AMPNEY, Gloucestershire, England, Feb. 7 (CP
Cable)—More than 2000 R.C.
A.F. ground crew personnel on
o "we-want-to-go-home" strike
at stations here and at Odiham, Hampshire, today demanded the resignation of Air
Minister Gibson and threatened to stay off the job until assured they would be replaced
by men from home or that the
Occupation Force would be
withdrawn.
Reports circulated at both
stations that strike action also
is planned by RC.A.F. ground
crew men at the Topcliffe repatriation depot ond Leeming
airfield, both in Yorkshire.
(A telephone call from London
to Leeming airfield brought thii
reply from the switchboard operator: "Nothing ia doing here ytt"-
The operator said he knew nothing
of any specific strike plans).
The itrlke began Tueiday when
1000 men at Odiham RCAF Traniport station stopped work, demanding speedier repatriation and complaining non-volunteers were being
kept overseas against their wishes.
It spread today to this station, involving another 800 to 900. At neither station were officers or senior
non-commissioned officers participating.
GIBSON WARNS STRIKERS
\ _o\v from Ottawa it. top**--
&^»^W«««fflB«»h,._trik-
trs wai lev both here and at Odiham during the day but spokesmen
for the men at both stations said
they were not satisfied and there
was no sign of a break in the itrike
policy.
In Ottawa Col. Gibson Issued a
warning to the strikers that "wt
rannot tolerate continuance of refusal to carry out normal duties"
and that "early repatriation will
apt be provided for those who take
part In serious breaches of discipline."
The Air Minister referred to an
war and now have lh extremely
small back-log to draw on.
The 1,'ii problem, lt Is said, Is to
bridge the gap between the harvesting season in the Southern Hemisphere and the reaping period in
the Northern Hemisphere. After Ca-
the United States and Australia for.nadian crops for 1946 become avail-
relief, [able  late  this Summer,  Australia
In London, Herbert Morrison, La-1 plans to export to Empire regions
bor government leader in the House [such as India, Malaya, Hong Kong,
of Commons, announced that there South Africa and New Zealand. This
would be a debate on world food would permit Canada to send great-1 0Ver7eaV'dlspatch'saying' tiie Down
shortages  next  Thursday.  His'an-'er quantities of wheat to the Unit-'
noupcement came a day after the[ed Kingdom on a shorter haul,
government had revealed the crlti-     At the same time, Australian food-
Mr. Hart iaid hi wit holdlngi0"1 natu" oI Britain's food situation. for-Britain Fund officials said they I rolunteOTTH-t&d tb* fraction wai
out for a Dominion grant to eu-     Other countries in an even worse;were preparing shipment of more]wr0ng  and   actually  the  majority
penada lump-sum grant of 11 J,-1position than Britain include France, than 22,000 cases of food  ranging] of the occupation force was compo*-
000,000 plui, which his been  In:Central   Europe,   Italy,   Germany,!from canned meat, cheese, jam and ed of pon-volunteers.
effect ilnce 1911 equal to the ium;Greece, China and India. The last-,powdered and condensed  milk, to!    A spokesman for a 12-man strike
which  would bt derived  If the mentioned country, faced .with one cakes and puddings. They also pro-[ committee here said majority of the
maximum 1941 provincial tax rate |of   its   worst   droughts,  will   have posed that the government buy and
wan collects.) by thi Province,     great difficulty in feeding its 400,- ship 15,000 tons of canned food.
Thli would permit tha Domln- ■—
[ Ampney strikers were incensed at
[his recent statement that four-flfthi
I of the RCAFs occupation force w/ere
lon Government to collect r.onild
•rabli more money by levying a
rati higher than the Provincial In-
come and corporation tsx j-ate ef
Wl.     *
In 1944. the Premier said, the Dominion Government collected In extols of 51SO.noo.OOfl from corporation
md pessonal Income taxes In B. C.
linger ind crew lists. These wen j The sum which would be provided
being cheeked for possible duplies-;by the Dominion government If It
dons and It was not known yet j,greed to reimburse the province
Whether all crewmen and  passen- with the monev that the 1941 provln-
gers actually were aboard when the
V111. ■::   silled.
The Company uld It would not
announce the names of any of the
del Ux would yield has been est:
mated as being in the neighborhood
of I2J,000.000.
The   Dominion   proposal   at   the
missing tonight but would continue jD„„nt time Is that the Provinces
to press for verification. „m b, fivtn _ lump m buti m
The. steamship Alaska, sister ship por'ih.lnn.
»f the Yukon, was at Seward and
expected to take the survivors
aboard for the Seattle voyage. Sailing time had not been let.
Vancouver Daily Province publish- 'aid  "Th7 ^'Iievt the "nailer na-
ed today a  special dispatch from! ;ions should have more of a voice In
VICTORIA. Feb. 7   (CP)-In an °J^*"ZZ^ZZZn[*herei' *   Coll.so last nllht addled
effort to avoid Dominion and pro- ?*g °££!~"f*[\n'J''i,'"?' KLJIW  Lions members  from  the  In-
vincial duplication of cow testing.1'0' p,ur,ci?"e ?' " h»™ "«t which ,    d E
the   Advisory   Board   of   the   B.C JS* to HI *> Jormt r Park relghttr
I costing the city men a total of about
$11,500,000."
The ipeoia] dispatch added:
"One report here said a group o*f
four Vancouver  shipping Interests
i plan to organixe as a separate entity
and buy a fleet of 10 to 12 of the
10,000-tonncrs. . . .
"The government Is offering the
Park freighters for M0O0OO with a
J25.00*) reduction If three or more
are purchased."
To Guard Racers
Against Stimulating
Farmers' Institute! at its annual
meeting here thli week, passed a
resolution urging the Dominion Department of Agriculture to arrange
with the province for testing to be
continued by existing associations.
He will go to Vancouver, B. C.
tonight and will be In Seattle Saturday.
Would Holt Export
Till Own    '
Larder Stocked
Mr. Hurt has cimpaljlnwl thui thl5
rum wnuld b« tn^ultable for B. C.
ilnc« the peculation has Increawd
and the Industrial nroductipn' has
Increased considerably slpce 1941.
The Increase of population nnd
'he Increase in the total Provincial
Sees Germans
Working Beside
Russians
MOSCOW, Feb. 7 (API-German
prisoners of war are being used in
labor battalions and factorlea In
Russia, as in other countries in
Europe.
This correspondent nas seen German prisoners ln battalions in Odessa, Kiev and Smolensk. They still
were wearing their uniforms, which
are getting pretty thin by now.
Edwin Smith, ot the American-
Soviet Friendahlp Organization, who
visited Moscow during last Summer, said he saw Germans In fac-
occupation force was composed of
non-volunteers.
One member of the local committee laid: "The Ottawa statement
rontains a mass of gross evasion!
which caused more unrest among
the men."
Tbe Down Ampney ground crew
men sent this cable to Prime Minister Mackenzie King:
"All RCAF Transport Command In the United Kingdom en
strike demand an Immediate
change In occupational policy to
affect complete repatriation of
non-volunteers.
"Public retraction ef Col. Gib-
ion's erroneous statement that
four-fifths of overseas perionnel
are volunteers Is demanded.
"Signed: RCAF Down Ampney
Ground Crewi".
Organization of the itrike at both
statiop was almost Identical but thl
Down Ampney walkout wu more
complete—even cooks ln the officers' mess quit  work  and  a sign
Labor-Vottron's
Relation Committee
to Meet March 29
VANCOUVER, Feb. 7 (CP)-Flnl
full meeting of the receptly-formed
Labor-Veterans Relation! Committee will bt htld here March M and
all trade unloni and ex-iirvlcamtn'i
orginlntlom have been invited to
send delegates.
A. D. Darlington, secretary, aid
after • preliminary committee meet-
"Tht bird ited ll all planted-
soon   we'll   ba   Mlllng   canaries
•"Ith  Newi Want Adi!"
WASHINGTON. Feb. J (AP) -
legislation to halt exports of grain
and flour temporarily was Introduc-
rd In Ihe House of Representative!
'oday a short time after President
Truman uld he would ration meal
again If necessary to
shlnnvmts.
The bill, by ReDresentatlve Edwin A. Hall (Ren.-N. Y.) member of
the Hoine Agriculture Committee,
would ban grain lnd flour exports
until:
1. The Secretary of Agriculture
finds that sufficient grain his been
ilrtrlhuted lo "areu of the United
SUtei now suffering from shortages of livestock indV^Hrr feeds"
2. The Secretary .of Agriculture
determines there art sufficient sun-
NEW YORK, Feb. 7 (AP)-A plan
designed to lock the barn door before there ts iny chance of stimulation of a horse on the day It racei.
thereby protecting the animal, its
trainer—to say nothing of the better
—will be pat In use on the five New
York State race track! next seaion.
Extensive tests by the Jockey
Club i New York I have shown that
doping a horse must be done within two hours of the race to be effective Under the plan tn be used
next season, every horse will be be-: [n \\__ nf
hind a locked mrsh screen In front
Bf lhe
nrome during the war should beitoriei  in  Stalingrad  working  side
aken  Into consideration, the Pre- by side with the Russians, receiv-
rnler contends
"Our position hss not changed."
he emphasized. "We are prepared
lo allow them to collect the Income
rnd corporation taxes but they must
r.lvi out of that a ium equal to
what we would colled If our levies
vert used."
Maximum rite of corpnritlon and
Income tax In 1M1 wai 10 per cent
lng pay as skilled workers.
Well-Known B. C.
Paper Publisher
Resigns
CHILLIWACK. B.C., Feb. 7 (CP)
Thi Dominion's proposal of pa«-1 -Charles   A.   Barber,   well-known
ment on a ner caoita basis would British   Columbia  newspaper  pub-i
nrovldt B   C   with only te.800.noo. j n.,her, has announced his resigns-i
ncome. and rnrporatlon tjon a5 head of the C. A. Barber!
« *_oXmln",on Zs^Z.t^*'^   Um'-Ud'   PUbl"h"'  <*   ""
Ing yeiterday that tho githerlng It
being called to air any problemi pfl'es (-.'nouVto^V-nrt'Vht'AmVr-
arlslng from relation! between the i can people of lhe Mtsent amount ol
two irouoi. I white brt«d"
will have ■ key
This, track officlili believe, not
Mily will protect the horses from
outside tampering, but wlll meet the
inVr»___".h. P'M of trainers that, while ruin of
"• racing eharge thtm with full re-
.pomlblllty over thilr thoroughbred!, there ire moments when in
outsider might hive aeceii to an
open itill.
OTTAWA. Feb. 7 (CD-Control
and npenllon of the glint Newfoundland ilr baiei at Gander and
Botwood, both vital links between
Cinada and thi United Kingdom In
the days whin planes were being
ferried acrois thl Atlintle, li to bt
returned to the Newfoundland government, It wu announced here today.
rlslnns nf lhe BNA Act
Limited   to  this  revenue.  B   C
would not be able to provide thi
service, which It had been ablt to
provide In th* pait.
Mr. Hart will Immediately Isunch
Inln preparations for the next tei-
ilon ot the Leglilituri which will
iptn Ftb. 11
Included In tht propouli te bi
brought before thi rtetne wlll bt
Liglllltlon tt Impltment thl slum
cliirinea progrim which thi
government announced itmi tlmt
tgo. It ll thi govtmmtnt'i pro-
poial to uilit thi munlelpillt.il
In building  niw houm In slum
Chilliwack Progress.
Mr. Barber began publishing the
Chilliwack newapaper In 1923. He
hu held the presidency of both the
Cinadian Weekly Newspapers Association and the'association's Britlih Columbia division, and in 1034-
35 hi rtprtsentid Canada's rural
prut it the Empire Prill Conference ln South Africa
Ht wu elected in ildirmin of
Chilliwack In 1M0 and mayor ln
1923, serving nine yean ai chlet
magistrate.
The new publisher! of the Chilliwack Progreu wlll be Mr. Barber'i
ton and former shareholder In the
River of Mud
Pours Into
Columbia Gorge
PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 7 (AP)
—A vait, sloping river of mud
and rock continued to Inch down
on the Union Pacific Railroad
track! and United States Highway
No. 30 Eut cf hire today—third
day of the Columbia Gorge slide.
Meanwhile, re-routed tralm
were delayed for houn ai mow-
storms   swept   over   thl   Western
D"kopt!_.,_(,0r"t, m.!-!"?' N,°,rth"'■*■■■■■■   •■■■'■■■
■ , a    ,"ui Mllw*"k" ■**"?! In the officers quarters asks offlcer
reported   it   Minneapolis  tonight rolunteer3 (or MmeM dutl„,
that thilr eoait-bound tralni wart     The   Down    Ampney   perionnel
running but tardy. callad „ meetlng for tom0rrow to
Hope of clearing the Gorge slide; which the press was Invited,
this   week   faded   today   ai   thi     Thl strike here Is not In sympathy
mountainside continued   Its  lllp-li/lth   that   at   Odiham,   said   one
page and Intermittent ralna kept sopkesman.
the ground at uturatlon point      j   "We are In sympathy with our-
Hlghway crews found their lait telves," he said. "There will be no
night's cut nearly filled today and  compromise.
a 26-foot-diep layer again block-1	
Ing tha icenlc routi. j i  ■ ■ ey,  p m   t   -    _._._,.,
Telephont compiny criwi ran;**aB *■ l*«ViM„r. DOQI5
two temporary lead cables across s„ tiaLmultia Pnfrnl
thi slide area today and expectediTO TlSneriei rarroi
to have all circuits restored by! VANCOUVER, Feb. 7 (CP)-Ma).
midnight. Thi slide cut a cabla J. A. Motherwell, chief supervisor
carrying more than 200 lines In-'of fisheries, said today two fast including local and trunk circuits,    foot RCAF. boats, the Nicola and
While the slide closed the Gorge Atlin, have been acquired by Fed-
Hlghwiy, huvy mowi iwlrled.eral fisheries authorities, for en-
through the Cucadii but all Ore- iforctment of regulations on tht
gen and Washington panel ex- British Columbia coast, thereby
stpt thi South Santlam wtrt open, boosting the province's fisheries pi-
  trol fleet to the largest size In hil-
Canadians in Other
Forcei Entitled
to Vets Benefits
OTTAWA, Feb. 7 (CP.-The gov-
tory.
The Weather
Fprlcast—Kootenay: Light winds,
becoming   moderate   Friday   after-
ernment announced tonight  In  anlnoon.  Partly   cloudy   Friday   noon
order-ln-council that Canadian vet-and bocomlng cloudy hy late Frl-
erans of Allied forcei now arc en- day afternoon with snow commenc-
irui. The"DomlnloiTOovirnminiIpublishing compiny, Leille B. Barb- titled to benefits of the War Ser- Ing during Friday night. Milder tern-
_____   -. ,.. . ,    . a..      _,    ..   1,-A,,...   T    nnl_l...i_.  ..A  __   r..s,  ..i..   er......    ,.. ,    »_._.   i'._,    n_ .  n,_,j_._ _,__,
hu 11 ready provided for some fl
ninolll inlititMt to provldt for
thli.
•r, D'Arcy J. Baldwin ind O. Cecil vici Grants Act, the Veterani Re- perature Friday night.
llnrkrr,  who  hu  been  associated hlbilltatlon Act, tbe Vettram Land    Ttrnperatures — Min.  20.2, Max.
with the paper for Uveral yeari.     'Act and treatnynt regulations. SSL
I
_A	
	
'    '      ^       ^
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___________________________
_________________
__________________________________________________________
____m_____
_______________________
 ll
a - NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY I; 1944
Banquettlng Curlers at Bonspiel
Toast Rossland and the Old Days
ROSSLAND, B. C, Ftb. 7-Curl-
lng glories ot Rouland of tht tarly
dayi, uid tbe fine tportmmsblp for
which Rouland hu bttn famous
throughout thi yean, wtrt itrtued
by mii-jr ipeiktri at the blf bin-
outt ln K.P. Hill Wedneidiy night,
When Rouland Curling Club was
hott to the viiiting curlers, and the
curltrt— viiitors tnd nttivei alike
—were relaxing trom tht strain of
active pity.
I Early Roulind ai a curling paradise wu plcturtd by T. S. Peteri,
{dean of Kootenty curlers, who pro-
noted the toast to the "B. C. Curling Auocittion;" Dr. H. R. Christie
(of Roulind, who proposed the tout
to "Our Vliltori;" and James Buch-
juun of Trail, retired CM. it S.
Company General Manager, one of
!thl oldeit ot the veterans,
j The fine spirit of friendship developed by curling was stressed by
ilr. Peters, who told of the game's
'Inception ln the Kootenay. But fine
u the game was in the old days,
there had been great Improvements.
! Dr. Christie revealed some of the
sources of Rossland's attractions to
the early day curlers, as evident
from advertisements of those days,
which offered a great variety of desirable and attractive services and
products at miraculously low prices.
Secretary George F. Reimann
itited the records showed Kooteniy curlers were so enamored of
Rosalind's attractions and hospitality thlt one year a resolution was
offered at the annual meeting of
the Kootenay Curling Association
thlt Rowland be made the Bon-
tpiel's permanent home,
CURLERS SOFT TODAY
SAYS "BUCK"
Tilting sharp issue with Mr. Pet-
era' contention that the modern
gime was much Improved, Mr. Buchanan stoutly upheld the old dayi.
He said he and some other old curlers dropped in at the Curling Rink
during the afternoon, and found
everything deserted. On being told
it wis because the ice was soft—ice
thlt Nelson and Trail would have
eonildered wonderful ln the eirly
dtyt—he felt that it was the curlers
who were soft, rather than the ice.
Mr. Buchanan claimed to be the
only mm in B. C. to have won and
loit the Grand Challenge in a single
gune, ind told of how, on his first
ylilt to Rossland, sent by Trail to
fill out • Kailo rink iklpped by the
lite G. 0. Buchanan, the opposing
rink conceded defeat in the Grand
Chlllenge flail, ind the rocks were
ibout to be removed, when "G.O."
dlKloeed that he still had his last
rock to throw. Implored to "waste"
the rock, or at least uae the outturn so u not to disturb the winning set-up, the skip insisted on
playing the rock as he considered
' he ihould, used the ln-turn, and
lucceeded in moving the opponent's
rock i couple of inches inward, and
dunging victory to defeat. "Buck"
said he and his matel, who had
been restricted to a coffee diet by
"GO", who was an ex-minister,
rebelled then, and retorted to the
fluid* that the other curlers used.
F1NI TYPES OF MEN
A. M. Chester, who responded to
the tout to "The B C. Curling Aiioclitlon," dealt with curling's "in-
ttrmedlite days" in the Kootenay.
Al with many other speakers, he i
attended his first Bonspiel at Rosslmd, ind there he met and lm-i
menaely admired the late "Dud":
Blackwood of Nelson, whose sports-
minihip, and encouragement to
young curlers, made him a type of
the true sportsman. As a consequence of that association, he deeded curling was t|je game for him.
There   was   comiderable   good-!
Toast-Tea
natured bandlnage it thl expanie of
tht Vtncouver curlers, particularly
from Frank Staples of Creston tnd
Mr. Buchanan, tht litter criticizing
tht modern "knock-out" gimt.
}. B. Oriy of Nelion, newly-elected Pretldent ot the B. C. Hockey
Auocittion, told' • characteristic
Scotch story of a minister who was
t curler. He paid a tribute to Rois-
lind'i iplrlt, which overrode ill
idverslty,
SPORTS BUILD DISTRICT
(AYS DIAMOND
R. W. Diamond, General Manager
of the. CM. & S. Compiny, aaid
though ht wu not t curler, ht ftlt
curling wu • iport thit probably
mort than tny othtr tied tht mtn of
this district togtthtr.
Whit would Trill, Ntlion, Klmberley and Crtnbrook bt, for Instance, lf the pepole of each ot thnt
citiei went their own wiyi, ind
eonildered only their'own lnternil
lntereiti, without iny mixing together? Inttr-dlitrlct iporti did
mort to provide this desirable (nixing together thin inythlng elie.
Speiking for the CM. 4 S., ht
hoped th* aports of the district
would grow and extend, and the
Company, for It* part, would do
whatever lt could to further them.
Mr. Diamond expreued the opinion the MacDonald-Brler playdowni
were a good thing, If only for the
common Interest they created acrou
the Dominion.
Others who spoke u representatives of the different clubi In the
Association were Ned Henderson of
Vancouver, E. M. Reynoldi of Grind
Forks, M. C. Donaldson of Salmo
and Joe Rochon of Klmberley.
Jamea Wright, retiring President
of the B. C. Curling Auociation and
ex-Preildent of the Rouland Club,
waa toastmaiter.
Rev, H. R. Johnston, retiring
Chaplain of the Aisociation, said
grace at the banquet, which wai
outstanding. The toast to "The
King," which preceded the speaking program, was proposed by
Toastmaster Wright.
With Stane
apd Besom
Opening U.D.L. games at the Nelson Curling Rink Thursday night
resulted  as  follows;  e
G. S. Godfrey 5, H. A. D. Greenwood 14.
F. D. Cummins 10, J, B. Gray 6.
A. H. Moore 8; E. C.'Hunt 9.
R. A. Peebles 5; A. G. Lane 10.
A. H. Whitehead 11; D. Laughton 8.
I Rinks Reach
Cranbrook Eights
To spare a man from a healthy toll, aayi A. W, Kinglafce in
The Invasion of thp Crimea, is
not always an unmixed good. To
save a free-born citizen from
th* trouble of thinking upon
questions of state is to take from
him his share of dominion; and
although it be true that he who
follows printed advice Is under
i guidance more skilful] and
dtxterous than any he could
have got from his own untutored mind, he is less of a man.
and, on the whole, is less fair,
It,, righteous than one who In
a ruder fashion contrives to
think for himself ... The readers of public prints were slow
to understand the new kind of
duty which had come upon
them They were slow to see
that it became them to look in a
very critical spirit upon the
writings of a stranger, unseen
and unknown, who wis not
only proposing to guide them.
but even to speak in their name
. . . The blessing confarred by
print will perhaps be complete
when the diligenr-e .the wariness, and above all, the courageous Justice of those who read,
ahall be brought into fnir proportion with thp skill and the
power of those who address
them In print,
CflOllFRHAM/WOATS
Limited
TORONTO. ONTARIO
CRANBROOK. B. C, Feb. 7—At
the end of the early draw tonight
seven rinks had advanced to the
eighth of the Green Cup mixed
competition. Three more games
were scheduled for the late draw.
In the sixteens scores were:
Duncan MacDonald, 8; Bill Citra
7.
Walter Richards, 5; Jack Fil-
kins. 4.
Pascuzzo, 8;  Eric MacKinnon 5.
In the early draw tonight scores
in Sixteens games were;
Dave Frame, 11; Rylander. 1.
Steve Svpitka, 8; Ted Nelligan 7.
Cole Reid, 6; Art Scheffler, 4.
Dey. 7; Tippe 3.
Section playoffs in the Sash and
Door Competition are set for Sunday and the Green competition will
be finished early next week to b*
followed by the Little 'Spiel.
There will be no scheduled games
Friday, making way for the Gyro
Ice Fantasy at the skating rink for
which ice conditions are ideal.
CHARGE GUARDS
WITH MURDER
0F2PKKETS
^trilie Control Bill
Goes to Senate,
Expect Opposition
N. Y. Schools Close
NEW YORK, Feb. .'(CP)-With
tomt 1,449,000 American worktri ott
tht job through labor-management
disagreements tnd no major developments reported leading to settlements, President Trumin todty
told t prtu conference ht hopfcd a
ntw formula for* ending strikes
would bt rttdy ln t dty or two.
Hht itld tht whole question wu
ont of production tnd tht government tormult would not bt t completely new wage-price policy but
one tor meeting pretent problemi.
SEE 8TEEL PRICE LIFT
At almost the same hour, officlili
cloie to economic plinnlng la Wuhington predicted iteel prlcei would
be boosted to J5.25 ■ ton to offset
propoied Wlge Increases ln the
itrlke-bound Iteel lnduitry.
There were then developmenti;
1. Four guards on the itrlke-
bttat Toledo, Peoria ind Weitern
Railroad wtrt charged it Bloom-
Ington, III,, with  murdering two
plcketi. The men wtrt killed tnd
thrte othen wire woundtd Wed*
ntldty  In   in   affray   itemmlng
from   tht   railroad'!   attempt  to
move t soil triln ovtr Iti lint
whloh hid betn  paralyzed by t
atrlkt ilnce Oct 1,        '
2. Partial trolley service wti re-
sumed under heivy police guard in
Lancaster, Pa., after in automobile
load ot men, iome wearing trmy
garb, craihed through t picket line
to reach i strike-bound bun of the
Coneitogt Triniportttion Company.
Five can, the only public transportation available in an area terving 216,000 persons, rolled out of
the barn amid shouti of "Scab!" A
uniformed man operating one of
the cars shouted back "I fought for
this and you fellows aren't going to
keep me from working."
PASS ON STRIKE
CONTROL BILL
3.v The Greater New York C.I.O.
Council announced it had called off
plans for a two-hour work stoppage
by CIO. workers in New York City,
scheduled for Monday afternoon.
The demonstration had been planned ln support of a C.I.O. strike
against Western Union.
4. The House of Representatives
stamped emphatic approval on a
sweeping strike-control bill—258 to
155—andWt it to the Senate where
opponents said it would meet tough
sledding.
5. New York City, already proclaimed in a state of emergency,
saw its fuel shortage grow more
critical as 400 strike-idle tug boats
remained tied up for the fourth consecutive day, despite government
seizure. The army and ntvy, which
had been requested to man the boati,
employed only 11 of an expected 45
government tugs to tow a trickle
of oil and coal across the harbor.
Schools were ordered closed as the
fuel situation became more critical.
<_. An estimated 18,000 C.I.O. steelworkers la the Lake Superior district prepared to join in the national
steel strike at midnight, C.S.T. Minnesota law preventing for 30 days
any strike affecting public intereit,
had kept the iteelworkeri on the
job in that area.
The new strike control bill by
Rep. Francis Case (Rep. S.D.) sets
up a Federal Mediation Board and
forbids strikes and lockouts for 30
days. It tlso provides for court injunctions ind civil suits, outlaws
violence and bans boycotts.
Rege Stone Cops Grand Challenge,
Jim Hanson Cammell-Laird;
Riesterer Gains Rossland Cup Final
ROSSLAND, B.C, Feb, 7-Tht
■ilvtrwtrt stage of tht B.C. Curling
Assoclttion's Sltt annual Bonipiel
htrt wu reached tonight with four
finals itaged ot itarted.
In 1 three-hour game, Uw Rege
Stent rink of Trill emerged Winner ot tht Grind Challenge when
it defeited the A. M. Chesser rink,
also ot Trail, 10-5.
The Cammell-Laird event, lecondary of the Grind Challenge, wu not
decided until 10:30, in hour ind t
hilf overdue, when an 8-8 tit between Jim Hanson of Rossland and
Fred Tinling of Vtncouver wu decided by i drtw to the button by
the skips, Hanson winning.
Finals of tht Trill ind Rouland
Cupi went Into action at i latt
hour. Tht Trill Cup^lnil is tn tll-
Trill affair, ln which Rege Stone
eitabliihed • lead ot five pointi over
R. C. McGerrigle ln the opening
endi. The Roulind Cup, which
itirted later itlll, ll being tought out
between Cheuer of Trill ind R.
P. Riesterer of Nelson.
Play .in the Nelson Cup reached
the leml-flnals lite today, with t.
E. Perkins of Rossland facing Theo
D'Amour of Trail ln the upper
bracket and A. Albo of Rossland and
Chesser of Trail being paired ln
the lower.
KIMBERLEY IN SEMIS
The Klmberley Cup In which the
Chlaholm draw is employed, making
it the largest of the three secondaries, has reached its first semifinal ln which McGerrigle of Trail
il paired wltft Fnnk Avery of Vancouver, who eliminated hii name-
uke, t. J. Avery of Salmo, by i
6-5 score, winning the list end with
a perfect draw to the button. Two
Roulinderi, Gibion ind Donildwn,
are bracketted together ln the eights
ai are Tinling of Vancouver and W. I
Forreit of Trail. Thui three clubi, I
Vincouver, Trail and Rossland, have
two rlnki each Itlll in this event.
Entries are now being received
for the All-Comen or visttori consolation; for the Burns Cup for
home rinks' consolation; and for
the Pointi competition.
It is now probable that the 'spiel
will go into Saturday for all three
ot these events, instead of only for
the Burns as originally planned.
The ice was below the frost mark
during the day by a slight margin,
but a clear cold night has, produced
perfect conditions again.
The day's results:
GRAND CHALLENGE
Semi-final—
A. M. Chesser, Trail, 10; Theo
D'Amour, Trail, 8.
Final—
Rege Stone, Trail, 10; A. M. Chesser, Trail, 5.
CAMMEL-LAIRD
Semi-final—
Jamot Hanson, Rosiland, 5; E. M.
Reynoldi, Grand Forks, 3.
Jim Hanson, Rossland, 5; E. M.
Reynolds, Grand Forks, 3.
Final- •
Htnion, J; F. Tinling, Vincouvtr, 1,
TRAIL CUr
Stml-flnil—
Rege Stone, Trtll, 11; Theo D'Amour, TOU. 7.
ROSSLAND CUP
Semi-final—
A. B. Cltrke, Trill, 5; R. P. Rlei-
terer, Ntlion, 10,
NILSON CUP
Round J—
E. t. Perkins, Rosslmd, 11; Andy
Ctltchton, Trill, 8.
MUrriy Gibion, Roulind, 9; Fred
Tinling, Vancouver, 11.
W. Forreit, TnU, 12; A. B. Ronmirk, Nelion, 10.
J. C. Urquhart, Roulind, 8; A.
Albo, Roulind, IS.
R. Domldion, Roulind, 7; R. P.
Rieiterer, Nelion, 9.
Reie Stone, Trill, 4; A. M. Chei-
ler, Trill, 11.
Theo D'Amour, TrilL 11; F. J.
Pleiter, Trail, 10.
Roundi 8—
E. E. Perkins. Roulind, 13; E. M.
Reynoldi, Grind Forks, 8.
Fred Tinling, Vincouver, 7; Theo
D'Amour, Trail. 8.
W. ForresL Trail, 9; Albo, Rouland, 12.
K. P. Riesterer, Nelson, 3; A. M.
Chesser, Trail, 9.
KIMBERLEY CUP
Preliminary round—
R. Donaldson, Rossland, 10; Rege
Stone, Trail, 9.
Round 1—
W. H. Baldrey, Trail, 8; Murray
Gibson, Rossland, 15.
F. Ji Plester, Trail, 7; A. B. Ron-
mark, NeUon, 8.
J. C. Urquhart, Rouland, 12; R.
Donaldson, Rossland, 13.
Round 1—
Lei James, Chapman Camp, 14;
A. B. Clarke, Trail, 11.
G. Bishop, Rossland, 10; R. E. Hill,
Trail, 11.
W. Carrie, Trail, 11; E. J. Avery,
Salmo, 13.
Frank Avery, Vincouver, '12;
Frank Staples, Creston, 9.
O. H. Hill, Trail, defaulted to Russell Jones. Rowland.
Jimes Atwell, Trail, 9; R. McNib,
Rossland, 8.
James Hanson, Rosiland, 6; R. C.
McGerrigle, Trill, 13.
George Dyson. Roulind, 7; J. A.
Wright, Rossland, 9.
Round 2—
T. A. Wallace, Nelson, 9; Andy
Crichton, Trail, 10.
Round 2—
E. M. Reynolds, Grand Forks, 6;
Fred Tinling, Vancouver. 14.
W. Forreit, Trill, 14; R. P. Rieiterer, Nelson 7.
James Atwell, Trill, 4; R. C. McGerrigle, Trail. 10.
Les James, Chapman Camp, 9;
James Wright, Rossland. 8.
R. E. Hill, Trail, «;•___.. J. Avery,
Salmo, 10.
Frank Avery, Vancouver, 13; Russell Jones, Rossland, I.
Round 3—
R. C McGerrigle, Irall, 14; Lea
Jamei, Chapman Camp, 2.
Miss Canada Girls
Blue Team to
Sell Stamps Saturday
1 War Savings Stamps will again
be sold by Miss Canada Girls at
their Baker Street Canteen Saturday. The Blue team led by Captain
June Fraser will be in charge, oth-
s2r members being the Misses Sheila
Dawson, Kay Cooper. Marjorle Irving, Molly Jean Idiens. Dorothy Zu-
bic. Mary Waldie and Marjorie
Young.
Coldwell Charges
Discrimination
'< OTTAWA. Feb 7 (CPI - M J,
Coldwell. CCF Leader, said today
in a statement action of the Government increasing gasoline prices
iwo cents a gallon in the Prairie
Provinces was "an unfair and dls-
rnminatory measure" against West-
, trn farmers.
ITCH
CHECKED
htJtmi
-or Money Dick
For quick rrllrf from Itrhlni cauied by edtrna,
ethletei foot, tabid, r*mpl-i and otber ItchJni
tftoam-ttt ■fis&lhs_3
•liinifM. Soothee, comforts ud quickly ealmi
Intenee itching. IWl stiff. r AikyOur d runlet
today  for   D. 0. D. PHUCRlf TION.
Wings Square
Series by
Beating Rangers
NEW YORK. Feb. 7 (CP)-De-
troit tonight squared its series with
'.he New York Rangers at three vic-
'ories and a tie rach by downing
the Gothamites 4-2.
Lineups:
New York: Rayner: N. Colville.
L. Patrick; Laprade; P. Wition.
Pike. Subs: Laycoe, Trudtll, M.
Colville, Warwick. Gardener, De-
Marco, Russell. Leswlck. Moe.
Detroit: Lumlev: Jackson. Stewart; Armstrong; Llscombe, Lindsay.
Subs: Howe, Gauthlet. Brown, Carveth. E. Bruneteau, Quackenbush.
Couture, McLenahan. Douglas
Referee: George Gravel; Llnei-
men: Doug Young md Stm McCabe
Summary:
First period:
1. Detroit. Gauthier .Carveth)
8:30: 2, Detroit, E. Bruneteau (Stew-
srt-Couture) 9:06; 3, Detroit, Armstrong (Lindsay) 13:22
Penalties: Jackson (2).
Second period:
4. Detroit, Gluthier (McLenahin,
Carveth) 4:44.
Penalties: DeMarco. McLenahan.
Third period:
5, New York. Warwick (DeMarco,
'..eswicki 13 40; 8, New York, Pike
(Watson, Patrick) 18:30.
Penalty: Stewart,
Gov't Slapped
lor lack ol
Shortage Warning
Harder Conditions
for Britain "War's
Legacy" Says Herald
Women to Protest
By  JAMES  McCOOK
Cinidiin Prtu Stiff Writer
LONDON, Ftb. 7 (CP Ciblt) -
Britain's biggest post-war problem
—food—today embroiled the Labor
Government in the most voclferoui
expression of public wrath linct it
took office.
As the Government let up a
three-man "tood cabinet" to battle
world shortages. London'! newspapers editorially echoed criticisms
mide In the Houie of Commoni yeiterdiy. The newipaperi charged
that the admlnlitratlon had failed
to warn of the gravity of the food
iltuation and the imminence of new
reductions in already strained supplies.
The cabinet discussed the food
crisis during tht day end Parliament iet next Thursday for debite
on the Government food policy to
be followed on the next day by debate on an agricultural program.
Several Labor backbenchers have
indicated they will uk—as will the
Conservative oppoiltlon,—why the
Government did not warn monthi
ago of the impending food crisis instead of allowing Sir Bin Smith,
Food Minister, In recent statements
to foreeast food conditions would be
better this year ln aeveral lines.
"WAR'S LEGACY"
BAY8 HERALD
The Labor Dtlly Herald said editorially, however, that the Conservative! have suddenly become aware
of "■ world threitened by famine
and certain ihortigei." The newipiper added that "the Tory party
oitrlch" ii learning that "war and
luffering do not end with the last
ihot."
Britain had hoped for an easier
lot after six years of rationing, the
Herald said, but "the days of eaiy
bacon and eggi are not yet, the fat
ration is down by one ounce weekly, the loaf of bread will be darker
and becauie ot reduced animal
feeding stuffs, it ls anticipsted thlt
big increases in pig herds and poultry flocks have been postponed."
"But thit it no fault, al the Toriei
will make believe, of a lack of planning by the Labor Government.
This ls war's legacy."
HOU8EWIVE8 PLAN PROTEST
Against that, the Times of London said there had been "too little
blunt speech from ministers about
the coming dearth." The powerful
Independent journal went on to say:
"The Government has tailed to
lay sufficient stress upon adverse
omens which have been piling up
lince last June when Col. J. J. Llewellyn, (the Minister of Food In the
wartime Coalition Government),
painted a lombre picture of Impending deficits of iugar, fat*, meat, milk
and wheit... but those critics who
have pressed io unceasingly for I
relaxation ot the Spartan ittndardi
of this country's diet ctn icarcely
claim any political credit now from
the belated discovery thlt imterity
is not s stubborn 'Sodilitt' policy
but a product of plain facts.
The newspapers published the Ca-
nadlsn offer to send all of the Dominion's wheit lurplus to the United Kingdom.
Housewives from all parts of
Britain are being asked by the
Housewives League to participate ln
a man demonstration in London
against the latest food cuts.
,     .,.       '
Children's Wear Specials
i
Kiddies' Romp-jr*. Colors of Yallow or     fl At
Blue. Sizes 1 and 2 .'     i*\J_9
Little Boys' 2-plece Suits in Blue or
Red. Suit _
Girls' 2-plece Flannelette Pyjamas.
Sizes 8 to 14   _..
'2.59
1.65
1.95
•4.95
FINK'S ttitc^-to-WswL
Clearance of Girls' Dresses. Sizes 1 to
12. Regular up to $3.25. Special _	
Winter Tweed Coats. Sizes up to 6.
Regular $10.95- Special  ..._ _
Trail, Nelson Lodges Pay Homage
fo F. E. Dockerill, Trail Pioneer
TRANSPORTATION - PASSENGER
AND FREIGHT
I In the middle ages people were
bathed onlv at birth, at marriage
and at death.
No Negligence, Jury Stales In
Verdict on Death of Glade
Man, Struck by C.P.R. Snowplow
Death came to J^mes Nick Potd- the fireman was on the shovelling
tiikotf as a result of being struck by: deck, he decided to apply the brakes
a CPR snowplow Jan. 31, a Coron-!at once, receiving Hilton's si I al
er's Jury found Thuriday at an in-1 as he did so. The train was travel-
quest into the death of the Glade | ling at 25 miles per hour, and trav-
man. The Jury slid thit in its opin- tiled about 400 feet before It came
ion. everything poulble had been, lo a itop.
done to wirn the victim of the ap-] Pozdnlkoff was found under the
protch of the snowplow, ind that olow, having been puihtd along
there was no evidence of negligence between the rails,
on the part of the train crew. Death! He told Mr. Dawson that the last
was caused by internal haemor-, whistle signal before the warning
rhage and shock. ; tlgnal had been made less than one-
The accident occurred near Glade quarter of a mile from the scene,
during tht return trip to Nelson! where tht whistle should have eas-
from Cascade of the snowplow, j Uy been heard.
John Billion, operator of the plow| Tinman Zubick of Nelion uld
'old Constable John DeYoin, who 'hat ht could not sel thi man at all
reprtttnted the Crown. The train j whin he iniwirid Mr. Butler1! call.
had reached a point Just East of Conductor Ira C. Marquli of Nel-
Glade when he ipotted a man walk-! son said that the train ctme to a
ing on the track ahead from the'stop at exactly 4:50. and thlt the
cupola of {ha plow, ahead'of thel'tmosphere was perfectly clear at
engine. He signalled by hand to the! 'ha time. The first Indication of the
engineer to blow hli whiitle, he con-1 accident came when the whistle
tlnued. and the man stepped out- blew and he went tc thl window
■ide the rail. I In the caboose  Just at hi did so,
He turned, looked r> the oncom-,he heird the emergency btakes being plow, then stepped back on the ing applied He had gone to the
track and walked ahead. Mr. Ilia-i window because ha hid planned to
•on estimated the train was about; inspect the track at Shoreacres for
'00 feet away when he stepped i Dossible plowing,
hick. He ipplied the emergency TAKEN TO NILSON
brake, but tilt train could not be wh,n the trlln „ M th. en-
jtopped n time to be prevented L,nMr had C,,M oll, th|t he
from hitting Uie man. | .hou|M , man _sai been itruck. Mr.
IP. Dawson wh represented the M , _ht(M „ ,h, „ fcut
fimily of Mr. Poxdnlkoff wii told ^ „       B rllw „„„, ,h, front
by ,Mr. .?U.,.on '5£ "{"K *" -nd that the victim was thert. Hil
tood at the ime When he first saw bod   (rom th_ ch  , a u„.
Mr.   Poidnlko     he   was  about  .,._ (h,    ,ow ,n(, he on hl(
ouirter of a milt ahead of the triln !b,ck    NotlnJ   ,„ ,   h,   w„   ,mI
the whistle had bein Mown it;brMthlng, he had him lifted care-
crossings ind mile poiti Just prior fu„ lnto _nt c|bo0„ ^ h„de„
to the accident, he recalled, and,, „,, wlrln| from South 31o.
would have been heard etilly under ,,„ ,„ of(lcUll ,'mKn „ th„ ,n
-■mbulince and doctor could be held
tiady. They reached NtUtan tt S:M.
Dr. H. 8. Shiw told ot rtetlvlng i
tall  from  tht CPR idvlilng  him
,   .  ,thit   in   injurtd   mm   wai   btlng:
I'Tot^s Bru.mmltVM"'i»J «" .brought ln and described the treat-:
3st mor em he performed ftb. l|n|n, glv,n h)m „ Koo„nty Ll)t,;
.ndicated  that  Poidnikoffs  deith 0tmt] Hospitil. Dttth ctmt at > INTEREST RECORD
was cauied by haemorrhage from two „^    ,„    h takenlIN,tRt5T '
the mesenteric veutli  tnd upper,,, __, Holplul by „,, Tampion
•urfaces ot the liver. Fractures of' irnbulince
he   legs  undoubtedly   contributed,   Co81„bl,  D,Voin described  his
tnvestlgitlon Feb   1. during which
hi wis shown three footprint* just
II Inchei outside the North rill at
Memberi of Kootenay and Enterprlie Lodges, I.O.O.F., of Nelson and
Trail, respectively, attended funeral lervlces et St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Thursday for Francis Edmond
Dockerill, 73, who died at his home
•t 911 Third Street on Sunday.
Very Rev. F. P. Clark, Dean of
Kootenay, conducted the lervicei. ,
A large number of Nelson and
Trail friends also paid final tribute
to the former mayor of Trail who
moved to Nelson in January. He had
lived ln Trail since 189J., retiring
from the C. M. & S. Co. nearly a
year ago. ,
Following the servicei at church
and again at tht graveside, tht
Lodge memberi formed open ranki
through which the caiket wtl carried. There wai i large display of
flowers. The Lodge burial service
wta read by H. Hopklni, Noble
Grind, and II. H. Hankln, Chaplain,
ot Enterprise Lodge.
Hymns lung were "Abide With
Me," and "Peace, Perfect Peace."
Pallbearen were L. Fortin, R.
Oliver, J. P. Schofield and S. O.
Smillie of Trail, J. L. Schofield of
Klmberley and W. G. Holtona of
Nelson. Interment was ln the
I.O.O.F. Plot at Nelson Memorial
Ptrk.
K Rinks to Play in Consols
Event Opening at Rossland Today
condltloni of that afternoon
Pordnlkotf hid not actually moved clear of the track, Just stipplnj
over the rail, then back to the ctn-
'.re of the track
D
. post
Five Appeals for
Today's Court
of Revision
Five appeals are to be heard at
the Court of Revision to be held
in the City Hall it 10 a.m. thii
morning. Four city councillori will
be present to deal with them.
Those appealing are:
A. T. and Iditn M. Godfrey who
feel the Improvements thay were
messed with on Lots 20, 21-.W of
IB Block O.P., are too high. Their
land li isieised at 1730, with improvements 13100.
Sarah J. Hamilton feels the Improvements are too high on har
property. Lot! 1, 2, 3, Block 33. Land
is aliened at $450 and Improvement! at (3000.
Mn. Mary Aro whole land wai
aliened at 3440 and improvements
it »700 for Lot! 9 and 10, Block 99,1
cliimi the tmprovementi had been
assessed too high.
Leslie and Nora C. Miwer feel
their property wu aliened it market vllue whleh was too high. Thli
property i* Loti 3 to 5 Block 41, and
the lind Is valued at (333, with
thl improvements $2300.
Arthur and Thelma Krleger, the
owners of Lots 5 and t, Block 48,
whose land was assessed at $300,
with improvem'-nts $200, claim they
were assessed for a chickanhouse
which ii to be moved off ln Spring
ROSSLAND, B.C, Feb. 7-Frlday,
the fifth day of the 31st Annual
Bonspiel of the B.C. Curling Association, will be devoted to the
pltyojfs of ihe British Consols,
which constitutes the B.C. division
of the Macdonald Brier, the provincial playoffs alternating between
the B.C. Bonspiel and Vancouver.
With exactly 16 rinks entered for
this event, thee winning rink of
which is deemed to be the provincial
champion, Bonspiel Secretary E. E.
Perkins has an ideal layout, with
neither preliminary round nor byei
to take care of.
Eight clubs have made entries,
based on their membership figurei,
seven being from Kootenay-Bound,
try. Trill leads with lix rinks entered, Nelion has three, Rossland
two, ind Vancouver, Grand Forka,
Stlmo, Creston and Chapman Camp
one each.
As British Consols games require
12 ends, instead of the 10 standard
in B.C., Secretary Perkins ls allow,
ing three hours on each draw.
Representatives of the eight clubs
officiated at the draw-making to<
night, with the passing as follows
In order:
R. C. McGerrigle, Trail, A. M.
Chesser, Trail.
R. Donaldson, Rossland, Lei
James, Chapman Camp.
Rege Stone, Trail, R. Riesterer,
Nelson.
T. A. Wallace, Nelson, P. T. Mclntyre, Trail.
A. B. Ronmark, Nelson, E. M. Rey-
nolds, Grand Forks.
0. R. Beckett, Rosiland, E. J.
Avery, Salmo.
A. Albo, Rossland, Theo D'Amour, Trail.
Frank Staples, Creston, Frank Avery, Vancouver.
It wlll take four draws to pro-
Improved Program
Uncovering Greater
Number V.D. Cases
VICTORIA, Teb. 7 (CP) - Although statistics for the first lix
months of 1945 show a 100 per cent
increue in British Co)mjibla In the
number of cases of tkti'more serious type of social disease, this
ilarming increase may be attributed ln part, to Improvements in the
control program, officials of the
Provincial Department of Control
nld todty.
Continued expansion of the pro
gram hu resulted in the location of
cases that would normally remain
unreported, It was explained.
The Increase reflects a world-
vide trend. In the Province new
cases ot social disease of all type
cose by 18 per cent.
Officials stated, however, that
many cases continue unreported
throughout the Province.
FREIGHT TRUCKS
LEAVE NELSON DAILY
At 10:30 o m.—Except Sunday
Trail Livery Co.
M. H. MclVOR, Prop.
Trail—Phone 135   Nelson—Phone 35
'I ■ '
P H H--■--■! M Hi ■■ H M H ■ I
! CUTICURA!
| SOA-
| Fori
■i
lo the shock
ENGINEIR DAW HIM
Engineer Eric Butler of Neleon
| SOAP and OINTMENT
| For PROMPT RELIEF |
PIMPLES I
RASHES I
BLACKHEADS I
ICutkuri h-Ipi cl.ii ap ikin blam- I
Ittn. puy loitir-Koimmlcill Ml !
■ rtfuuiiuMildly Me.lce.loi.
|  MOTHtRS!   Mc-ndl- fM eilper'mS: I    mttvioi
■ ______> ______■ ______■ _____■ ■__■ ______■ ______■ ______■_____■ BB ______■ !__■
tteted he htd ittn the victim on the
'rick Just as he rounded a slight
curve. H« immediately afKid the
.Irtmin. Gtorge Roltnd Zubick. to
ree If the mm wu itlll on tht* trick
il ht diuppiared from hit own
view on the itnlghtewiy. Noticing
[ lUBVVIIW mini
■•'/-VIOITAIU
IIXA.IVI
' i.e....■-■-, tl,,,.-, i,i..,.
I a_—*r*a**r*2ta—**—&_!
— nM|||Wia--i p-e/
lha icctdint leant Thtrt wu
1300-foot itrilghtaway, tht font.
prlnti bting 900 ftet from the curve
to the Weit. Tht triln htd tpptr-
intly stopped 4)3 feet from the
point where PotdnlkofTi cip wu
found, tnd tht dlitinct from tht
can to tht footprint! wu ts feet.
Hi igreed with Mr Dawion thit
thl footprints wire not nectiiarily
ihoM of tbl vietlm'i
TM Jury wu compoltd of Aldtr-
min A H. Allln, foreman: Sim
i Brown. Dm W. Crotltr, Oordon I.
Smith. Intr Krift md Oordon C.
Burgiu.
Tht tolp trtde flrit begin to
flourish In Europe during the 13th
century.
I
VANCOUVER, Teb 7 (CP)-Whtt
li believed to be an all-time low
fnterist rite record In public fi-
nineing in Britiih Columbia wsi
mide todiy when the Greiter Vin-
ctuver putrlet Witer Boifd sold
$1,230,000 of Its debenture!.
The debentures, dlted Mirch 1,
will miture from two to 33 yeiri
ind will baar Interut at 2, 2«t, 1',
lnd 3 per cent. Thiy wert lold to
I syndicate whleh bid 100.78 per
100.
Mil from NEORITIC Ha
Don't ante tisoibm dty from tht cruel
totm.nt of N.u.ii.c, JUuujntUe et
Artkittic Pile. Cat quick relief al
thouundi have wtth TuaplKOa'l T-R-C't.
Swdilly made to r»llev» Rtiwnuilc Pall
end 6t_gB«e_, Neuralgia. Lumbago.
8_.iil.-_. T-R-C't an acid by dntagiiti
r-vrwbara. Wc tl. *U
I
TAKE NO CHANCES
WITH
BABY'S COLD
DON'T LET your beby'i Utile coM develop
into unyihlni worM. Let Mrt- Geo. McBride,
ol Scarborough till you whst to da. "My bsby
of 26 monthi etui-it e nuty cold, eo I tritd
fshy's Own TsbUte ind ibe threw thl* cold
ofl quicker thin ever before. I cerulaly tm for
Btby'e Own Tebleti from now on.'
Bsby'i Own Tsbleti help In the treatment
of _:■■_*!# br their Uxetlve action- Tbey tn
iw-rtl-iaitlni, eaiy to take—end may be cruehc<
to a powder lldeatrtd. Effective id teethjn
■_■■_' ■-■•, comtlpitlon, ilmple fevtre, upe-f
>-rr_»L__, luniiuri complaint, diarrhoea am
Mher minor allra.nu. No "ileepy" itulf — ti
lulling efltet*
i'-»f e packiu today. SlrkneM ao often -sulkr
n the niiht. 3 centa. Your money back il yov
ere not mi!1-I**!.
Hiiuomm
pltei relief »»*
# Don't lultcr tin naigtnc torment of
•Impie plin. Aik Ua wwt dmirtt
for 7AZ0 0__tn-.nl. Acta I arsy-—.
tl) bfinn mothlnc stlal (ran pain and
lirhlni (2) hi_.l_.iiri h__r__«ia<__.drladparts
-ti-lpi prevent crtcklnl see) mrrniee
(S) tende te reduce Mrelllng, check Heird-
lng. Appllritlon li my ir_ thoro_|tl
«llh the FAZO nerlorated pile pipe. A*
yens Doctor. He Vncen mO Ointment
-Uaove lor 30 nn us
duce the winner. Ai not ill flvt
iheeti will be required for thlt
competition, a start will be made
simultaneously ln the AU-Comen,
or viiitors coniolttlon, which will
stage six games during the dty
time play of the Consols.
EARLY DRAWS
First round draws of thl Conioli
are as followi'
7 a.m.—Donaldion vs Jamet; Wallace vi Mclntyre; Ronmark vi Reynoldi; Staplei tn T. Avery.
10 a.m.—rtfcOerrlgle vi Cheuer;
Stone vi Riesterer; Beckett va E. J.
Avery; Albo vi D'Amour.
CM-dispelliiq
PA/H-re/iemg
Ingredients in
DUUUlIlI  9 CAPSULES
Bring Relief In
¥■ tton
HUD COIDS, mi S, PAIHS
OR MONIY BACK
'CD
■ Mill    iWALLOWlD
-act msita-
Moving By
WILLIAMS'
TRANSFER
Costs Less
Saves Time
Avoids Worry
Assures Safety
Modern Vans, Expert, Experienced Moving Men take
complete charge—and handle your belongings with utmost care.
WILLIAMS'
TRANSFER
Phon* 1106
____________________________
	
	
 ■ -.
Come by Way
of Canada-Bracken
NEW YORK, Feb. 7 (CP)—The
onus ot preserving peice in the
world hai shifted to toe North American continent, and "we muit accept the responsibility for establishing a peace . . , That wlll not
need to be a veiled preparation
for another war," John Bracken,
leader of Canadian Progreasive
Conservative Party, said tonight.
In a speech prepared ior delivery at th* annual dinner of the New
York City Committee of Ducks Unlimited, Mr. Bracken said that if
a third world war should come, it
would not necessarily come by
wsy of Flanders.
"It might come by way of Canada," he said. "Fifty years ago, the
prevention of war was not considered to be the business of this continent. Now it is very much our
business. We now find ourselves
at one of the main crossroadi of
the world's affairs.
"We in Canada have a geographical area comparable to youri but
only one-twelfth of your population. We art not one of the Big
Three, nor one of the Big Four, nor
one of the Big Five. But no notion
has a greater stake in peace than
Canada.
ONUS SHIFTED
"And the onus of preserving peace
has shifted to this continent. If we
are going to preserve peace, we
must make a sane beginning by
sterilizing the germs of war. Standards of living in Nation States
must be respected. But it wlll-be
well for us both to remember that
international trade restrictions are
not free from some, at least, of the
germs of war."
Mr.'Bracken, pointing to what
had been done by Canadian and
American sportsmen in rebuilding
the continent's duck population,
said Canada and the United States
had set "an example of amity in
International relations to the re*t
of the world."
However, in a measure "we have
treated the resources of this continent as if our interesti were mutually antagonistic," he laid.
"A Canadian citizen today
payi at leait $200 more for a motor car than hli neighbor acrou
the border; and If an  American
fOQUSH
TO WOUCT INimiS, INHZIS 0|i
tieadM
A bottle of Vlcka Va-tro-nol la mighty
bead colds. Mate breathing eailer.
Helps PlfWrt *****   _m develpp-
-—*— — lag lf uied at the flnt
warning sniffle or sneeze.
Thli Double-Duty Noee Drops ahould
aave you much mlaery. Try ttl Worka
finei You'll like ltl
VICKSVATROMOL
Great Man Buries Citation When
Germans Occupied Brussels
miller wanti a buihei of Canadian wheat, he hai to pay a toll
of 42 centi before he can take It
acrou the line, Our flih, our settle, our lumber and our metali
are itlll subject to your heavy
dutiea; and much of your manufactured goodi face ilmllar ob-
■taclei of our making,"
Mr. Bracken recalled how the
depression of the 1930's had led to
the establishment of trade barriers.
"We in Canada were denied certain markets in your country," he
6aid. "We thereupon sought a more
favored position in the British market. And that position we shall
hesitate to relinquish without comparable gains elsewhere.
POWER CONTE8T
"But we have a bigger stake in
foreign trade than to let matters
rest ai they are. We feel that if the
area of relative freedom of International trade ii continuously narrowed and the area of trade Interference ls widened, international
commerce will develop into a power contest,
"What chance .will there then be
for Implementation of the world's
resources available without discrimination for human needs? It
will mean that the Wars of the future will no longer be contests between men oi orte nationality and
men of another, The wara of the
future will become contests in
i which men are pitted against resources, in which icience battles
against human beings, and in which
the world's goods and services are
mobilized for the destruction
rather than for the amelioration of
mankind.
"We must have aggressive leadership in the area of free enterprise or political domination of
trade will win the rate. I believe
that such leadership must
come from this continent, and from
this part of this continent, and in
this respect we ln Canada will be
prepared to pliy our part.
"Canada is t small nation, judged
by your standards; but we mean to
throw our weight where it will
count mott for world peace and
the general progrtsi of mankind.
We mean to ihart with you and
ohen the reipomlbllity for maintaining a reign of law and preventing aggression throughout the
world.
"Our first concern, of course, will
be for our own workers—in all
callings—and our own economy—in
all its branches; but we mean as
well, to ihare with you, by the
wisest policies our best brains can
formulate, the expansion of human
welfare throughout the world."
By   DEWITT   MACKENZIE
BRUSSELS, Feb. 7-This il a
very, per son il column, but I want
you to meet my old friend Erneit
Marechal, one of Belgium's heroes,
who mngnificiently symbolizes the
Allied spirit of Fredom, Justice, and
Righteousness for which he has
stood so uncompromisingly at the
risk of his own life through two
world wars.
I regard Marechal with deepest
affection, for at the end of World
War one he rescued me here in
Brussels from what, to put lt mildly, was a most trying predicament.
I hadn't seen him since that time
—28 long years—but one of the
first things Mrs. Mack and I did
on arriving ln the capital was to
call on Marechal and his wife and
daughter in their home.
Back in the last conflict he many
times dared death to cross the German lines into France from occupied  Belgium in missions for  his
government, ln which he was a
cabinet minister. A citation ilgned by the late King Albert himself
described In detail Marechal's vast
heroism, and he wears a high decoration for his service to King and
country.
That citation ls badly stained
with dampness, for Marechal buried it ln his garden when the Germans occupied Brussels again in the
war. It would have been his death
warrant if they had discovered lt.
In the present war Marechal has
had a ion serving es a Major ln the
British Royal Air Force. Another
lies in a Czechoslovakia!! grave
where the Germans' buried him
after theytiad killed him by itar-
vation and other inhuman treatment, Still, the Marechals aren't
I vindictive. Tears come to their eyes,
but they look on the sacrifices as1
part of their contribution to the
welfare of the country and their
fellow men.
Dispenses (00 Cups ol Free Coffee
a Day to Arctic-Clad Volunteers
By ALAN HARVEY
Cinidlan Pren Stiff Writer
CHURCHILL, Man., Feb. 7 (CP)
-Kitty Lloyd walked into the Silver Lady Canteen in Peacehaven
one warm English night, years ago
and met a Canadian corporal with
the Cameron Highlanders of Winnipeg.
Today, as the 33-year-old British
war bride of Diesel Engineer Norman Whitmell, the soft-spoken,
dark-haired girl from the Sussex
Downs dispenses 600 cups of free
coffee- every other day to. Arctic-
clad volunteers for Canada's exercise muskox—and loves doing it.
From balmy Peacehaven to chilly
Churchill was a long journey—
2750 mllei to be exact—but Kitty
! wouldn't have missed the experience "for anything."
[shook heads in dismay
"People shook their heads in dis
may when I said where I was go
lng," she recalls, "I didn't get a
scrap of encouragement. But I'm
glad I came. It isn't so bad here as
they- say."'
She likes th community's "preeminent" sunsets, working in the
Knights of Columbus Canteen operated by Rod Grant of Chilliwack,
B.C., and looking after, the one-
storey, converted- army dispensary
in which she lives with her husband and two-year-old son, blond,
blue-eyed  Roger  Keith,
But her husband, who came to
Winnipeg before the war from
Dunchurch, Ont,, and took a job
as Transport Department Engineer
on receiving his army discharge,
hopes to move soon from this Hudson Bay settlement. "Norman's always had a fancy for Alberta,"
| said Mrs. Whitmell, who married
the ex-corporal in April, 1942 and
arrived in Churchill late in 1945
after spending six months in Winnipeg.
Frozen Fingers, Faces All Part ol
Game Because "I Like Sheep"
 i	
UMTS WO MIM
JUT2KC0MS
ASPIRIN
RELIEVES
'-■ .-,(.ms "ind CAIN-, or
COLDS
a®
OINUINI AsrirtiN
MAIKID THIS WAT
BellofHM.CS.
Kootenay Is to
Come to District
From the Department of National
Defence Herbert W. Herridge, MP
for Kootenay West, has received
■word that the bell of HMCS Kootenay ls being sent to him, to be placed in this district for which the ship
ivas named.
Mr. Herridge wrote to Ottawa
mentioning that the bell of HMCS
Trail was going to Trail, that of
HMCS Rossland to Rossland, that
of HMCS Kokanee to Nelson and
liked what wai to become of the
bell of HMCS Kootenay,
Mr. Herridge was in Nelson yesterday after visits to Boswell and
Kaslo. He will address a meeting of
the Salmo Board of Trade tonight.
NEW DELHI <CP)-Three officers
of the 4th Indian Division have received the freedom of Verria, Western Macedonia. Citizens of the
town expressed their gratitude for
the work of Indian and British
troops at the ceremony.
The "Bay's" Food Values
Selling Friday, Saturday, Monday—Phonei 193—194
fn* City Delivery  on Orderi of $1.00 or Over
23<
nt
PASTRY FLOUR
Royal, 7 Ib. nek
BREAD   FLOUR:
Purity, 49 Ib. uck
PANCAKE  FLOUR:
Roiebud, 36 oz. pkgi
35«
$1.63
2H
BREX: Briakfait
Cereal, 2',, lb. pkgi.
COCOA:   Bakrr'i,
Vl Ib. tlm, each
RASPBERRY      JAM:
Aylmer, No.  .,
Tin
Pure,
75«.
HOSTESS COFFEE for Flavor Lb. 43c
Ground, fresh roasted coffee beans
TEA-Salada Orange Pckoo, Vl lb. 44c
Try Iti dellihltul flavor
CHUTNEY  8_.UC_:
9 oi. bottle
MARMALADE:   Aylmer, 24 oi. Jer
I5<
34<
SPAGHETTI    with   CHEESE:
Famoui. f)(k_
l» t,,   I.e. -*J\
FLOOR   WAX:   Old
No-Rub,
Quarti
WOOU   FOAM:   For
woolleni,
Pkg.
BROOMS:  For
household uie, each
ORANGES: 2Mi.
Doa.
GRAPEFRUIT: SO'i,
Ruby Redi, each
LEMONS: SOO'l,
« for
FRESH  FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
29*
25*
HEAD LETTUCE:
Each
NEW BUNCH
CARROTS: Lb.
CILERY: Freih and
crlip, Ib.  .
Engliih,
wishing
28*
$1.10
15*
7*
14*
fti^ony^g^amiidttg
INCORa-ORATIO   ttt MAY 1870.
MAPLE CREEK, Sask. (CP>-
Sheepmen ot southwestern Saskatchewan and other parts of the
prairies have an acute labor problem—a shortage of shepherds.
They say young men don't take
much interest in a job that puts
them out on the range alone for
months In all the weather the
prairies can muster. And the herders that are left are getting pretty
Old, men like Jim Moodie who came
from Scotland in 1919 and has been
herding a prairie flock lor almost
SO yesrs. Ha'i Tl.
Shepherding ls routine to men
like Jim Moodie. In June they load
up their' camp wagon, leave the
ranch and set up camp out on the
range. And they stay there until
October with the weekly supply
wagon their only link with civilization.
In winter they move to a permanent camp nearer the ranch, but,
are out with the flock in all weather. In storms and blizzards they
find shelter with the sheep and
their collie  herd dogs among  the
Aussies Start Huge
Mapping Job
: SYDNEY, Australia (CP)—Mapping of Australia's 3,000,000 square
I milei and the mandated territory
is planned by survey sections of
the army and Royal Australian Air
Force. The two services plan to use
modern radar map-making techniques.
i The project may take 20 years
The R.A.A-F. expects to take five
years to photograph the Commonwealth from the air; the army, 15
years  to  co-ordinate ground  data.
The army director of survey says
that 90 per cent of Australia is
still inadequately mapped in detail. The bulk of maps of settled
areas are based on old and erroneous information prepared by outdated methods. By using radar between the mapping aircraft and
the topographers, the ground lur-
veyors' fixation range will be increased from about 30 miles to 200
miles,
The plan is subject to Commonwealth government approval of a
recommendation by the general
staff that the Army Survey Corps
bc maintained at 10 times its prewar strength of 50 men.
The Survey Corps, aided by
RAAF and US Army Air Force
photographerJ, mapped about 100,-
000 square miles in Australia and
another 50,000 in the islands during the war. From the aerial surveys, the corps hBs built up in Melbourne a national library of more
than  2,000.000 photographa.
The corps printed for the Australian and US. forces 19,000,000
map sheets, mostly operational
Five million of these maps were
produced in thr field by mobile
lithographic  units.
prairie bluffs. Through the years
some have become casualties, frozen to death. Frozen hands and faces
are regarded as occupational hazards.     ' -..
The shepherd's -responsibility is
to see his charges don't poach on
some-Mil el«'i property, watch for
Mjjrs of difcase among the flock
and IN thet none stray. Black
;.i.cep are mattered throughout the
flock for countin;: purposes and
the shepherds count only the
blacks. II any are found missing
they aiiumc^lherj also have strayed and befit a search.
The' ihepherds earn from $75 to
$100 a month and board and. sheepman say thtt kind of money is no
attraction to'younger men. Though
.there has been talk of "importing"
shepherds from other countries
such as Scotland, nothing has ever
come of it.
So mon Ukl Jim Moodie carry
on, going'-on the range every year
with 1500 to 2000 sheep.
Whv doein't he give up"1
"I like sheep," Jim Moodie says
Deaths
By the Canadian Press
TORONTO-Norman    E.    Waln-
wright, 59,  paper manufacturer.
MECHANIC FALLS, Me.-Sam-
uel R, Penny. Sr,. 87, designer of
the first Stanley Steamer Automobile Engine.
OTTAWA-Dr. J J, Heagerty,
fi6, former Director of Public
Health Services for Canada, Since
his retirement in December, 1944,
he had served as special assistant
to the Deputy Minister of Health.
He was a native of Montreal.
ACCRA, Gold Coast (CP) - An
Engineers and Architects' Society
has been founded in Accra, its objects being to promote the acquisition and interchange of knowledge
of the engineering, architectural
and allied professions.
KISS YOUR
Tip FEELING
GOODBYE!
Paplaaa Many Suffer Low Blood
Count-And Don't Know It.
The biJBInf thlnf ■hmif low blond eottnt
u thtt yon fan wHjh ib-int ■* much u you
*-tr dii-trVtn look hMlthr ind itr-oni, jtt
-yoo ■_*__ ttt] «« if jtyti had lead in yoor
Wm. doner, tired and pcpliu.
Low blood eotiot *-*.■*■■-_• you h-jruVt fot
mouf h red blood eorpueeke. It li thtir »it_U
Job to mrry life-ri-ritr oiyran from yoor
lui-ft thromhout yonr body. And juit u fl
itkM ozrrn to explode ffftioltne In your
ear tnd mtkt tht *> > wer to turn Um wht*l__,
eo yoo molt htrt plenty of oxyftn to tn-
plod* tht tntrry in yoor body tnd t>f* yoo
gnlng powtr.
r_*t Dr. Wmitnu Pink Pilli today. Thty
trt world-no*t*d fnr tht htlp thty t\v* _j\
tnertttlm th* numbtr tnd itrtnfth of rtd
corpi-idti. Thtn with your Wood fount up
you'll fttl like boon-lint up tht ita in * • if
yoq wer* Ac* tin* on tlr. Aik ynur drugfltt
for Dr. WUlltau Pink Pilli todte.
Former Member of
Trail Police
Force Dies at 'Peg
WINNIPEG. Feb. 7 (CP)-A
former member of the Trail. B.C.
police force. 30-year-old Roland
Hill died in hoipital here yesterday Born in Peterborough. Ont..
he moved to Trail in 1938 and Joined th« police force the following
spring.
Surviving Is his widow, Mrs Mildred Hill, In Winnipeg. Funeril
Krvlcti will be held Friday afternoon.
The nofl-po simOui indigo male,
kills and eats the deadly rattler.     1
____ :	
■"_»"''.-;- -■-.-■■v<&'
NILSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1946-3
S" February
Home Furnishing
Event
Our Annual Homt Furnishing Event offers you fhe opportunity to secure the things
you need now at the most economical prices. Be sure to visit the Bay Today and
Tomorrow.   See our windows for some of the leading values.
3 Piece Chesterfield Suite
For Handsome Lasting Beauty '
A beautiful Velour-covered Chesterfield Suite, covered to give a
comfortable air to that moit Important room, your living room.
Completely spring filled. Chesterfield and one chair, Wine; wing
chair, Green. February Home
Furnishing Event—
$
22500
New Studio Lounges
These comfortable Lounges are upholstered in plaids and
florals ond are easilv made into a restful double bed or
two cots.    Regularly priced ot $59.50
February Home Furnishing Event 	
$49.50
4 Piece Bedroom Spites
Transform your bedroom Into a haven of
beauty with these smart bedroom ensembles.
Handsome Vanity with round or oblong mirror; Vanity Seat; full-panel Bed in Waterfall
design; large Chiffonier, with four large,
roomy drawers. February Home Furnishings
Event—
*
129
OO
HERE ARE A FEW LEADING VALUES OFFERED IN THIS ANNUAL EVENT
WALL MIRRORS—Siie 16"«16", unframed.
QUEBEC HOOKED RUGS in good design.
Regular $1.95, eoch                                 $1.49
Regular $4.20, each   _  $3.79
VANITY TABLE LAMPS—Silk shades,
Regular $6.95, eoch  (                  $3.98
BRASS CURTAIN RODS—Flat type,
CLOTHES DRYERS—Unpointed.
Regular 15c  ._. 2 for 9*
Regular $2.25, each                                $1.98
IRONING BOARDS—Well built.
FIBRE WINDOW BLINDS—36-inch,
Regular $2.25, each                                $1.98
Cream er Green    _  2 for $1.00
"Special"—One Only Solid Maple
Bedroom Suite
Colonial design in the fashionable "Wheat" shade.
The suite consists of Vanity and Scat, Chiffonier and
Double Bed. Regularly priced at $139. February
Home Furnishing Event, Suite—
Bed Spring - Mattress
Consisting of oil steel bed in walnut shade. A well-
made steel cable spring and a comfortable felt mattress. Siie 3' 3", 4' 0" or 4' 6". Regular $34.85.
February Home Furnishing Event—
OO
>110
8 pc. Dinette Suite
Buffet, Extension Table ond 6 Chairs in modern des gn. Walnut
finish hardwood construction. For dining roam or dine'te. A suite
you con be proud to own    February Home Furnishing Event—
*28S0
_■
129
OO
PHONISt
lUsdy-Io-W-ir
Hotltrj        .......
Dr;|oods ...___..
Oroc_rlei ..__
Men'i W-.tr   	
tl
51
V)
I'll
28
iWs'nirt. "Butt (!u»mpiuuj
,»    -- ■.,io m »_>- n;a.
NELSON. B. C.
STORE HOURS:
Mon -Tun -Thurs -Frl
8 s m -3 p nt
Wrd-iC'lay- 8 » m   I? noor
Saturday   ' » n. -8 pm
______..__..n_^^_
1     ■
_______________
_____________________________
________________________
r ■—
 ,
. ■■■ .
4— NELSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1946
l|limillllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII
A
dtinhfah
By BETSY NEWMAN
II1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII
place. Luve ibout 4 tibleipooni ot
fit in thi skillet, fill it with apples,
Fried applei ind bacon II probably old ituff to moit of you, but
among the many war brides, we
may find some whose young husbands remember it as a dish Mother
did superlatively well, and they
vearn for same.
Ir
TODAV8MENU
Fried Apples and Bacon'
j    Succotash Bran Muffins
I    Celery Cabbage with French
v Dressing
Apricot Tapioca Tea or Coffee
PRIED APPLES
AND BACON
Pare tart Winter apples and cut
' Into inch cubes to make 4 cups. Fry
sliced bacon in a heavy skillet, and
B| soon as crisp, remove, drain on
• absorbent paper and keep in a warm
gg;
• Authorities let tht difference he-
tween husky children end thou wbo
lit poor eiters, underweight iod
Hereout It often limply i matter of
proper nourishment, especially as
adequate lupply of.iui-uns.
Bit titimins alont art not enough;
Tor authorities now agree thu —tt.
mini do not work alone. Thty work
U I turn with certain other food
elements;
For thli resson, thouundi in
twitching to Ovaltine. Unlike mere
"vitamin carriers," Ovaltine food hew
•Itgl contain! not on ly txtra vlumiai
but nearly all the precious food tie-
jnenti needed for health and top
vitality. These include Vitamins A,
Bi and I), the important minerals
calcium, phosphorus and iron, high
quality proteins ind quick, energy
fcel-food~a combination ot food
elements authorities agree are needed
for belt results.
So, if your child ii thin, oenroos
tnd not developing properly, why
not turn to Ovaltine ss thousands ire
doing. Three normal meals plus two
glasses of Ovaltine a day give your
child all the extri amounts ofvitamini
and mineral! needed for health and
top Titality. isj
OVALTINE
THI  PROTECTING  FOOD-DRINK
sprinkle nn V, cup sugar, cover and
cook slowly until the apples are
tender; then remove the cover, turn
the apples gently I0 the pieces will
keep their shape, and let thtm
brown lightly. They art thtn almost transparent. Place them on I
hot platter, and surround them with
the crisp bacon. If you prefer, you
can slice the apples instead of dicing
them. This serves six.
SUCCOTASH
1 pint shelled lima beam; Vi cup
creim or rich milk; % cupi canned
corn; 2 tablespoons butter; salt; pep-
per,
Simer beans In a small quantity
of lightly salted water until almost
tender. Mix the canned corn with
lhe beam, add milk or cream and
cook for 10 mlnutis; add butter or
margarine and enough salt tnd pepper to season to' taste. Serves six.
APRICOT TAPIOCA
V4 pound dried apricots; 3 cupi
water; lh teaspoon salt; Vs cup
sugar; 3 tablespoons quick cooking
tapioca,
Wash apricots and soak over night
If necessary, thin cook until tender
and dnln. If needed, add water to
the Jules to make 2 cups. Heat to
boiling point, stir In tapioca and
salt and cook ln double boiler for
15 minutes, or until tapioca is clear.
Force apricots through a sieve, add
pulp and sugar to tapioca mixture.
Chill and serve plain or with
whipped cream.
Once Ashore
Girl Noi His
By PERSONAL ADVISOR
Dor Advisor:
Thert is a girl who lives tn Illinois. She is • student. I met her
on i Swedish liner last summer
during a repatriation trip. Her
journey started from India and
mine from Southern Europe. We
had a wonderful time aboard tho
ship and lots of fun.
During our students' meetings
and parties we got to know each
other very well, and, to be frank
liked her. Maybe she liked me, too,
Anyway, the day we arrived in
this country and shortly before
eaving the boat, we exchanged addresses.
I Since then I started a correspondence sending her letters, cards
nnd souvenirs. From her, I re-
ceive'd only one letter, which, :n
part rend as follows: "However, I
have no objections to your writing
me'"
Nnw   what   can   1   do*1   Continue
writing her, as she said, or stop'1
B,
It seems to me this young woman is lukewarm about continuing
the correspondence, to say the
lent, If the rest of the letter from
which you quote is no more en*
couraging than that sentence, I
think I would forget about her and
find someone more friendly nearer
hy. Shipboard relationships are apt
to dissolve into thin air once dry
ground is reached, There are numerous nice girls in your town, B.
Why not make some friendships
rioser to home1.
And II Isn't
Even Spring
WIN YOUR FAMILY'S PRAISE/
■y IDA JIAN KAIN
Ho hum ... thli l| tbt tlmi of
yeir when molt folki feel i terrific
letdown .. . ii If we'd been wound
up Ukt thi iprlng on i window
ihidi and glvin one twlit too many,
It'i not 1-ifnm, juit • mrt ot Spring
fever ln February feeling.
Might be a good time for ■ phyilcal checkup. There'i probably nothing organically wrong. But a visit
to the doctor While we can atlll
makt It under our own steam Isn't
iuch a bad Idea. Personally, I like
the plan of paying a little to keep
well, Instead of i lot later on Seems
to make seme. The people who
boast that they haven't been neat
a doctor In yean and yeari alwayi
say It ai if thiy expecttd a pat on
the back, tvtn If thty look far from
healthy. Stupid, lin't lt?
On the other hand, by tht tim*
we've reached middle agt, moit of
ui have a ftw ailmend to put up
with, some that we know better how
to treat than any doctor would.
They do say thit if everyone could
put his ailments ln ■ pile, Juit drop
thtm like an old Wintir coit, ind
pick out i corrtipondlng numbtr of
new and different onei, after due
consideration, we'd wind up taking
tht old onu back igiln. We feel
more' at home with them. I think
there is a lot of truth in that. But
I'm convinced too many folks put
up with "ailing" that ian't necessary. Medical icience hai much to
offer in Improving health during
middle ige and later.
If lt'i bien a long spell ilnce
you've flit realty chipper; lf you've
forgotten *hat it'i like to get a kick
out of working ind living, do tome-
thing about It! Life ll not merely
being alive, but being well! Nobody
was born tired or born to be tired.
A checkup may revtil a low hemoglobin. Better nutrition can fix
that. Maybe your blood pressure is
too high. Or too low. A few necessary little changei In your way of
living may be all that Is needetj to
restore that feeling of well-being.
The doctor will ask • few pointed
questions. How miny poundi have
you put on In the lait five years,
•nd ln tht put year? Do you puff
whtn yoM climb the itairs? He'll
thump your chest. Examine your
heart. He'll talk to you about food
habits, particularly it you are overweight or much underweight. Normal weight that remains unchanged
is a sign of good health.
ROSS SPUR
jtOSS SPUR, B.C. - Leonard
Rundval has returned to his home
at Ross Spur trom Vincouver where
he received hil discharge from tht
army.
; Mrs. Mae Murray of Grand Forks
!who Is visiting In Fruitvale at the
home ot her son-in-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs. T. Cuming, spent
a couple of days visiting friendi at
Ross Spur.
J. R. Tremblay was a visitor to
Trail.
Bill Hlookoff of Nelson wai a
visitor to Ross Spur.
Elite Heimstra who Is attending
school in Salmo spent the weekend
with her parenti, Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Heimstta, Ross Spur.
Marco Sterek was a visitor to
Nelson.
Jack Benton, of Benton Siding
visited in Trail.
James R. Carleton of Simmle,
Sask.. irrlved at the weekend for
a months' visit hen with relatives.
Mrs. J, McColm wai I Wednel-
day visitor to Frultvili.
J. E. Tremblay and his daughter,
Rose Marie of Trail spent a couple
'ol days here at the home of Mr.
Trembliy'i parents, Mr. and Mrs.
T. Trembliy.
I Mrs. Lusler and two children of
Parks Siding were vliltori to Fruitvale.
Lauri Forch, diughter of Mr. ind
Mrs. Fred Forch ol Meadows, who
js attending school In Salmo ipent
the weekend at her home.
Zenon Lepage of Parks Siding
is visiting in Nelson.
j Hope Faulkner has returned to
her home at Parks Siding after visiting lor a week at Nelson at thc
homo of her sister, Mrs. Ernie Ab-
ranson.
Paul Hlookoff was a viiitor here
(ram Nelson.
T. J Tremblay was a visitor to
Trail.
Mrs. Jim Hslpln and children,
Patsy, Ksren and Jimmy, ol Fruitvale were weekend visitors here* It
.he home ot the former's parents.
Frits Forch ot Meadows was I
visitor to Trail on Wednesday,
On his first visit to a home In
Chile, a stranger is presented with
;i rnse by each member of the family.
WELL IN THI SWIM
80 you don't like the brief bra and shorts swim suite that aeem
to be the mode for beach retort wear? Well, no need to wear one,
since aome of the smartest of advance swim suits ara of the type
shown here. Celanese Prospector, a firmly woven cloth that tailors
well Is used for this most wearable bathing suit made with a brief
skirt that flares slightly towards the back. Embroidered scallops
trim tha skirt and bodice. ■
Old Office Building, Pairof Birds
All Needed for Pigeon Fancier
3 Way Specialists . * *
. MOVING
. STORAGE
. PACKING
Juit Call 33 — We have fhe equipment and
men to do a thorough job.
WEST TRANSFER CO.
Established in 1899
-"* : rr	
If you want to raise pigeons, Kun-
deds of them, here's the way, E. R,
Schauffler writes In thc Kansas City
Star. Get an old office building,
preferably one with ornate stone
excrescences, cornices, columns, et
cetera. Get a healthy male and
female pigeon. Provide them with
a few old sticks, and await results.
Somebody once gave Maurice
Maeterlinck, the Belgian author, a
pair of white fantail pigeons. In a
little more than a year, they had 32
descendants. Maeterlinck figured
that by the next year,, there would
be 512 of the creatures, strutting
and cooing around the place, and
the year after that 8000. At that
point, considering how much grain
would be required at an ounce and
a quarter per day per pigeon to
f*eo 8000 pigeons, he was fit to bt
tied.
QUESTIONS OF STUPIDITY
It is uncertain, Maeterlinck believes, whether the pigeon ls more
or less stupid than the domesticated chicken. He considers the fact
the pigeon is generous about sharing its food with other birds. This
{argues loose, vacuous thinking on
I the part of the pigeon, the author
' feels. Dobi are not that way about
bones, df course, pigeons have been
'preening themselves ! about how
bright they are ever since Noah
turned that dove loose from the
'Ark and it came back with a sprij*
[of greenery to indicate the earth
was bearing again, and the second
[time did not return.
You will have to admit that wai
pretty smart, for a pigeon.
THey art- graceful, pretty birds,
and poets have chosen to regard
them as amblematle of peace, love,
the spirit, and a lot of lovely
things. Don't be deceived. In the
hatching season, ths male pigeon makes hit wife sit on the
nest 16 hours a day, while he puts
In six hours there. If she doesn't
return at the end of six hours, he
hunzts her up and packs her un-
| til she turns domestic again In
self-protection.
ATTRACTIVE  BIRDS
I   Pigeoni are comely birds. In this
.part of the world they are gray
white,  bluish,  reddish   brown  and
.iridescent. There are 850 kinds of
P'geons and they all belong to the
;family  Columbidae.   In   the  tropic*
'yfc see blue and purple pigeons,
but not In Kansas City unless you
have been drinking entirely too
much, In the Orient, the fruit pig
irons come green, yellow, orange,
red, violet and blue,
j There are pouter pigeons which
swell out their chests like pompous congressmen at Fourth of July
[celebrations.   There   is   a   variety
l known as the tooth-billed pigeon
which   has  a  beak   rather  like   a
.parrot.
I Once upon a time wild pigeons
uied to blacken the sky in North
'America when they were migrat-
ing from one feeding ground tn an
i other.     Jugheaded     frontiersmen,
I however, slaughtered them by the
j thousands, feeding their bodies to
pigs after eating all ,they could
hold. The last known wild pigeon
In tht country died in 1914 in the
'Cincinnati ron. and there hasn't
been any world peace to ipeak of
bince then.
\   Pigeons make very good eating.
; especially when they are 20 to 25
days nld and not yet hardened up
by flying and hustling for food in
a grim world. They are vegetarians,
and they evidently are pretty tough.
BUILD LIGHT NESTS
Tlgeons, the learned New International Encyclopedia assures us.
are monagamnus. attached to each
other. They share thf labors of
nest-build ing, which, in the case
of pigeons, are very light indeed
A few old sticks, carelessly flung
together, and the race for progeny
II on. The father pigeon, as has
been noted, sits on the eggs six
hours a day ind divides the rest nf
the time between foraging for food
and strutting, cooing and showing
off tht rainbow hues of his feathers. 'They're vain, never doubt it.
A mother pigeon lays two eggs to
a brood, but as she keeps constantly at It, the pigeon population continues tn mount.
Mr. Maeterlinck, who writes with
more reeling than the encyclopedia, observes:
"What with Incessant hillings and
roolngs and amorous parades and
sudden matlngs, the pigeons pais
their time sauntering and drowsing
on the sunny roofs and cornicei.
whence they watch the best houn
of thr spring and summer pass -i" ■
rou the aiura sky. -
Tht vaunt birds flutter around
[their father or their mother. You
might think they were embracing
Ithem with the vigorous strokes of
j their wings and lavishing passionate kisses on them. In reality, they
are asking for food,"
Maeterlinck, with truly scientific
passion for facts, noted that some
rakish blue pigeons who lived on,
a cliff in the neighborhood came
over and got acquainted with the
debutante fantails of his pure white
flock, and shortly there was a scattering of blue-streaked pigeons,
The rakish blue pigeons took care
not to move in and adopt a dom
estic routifte, either.
Mrs. Tinkess to
Head Kaslo I.O.D.E.
KASLO, B.C.-The annuil meeting of the I.O.D.E. wss held In the
Club Room Tueiday evening with
a good attendance. The annual reporta ihowed a great deal of work
accomplished in 1945. There were
112 regular meetingi durjng t^-ie yeir
Over $300 was realized, proceeds
.from teas, raffles, rummage room
and entertainments. Donations were
sent to the Salvation Army Home
! Appeal, to the Kaslo. Recreation
I Club, the Jessie Burke Cancer
Fund. '/  '   '      '
A wreath was placed on the Ceno
tiph on Armistice Daji Many books
were collected and sept to the ler
vice libraries. Three hundred cigar
ettei were sent to each of 71 boys in
service at Eister, and every month
300 were sent to each of 5 boys. Personal property bags were sent to
the A.T.S. in Britain. Over 75 pounds
.of clothing was donated to the National Clothing Drive. Seals were1
sold realizing thc sum o( $142.42 to
be sent to the Jessie Burke Cancer
Fund.
! Calendars were purchased and put
'in all the rooms at the local school
and sent to schools in the outlying
.districts. Election of officeri resulted in the following being elected:
Regent, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess; First
[Vice-President, Mrs. F. Chandler,
I Second Vice-President, Mrs. Horner;
'Secretary, Mn. J. Tonkin; Treasurer, Mrs. Short; Educational Secre-
Itary. Mrs. Primrose;'Echoes Secretary, Mrs, McCartney; Poit War
Work Convener, Mrs. Slngel; Standard Bearer, Mrs. C. Lind; Jr. It
[was decided in future to hold the
meetings in the afternoons, the first
Friday of each month being chosen.
[At the close of the meeting delicious
refreshments were served by Mrs.
Fell and Mrs. McCartney.
Lowered Intent
Mortality
By Garry Cleveland Myin, Ph.D.
A recent report by tha Children's
Bureau, Department of Labor/ re-
veali that babiei and their mothers
have a better chance to keep alive
today thim they had 10 yeari ago,
During the decade 1933-43, the birthrate rose 30 per cent and the infant
mortality rate In the same period
dropped 31 per cent, more babies
born and more of them kept slive.
Better still, fewer mot-hers by 81
per cent bit their lives at bearing
babiei in 1943 than ln 1833, the drop
being from 62 to 24 deathi per 10,-
000 live births.
"The major credit," according to
associate chief of the bureau, "goes
to tha docton, those In private practice and In public service, for the
work they have done In their cara
of women during pregnancy and
the Improved care they ire able to
give at childbirth and after delivery
and ln the dangerous early dsys and
monthi of the baby's life. Improvement ln hospital care also came in
for a large part of the credit.
"Improvement in the economic
status of many families Is also an
important factor. Many women have
bean able to have a better diet
during pregnancy and the diet of
the mother affects her child's well,
being as well as her own. More
women were able to have their
babies in hoipitals. and hospitals
are the safest place for a baby to be
born."
"But great as the reduction has
been," observed the doctor, "the
record is still not good enough, for
thousands of the 118,000 babies and
of the 7000 mothers whose lives are
lost each year, die needlessly. If
the care we know so well how to
give were available to all groups
of the population in all parts of the
country then we could cut still further the present tragic losi of life."
Sterilizer Arrives
for Kaslo Hospital
KASLO. B.C.-The regular monthly meeting of the Hospitil W.A. was
held ln the Nurses Home Tueiday
afternoon. The reporti of the canvassers ihowed thst over 125 members had Joined the Auxiliary for
1946.
The president ln her report informed the meeting that the sterilizer ordered for the hospital had arrived and' would soon be Installed,
and that a good supply of new Instrument! had been ordered. A vote
of thanki was tendered two members for embroidering two pair of
pillowslips to be sent to a former
matron of the hospital who is now
married and living elsewhere. Reports were given of the Eaiter Ball,
arrangements were being latlsfae-
torily made to hold the dance on
Easter Monday. At the conclusion of
the meeting refreshments were ierv-
ed by the Preiident, Mrs. Chandler.
LONDON (CP) — Thlevei broke
Into the home of Lord Tavistock recently and itole jewelry ind a mink
coat valued at over £-000 ($22,500).
Said Lord Tavistock: "This li the
fourth time within the last two
years thieves have visited my
house."
CRESTON CORPORAL ONI OF ORIGINALS
OF FAMED CANADIAN TANK "BOMB"
HALIFAX, N.S., Feb. 7-Four of
the original members of the Crew
of tha Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment's famoui tank "Bomb" along
with two liter memberi arrived
back In Canade, with tha unit, on
board .the troopship Lady Rodney
at Halifax.
The orlllnali are Capt. J. W. Nelll,
M.C, Oshawa, Ont.; Cpl. R. More-
ault, Montreal; Cpl. J. W. Hall, Creiton, B.C.; L-Cpl. A. Rudolph, Claresholm, Alta.; the other two who joined the crew later are Lieut. W. M.
White, Weit Gore, N.S., and Tpr.
K. Oerow, Burns Lake, B.C.
The tank "Bomb" li the only Canadian tank to have gone through
the entire European campaign, from
"D" day to "V" day without once
being knocked out of action or being
out for repain. Although the tank
received iome minor damage
through enemy sctlon all the necei-
lary repain were made on the spot
by the crew themselves1.
It was In one of the tank's engagements that Capt. J. W. Nelll
won the Military Cross for gallantry,
leadership and devotion to duty.
When Capt. Nelll relinquished command of "Bomb" Lieut. W. M. White
took over as tank commander.
The Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment are justly proud of the tank's
achievements and made arrangements to have the tank brought
back to Canada to be used n a
memorial In Sherbrooke, Que.. It
will be given a place of honor In
the city to perpetuate the memory
of the gallant men and women of
Sherbrooke who lerved their King
and Country.
The tank has already arrived ln
Canada having reached Saint John,
N.B,, recently on board the River-
view Park. It will reach Sherbrooke
before the men who handled lt arrive and no doubt will be included
in the city's official welcome to their
returning heroes.
TIRED OF BEING
CALLED A TRAMP
SO CHANGES NAME
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7 (AP>-
An aircraft engineer who said ha
wai tired of being called a tramp
hai filed a petition In superior court
to change his name to William F.
Cramer.
He said he hai taken a ribbing
from friendi throughout hla 47
yeors. end he's had enough of It.
His name Is William Ferdinand
Tramp.
11111111111111 11 111111111111 ] I ■ I •
Where You Buy
Is as Important
as What You Buyl
Main at Sixth
and in Hotel Vancouver
11111111111111111111111111 ■ ■ i ii 11■r 111 i i -11
FIRST
FOR
STRENGTH
FROM GROCERS,CHAIN W
DEPARTMEHT STORES
I'MOUUCI
If your neighbors Sniff • •.
0-_'/
BOSWELL
j BOSWELL, B.C.-H. W. Herridge,
MP. for Kootenay West, was ln
Boswell and gave an address ln the
Memorial Hall with C. H. Beb-
bington in the chair and a large attendance of residents. Mr. Herridge
gave a very interesting and Instructive talk on thc work of the
Dominion Parliament during the
past seslion and outlined the process of various bills thrtftgh the
House, he also gave information on
local   matters.   Whilst   In   Boswell
I Mr. Herridge wai the gueit of Mr.
and Mrs. C, H. Bebbington.
Most  insects  never  know   their
Pirents
lllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinFl
"BUILD I.C. PAYROUI"   ■
Among a numbtr of reo-
tons why sht uies Pacific
Milk, Mn. R. McN. citts
thii imp-Jrtant ont: "It ii
vtry convtnient, convenient because ont need
ntver bt without milk. It
kttpi iwttttr much lon-j-
tr then ordinary milk ond
rs mort teonomlcal."
Pacific Milk
"Irradiated and Vacuum Packed"
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllll
because your clothes wash Dingy like this..
instead of White like this
While Without Bleaching
FOR a wuh that's really jf-.r4__._jr white-get Oiydol
with Its lively "Huitli-Bubhlc'' mds. Oiydol !uds ire
io supremely active the; lift out the last possible trice
of dirt. And even four grimiest clothes—except foe
unusual stains—come White Without Hlc.u hing.
Actuil teiu prove thit Oxydol gets clothes doner and
whiter than less**energetjc soapi can ever hope to do;
It even acts to prevent thoie "dirty grtyneis" particle!
thit form ln the witer—stick io clothei—theo turn yellow
or griy when you Iron them.
Yet Oiydol il really «ife for waihahle colors, rayons
and your own precious hands ■ i ■ Oet Oxydol now—for
a wash ao dean It's White Without Bleachiog.
HAM M CINtDA
c.othes
THEY'RE
•so
<%,
While Without Bleaching
_____
 ■  ■.'■_■
-    -.. % • 'I   -
w
February
!      5 • -,.  t
Clearance Event
, ♦
We ore happy to announce that we can again offer you outstanding values during our
Annual Clearance Event. We orr putting on sola several hundred pain ef shoes, Including Men's, Women'i and Children'l and we would suggest early shopping for
complete assortment of siics and styles. •
WOMEN'S SLIPPERS
Values to $2.15.
Special  	
95'
WOMEN'S SUPPERS (Hard Sole)
 $2.15
Values to $3.65.
Special  	
WOMEN'S TIES
Values to $5.50.
Special   _ .	
1.95
WOMEN'S PUMPS
Values to $6.50.
Special   	
•2.95
WOMEN'S OXFORDS
Values to $9.00.
Special   	
'4.95
CHILDREN'S OXFORDS
Sizes Wh to 10.
Special   _ - 	
Sizes 1 to 3.
Special	
$1.95
'2.35
MEN'S DRESS OXFORDS
Values to $6:50.
Special	
MEN'S WORK BOOTS
•3.35
Values to $4.95.
Special    	
NOT EVERY SIZE IN EACH LINE
BUT ALL SIZES IN EACH GROUP
e
Sorry—No Exchanges or Refunds
'335
R. Andrew •& Co.
LEADERS IN FOOT. ASHION
NELSON SOCIAL
■y MRS. M. J. VIONIUX       '
Charge fer engaaement ■nnounoamenti en 'this pagt le |1M  .
e In Nelson it the home on Silica Street of Rev. T, J. 8. Ferguson,
Wednesday evening it 7 o'clock,
Jan. SO Rev. Ferguson United ln
marriage Miss Sarah Eleanor end
William Henry Thomas, 408 Gore
Street, both of Nelson.
• H. Hankln and Mr. Spooner
of Willow Point were ln the City
yesterday to attend the funeral of
F. t. Dockerlll,
• Mrs. Henry Hilton and her
ion of Brilliant visited town yesterday.
• Mrs. O. Q. Cuthbert has returned from several weeks spent in
Vancouver where she was with her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs, Jimmy Mclvor. She was accompanied home by Mr. Cuthbert
who spent a brief visit at the Coast.
• Mrs. Jerome of Bonnington
visited Nelson yesterday.
• Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shannon of Willow Point were city visitors yesterday to attend the funeral
at r. E. Dockerlll.
• Mrs. J, Fisher of Hall spent
yesterday ln town.
• Miss Ruby Jarbeau was hostess at a miscellaneous sho wet at her
home 419 Latimer Street Tuesday
night In honor of Mrs. George
Milne, formerly Miss Donella Dingwall, whose marriage took place
the end of January, Mrs. Milne was
the recipient ol many useful and
lovely gifts. Invited guests were
Mrs. W. Smith, Mrs. D. Smith, Mrs.
8. Lelnweber, Mrs. A. Dingwall,
Mrs. Allan Harper, Mrs. C. Choquette, Miss Marjorie Howarth,
Mis Ruth HaslaiA, Mrs. G. Milne,
Mrs. B. Kidd, Mrs. J. N. Jarbeau
and Mrs. A. Kraft.
e Mrs. J. Clayton Sharp and
her sister, Mrs. C. Douglas Craig,
both of Vancouver, are In the city
to attend the funeral of their father,
Thomas Brown.
By JACK  WILLIAMS
Canadian  Press 8taff Writer
OTTAWA, Feb. 7 (CP)—Canada's working population will be
proportionately greater than before the war, but mos\ of the workers are going to be looking for jobs
In, cities instead of on farms, the
Labor Department predicted today.
In a survey of changes in population and the labor force which
have resulted from the war, the
Department found definite trends
likely to continue Indefinitely. The
development of war industries
had drained population from many
NEW DELHI (CP.-India is to LEICESTER, England (CP)—In-
buy British drill equipment for investigations have been made here
big irrigation scheme involving an during the last five years with the
•rea of 20,000,000 acres, and an of- object of developing new methods
ficial of the India Supply Mission of air purification for London and
is in England Jor this purpose.        I other large industrial cities.
TEA.
Postpones Meeting
COLUMBIA, S. C.„ Feb. 7 (AP)~
The South Carolina Bar Association
has postponed indefinitely its annual meeting set for Feb. 13-14 be
cause, the Executive Committee ex
plained, It had been unable to obtain a speaker for the occasion.
Phont 144 for Want Ad Strvict
FLEXAIRE BRASSIERES
by "FLEXEM"
Slits 32 te SI
$1.73   v
FASHION FIRST LTD.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii
SPENCER SUPPORTS
For health garments and
figure control, see
MRS. THEA A. GIBSON
110 Kerr Apts, Ntlson.
IIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIflmilllllllllliMIMIII
BixicSfitViitihXA^
- NEWS -
WHITEFISH: Fresh Frozen; Lb.      25c
2 lbs. SAUERKRAUT:
1 Ib. WEINERS: Both for
45c
BONELESS BEEF STEW AND
KIDNEY: Lb.
23c
STEWING VEAL and LAMB: 2 lbs. 35c
SHOULDERS OF LAMB:
Rolled on Request; Lb.
27c
FRESH BEEF TONGUES: Lb.
25c
ROASTING CHICKEN:
3-6 lbs. each. Lb.              40c
& 42c
FRESH OXTAILS and HEARTS: Lb. 12c
POT ROASTS: Commercial Beef;
Up from, Ib. 25c
We Have a Limited Supply of
Pork Cuts for Saturday Trade
Phones 527 528
Free Delivery
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Fairview
Caih Market
PHONE 295—Free Delivery
Blue Quolity
Commerciol Quality
RUMP ROASTS:
Lb 	
BRISKET BOILING
BEEF: Lb.  _
BABY BEEF LIVER:
Lb. 	
BURNS BEEF FAT:
Lb 	
FRESH SIDE PORK:
Lb....       	
PIG'S HEAD: Half
or Whole; Lb.
ROAST OF VEAL:
Shoulder; Lb.
VEAL STEAKS:
Shoulder;  Lb.  .    .
RlB VEAL STEW:
Lb.
CELERY:
Lb.
GRAPEFRUIT: Ruby
Red 80s; Each	
LETTUCE: Large
•lie; Each . ,	
CAULIFLOWER:
Lb	
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii i .i 1-j
e J. P. Schofield and J. L. Schofield of Trill were ln the city to
sttepd the funeral of F, E. Dockerlll
yesterday.
• Wednesday afternoon Mrs.
Louis Alexandra, Cedar Street, entertained members of the Circle of
the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate
tt her home, whan those attending
were Mrs. D. A. McPherson, Mrs.
Louis Colettl, Mrs. G. F. Stevens,
Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Mrs. M. J.
Vigneux, Mrs. Edith Edgar, Mrs. D.
Mclnnes, Mrs. A, Ling, Mrs. Henri
Gagnon, Mra. J. Morrison, Mrs. W.
K. Kopeck!, Mrs. George A. Tapp,
Mrs. I). Aurello, Mrs, W. G. Fuller-
ton, Mrs. Arthur Perrler, Mrs. P.
DeFoe, Miss Albertlne Choquette,
Mrs. Vito Romano, Mrs. Harry Kor-
olak, Mrs. V, Doyle, Mrs. I. Smelt,
Mrs. C. F. McDougall, Mrs. M. DeGirolamo, Mrs. Phil Rahal, Mrs.
Ann Aduddell, Mrs. J. Muraro, Mrs.
L. H. Choquette, Mrs. J. P. Herron,
Mrs. A. G. Gellnas and Mrs. Norbert
O. Choquette.
• Mrs. Robert Finlay of Trail,
tvho has been a patient in the Kootenay Lake General Hospital, left
that Institution for the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Magllo,
Inner. Street.
e Mrs. Ivor Jones was a shopper from South Slocan yesterday.
e E. S. Jorgensen, recently discharged Flight Lieutenant, has arrived home and ls with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Jorgensen, Mill
Street.
e Mis Edna Cant, formerly
Corporal In the RCAF arrived last
evening from the Coast and was met
by her mother, Mrs. Cant of Apple-
dale.
e L. L. Fortin, W. J. Holton and
R. Oliver and Mr. Hopkln were in
the city yesterday to attend the fu
neral of F. E. Dockerlll.
Canada's Working Population Will
Be Far Greater Than Belore'lhe War
Workers Will Look for Jobs in
Cities Instead of Forms
Turner New Head
Anglican Young
Peoples at Kimberley
KIMBERL&Y, B. C—In an effort
to have an organization of pre-war
dayi the Anglican Young People's
Auociation held a reorganization
meeting here. The enthusiastic turnout wis very gratifying and encouraging.
Betty Nelson opened the meeting
with the usual ceremony. The buslneu of the evening started with
the election of officers, as follows:
President, Joe Turner; Vice-President, Harold George; Secretary,
May Leggett; Treasurer, Bernice
Fandrick; Convenor of Refreshments, Grace George; Convenor of
Programs, Bonnie Turner.
Installation of officers took place
at the evening-song service, Sunday
in conjunction with the Church advance appeal.
NILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1*44 — •
William Wallers, Here in Early
90rsr Brought First Garden Beauty
lo Nelson; Started Park Flowers
farm areas Into larger cities and
concentration In industrial areas
likely will continue, the report
said, although farm counties prob
ably will continue to maintain high
rates of natural increase.
Information gathered by the
army Indicated that about 90 per
cent of returning ex-servicemen
would take up residence In the
province in which they enlisted,
but there was a tendency to move
to the larger urban centres. British Columbia came first among
the provinces to which veterans
intended moving with Ontario
next.
"The cities likely to receive more
men than they contributed to the
army are Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary and Edmonton," tha report
aaid. "The two likely to lose population are Montreal and Halifax."
While estimated 14.8 per cent of
Canada's adult population were
men engaged ln farm work In April, 1939, the proportion had dropped to 11.3 per cent In April, 1945.
By R. O. JOY
Nalion  and   District  Old  Timers
Association Historian
William Walters who died In Nelson Wednesday, was born ln Maidstone, Kent, England, where he
went to ichool until he was eight
yeari old, and then came to Canada. He located in Orangesville,
Ont, where hia father was a carpenter. When ha wu 17, and old
enough to go on hla own he took
a Job al waterboy on the comtructlon of the CP.R.
He got ai far ai Donald, one of
the flrit towns ln the Kootenays
on the main line and got acquainted there with Joe Simons. In 1886
he worked as a scctionman at Calgary. He stayed a summer and winter there. He used to walk eight
miles of the section.
He got a Job at the Windsor Hotel, which was the only hotel in
Calgary at that time. This was until the road got connected at Craig-
ellachie.
He obtained enough money to go
to Vancouver in 1887, where he obtained employment as a laborer
with H. Henry Greenhouses, and
then went into the seed business.
While ln Vancouver he worked at
the docks there, where he helped
load and was checker.
WENT DOWN UNDER
"I took a voyage to Australia
and then to New Zealand and Tasmania working 12 hour shifts and
nights," he told me.
He went down to Tahiti Island
away below New Zealand. They
loaded up with spices and bananas
there and then decided to go to
San Francisco. Afterwards they
went to Victoria and then to Vancouver.
The following Spring he went to
work for T. Hanson on the C.P.R.,
between Vancouver and Donald.
Later he got a recommendation to
Bill Downie as a travelling gardener. Mr. Beasley was superintendent at that time.
"After three years", he said, "I
saved the wages I got and came
to the Kootenays. I came to
Sproats Landing. Captain Gore was
Captain of the S.S. Kootenay, the
first boat on the Columbia, .•had
a letter of introduction to Captain
Gore. All lt laid was 'O.K.'
"I took Joe Wllkin'i pack train
to Nelson and stajfcd at the Lake-
view Hotel. The •'proprietor wai
John Ward. The C.P.R. got to Nelson. Ed Cheisley was the first conductor and lived at Craigellachle,
Clarence Ogilvy waa yard-maitor
and Billy Good, yard operator and
manager of the paaienger coach.
"I cooked for the three men and
worked there two ye_)ri. Then I
fenced In 10 feet of ground anl had
the first garden in Nelson. I sent
to Vancouver for flower seed also
hops and grass seed, and I used to
keep the ladiei in flowers until
1896."
He worked for Mr. Grizzelle and
at the Grand Central Hotel and
the Lakevlew Hotel. He then worked near the first Church of England and got Mr. Grizzelle to put
the shade trees in there. He told
how he was at the Grand Central
Hotel as a clerk when two "fine
young Englishmen" came into the
office. One was Gordon Allan, a
C.P.R. engineer, and Dave Norrls
a C.P.R. engineer and who Is now
retired.
He attended the bar In the New
Grand Hotel and the Hume Hotel.
He was also responsible for putting the first flowers in the Park.
He was near Frank when the
great slide occurred there, and was
at Fernie when an exposlon in the
mine killed ISO-men. He was cook
on the dredge when Fred Nichol
was engineer.
Causes Confusion
When Marrying
Stepfather's Brother
STANBERRY, Mo., Feb. 7 (API-
Miss Dana Miller of Stanberry married her stepfather's younger brother and threw the family into confusion.
She became her mother's sister-
in-law, and her husband now Is his
brother's son-in-law and his sister-
in-law's son-in-law.
Onlh&Gih
IV
15'
25*
17*
28*
8c
25*
25'
15*
15'
11*
15*
20'
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
1240 ON THE DIAL
MORNING
7:30—0 Canada
7:31-Muslcal Reveille ICKLN)
8.00-CBC News
8:15—Breakfast  Club
8:30—Breakfast Club
8:44—CP.R. Train Time
8:43— Toait and Coffee Club
(CKLN)
9:CO—BBC Newi
9:1S—At Your Service (CKLN)
»;30-At Your Service (CKLN)
9:43—Songi in Sweet Style
9:59—Time Signal
10:0O-Mornlng Vlilt
10:15—CKLN Preu Newi
10:30—Muilcal Roundup (CKLN)
10.4S-Organ Reverie! (CKLN)
11.00-rHlta o( Today
ll:15-Let'i Dance (CKLN)
ll-JO-Soldler'i Wife
11:45—Muilc From the Movlei
AFTERNOON
12:00—B.C Farm Broadcut
12:25-The Notice Board (CKLN)
UiSO-CBC Newi
12:43—Matinee Memories
1:00—Modem Minstrels
1:15—Community Life
1:30—Old Favourites  (CKLN)
l:43-01d Favourites (CKLN)
2:00—School Broadcast
2:15—School Broadcast
2:30—The Robinson Family
3:45—Downbeat
3:00—Don Meutr
3:15—Prairie Comment
3:30—Serenade
3:4»-Swlng Time (CKLN)
4:00-The Old Songi
4:15—Klng Edward Hotel Trio
4:30—stock Quotatloni
4:45—Top Bandi
5:00—Sacred Heart Progrim
(CKLN)
5:15-Preientlng  Harry  Ho. lick
(CKLNI
5:30—Peerlesi News (CKLNI
3:4»-South of the Border (CKLN)
EVENING
6 00   People  Aik   (CKLNl
_:13- I.lilenlng Post (CKLN)
fl:»-Thli Is Canada (CKLN)
6.»-Cav«lcada ol Mtlody
J:5&-C.PJ.. Train Time
7:00-CBC News
7:15—News Roundup
7:30-Eventide
7:45—Eventide
8:00—Books for the Times
8:15—Soliloquy
8:30—Pacific Time
9:00—Report From Parliament
Hill (CKLN)
9:15—Violin Recital
9:30— Sunny Days (CKLN)
9:45—Sunny Days (CKLN)
10:00—CBC News
10:15—Cascade Tales
10:30—God Save the King
J. Slocan Man
Honored
by Netherlands
A letter has been received by
Witford Long of South Slocan from
the Department of National Defence
in Ottawa, informing him that his
son, Company Sgt. Major Eric Newton Long, has been awarded the
Meritorious Conduct Cross. Mr.
Long said that this made' him a
very happy lather."
The letter reads:
"It is with much pleasure that I
write you on behalf of the Minister
of National Defence and Members
of The Army Council to congratulate you and the members of your
family on the honor and distinction
which has come to your son, Company Sergeant Major Eric Newton
Long through the award to him of
the Meritorious Conduct Cross conferred by Her Majesty the Queen of
the Netherlands in .recognition'of
Distinguished Service in the cause
of the Allies."
It is signed by Major General E.
G. Weeks.
Three of Mr. Long's sons were
overseas. George Long is still in
England with the Lincoln and Welland Company, and Chester \Long
has returned to his home at Pawas-
san, Ontario.
STATUS OF BOARD IN
LIBEL SUIT QUESTIONED
VANCOUVER, Feb. 7 (CP)-The
status of the Prices Board in a libel
suit was questioned today when
James Macdonald applied to set
aside a writ served on Charles Brazier, prices and supply representative, by Mrs, Wlnnifred Wood.
Mr. Justice 3, O. Wilson reserved
his decision, after Mrs. Wood Introduced in her own behalf that Mr.
Brazier accepted service of the writ
and is too late to make an application to strike it out.
She is suing the board and her
landlady, Mrs. Erma Wannamaker,
for libel alleged to have been contained in a rental application of
Dec. 21 last.
James A. Macdonald, counsel for
Mr. Brazier, argued that the board
cannot be sued as It is in the nature
of an unincorporated association of
individuals who are servants of the
crown,
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
FreemaN
FURNITURE CO.
Tht Houie ot Furniture Valuai
Phoni IU Nelson
BUY ON OUR
BUDGET PLAN
Terms ln accordance with Wartime Prlcea and Tradt Regulations.
III llll 11 lllltrilfK lllll Itllllllllf IIM1IIIIIM
LONDON (CP) - Tht National
Central Bulb Committee ot Holland
recently preiented 30,000 tulip
bulbs to the Royal Botanic Gardeni,
lie\_i. A similar gift wu made to
tht Royal Parks.
1
SALE   CONTINUES
TWO MORE WEEKS
Now Spring Merchandise
Arriving Daily
MILADY'S FASHION SHOP
For Reliable Watch Repeiri
consult—
J****^      491 Baktr St
FAIRWAY
Meat Market
PHONE 268
Ration Free
OXTAILS:
Lb-	
BABY BEEF LIVERi
Lb-	
PICKLED
TONGUES:
Lb.
ir
25*
25*
23*
39'
FRESH KIDNEYS:
Lb-	
HADDIE FILLETS:
Lb-	
Blue Branded Commercial
Quality Beef
BOILING BEEF:
2 lbi	
VEAL RIB STEWi
Lb- !	
LAMB STEW:
Lb-	
ROUND BONI
ROAST: Lb	
BLADE ROAST:
Lb	
LAMB SHOULDERS: Rolled
on Request;
Lb	
25*
15*
15*
25*
25*
IT
ROLLED VEAL SHOULDERS
Boncleii; OQ*
Lb *****
PICNIC SHOULDERS:
Shankleii; 9Q*
Frtlh Muihroomi, Fresh
Oysters, Cottage Cheeie,
Froth Fruiti and
Vcgetablei
Opposite Standard Caft
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
MALCOLM'S FURS
Storage
Repairs — Alterations
659 Baker St-      Phone 960
llllll_l_lll_IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII._l.il
For Extra Pep ot work or play
DRINK MILK
K-V-D
CUP AND HANG THIS IN YOUR KITCHEN
FEBRUARY RATION NEWS
BUTTER COUPONS Vi-LB. — SUGAR COUPONS 1 LB.
t For Fineit
Quolity  Meats,
Filh, Poultry.
• For Gorden-
Frcih Vtgt-
tablei ond
Fruiti.
• For a Fair
Share of Short
Llnei of Goodi.
SHOP AT
7 BUTTER COUPON 139
MEATCOUPON23vdid
]4 BUTTER COUPON Rl
MEATCOUPON24Valid
21
SUGAR COUPONS 70, SI
BUTTER COUPON R?.
MEAT COUPON 23      Valid
28 MEAT COUPON 26
Valid
The FAIRWAY
PHONE 265
FREE DELIVERY
•m
.:;'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiit
R6?R QROCERY
JOS. KARY, Prop.
THE HOUSE Or BETTER TOODS
COURTEOUS SERVICE
FRUITS and VEGETABLES
CELERY: Utah Crisp;	
LETTUCE: Largt htadi	
FRESH BUNCH CARROTS: 2 Ibt	
CAULIFLOWER: White headi; Ptr Ib.
ORANGES: Sixt 288s; 3 doi.
Sixt 344i; 3 dox.
LEMONS: Sixt 300i; 6 for	
COOKING APPLES: 6 lbi.	
MUFFETS: 9 ox. paektti; 2 for
FLOUR: 7 Ibt. Any Brand 	
PALMOLIVE SOAP: Giant iln; 3
SUPER SUDS: Largt llxe ...
SUNLIGHT LAUNDRY SOAP: 3 ban
for
11*
m**
m*t
20t
7S#
S3*
w
as*
29*
aa*
aa*
20-J
FREE DELIVERY PHONE 161
OUR MOTTO—FRIENDLY and COURTEOUS SERVICE
IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII
i r>     v.
BRADLEYS
NEAT MARKET
PORK ROASTS
ond CHOPS
While They Loit
LUTEFISK: Pre-      **kf\t
pared; Lb.    3U
TURKEYS: Grade A; 8-10
Ib. average; A_C*
Lb  TO
SAUERKRAUT:       *ir\e
VEAL STEAKS:      «*
Shoulder; Lb- Mm J
VEAL ROASTS:      "%P*
Shoulder; Lb   Lj
POT ROASTS: Roundbone,
Commercial; **k C*
Lb.
BREAST VEAL:
Lb.
15'
BOILING BEEF:
Lb.
15*
RUMP ROASTS:     3Q#
Commercial;   Lb.   mt* O
CANADIAN 33*
CHEESE: Lb. JJ
KAM: Purt Pork;
Tin
30*
*****—
	
	
 Eitabliihed April 22. 1902.
British Columbia'*
'>      Mott Interesting Newspaper
Publlihed every morning except Sunday by
the NEWS PUBLISHINO COMPANY. LIMITED. 266 Baiter St.. Nelion. Britlih Columbii.
Authorlied as Second Clan Mall,
Poitoffice Department, Ottawa
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRES8 AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
FRIDAY, FEB. 8, 1946.
Public Services Are Never
Free
London Passenger Trawport Board
is being offered by the anti-Socialists
ln Britain, as a sample of what nation-
I alization will be. They point out that
the average fare per mile of this publicly controlled public utility is H4d
per mile, while private transport companies throughout the country can
make money at Id per mile, and still
pay heavy taxation. Yet, LPTB is now
proposing to increase its fares to 2d per
mile.
I • A  Canadian  counterpart  can  be
found ln the tramways systems of Toronto and Montreal. Here, the two systems charge the same fares; give the
same type of service. In 1924, each of
these systems had about the same debt.
In 1944, the debt of the Montreal system was nearly $38 million more than
the debt of the Toronto system. The
Montreal system had been unfortunate ln having to pay $27% million more
fet municipal, provincial and Domin-.
Jon taxes than did the Toronto system
In the same years. The taxing authorities in this cise are simply subsidizing
the citizens of Toronto.
Hazards in the Home
In 1944 in B. C, 101 persons died as
the result of falls tn and around the
home, almost as many persons as were
killed in motor vehicle accidents in
the same year. In 1945 from January to
October, 71 persons died as the result
of such falls.
People of all ages fall down, but old
people-whose bones are brittle are' the
•ones who die most frequently from
falls—this is borne out by the follow-
ing figures showing the ige distribution of the victims over the 10 month
period in 1945: Eighty-seven per cent
of victims were over 60 years of age,
70 per cent were over 70, 40 per cent
over 80, and 15 .per cent over 90 years.
Seventy per cent of the victims were
women and 30 per cent were men.
It is true that many old people fall,
due to their feeble condition or to some
physical defect at their age. However,
it is also equally true that many of
these fatal falls, and also many other
falls, could be prevented by taking
" simple safety precautions.
An analysis of the fatal falls from
January to October, 1945, by place of
occurrence in the home will serve to
show the more important causes and
point out safety precautions which
should be taken.
The bedroom was the scene of the
greatest number of fatal falls—16 persons fell, resulting in death in this
room of the home, and all were in the
older age groups. Four persons fell out
of bed, seven fell when getting up out
of bed during the night to go to the
bathroom or to get something which
was not in their reach, and (he other
five persons slipped on the floor and
fell at various times during the day
and evening.
Care must be taken to safsguard old
people in the bedroom. Getting out of
bed it night, stumbling over a chair or
open bureau drawer or tripping on a
rug ire factors accounting for so many
fatil falls in this room. No -passageway from the sides of the bad to the
doors should he obstructed, lights
should hr handy to switch on by the
bed, and it is advisable to have a dim
lipht burning.
Stairs wit the .scene of 13 fatal
falls, and of these, the basement stairs
took six lives, the backstairs three, the
front stairs two and other inside italrs
two Two nf the stair falls were caused by physical defects, fainting spells,
or epileptiform seizures on the steps, or
by other causes
Falls on stairs, more thsn falls in
rooms, offer hazards to persons of ill
ages, for such falls cause more lerious
injuries than those sustained in anv
other place, even though they do not
result in death. Therefore, stairs especially should he made safe
On staircases, dual light control is
desiratye so thst lifhts cm he tnrn.d
on or off at either top or bottom of th*
stairs. Even if the italrs are enclosed
by walls the^ ihould hav* a substantial
handrail at least on one aide. The carpeting on the stair should be securely
fastened down.
Letters to the
y  Editor
Letten miy be publlihed ever a nom de
plume, but the attutl ntr-ie ef the writer
muit ba nlven te the Editor ea evidence tf
toed filth. Anonymoui letten go In the
waite paper baiket.
The letter received yeiterday from J, H.
Turnbull, Secretary of the Central Executive
of the B.C. Honey Producer! Auociation, doei
little to avert the doom that threaten! Britlih
Columbia'! honey-beea with decimation; following the recent ruling of the iugar controller. He state! that iugar permlti will be
luued thli year, only to returned men who are
planning to reenter beekeeping, who were registered beekeepen prior to enllitment. Other-
wise, only thoie beekeepen who gaued their
beei ln the Fall will be allowed five pound!
of iugar for each Incoming package aj a supplement to the laved itorei. No iugar wlll be
available to thoie who have wintered over
their coloniei, and no iugar will be ivillible
to beginners.
What the effect of thli ruling will have on
our memberi we shall not know for iome dayi.
We Imagine that iome orchard men will be
lerlouily affected; and certainly the leed
grower! will view with grave concern thli
eleventh-hour blow to their season's plins. It
li alio to be feired that many orderi for packages wHl be cancelled without ceremony, and
ihould the Spring be late In coming, many ot
the wintered over colonies wlll perish of starvation,
A ipeclal meeting of the Directors of the
Kootenay Dlvlilon ls being called for Saturday
evening at 8 p.m. at the Civic Centre to dis-
cuii what itepi ihould be taken to keep the
threatened loaies to the honey production and
aiiociated lnduitriei within boundi.
G. A. BUTLING,
Preiident Kootenay Division,
B.C. Honey Producer! Association.
Nelion, B.C., Feb. B, IMS.
Looking Backward
10 YIARI AQO
(From Dilly Newi, Fef. S, 1936.)
Mill Helga Thorliefton wai named ski
queen of the Kimberley Ski Tournament today over several other candidates. She was
repreienting the Elk Lodge.
Salmo Senior! will come to Nelson tonight
to meet the Savoy Hotel in an exhibition
hockey match. Included In the Salmo lineup
sre leveril players who have chased a good
puck. Dr. Morriion and Carrington are two of
the players who are expected to give i good
account of themielvei.
29 YEARS  AOO
(From Daily News, Feb. 1, 1921.)
Mayor McHardy left for Victoria yesterday. While there he will try to complete arrangement! for the union of Fairview and the
city.
Great intereit ll displayed in the big ski
tournament which opened in Revelstoke todiy. Hundredi ot visitors are preient from ill
over the country.
40  YEARS   AOO
(From Dally Newi, Feb, 8, 1908.1
F. W. Aylmer of Golden, Dominion En.
gineer for the Kootenay, arrived in the city
laat night and is staying at the Hume.
The Kotoenay Lake Minstrels held a very
successful rehearsal in the KP. Hall last
night.
? ? Questions ? P
ANSWEES
Open te any reader Nimss ot penoni
asking queitlom wlll not bt publllhod.
There ll no charga for thli ttrvlet. Quel- ,
llona WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY
MAIL exoept whtn thort ll obvious noooa-
•Ity for privacy.
C, Nelson—How many countloa are there in
Britiah Columbia?
There ire nine counties—Prince Rupert,
Cariboo, East Kootenay, Weit Kootenay, Nanaimo, Weitmlniter, Vsncouver, Victorli and
YUi..
Young Firmer—How long ihould It take to
milk a cow?
The time' required to milk a cow !■ between 2ti and 19 minutei, the average being
approximately ilx minutei. Tht dltftranco In
the time it caused by the temper of the cow
In letting down her milk tnd ll hot dependent
on the ability of tht milker.
A Reader, Michel, B.C.—Would you pleaie
inform ma tl to where I could obtain
information aa to enllitment in the Permanent Force of the Royal Canadian Air
Force?
We  would  adviie  you to write  to   the
Secretary. Dept. of National Defence of Air,
Ottawa, Ontario.
M. E. C; Kimberley-Who wrote "Ood Bt
With You Till We Meet Again?"
Thli hymn .wai written In 1882 by Dr.
J. E. Rankin and wai fint sung In the First
Congregational Church, Washington, D.C., of
which Dr. Rankin wai pntor. He wai alio
at that time President of Howard Univenity.
R. B_, Rossland—Why li a man luppoied to
remove hil hit in the preience of a lady?
The origin of thii cuitom his not been
established. Some authorities attribute it to a
medieval custom which required thst a knight
lift hie viior in the presence Of a lady.
Very Curious, Nelson—What li (neant when
the corner of • viiiting cird ll turned'
down?
There is nn universal interpretation of
thii. Many turn down the corner of a card,
meaning that the visit was meant for all the
ladiei of the household, while others mean
to convey thlt the cird wai left in penon,
taking the place ol a bona fide viiit.
Just Wondering. Nelion—How many orangei
does it take to make one quart of orange
Juice?
A dealer ln orange beverages sayi that
oranges are graded from numbers 86 through
344. Thii particular orange juice company uiei
oranges size 178 ind finds thit from thii sire
each orange givei two ounces of Juice, 18
orangei art needed to make one qusrt. Thli
may vary, due tn the widely varying Juice
content of different oranges.
Mother. Nelion—Is it true thlt cati sometimes suck the breath of sleeping bibles"
Ttii commonly held belief exiiti mainly
Jr-SM'rural lections. It hai no foundation In
fact. The anatomical formation of a cat's mouth
mikes it impossible for it to prevent respiration by the mouth and nose of a baby in ltl
sleep.
A cat is a rule, seeki a soft clean place tor
•lumber. It may find «uch In child's crib or
carrlige. and may accidently lie directly on
the baby'i head An average sized cat weigh!
about 10 or 12 pounda, a sufficient weight to
bring about suffocation in a baby nr small
child, who would lack lhe strength to dislodge lt.
Etiquette Hints
It is considered bad manners lo look over
a person's shoulder when aaid person ii reading.
Words of Wisdom
With us, law is nothing unlesi cloie behind it ilandi i warm, living public opinion.
Let that die or grow indifferent and itstutei
are waste paper, lacking all executive force,
-Wendell Phillip*.
TEST   ANBWSRI
1 Yes, an agent is employed hy a particular compiny; a broker is in business tor
himself
2. The Brooklyn Bridge, .reeled in 1863
3 A Madagncan inlhial
Verse
SENTINELS   OF   THE   COAST
Along the rugged coast line
The lonely lighihouie Hindi
Guiding miny a ship it night
From the treacherous rocks -ir.d sandi
Sending forth  its brightness
Across the ocean dlep
To warn the men fir nut at sea
As thalr witch eich night they kiip
Above the noise of the tempest
Tha skipper on board can hear,
The mighty blast of tht foghorn
Ai it loundi III call "Keep Clear"
Tht mckle of the wirelesi
And Ihe ndlo in tht tower,
Bring comfort lo the kttper.
Through miny a lonely hour.
Sometimes when storms ire riging
And lish it the lighthouse lite.
It muni constint vigil night and diy,
No miller what betide
He knows tho (low front the baaren.
Thlt Hiihtl ter"" lhe foim.
Will nve miny i ship from slaking.
And bring lallors igfely home.
J. M Plclnrd, Tyll, IC
Guns of British
Cabinet Turn to
Peacetime Pro
By STUART I'.IDIRHIL
Canadian  Press Staff Writer
LONDON, Fob. 7 (CP Ctble.-
Tho big guns of the Britiih Cabinet
were turned today on what hai become Britain's biggest peacetime
probltm—food.
A committee headed by Prlmt
Mlnlittr Attlee, Food Miniiter Sir
Bin Smith ind Agrlculturi Mlnlittr Tom Wllllami hti been let up
ll a "battle ot bread team," which
Sir Ben itld Tueiday had been
made neceuary by the world food
shortage.
The committee will heivo sweeping poweri ind will consider ill
means of Increasing suppllei, esp.
eclilly  by   stimulating  home  pro
Hollywood Gossip |
Billy Rose Sells Life Story to
Paramount; Levant Isn't Unhappy
With Work, Just Natural Look
By BOB THOMAS , labout working ln  the movies—Dt
Uf^^rimTuAf^h^.*' ""„_," ,et, ho enjoy.
ask. ondorsitlon of . resolution I'^i^^fhe"""^^"^ play! '"' '"*■■ «*■*«* T"C ,!?
dllng on exporting countries to-HlS2r » to VSSt, Si W*. HP" _*JS*!ffi j!____
expand production and Imports to alrical lmpre,sario replied! "That's. ™. ',**} '*"}* h°.B .* '^kKJ^J
contract consumption. !UD lo th. casting department" He s,de'   But when he " workin* __
The   Government,   among   othtr, X,   diDlsyed   notable   disinterest Ia Pidure' he (liscu,5M mu,ic v_
thing,, probibly will bt llktd  to j f„°th!T.tary! •■"l6ng a.Tit .tay.!"10"- <»">«***«■ P«P •**»• •*
restore the wheat subsidy to Brlt-|Clol, l0 lhe ,8Ct, 0, hi, life.
lib firmtrs which wai cut early I _>___ hal no .mbiuoni to work Intriguing twoiome: Joan Craw-
lilt yeir from £4 ((18) to £2 sn ,„ Hollywood '"rd and Van Johnion it i night
•ere. I   ..j wouldn't'be on anybody'i pay j club . . . Hollywoodimtn heir th«
Another    oppoiltlon   requeit   Is, roll." he said. "Right now 1 own 'Duke of Wlndior miy become In-
oppoiltlon requeit
thit movie ind tobacco imports
from thl United States be reduced
to make ivillible dollar! expendable on food. A Coniervative motion to this effect tlrtsdy has been
entered ln the Commoni,
Miniitry  of   Transport  ipokei-
min has said enough shipping wil
du "tion. "6nr oV".he''_-r.V"d_" liKn. i-r«"a^.to brin« a11 needed SUP-
Is btlitytd to be refltcttd in Ui.)Wl* 55,-
three little gold mines—the, Dia
fond Horseshoe Cabaret and the
Ziegfeld Theatre In New York snd
the operetta 'Cirmen Jones' on the
announcement that 80011 farm
workeri duo to be called later for
military lervlcu will be left In the
fields
Tht   Food   Cabinet—which   Sir
Sen deicribed as a poit-wir parallel of the "Battle of the Atlantic
Turn" established In "the blackest houn of thi wir whtn  U-
boiti were threatening our lifeline"—wlll    receive    ipeclal    reporti from the Mlnlitrlei of Food,
Agriculture,  Tnniport  ind   my
otheri concerned,
Cables   already   have   been  lent
by Mr. Attlee to the governments
of Cenada, Auitralla and other exporting countries, and the urgeVicy
of the situation will be itrened by
Foreign   Secretary   Bevin   at   thi
U.N.O.  meeting Friday  whtn  he
road .
However tf I could make
A itatement iisued Wednesday
night by the Imergency Economic
Committee for Europe laid that in
the next few months 140,000,000
Europeans would have to subsist
on 2000 cilories daily—recognized
as thi minimum to preserve health
md tffleltncy. Of that total, 100,-
000,000 irt likely to get 1500 cilories dilly, or less.
It wai thli over-all, food ihort-,
ige which was blamed by Sir Ben
Tueiday when he announced Britiih rationi wort to be more monotonous ind Ills plentiful than
ever.
The chief charge of the opposition ls expected to be that of lack
of foresight—contending that Feb-
'Carmen Jones' into a picture the
way I want to make it, that would
be the only picture for me."
Oscar    Levant    ien't    unhappy
Will (all Return
of Meat Rationing
fo U.S., Necessary
WASHINGTON, Feb. 7 (API-
President Truman laid today he
would call for a return to meat
rationing in the United State! if
it becomes neceisary to prevent
10,000,000 to 15„000,000 people from
ruary  is  too lata to (ell farmers | starving to death.
Urge Government Development Rural
Power, Decrease in Appliances Cost
VICTORIA, Feb. . (CP)-Immedl-|tt6n "that It li In the best interest
ate   promotion   by   the   provincial
government of rural and urbin hy
dro-slectrlc power development, ri
ther than uie of provincial funds for
terested in movie production lit
Switzerland . . . The Swiss havt
made I prominent bid for the international market with "The List
Chinle" .... Lauren and Hum*
phrty Bogart are taking a three
wetk cruise down the coast to low*
er California . . . Bing Crosby and
Barry Fltigerald will again co-star
ln "Welcome Stranger," a story
•bout a young doctor Ind an old
doctor.
Punchers wert chuckling when
the two top serein cowboys arrived
at the same eitlng pltce. Roy Rogers irrivei flrit. ill decked out ia
hli cowboy clothes. Then Gent
Autry, similarly arrayed, walktd
In. Tht only empty table was next
to Rogers. The heidwalter thought
fut, md hid Autry wait 15 min.
utti until mother table acrou th*
room wn vacated.
purchaie and improvemint of local llgrrt laving time hai been umnl
dieiel-powered planti which, lerve moujly declared by all farmers to
towni only wai advocated Widmi- be • nulsmce.
diy by the Advisory Board of the    Another endorsed resolution urg
Farmers'   Institutes   at   its  annual
meeting here.
The Board passed I further rem
lution urging the provincial govern
they should grow more grain for!   Tht Prtiident told a press con
1(140 consumption. ference that he thought it would
— ■   ■"—■— |not bt neceuary  to  rition  meat,
that he hoped not.
If, however, lt becomes necessary to keep from 10,000,000 to 15,-
000,000 people abroad from starving, he continued, he thought the
country ought to do it.
Ht  explained   thlt he  was vitally  concerned  with the  prospect
of  widespread  starvation   in  war-
of thi agricultural Industry that we; torn countrlei, accentuated by lou-
dO  not  nvirl  to  daylight laving n of whtit cropi ln iome countries
and other grains elsewhere.
He hopei, he iaid, that hii wheat-
conservation order yeiterday miy
make it possible to ship 6,000,000
torn of wheat abroad during tht
first six months of the year.
Canada,    Australia    and    othtr
%%£
time   this   year,   but   continue   on
standard time," they claim thit day-
ed   that   War   Assets   Corporation,,                   -...-.
h\d, make available light landingicountries with food surpluses ire
barges for use in communities with) being uked to cooperate, he Mild
acute transportation problems. The
Test Yourself
1 Is there a difference between in iniurance agent and an  insurance broker?
2, Whit was the first bridge to span the
East rlvtr In New York City1
3 What ii an aye-aye-1
T
 • _____	
Today's Horoscope
It is easy for ynu to absorb h universal
knowledge without much effort, because of
your keen memory You are very practical
and not inclined tn take thingi for granted in
ynur home, business, or in love Ynu are
capable of a deep ar.d lasting love, but hesitate to accept others at their apparent worth-
Work according to schedule this morning.
Stimulating rays promote energy and en thm-
iaim. Don't believe everythirg you hear thii
afternoon. Tho atmnsphere is conductive tn
excitement. New plani are not sanctioned
this evening, so deity them.
Press Comment
WOODSHEDS
There was a time when a farmer'i wood,
pill was a generally acc-ptrd criterion nf hli
all-around competence. A big wnodpile with
plenty of solid maple, oak and birch meant
ample dry fuel fnr the kitchen range and the
gleaming nickel-trimmed baie burner in tht
parlor When the time nf killing frosts arrived
and a countryman (pent the quiet leisurely
late-rail days grtting ready for Wtnten he
liked lo check his woodshed against the coming monthi of cold and mow, myi Tht New
York Timei,
There ii a good satisfying imell about a
woodihed. compounded from the inches-deep
liver of debrn. splinter*, sawdust and pieces
nf hark It is a dry, tangv nostril-tickling
aroma A man wh~ know* his woodi can distinguish varloui ipecles Thert is tht htavy
bland imell of the maple, tht sharp acrid
aroma of rtd oak, the rtilnoui lip of the pint
branrhes trimmed out frnm list Winter1! lumbering- The hemlock sticks that map and
rracklt In tht itovt havt ■ pungent penetrating imell, Tht applt wood chunki that camt
from the old Baldwin behind tht Icthouit
have a iplcy fragrance,
Tht lymmitriril tiers of ipht wood for
tht kitchin range ire piled high Neat ind
orderly, thty wait to bt carrlid In the old
buihtl baiket It the wiodhov beside tht itove.
In ent earner fs the pilt nf imrltd and knotty
chunki. thoie Irregular-liitd, hard-to-iplH
pitrt. whlrh wlll firry a firt ill night loag
In tht parlor burntr In another corner ii tht
pile of ihort pierti nf pine kindling—brittle,
quick-catching pieces that get a fire going
eaiily in the kitchen on mornings when rero
cold ii popping tht nalli in the elapbovde.
At night whtn a man cotr-m In from the chorei,
ht liku 10 ilep i minute la tht til and let the
lantern light ahlne on Ut reiulti tf hli labors
A woodihad, htipt-f high with drr fuel, li a
unifying thing M Winter rfrewi tn
 i *.
Yamashita Musi
Die on Gallows
| TOKYO, Feb. 7 .\?-~U. Gen.
Tomoyuki Yamaihita, hii last hope
for clemency denied by General
MacArthur, must die secretly like
a commnn criminal on the gallows
In Manila - tho city hli trapped sol-
idieri raped, pillaged and burned.
! MacArthur, ai final reviewing
authority, today upheld the death
lenience imposed on Yamashita by
a Military Commission in Manila,
and ordered that his one-time adversary meet hii doom "stripped
of uniform, decorationi and other
appurtenancei signifying membership in  the military profession."
Lt Gen Wilhelm D Slyer, acting on MacArthur's ordera, will
I cany nut the execution lecretly
land then announce it Niwipaper-
Imen and photographer! will be
barred
EXTRA EARLY NEW TOMATO
EarlyChathm
l.rU.,1 Qutlily t.m,l. 1,1 D„,l.a,l
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Of lunn etlri, ttt Ihi Naph ml Wm
etl •.her ih*.! mm dimi-d Hlfblf
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■i .--i-l- ii sao __tki ei woe. Wn man
eltet ,,r ,,i>, Prov*. | Mn.nir,* tt e)m
>■_■■< m !■ IV I'll ,. I !"!' lailul^
IU ludi Hi,,,nil || I.«iiibnJ|* lid trmls.
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mre, ea Altofts , ll.dMtn oen nmoll
•S-T ibo-i >- Al -MlWlWi Villi flu
hia treatta , aari tt Mn 'in lottet
mum um hiIi uiinin At Um4is.
Mill, ll bu vellll li uemk ll It,*, It
4"* BUM .tt*s list etmu uwl hiIih.
(ill)   U.II-1*   II   loul.   •<- U_MI|    u4
hi b Muat ii iloiiii <i i
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i Ail i.lnftiM««ii. Al moi ii
firal u, ejtam .Its Uipi ox
... calMf;
it iu EXi
ii' -i lines
Stanrll ., iiwai tttt luiit fiuaii'lar,
u liiwt   (Ml IHI l.i nf) Wftt,
lilt~OUt IIO !»«, HID ANB
MUMP stntrnXwatsAfti.   ..
' "u^i*IW__-_-__JBBWIn1li|lfl
ment to keep the colt o| ljKtrical|resolution   was   sponsored  by   the'   Thl air at high Jevela ll cold be
appliancei  to   (armtn undlr  con- j Vincouver Island and Gulf Isiandlcsuie it doein't absorb much heat
stunt obiervation, "tytfk) t vlfw to ■Inititutidns. ! and doein't etilly retain it.
having utility appliMMM brought'
down to a price ■ ithin tht firmm.s
riach."
Extension of irrigation tt bring
under cultivation land now Idle in
the Okanagan and itvilownent ol
the Nlskonllth Ukt Bar Creek
•irrigation ichemt wtr* advocate,
by Ihe Board.       • ,.   ., .
A further resolute*1, wtt pasied
-recommending tb»t mftt My Und
is purchased for returned men under the Veterani UMl Act It ihould
be inspected and pHM tn by a
committee of thret eomptttnt local
farmen.
AGAINST SAVING TIME
The  Board  also  pasied t resolu-
"On, ihs, bcLttkL of, JfoDhheuf AhitX. qhoioA, a, Atatshp bm,,
iHofiu. ia bo, a, (Ocdhf %lwl ^iiibit' bout 1953 •"
I think that I shall ntvet see
Aught lovely as a pulpwood Ittt.
A ir**) that grows through sunny noons
To furnish iporling )xjgt earfoens.
A tree whose girth will prove lis ag»
Is ample lor a want ad page.
A tree with qracj lotvaid heaven lislng,
Men macerate hi advertising.
A tret that litis Its arms and laughs,
To be made into paragraphs.
A Iree lhal falls belore Ihe saw,.
A flvt-slar llnal In th* raw.
Authorihip Uncertain
SWamt Sailg Nmb
	
	
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PORTS
\%
1
id Grand National to Be
i Again at Ainfree This Year
VERNON MORGAN
ON, Feb. 7 (Reuters)-The
National, greatest and most
1 steeplechasing event on the
I sports calendar, will return
II to its pro-war site at Ain-
n-sar   Liverpool,   it   became
this week,
historic course with its
■taking jumps that are the
it test for horse and rider
sen in possession of the Uni-
ati*;; Army during the war.
general public is so confid-
_ntree will be ready, that al.
, the race is two hionths
lt is lmpoiiible to book ac-
odation within half a day's
of the course.
stakes should be worth more
$25,000. The field propably
>e between 40 and 50, but am-
he runners there will be more
horses than ever before be-
owing to the war, the quaN
( rule had to be done away
and any horse can be entered,
thermoro the riders will not
i to pre-war standard for they,
the horses, have not had an
tunity for regular riding.
baps the outstanding horse at
lOment is Macmoffat, veteran
jumper from England's North Country who finished second in both
19.19 and 1940.
He and Bogskar, winner in 1940,
are the only entrants this year who
have safely negotiated Aintree's
giant obstacles, and therefore have
the great advantage of experience,
The IMsh champion, Prince Regent, wlll have to be every bit as
good as enthusiastic Irish reports
say he is to win this race with the
topweight of 173 pounds hf will
have to carry, He has not even
seen the course yet and it is regarded as about 10 to 1 odds again-
st any horse even getting round
in his first attempt, let alone winning.
One thing Is certain. Aintree's
fences will be as stiff as or even
stiffer than they have ever been.
No labor in this connection is being spared.
Okanagan, (oast Coming Into
Bonspiel Picture, Association
Told; J. B. Gray New President
B
V.ARTHA  ("Mo.her")
,   SHIPTON SAID:
'Around t h e world
oughts shall /ly
Jn the twinkling pj an
<t."
UR PRINTING EXPERT
SAYS:
■With ill dui respect te
.phone, telegraph, radio,
d the reit, there li nothing
it takee the place of a let.
-—builneu or otherwlie—
a meant ot communication,
'You will need a good lup-
t ot ENVELOPE8. We have
im In all itandard ilzei.
Iti of five thousand are
eclally priced."
PHONE 144
.elson Daily News
HINTING DEPARTMENT
Nelion, B. C.
CONFIDENT BABE
PRATT TO GET
FAIR HEARING
BUFFALO, Feb. 7 (CP)-Maiug-
ing-Director Conny Smythe, returning wllh his Toronto Maple Leafi
from Boston, said in an interview
today that Babe Pratt need not
worry about getting "a fair shake"!
when his expulsion appeal comes Up,
before National Hockey League governors.
"I have felt out a number of the
governors," said Smythe. "They realize that the player as well as the
Leafi, who were after all most
severely hurt, is entitled to sympathetic  consideration."
Smythe had no other comment on
the big defenceman, whoie appeal
against gambling charges is .scheduled to be heard at a governor!1
meeting at New York Feb. 14-15,
but proclaimed a "minor shake-up"
for hli Leafi and revealed plans
for a new "farm" club,
Smythe, returning from a health-
enforced vacation in California, said
he hopes to organize the new team
to play in the Eastern United States
Hockey League, which operates at
Madison Square Garden. He added
that he is interested jn seeing Montreal. Ottawa and Boston put teams
in thli circuit.
Concerning the fifth-place Leafs,
whom he watched hold the league-
leading Bruini to a deadlock at Boston lait night, Conn laid Walter
(Turk) Broda "looked good" in
the 3-3 draw. He indicated that the
veteran goalie, recently returned
from overseas, likely will get first
call over Frank McCool.
Bill Etinickl, Leaf wingman who
has been tolling for Pittsburgh ln
the American League, will be recalled for Saturday night's game
at Toronto against Detroit Red
Wings, Smythe said. Vetenn Mel
Hill of Calgary will go to the Hornet! ai replacement.
Doug Baldwin, who has been replacing Pratt on the Leaf defence,
will probably be sent to Hornets ai
well in exchange for Ernie Dickens.
Thc Hindus ire credited with or,
iginating the science of trignonom-
etry.
LOOK
SH**P
FEEL
$HA*P
BE
SHA*P
ROSSLAND, B.C., tab. 8-That
the B.C. Curling Association, which
for 91 years has been based on the
Kootenay, should look forward In
the near future to considering ltl
relations with the reit of the province, was the warn'ng given by
more than one speaker at the annual meeting held in Rossland Wednesday ln connection with Provincial Bonspiel.
Secretary Gerrge F. Relmann reported being advised by Dolph
Browne that Vernon would have 11
sheets of artificial ice next Winter,
and Donald MacDonald of Trail
pointed out that the Okanagan had
come prominently into the curling
picture recently and predicted that
it would be the centre of B.C. Curling in a few yeari time.
The discussion cattie up al a sidelight of the annual debate Initiated
as usual by T. A. Wallace of Nelion
on the advisability of the B.C. Curl,
lng Association divesting Itself of
all responsibility for the British
Consol's playdowns which are the
B.C. Section ol the Dominion-wide
Macdonald Brier.
Mr. Wallace and molt other delegates who dealt with the subject
agreed there was a strong case for
not holding the British Consols in
the course of the B.C. Bonspiel, including particularly the "packed
rinks" especially assembled for the
Consols which inevitably overshadowed the run-of-mlll rinks, the fact
that 12 ends were required for the
Consols and so its games were hard
to fit into the schedules and the fact
that the Conioli rinks had already
had tiring play before thc Consols
games were reached.
Solutions proposed varied greatly.
Mr. Wallace's was to divorce the
Consol's entirely from the B.C. Bonspiel, his propoial being for the
competition to be held a week later
under its own steam.
UNITES CURLERS
Donald MacDonald of Trail claimed that Consols was a factor In
binding the curlers of the Dominion
together and had a great competitive value in curling. He and sev.
eral others figured thli competition
might be held immediately following the Bonspiel. Some saw a solution In making a rule that Coniol's
rinks should not use their Consol's
personnel in the bonspiel except
diluted, but it was objected to this
that no rinks offering could be
barred.
Frank Staples of Creston was
against any change, saying all hil
own curling had been confined to
bonspiels and th t he never attended
one that did not have some packed
rinki. He considered thii was inseparable from bonspieli, a part of
the competitive value.
Addition of extra competitions
waa the solution favored by some
delegates who Instanced the innovations lucceiifully uied by Trail
at last year's B.C. Bonspiel on having both secondares and tertiariM
wnlcli greatly increased the curling
available to the average curler and
the poor curler the high-power rinks
fighting it out in the primaries.
Finally on motion of Donald MacDonald a committee was named
composed o( Measri. MacDonald,
Wallace and Jamea Wright of Ron-
land "to take up with the truitees
of the Macdonald-Brier trophy the
question of adopting for B.C. the
system used in Saskatchewan,"
where the playdowns are .not connected with any 'spiel.
In connection with tht future of
the association lt wu pointed out
th* preferred poiltlon at Vnncou-
ver although having only one imall
club, compared witn the Kootenay
which has a large number, enjoys
with regard to the Britlih Consols,
laving the playdowni In all past
years. This was considered entirely
unfair.
COMING INTO PICTURE
Apart from that It was suggested
that the Okanagan and Vancouver
must eventually be taken Into the
bonspiel picture, and that It would
be fair for them to take their turn
In rotation with the four strong
Kootenay clubs that have carried
the B.C. Bonspiel up to the present.   •
Invitation of the Nelson Curling
Club to stage the 1M7 bonipiel and
the officers and executive for 1947
were named on the uiual lines of
giving the most clubi a preponderant voice.
J. B. Gray of Nelson, First-Vice
President for the pait year, wai
elected preiident, other officers being as follows: Patron, Jamei
Wright, Rossland; Secretary, George
F. Reimann, Trail; Executive: John
Thom, H. Farenholtz, H. M. Whimster, A. B. Ronmark and A. B. Gilker, all of Nelson with power to
add; D, MacDonald, Trail; Fred
Tinling of Vancouver; Frank
Staples, Creston; Dolf h Brown, Vernon; Robert Willis, Cranbrook; H.
A. MacDonell, Bralorne; W. Vance,
Kelowna; Les James, Chapman
Camp; Joe Rochon, Kimberley; L.
G. Moir, Salmo; E, M. Reynolds,
Grand Forks; L. G. Fogle, Sheep
Creek; and E. E. Perkins, Rossland;
First Vice-President, J. R. Gleger-
ich, Kimberley; Second Vice-President, E. L. Jones, Trail; Chaplain,
Rev. H. Stewart Forbel, Nelion.
A tribute waa paid to Secretary
Reimann and note was taken of the
development of Kootenay curling
during his long tenure of office.
BRIER AT NELSON
_ MacDonald suggested that the
resolution of the Association asking
the Dominion Curling Auociation
to arrange for the Dominion play-
oft for the Macdonald Brier to be
held at Nelson in the year following
the playoffs in Saikatoon should be
re-affirmed, and Secretary Reimann
stated he would renew the Association's invitation before the matter
of the playoffs came up as the playoffs which were suipended during
the later war years are taking place
in Saskatoon. This would make the
playoffs at Nelaon coincide with the
1M7 Bonspiel. The new President,
J. B, Gray, on taking over from the
retiring Preiident, Jamei Wright,
Invited all the curlers to be present
and enjoy Nelson's hospitality next
year.
On motion of D. MicDonild and
F. S. Peteri of Rosilind it was decided to write conveying to Judge
J. A. Forin, one of tte founders of
the Association, who was recently
struck by a motor car In'Vancouver,
the Auociation'! wishes for an
early recovery.
Delegates included James Wright,
F. S. Peters, Rossland; D, MacDonald, J. Atwell, H. A. McLaren, E.
L. Jones, Roy Stone. Trail; .1. B.
Gray, J. S. Thom, T. A. Wallace, A.
B. Ronmark, Nelson; L. G. Moir.
M. C. Donaldson, Salmo; Frank
Staples. Creston; E. M. Reynolds,
Grand Forki; and Les James, Chapman Camp.
Trail Juniors
to Enter
B.C. Playoffs
V*MU B.C., Fob. 7-Playoff time
li fast drawing nigh for the Trail
Juniori. Coach Gerry Thomion announced that hli team would open
a Provincial leml-flnal seriei at
Vernon a week from Saturday
against the Vernon repreientatlvei.
It will be a best-of-three serlei,
with gamei tentatively billed for
Feb. 16, 18 and 19 if necessary.
The 'winner will advance against
the Coast champion, either New
Weitminiter or Nanaimo, and will
play in another btit-of.three leries
In the B. C. final. The tentative
datei are Feb. 21, 23 and 25 lf
necessary.
It ii generally underitood that
If Trail wlni the Provincial title,
the next atep in the Memorial Cup
playdowni, agalnit Alberta, will be
staged at Edmonton. However, if
It li thought that the inter-Provln-
cial series will be played at the
Coait.
The only competition for the Trail
Juniori thli year hai been ln the
Smelter Hockey League, where they
are In iecond place.
Alb to Have Trial
Hauled Before
U.S. Commiuion
WASINOTON, Ftb. 7 (AP)-Lt.
Oen. Mmahiru Homma, Japaneie
ww leader charged with condoning the Bataan Death March, today uked the Supreme Court' to
halt Mi trial before an American
Military Commlulon In Manila.
Homma alio aiked th* High
Tribunal, by airmail, that ha be
taken out of the handi of tha military and that the Supreme Court
review • refusal by the Philippine
Supreme Court to grant him a writ
of Habeas Corpui.
The General'i petition! were
placed ln the mail In Manila late
in January, while the Supreme
Court wai comlderlng ilmllar petition! filed by Japaneie General
Tomoyuki Yamashita, who li under death sentence ai a wir criminal,
Tha High Tribunal last Monday
rejected all of Yamaihita'i con-
tentiom.
Homma's petitions were placed
before the justices after their arrival today but the court li expected to announce later whether
it will hear argument on them or
reject them.
If the petition! are rejected, the
court may base its action on thc
decialon reached in Yamashlta's
cue.
NILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1946 - T
Washington Spotlight...
Why Experimental Atom Bombing
Asks Senator; Cost Tremendous
36 Skiers Enter Annual Grey
Mountain Grind al Rossland
STRIKES
and
SPARES
Zombiea, Clipper! and 77's were
victors tn five-pin games of the
Junior Ladlea Bowling League at
Gelinas Alleys Monday night. Top
scorer for the evening was Joan
Carew with 236 and'3866 for high
single and aggregate, respectively.
77'i
D. Bergstrom   150 170   32.
F. Crosby       163 10.1   268
O. Bergstrom     06 150   246
IF. McMullin     179 12S 304
^Low Score     90   U 178
I    Totals           678 6J8 1316
SWALLOWS
M. Leigh   1J5 187 322
E. Hicks  101 119 220
M. Cook  144 137 281
L. Davey        90   88 178
Low Score          96 105 201
Totals . 566 63- 1202
High individual score—M. Leigh,
187.
High sggregate score—M. Leigh,
322 '
HUDSON BAY
E. Goucher     73 102   175
B. Clynick          89 117   206
IS. Armitrong'  122   10   202
K. Kopec   135 183   318
J, Fraier   112 150   262
Totals       531 432 1163
CLIPPIR8
V. DeLucreilo   153 170   323
Kay Northery          95 100   195
Gladyi Horthery   106 113   219
Loye Dayeman   200 154   354
Fran Preitley     96 202   296
Totala 650 739 1889
High indicidual score—Fran Preitley, 202.
High    aggregate    icore — Loye
Dayeman, 354.
ZOMBIII
J. Carew   150 236   .388
■M. Ling      147 119   266
S. Vecchio   160 198   358
N. Slmpion       97 1B9   276
M. McDonald  148   96   244
Totali         702 838 1540
TILLICUM8
J. Reel       209 170   379
L. Croiiley    99 122   221
Low Score   148   06   244
Low Score   147 119   266
Low Score     97 189   286
Totali  700 696 1396
High Individual icore—J. Carew,
236.
High aggregate icore—J. Carew,
3M.
$800,000 FIRE
WIPES OUT
HANGAR, QUEBEC
QUEBEC, Feb. 7 (CP.-Fire of
undetermined origin today destroy-
fd Hangar No. 4 at nearby Anclennc
Lprette- airport.
The hangar, rented to private lntereiti for the manufacture of prefabricated houses to be ihlpped to
France, was surrounded by other
buildings but the blaze was kept
trom ipreadlng. Lait reporti iaid
do ona wai Injured.
All available fire fighting equipment at the airport wai put Into action and a call fnr aid was sent to
the Quebec Fire, Department. Thc
Quebec force wu In the midst of
fighting a fire which completely deitroyed La Tour, a lowertown iports
arena, and could lend only one reel
vlth a cdmpreuor pump to half the
llremen it the airport.
Damage, unofficially eitlmated as
high as $800,000, was kept to the destroyed hangar.
■y CLYDE   BLACKBURN
Canadian Presi Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (CP)-
Senator Scott Lucai (Dem.-111.) ll
not io much concerned about
whether Canada and the other
memberi of the United Atomic
Commlulon ihould bf Invited to
Bikini Atoll next May but he wonder! If the propoied experimental
Atomic Bomb attack on W naval
vessels ihould be carried out at all.
It Is going to coit million! and
the deitructlon of many warihlpi
to find out what atomic bombs will
-To when dropped en ihipi at iea.
Apart from that Important fact
Sen. Lucas luggested to hli fellow
lenaton that If the uie of atomic
bombi ln warfare li to be outlawed, ai Preiident Truman, Prime
Minister Attlee and Prime Minister MacKenzie King recommended
laat November, there li no juittfi-
cation for the display planned at
Bikini Atoll.
He aiked what Americani would
think if iome other country wai
planning such a terrifying experiment of wholesale destruction.
It was Ironical that after San
Francisco, Philadelphia and other
centres had ipent imall fortune!
lobbying for selection al permanent  home   of   the   United  Natloni
Organization the main recommendation of the Selection Committee
wai for an area where th* local
reildenti are up ln armi against
the Idea.
Canada's Custpmi Commliiloner,
David Sim, and advisers here to
opnfer with American officials on
methods of simplifying customs operationi, have a wide field' of opportunity. Ai an lnitance, thli correipondent imported a $14 automobile part from Ottiwa, ipent nearly an hour getting lt through customs, and was about to be charged
a heavy rate of duty until ho pointed out that the part waa made In
Dayton, Ohio, and had been subject of cuitomi duty paid by the
Ottawa Importer. The time con-
lumed by all concerned with this
traniactlon, at a conservetlve estimate of what their time la worth,
would about equal the value of the
article Imported.
I
3 PAIRS OF SKIIS
FOR SALE
SAM BROWN
Gun, Lock, Safe and Cyole Worke
Box 187  Nelion, B.C.  Phone 1045
40 DAYI OF RACINQ
PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 7 (API-
The Oregon Racing Commlision today granted Portland Maadowi 40
dayi of hone racing between July
27 and October 12.
SILVER RIDGE
MINING COMPANY LIMITED
Increase In price of SILVER from 40 to 78 centa par ounce
and the impending world shortage of LEAD, make thli
an outstanding speculation. SILVER RIDGE li located
in' the Slocan district which In the pait hai produced
♦65,000,000 In lilver, lead and zinc.
Wl recommend purchue of theae iharee.
Price at the market.
Information bulletin on request
DAVIDSON & COMPANY LTD.
Memben Vancouver Stock Exchange
808 Wut Pender Street      PAclflo 4188       Vancouver, I.C.
The
VANCOUVER ENGINEERING
WORKS LIMITED
is   proud  to  announce
that   It  is   now  th*
SOLE AGENT
in the Provinces oi
BRITISH  COLUMBIA, ALBERTA,
SASKATCHEWAN & MANITOBA
ior the manuiacture and
sale oi the products oi
I.  A   E.   HALL  LIMITED
OF     DAHTTOHD,.    HUT,     ENGLAND
C/mmerclal Manulacturen
oi Refrigerating Equipment,
Eicalaton    and    EU-ratori
•
ROSSLAND. B. C. Feb. 7—It wai
announced todiy that there are J8
entriei, 24 seniors and 12 juniors for
the fourth annuil Grey Mountain
Grind to take place on Sunday.
The first entry leaveE the top of
Grey Mountain at 2:01 p.m. The reit
I leave at minute intervals. Following is the draw:
Seniors:
No.   1. Fred Hancock,  Rowland;
No. 2. Bob Greene. Rowland.
No. 3. Chuck Fankey, Trail;
NOT TO EXTEND
LOTTERY DEADLINE
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP) - Attorney-General R. L. Maitland,
back in his office from the Domin-
lon-Provlnlcal conference Coordinating Committee discussions in
Ottawa, uld today that despite a
large number of request! to extend
the deadline for lotteries ln thii
province, no action would be taken.
Sometime ago the Attorney-General announced that no action would
be taken to prosecute persons conducting lotterlei along a basis provided for during the wartime to
raise money for charitable purposes.
The deadline for winding up these
lotterlei is Feb. 21.
Firtt Income Tax
Offko To Be
Opened in B.C.
OTTAWA, Fib. 7 (CP)-The
Revenue Depirtment will proceed
this year with lhe opening of 14
'new district income tax offices
throughout the Dominion.
The fint to he opened will be
an office either at Kelowna, B.C.,
nr Victoria to handle extra buil-
Iness resulting from increased population in the province and ease
[congestion In the Vancouver office.
Tt was explained the opening of
ne.v offices Involved transferring
records of individual taxpayer! and
the mnvini of itaff ind it wai nnt
expected that more than a third of
the new officei could be opened tn
the nent few months.
No. 4. Gilbert Page, Trsll;
No. 5. Windy Williams, Trail;
No. 6, Nell Mation, Trail;
No. 7. Jick Mitchell, Robion:
No. 8. Saul Ttothman, Trail;
No. 9. I. OUen, .Robson;
No. 10. Ira Page, Rosiland;
No.  11. Fred Graham, Ros-sland
No. 12. Tommy Wlllii, Trail:
No. 13, Sammy Martin, Trail;
No. 14. Len C.mozzi, Roisland:
No. 15. Ernie Beiulieu, Rossland
No. 16. Martin Johnson, Rossland
No. 17. Paul Jones, Trail;
No. 18. Jack Foster, Trail;
No. 19. Jimmy Douglas, Rossland:
No. 20. Herman Schnidrig. Trail;
No. 21. Ernie Mason, Trail;
•   No. 22. Jack Collini, Rossland;
No. 23. Frank Blackwell, Rossland;
No. 24. Newt Robinson, Trail:
Juniors:
No  25. Loren Calder, Trail:
No. 26, Jean Anderion, Rossland;
No. 27 John Michaely, Rossland;
No. 28. Gorden McKemii, Roisland;
No. 29. John Poochoff, Rossland;
No. 30. Allen Fliher, Rowland;
No. 31. Bib Smith, Rouland:
No. 32. .Gordon Atklnion, Rossland;
No, 33. John Bulck, Roulind;
No  84. Peter Stllei, Trill;
No. SS. Donny Davli, Rowland:
No. 35. Hugh Urquhart, Rossland
Starter! from the tpp of Grey
Mountain are Gerry Clayton and
Fred Brooki; Control point at 12
Squaw Baiin, Miller Mason and, E.
B. O Bourchler; Indlm Flats, W. P.
Dunbar and F. M. Elhrlcte: Spokane
St. Hill, Gib Hunt; Flnlih line. Howard Bayley and L. J. Nicholson;
Race Marshall, Bob Van
In charge of first aid is Petf
Mflnecr.uk and members nf the St
John Ambulance Corpi
FORMER MINISTER
URGES LOAN AT    .
NOMINAL INTEREST
VANCOUVER, Feb. 7 (CP) -
Hon. H. H, Stevens, former Federal
Cibinet Minister, released today
copies of an open letter to Prime
Minister Mackenzie King calling
| on the Dominion Government to
joffer Britain a loan of $2.(100,000.000
ior $3,000,000,000 at nominal interest rites.
! Mr. Steveni, Minister of Trade
and Commerce in the Bennett Coniervative Government, aslced Mr,
I King to ship supplies to Britain im-
j mediately on a No, 1 priority.
| Mr. Steveni contended that Britain had lost so much in the war as
j contrasted with the economic gains
jof the United States and Canada
I that the United Kincdnm "nught
I not to he forced to the position of a
mendicant suppliant at the doors of
Congress"
Lindsay to Bottle
Cleveland Boxer
SEATTLE. Teh, 7 <AP>-Kenny
Lindsay, little blond buzzsaw'from
Vnncouvcr. B. C-, and former North-
K'est Golden Gloves Boxing champion, mixes in a 10-round main
event with Bobby Richards nf
Cleveland at the Civic Auditorium
here tomorrow night.
OLD FilNG PALS
Tnny LeswJek, hustling forward
nf New York Rangars in the National Hockey League ind "Vf-
petual Motion" Grant Warwick.
who wings nn the samt line, bnxrd
as nmnteurs in Saikatchewan. War-j
wick won thr lightweight cham-j
pinnship of 'hr province when he
wis  18 yaan nld.
FARM   NIGHT
Hockey games In the Chicago stadium are wild affairs with the customers throwing "everything from
vegetable! to nails from tht balconies  to the rink.
The Chlcagn Blickhawki, natur.
ally, seldom make a clcnn swerp of
anv series.    *
ARE you tempting thc Victory Bond
thief? He has a rattling good business out
of the wtr. If Victory Bonds are anywhere
but in a steel vault they are not safe.
Call at the nearest B of M branch and
lodge your Victory Bonds in our vault.
Thc cost is trifling—W per $100 per
annum—minimum 25^ a year, Your bonds
will he kept safe, your interest coupons
clipped and credited to an account in your
name on which you may draw at will.
Bank of Montreal
uarkiny uilk Cassastsaus tu euetty walk ef life tiuci It 17
Niton Branch: H. A. DOAK. Manaiar
THII Br«n-h: « RAnCUnT, Mane«er
HoieUnd Branch. W. A- HUTCH-NOS, Manner
Kulo iBub-Aienoy): Open Thuriday
New Danvir (Sub Aiency)
Open Monday and Tueiday
°°»vr
Cer
roar
ft*.,
*>*
<*r
Per
1,11 s'"hcr.
.""-IO*    ^  'hero
rrtiS.,7   l*t   e,  **■
"■'te_        »>.<_
"■v..
"Pt
111
'■> r. '" *t' On
St. c<>?
_££-.
_____________________________
 ;	
_________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________
 t — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1941
TODAY'S News Pictures
m__W__WMs.
<„■':.'■■
.
%'.'■'' '
■_ -v   &
,r.. ■   ' I
1*•$ .■** ■*_
v',-^^-.-*wtt_j
i :   ■ 1
'■'■' j.
:'.'; ^i,,l^7
tl-'-.'
w.i.'
. ,     ■
■ *; •
■
i
1
1
r
.vt
L.-_:. /____
KURT MEYER'S AUNT PLEADS TO TAKE HIM ON HER
FARM: Mra. Stanley Him of Nipinat, Ont., believed to be the only
relative In Canada of Maj.-Gen, Kurt Meyer, above with her dogi,
bellevei that • lift lentence In priion Wilt kill thl Nul officer. She It
liking thi government to plice him In her cuitody it her firm which
li ilmoit In the ihidow of Klngiton penitentiary. Mrt. Htm hai
lived on her 214 acre Ctnidlin firm for the pait 30 yeari. Thi firm-
houie md Meyer ire alio pictured.  •
SAID MR. B TO MR. B.i Of course thiy might hive been
(inclining the butter shortage or the price of nyloni, but It ll unlikely that Brltalm' Foreign Minister, Erneit Bevln, left, and U. S.
Secretary of State Jamei F. Byrnei, right, could look so lolemn If
that were the caie. They were mapped In thli tete-a-tete In the lobby
of Central Hall. London, where the United Natloni Organization
General Aiiembly ll In conference.
^Hi   :
 -J  -^ccp^^p;
Catil.
fyJauiaTtKcelti
CURTAIN CURES: Are your curtain! ihrunken? Tike heart . . .
here'i not one but ilx wayi of
making them over or of tewing
new onei with  little fabric.
The budget'll balance If you re-
uie old curtalm. You'll be delighted at their imartneis. Initruction! 829 hai direction! for 6
curtalm.
Send TWENTY CENTS (20c) In
for thli pattern. Print plainly
colni (itampi cinnot be accepted)
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS. 8TYLE
NUMBER.
Send your order to Dilly News
Pittern Department, Nelion, B. C.
MILLIONAIRE G.I.: One G.I.
who won't hive to worry ibout
finding • good paying Job when
he geti back home ll 21-year-old
Peter Slim, ion of Count Ludwlg
Slim von Hoogitraten -and Mllll-
ctnt Rogeri, Young Slim, now •
lorgeant In tht U.S. Army In Germany, Inherit! $2,198,632.2* from
thl Rogeri' fortune now thit hli
father  li "officially dead".
MCTTHER-
WH AT IN THE
WORLD ARE
MX'
LAUGHIWG
ABOUT?
I'MJ_J5T LOOKING AT
THIS OLD FAMILV
ALBUM -HA-HA-THE
GOWNS AND H AT§
WERE SO FUNNY
IN THE OLD DAYS/'
7	
Mv GOODNESS - I
FPCGCT-I'WI TO
BE AT MRS KEN
SHOOTDICE'S
THAT MUST
BE MAGSIE
I HEAR
COMING
DOWN THE
STAIRS-
BLONDeSBEEN
ON THE PHONE
TALKIM6 TO
MBS, fvKNUFF
FCf- OVERA
HALF-HOUR
vve'bs ovee
... AT ANEVV   (
ow.rni v*j, \s  toemc*
BOySf VVHBRE HOUSE AND
ask _uf -Vi WAY WE '
DON'T Y'KNOW) STAV HERE
ITS LUMCH   r-<FOK LUMCH.
DOT IF ITS GO.N'
TBE ONE Of
THESE COOKY
CAKE ANO
CAND-*. OB3I6S,'
ITS GOTTA BE
A HEALTHFUL.
LUNCH f ,
RESCUED OFF JAPAN: Shir-
on Rogeri, above, ind her 10-glrl
orcheitra from the U. S. wera reicued from the iea by Japaneie
flihermen efter a traniport plane
craihed off the 8outhirn tip of
Kyushu liland while they were
returning from Korea to Japan.
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
\u.A VOfJTHFUL
MATHEMATICIAN!,
DiMWIDDy WAS
from hun6er-
me couldn't
ADO 2 AMD 2
Twenty- five
years lateh-
me still can't
add-0ut he's
NOT DOIM-d 6^D
AT ALL,AT ALL
aj? -
■^f*\*__\ £o?2 c
PJ¥ ___-*,
$6ACAV
FOR. ROOM-4
!_AyS-TMAT5$4e.'
4 SHOW TICKETS,
$ 3.30 EACH E
Eft, $32.86 -
'2fi
WELL,"8UITED": Want to get
on the team, Jr. MIm? Wear thli
•mooth lult, Pattern 9058. Cardigan Jacket has that rave-rater—a
tiny tie at walit. And note the
aklrt'i center ventl
Pittern 9068 comei In Jr. Mlu
ilzei 11, 13, 15 ind 17. Size 13, lult,
takei a 1-8 yirdi M-lnch,Jabrlc.
ITitvitoii   Wflatiw
Send TWENTY CENT8 (20c) In
coins (itampi cannot be accepted)
tor thli pattern. Print plainly
8IZE, NAME, ADDRE88, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send your order to Dally Newi
Pattern Department, Nelion, B.C.
AUNT HET
Bl* AtTT THE FIRST KILLERXKE HELPED CAPTURE \\ i? ITS THI CM
TOOTlOOS* HAS HANDED 0Ha/fOXY...L__T(N.'THf   Lf THEY'LL TAKE.
TD ml Uk...Chili/ £ 1 wh ARE WHkin* •* into han6.'.
•JO-ttONK COMiN6.y>    SOTTA thik
Cacct:
*?.
^<*<_.
"I wasn't cut out for n hern I
know we got to occupy those countries for n long Ume, but I just don't
want my boys to do It."
SALLY'S SALLIES 5
-.•filter*- tl. 8. Pi'tnt Otfft. ,
RLIZ KN0CK6 ft TOT WffOERE DOOR.
WnO ANSWER. HE TRIE? THE KNOB.
KILLED INSTANTLV. *li. BELIEVE SHE'
FROM YOUR |7T_- FLOOR TERRACE.
yOUNG WOMAN ABOUT 50, BLOND
GOOD-LOOKER. WORE A DIAA"OND
WRIST WATCH WITH THE INITIALS
GOOD HEAVEN
MUST BE «
WINTER
<r
s
"Joe, dear, you'll ml«« that Wan-
na-Go-Home rally!"
Wl'*, (MUT, o'CARR
1 HEARD A ItH,, THIN
ju^pec mot. AND —
PROBABLY Jt-ST
ANOTHER est. ocfrfy
Ot WAITING K*.
RECONVEK'HCN
rfOfi THAI .lAITflr, 1
' \ •,•,)& in APROV-t. (a
HCH OD VO, nllpf\\H
ANO— NE_, ARE YOU'
T0ARP,vE  -0        1
10 Pin thi* On nit
PtCMfTl,       .^d
UMAT WINDOW DtD *
O'SARRT      H
7»AN-WE tKUt
	
—
__.
	
 LASSIFIED
PHONE 144
HELP WANTID
NIC-MUST HAVE EXFE-
with most mikei of can
Tucks. Small town Garage.
tn equipment. Apply wtth
tees to Box 2867 Daily News
Selective Service, Nelson
TWO HOTHOUSESlO~X £0',
rater heated, 7 actei garden.
market gardener to rent on
'   Eight miles   from Trail.
L horse, etc. Irrigated. E. C
2318 Riverside Ave. Trail.
SD-EXPERIENCED   FAR-
br power-equipped, irrigated
ln Cranbrook District. Prl-
resldence.  Heferences   Box
)ally News. __
D-BOY   OR   QlRfTFOR
farm work. Able to milk.
y Box 2865 Daily Newi.
MACHINERY
Rations wanted
Itclal low ratei Ior non-com-
Dial   advertisements   under
classification to assist peo-
leeking employment Only
lor one week (6 days) covers
number ol required llnei
Ible in advance. Add 10c If
pumber is desired
3MAKING - WILL SEW IN
• home or mine. Ph. 584-R1.
BUSINESS AND
'ISSIONAL DIRECTORY
tSSAYERS AND  MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
JDOWSON & CO. ASSAY
)1 Josephine St., Nelson.
 IS, "ROSSLAND. B   C
Ser, Chemist. Mine Rprsntvo.
tST ttOOtENAY  ASSAY
410 Kootenay St.. Nelion.
IL 410 Koo'
IU_E, lndep>
_.rendent Mine Rep-
ItaUve. Box 34, Trail, B.C.
CHIROPWACTOR8
JN McLAREN, D C. CHIRO-
tlc X ray Sinography. Strar.d
itre Bldg., Trail, B.C. P._328
[AMOND DRILLERS
)NAL DIAMOND DRILLING
LTD, Drilling and Bit Ser-
gxjOjlRoss.and, B.C. _____
MRS ANfl SURVEYORS
HAGGEN.   MINING   AND
, Engineer. B.C. Land Surer Rowland and Grand Forks.
C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,
on, B.C. Surveyor Engineer
gikcE AND REAL MTAti
T McHAR_)V, INSURANCE.
Eatate. Phone 133.
MACHINISTS
^riJHWTS LIMITED
•hine Shop, acetylene and
c welding, motor rewinding, _
883 324 Vernon St. NATIONAL
ERSol.'S Machine shop-
IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE
SALE
Two and Thrtt Block
Sawmllli
Two and Three Saw Edgers
Circular Inserted Tooth
Saw«
Pulleys—Solid and Split
Shafting—Bearings and collars.
Pipe. Black and Gal. All sizes
Pipe Fittings—Valvei etc.
Pumps.
Mine Rails.
Holiti, single and double drum,
large and imall.
Cable and Chains.
Motors, single and three phase.
Compressor!.
Steam Engines
Stopers and Drlften
Jack Hammers.
Interior Distributors for
Spear & Jackson (B.C.) Ltd
Saws.   bits,   holders,   mill  supplies. Challenger Power Chain
sawi
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 for:
Evinrude Outboard Motors
Electric Lighting Plants
Case Industrial and Farm
Products
Nelson Machinery
& Equipment Co.
2H Hall SL Phone 18
Mining. Milling and Sawmill
Machinery. Building and Contractors' Supplies.
"If It's Machinery You Want,
Consult Ul".
MACHINERY
(Continued)
National Single and Double
Drum Gasoline Hoists
Ideal  tor Log  Loading,  Land
Clearing, Dragline and Building
Construction.
NATIONAL MACHINERY CO.
LTD.
Vancouver, B.C.
WHEN IN VANCOUVtH STOP AT
Aimer Hotel. Opp  C.P.R  Depot
NEW AND SE<_6-.D-_-A-"t>
oods. Chess' Second Hand Store,
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
OF RELIABLE MINING
MACHINERY
Moncha Trams and Mucking Machines, Mine Ralls,
Pipe, Compressors, Rock-
Crushtrs, Ball Mills, Stopers, Jack Hammtn, Valvti,
Vancouver Sales &
Appraisals Limited
846 Beach Avenue
Vincouver, B. C.
kAVi   RStT A CAMERA #8R
sale? If io tend description to L.A.
Brodle, 2593 Granville St, Vancouver.	
KNOW YOUR BEST-SOTflTD
trade by a scientific analysis test,
Mc complete. Box MID, Victoria,
B. C.
iiavb'S eoikf. am tmztm
Salve gives immediate relief from
corns and callouses. 90c at Fleury's
Phsrmacy and all druggists.
rs PHOTC^25c
Box 434. Vancouver
Any 8-exp. roll developed and print-
ed 29c Reprints 3c. Free 3x7 Coupon.
Le Rot portable air compressor!
ln stock, 'or tent or sale.
AIR EQUIPMENT SERVICE LTD
1401 Hornby St Vancouver
TOR SALE-SPEAR 4 JACKS5S
12 H.P, 4 ft. power saw in good
condition. Four chains and complete equipment. Box 412, Kimberley, B.C.
LONDON BRICK TONGS
ln stock for Immediate delivery.
Purves e. ritchie & son ltd.
838 Hornby St.        Vancouver, B.C.
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
SMITH MARKING DEVICES LTD.
"Let us solve your marking problems." We specialize in machine
engraving, badges, rubber stamps,
steel stamps, inks, pads, stencils,
dies, 822 Homer St, Vancouver,
PIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES, SPE-
clal low prices. Active Trading
Co..  913  Powell  St.,  Vancouver.
i-MflJM Radio, dual wave,
in good condition, with all bat-
terles. W. Belt, Box 124, Nelson.
A MODERN STYLEb BARBER
Chair at a low price. Apply Slo-
can Barber Shop, Slocan, B.C.
1 McLARY, 9-HOLE COAL AND
wood range; good condition. Ph.
380, 824 Silica St.	
TOR SALE-LADY'S NEW RAIN-
coat, sire 12-14. Phone 120 from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.	
WOOD AND COAI. RANGE, GOOD
condition Phone 811-L3.
PORTABLE    BAW-
MILLS are'itrongly built for ro-
nomlcal production to lult Weitern Canadian timber. Manufactured by NATIONAL MACHINERY
CO. LTD, Vancouver, B.C.
WANTED, MISCELUNEOUS
PERSONAL
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC
good
324 Vernon St. Ph. 1081.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1944 - •
Toronto Stock Quotation!
25c T
P.O. Bi
MINES
Aquarius  .
Armistice
Astoria	
Atlas .........
Aubelle   ...
Aunor
ca aot Reprints 3c. Free 3x7 coupon,
WE SPECIALIZE IN RECONVERT-
lng your old Army rifles to sporter
models. All types of guns blued
and repaired. Guns bought and
sold. Precision Instrument Co, 889
Richardi St, Vancouver,
ATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD
lecretarlei. We have a large stock
of newsprint, mlmeo and bond
paper and can fill any order Immediately. Daily Newi Printing
Dept, Nelson, British Columbia.
LET THI AMAZING FORTWfl!
teller help you with your family
problems. Lucky days and fortunes told with six question! for
one dollar. Pleaie write with Ink
to Mdme. Alblna, 143 Rupert Ave,
Winnipeg.
BOX N, LANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C
Box N Vernon, B.C.
(Branch Hatchery)
PUT PEP IN THOSE FUTURE
partiei. Send $1.00 for giant Novelty Pak. 10c Hitler Comic
Photo, 10c Lover's Fun cardi, 10c
Comic Post Card, Homecraft and
Noveltlei, Box 387, Cranbrook,
BC.	
FILMS DEVELOPED ^I.D Pit-NT-
ed (6 or 8 expoiure roll) 23c. Re-
prlnti 3c each. For your inapihoti
choose Krystal Finish Guarenteea
ron-fade prints. Krystal Photos,
Wilkle, Saskatchewan. Established
over 30 yean.
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or iron. Any quantity Top price!
aid.   Active  Trading   Company
Powell St.. Vancouver. B.C
JANIE DEAR-Not much to tell
you, but may have more later.
Have a hot tip that COLOR-
BACK Is back. When I know more
for sure wlll let you know right
away—JUNIE.	
STOP SUFFERING FROM FOL-
lowing stomach Disorders: Acid
Stomach, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Coated Tongue. Bad Breath, Sick
Headaches, etc. Uie Ellk's Stomach powder No. 2, prepared by
experienced Pharmacist It must
give Immediate results or money
back. SI, 12. Ellk's Medicine Com-
pany, Dept. 42, Saskatoon, Sask.
ed. Sl.OO, 82.00. Mail orders filled
promptly Order today from Elik'i
fald
IB
WANTED TO BUY STOCK SAD
dies. Give price and condition.
J. H. Annable, 1039—Sth Ave.
West, Calgary.
WANfED A PIANO-WTLL STORE
for use of tame. Phone 718-X or
918 Kootenay St	
SHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR-
gan. Nelion, B.C. 	
1  TRUNK AND  1  SUITCASE  IN
good condition. Phone 588-R
ejilsta ln mlne.and mill work
Mne work, light and heavy
■trie and Acetylene welding
ernon St. Nelson •__{
SRTtRED ACCOUNTANT
tttrtitA M. HOYLAND
Chartered Accountant
Ictoria St, TraU Ph. 336
IECOND HAND 8TORE8~
fpE_OTrarowr CHICK STARTER
it have you? Ph. 934. Ark htr.
A, GARDEN & NURSERY MAbH
(UT TREES-FREE ciRCU-]one thimbleful a day—That's
s^uSS^^h11 ,he feet a,ch^ea,s in a,
and better nut trees. Box 19.: day—yet that feed has to con-1 WANTED—8-8   ROOMED   HOUSE
We Recommend
MIRACLE
We repair sewin| machines.
Free estimate given ln advance,
and all work guaranteed.
Phone 41. or call at the Singer
Shop, 339 Baker Strett, Nelson,
RENTALS
WANTED TO RENT BY RETURN- STOP   ITCHING
ed veteran, approximately 1000 ft.,   eczema, psorlasla,
floor ipace for cabinet and electrical factory. W. Jackson, Phone
488-R.
OF
ath
WANTED—4 or 8 ROOM HOUSE
Summer dwelling acceptable
reasonable auto distance city
Apply Box 2881. Dally News.
WANTED-3 OR 4 ROOMED Unfurnished suite. Close in. Phone
120 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
lcte's foot and other skin Irrita
tions with Elik'a Ointment No 3
prescription of noted akin specialist Itch relieved promptly, ikn
healed nulrklv or monev refunded, $1.00. 82.00. Mall orders filled
promptly. Order todaj from Elik'i
Medicine
Sask
These famous chicks ln ever Increasing quality bave been raised
by successful poultrymen for over
21 years. '
They are again available ln the
following breeds-
White Leghorni, R. I. Reds, Barred
Rocks and New Hampshires.
A letter will bring full particulars and prices by return.
Order early and remember
"IT'S RESULTS THAT COUNT"
*
Bbmp&Sendall
TO ALL BUYERS OF  BABY
CHICKS IN 1948.
Your futuro profits from poultry will be determined by the quality of stock you buy. Our new
poultry farm, backed by thirty
years poultry breeding experience, ls devoted exclusively to the
production ot strong, healthy,
production-bred stock. Only birds
on this farm are used to produce
dur babv chicks In White Rocki,
RO.P. Sired White Leghorns and
New Hampshires. Write tor our
Illustrated 1948 price list
APPLEBY POULTRY FARM
Mission City, B.C.
BOLIVAR CHICKS
When you order Bolivar chicks
you get the benefit of 34 yeari'
experience ln breeding, hatching
and handling chicks. White Leghorns, New Hampshires,  Barred
Rocks, Leghorn-Hampshire Cross.
Illustrated  folder and prices on
request. There are more Bolivar
chicks  sold  than  any strain  In
B.C. There must be a reason.
BOLIVAR HATCHERIES
R.R. No. 4, Pacific Highway, New
Westminster, B.C. A modern sanitary  hatchery  supported  by   a
breeding    farm    operated  under
government lupervliion.
QUALITY   CHICKS.   APPROVED
Leghorni and Hampshire! Order
chicks now from our specially selected breeders. 20 years' experience with chicki and poultry. Full
particulars in  our catalogue.   A.
Balakshln,   New Siberia   Farms,
R.R. 2, Chllllwsck. B.C.
BURNSIDE POULTRY FARM
High    quality    chicks that will
prove profitable to the poultry-
man. They grow in popularity aa
is evidenced by repeat orders and
increased sales. Leghorns, Hampshires,    Barred    Rocks,    Crossbreeds. Write today for catalog.
Order chicks early, demand will
ba heavy. -Plant and hatchery under Dominion Government Inspection.
BURNSIDE POULTRY FARM
A. E Powell     .    Hammond, B.C.
.73
.88
.73
.82
.70
6.80
9.25
UD
Anglo-Huronlan    12.83
Aumaqua   .., „     1.42
Bagamac    _     M
Baie Metali Mining   • 31
Bear Exploration     1.5J-
Beattle Oold Mines     1.68
Bevcourt  83
Bldgood Kirkland 39
Bobjo Mln« ley.
Bonetal   „ 40
Bralorne   -.  18.73
Broulan  	
Buffalo Ankerlte 	
Buffalo Canadian 	
Campbell R L      3.
Canadian Mai      1.29
Cariboo Gold Quartz     2.80
Caitle-Trethewey        1.90
Central Patricia  _    2.93
C Porcupine      .36
CItralam          .28
Coin Lake  82
Cheiterville     1-87
Cochenour          4.78
Coniaurum Minea     2.24
Consouldated M Is S    8.1.50
Conwest         1.68
Croinor        1.50
Delnite      ' 2.75
Dome Minei     32.00
Donalda         1.50
Duquesne         1.46
East Amphl  57
East Malartie      3.00
East SUllivan        3.03
Elder
Eldona  .
Falconbridge Nickel
Fed Klrkland  ........
Francoeur	
Froblsher   	
Giant Yellowknife
Gillies Lake
God's Lake Gold	
Gold Crest
Gold Eagle
Venture!     11.90
Vlcour    _..      .69
Waite Amulet       4.83
Wasa Lake  -. _._.    1.55
W Malartlc         A3
Wiltsey 28
Wright Hargreavis      6.43
Yellorex   _._       M
OILS
Anglo-Can  ................    1.31
drl.ish Am    27.00
British Dom 41
C & E Corp     2.90
Calmont  49
Chemical Reiearch 88
Dalhousle       .98
Davies Pet       .1814
East Crest       .11
Foothills   r.     195
Home Oil     3.80
Imperial     16.85
Inter Petroleum    23.50
National Pete 14
Mid Continent 14
Okalta  70
Pacalta 13
Pacific Pete      1.20
Royalite ....    23.00
South End Pete 0714
United . .    ..    134
Vcrmilata  114
INDUSTRIALS
Abitlbl Power  "...    8.33
Algoma Steel  _    2500
Bathurst A     20.00
Beatty     40.25
ell Telephone  189.00
2815
14.39
2(1.50
481)0
30 25
4.65
30 00
BOO
24 50
2X00
Brazilian Traction
Brewers & Distillers
B A Oil
B C Packers
B C Power "A"
1.20     B C Power "B"
1.15     Building Products
6,25     Canada Bread
.19     Can Brew	
.65     Canaaa Canners....
5 25     Canada Car & Fdy pfd     34.85
850     Can Dredging     28.00
.24     Can Marconi     4.50
.68     Can Pacific Rly           23.50
.344 Can Ind Alcohol "A"    18.80
Cockshutt Plow     17.50
Cbasl Beekeepers
Protesting
Sugar Quota (ut
VANCOUVER, Feb. 7 - Vancouver and New Westminster beekeepen have called a Joint emergency
meeting ln the YMCA, New Westminster, Friday night, to protest to
the Federal Government the cut In
the quota of sugar.
The quota ln 1944-49 was 90
pounds per colony of 15,000 to 30,000
beei. Last Fall the quota was cut
18 hhlf.
William C. Feedham, President,
New Westminster division, B. C.
Honey Producers' Association says:
-The beekeepers are up in arms.
We are actually conserving iugar
by encouraging beei. Ivery pound
of sugar used to further production
Is Increased a number of times.
"If we don't get the bees through
the season the farmers will lose be-
rause fruits wlll suffer. We Intend
io follow up the Friday discussion
tt our regular meeting on February
14"
Hon. Frank Putnam, provincial
Minister of Agriculture, says: "Millions of bees in Vancouver, New
Westminster and Victoria areas
will die this Spring for lack of
sugar.
"If we have a cold, wet Spring
we are going to lose many bees; If
we have fl good Spring with plenty
of flowers, it will help. But In any
event Coast beekeepers are going to
lose many hives. Probably one-third
of the coastal bees will die.
"The situation ls much better ln
lhe Okanagan, Kootenays, Shuswap
and Central B. C, where they have
plenty of honey."
Gold Dale  34 Vi Cons Bakeries
i Co.. Dept 42. Saskatoon
tbank, B.C.
WILL    YOUR
»T Soil production miy be In
ted up to 700 per cent without, layer
dd of chemical fertilizer!. Re-
are beyond imagination. You
liave thefinest topsoil known
an. Write for the astonishing
let which reveali the drama
ealed kiside the earth. Writ-
tor the farmer and non-far-
fqf those who grow flowers,
I or vegetables. Send mme
address plainly printed along
1 dime to cover poitage and
ling to: Soilmaster System
. 75, P.O. Box 223, Winnipeg,
toba.
AUTOMOTIVE,
•ORCYCLES, BICYCLES
,tain all the nourishment need
GARDEN ^ tQ bui|d  jt jnt0 Q hea|fhy
MIRACLE CHICK FEEDS
DO THIS
Sold only by
NELSON FARMERS'
SUPPLY LIMITED
324 Railway St Phone 174
neir town, If possible. Ph. 237-X
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
(Continued In Next Colufrm)
FOR SALE AT CHINA CREEK,
Newi Store, 2 large building lots
ind ipproximately 85 acres of
undivided land. Phone 445-Y or
apply 1939 Second Ave., Trail
Why   not  refinance your
mortgage on the Yorkshire Savingl and Loin Monthly Reduction
plin it 6 per cent C. W. Apple-
yard. 	
FOR SALE-3 ROOMED HOUSE;
Immedlite posiesilon; Fairview.
Box   757,   Dsily   Newi.
DAILY CROSSWORD
OR EXCHANGE
NEW, USED and
JNDITIONS IN STOCK
Tt,   VALUABLE   TIME
:bles MOTORS
Ltd.
NELSON
JJ^SANSWfSSToN FOR
■fhlppetB<» 2M8. News.
j     BEAM-HEADTiShTS.
luto Wreckers, Nelson. B C.
ott Mil NruiB
TELEPHONE 1««
Ified Advertising Rata
per line per Insertion
per line per week (6 con
e Insertions tor coit o( 4)
a line a month
timet)
mum 2 llnet per Iniertlon
numberi lie extra  Thli
any number nf timei
JC (LEGAL) NOTICES.
TENDERS. ETC
>«r line first insertion ind
Ch subsequent Iniertlon
,  ABOVE  RATES   LESS
OR PROMPT PAYMENT
■eClAL tOW RATES
I. c o m merclil iltuitloni
d for 25e for iny r«qulr__
ir  of  linos lor ilx  dayt.
la In advinci.
BSCRIITION RATE..
oopy »   *»
Tier, per week
dvance        38
rler. per vear 13 00
I outilde Nruon:
lonlh  -   I   73
Jnonthi    -..     2 00
onths             4 00
ear 800
ire ratet ipply In C..n»da.
SUtes and United King-
0 subicrlberi living out-
[gul.ir carrier area
jniere   and    to   Cimdi
-e_.il -i nostaje Is required
lonth SI JO three months
Ax months MOO. one year
8. Cooked.
iiin(at
6. Employed
7. Amount!
lost
8. Romin
goddeu
9. Per. to
Nicaea
10. Ittiicontr.)
12. Earthtn-
wsri mug
14. Ripped
18. Article (Ft.)
20. King of
Judih
21. Help
22. Pir. to thc
Pope    •
23. Mskes
smends for
24. Sting of an
Insect
25 Reckltss
27. Coin (Chin.
29. Thoie who
dye
30. Proclaim
loudly
81. An astringent
J2. Short-talltd.
itockyhone
M.Momter
ACROSS
1. Pronlable
8. U. S.prcsl.
dent
10. Kind of
pnckly pear
11. Double dig.
ger (print.)
IS. melees
15. Decrei
16. Distrni
■Ignal
17. Ancient
19. Born
20. Part of
"to be'
Jl.Vedlcfln
god
22. Antiquated
25. Climbed
26. Whealen Som
27. Youth
28. Hawillm
food
29. Underworld
god
30. Ferry-boat
(var.)
83. Plague
35 Greeting
J7 .Walked
(llang)
3P Plint
sloppily
40 S»v>llkeln
ihipe
42 To braith-
DO\. N
1 Faclori
7 At a distance
8 Whether
4 Boy i
nickname
CRYPTOqiOTl-A cryptogram e«otalloi
DRR
•.it-lH  H'li
I mfJ __:HW
'..-.MM'rl  '..ili:1."l_l
MM.IM4-III.-   Sl'i
1*4'.-  UUM MM-I
hi-I'-i tiMim
U .lIM.i i_1IMHi.
•JIK«   Will]
1:1114 U*.I VS
114 H.'li'i 4i*IIW
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S6. Smell
38 Slope
41. FIJI Iilandi
labbr.)
AUTO  LOANS
ARE   QUICK   AT
CAMPBELL'S
Campbell Auto Loans provide
you with the fastest, most convenient way to get extra cash.
All loans provide life insurance
at no extra cosf for unpaid balance. Only owner's signature Is
needed. Vou can borrow $20 to
$1000 with no fuss. Terms in accordance with Wartime Prices
and Trade Regulations.
CAMPBELL
FINANCE CORPORATION
LIMITED
560 Biker St. Phone 1095
Above  Fink'i Ready-to-Wear
COLES'- QUALITY CHICKS
Be wise, order Coles' Quality
Chicks today to insure your poultry future. We do everything possible to give you healthy, Vigorous chicks that will develop into
high-egg producing flocks. White
Leghorns New Hampshires, Barred Rocks, R.I. Reds, Light Sussex, Black Australorps and Aus-
tra-Whltes.
Write for a price list
L. S. COLES HATCHERY
 King St., Cloverdaje, B.C. __
START TEM  OUT  RIGHT
PETS
New Bidlamque
Nib   .
Nipissing Mining
Noranda   	
with   MIRACLE   Baby   Chick ^Sunan    '">	
Scratch Feed and Baby Chick Start- North c     d
er Maih. 'Miracle" Chick Feeds re- Q'Leary
duce chick mortality. Supplied only nm.._.»r.nM
by NELSON FARMERS' SUPPLY, orenlda
Golden Arrow  70
Golden Gate      34
Golden Manitou  ,     235
Gunnar Gold        57
Hard Rock Gold     1.15
Hacker Gold  V'k
Harrlcana       ._;i
Hasaga     2.50
Heva Cadillac  53
Hollinger       19.50
Homer    32)4
Hosco    85
Howey    87
Hudson Bay M % S     4375
Inspiration      1.41
International Nickel    48.00
Int Uranium        1.68
Jacknife    _..._      .38
Jack Waite  1 37
Jason 48
Jelllcoe    14
Joliet Quebec  j.     1.22
Kayrand    31
Kerr-Addiion       1675
Kirk-Hudion        2.60
Kirkland Lake      2.75
Labrador     1023
Lajte Shore Mlnei     25.35
Lamique Gold        8.50
Leitch Gold      1.53
Lexinden 31
Llngman Lake     136
Louvcourt      1.56
Lynx 42
Macassa        4 93
MacLeod Cockshutt      3.50
Marcus   _    1.70
Madsen Red Lake      5.00
Malartlc Gold T          3.65
Mclntyre-Porcuplne    75.50
McKenzIe Red Lake ..._     1.55
McMarmac „ 42
McWatters    .:. 29
Mining Corporation     11.20
Moneta    88
Moiher    38
Negus-          2.30
 46
 25
       5.50
    6950
      1.88
 26
......     1,30
       .33
1825
Distillers Seagrams  103.00
Dom Foundries    36.00
Dom Steel k Coal B    1350
Fanny Farmer    58.00
Ford of Canada "A"     81.00
Gatlheau    16.25
Gatineau 5% pfd  108.50
Gen Steelwarea  _     20.00
George Weston  _   29,50
Goodyear Tire   110.50
Gt Lakei Paper ' 27.80
Gypsum Lime        n.00
Hamilton Bridge    11.23
Hiram Walker  117.50
Hiram Walker pfd    22.25
Imperial Oil     16.50
Imperial Tobacco     15.65
Int Metals    ,    32 00
Inter Nickel   - 45.75
Lake of the Woods    30.00
Laura Secord    13.00
Loblaw A    80.00
Loblaw B  ,    29.00
Maple Leaf _   16.50
Massey Harrii     18.35
Massey Hsrrli pfd _   28.78
McCoil Front           19.83
McCoil Front pfd  106.00
Montreal Power     24.00
Moore Corp        73.50
Nat Steel Car    28.50
Page Hershey    14.00
Powell River    82.00
Power Corp   _   13.00
Pressed Metsli    19,00
Shawinigan           23 00
Sicks Brew           44.00
Simpsons pfd      108.00
Southam     19.75
Steel of Can pfd _    84.00
Steel of Canada    84 00
Union Gas          n.00
United Steel    10.00
United Corp _    J8.50
Winnipeg Elec pfd     99.00
Winnipeg Elec com ... _    16.15
Road Access
lor Every
Columbia Farm
COULEE DAM. Feb. T (AP) -
Each of the 17,000 farmi expected
to be established ln the Columbia
Basin reclamation project ln South-
central Washington would have direct access to a county road—part
of a well-planned network serving
lhe area, under recommendations
of State, county and Federal agencies. -
In a report released today by the
Bureau of Reclamation the planner!
eitlmated that dally use ot main
roads would total more than 1,200,-
000 vehicle miles and laid such
travel would Justify construction of
hundreds of miles of primary and
secondary state highways.
A right-of-way of 150 teet la recommended for all state highways. If
suggestions lit the report are followed, roadbeds on prlmsry routes
would be 86 feet wide, each shoulder 7 feet wide, and surfaced width,
23 feet On secondary state routes,
road beds would be 30 feet wide,
tech ihoulder 3 feet and tbe surfaced portion, 30 feet
524  Railway  St  Phone  174.
Pamour Porcupine
.45
2 40
93
4.75
FINEST   QUALITY   R.5.P.-SIS1D I Paymaster
Rhode Island Red and New Hamp-1 Pend Oreille
shire Chicks at my regular price I Perron Gold 179
of $4 for 25, $8 for 50, $15 for 100 picadilly 39
Book    your    1946   Chicks    now Ipi-w. rrow __,_  i.a
GEORGE GAME, R.O.P. Breeder, pioneer                    6.5
Armstrong. RC.                           | Powe„ Rouyn -.^ -'";■';;; , M
CHARGE BLACK
MARKET IN FIR
LATH, COAST
VANCOUVER, B.C, Feb. 7-Van-
couver builden are fighting a black 1i,00i„,?el"
market which li delaying home con- ,I*,c.?Plvra-'
VANCOUVER STOCKS
MINES
Bayonne   „   JH4 .33
Bralorne    _.... 18.56 19.00
B R Cons - ,19H X
B R X   _ .1714 .19
Cariboo Gold   180 2.85
Congreai   — .1414 .14 'A
Dentonia             J9 ,40.
Goorge  Copper   — JO
Golconda   .         At 2V2
Grandvlew       ~ JO JS
Grull Wihksne ....... _t3 M
Hedley Maicot   2 82 2.85
Int C & C    ...
l_land   Mount
Jason
Koot   Belle  	
Mlnto
says 0L«rJ'
Ch.rle,  A. Thorn,  executive s«\-?"&™$*
retiry of the BC. Contractor's As- Pmi
itruction early ln operations
They     hive     discovered,
sociatlon, thit laths, for three years
in such short supply that hundreds
Pioneer Gold
Premier   Bord
J7
IM
.45
.12",
.18
.07 r*
J2
,26
4 m
b m
.124
GUARANTEED SINGING CANAR-,_,„„,,,
ies, $7 50 Hem $150. W. C. Muir, WINNIPEG GRAIN
GOATS-1   MILKING,  I  YOUNG, | premier Gold ZZ.    3 25
$18. G. Wllloughby, Crescent VaI-ipre,ton £„( Dome     305
j__[ iQueenaton      1.20
FOR  SALE — TEAM  OF  PURE- Quemont      18 65
bred   Clvdesdalc   horscr, -itiRegcourt     ...        it
3600. A. E. Freed, Wynndel, B.C. i Roche L L 19
Rouyn Merger  57
San Antonio Gold      590
Bonnington  Hill,  South  Slocan.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
58000 MORE OR LESS TO INVEST.
General buiiness or gents' furnishings preferred. Wlll consider
other offers. Box 779 Dally News.
WINNIPEG,
quotations
Open
Rye:
May 234 V,
July   ,     2244
Feb.
Sen Rouyn
7  (CP)—Grain!Sheep Creek
Sherritt Gordon
High   Low   Close Sigma Rauyn
ISiscoe Gold
239Vj   234 4   2394 Sladen Malartlc
229 V,   2244   229 Vi Springer
Oats: (All futures at ceiling pri- Steep Rock 	
ees of 514 cents). Sturgeon  R     	
CASH PRICES: Sullivan Com 	
,,   Oats 514: 2 C.W. 314: ex 3 C.W.iSylvinlte   	
GO_OD TONE. PEl-JECTjsm; ex.  | ,ted _)•_-,,  ,eEd 514; T C Reiourees .
2 feed 514; 3 feed 504; track 614. T Lundmark
Rye: 1 CW  2,424; 1 C.W. 2 424; Teck-Hughei Gold         8 30
3 CW. 2 334; re). 2 C.W. 2.096; 4 Toburn Gold Mine} 2 30
C.W   2 294: track 2 394-                  Towgimic .28
Screenings $12 50 a ton | Upper Canida     .... 2.70
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
VIOLIN
cond. $33. Phone 1005L
139
2 00
193
17 23
: 10
96
1.M
435
39
3'!»
3 75
157
71
of homes In Vincouvir have been £"ml" Gold ._
standing unfinished, now are being KrlvatMr
sold "under the table." Reeves MacDonald
An association committee Invei- "pn0 Gold
tigated  and reported   urgent need Salmon
for increasing Prices Board celling Sheep Creek
prices   of  fir   lithi,   also   that   "a Silb.ik  Premier
black  market"  11  selling   lilhs  it Whitewater
far more thin the committee'i re- Taylor Bridge 	
port recommend! Wellington
Prices   Board   official!   In   Van- OILS
couver have been advisedthat the Anaconda
retail celling price on fir laths, now Anglo   Canidian
$6 60 a thousand ihould  be raised A  p Con
lo equil that of cedar laths, quoted Calg   A   Edmonton
Calmont
Commoil
Commonwealth
MrDnugal
Mr Lend
Mernirv
Mill   Cltv
Scc-ir   E
MONTREAL STOCKS
^INDUSTRIALS
Assoc Brew of Can   44.00
Ccn Cir is Fdy pfd   34 83
Can Steamijilp   51.25
Con Min & Smelting ,  ..  , 9075
H Smith  Piper pfd    3150
National Brew Ltd  46 50
Shawinigan W tc P   23 00
BANKS
Commerce     22 00
Dominion   26 23
Imperial   28 50
Montreal   24 25
Novi Scotli   34 23
Royil   23.73
Toronto   83.00
at $9 50
B.C. Contractors' Association, al
lying thimielvei with Nitloni
Houie Builders' Association, are Fonhllli
cooperating in a drive on Ottawa Hnme
to have major changes In the gov-
ernment's policy for veterani' homing completely chinged.
Mr. Thorn salei the new plin calls
on   Ottawa   to   buy   imall   houses Model
outright   from   bullden   and   rent °kel'« Com
them   lo   veterim;   iwltch   hljT.nl Pacific   Pete
priorities for builders' luppllei from tnvil   Cinidiin
government to pnvite building pro- Spnoner
grams   for   veterani'    houses,   and  S-in-.l
modify  National  Housing   Art  rr- Vnnalla
slriclion to increue the pcrrcnligr Vulcan
NEW    YORK-Stocks    generally tories were  In  demand  and  were o( morl«J«* lo»n' 'or  veterani in INOUSTRIAl 9
continued their retreat in the mar-'tnarked up fractions In light deals       ^ PPrcr"1 °" market value; alsd in  BC IV,  old
ket   Dealings   were   slow   after   a,    LONDON—Activity   i»   M—i-.-   veterani'   applications,   exlend   lhe Capital Estate-,
64
ISO
.274
2.00
150
'A
102
.08 Vi
06
130
280
334
48
195
3 7(1
IO)
.48
.13
.08
35
38
4.KI
680
_12H
3.23
.79
1 53
.164
.28
2 03
.04 Vi
re)
133
::i
2 85
.47
198
3 75
.13
.07
TJtivJud JjLQ__d&
veterani
1        ment  period
yean.
exlend
from   20   tn
Calgary Liveitock
were   slow   „,_-,    .     LONDON-Actlvity    in   Mexican
fairly aclive get-away. Eag„ ^r„ ouUtrlppln| ,nythm|
CHICAGO —The unrestrained lhe itock market hai teen for mon-
May rye gilloped around in broad, ths, developid on reporti of 1
ripid price fluctuations agiin un-'forthcoming announcement thit in
der mild pressure. The grain shift-.igreemant for lettlement of the
ed is much as 1 cent or more a dispute over expropriation of lhe
bushel on light offers either to buy , Company'! properties.
or '*"' I   WINNIPEG—Rye   futurei  values first glass tictory ll contemplated
Wheit,   corn   ind   barley   closed on  the Grain  Exchange idvanred by   BC.   Minerals   and   Reiourees
unchanged   at   ceilings   of   $1804, ai much ss five cent! in fairly ac- Development Co. Ltd
fLAN TO MAKE
GLASS IN B.C.
VANCOUVER. BC, Feb 7 -BC'l
Ilr
Pnnf'e   C.vle
Powell   ll v,--
IVIti-H    lie ■•---..
IINLI1TFD  MINE")
Tilt   Ml<i-"i'l
RVi.h'rd
'Irooklvn   SI
"--rlral   7.eb«Iloi
Csntv
Ciivnnl
rZLDCYSE
C S _8 L E I —
D J q
T Y Z X-
X R D 1 V     MX
DRR     riLDCYgt     MX
L Z I L I J.
Yr.irril.,,',   CrypuwiuoMi    HEROISM   FEELS   AND   NKVER
REASONS.   AND  THEREFORE  18   ALWAYS   RIGHT    EMER-
SON.
-..,..._..,»._„   .,   L^,,,,,B3   ,,,   ,,,„„-,, di „iu_.ii ■_, iiv-e ceim in niriy ac- Development co, Lid   tn  furtritr- Cimm
$1184 and $1224. oats unchanged tlve trade which wu feitured by 'ance of Hi plan for fuller utllliatlon Federal
to  1  cent  higher  than  yesterday's fair buying for ihlppen md light of B.C'I natural resourcei. ifrdlrv A-n»l
CALGARY. Feb   7  (CP)-Cattle finish, rye unchanged to 3 cents un   offerlngl. The compiny hss uked Coijult- Home Cold
sctive st itesdy prices. I    MONTREAL-"Majority     trends!   At the close prices were 3 lo iVi'*m Council to reierve 88 acres on Marble   TV-i.
Wednesdiy'i receipts: 1174 cattle.were downwird ln trading on theicenti higher with Mey it $2394;Frsier Rlvir West of Colony Farm N>hle  Five
20 calvei. 220 hogi and 648 iheep. stock exchinge end curb roafket.     bid, July $2.39*4 bid  and Oet ill «7 ihould irnngemenli be compleled Olvmnlr
This morning'! receipti:  23 cattle,    TORONTO—lnduitriei  and   bate y,
1"70 hogi end 10 iheep.                  metal   groupi   poited   fairly   wldel   0n  ,h,  a„~,,,,.  m,tk., mnnn
Hog,  mid   Wednesday   ,t  117.10 losses on  the exchange and  (OldsLiheliTrf ?« i... _\iItns- «™
_.  _.-. .1 ...a. .ot .1..,.   a .a  ,„....—   n,,. ......  .....    ,_ ouineis 01 rye were sold for pro-
celling in Eaitern Cinada. No ex-
:'
for A'l at yardi and plants. Sowrand  Western  Oils were  iteady  to
$12 88 live weight ! slightly     weaker.     Volume     wai .... _„,„,_.
Oood   to   choice   butcher   steers around 2,500,000 .hires for the day. p0rt *""""'' WM rtp0"ri'
1175-1240.   Good   butcher   helfen    VANCOUVER-Goldi. base  met-
10.30-1133. iii,   and .oils   all   were   down   on DOW  lONf. AVIIA_llt
Good cows 8.7S-8.33. Canners and stock    exchange    but    Industrials **"*■•* su.vaworiiiaa
cutlers 9 00-8 50. 1 broke even in galm and lours. Tot- M  Industrial! 203.00 off 48
Good  bulls 8 73-9.23. ll  sales  were  93.144  shares 20
Good limbi l_|^3-12SO. I   MONTREAL—Dominion! and Vic- 13
...  - _
	
jLfih
for a plant. p>(. Faslern (
Il has taken oontrol of aacellinl Pilot
sllici depoiiti up the coait ind  ii Prnsperlne
making a detailed mrvey of costi s;n||T mi ._,
and markets on gists. If reporli ire Spud  Vallrr
favorable the reierve wlll be taken Tavlnr Windfall
up.  Siie of the factory  is  not an- Vanandn
nounoed. Silver Rlcl«e
The company It alio  sisoclited Weskn
with   Privateer   Mine   In   develop- 11NI.IBTFD OI19
rails 6748 up   .02 ment of an Iron and str-rl plant al Command
utlllllei       40.48 off M Anyox. .Freehold
,071.
(101.
,ns
.13
17 2.
6"0
33
32 nd
ne
OflS.
1 ■,,
2"
0:4
16
.13
ns
16
w
Of   ,
il
!•:
021
14
15
31
—_ __.  '„    _—,.,,    .OA.-Q.-_
_________
- -
 fl r^~
o~a-ror.
mif^m
y*w
10 - NILSON DAILY NEWS. WAY, MIRUARY n, 1941'
====
it™
==
TONIGHT—Complete Shows at 7:00—8:53
Pdramount'j imaih muilcat
Idtfit Bracken   •   Diana
Lynn • Veronica Lak*
Oil OF
THIS WORLD
Iwith Cats Daley • Ray Noble
Joe Reichman ana Bing
Croiby'i voice In new hiti
MiiimiimiiMimiiiimmiiiimiiiiimit
DUREX
(Scotch) Tope
10c and 25c
Mann. Rutherford
DRUG CO.
HiniiHiuiiiiiiiiiimiiiiminiiHiimim
Civic
Latest World  News
"Sporting Events"
Colored Cartoon
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP)—Burial
was made here today of Mrs. Charlotte Augusta White, 71, wife of
Arthur White and daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Gibson of
Gibson's Landing, pioneers of Vancouver. Born In Ontario she lived
It It's Electric
F. H. SMITH
Phone 666      351 Baker St.
Have the Job Done Right
SEE
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 81S
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C. W. House N. A. Houie
KOOTENAY GIFT SHOP
438 Baker St.
WEATHER WIZARDS
and FORECASTERS
An emergent communication of Nelion Lodge No. 23
A. F. 4 A.M. will be held ca
Friday, Feb. 8, at 1:18 p.m,
•harp—for the purpoie cf attending the funeral for Brc.
Thomai Brown, member of
Antiquity Lodge, No. 1, Montreal, Que. Vliltlng brethren
cordially Invited to attend. By
order of the Wcrthlpful Mai-
Mr.
J. TEAGUE,
Secretary.
here 40 yeari. Also surviving are
two sons, Norman, Vancouver, Arthur, Hope, B.C., and tlve daughters,
Mrs. H. E. Wade, Thetis Island,
Mn. A. Stewirt, Victoria, Mrs. F.
Doney, Cowichan Station, Mrs. W.
Oulmet, Wellington and Mrs. J.
Woods, Victoria.
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Have Your Furniture Expertly
Recovered at the
NELSON UPHOLSTERY
413 Hall SL Phone let
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BURGLARY INSURANCE TO
COVER DWELLING CONTBNTS
$8,00 per annum. Call 980. 877 Baker
BL Stuart Agencies,
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WE TAKE PRIDE IN OUR
SERVICE OF MEALS
Melon Dew Cafe
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URGE SETTING UP
OF COAST GUARD
SYSTEM, CANADA
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP)-Results
of an accident similar to the
grounding of SS Yukon near Seward, Alaska, this week might have
been much worse on the B. C. coast
because Canada has no Coast Guard
Service, the Victoria and District
Trades and Labor Council was told
last night.
Representations were made by the
Fishermen's Union which urged the
Council to forward requests to fach
member ot Parliament urging the
establishment ot a Coast Guard
lystem for Canada.
Aik Consideration
for Farmen on
Yule Tree Permits
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP).-Christmas tree cutting, which amounts
to an Industry ln East Kootenay,
providing substantial revenue for
settleri and the province alike, has
been held up for the last few yean
because the Forest Service has had
no one available to tjlock off
Crown Land cutting areas and Issue permits, Jack Aye, East Kootenay delegate, told the annual
meeting of the Farmers Institute
Advisory Board.
Mr. Aye sponsored a resolution
passed by the board "that greater
consideration be given to farmers
regarding Christmas tree permits
Crown Lands ai soon aa the
Foreit Service hai the force neceuary for the work."
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DO YOU KEEP CHICKENS?
Feed them
ELLISON'S LAYMORE
and they'll produce more eggs
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lilliiiiiilliiimiimiiliiliiiliiilililiiilii
Smedley
Garage Co.
HUDSON
PARTS and SERVICE
Genuine Factory Clutch Oil
W.C.B. Rejects
Only.52 ol
55,854 Claims
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP)-Of the
88,884 clalmi fnade to the Workmen's
Compensation Board during 1949
only 481 were rejected, Chris Pritchard, commissioner, told the Victoria
and District Trades and Labor
Councii last night.
Mr. Pritchard noted that death
claims had totalled 213.
He said employers had paid ln
mere than $10,000,000 and employ
ees $447,000 of which $0,163,102 had
been paid out ln claims, pensions
and other benefits. Cost of administration, he said, was slightly more
than $463,000.
Mr. Pritchard presented statistics
to show that in B.C. the average
amount of each claim was $178, the
highest of any province in the Dominion, the next highest being Alberta with $128.
During the year 223 employers
had been penalized for Infractions
of board rulings, he said, adding
that both employers and employees
were penalized at times.
He reported loss due to accidents
during 1945 totalled $6,112,901
Worker days lost through accidents
in 1943 totalled 797,799, he reported.
HARD HiniNG BEVIN SEEN AS
GREAT WOULD STATESMAN
R. NADEAU
LICENSED PLUMBER
Phone 1157-61S Victoria St.
To Inquire Into
Provincial,
Municipal Relations
By FRASER WIQHTON
LONDON, Feb. 7 (Reuteri) -
Hard-hitting Foreign Secretary Bevin, farm laborer's son who represents the voice of Britain ln peace
as Winston Churchill did ln war,
"moves massively forward"' aa an
intimate put It this week, undisturbed by the world spotlight fo-
cussed upon his historic role at the
United Nations Security Council.
Four weeks of U.N.O. meetingi
have 'lerved to give the world a
clearer picture of Mr. Bevln than
five war yeari during which as
Minister ot Labor he was virtually
controller of Britain's manpower.
"Bevin's the first man I've met
who really sees the world ai
whole, not just as an idealist, but
as a great practical statesman," was
the comment of an International
newspaperman who first met the
cabinet minister early in the war.
A well-known Conservative said the
other day that Mr. Bevln would
rank as the greatest foreign secretary since Lord Palmerston,
GAINED BETTER
CONDITIONS FOR DOCKERS
Mr. Bevin's love of a fight drew
him to trade unionism as a young
man via his job ai driver of a two-
horse van at Bristol. He made trade
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NEWS OF THE DAY
Rates: 22c line, 27c line black face
type, larger type rates on request
Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prempt payment
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Insurance, see Ron Somers.
For
gttMttKW&S&S&SS
sseMOttoto
ROSCOE
AND
FOURNIER
GARAGEMEN
SKV CHIEF AUTO SERVICE
Phone 122 Nelson. B. C.
WMtoWMwawseaWtoeawswaeB
VERNON IT. NILION
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i
Lovely to look at
Styled at
Haigh Tru-Art (
Beauty Salon
Johnstone Block
Phone 127
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VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP) - H.
Carl Qoldenberg, outitandlng Canadian expert on municipal attain who hai been appointed lole
commliiloner of a Royal Commiiiion to Inquire Into provincial-
municipal relatione In B.C., will.-., ,,.k,rSt Ph .,,-..
arrive In Victoria next 8unday to|JD2 Baker ht. fn. inf.
begin hli Inquiry.
Mr.   Qoldenberg   will
Into:
1. Inequalities In financial relationships between the province
and tht municipalities.
2. Clalmi by the municipality
for larger iharei In motor vehicle! rons~ Kootenay Stationers,
and  racing  taxei  and   In   liquor
profit!.
3. Taxation   by   municipality ig fairview. Apply Valentines,
on crown property.  —
4. Dlitrlbutlon ot locial lervice Montague E. Harper
coit and reipomibllitlei and oth-     Auctioneer Phone  148
er related matteri.
McCall's, Red Book and Can.
Journal on sale at Valentine's.
,      ,    I    Potted Dalfs. and other types at
Inquire, Wa,t,5 New5 Depot.
Aik  for our Week-End  Special.
Wrlght'i Grocery. Ph. 4«.
Durex Scotch Tape: 10c-25c-$1.00
.Ion
union history br getting t go
ment commission set up to Investigate dockers' condltloni, Tha employers called, experts to prove that
the average wages were sufficient
to support a docker's family If they
ate food containing the necessary |
calories and vitamins,
It Impressed the court, It made I
Mr. Bevin aee red. Next day he produced in court a large plate with
few mouthfuls of food in the
middle—he had had the docker's
dinner prepared according to the
scientist.
The court was shocked, public
opinion aroused, better dockers conditions obtained.
Four-Square Bevln, as he might
be described—equare ihoulderi,
•quare head, iquare Jaw, with two
brown eyei, sometimes sparkling
with humor, lometlmei iparklng
fire, iet wide apart—oan be ruth-
less.
When, as general secretary of
the Transport and Generil Workers Union before the war he had
to handle a London Transport
strike,    '
walking to work and feelings were
rlilng. Mr. Bevin wai grim but
unmoved.
"What the public don't realise,"
he obierved, "li that thli li not
Juit an ordinary Induitrlal fight
which ought to be itopped becauie
It Inconveniences them. Thli It a
itruggle of the Communlits to get
hold of the London buimen's organization. They've got to walk
but I am fighting for my life and
the life of my organization and I
don't Intend to stop until I've
cruihed the Communliti who are
trying to ouit me, cruihed them
once for ell—flat, finiihed."
Mr. Bevln won, settled the strike,
and the busmen expelled from the
union those who had been working against him.
Let Us lupply
YOUR   BABY   NEEDS
Mallow, No. 1-2-8   76c
Pablum     48o
Ceitorle   .... 40o and 7S>
J. A J. Baby loap   II*
J.*_. Baby Oil       60-
1 A J. Baby Powdere    2U ■ 65o
and all other, popular needi at
City Drug Co.
BOX 460
Phone 34
Const. A. G. Smith
Transferred
to Fruitvale
Constable A. O. Smith of the B. C.
Provincial Police at Slcamous has
been transferred to Fruitvale,
ivhere he arrived on Tuesday.
Subscribe $10,000
for Ducks
Unlimited "Factory"
TACOMA, Wash., Feb. 7 (AP)-
Londoneri were angrily IHa" the $20,000 quota for the Slate
1 it Washington, or $10,000, was sub-
rcrlbed by the Tacoma Sportsmen';
Club last night for a Ducks Uniimlt
ed fund to establish Wa , ngton
Lake North of Edmonton, Alia.,
a "duck factory".
STETSON i
HATS
FIRST
SHOWING
FOR SPRING
The new Stetson Stra
liners are here.
•7.50
EMORY'!
The
LIMITED
Men's Stors
We are again open for busll
We have an extra special on
sleighs at, each
HOME FURNITURE
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PHONE 288
We Call For ond Deliver
Men's, ladles' suits, ladles'      tttij.
Dresses, plain         m**Jt.
Men's and Ladles' Cl IE
Summer Coats J_____3
EMPIRE CLEANERS & DYERS
Ask Provincial
Control of
Instalment Buying
VICTORIA, Feb. 7 (CP)-Provin-
,,.    .   .   „ ,,   ,., ,       „,,.» tlal government regulations of in-
^_..,B0/J,°J VPrJT._r0Ute •Wment buying to. supersede con-
Sorority Plans
Annual
Tea and Musicale
PORTRAIT8 BY WM.  RAM8AY
VOGUE STUDIO—PHONE 10*
Hospital   Auxiliary   Meeting   st
Nurses Home, today at 3'p.m.
OUR PHONE NUMBER  IS 265
FAIRWAY MEAT MARKET
Plans   were   completed   Monday
evening by B. C. Ioata, the local
chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, for their tea and musicale. This | ;       ~
is an anual event arranged by the'   Repairs to all makes of washers at
Sorority    featuring    local    artists, Beatty Service, Ph. SKILTON, 81.
which has proved a musical treat I m.i™ »__.»_( „«
lo which music lovers look forward I    Monthly "feting N.e'!™ **0"* °'
with anticipation each year.             Trade, Hume Hotel, 12 noon today.
The    Committee    reported    that \ ,,,.m_.
plan, were well under way and the'  ft'&'W 'fcENCY for rails
la.n, _, h».n icheduled for earlv BLACKWOOD AGENCY for rates
trols of the Wartime Prices and
Trade Board which are expected to
be lifted shortly will be asked of
the B. C. Legislature by the Victor-
la and District Trades and Labor
Council, it was decided at a Coun-
tll meetihg last night.
E. A. CAMPBELL & Co.
Chartered Accountant!
Auditor*
542 Baker St. Phone 230
event has been scheduled tor early
March.
No. 2 Face Building Brick
These have been hard to obtain for several months, and we suggest you
purchase your requirements now for future use  $36.91 per 1000
16x27 Plain
Coco Door Nati
$1.40 each    20x32 Stencilled _. $1.95 each
Homo Workihop Supplies
Die Cast Pulleys, Single and Four-Step; Tex Rope V Belts in all popular sizes
Satin Olo Satin Finish (Semi Gloss)
Satin Olo Enamel (High Gloss)
The ideal finishes for all interior walls and woodwork.   Both are washable
and their delightful shades bring bea uty and comfort to your home...
Gyproc Wool Insulation
In paper backed batts, 2 inches thick, 15" x 24". — Fire resisting, vermin
proof, economical _   $7.00 per 100 square feet
Wood, Vallance Hardware Company, Limited
NELSON, B. C.
wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Samson's
FISH and CHIPS
PUMPKIN CREAM  PII
Why not give ui s call to Increase
ircnce pr
APPLEYARD.
f
(ire  fl
C,
surance protection to-
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ASK YOUR GROCER FOR
HOOD'S
Supremo Milk Broad
■ 1111 ■ i ■ 11 i ■ r 1111 ■ 11111 ■ 11111 r 111 ■ 1111111 ■ 111 ■ i
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Suite 205
MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING
laxi-tai as* m* ■ ■■a""" ---_,
11 ■ ri ii ■ 111 m i m in r 111 fi i m 11 ■ r 11
LOUIS BONDERUD
912 SIXTH STREET
PAINTER AND DECORATOR
FOR  ORDERS
PHONE  1138 AFTER 6P.M.
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For Reliable Watch Repairs
PROMPT   SERVICE
HARVEY'S
684 Baker St.
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NEW 8HIPMENT OF LADIE8'
TENNIS ond PUT SHOES
arrived at
The Bootery
your
day?
Kiss me once and kiss me twice
Yes, you can play it yourself on a
Mouth Organ. Dave Wade has them.
Kaslo Motor Transport Is dlscon- j
tinulng Wednesday freight until
Spring. Service Monday, Tuesday,
Thursday, Friday.
WALKER
BUMPER JACKS
$6.90
("UTHBERT
^MOTORS    LIMITED
W.A.   TO   ACTIVE   SERVICES
Annual   meeting    tonight    Civic
Centre.   Refreshments.   Bring  your
own sugar.
Have your car overhauled, tuned
up and brakes re-jlned. Expert mechanics. Nelson Auto Wrecking
Garage. Phone Md.
For a tasty snack or a full course
meal, you'll enjoy Mabel Scott's
cooking at the Koffee Kounter, next
to New Grand Hotel.
CORRECTION
Pre-School Clinic for Immunizing ls
held first Frldiy each month only.
Next time is March lit.
Building lots ln East Trail. Easy
termi. Now is the time to buy ind
build later. Write Robertson Realty
532 Ward St., Nelson, B.C.
Hear Harry Adukin. noted violin ■
1st in lecture recital, Trinity Church,
February 13th. 8 p.m. Adulti $100,
Students 50c. Sponiored by Nelson
Muilc Teacheri and P.T.A.
L R. Downing C. J. Harris
"R05ELAWN CHAPEL"
Crematorium-Branch at  Kaslo
NELSON FUNERAL CHAPEL
LTD.
(Successor! to Somen Funeral
Home).
702 Baker St     Phone 262     Nelion
Prompt — Dependable
Guaranteed Radio Service
McKAY&STRETTON
Limited
Phone 5.4 Nelion
 POULTRY MEN	
Let ui take care of your sheet
metal requirements.
Made to Order
LES BROWETT
Phone 1152     510 Kootenay St.
Need a new Portable Typewriter?
See the new Royal. Expect to make
prompt deliveries very loon. D.'W.
McDerby,   "The  Typewriter   Man" Phone 2«0
538 Ward Street, Nelson.
JUST RECEIVED 8HIPMENT
"E880 RAD", PERMANENT TYPE
ETHYLENE GLYCOL BASE ANTI
FREEZE. DILL'S SERVICE 8TA
TION.
GENERAL ELECTRIC
and all Electrical Repairing
Call
NELSON ELECTRIC
57. Baker St
List for Nelson District Boy Scout
honor roll closes Saturday. Anyone
having information of servicemen,
formerly Boy Scouts, please phone
715-R.
KOKANEE
SERVICE STATION
and GARAGE
Expert Repair Work
Promptly Done.
Get.  Oil, Wiihlnj, Grilling.
Opposite Bank of Montreal
STAR TAXI
Day Phone 1154
For ynur convenience.
After 12 o'clock phone 204-X.
Stand at Walts Nows Stand.
For cleaning any enamelled or
Minted surface, Soil-Off is unexcelled. No rinsing, no drying—and no
-treaks when the Job is finished
.'int like dusting. Get a bottle today at Hlpperson's.
CARD OF THANKS
We wlih to express to our miny
frlendi our sincere thanks and appreciation for their kind wordi and
acts of lympithy extended to us in
our bereavement; also for the many
beautiful floral trlbutei received at
the funeral.
—Mri. F. E. Dockerlll and Family.
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FLEURY'S   Pharmacy
Prcicriptions
Compounded
Accurately
Med. Arts Blk
PHONE 25
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G. VALIN
JEWELLER
Phone 1149       3S4 Baker SL
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Jim's Radiator Shop
JAMES BIREAU, Mgr,
(FORMERLY.WITH THE QUEEN CITY MOTORS)
Has opened a Radiator Repair Shop a
417 Hall Street, and is fully equipped t<
boil and repair any type of Radiator.
IF YOU HAVE ANY RADIATOR TROUBLES
BRING THEM TO JIM
Final Notice to Veterans
Who Have Applied for
Housing Accommodation
Questionnaires have been sent out to between '
and 80 veterani who have applied for housing accoi
modation in Nelion. Many have foiled to return tht
queitionnairei-
Before any definite action can be taken thii i
vey muit be completed through the return of thl
queitionnairei with the necessary information to I
Secretary of the Rehabilitation Council ot the Car
dian Legion.
Final date for return of queitionnairei it Frid
at noon, at a meeting of the Rehabilitation Cour
Homing Committee and Committee of the City Coi
cil ii to be held Friday night.
T. H. WATERS, Chairman,
Nelion  Rehabilitation  Council,
J. R. WATKINS
Quality  Producti
Splcei, E_.tr._cti, Medicinal, etc.
SPENCER C. COLMAN
Diitrict Agent
Moved to
1117  Front Street Nelion
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
HOUSEHOLD OOODS FOR SALE
Apply 1012 Ward Street.
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THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE  SERVICE
"Dlitlnctlve Funeral Service"
21* Kootenay St Phone 3S1
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*   PLASTIC and
STAINLESS STEEL
MOULDINQS
Available in ihapei and deiigm luitable for finish!
kitchen cupboardi and fixturei, wall dadoi, o1
BURNS
> LUMBER i, COAL CO.
ti.r0iut/l'jl(, 5fy tfli ditL%'icZh
- -   -   L.     .     __._.        -
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