 :S
U. of W. Ski Corps
Wins, U.B.C. Second
On Red Mountain
U.B.C. Ate, Gar Robinson, Captures.
Fourway Championship; State College
Star Thrills With 175-Foot Leap
ROSSLAND, B.C.-—Norwegian ski stars GustavRaatim
and Ole Lie pushed the University of Washington team's totaf
points -.-to.'389.07 Sunday ".afternoon recapturing the International Tnterc'ollegiote Ski Meet trbphy-r-the.Olaf Jeldeness
Cup. -•',.' ■        ,'   .,.'..-.'- ""       '
Close behind was the University of British Columbia with
384.82 points collected, in the slalom, downhill) jumping and
^crosscountry events,
U-B-CJ. s Gar Robinson won the slalom with, the-fast time
of one minute,-21.2 seconds and pne. minute 24:8 seconds, and
his -total 373.9 points gave him the four-way- trophy, the
Mcintosh Cup, ; \      .    •
Washington State if inished third with.379.30 polnnj and
Montana   State   fourth  with
<376,95.
First won in 1898 at Rossland, and
then retired for several decades,
the trophy-was revived this year by
. the Red Mountain Ski Club. .Lars
Forland of Washington State College came within one-tenth of a
point ot equalling the fpurway total
of Robinson's. Judges said it took
"careful" attention to be sure, this
was an accurate tally.
■ Gustav Raaum, 23-year:old > ski
Jump artist of the winning team,
was credited 232.4 points for his
jumps of 141.5 and 142.5 feet, Raaum
prefers a "medium hill" like Red
Mountain's, he said.'Last year he
won the Silver Dollar Ski Derby in
California and the Nevad Championship in February, 1948. Hs also
took top lumping honors at Sun
Valley's;championships Intercollegiate National Meet..
For   Washington, State. College
George Thrane, holder of 1947 Hol-
molkolen classic competition of the
aki world held at Oslo, Norway,
jumped 142 and 147 feet. His team
placed first in.the jumping event.
After the competition jumping
Thrane gave the ski crowd a thrill
with an exhibition Jump of 175
feet.   He   said   later  he .could
"easily" have reached 220 feet, but
he was unsure of the powdered
snow on the big Jump, not used
In the competition.
His jump of 147 feet bested all
other contenders. Last year's longest jump was 144 feet made by
Haauiri. .-,'..' .-:■■
Olie'lle, jumping mate; of Gustav
Raaum, posted leaps bt 131.5 and
123 feet', tb push; University of
Washington to the top. Last year
Lie,- a one-year resident of the
United States, coppeij the Torger
Tokle .;■ Memorial Trophy at Bear
Mountain, New York.
, Red Mountain's Red Bud Scorgie
ahd Allah Fisher led their team to
victory in, tha B Class.
- Jt .was ..the points- captured, by
University of WasttilirJoWluttp'e3r«7
that gave them ^the victory' edge
Over'University of British Columbia. The ThunderbirdS led throughout until the final event
' "A" team jumping points were:
University of Washington, 91.13;
University of British Columbia
85.42; Washington State College 100;
Montana State College'88.41.
Mountain 100, University of British -Columbia 98.38; University of
Washington 88,78.  '•'■■"'.-
-Streaking down Red Mountain's tricky slalom course Gar
Robinson of the. host, U.B.C,
Thunderblrds Sunday- morning
raced through the final gate 4.7
seconds faster than University of
Washington's Alan Fischer.
The  second  place .Fischer
timed at 125.9 and 1:24.7.
Arnie Teasdale, Robinson's teammate, made the two'runs, in 1:28.7
and 1:24.4.
Individual fourway Combined
standings were:
"A"-CLASS
Gar, Robinson, U.B.C.
Lars Forland, W.S.C.
Carlos Livers, M.S. ...
John Frazee, U.B.C. .
Rees Stevenson; U.W.
Jack Davis, M.S	
Phil Finch, M.S.	
"B" CLA88
Allan Fisher, R.M t
Chuck Welsh, U.W, _.
Bob Tower, U.W. ..:....
Lome Calder, U.B.C,
Harry Mann, R.M	
A" TEAMi
G. Thrane, W.S.C. ...
G. Raaun, U.W. ::.:.....
T. Forland, W.S.C."..
L. Forland, W.S;C....
A. Teasdale, U.B.C..
J. Davis, UJM.	
Ole Lie, U.W, ..........
Ben Parsons, W-S.C,
Carlos Livers, U-M..-.
J. Livers, U.M. .........
Dave Gunn, U.B.C. .
Gar HobinBon, UJB-C...
R.. Williams, U.W. ....
R. Seyenson, U.W. :..
J. Frazee; U.B.C. ..„..
T. Finch, U.M. 	
.'.•B'tlEAMJ!.,,, ....,-
Bud Scorgie, R.M.	
D. Fernside,; U3.C....
Allan Fisher, R.M.	
Chuck Welsh, U.W...
Bob Power, U.W. ...;...
C. Stinson, R.M.	
G; Dyson, R.M,	
Bruce McKay, U.B.C.
Lome Calder, U.B.C.
Harry Mann, R.M	
.„.,...... 378.9
  373.8
,.-..,-. 381.0
........... 355.4
„.-... 355.2
...,  354.1
 .,. 322,8
.1.......;' 398.
 377.9
 ~- S87.4
  386.7
...........356.8
Jumping Team
points points
....241.4    100
"B"   team  standings   were  Red T. Jones, R.M. .
U. of Washington Tops in Slalom
... 232.4
98.3
._ 217.4
90.1
... 213.3
88.4
... 197.Z ,
81.7
... 196.8
81.5
.... 196,8,
81.5
... 193.2
80.0
...192.1
79.8
... 191.8
79,8
... 1B1.3
79.3
_ 185.6
76:9
... 183.2 i
75.8
... 179.9
74.5
... 175.9
72.9
... 136,1
56.4
.'.. 181.7
100 "
... 191.1
99.7
.., 188.T
98.4
.. 187.4
97.8
... 185.8
98.9
... 184.3
96.1
... 179.4
93.6
.. 167.3
87.3
.'. 159.0
82.0
.. 157.8
82.3
..   81.7
42.6
■■   University of Washington A and B teams were tops In the elitom.
Results follow: i- /
1st
"A" TEAM     ' '"'„:,, run
Gar Robinson, UBC  ;.„ •_..,...„....„.   1.21.2
Alan Fischer, WU ...... v..........;:—   1.25.9
A. Teasdale, UBC i.J.......u.~;„~.....   1.28.7
Doug Fraser, UBC —;   • 1.26.1
R. Stevenson, WU „..^ „....,.._..,  1.29.3
W. Talbott, WU .'.  1.28.6
J. Davis, Mont  .-.....:,. ~ 1.30.1
B. Berg, WSC ;.: .....:.....,„ 1...... 1.32.8
L. Forland, WSC -.  : ~. 1.42.3
8, Williams.. WU :—r~r-  .iai-0
C. Livers, Mont ........ .„.._„„... 1.88.0
G. Cowan, UBC _..'..:   1.46.1
: J. Frazee, UBC .
.   P. Finch, Mont	
T. Forland, WSC ....
Ole Lie, WU .,.	
■ J. Livers, Mont ......
"B" TEAM
J, Douglas, RM	
Allen Fisher, RM	
W. Cowan, UBC .'.	
' R, Power, WU	
R. Dings, WU .:	
« R. Clendehln, WU ..
C. Welsh, WU	
J.YounuvWU.	
; N. Welshi WU ....-.,..
Lprne-Calder,' UBC .
d. McKenzle, RM	
.   W. Boots, UBC ,...:..
H.Mann, RM	
D. Fernside, UBC	
G.- Merry, RM	
FORERUNNERS
"G. Brady, WU ..:.;„,..
J. Buick, RM .:..
C. Stinson, RM	
Peter Vajda, UBC .
1.50.2
1.49.9
2.62.8
1.45.5
2.13.0
2nd
run
1.24.8
1.24.7
1.24.4
1.28.7
1.27.7
1.32.7
1.33.7
1.31.1
1.24.1
1.38.2
1.33.8
1.26.4
1.30.2
1.35.2
1.59.9
Total Pts.
.2.46.0 100
2.50.6 98.6
2.53.1 97.9
2.54.8 07.7
2.57.0, 96.7
3.01.3 95.4
3.03.9
3.03.9
3.00.4
8.07.2
3.11.8
3.12.5
3.20.4
3.25.1
4.02.7
,Fts.
mo
292.5
94.6
281.4
279.7
285.0
272.6
93.9   285.4
93.6
92.2
92.0
281.4
88.2-
76.9
Time Pts.
1.34,9 100
1,36.1
1.41.1
1.42.9
-1.43.1
1.43.4
1.44.8
1.53.8"
1.56.2
1.58.6
2.04.6
2.11.2
2.14.4
99.4
96.7
95.8
95.7
93.5
94.8
90.0
88.8'
87.5
84.3
80.9
79.2
55.9
282.5
266.4
Pts.
298.1
279.5
270.5
284.9
269.4
280.1
274.3
247.9
283.8
263.2
274.5
1st run 2nd run Total
306.0
309.4
ind run
U8.0
1.38.0
3.14.8
1.38.5   .-.—
■ —       1.31.2
U
Slalom standings, with the last column showing fourway cumulative
points: '   ,        , ;-
"A" TEAM8"
University of Washington
University of B.C.	
Montana State
iVIUf J LUllc,    K.M..C	
Washington State College
• "B" TEAM8
University of Washington .
Red Mountain Ski Club .....
University of B.C	
100.00
99.58
95.09
.   92.05
297.53
299.40
290.54
279.30
. 100.00
. 97.41
N 93.29
287.53
297.41
286.55
1500 Letters to
Victoria to Date
On Margarine Ban
VICTORlA^More than 650 let-,
ters protesting B. C's margarine ban
many of them bearing more than
one signature, were received here
during the weekend.
' The total for last week spared to
1500 letters, all of them arriving af-
. ter Attorney-General Gordon, Wls-
mer left on a trip to California.
The Government has given no indication that it will move the matter until the Legislature meets next
month. V ■'' .  i
Believe 3 Drowned-
In Boat Collision
VICTORIA (CP)—Two women
and one man were lost and believed
drowned Saturday when the Vancouver Island coastal steamer SS.
Princess Maquinna collided with
the gas boat Lorraine in the vicinity ot Esperanza Inlet, 190 miles
Northeast of here, -.-.
Four other persons aboard the
smaller craft which sank, were rescued and taken to Esperanza Hospital. ■
Missing are: Mrs. Lawrence Peterson, Mary Peterson, Ervin Peterson.   .
&%&
WEATHER FORECAST
Kootenay: Mostly clear1 Monday.'-,
Light winds. Continuing Very cold
Low and high at Pentlcton 6 below,
and 20; Kamlops 10 below and 16;
Lytton 5-below and 20; Cranbrook
29 below' and 5; Crescent Valley,,
10 below and 15.   ■
VOLUME a,'f   'cV
g CENT8 A COPY NELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING. JAN. 10, 1949
NUMBER 219
M^kes Record Red Mountain Run
Gar Robinson of the University; of British
Columbia, who made a heartbreaking record run
on Red Mountain, Rossland, during the second
annual International Intercollegiate Ski Meet during the weekend, Is seen In action.
Robinson ran the event as a spare; scratched
from the Thunderblrd team at his own request.. -
but he made It In record time, 1.31.1, The event
and *he meat; was won by University of Washington sklmen.'i
.. The six foot, five U.B.C ace however, Harried
off the four-way Individual championship with a
373.9 points tiital, after he took the Sunday slalom.
.-•"• (See story on page 3.) .'■!-.
Tense Site^
Protests Downing :$f Planes
British Strongly Protest Shooting
Down of 5 Planes; British Troops
And Ships Sent To Back Up Protest    f
NEW YORK—• Britain,has: issued a strongly worded protest against the shooting down; of RAF planes by Israeli aircraft. But there has been some question as to whether the
neW state of Israel is taking official note of. the protest.
In New York. City, o British delegate to the United Motions Security GouriciI has handed .the: formal protest, tb the
htiodof the Israeli delegation to the U. N. B.yt the Jewish delegate, Arthur ^Lourle, declared- flatly'that he will not tronsiifiit
the British statement to Tel Aviv because it is addressed merely to "Jewish authorities" ondnotto th^. Israeli Goverhm'eht;.
Thisr.sjtudtioh;hos resulted from Britain's refusal tip tb
this ■; Doj|}ti,,,tQ„v1.r;ecpgoiJ5f|A^^'"
state"bf"rsrael. '''
A later .'development in Haifa may
have cleared up this diplomatic
tangle. A Foreign Office spokesman
Said Sunday tho British Consul in'
Haiti has' given the protest to an
Israeli.dfficial in that port city. According'to the-Foreign Office
spokesman, the Haifa, official has
promised, tb relay the memorandum
to' the aiithorities-lnTel Aviv. A
British source declares the language
of the note is strong.
/'The incident which brought ton
the British, protest took place iri
the vicinity of Rata, a town near the
frontiers ot Palestine and Egypt.
The British .version is that five
R. A. F. planes were shot down by
Israeli fighters over Egypt, -, Tel
Aviv reports that four British planes
ahd an Egyptian plane Were downed, that the action took place just
inside the Palestine border, ahd
that it happened after what we're
termed "enemy planes'' had strafed
Israeli ground ictces.
From the Island ot Malta come
word that a brigade of British Marine Commandos is making ready
for embarkation. There is speculation that the marines are going to
ioin other British troops which have
}een sent to the Fort of Aqaba in
Trans-Jordan. The port on the Red
Sea is a stone's. throw from the
frontiers of Palestine and Egypt.
All shore leave has been can-
Celled for British naval forces on
Malta, arid two British naval frig
ates have sailed from; Malta for
Cyprus. ..',
Associated Press correspondent
John Roderick: cabled from the Island of,Cyprus that Britain considers her stake in the Suez Canal,
Middle East oil and -the, Fort bf
Aqaba too. great to allow incursions
by others into Egypt and Trans-
Jordan.
In Palestine itself, the conflict
between the Egyptians and the
Jews appeared to have died, completely. Egypt confirmed reports
that she has agreed: to negotiate
with Israel for an armistice.
The Egyptian'annpuricement
means a radical departure from the
10-year-old Arab policy of holding
no direct talks with the Zionists.
The Egyptian Secretary-General of
the Arab League said that recent
fighting in Palestine showed what
he terms the "regrettable hesitation"
of some politicians in Arab countries. This was an obvious reference
to the failure of Arab allies to come
to Egypt's assistance in the Palestine fighting. ; /,:. :
-At the"same time the Arab Secretary General predicted that fighting will reopen' in the Holy Land
Unless Jewish troops withdraw from
their newly-won positions in the
Hegev area./
LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y. (CP) .—
United Nations officials expressed
hope Sunday that the British-
Israeli -air clash will not. Interfere
with scheduled Egyptian--Israeli
armistice talks this week.
Returning (old
WaveSetsNelson
The Cold wave came back to Nelson over, the Weekend, after a re-!
spite so brief it hardly gave home-;
owners a breather from:, heavy.
stoking. .,-.-."-..
' With one bye on the fuel-bin,
Nelsonltes - saw the thermometer
dip' down into the zero regions
aagiri Saturday night -and Sunday.
The ice 'surface across ..the West
Arm of Kootenay Lake, breaking
up in the. fe^w' milder • days pre-'
vlously, stretched from shore to
shore again Sunday,
Temperature extremes were 15
arid 20 degrees oh Saturday while
Sunday they plummetted to an "official 6.2 degrees and never climbed
higher than 19.8.-.—  , . .;
Forecast, for Monday.-was for
"continuing ^very cold.'1''.
About' the' coldest spot - in the
District, Cranbrook recorded 24
degrees below- zero Sunday, while
at Crescent Valley the lowest was
two, below.
JAMES BOYS IN TROUBLE
VANCOUVER '(CP)-The James
boys were in town—arid trouble —
today.   —    ,'':.'
Frank James, 53, and Jesse James,
67,'both Prince Rupert; B.C., railway Workers, were arrested and
charged with vagrancy.. In court
Saturday, they were remanded i to
Monday. "->••"'   : " ".    '■ :',
From Slave to
Lane)lord Career Ends
LOUlB'vTI&E',iKy. (AP)—Robert
Heady, 98ryear-oId, Negro who'' was
born in slavery but worked his
way up to hwnershlp of a: 160-acre
farm, died here Saturday. His wife,
also born in slavery, died, about
three months.. agpv-age^ 102.  •
Cops Grab Booze
In Cabaret Raids
VANCOUVER (CP) — A police
liquor detail swept down on three
Vancouver cabarets late Saturday
night and carried off 17 bottles of
liquor.  -. ■    .    |
The,detail, headed.by Detective-
Sergeant' L. M. Muhn, in the. first
raid seized seven bottles/at the
Vancouver Hotel's Panorama Roof,
Iri ' later raids they seized 10
bottles from the Maylifig. arid Commodore cabarets.        '   :
Leg Broken as
Building Collapses,
VANCOUVER —A 66-year-old
employee of the B. C. Electric at
Bridge River—Charles Hepburn—Is
in satisfactory condition' at hospital
following a mercy flight to Vancouver. ,.' '.'-.'■    ,
Hepburn suffered-t^fractured left
leg-when part bf.a building collapsed on him. '       "•'.
WARNING TO
SHOW OF FORCE
-.Britain Takes Ivlo    ,
.Chances With Jews
In Middle Ejast
GUARDS INTERESTS
\  ty JOHN RODERICK
..,KXREJSIArCypruS''(-A-P)^BHtaln
is telling 'Israel' in -Slain' language:
"If you/stretch but a hand against
British interests iri the. Middle'East,
We'll rap your knuckles."   -
That is the meaning of Britain's
show of force'ln the air over Trans-
Jordan : and the Egyptian Sinai
Desert adjoining Palestine.
If the Israelis attempt to make
mpre   incursions   into   Egypt   or
probe towards the important Trans-
Jordan part of Aqaba, fighter planes
armed with cannon may be on hand
td,intercept thein. Both Egypt and
Trans-Jordan are Britain's allies.
. The British stake In the 8uez
qanal and Middle East oil fields
\|s too great to permit winking
rat  any   Israeli   moves   In   tn'elr
direction.   ' >;
j j- Inauguration of regular patrol
ireconnaissance flights' over the
Trans-Jordan border areas -and
swift additions-to Its fighting re
serves was the British answer.
-. i The start of these operations
opened up the possibility that
.British alroraft might run afoul
of Jewish pursuit, planes, as happened along the Egyptian frontier
Friday. This was a dangerous
chance which London appears,to
have considered was worthwhile
Iri view of the Importance of the
Issues Involved.
From the Suez Canal zone Britain
started her own air lift—a quietly
efficient operation masked by censorship so .tight that even. United
Nations observers still can not con-
firin these preparations. -,'
Fighter-escorted transport planes
made the.airlift to Aqaba and Ma-
frak in Trans-Jordan on time
crowding schedules that allowed
only seven minutes to drop a load.
Aqaba, Trans-Jordan's sole port
on! the Red Sea,': Is Britain's chief
worry at the morhent. ,
- There she has sent troops: for the
annoupced purpose of guarding the
port of her ally.:The>Southern tip
of '.Palestine's.-Negev Desert which
the, Jews 'Want'and ;have: mostly
occupied, 'reaches' the Red- Sea a
few miles West of Aqaba.
■ Aqaba is.importarit.to Britain'-be-
cause it has a military highway bypassing Palestine and running
North - through' TrSns-Jordan to
Damascus, Syria, Thus, conceivably,
it. might be the key to a tenuous
link, between the Mediterranean
and Red Sea in the event the Suez
Canal were blocked.-
Dam at Ca
an
llllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
Hoot Mon! Sit a Time
Yer Gaen Tae Hae!!
Scottish Curlers, Here's the Program
^AONIDAY,JAN. 10th V   ;
.. Public welcome at ClP.K; Depot on train arrival
.   from-East.' ; -.,
Piped to Hftme Hotel for Rotary Luncheon,
.    .-i2:l5;p-m. ,  ■
After, Luncheon to Civic Theatre to see. Summer
■"•Bonspiel pictures, then tour Civic Centre.
3:00 p.m-.r—12 of party.; to be driven to Trail.by
TraU hosts, remainder to cocktail party,,
6:00 p.m.—Public Banquet and Reception at Civic
■"Centre.'-'" "     _
8:00 p,m,-^SCOTLAND vs. NELSON.' First draw,,
. .on Aiijena ice sheet.-
• 10:00 p.m.^-Secoiid draw On-Arena ice shefet. -
--,--->.-        ■ ■ ''-■'■..'; ..'
. TUESDAY, JAN,nth
10:30 a.m.—Tour to points of interest in distribt by
"* ';. ' hosts. .- ,;.,"- •-.'•.-
12 noon—Board of Trade Luncheon.
2:'00 p.m,—Curling in Nelson.  Curling Club Rinlc
(optional).
4:30 p.m.—Return to Hume. Prepare for departure
' S;55p.m. for Calgary,;     V
'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
A largo crowd of citizens is expected to tprn out at the C. P. JR.
dppo| Mpnday for a royal .welcome
of. the Scottish ;curlers. Banners of
welcome have been .erected -at the
station and across Baker Street..A
contingent--of 12 members from
Trail will be on hand.to greet the 12
members from Scotland; who ari?
going to the Srrielter City, later in
the afternoon.' •
Rotary Club will be hosts to all
visitors .'and local guests. All the
Septs will be presented With program badges at this luncheon and
Nelson and Trail Club Scrolls will
also" be,- Signed by the Scots curlers.
.-Hosts ^during their two^day'stay
in Nelson are Mayor T. H. Waters,
& E..Horton, W: A^ Duckworth, H.
A..Peebles, Aid. A. H. Allan, E. C.
Huntvapd J. B. Gray. They will take
charge of the visiting Scots during
their stay. Thb visitors, and, as many,
citizens as possible will attend a
short picture of, the Summer Bon*
spiel at the:Ciyic Theatre. They will
then make a tour of the Civic Centre and adjourn to a cocktail party
later.,     "'""-
At 6 p. m. a public banquet will
be held at the Civic Centre. Principal speakers will, be Mayor Wat
era of NelSon, J. G. Ridland, British
Vice-consul froin .Spokane, and
John Learmonth, President of the
NelsOn Board of Trade. At 8 p. m. all
willadjourn to'the Ice Arena wnere
the Mayor will open the curling activities. ' :_'.; '■' '. •':
■ On Tuesday the hosts will show
their guests points of • interest in
the District. At Wncheon at 12 noon
they will be entertained by the
Board of Trade in the Hume Hotel
Silver Room. Curling will take
place'at 2 p. m. in the Curling Rink.
James Vipond
HewCRR.
LOWER PRICES
FOR EGGS
AT COAST
VANCOUVER. :.(CP). — British
Columbia housewives will pay
seven cents less for a dozen eggs
Jan. 25, .when Fraser Valley poultry
producers begin, shipments to the
United Kingdom.
; Under the 1949 contracts with
Britain, the poultrymeh will receive 35 cents a dozen for their
eggs and the domestic market price
must be np higher.
- G. Heady, Secretary of the B.C.
Poultry Producers Association, said
Sunday .he does not, feel too bad
about the price decrease. "We have
to sell our eggs somewhere," he
said. (..'.-•;
Eggs- currently-'are selling at '67
cents a dozen.
JAMES VIPOND
TRAHj, B. C.' <CP)-4Tames Vipond has been named to succeed
C. H.Jrjall as C. P. R., Agent at Trail,
it was announced . Saturday. Mr.
Hall went on retirement at the end
of the year.     x ' .'
Mr. Vipond is well-known iri
Trail, having been, stationed at both
Trail and Tadanac previously. In
1945 he left Tadanac where he was
operator, to become agent at Hope.
Born in Nakusp, Mr. Vipond joined the C.P.R. there as a car checker
at 15. Later he became assistant
agent at Nakusp in 1922, and since
then had varied experience at most
stations iri the Kootenay Division as
Assistant Agent, operato'rand agent
His hobbies are -amateur 'photography arid fishing. He belongs to
the Hope'Rotary Club,
lllllllllllllllllllllll.HIIIIIIHIHHIIIIII.il
SNOW IN LA.;   r
SUNSTROKE,   ;
IN CONNECTICUT
", LOS ANGELElS; (AP)  -It-
■ Snowed Sunday iri Los-Angeles.
Iri most places it melted as i.t
fell but, nevertheless, it was
.""snow. '.;■•'
In -the Windsor Hills section
of Los Angeles, a resident said
,: heipacked a "real snowball."
CANAAN, Conn. (AP) 4
| There Was a sunstroke < case
.' here Saturday.' - ;',
Lester Dalone, 24, was stricken while working on a garage
roof. He fell; about eight feet
in soft dirt, spraining his left
■;. ami; '
J.    "It was sunstroke all right,"
said Dr. John Elliott.
j   An unofficial high of 68 was
reported  In  Canaan  Saturday
; afternoon;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Mother VVith Baby
In Arms Struck Dead.
I CORAL GABLEXN, Fla. (AP)-
The 22-year-old wife of a war veteran was killed by a mysterious
bullet Saturday as she stood beside her husband with her infant
daughter in her arms. Mrs. J. O.
Jones was inspecting a house under
construction when the bullet struck
her in the:face.
STUDY OF ARROW
LAKES
PROJECT ASKED
';Up'to,$3,5bo,boo   ;
For B.C. in Plan to
Avert Power Shortage
SUPPORT SOUGHr
OLYMPIA, Wash.; (AP) --;
An International stiidy of a'
proposal for storage of water,
in British Columbia to helpre*
lieve the Northwiest ppwer
shortage was. asked here Sun-'
day. Construction of "a dam at
Castiegar is; contemplated in:
preliminary plans for storage,
if .the project was permitted
to go ahead.
line State Columbia Basin;
Commission, voted to ask the
InternOtional Joint Corrl,mis>'.-
sion for an imm6didte ■ study;;
oh. the amount of wdter thijt-
could be stored in B.C.'s Arrow
;L"akes. ...'.  |
The International body' Is;'
composed, of rtpree American
and three Canadian'members.
; The Comrriissibn's Arrow Lalia's
decision gave a big impetus to form-,
er; U.S. Senator C. C. Dill's proposal
to provide Water to keep the Grand
Coulee Dam's generators , running
during Winter months.
NO OBJECTION
Dill told thb group.that Premier
Byron Johnson of British Columbia-
had said his' Government "would
have no objection to. having the;
(International)' Commission expedite its report, on the amount ot
Storage it will approve in Arrow
•Lakes."" ■;,   .
Dill emphasized that the storage plans were preliminary and-.
••'s'ubieBf'.to'-eMHrje.''';"    r~v«-i*w*rS|
At present, a dam Is contemplated   at   Coctlegar that  would
store, frohi  5,000,000 to 7,000;000 "
acre-feet of water in the'lakes.
B.C. would be paid an estimated
$2,500,000   to   $3,500,000   annually
for the storage, 'he said,
"The Bonneville and Grand Coulee power plants as the result, of
the added storage will be able to
produce   an   additional   500,000   to
700,000 kilowatts during the Winter
months," Dill said;.' ' - ''
BUILT IN YEAR^
"This would be the biggest thing
that could be done to relieve the
critical power situation between,
now and 1954 when the McNary
and Hungary Horse dams will first
provide, power," he added.
, Engineers have said that an earth-
rock dam could be built near Castiegar within a year, Dill said. No definite cost estimate is available, but
engineers say it would be "a very
few rilillibn dollars," he said,
British Columbia would get half
what power brought, Dill said. The
: Joint proposal would amount to
B.C. furnishing the water and thai ;
' United States making the power.;
The State Columbia Basin Commission, in its formal resolution,
also, urged the Washington legislature,' members of Congress from
the four Northwest states, their
governors, and President Truman to
urge the international study. The
group urged "the Premier of British'
Columbia and the Prune Minister bf -.'■'
Canada to join" in a request to the
Canadian members of the inter-
national body.       ,
The action; the group said, was >
taken "in the hope that what may '
become an electrical catastrophe, U
no relief is provided, may be changed" for the benefit. of both the.
Pacific! .Northwest and British, Columbia.
priest; bitten by dog, •
not in danger ,
OTTAWA' '(CP) - Condition of
Father Ostran, Roman. Catholic
priest bitten Friday by an Eskimo
dog, is not considered dangerous, a
Health Department spokesman said
Sunday night.
"The Air Fores, has at least. 15
days to get vaccine to him, even if
it is found he has become Infected
with hydrophobia," the spokesman
said. '"- .
"But It still is not certain that
the dog actually was mad, It was
killed soon after It had bitten the
Roman Catholic priest. No tests
have been made on it yet."
(See also story on page 10.) j
Mission Doctor
Dies in Fire
MISSION,' B.C. (QP) - Fire A
undetermined origin Sunday claimed the. life of one man an diett six
others homeless when flames gutted living quarters above a cafe in
this Fraser Valley centre.
Dr. L. R Campbell, trapped in his
apartment, died of. suffocation before police and firemen could reach
him. ;'-.'■'.'-■      ---..-, -
The 10-man Mission Fire Brigade
ajib> dozens of volunteers battled the
blaze for more than two hours. Fire
damage was estimated at $15,000.
Ask Shorter Pay
To Spread'Work
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — CIO.
Woodworkers Sunday announced
they would ask employers for a six-
hour day to spread the work iri the
logging camps and mills of the
Pacific NorthWest.-
The shorter working day was
proposed as a means of spreading
the work through a longer period
of the year. The union explained
that many. union members work
only four to seven months of each;
year..
I
'J-
 %— NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JAN.10, W?
ihetfte A far Of droadmy
Qoid Vi(jqeirs..,Ourlb Prove
fiarnuin Was "Ricjkt /iptSt
TONIGHT -Tuesday
Shows,at 7:00-8:57
>,
We
STARTS WEDNESDAY
"The Emperor Waltz"
A 40-year engineering career, 24
of them spent with West Kootenay
Bower and Light Company- Ltd.j
has ended With the retirement of
W. J. Tlndale, former Chief Engineer; of the Company..Mr. Tindale
has left for Vancouver.
Nearly SO years ago, in 1920, Mr.
Tindale, entered the employ" of the
Consolidated Mining and Smelting
Company Engineering Department
at Trail, first working'on the design
of a mill to treat Rossland ore. The
mill was' never built; however. :
Prior to this he had seen service
with a number of Eastern concerns, including Hamilton Bridge;
was a C.N:R. bridge inspector witli,
Canadian Inspection Company, 'was
chief draughtsman for the,,Hydro
Electric Power Commission of Ontario; Iri 1918 and 1919 he went lo
the British American Nickel Corporation at Sudbury, Ont, where
he was engaged'in the design of a
large.: nickel Smelting plant.
' He played a part- in the construction of the Kimberley concentrator  In   1924,  chocking 'design   prior   to   commencing   the
design for reconstruction of the
West   Kooteriay'a   No.   1   hydro
plant at Lower Bennington.
Since then his work has made
history. A* designing engineer he
was intimately associated with the
major development of the power
company. Under his plans the South
Slocan No; 3 plant was constructed
between 1926 arid 30 and considerable study Was done on Kootenay
Lake storage and preliminary work
on other possible power sites such
as   Pend d'Oreille,  Adams  River,
Trout Lake and Howsep Lake.
AUTHORITY ON DESIGN
In 1930 construction was com-'
mericed on- the No. 4 plant and
control dam at Corra Linn, followed in 1933 by the Goat River plant
near   Creston,1   followed   between
Fire Wipes Out
Town's Livelihood
KILGARD, B.C. (CP) — T,he
main livelihood of this tiny Fraser
Valley centre Sunday night was
erased by fire which raged
through the $1,000,000 Clayburn
Brick and Tile Co,
The main four-storey structure
and adjacent clay shed'were demolished. Fire Department 'Officials estimated damage at $500,-
000.,
Kllgard, 30 miles East of Vancouver, Is built around the plant
which employed 150 men and
supplied British Columbia, Al-
j borta, Washington and Oregon
states, with building materials.
Machine shops, garage's, kilns
and sheds were saved by three
and a half-hour fighting by the
company's: own brigade and the
Abbotsford, B.C., and Sumas,
Wash., fire detachments.
FOURTH DIES
FROM
CONSTABLE'S GUN
.KINGSTON, 'Jamaica (CP) —
Ueathjtbir in nearby Spanish Town's
ail-police gun battle Thursday rose
to.four Saturday when Cpl. Thad-
deus Johnson died in hospital.
Constable Roy Morgrace, 24, suddenly went berserk in the police
station,; drew his revolver, and
started shooting. A sub-Inspector
and sergeant-major were shot to
death on the spot Another constable
died in hospital Friday.
Hospital authorities said Morgrace is- recovering. He was shot
by another policeman, and then
turned his own gun on'himself. ,
Police said Morgrace had apparently been brooding over a series
of departmental' charges against
■him.    ,  ;■'•"•'   •■'.' -. -■:■.-,.   •
BRITAIN/FRANCE
TO CLEAR
AWAY DIFFERENCES
By ARTHUR GAV8HO.N
LONDON   (AP) - Britain   and
France Will have, a "peace confer-
ence" of their own Wednesday.
They are. West'Europe's main
partners in trying to achieve prosperity, political unity and military
security for the Continent, and in
the fight to beat .back Communism.
But their statesmen are worried
because their, policies clash at many
points and. levels throughout the
.world. ■. „-,:. . . .'.'...-
•In an effort to straighten out their
difficulties, France's Foreign Min-',
ister, Robert Schumah, will' arrive
Wednesday to talk things over with
Foreign Secretary Bevln In a two-
day meeting. .*;. ■;
Is Your Car or
Truck Ready?
Now Is the time to prepare your car for the long'Summer grind.
>    BE FREE OF WORRIES
COMPLETE MOTOR OVERHAUL
MOTOR TUNE-Ulf,
BRAKES RELINED — Don't Take Chances
COMPLETE: CHECK-OVER
Seo us for terms on complete overhauls.        .
Wo Sell, Part, on All Makei
Battery Trouble? — The Answer Is a New Willard
Lubrication ot Its Best
,.     YOUR FRIENDLY SHELL DEALER,
Bill Defoe's Super Service
PHONE 1234
213 BAKER ST.
W. J. Tindale, lor 24
Years With West
Kootenay
W. J. TINDALE
1934 and 1937 by a.series of further
studies on Kootenay Lake storage
and preliminary studies of the then
proposed Brilliant project During
this.perlod, being by now a widely-
recognized authority:. in • power
plan design, he,did work on design
of plants at the Big Missouri and
at Wellington Lake in Northern
Saskatchewan.   >;■
From 1038 to 1940 came the ex-
tepslb'n of .the Upper Bonnington
plant, followed in 1942 by construction of the Brilliant'plant Prior to
comriiencement. of the Bonnington
plant, Mr. Tindale was given the
appointment of the power company's chief engineer.
''The cold facts on paper mean
little,'' an associate of Mr. Tindale
said. "One has to see hs occom-
plishments on the river and to
know the man to fully appreciate
the qualities of Bill Tindale."
Mr. Tindale is a member of a
number of professional: organizations, including the Association of
Professional Engineers of B.C;
the Engineering- Institute of Canada; the Canadian Electrical Association and is a member of the B.C.'
Research Council's Advisory Committee on power arid irrigation.'.
CALIFORNIA
FROSTTOUP
B.C. PRICES
VANCOUVER (CP)-Lettuce, celery,', oranges and lemons will increase iri price in British Columbia
because of weather damage to California .crops.   .
I. W. Chess, Vancouver fruit and
vegetable wholesaler, said Saturday
California suppliers have wired him
that nearly 90 per cent of the citrus
crops were damaged by frost.
Lettuce and celery will go up
about five cents, while the citrus
fruit is expected to rise from five
to 10 cents a dozen.
However, egg prices were expected to drop four to seven cents a
dozen before the end of the month;
The price decrease was blamed on
a decline in United Kingdom pur
chases.
SPOKANE (AP)—Cy Rouse led
Spokane Flyers to an easy;, 5-2,
Western International Hockey
League victory over Kimberley
Dynamiters Sunday night. ■'",   ■'.;/
Rouse scored two quick goals in
the second period-tb give the Flyers
a comfortable margin, Pat Petrucci
assisted on two goals and scored
another himself to help the Spokane
victory..
Nadeau also tallied a brace for
Spokane. Kromm and Sullivan were
Kimberley marksmen';  '
Lineups:    y.i    ; ...
Spokane—Plckeili Blackett Bentley; McBrlde; Rouse, Snider, Subs—
Nadeau, Barchyn, Scott, Curillo,
Petrucci, Ryplen, Luke.
Kimberley^rNashi Brown, Jones;
BELIEVE RUSS
ASKED TO
HELP MEDIATE
CITY Ot7 NELSON
WATER RATES
20% Discount
will be allowed on all FLAT RATES
for the year 1949 if paid on or before;
JANUARY 15, 1949
Providing No Arrears Aro Owing
The Weather
Synopsis: Milder weather has returned to the Northern B.C. Coast
Sunday together with cloudy skies
and occasional light snow Which
turned to drizzle during the afternoon. A -little-of the cloudiness was
spreading Southeastward over the
nest of the province in the evening
but showed no signs of bringing
any marked improvement to these-
regions during the next 24 hours.
Subzero temperatures were again
expected in. the Interior of the province overnight with afternoon temperatures remaining about the same
as they were Sunday;
NELSON ■_•.:       6    20-    —
(Saturday); ....:..-.    15    28.; ,?*
Toronto    '29    48■-.  —
Winnipeg  :   -12    -3     —
Regina ..- s-27   -13 ;; -r
Saskatoori :„;.;.• i   o .
Medicine Hat ............ -30   -10     —
Calgary    -24    -6.   —
Pentlcton      0    1,8     —
Vancouver .;^.;.,i.    14., 31.,;-r'
Victoria  23    33 ": -
Cranbrook    -24     ,0  . —
Grescerit Valley «;... \ -^    19    '—
Prince Rupert  .'»    18    27    .02
Prince George  _..   -33    -5     —
Spokane .;... ....: '   -5    14    —
Whitehorse >,; :...; -U  ;  9     -
GRANITE ROAD
INSTITUTE NAMES
SUNSHINE GROUP
At the monthly meeting of the
Granite Road Women's Institute,
held'at the, home of Mrs. E. R.
Clark, a Sunshine Committee was
appointed. Mrs. B. Norcross.: arid
Mrs, G. R. Pickering iorm the committee. . .   :■ '",.'
A check for $25 was sent tb' the
Women's Institute Memorial Fund
at. Vancouver.
A social followed with exchange
of gifts.. Refreshments were served
by Mrs. B. Norcross, Mrs. E. Berg-
stroni, Mrs. A. G. Norcross and Mrs.
Charles Stewart.
Mrs, J. Rulcheski's check for $10
was sent to the Teen-age Club toward a hew record player. '■;..'.,,
Collision Victim
At- Cranbrook -
Saskatchewan Farrrier
CRANBROOK, B.C. —Victim of
Thursday's truck-train collision at
the' Cranbrook Sawmills yard; Angus . Joseph McEacheran. 'was 3}
years old Jan. 3. He was driver, of
a fuel truck for Vlnce Downey between farming seasons Iri Saskatchewan and had been here only two
months. He wife survives him here.
He was born and grew up at Sin
nett, Sask., and operated a farm
there intending to return in the
Spring. His parents are Mr, and
Mrs; Allan McEacheran of Sinnett
and. also surviving are six sisters,
Ellen at Vancouver, Rita at Victoria, Mary at Wilkie, Sask., 'Margaret at Hamilton, Josephine - at
Moose Jaw, and Adele at Sinnett
and two .brothers, Jerry'at Sinnett
rind Plus at Kingston,'The body; Is
being shipped-to Sinnett for funeral
services and burial.
Dick Turpin, < renowned English
highwayman, started his career by
cattle-stealing when apprenticed tp
a butcher.
tot quick comforting, help for Btcksdw,
Rheumatic Palm, acttlns Dp Hlghts, strut
cloudy urhu. Irritating passages, I« Palpi,
wd Ion ot emw *» to Kidney sad BU44ei'
Iroublea, trr eyitss. .Quick, tompI«t« oatli-
factlon or money back. Don't.iufrer another
<Uy without asking your druggist lor Cult*
To relieve coughing spasms, muscular soreness, rub
throat, chest and a, m a 0* e» af*
back at bedtime \f IG IfB
with time-tested ▼ va»oru»
J. Bi Gray
"Much Improved/
J. B. Gray, recently-retired Nelson
business man, was "much Improved"
Sunday after suffering a heart attack at the curling rink Friday
night- i • .  .
Mr. Gray was taken to Kootenay
Lake General Hospital immediately
after he was stricken about 11:30
p.m'. His doctor said he was "resting
well." .'.,..
'.'"Well known; Iri NelSon and District, .Mr. Gray sold his business on
the New Year arid planned to take
a trip abroad in February.     ■'.'
THREE DROWNED;
STEAMER, SLICES
CRAFT IN HALF
VICTORIA (CP) -Art early
morning collision between the Vancouver Island Coastal steamship SS.
Princess Maquinna and the gasboat
Lorraine Saturday 'claimed the
lives of three persons, 'including a
bride - to - be oh her way tq be
married,, .       .-..,<,',- .
Drowned .were Mary Peterson,
the bride-to-be; Mrs. Laura Peterson and Irylne Peterson. Miss
Peterson's, fiance, Reginald Davis,
was rescued with three others —
Martha." Smith, 18; Joseph Peterson
and Edward Lucas.
,iThe,party; of seven Tahsis Canal
Indians were en route to the wedding at Nootka Sound on the West
Coast of Vancouver Island when
the Maquinna sliced their boat in
half near Esperanza Inlet 190 miles
Northeast ot here, in a blinding
snowstorm. • .
The four survivors were picked
up by the steamship and taken to
Esperanza Mission Hospital. The
disaster was blamed on frozen steering' gear aboard the smaller craft
The.Lorralne was, reported cut in
half by. the Coastal steamer when
steering became frozen and she
veered across the Maquinna's bow;
The Lorraine sank Immediately.
Named Conciliator '
VICTORIA (CP) - Appointment
of R, G. Clements, Vancouver conciliation officer, to aid in settlement
of two Mainland wage disputes, is
announced by the B. L. Labor Relations Board. .
One dispute is between the Vancouver Auto Workers' Lodge 1857
and the McCulloch Motor Co., bf
North Vancouver, and the other is
between the International Union of
Operating Engineers, Local 882, and
the Fraser Valley Milk Producers'
Association.
.   NANKING—Russia   may   have
been asked by the Chiang Kai-
shek Government to help In efforts to mediate China's civil war.
A  usually reliable; spokesman
said Saturday.the Big Three Western   powers—the   United   States,
Britain and France—have been approached, with a similar; request,
arid Sunday a reliable Informant
said Russia has been added to the
potential list of mediators.
The report was not official, but
Associated Press correspondent Harold Milks said it was obvious that
something is brewing. He suggested
that either the Nanking Government had suggested .mediation ot
the civil conflict, ortoeWesterirna-
tloris have coriferred with Chinese
leaders about dumping the problem
in the lap of the. United Nations.-.
Meanwhile the Communists seem
to-be making new and impressive
gains iri the civil war.        • !
The Chinese Central Government
admitted Sunday.-that the Reds have
penetrated the great city of Tientsin ^commercial hub of North China.
Ten shells fired ;by Communist
heavy guns are said to have crashed
down on Roosevelt Road, one of the
main thoroughfares In that city.
The City Council of Tientsin,is
asking both sides to stop the fighting arid spare the city further destruction. With the Comriiurilst van'
guards well inside the city's walls,
food prices in Tientsin are going up.
They have doubled in the last ?4
hours, ■ . .,
The city is still crowded with refugees from Commuriist-held territory In'the North. Although the local Government is encouraging the
refugees to leave, the city's population is still above two and a half
million t     .
W Only the rlch'Iri/Tleritslh have
jnoney enough to get out of the way
6t the Communist onslaught. Wealthy Cblriese. aj$ gping;, South—by
plane. Most of .the refugees; the
poor and the middle class, can do
little else but return to their hemes
in Communist-held areas.
A8K8HONE8T POLICY .
In the United States, the Roman
Catholic Archbishop of Boston, Most
Rev. Richard dishing ,has called
for an honest policy ol free nations
toward China. Speaking at a communion breakfast Sunday, the Arch'
bishop said he could not see any reason why American, policy toward
China should be, as he put It, "devious; defeatist or halt-hearted."
Said the prelate:
"Badgered and embarrassed as
the present Chinese Government
may be, it Is the same Government
that our leaders were told would
collapse first in 1937, and then In
1942 and again in 1944. The prophets
of disaster proved'mistaken or malicious then. What better reesons
have we to believe them now?"
(fiaduate
Miss Isabel ■ Goggin, formerly of
Nelson, who was one of this'year's
nursihg ..graduates, winning her
certificate with second class honors
at Royal Columbian Hospital, New
Westminster. She is the daughter ot
Mr. and, Mrs. Percy Goggin, 4494
Naplef .Street . Vancouver. Miss
.flogglri ;.attended public, 'junior
High and High School here, leaving
Nelson about five years ago. She
is now on the staff of St, Paul's
Hospital, Vancouver.
POPULAR BRITISH
COMEDIAN DIES
LONDON (CP)—Tommy Hand'
ley, 35, one of Britain's top-ranking
radio comedians and a favorite of
the King, died' Sunday.
; Friends said he collapsed shortly
after. lunchy apparently from a
heart attack.
.News of his death reached 'the
BBC during Its Usual late Sunday
afternoon broadcast of a recorded
Handley program—the lorig popular
"Itma," or "It's That Man Again;"
A showman of more thari 35
years' experience, Handley hit his
real stride In the early years of
the Second World War. When the
BBC went under cover-durlng the
heavy German air attacks on Britain, Handley and a corps of supporters carried on ■ valiantly with
the "Itma" episodes. These were of
a broad variety ■ pattern, satirizing
current, events, featuring screwball
situations and characters.
; Members' of the royal family
praised him as a wartime morale,
builder. All listened often tb his
clowning.
His "Itma" show, started In 1939
and continued since with few
interruptions, was estimated to have;
drawn a radio audience exceeding
10,000,000,
Sacrament Subject
Of Lesson-Sermon
"Sacrament" was the subject of
the Lesson-Sermon In all Churches
ot Christ, Scientist, on. Sunday.
The Golden Text was: "Create, in
me as a clean heart O God; and
renew a right spirit within me."
Psalms 51: 10.      :,:-,':.
The Lesson-Sermon included the
following passage, from the Bible:
"Therefore let us keep the feast,
not with old leaven,.'neither with
thesleaven of malice and wicked'
nest; but with the unleavened
bread of sincerity and truth,"
I Corinthians 5:.-8,   ,
Among the selections from the
Christian Science textbook, "Science arid Health With Key to the
Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy,
was the- following: "We worship
spiritually, only as we cease to
worship materially. Spiritual de-
voutness is the soul of, Christianity.
Worshipping through the medium
of matter is paganism.".. <
Rouse Leads Flyers
Over Dynamiters 5-2
Wilson; Kavanaugh, Taraow. Subs
—Johnston,  Calles,  Sullivan,  Bell,
Coombs, Kromm, Swaney, Hryciuk.
. Summary: i.
First, period—1, Spokane, Nadeau
(Barchyn,; Petrucci) 10:33.
Penalties—None.'-'
Second period—2, Spokane, House
(Nadeau, Barchyn) 6:08; 3, Kimberley, Kromm (Wilson) 8:49; .'4, Spokane, Rouse (McBrlde) .10:08; 5,
Spokane, Petrucci (Curillo) 16:39;
6, Kimberley, Sullivan (Coombs,
Calles) 17:58. •
Penalties —•. Rouse, Petrucci (2);
Kavanaugh, Swaney.
Third, period—7, Spokane, Nadeau
(Petrucci; Barchyn) 15:56.    -'•
Penaltles-^-None. .
TRAGEDY. MARS     '
PALS' PLAYTIME
BEAVER, Pa. (AP)^Worthington
(Sklppy). Gunsauley,, five, liked to
play with a neighbor's collie.
Sunday he wandered over to the
neighbor's yard and;the collie ran
to hirri. It was chained to an overhead wire. The twoployed and the
collie ran merrily around "Skipriy."
A few minutes later neighbors
found the boyon the ground, the
chain wrapped tightly around his
neck, the collie trying to loosen the
chain. A first-aid .team was unable
to revive "Sklppy.". He.had strangled. ,'■'.   (-':>'■',    -    "    ■■-
Capf. H. F. Hird
Dies Suddenly
At Balfour at 44
Captain Herbert Francis Hird,
relieving Captain M. ;McLeod .as
Chief Olflcer of M.V. Anscdmb,
died suddenly at his Balfour home
Sunday morning of a heart attack.
He was 44.   ,:.';-,
Born in England, he came- to
Canada, and British Columbia when
about five and was educated in
Vancouver where he lived until
1939. He then went to Victoria and
joined the Royal Canadian. Engineers at the outbreak of tho Second
World War. He /Was later transferred to the Armored Service
Corps. . - .    >. ;.,    -. ''      \
After the war he returned to Victoria '.and was - employed by -the
Victoria Tug Company operating
tow boats, on the, .Coast He was,
also .employed on a hydrogfaphical
survey for the B.C. Government
before coming to Balfour a year
ago. -..':.-■
Besides his widow, he is survived
by two small sons, Leo and Francis;
one brother Leoiin Powell,River
and his mother, Mrs, H- Hird at
Vancouver.'   ,
Retired Trail
School Teacher,
Mrs. Pi
Mrs. Elizabeth Margaret Pipkin,
84, a, retired Trail school teacher,
died after a lengthy illness at Lake-
view Nursing ' Home on ^Victoria
Street where she had lived for the
laet;two years. .   ,   v ■
She 'was a teacher in Trail for
about 24 years, and retired in. 1930.
Born in England,' she was predeceased by her husband 10 years
ago. ■ ■;.'  ,
Her only known survivor is a
sister, Mrs. M. Hathews at Victoria,
Remains are'being forwarded by
the Thompson Funeral Home to
Trail where ■ funeral services will
be held, '
JUST RECEIVED
A Shipment of    ..,
Beautiful
Spring Blouses
FINK'S
READY-TO-WEAR
Firjd Couple -
Died Before Rfei
Mount forest, ont. tcp>- a
Provincial Pathologist found In an
autopsy that neither George White
nor his mentally-ill daughter, Florence, whose bodies were removed
from their burned home, had died
In the fire,    j -  .   °
Dr. Walter Armstrong last night
determined that the 42-year-old
woman had been - dead for two
months and that'-, her 72-year-old
father had died of bronchial pneumonia 48 hours before the tire.
An investigation by the Ontario
Provincial Police Investigation Bureau is under way In this town, 40
miles South pf Owen Sound.
Strong suspicion is held by police
that there were two separate fires
in the house, relatively undamaged
due to quick action by volunteer
firemen,. ' .'-,';.
Of three .rooms on the second
floor, only the two occupied by the
victims were afire arid .little more
than their mattresses were burned.
The rooms were Separated by a hallway which was not even scorched.
City Band
STILL NO SIGH
OF DECISION
ON WHEAT PACT
OTTAWA (CP) — Negotiations
on the question of prlce-vewus-..
extension of the Anglo-Canadian
Wheat Contract still are going on
between London arid Ottawa, with
no clear Indication of when they
might; be concluded.   •
The- situation is little changed
from what It was three weeks ago.
Though some progress is being'
made, the Canadian and British negotiators still are seeking to determine whether it would be best to
extend the contract beyond its ex-
plry date of July 31, I960, or to close
it 'out on that, date with a cash set-,
tlement to recompense Canadian-
farmers for the low price at which'
they have sold their wheat The negotiations are; proceeding by cable.
"One day," said. »h' official
Source, "both sides art Iri-< .fiver
of extending the' agreement and
' then the next day they are back
to the-Idea that It might be bet-'
ter to let It lapse on the expiry
date."    ;
The Nelson City Band,' now
under the direction of S. J. Newell,
will resume weekly practices on
Monday nights. ...
Mr.. Newell' Is conductirig the
band since E. G. Hooper resigned.
-Enthusiasts .have been asked to
turn'out Monday night with instruments and stands.
Atlantic Pact Aid
To Lasting Peace
OTTAWA (CP)-Prime' Minister
Fraser of New Zealand said Saturday that a North Atlantic Security
pact "will help to balance peace at
a possibly lasting equilibrium." .
With the United Nations handicapped by the veto; regional defence
arrangements among the democratic
nations appeared to be the best way
of maintaining peace, said Mr. Fraser during a Press conference In his
hotel suite.
PHONE 144 for Classified  Service
r Ktt AND NUUERr SOOK
> O MINION    SEED    HOUSE
** GETTING UP
If morning findi you
only half reated, still
weary—if your aleep
is broken by fitful
toiling and turning
—jour kidney* may
bttobUnu When
your kidntyi gel out
el order, your lleep
luuilly inffeta.   To imp your kufcurs
regain a normal condition, uio.Dodfi
Kidney PUIi. Dodd'a help lha kidneyi get
rid of seasons and osteal adds in your
system. Then your uneubieii diaappean
—you can enjoy reiUul unbroken lleep—
and awake refreihed and ready for work or
play. Get Dodd'i Kidney PiDitodif. 1«;
Dodds Kidney Pills
ARE YOU THRIFTY?
LOQkFGR
OUR AD
TOMORROW
A HEARTY
ymxxME
~       To The Visiting" .
Scottish
■ ■» v, t ■•■ ■■   '
Curlers
May your visit to.Nelson and    ;
Kootenay be one that will always recall many pleasant
. -memories.   ;        :
»   ,,.    John Thom        .'-'        ■   „
Va-try oTrer^Tr»~6~ry-b-'o*.o
nr!6~inr,*~orTrins"ir\
ttrtf-i
a tali at
NIAGARA FINANCE
made ihe difference...
10AH$-'20~41M0
LIFE INSURED AT NO EXTRA COST
Older halvnt
o Rate urttlqr (SOD, lowir than
Government celling; atovs
5500, oven lower    ,
oNobanklyposocurlty  ':']
o Towns to suit you
Wfl enouBi for
ixftmna
Small enoogh for
tmmimtss
PHONE 1095
NELSON, B.C.     ,
560 BAKER ST.
'' —
 Angora Spinning
•Mill, to-Open .
In Fraser Valley
ALDERGROTO, B. C. (CP)-One
of the only two spinning mills in
North-America.capable of produc-
I» the highest grade Angora yarn
jafexpectcdto be In Operation here
rjoji the end of February.
' 'fflfhe.   British   Columbia   Angora
Wool Producers' -Association Cooperative -have, approved purchase
of' the 'machine in California" tor
$1000. It will be set up to the grading station in-this-Fraser, Valley
centre, 36 miles East of Vancouver.
EAST GRINSTEAD, Sussex, England (CP)—Following a youtij.ser-
vlce, Rev, Douglas Griffiths, shobk
1 hands with all 950 members of the
congregation,        .   ;. '.
Always^. Dependable
S   : t
INCANDESCENT
and FLUORESCENT
-     Distributors for Nelson and District -]
Wood, Vallance Hdwre. Co Ltd
593 Baker St.
Phone 26
Armed Bandit's Rob
Coast CoupNe
Of Money; Rings
VICTORIA (CP) — two armed
and masked bandits early Saturday
robbed Mr. arid Mrs. John G. Doug-
las Of $70 cash arid two rings worth
$7000 in'their; home here.- •' './
; Described as 'wearing dark; suita,
brown hats, tan cowhide gloves,
punched tan shoes arid blue polka
dot handkerchiefs for. masks, the
pair, about 25-years old, brandished
black automatic- pistols.,
Mr. arid Mrs. Douglas; had retired
when ihe doorbell rang. When Mrs-
Douglas opened the door, .the bandits forced her to the rear of the
house, ;•-'■""-, '
Douglas stepped from his bedroom, sa'W the masked men, and,
thinking It was a joke, pushed one
of the guns aside. ,     „
'•Don't do that again,". snarled
one of the.thugs. •
. Husband and.wife then were tied
up, Mrs. Douglas being-left in a rear
room and the husband in-a -bedroom. ,'.';'- '.; , .     .
Three rings were taken from Mrs:
Douglas, one. her' wedding ring, being returned to hef.'One of the others was a diamond'set in white gold
weighing four carats^and valued at
$8250. The* third ring was a white
gold cluster of 10 stones, worth $650,
Police said the thugs knew what
they were after. .They referred to
the, Douglas, couple as "Ira" and
Major J. Reynolds
Of Kimberley Heads
|. Kootenay P.C.s
CHANBROOk, b;c -tt Delegates
from many parjs.of the constituency
attended the annual meeting here
of 'the East; Kootenay Progressive
Conservative Association called by
its President, R, E. Sang,. as an. an--
nual meeting. -
Elected to. succe'ed'.Mr.' Sang as
President was: Major, J, Reynolds
of Kimberley:/Joseph BeJI of. Kimberley waa named "temporary.'Sec-
retary-Treasufer. pendingi .a general meeting. Prior to thls'.ineeiiHg,
which will be called'soon, local Associations will have their own'meetings preparatory to namirig'theDis-
trict Executive * and Ydf awing -up, a
district program.'.-,
Wash. U. Burns
"Barbara" -        '■
.'As soon as the robbers left,-,the
Douglas couple yelled-for help, and
a friend living In.another, suite;released them, '' '' .',!,..-, .-."■
"We were lucky, the rlfigi; were
Insured,"  said | Mrs. 'Douglas.  "I
wore them for 11-years»without
Insuring them, but realized' that
was foollshi and had ttjem Insured
a few morittis ado/': '.'
There were no sounds of a get
away car, and ppllce.Sdld they hod
passed the hbuse'twlce* during the
time of.the robbery..without'seeing
a/car parked In front,.,   ,;;»',■_,. -
Scored by Scratched U.B.C. Artist
Pastiest Time in Downhill
-{>■.{: ':'/'■■■ ■' I .-,"- '-'-.'" ''.'- ' ■ (', : &$'■'<:
-;•:.':, RQSSLAND, B!C. -p Two University ofWashi06rt plonk
artists clocked fast fifties on the, downhill cdyrseq'f Bed
Mountain Saturday and earned for their team the sewna event
bf the Second Annual International Intercollegiate Ski Meet
dt. Rossland. , '; .    ---'
RosS Williams' time on the 3800-foot slope, was one rhin'-
ute and 33;3 Seconds, and teammate Alan Fischer, was ) .33.4.
a=
Fashion First
ALL FALL COATS — Gabardines and Baratheas Included
Regular to $4950 Fashion First Clearance $^^50
Regular to $5950 Fashion First Clearance$%Q5<>
Regular to $6950Fashion First Clearance$AO$0
Hats FASHION     '■'
Handbags ;   first"    Va Price
Blouses
CLEARANCE
HOUSECOATS
Regular to $18.95.       $ 1 f\95
Fashion First Clearance   Jlv
EVENING DRESSES
Reduced IJp to
DRESSY CREPES and WOOLS
Regular to $3950 Fashion First Clearance^ J ©5©
Regular to $2500 fashion Hrst Clearance $ 1 If OO
ML SALES FINAL - NO EXCHANGES WO REF0PS
-ETDr
596 BAKER STREET
PHONE942;
Fastest time of the event could
not be credited to the host U.B.C. Red Mountain Ski Club
Thiipderblrds. Gar Robinson,
scratched/from the team Saturday
morning, waa clocked at 1.31.1—a
new Red Mountain record. He ran
.200,
University of B.C.   .....;....;•„-103.28
University, of Washington  187.53
Scoring for this meet is primarily
for team totals.' This precludes; a
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JAN. 10, 1949
fr
Expect Eatf to Share
Soon in Cold Wave
the event as a spare, Coach Peter;possibility of individual high scores
Vajda said, due to a c6mblnation of,that would raise team standings. A
an Injured shoulder, slow time on. team consists of four with'the top
trials, and his request for elimination as he didn't feel well.
U.B.C. HOPE FALLS .
Vajda's hope was Jim Frazee, who
three having scores recorded.
The team having the highest total
score will-hold for one year the trophy posted by the Red Mountain
fell' arid rited. a 'slower time otSkl Club. It was won last year by
1.36.6. He lost eohtr6l at the final to.l'UnWerslty ot Washington.
gate, dropping' about six seconds,
nis running mate, Doug Fraser, was
too fast off the cliff.
Robinson  schussed  the   cliff to
A" TEAMS
'    v Time -Pts. Pte.(
G. Robinson, UBC 1.31.1 iOO.6.107.0
R. Williams, WU ./L33.S
gain speed and take the rougher | Alan Fischer, WU.. 1.83.4 98.7 193^
gully and slope'with more control G. Cpwn, UBC .'... 1.38.9 ,08.5  —
A background'of downhlU and'J.: Davis, Mont...... ,1.34.3 08.2 178.0
slalom Wins are credited Williams A. Tesdale, UBC. 1.34.7 88.0   —
and Fischer. Ross Williams won the J- Frazee, UBC    1.36.7. 96.9 102.9
Arnold. Lund downhill in Oregon H. Stevenson, WU 1.37.6 ,96.4.183.0
and the Banff «iant slalom, whileU Fortal, WSC .1.39.9 05-2.191.5
the-fifth   National  downhill • was B. Talbott, WU ..... H3.0 93.0 180.6
taken by Alan Fischer, competing'J. Livers, Mont.- ..1.44.8 92.5 100.1
with an Olympic team. He also holds C, Livers, Mont, .,1.47.1. 91.2,189.2
the Kandahar'event of CaliforniajD. Fraser. UBC...... 1.48,6 00.4184.1.
last year.       "' ' Ole Lie, WU .......... 1:49;0 90.2 185.0
El0ht..n-ye«r:-old AllenVFIsher B- Berg WSC  1.56.0 85.8   -
.-■ of the Red  Mountain Ski Club, £ $£%**£&. r M" 2H X™'2
,who Friday raced over the gruel- ?• S'fL. J?M S?S ^B
ling ilx^mlle cross-country course J-H™d=™n,WSq 2.12.7. 77.2,169.5
In 3941 ^minutes, equalled Satur-LB.,„£,•msan    i«dinnn  —'
. day the former record for down- G;Mer^,RMSC-1.35.6 100.0  -
hill on Red Mountain with a time fc0IS?2P^^Qf80-||o? S'J JlS5
. of  1^8.1.   Fisher',  crou-country £ £^f ^SC 1.38.1 »8-'-"W.
wtP,iK?.dDr«VmG4oU03 mL^tS g- 55ST''--:»5'» W,V
take the  Universityl.e6mpetltlonj"•RJj^enae,
honors v'.--_ ^ ...        ^.Alexander';""
Rossland skiers entered the events    RMSC	
for experience, not In competition, jj power, WU ..
They weVe listed .witK the'secimd-ij. Youniei WU
stringers of VS.C. and University b, Birigs, WV
of Washington-as Class B entries.
entries. \.'
George^ Merry of Red llountaln
and Lorne Calder of U.B.C. topped
Class B with 1.35.6 and. 1.36.7, respectively. Calder, a former Trail-
ite, learned his skiing, on the Rossland slopes*
Standings are: .
A TEAMff •     '
University of B.C  199.82
University ot Washington ... 197.94
Montana State ;;... 195,45
Washington State College  187.25
B TEAMS
.1.46,?  94.5   -
1.47.9 03.6 188.8
1.48.8 93.1174.7
1.49.9 92.6 184.3
1.50.0 92.5 189.2
W. Roots, UBC ... 1.59.5   87.5 182.3;
R. Clendenln, WU 2.03.6   85.4 173.9
R. McKay, UBC 2.21.7   75.9.166.6
N. Welsh, WU &...« 3.24.9   74.2 150.1
LiiDouglas, RMSC   —     —     —
FORERUNNERS
Geno Dyson ............ 1.43.2
C. Stinson ^ 1.44.7
C, Jones -., 1.59.1'
Bud Fulton  ;.... 1.56.4      \ '-.,-"
J. TopUff ;  1.56.6
Gene Brady 2.01;8 ■
Mortlnson :........ 2.15.4
*—Fourway coiribined cumulative
points. ',-.■•'-'■•   ■' '    :
AfWesit Shivers,
j^w York Sees
Mercury Reach 60s
.By The Canadian Press
Canada ahd the United States
have presented a surprising con;
trait Ih weather conditions for the
past few days. In Eastern, Canada,
weather has. been balmy—almost
Spring-like.,And. In   the   West,
some.of the coldest weather In 12
years has left everyone shivering.!
■ „P'ut unless, soipe balmy weather:
invades the West coast, everyone's"
going to be in the same boat.soon.
The:weatherhiah said Syiiday:.'tnaV
cold weather;how is rhovlng up to
cover Eastern Canada.
-So far as present conditions are
concerned,   however,   a   Canadian
Press Survey shows that,, for in-
stance, the St. Lawrence River is
still open to the sea. from Montreal
—for the first time in years at this
season. Hundreds of Quebec snow
shovellers are out of. work because
of theUack; of the white'.stuff..
In. Toronto, the last eight days
have been about seven degrees
above the average temperature • of
this season. .      ;
And'-'Varicouver, is reporting the
coldest Winter In 12 years. Meantime, the; hew. cold wave has already Invaded the plains states and
the Middle West. Federal, forecasters
In Washington have put out special
cold wave warnings for Ohio, Western Pennsylvania; West Virginia
and Kentucky,
TEMPERATURES 8KID
After the i-eeent mild spell, the
temperature dipped to between 10
and 20 degrees below zero this
morning in Montana, the Dakotas,
Northern .Wyoming anil Western
and- Northern Minnesota, During
the day, the. cold wave, accompanied by snow flurries; is spreading
over Iowa, Wisconsin and Northern
Missouri.
. Ohio, .Western Pennsylvania and
West Virginia are warned to pre^
pare for a drop to between 10 to 15
above.tonight, while Kentucky can
expect a low. between 15 and 20
above,- i
CA8E OF 80N8TROKE
'-;'It was anything but-cold!.inx the
Eastern-' United States Saturday.
The mercury climbed up tothe six-;
ties tn the New York area. And a
case of sunstroke waa .reported in
Canaan, Connecticut, a j cbmmuhity;
Whijh 'Was gripped by sub-zero,,
temperatures a. few weeks back.. '
Another freeze is forecast -iri.
Southern California.. The Weather
Bureau is not certain, but has indicated that it' may'be almost as sev-':
ere as the cold wave which hit
.the region last week. That ,was, Cal-'
Ifornla's worst'freeze In 35 years;
and caused; $25,000,000 In' damage,
to the State's;, fruit and vegetable
crop.^_'.     ;, >'
The hew snow .storm continues
in the Great Plains States, but- the
snovv apparently is lighter than, the
gigantic blizzard which paralyzed
much of. that section'of the country;
most of-last'week.: The snow Is ex-;
pected.to be'followed by a-sharp;
dip in temperature.with Wyoming'
expecting a low of between 30 ahd:
40 below; zero. Traffic in parts of
North- Dakota) was tied up by the
new storm -last; night. The 'snow
there was accompanied by 35 miles
an hopr winds.',(." '..
Vera Chown Heads
Legion W. A.
At Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, B.C.— Report for
1948 at the'anniial meeting of the;
Women's Auxiliary to the Canadian;
Legion showed peak memberships,
the Kighest recorded! returns !frpm.'
Its sponsorship of Poppy pay, active
participation in community affairs,
and: assistance, td a; number of Legion-projects.-
Vera Chown was elected President wMh Vice-Presidents Mrs. Fred'v
Large and Mrs. Bruce Smith; Sec:
retary-Trea'surer,  Mrs. J.  George;
Sergeant-at-Arms; Mrs. A. 'J. Corij,.;
roy; Executive Members, Mrs. EIr j
Jlott Dale, Mrs. H. Lunri, Mrs. James,;
Vlgers and Mrs. Robert Knight and
social convener Mrs. Reg Watson.   .
Would Ask $10,000,000 a Year
From Ollawa for Amateur Sport
By JACK SULLIVAN
•   Canadian Press 8taff Writer
i ,    OTTAWA (fcfl) — Recommendation  that the  Dominion   Government   appropriate   $10,000,000
during the next three fiscal years
for provision of facilities for amateur sport In Canada was made
here Saturday by representatives
of sports-governing bodies.
■ "An additional $300,000 a year for
organization    and    development,
coaching and other expenses also
-was suggested.
^-Delegates to the Sports Congress,
called by the National Council on
Physical Fitness, approved the. recommendations bdt their decision is
not binding and the executive of all
sports-governing bodies In the Do
minion must.be asked their views
before the Government Is.approached;
J. H. Ross of, Calgary,' acting
Chairman of the soprts gathering,
said his department would send detailed reports to all national sports'
organizations.  . ..'..-
'.'Some.may not wish to ask the
Government for money for political
or other reasons and they are at
liberty.tb reject or accept the recommendations."
"In any event the majority rules,"
he added.  - ■"  , "   .
,  The   "mdney"   recommendations
were opposed by Clarence Camp
bell of Montreal, President of the
National • Hockey League, and;
George Dudley of .Midland, Ont,
Secretary-Manager of the Canadian
Amateur Hockejr Association.
DANGER SEEN
Campbell stressed he spoke "only
as an individual,' and not in myj
capacity as a hockey official" arid
declared it was "extremely dangerous in taking funds from the public
treasury." He ;said the ^'voluntary
effort" made by Individuals iri-sport
"disappears - when  the  taxpayer's
dollar is put; into it" and'warned
"this will happen."   ::  ;;-''.
Dudley'intended the recommendation dealing with the "$300,000
asking that-.any mention of the
money being spent on "organization andtdevelopment'' of amateur
sport be deleted, "As a matter of
principle I feel It Is a mistake for
•ports-governing bodies to be subsidized by the fiovernment. It Is
only Inevitable that the Government will decide to have some say
In the policy as they are paying
for It."        ,--.   '.'.'.
The meeting, approved a recommendation asking that a Canadian
Sports Advisory Council be established and'that the Fitness Council "annually sponsor a meeting" p!
the Council and "assume the expenses of one delegate from each
memb»r orgarii'jtion^."
Say Musi Keep
Older Workers
In Production
WINNIPEG (CP)-Canadiah employers and union organizations
must face the fact that-older^wOrk-
ers must be kept productively employed, *he Pubic Welfare Division
of the Canadian Welfare Council
jrasvtold Saturday.
\Otherwlse, said Professor J; S.
Morgan of, the University of -Toronto's School of Social Work; the
cost of maintaining older . persons
in non-productive retirement niay
well prove a serious, burden on Industry and workers alike.
In presenting a report, on. behalf
of a Committee on Needs of the
Aged, Prof. Morgan said these re-
ouirements (nust be viewed against
tjie needs of. all Canadians for a
minimum, standard of decent'living.
Earlier,' B., W.^Hetse,; Ontario's
Deputy Minister of public.Welfare,
said the placement of dependent and
neglected, .children in-foster homes
was; a principle of welfare work effective ecrosS the country... .-
: But, Mr. Helse said, no Such prln-
ilple hadbeen established lh caring
for (he aged. Barring some such
stimulus as immigration, the pro-
portion of aged persons In the population would continue to increase
in light, of the declining birth rate.
This: raised , the question of the
standard, at which the declining
working' percentage of the population could maintain itself and an
increasing group of dependents—a
VAST QUANTITY»
OF NARCOTICS
SEIZED IN N.Y.     ;
NEW/YORK, (AP)—A vast qiian.
tity of smuggled narcotics has been
turned up here, in two separate ac>.
tions by authorities. One-'sjilpment
was called'the largest slncj pre'
war days.  '■ . .     '     ,
The name of ChSrles (LuckyjrLu
clano, former New York underworld
kingpin, was linked by investigators to both cases.
The largest cache was some $800,
000  worth  of heroin  and  opium,
found' by  customs, agents,. Friday;
aboard the French freighter Bastia.
Friday night,; detectives also arrested two men identified as Ralph
Ei Jlmlnez, v/ealthy 48-year-old importer, and Roger >S. Blasque,. 38,
an elevator operator. They were
picked up outside a mid town hotel,
and charged with narcotics pbsses-
slon. About, $80,000 worth of cocaine
Was jieized.; ■      .
Luciano was, deported to Italy
Feb: 10; 1946,'after. Governor Thomas E. Dewey of. New York commuted a prison' sentence imposed far
compulsory, prostitution. *   . ■"■'-,'■'•■:
question which must be answered,
Mr. Helse, emphasizing he was expressing his personal views, said
that even if. welfare authorities
agreed upon principles with which
to; meet these difficulties, they
would find '"lh short order" they
were handicapped- because of lack
of research facilities,
From E. W. Griffith, Deputy Minister of Welfare for British'Columbia, came a plea for the avoidance
of anythiifg smacking of the dole In
dealing with unemployed.
1*
^LCGME
ScottishCuriefs
•..'..-•-■ from The
The Mayor, TVldennett
. '     •'-"'   '- - .    and.   ' .;   ,       J      'J
Citizens pi Nelson    3
■ ^qyJypursyisit;to. our istlfy;;b!?;va|i..>;.eyg@tj
»fhat will leave you with' many, many
fond memories - memories that you will
cherish when you look back upon your
trip-across the "Pond".
CUNARD WHITE  STAR
B^p^^^^psgr;
-   „
If
■
PASSENGER SAILINGS CANADA TO EUROPE
TO CIVERPOOL
Jah.,29
■Feb. 11
Mac 18
TO SOUTHAMPTON
, Jan. 21   .„
' TO'LONDON
-     Feb. 26
Apr.  2
'    '   Apr; 16,
DONALD80N ATLANTrO LINEr
TO GLA8GQW    .     '
LISMORIA Feb,   5 from St. John
LI8MORIA ,- Mar. 16
LISMORIA Apr.20
'.  ■:,-:,  ONE WAY RATE8 OK PA88AGE
— One Class $176. ".-
— One Class from $200.
ASCANIA '                      — Tourist. $140". - 1st Class from $210.
AQUITANIA   '                 — Tourist $160.   1st Class from $220.
* ' .v,'''.'. REGULAR 8AILIMG8 FROM.NEW YORK .
QUEEN ELIZABETH MAURETANlA Q"UEEN MARY
PARTHIA        BRITANNIC   .    CARONIA (New)       .MEDIA
"See your local agent  No one can serve'you better"
CUNARD DONALDSON LIMITED
626 West Pender St., Vancouver, B.C.!
8CYTHIA
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from Halifax
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14 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MN. 10, 1949
t.'     ,.■ i -
an<i District
The Touring Members
of the
Royal Caledonian G^        Assn*
W e in Nelson Are Proud Thai Ours Is One of the
'■■.:■..'■   ■   ' ." ''.',"'      ,.■ '•     -'.^---j.-s .   •■ .''■.'•        ''?' ';'  ■'■''; ;'.". ' ■ ■■ V..-.   ,,-.!  - .   ■■■   '-"
■Feu; Cities in Canada and the United States That Will
lie Honored by Your Visit We^ Feel That You not Only
Come to Us as Members of Your World Famous Association
\but Also as Ambassadors of^ood Witt From Our Mother
Country ,,. We Tritsi That Y0i Will Enjoy Your Visit
to Our District —.'. That You Will Enjoy the Curling
Facilities q\ Our Civic Centre:■;."—-and That You Will
Carry Away With You Many, Many Pleasant Memories
of Your Visit to the Kootenays.
ThkMessageof Welcome Is Made Possible by the Following Nelson Firms:
JONELLA CLEANERS
J. C.MUIR
FINNING TRACTOR & EQUIPMENT CO.
TOWLER FUEL & TRANSFER
EMPIRE CLEANERS
.BILL DEFOE'S SUPER SERVICE
STANDARD CAFE
MeKAY & STRETTON LTD.
WELLS SERVICE SHOP
"NELSON ELECTRIC CO.
ROYAL HOTEL
RENWICK'S PORTRAIT STUDIO*!
FAIRWAY MEAT MARKET
DILL'S SERVICE STATION
NELSON HARDWARE & AUTOMOTIVE
SALLY SHOP LTD.
Mc & Me (NELSON) LTD.     .
." HUME HOTEL
W. W. POWELL CO. LTD.
R. ANDREW & CO.
STAR GROCERY
CITY DRUG & STATIONERY CO.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS ,
NEW STAR CAFE -
COVENTRYS'
BRADLEY'S MEAT MARKET
GILKER'SLTD.
WOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE CO. LTD.
i    DEE'S LADIES' APPAREL   ':
CLUBCAPl
■'■"\   • JMITH ELECTRIC
GOLDEN GATE CAFE ;
yNHWtoN TRANSFER CO, LTD.
MILADY'S PASHION SHOPPE
THE SMEDLEY GARAGE CO.
NEW GRAND HOTEL CO.
ALF'S LUNCH COUNTER
OCCIDENTAL HOTEL
/   LITEHOUSEINN
THE BOWLADROME
SAVOY HOTEL       I
BEACON MOTORS
BURNS LUMBER & COAL CO. LTD.
BUTCHERTERIA
FLEURY'S PHARMACY
EMORY'S
CUTHBERTS
WEST TRANSFER
T. H. WATERS CO. LTD.
NEWS PUBLISHING CO. LTD.
 30
"It Pays To Buy Quality"
Scott-McHale
OXFORDS
NEWPRICES
JUST ARRIVED
A blucher cut with rubber
Keel'and ndrrowishank, All
sizes' In-B and D, widths
Old Price .__..__ $15.50
Hew Price _ $13.50
R; ANDREW
: > &CQ.
Leaders in Foot fashion-
':        Established 1904    .   }■'
Nelson Social
ALLURINGLY YOURS
Style, Distinction and Flnese is
yours when your hair is styled
by us.,You will be CONFIDENT
ACTON'S,
.     BEAUTY PARLOUR
• Mrs. Ella Roselsnd, sister-in-
law of Mrs. J. E. Bennett, 023 Gordon Road, has left to spend a few
weeks in Seattle at the home ot her
daughter.
•' Harold Mayo,; who' spent the
Christmas Vacation at the home ot
his parents, Mr, and Mrs. -Guy Mayo
Mill Street, has returned to Vancouver where he attends.U..B.C.
• Mr. and Mrs. Gunnar Gunn-
laugson have arrived from North
Battleford and have gone to Long-
beach ; where Mrs.. Gunnlaugson's
parents, Mr, and Mrs. George Ward,
reside. ,. .'■ ■ ■;■
j Constable Frank Fornelll pf
Courtenay, was.a recent guest at the
home o! his mother,-,Mrs. O...For-
nelli, Second Street, -.',
• Ralph Wolverton'ot Christina
Lakfe recently visited Mr. and'Mrs,
Gordon Haskell, Mill Street, also
his brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
.;•;. By Mrs. M. J. Viknaux
and Mrs. C. Creed Johnson at Bon
nington.
'• Mrs. E. *A. Marin made I
charming tea" hostess last Wednesday when she entertained a number
of friends at her home' on Sixth
Street The'tea table, covered with,
a lace cloth was centeredby yellow
'mums and red lighted tapers, was
presided.over-'.by-Mrs; L. Walsh!
while serviteurs included Mrs. Cecil W. Hamsderi and Mrs. F. 'H.
Smith, Other guests attending were
Mrs. J. Waldie, Mrs. Donald Mac-
kle and Mrs, George Gill.. ' '• ; ■
. • Mrs. A. Barclay, her son-in-
law arid daughter, Mr. arid Mrs. E.
Murdoch and son Neil .of Trail, we're
New Year!s guests of Mrs; Barclay's
son-in-law and daughter.; Mr. and
Mrs.,'; Gordon Haskell. ..
•.', Mrs. C. Gay, bf.Creston was a
weekend visitor of Mrs; Joe'Nedelec
67,:HighStreet ' '   ..'.'-.*■      •-.,.;
•;-.:   By HERiyiAN N. Bu^KEN,,M|>i
Consideration' of Others; Shoyvn ';
By Attempt to Write Legibly
LARGE SIZES
^  in Dresses
We Cater to the Larger Sizes.
MILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE
"|»t»tt»»ttfWfWlfW>WWt
Flannel and Corduroy '"
JACKETS  ... '
$9.95 to $16.95 :- ,
Fashion First Ltd.
im,m,miemmememskm^mm,mmmm£im».
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
\   "BUILD B,C. PAYROLLS
TRY
PACIFIC
Milk;
^fODAY
•'Grearhy - rich Pacific Milk
.can; be used in so many
-tempting ways . . . in your,
cooking or as ar beverage
ywti'll find it economical and
, convenient.   v
Pkcific Milk
Irradiated and Vacuum Packed
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
We have all seen coolrs best de
scribed by trie'word '''depressing,"
but few of us would believe, that
working in surroundings where
such colors, predominate could result not pnly. in reduced efficiency
but actual physical sickness.
And yet, this' may very well be
true. Dr. Paul Seagers of Indiana
University is convinced of it, finding in- our poor use of color in our
homes, offices, and factories a clue,
to much of the Irritability, depression and slackness attributed by
many to the presence of modern
living.
He believes that our emotions ah,d
mental health are affected by colors
to the same extent as by sounds arid
.odors, and that, this emotional disturbance may be reflected In suchh
physical symptoms as headache and
nausea.'
RELAXING COLORS
And if certain colors can do
harm, others can help. High-strung,
emotional people, for example;
should work and live in rooms in
which tlie colors, are relaxing, while
people who tend to be depressed
should frequent rooms in which
the. colors are light and stimulating. ,
For example, In most business offices, the filing cases are dark
green, the desks are dark brown,
and the Wall 'are a dark color. It
would be better to have a light-colored furniture arid light-colored
furniture and light-colored paint.
In school rooms;' lt has been
found that changes along this line
have produced amazing improvement in the work of both teachers
and pupils, '      .
.Not only must colors be consul
ered, but also lighting. Of course,
all places where peopje work and
live must be well lit, with not too
much glare. Experiments' have been
carried out to indicate that blue or
white light do not stimulate muscular activity. Green; yellow, and
orange increase it to some- extent,
and red light is particularly effective. These colors seem to have an
invigorating effect, both mentally
and physically.;
-Blue and green colors are recommended for reception rooms; waiting rooms, and executive offices. In
a room where a great deal of work
is carried,out, warmer peach colors,
red, and cream color may better be
employed. ,   ';':": '-. '■
Of course, things w.hlch affect
the mental and emotional health
also have an effect on the physical
health, Thus, it -would appear important from the standpoint ot well-
being arid efficiency that some attention be given to this matter of
color and lighting.
F.LU .T'E'-.'.-'L E S SON- — Eunice Podia gets fljile lesson from
Lamar Strlngfleld, conductor of■ Charlotte, N. C-Symphony Orchestra with which she appeared as piano soloist. He rilade flute.
lor'PareiitS'
By GABRY CtEVELANDMYERS. PhJ).
College Students Qfteh Centre   V
.Of Attraction While Absent
Mo-vie .Gossip--
Your information for the Asking;
Bob Thomas Begins Fifth Year pn Beat
.       By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Hello, out
there! Anybody want to read my
memoirs?
Nobody ever asks me to write
about myself, but this would be a
good day for it,' since .it marks the
beginning of my fifth year on the
Hollywood beat.
I "had hoped that someone would
write in and ask, "Do you get tired
interviewing movie stars?" I would
answer yes, I do. Any work, even
wine-sipping, can get' tiresome.
Interview "angles" can get scarce
and stars can get dull. But- the
movies are a fascinating business,
and something' always turns up.
If anybody asked me, I could tell
them that interviewing Ring Crosby
is like pulling teeth and Interviewing June Allyson Is like two weeks'
If you're subject to over-acidity, never be without Rennles.
Carry a few of these individually-wrapped tablets in your
pocket or handbag. They're simple to take (just like candy)
and quick in action. Take one—then another, and right away
they help relieve the pain and distress and you feel more like
yourself again! Keep Rennles handy at all times—they're
grand for heartburn and sour stomach 'caused by "too much
party",. If Rennles don't relieve your add indigestion, it's high,
time you saw' your doctor. 25c and 75c—all drugstores.
vacation' with pay.    ,:'<-.; r .
How, i got the brush-off from
Hedy Lamarr who told me through
a flunky that-she was too tired to
talk any more. How I got whipped
6-0, 6-0 in a tennis match with
Jinx Falkenburg. How I did a story
on a campaign tour of tile night
club with' Maria, Montez. And
kissed June Haver just to, report
what it was like.
I could report on how well I
know i the stars, except that Gary
Cooper and Irene Dunne sometimes
call me' Danny, which is not my
name. .:'.-..
Wouldn't you suppose that somebody would- be interested Iri the
fact that I discovered Robert
Mitchum when he did a bit in "30
Seconds Over Tokyo"? (Look at
him now!)
All this information could have
been yours for the asking.
FRUITVALE P.T.A.
CONVENERS
LEARN DUTIES
FRUITVALE, B.C. — A meeting
of the Past Executive and the new
Executive df the Fruitvale Parent-
Teacher Association was held on
Thursday evening in the Teachers'
rest-room of the Fruitvale school
with' Mrs.', N. Moller , and Mrs,
Peitjsche as co-hostesses. With help
of the old executive, President Mrs.
Veitch, outlined fo the new members
the; duties of the many conveners,
Who are as follows for 1048:    . i.
Fine Arts—Mrs. Rozella Webster.
Publicity—Mrs. W. Partridge.
Hospitality—Mrs. F. Cole.
Memebrship—Mrs. H. Vyse.
School Lunch—Mrs. R. Oregolre.
Community Standards, and Youth
Welfare—Mrs. A. Endersby.
Sunshine and Historian — Miss
Irene Irwin.
Program—Mrs. N. Moller.
. Literature Librarian — Mrs. H.
Biyley; •„   . ;.•'   '
Ways and .; Means—Mrs;•; W. V.
Graves,    -i   ■'.'.'
World Understanding — Mrs. E.
Peitzsche.       '-.-.'>    -
It was-decided that study class
and handicrafts would betaken at
Executive meetings and any outsider .wishing to take advantage of
study group and handicrafts would
be Invited to attend.       ',..
Those present were Mrs. Walter
Veitch, Mrs. D. K. Knowle'r, Mrs.
Leon Simmons, Mrs. Fred Cole,
Miss Irene Irwin, Mrs. Nels Moller,
Miss Mary McLaughlin, Mrs. Mtb>
ray Wilson; Mrs.'Rozella Webster,
Mrs. H. Bayley, Mrs. William Partridge, Mrs. Ralph Gregoire, Mrs.
Horace Vyse, Mrs. Lillian Peitzsche;
'Mrs,. -Alfred Endersby,.: Mrs. W.
Graves and Lillian Peltzschl.
Fruitvale Group
Talks Incorporation
FRUITVALE, B.C. — The annual
meeting of the Fruitvale Ratepayers Association Was held on Thursday in Institute Hall but because
too few were present, business could
not be conducted. Those present discussed some phases of incorporation, Mrs. Harrett answering many
questions put to her by those present.
HOME DINNER
Hurry-Up Vegetable Gumbo
; Cornmeal' Fritters
Southern Pilau Tossed Green Salad
Apple' Meringue Puff   ",'
Coffee or-Tea , Milk (Children)
All measurements are
All Measurements Are Level
Recipes, Serve Four
HURRY-UP VEGETABLE GUMBO
Combine 1 can condensed vegetable' soup and. 1 can condensed
chicken gumbo soup with 2 cans
boiling water. Simmer 3 minutes.
Serve in bowls, with grated cheese
and small cornmeal fritters.
CORNMEAL FRITTERS
Mix together.1, cup enriched yellow cornmeal, % teaspoon salt, 1
cup all-purpose flour and V/> tablespoons baiting powder. Beat 1 egg
light Add 2/3 cup milk and beat
Into the first mixture-to make a
stiff batter. Put enough vegetable
fat in a heavy frying pari to make
When a son or daughter goes off
to school or college,'something may
happen in'the behavior, arid' per:
sonelity of a.younger brother or sister who,stays home. In sorhe homes
the eldest child who had felt inferior arid insecure may blossom but
after jtolrig away from home to
school or, college, especially if this
older child makes good. The experience singles him out- arid attracts
considerable attention by thefanj-
lly and friends to him. He. knows
they talk well of him, while he is
away and he wins special attention
when'returning on vacation.   '.».
By comparison, the younger
brother or sister, even though he
felt, before the elder' left that he
had a more important family standing than the elder, may now feel
submerged. ;..-•'
. The same tipping of the family
scales, may occur when one; of two
children next: in age; enters the
armed forces, has a long siege of
illness or is disabled over a long
period; The well child may feel neglected in the attentions and affections of the family. Some years ago,
while on the faculty of Western He-
serve University, I, led a series of
forums for the Cleveland Welfare
Federation ,with parents of crippled and disabled children. I was
Impressed with, how much more
often these parents referred to behavior and personality problems in
the well child than in the crippled
or disabled brother or sister.
Therefore, if you have seen a
rather" sudden change in your son
or daughter, left at home; when ari
olderchild goes off to school or college or into the armed forces, oi
eyen.to a distant place;to work,
you might well suspect that such
factors as I have indicated are operating, The change may be indicated
in all sorts'of ways.'He may be less
cheerful or communicative In the
family circle. He may grow crabbed,
uncooperative, and stubborn, even
rebellious. He may lack zest
the direction in which he used
be very enthusiastic. He may be
less happy among his old pals. He
may lag at school. Indeed, he may
behave in all sorts of ways which
you dislike.' ■'-.'• -
JEALOU8Y NO LIMIT
Unless, you watch yourself, you
may remind him of his unfavorable
changes- and lecture him angrily
about them. You even may compare
him with the more acceptable broth'
er or sister. If you do either he
surely will grow /worse. Now jealV
ousy is not limited to the baby and
young child. It has no age limits.
But if you will use your imagination and.try to put yourself iri this
child's place, you will discover how
matters look to him and how he
feels about them'. You will see him
as a Buttering person instead of an
ornery child. Then you will proceed to find ways to build up this
suffering son and to make him feel
more worth while as a person and
member of the family.
'       By IDA BAILEY, ALLEN
a depth of 3", and heat until it will
brown a. bit of bread in I minute,
350 '.T.'' Drop the cornmeal mixture
in by; half tablespoonfuls and fry
until, golden brown; allow from 3
to 4 minutes. Drain on crumpled
absorbent paper. Serve, hot; '
SOUTHERN PILAU
' This is always made with a .basis
of bacon, rice and tomato, to which
is added leftover meat, fish or chick,
en. To prepare, dice 3 strips lean
bacon and, fry gently until golden
brown. Remove the bacon. To the
fat add 1 cup dry unwashed,, raw
rice, 1 peeled, medium-sized minced
onion, or 1 sector., crushed peeled
garlic. Slow-fry until both rice and
onion are straw-colored. Then add
2 cups juicy canned.tomato, Vt teaspoon salt and 2 cups soup stock, or
water containing 2 bouillon cubes,
Simmer until the rice is tender,
about 30 minutes. If the rice seems
a bit dry while cooking, add % cup
extra- liquid. Add 1% cups diced
chicken or leftover meat, of any
kind, or use shrimp, crab or any
Cbarse-flaked fish. Put an asbestos
mat under the saucepan and simmer
5 minutes longer. Transfer to
heated serving, bowl and sprinkle
the cooked bacon over the top.
APPLE MERINGUE. PUFF
Feel,.core and thick-slice 0 large
cooking apples. Add 1 cup sugar, 1
tablespoon butter or vegetable fat,
% cup water arid % teaspoon
cinnamon. Slow-boil until the apple
is tender.
w. point church
rename directors
Workers
WILLOW POINT, RC.-The Wo
men's? Auxiliary held its regular
and annual meeting in the Church
Room with President Mrs. B. Towri-
sherid in the chair and 12 Members
present.    ; .:
Secretary Mrs. H. Hankin read a
letter, from Rev.Tucker, England,
acknowledging a food parcel and
also a letter ot thanks for United
Gift Offering.
The altar flowers donated by two
members of the congregation Miss
C. Ross and J. Gilroy and a former
resident Mrs. R. Whitehead of Nelson were distributed among the sick
in Willow Point. -   -
Money donations were voted towards the'expenses of the room.
President Mrs. Townshend gave
a resume of the year's work,
Mrs. Hankin read the financial re
port.-. .
The election ot officers for the
coming year followed and resulted
in the 1048, Director's being reelected: ; Mi-S.v' Townshend, -President;
Miss C. Ross, Vice-President and
Mrs. Hankin Seeretary-Treasurer,
B, Townshend was renamed auditor.
Mrs. B. Heddle was tea hostess.
I T.. F I T S —: Actress Diana
Lynn'tries out at a Hollywood
pool the bathing suit she'll wear
L-^_y    to *' new Picture..   _-©_
Kootenay Valley Uairy
PASTEURIZED
MILK
IS SAFE FOR CHILDREN.A
New Denver
NEW DENVER, B. C. - The annual Christmas tree and party
sponsored by the Catholic Women's
League of St. Anthony's Church,
New Denver, when 17 children
arid their parents enjoyed various
games and contests held , in the
church hall. Mrs. J. McDonaugh en
tertained the small children with
games. The nicely decorated hall
with Its decorated Christmas tree
revealed cellephane bags' of ■ candy
left .by Santa Claus and distributed
to the young folks. Delicious re-
freshrhents were served. Mrs. Andrew. Schnaebele arid Mrs. J. McDonaugh were.in charge of all arrangements. .... ";! i
. Mrs. Harry T. Butler was a
charming hostess when she entertained in honor of her daughter,
Miss Sharon Butler's tenth birthday. Indoor games and; contests
were'enjoyed by the guests after
which supper was served. The table
Was-centred by a large decorated
birthday cake topped by, ten lighted
candles. The invited guests were
Ellen Berageh, June Stewart;-Dorothy kennett, Wawne Butler, Dennis .BUtler, Colleen Kennett, Sharon
Schnaebele, Evelyn Kennett,:arid
Linda. Kennett.
; Joseph Laiinderville of New Den-
veris a patient, in the Slocan Com'
munlty .Hospital.
' Quentln Broadfoot, who.was visiting his brother-in-law; arid sister,
Mr. and Mrs. James Forsythe, and
his nephews, Jljx. and' Mrs. Quentln A. Forsythe and Mary Phyllis
{or two days,'returned to Silverton,
Man; -'
Mrs, Vera R.! Kitchener,;returned
from the Yuletide holiday in Vancouver with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs.K.;Popbff.'.
; Miss Catherine A., Wilson of tHe
public school staff, returned after
yisiting in; Vancouver with her parent's, Mr. and Mrs; C. A. Wilson, and
sister,. Miss Mary Lois Wilson,
Mr. and Mrs. John Stokes spent
the holidays with the latter's mother and sister, Mrs. R. L, Reynolds
and Miss Gladys L. Reynolds, R.N.
J. Husby of Sandon is a patient
in the Slocan Community Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Les. R. Campbell
entertained at dinner when their
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Thring, Sr.,. arid son Bert Thr'ing
of Trail, Mrs. Mary- Tbrlng of Casr
tlegar; Mr. arid Mrs. Fred B. Fess-
man and son Terry, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter G. Thring and Donald
Campbell.
Miss Shirley. Bayrits and. her
brother, WatsOri Baynes, who were
visiting their sister,''Miss Doreen
Baynes, returned to Abbotsford.
- Miss Vivian RusseL who was the
guest of her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Cutler,
and daughter Fay, for a week, returned to her home in Slocan City.
Miss Elizabeth; Clifford spent a
few days in Nakusp with her father, Norman Clifford.'
Mr, and Mrs, Mark DuMorit and
two sons, Carl arid Paul, returned
to their home at Hunter's Siding
after spending the holidays with
their two sons-in-law arid, daughters; Mr. and Mrs, T. ,Wurz and
family, and Mr. arid Mrs;.G. Guldo
and family, in Keremeos,- and also
their son arid daughter-in-law, Mr.
arid Mrs...Robert DuMdnt at Pentlcton. : ■ "'■ ■■
Miss Nora Woods returned; after
spending the holidays In, Naramata
with her parents. :';■"";' ■
Rev arid Mrs'. Karl HariSerire!
turned from Trail where they were
visiting for a few days;
Norman Clifford of Nakusp spent
a few days at his home with his
mother ahd daughter.
Mr. and Mrs.: Mark DuMont ol
Hunter's Siding visited Mrs. Henry
Kelsall. '..-..-■       --.:;-,
Mrs. John Tcir, Mrs. Quentln
A. Forsythe, Mrs, John Taylor and
Miss Marjorie H. Butlin were vis-
itors in-Nakusp attending the ceremony of installation of the officer!
ot Martha Chapter No. 24, Order ot
the Eastern Star.;--
Queen's Bay ♦;. ♦
• QUEEN'S BAY, B.C. — Mr. .and
Mrs. Alec Attree left this, week
for Banff, Alta, where Mr. Attree
will enter hospital, for- treatment.
They intend stopping off in Calgary
for a week, to; visit friends.
Mlsa M. Porteous of Nelson spent
the Christmas holidays with her
parents.,
Richard Attree, MA;, has returned to Princeton, University, NJ.,
USA, after spending two weeks
holiday with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. E, F. Phillips and
baby, Anne, of Nelson, fpent the
Christmas and' New Year holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Hirst, Mrs.
Phillips and Anne spending a couple of weeks here,
LONDON'(CR). - The P. and O.
liner Orcades which cost £0,260,000
($13,000,000) recently made its maiden voyage to Australia; The Orcades
Is the largest ship ever built for the,
Australian run. ..
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JAN. 10, 1949 — 5
MRS. E.BOREN
HEADS FRUITVALE
CHURCH GROUP
FRUITVALE, B.C. — The annual
meeting of the Women's Association
of St. Paul's United Cnurch was
held on Tuesday evening with 13
members present. President Mrs.
Veitch opened the meeting with a
short devotional period.
The circles arid special committees gave their reports tor the year.
Treasurer's report revealed that
$110 had been raised for Church
Building Fund by the Talent Method. .-'., ■ .-.; '-..; ,
; Rev. Mr, More- corhpliiriented the
ladies on their achievements during
the year, also the step taken to join
the .two ladles' groups. W. A work
played a vital party in life at
church and Its success depended on
unity kindliness, he said. '
; From nominations submitted by
the Nominations: Committee of Mrs.
Graham, and-Mrs. Duncan, the following officers - were j.elepted' for
1040: Horiorary President; Mrs. W.
More; President;: .Mrs. -E.y Boren;
Vice-president Mrs. W; Duttcari; Sec-
retary-TTreasuer, Miss ,T.,Ffey.
The remaining three directors are
to be; selected by the-three circles,
one trow each, circle. ,'     ,
The remainder of the meeting was
conducted -by the new President,
Mrs.'Boreni   -,;:, ;  \
The W. A. reconsidered _lts de
cislon to cater to the A.O.T.B. Club
and- Circle 3 will have charge of
January supper.
-A social hour was enjoyed by
the members, tea being served by
Mrs. Graham, Mrs, Crawford and
Mrs. Dilllng..
Those present were Miss Eileen
Endersby, Mrs; Alfred Endersby,
Mrs. -W. More,' Mrs. Alfred Dffling,
Mrs. Walter Duncan; Mrs. E. Skinner, Mrs. E. Boren, Mrs. W. Wilson;
Miss Tilly Frey, Mrs. Dennis Miller,
Mrs. C. Crawford, Mrs. Alex Graham, Mrs. Water Veitch, Mrs. Fred
Peitzsche and Rev. W. More.
Balfour **.
BALFOUR, B.C.-For the third
time in succession the first Church
Guild meeting of the new year was
held at the home of Mrs. J. Riehl.
Sewing material was given the
members to" make articles lor the
Summer sale. Special New Year's
refreshments made the social' hour
quite festive. The hostess was, assisted by Mrs. M. M. Willwood,-.
. Mr. and, Mrs.';J. BowleSYand children were guests of-Mr, and'Mrs;
Russell Bowles ot Trail for the New
Year weekend. ,''.:
Miss J. Lahmer returned after
spending the holiday at her home
in Victoria.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Suitor and chil
dreri spent the holiday with rehv
Uons in Blackley, Ont.jj.
Miss Florence MacDonald who
attends school in Nelson, spent the
holiday with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. MacDonald. ' ,
. E. A. MacGuiltvary returried to
Fruitvale after spending the holiday
af his home,
Mrs. B. Breeze and daughter of
Nelson spent;New.Years here the
guest of Mr, and Mrs. W; H. Saunders.
; Capt, Walter Weston ol Vancouver spent New Years at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. C. MacGuillvray.
A., Anderson returned to Nelson
after spending the holiday at his
home.    . . i "''.'.''.- '.' ,
N. MacTadgen of High Prairie,
Sask, Is spending the Winter here^
guest bf his sister, Mrs. W- MacKay.
Miss. Marge Henderson of Nelson
was the,guest of Mr. and Mrs. J.
MacDondld lor New Years.
Freeman furniture Ccf.
PHONE 115 — NELSON, B.C.
The House of Furinture Values;
Your$$$ Buy More at Freeman's
BUY*
ON OUR
BUDGET PLAN
10%' DOWN
10 MONTHS TO PAY
The;Classified-Phone;Number Is 144
}F"It dries »o quick.
lyl    Redecoraa
.ting walls and cell*
ings u«ed to mean -
upietting the whole houio
for ages ... until I tried .
QUI CK.,DRYING
Monaiesl. Now I ean apply.
Monaaeal knowing it will;
dry In a lew hours—so
clean and frosh—no linger* -
Ing odor, WASHABLE
toe, that's why I always
use Monaaeal and recom. .
mend It to my frlenda."
,—From a 1948 survey.
Monaseal Distributors for
East and West Kootenaya
tuvujtkiiw got Ik (RuMa '
Phone 1180
602. Baker St.
I SEE A BRIGHT FUTURE,
IF YOU KEEP THE-
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TIME-TESTED — Over 300,000,000
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Give yourself a fresh start to a
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discover what it is to have that famous "Kruschen Feeling". 25c and
75c at all drug stores.
ARTHRITIC
RHEUMATIC PAINS
■  ,*tj '
If you are suffering the agony of
tortured limbs and the strain that
goes with it... read - „, -p
Mr. Clark obtained much needed
welcome relief with Lantigen "C".
Don't you delay—obtain real relief
with Lantigen "C" Dissolved Oral Vaccine...
get a bottle today.
«-; 163 ftlbldp St .
fft\f rotorboro. tfntftric
UntlRan Uborstorioo Ltd.,
1! lilctanond St. East.
Toronto. Ontario.
Oaar Sirs:
Uy husband, haa boon a nufforor of
Arthrltta for about 10 yoni-3 and about
18 oontho ago atnrtod to toko Untlgon
Ho haa taken nix bottloo And baa found
groat rollof. Tha pain.waa aostly in
hla fool and ho walked vory badly, but
now ho walko nuch bottor and tho polo
18 alooat goao fron hla foot, which
ahowa Untlion helpad a Lot
'Ho has slept batter alnoo taking
LMrflCEN.
'■ Mu./. CU),   .
MNII0M UIOMTOItllS
1IMITED
11 lltaiaml Sliest East
Toronto 1
LANTIGEN C
•: *"■
JtwalfML
li mi  i
ll^y^ll
 (i>i*rt :CqpH-
**™*i*Jt»'   ?Questions?
Establisheu April 22. 1802.
British Co(tttnbi9's    .■
Most/Interesting: Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday by the
I NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY,   LIMITED,
288 Baker St.,- Nelson. British Columbia
Authorized as Second Class Mail
Post Officio Department, Ottawa.
| MEMBER OP THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
r THE AUDIT BUREAU OF. CIRCULATIONS.
'      MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1949   -
Welcome, Scottish.Carters
jfe:''' The social, jriendly, honest man;
Whate'ef he be,
'Tis he fulfils great Nature's plan,
And none l?«f he,
'■.'"/ v-rRpberf Btmts. ,',.
-  Today Nelson arid' Trail''^re' hosts to
.members of the; Royal Caledonian Curling
Glub who have travelled ajl' the way from
'Scotland,on a goodwill tour in pursuance
'fitftheir beloved sport of curling. .
• Kootenay is ready to take the curlers to
;:its heart, .be.caUse'all IJootenay loves; a.
'Sportsman. Besides,; everyone has' a. warm
feeling for travellers-who have come" so far
in such a spirit of jovial goodwill.
): Welcome, good luck,_and good times to
"the Scottish curlers. - %' '.
,"HootAAon|"
I The Scots of the YRpyal Caledonian Curl-'
ing Club who visit Nelson and Trail Mon-
\ day and Tuesday would havemany a "Hoot"
ffifbr a boner which appeared in! Editor and-
Publisher, and for which the; newspaper- ■
Oman's, magazine was soundly ribbed by the
■Prince Albert Dally Herald, in ;the follow-
jjhg'editoriijlt
Newspaper workers are called upon often
'to write about subjects with which they are
' not familiar personally. They do what they
, can; therefore, to build up adequate refer-
j- ence resources, in an effort to avoid being
tripped unnecessarily by their ignorance,
;■'; much less flaunting it.
1 ■   Since this almost amounts to a general
1 rule, it comes as something of a surprise to
I find the trade, paper known as !'the riewspa-
;! perman's Bible", Editor and Publisher, pu}>
I lished at; New York, admitting ignorance in:
i a way which suggests being proud of it, in
the fbllowing passage: /        '.' .- - -'-.
•:,    "What, for 'eaven's sake, are 'curl-
i';.   ers'? Here's a piece from The-.Nelson
> ..;■ Daily News, up-in British Cijlumbia,
j '■ ' that brags that 'a distance equal to three
j     times'round the world, 81,396 miles, was
covered by curlers in round trips to,
1   Canada's  fourth  annual  Midsummer!
Bonspiel. at Nelson.' We gather it is a
:  sporting event of some kind,, but what
;J: ; kind? Thanks." .'   ,.-''■-.'. ' .
■ .. There is-no occasion for particular sur-
j prise if .;• sophisticated Gothamites lack
I knowledge of one of the favorite participa-
■ tion sports in Canada, several parts' of the
; Northern U. S.; and, elsewhere. But any
'.: newspaper worker deserves to 'be soundly
• spanked for preferring to exhibit his ignorance thus, rather than exert himself to
-the extent of going to the nearest diction-,
ary to lookup the word,     ,
l-.i;. However, since an implied call for help
: was included in the piece, apparently written for Editor and Publisher by T. S. Irvin,
.It may simplify his problem and avert undue strain on his laziness to have this, information: On page 647 of Webster's New International Dictionary (Merriam-V/ebster),
-Second Edition, there is a description of the
game of curling, a picture of a curling iron,
ahd a diagram of an end of a curling rink.
If this information is inadequate, almosttwo
; pages are given to the game by the Encyclopedia Britannica, Fourteenth' Edition, startling on page 876 of volume six,
Press Comment   ,
m'-, ',' '   ■;"■■(      ■'. ■ ■ i ',   -.
WA8TING THEIR TIME
Thousands of young people enrolled in colleges
and universities today have no business to be there,
and would serve both themselves and the institutions involved if they withdrew and gave up. all
thoughts of getting more education.
This Is the statement of the Dean of Men at the
University of Missouri, in a recent interview. Anyone who has ever bothered to look into the matter
will be Inclined to agree with him.    :
That, of course, does not mean that a college
education should be-withheld from., any ambitious
and deserving youngster. -What it does mean is that
thousands of youngsters are in college today simply
because they have a notion that it Is the correct thing
to do. They do not want to be educated; they are, in,
fact, not susceptible to an education. They simply
clog the wheels anil waste the efforts of the institution they attend. A sharp drop in college enrollment
i figures would probably be a very healthy Indication—Guelph Mercury. .,
VALUE OF COMPETITION
The United States Air Force tried 'for almost
three weeks tb get marooned filers off that Greenland ice cap. When the Uriited States Navy began to
interfere With rescue efforts, sending the aircraft
carrier Saipan into the area, the Air Force soon
lifted the men oft. Competition, even Jealousy, often
■produces results,—Windsor Star.. ';   -
Open to any reader. Names ot persons asking
questions will not be published.   There Is no
-charge lor this service. Questions WILL NOT BE
ANSWERED BY MAIL except when there Is   ,
■obvious necessity for prlvsoy.   , '
.',''',      .'-■■' '-' . >
E. T„ Sirdar—Regarding the request which appeared
in Thursday^' issue for the address of any firm
or individual who purchases homecraft eucn as
■ crochet or; needlework; vte have been informed-
that Alice's Wonderland,, 834 Josephine Street,
Nelson, is interested In such handmade items.
T. M., South Slocan-^Please tell me if there are 48
■ or ^9'States in >e Uiiltea States, and if the
Philippines^ are' irieludecl, /  :
There are 48 States In the United States of
America. On July 4, 1948;, t^is President proclaimed
the ..Philippines as. an independent Republic. Previously they were an "outside possession", similar
to Alaska, the Hawaiian Islands, Porto Rico, Guam,
Virgin Islands, etc., none of which are Included in
'the Union. ; -"•.;■.:••,.■•■:■■.,''
702 ^kiTiteers.Take
Readings i or
WeatKerm0;  ;
':■'■ TORONTO <CP)—The man who said, ''Everyone
talks about the weather, but no one does anything
about it," was not aware that thousands of persons
on this, Continent are doing sdmethlpg abbut weather
forecasting every day. In theUnited States and Canada there, are 8788 persons voluntarily helping, their
country's weather Bureaux collect data..
-In Canada;'there .are W2' volunteers who take
dally temperature; readings and read rain gauges; for
the Dominion Meteorological Office. Anyone cap
join their ranks, which" already include business.,
men, housewives, telegraphers and school teachers.
Andrew Thompson, Controller' of-the Meteorological Division of the'Department of Transport,
and'one' of North America's leading weather men;
says the Dominion Is behind other countries in the
organization of volunteers.for thle type of work.
The Controller said that Ontario, with 98 volun-'
teers, needs at least 100 more. Young people do not
seem anxious to take a part in'the work because'
they do not realise how .injportant it is,; ha ex-;
plained.'      •_      ■■   .'■',''       *,-...
- Unlike their British and American counterparts,
Canadian weather observers ire given their instruments fr?e, No mathematical oklll is required, liut-
. consistency is essential, as the readings.are pf no use.
to the Weather Office unless kept morning and night
without ..fall.''■',-".; ■
To measure rainfall, the volunteers are given a
gauge and a graduated glass. Two special1 thermometers are used to record temperature. Ordinary types
of thermometers are not'suitable, and may be as
much as four degrees out The thermometers register
maximum and minimum temperatures; Readings are
taken twice dally from the rain gauge and the temperature Instruments, and entered on a form supplied, by'the Meteorological "Service. '
MAILED MONTHLY    .
The forma are mailed once a month to the head
office of the'Service, a grey stone building on Bloor
Street in Toronto. ;      ''' \      ;     '. .'■ •
Information gleaned from the many reports Is
used'to make weather maps and show annual rain-,
fall and average temperatures for every part of
Canada. But weather men can also give specific information on a certain district to Individuals,
For instance^ a manufacturer of textiles could
tell if the'region had the right hqmldlty for f ?ac-
tory; ah, asthma sufferer would find a' dry spot; or
an engineer could check the rainfall at the site of a
dam to find if lt varied, from year to year,   ■
The gathering of detailed weather information
in Canada began in 1850, when school principals Were
ordered to keep a record of. temperatures and rainfall. Pioneer work in this field is credited to a science master of Toronto's Upper Canada College,
who took 'observations as early as 1830. ',','■
. Controller Thomson revealed that British, Columbia has more observers than any other Province
per capita. The reason: There are many persons of
English descent in the West Coast Province, and'
they take a greater interest than anyone else in the
-weather.   "   . '.  •'.
"They Inherit if," he said.
'    YOUR PET PEpLUM
The'. prettiest . two-jjiecer (bt. all!
Flattery in- every.'detail! There's a
swallowtail peplum for back-interest, scallops for feminine charm.
New modified-slim skirt!
Pattern 9301. comes in -sizes 14,
10, 18, 20; 32, 34, 36; 38, 40, 42. Size 16
takes 3% yards 30-inch.'
This easy-to-use pattern -gives' per:
feet fit, Complete,, illustrated Sew-
Chart shows ypu' every .step.
Looking Backward
"   v      10 YEARS AQO
From'Tlie Daily News'of J«n. 10, -1939' .  .
An octopus, measuring 10 feet from its- knife-
like beak to the tips of its eight vacuum-studded
tentacles was landed by Peter jorgerisen of Vancouver.-   * ."   ;■ ;»--       .
•Snow removal during the past two, weeks: was
one of the largest jobs for thePublic Works Department,according to the rejports pf Engineer Boyd C
■Affleck.   ;. '■'..,■",.!■..
';', In aid of their Association, graduate nurses held
-a shower at their Monday night meeting, held in
the Nurses* Home; and each membeif Drought a cup
and saucer. "*•'-'
' Mrs. H. Saare, Carbonate Street, has as her
guests her son-in-law .and daughter, Mr. and. Mrs,
D. L. Hings of Rossland and their young son.    •
.      . 25 YEAR8 AQO
S*.     From The Dally News of Jan. 10, 1924
A German scientist, Professor Harms of Ko-
naysberg, has attractedv much attention lh the scientific world over his victory In changing a rrtale tadpole into a' female tadpole. - /'.
S.S. Nasookin, big passenger steamer which will
take the  Kootenay Landing 'run'   tomorrow,  was
. launched today at 10 o'clock; • ;
Gay with Christmas decorations, softly shaded
.lights arid splendid music, the Drill .Hall was-the
scene of a very joyful gathering when the City
Firemen and friends gathered to celebrate the'closing of the .old year and the ushering in of the new
year.' ,  ;'-.       ■'.'■'.:"''•'■' ',",'
40 YEARS AGO   , ■;
.   From The Daily News of Jan. 10, 1909
The officers and members of the Rossland Lodge,
together with the officers and members of the-Trafl
. Lodge, Knjghts of Pythias, held a joint installation
of officers for the coming term at Rossland Friday
night. ... '  -"
The Creston Review announces the Lord and
Lady. Sholto, Douglas have left for a six weeks' trip
to the Coast arid Spokane. ', '
IS8S80O D
Him
; Mefe of the Day
RATES! 22o line, 27c line black face type; larger type rates-on
request Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment
Take Over As Secretary of Stale
eSiniiiiMiiiiipiiia
Ottoman Fine Cut, tt' lb. 95c, at
;.        VALENTINE'S. ■.
seamstress—Alterations and repairs. No. 12, Strathcona Hotel.
We repair all electrical appliances
at Beatty Service, Ph, 91. .K. Skilton.
Furniture repainted, varnished,
etc at moderate cost. Phone 131*..
Cardigans,  zipper  and   pullover
sweaters. '-.';       ■■"■ v •
JACK BOYO| MEN'S SHOP
Bring that valuable "timepiece to
COLLINSON'S for reliable .repairs
at moderate prices...
ELECTRICAL -i?6NT!}ACTIJIG
- Alterations;  New   Installations
R; C.-.Cattfln-     -      Phone. 389
EVERY  DAY  13 BARGAIN
'.'-'-   AT FAIRWAY.
>..v;:' PHONE 1177 AND 1178.
BAY
Old papers, 15b. bundle. Lay In
your .supply 'noW.j and cheat; Old
Man Winter. Nelson Dally News.
. Sprlngtllled mattresses as low. as
$15.00. Nelson Bedding', 550 Stanley
St Phone 1314. '
\NUk'
»hWvt\
."YOU CAN REDECORATE
Have brand new slip-covers ready
for Spring! These simple instructions show you thrifty short-cuts,
make .each step clear! -
-Step-by-step directions for making newest-style slip-covers! Instructions  661 has directions.'
Laura-Wheeler's Improved-pattern
makes needlework so simple with
its charts, photos, and concise directions. .
Send TVVENTY-FIVE CENTS In
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
for each pattern to Nelson Dally
News,. Pattern Dept, 266 Baker
Street, Nelson, B. C. Print plainly
PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRE88. -
CbmLdisL
By ROBERT QUILLEN
I'm.'sorry'fbr Sister Kate arid Joe,
They've got every dime they ever
made, and I reckon they're rich by
ndw,'but'they haven't,had a bit o'
fun in thirty years. :  -
SALLY'S SALLIES'
"Don't be surprised, Mother He's
just.trying to make'a good- impression:"    .
-Why'Aot give us a pall to'lncrease
your fire Insurance protection to-
day?-fe.' W.' APEWYA5D. ,''."
',-.'-. ,..< •.'' , 'i ,i i «-^—~' ",
. The new Du Fold self-wringing
sponge mop and waxer now available. Write L. 0, Tench, Creston,
B.C.:   ':.-.,''."■'•'■".";;;
JAN U A R Y CLEARANCE OF
ODD8 AND ENDS. COME IN AND
see us. '• ;-•
Mc and Mo (Nelson)
Those improvements to your
property—are. they coveted by insurance? If not see BLACKWOOD
AGENCY,today.  . '    '';    '
Winner of- our New Year's, baby
gift "($28;00, voucher),. .Mrs. Peter
Iwanuik,' Procter,'.. •"■'.'".
STERLING HOME FUPNISHJ5RS
Starting' Monday, Jan. 10th, my
office houra will be 10 to 12 a.m.
and 1:80 to-.8 p.m. — Dr. Wilhert
Brobk,- (Chiropractor), Phone' 98p.
For bbdy. and fender-.repairs see
us. first; Painting a specialty. Estimates given on.request.
CUTHBERT MOTORS LIMITED
Everything for the skjer. Wet arid
dry..-snow wax, "ski harness, sole,
protectors, ski plates,'etc-
HtppERsoN's  ;
RUBBER bOOR MATS -Alio
Rubber Stair Treads—from 60o to
$2.50..BURNS  LUMBER «  COAL
co." .'     ,.'-'". T" ''■'
H'nHllllliBBIIB
in, the   Hockey
Follow   hockey
Newa pn sale; at WAIT'S.
Attention' Kinsmen, meeting 6:15
sharp,' Tuesday, Hume Hotel
CLEARANPE 8ALE SPECIALS
Plain   white .sweat   shirts,-  long
SleVes,  fleece-lined,   Reg.  $1.95 . to
clear -at $1.45, at ',",  '.
-:.YTHe-CHIlipREN'8 SHOP
06D FELLbWS TAKE NOTICE
Rebekahs and Odd Fellows will
ho)d joint installation on Monday
Jan.. 10.  Lodge, opens '7:30 p.m.
Installation at,- 9, p.m.
Phone'num'ber 1 for expert Typewriter- on Adding Machine Repairs.
D.. W. McDer^y,. "The; Typewriter
and -Adding- Machine. Man";'•"564
Stanley Street...::.'yy'.-!- .,'
A HEARTY WELCOME
TO'ALL VISITING CURLERS
'   FROM THE MANAGEMENT   ,
■ -...AND STAFF OF":    -
-':.,/' PKBjLES MOTO(t$;
,: Pressure Cooker -parts.-Presto, National, Burpee and Ideal lid, gaskets,
Presto andiNatlorial pressure vajves,
and 'over-pressure plug's, "recibe
books, Preston' dividers, etc,
■" '   ;K: HIPPERSON'S   .'■
BANQUET. IN HONOR OF
SCOTTISH CURLERS
Today, January 10; « p,m.v
Limited number of tickets
- available, at .
BU8H'8 CIGAR STORE
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
Associated Press News Analyst -
Selection of a United States Sec.'
retary of State In these dark and
dangerous days of Communism's
global revolution is a momentous
decision.'
n» must be a man of international
vision and vast common sense. Wars
and peace treaties more often than
not'Start in foreign offices.
EOr- this reason, President Truman's appointment of Dean Aeheson
as. Secretary of State, is of supreme
importance not only to the United
States but to the world' at large.
Truman's, choice was'.- anxiously
awaited ever since it became apparent, that .'Gen. •.George• .Marshall
would retire as Secretary, because of
ill health. .; .,     '-.' .   , .
■ Prior to the appointment thtre
had been much diplomatic speculation whether it would Involve any
change In American'coldrwar strategy,.The answer-to that is,In the
negative,-.   [ ',     .."..;  ' / *   - -  .
-President Twman has declared
that American policy In this .reaped will not be changed by his
selection.    Moreover,   . Aeheson'!
- deeds -confirm his estimate,  ..
During his long. service' as Assist-.
ant Secretary and Undersecretary
of State, Aeheson had a big hand in
framing American policy for holding the' Communist aggression In
check. He helped develop the "Tru
man doctrine" for-. helping' free
countries (like.Greece and Turkey)
resist the Red aggression. He .
drafted the Marshall Plan for Ijj
Opean rehabilitation;
NO FOUNDATION
In announcing Acheson's appoii
merit, Truman took occasion t
dare there is no foundation to
ppfts that he wanted to aoften •
"tough1' policy in dealing with Moi
cow. This statement was in answer
to a published-story to the effects
that he was engaged in a fight witht' J
in his .cabinet to soften American Jl
policy towards Russia, - -  :        :, 'ft
The article In question was by\8
Jay Franklin arid was published in a.
Life Magazine..The President.said "
it is without foundation in fact in
nearly. every   instance  and  paragraph. -Franklin is a newspaper col-'
umnlst and was among writers who
helped prepare Truman's campaign
speeches last Fall...',■
Thus the President has giyen
double . assurances regarding the
steadfastness of American policy towards Russia. He not only .has reaffirmed the policy" by word of"
mquth but has put his seal on it by
appointing as Secretary a man who.
had much td'do with developing it
LONDON ENTHUSIASTIC   ;'-,,„'
First foreign reaction tp Acheson's..
appointment came - from London.
Hlgh^.Govemment officials privately
expressed .enthusiasm although they
were-sorry to see Marshall retiring
alter, "his fine and outstanding work
for the goo'd of humanity/' Western
Europe generally welcomed the
appointment;;   -.-'.-'      '. -'•'■'.'-   -.'.-' ,
.- A meeting of the Nelson Progressive Conservative Ajsoclatlori will
be'held in the Memorial Hall.Tues^
day, Jan, 11th, at 8 p.m. to choose
delegates to attend the Nominating
Convention-'/which''will-be held in.
Trail Jan. 15th.
, Special meeting of the Nelsbn
Board of Trade is called to eriter-
tairi the Scottish Curlers at luncheon "at- Hume' Hotel on Tuesday,
Jan. llth at 12- o'clock noon. Members are urged to attend on this
very special occasion.
MONDAY MORNING
SPECIAL
LIVING ROOM FURNISHED
complete for'only $289.99;
8tan6ard lamp ....,....;.. $ 19.60
■footstool  . 3.9h
cushion ....'.;.      4.95
RUO (Reversible)     29,98
RADIO (Astra)  .". -.:     6M0
LAMP TABLE   „ :'-   13-95
3-plece KROEHLER. CHESTERFIELD 8UITE—WINE AND
GREEN TAPESTRY     865.00
TOTAL- VAtUE ,.;......,.;...,....   $386.80
SPECIAL y_.y;:J::.;._ $28!r\99
" Me A Mc (Nelson) LIMITED-
Looking Ahead in Ottawa . ,'.
xpect Move for Official Residence
,       By The Ottawa 8taff    .
Of The Canidlah Press   .
OTTAWA (CP) — Some parliamentarians believe that a move will
be made at the forthcoming session
of Parliament to' provide an official
residence for Canadian Prime Ministers.
Canada is one of"the.few countries which does riot. pioVlde. state-
maintained residence for the Prime
Minister during his term, of office.
The need for such a residence has
become ' apparent since Rt. Hon,
Louis St. Laurent --. assumed the
prime ministership.
The housing situation being what
it is, the best 'Mr. St. Laurent has
been able to db;is find a small, centrally located 'apartment: While
quarters are comfortable they ate
not auitedfor the type bf eritertelij-
ment or receptions a Prime Minister
is expected to extend to visiting
dignatories, diplomats and others.
When Rt. Hon. W.' L. Mackenzie
King retired as Prime Minister iri
November, he continued to occupy
the house willed to him.personally
by the widow df Sir Wilfrid Laur-
ler, his predecessor as leader of the
Liberal Party,  '• ' , . '
HEAVY OBLIQATIpN     j,        I."
Injils last speech iri the Commons
last session, Mr. King said he hoped that subsequent . Parliaments
would make some provision for an
offocial residence for the.-;Prime
Minister. He said that if-it had no.t
been for the kindness ot Lady
Laurier andihe help of friends, he
would not have been able to furnish
and occupy Laurier House.,
The maintenance ot such a house
waa a heavy obligation on "the individual who holds the high office
of Prime Minister of his country,''
said Mr. King. "
The. Prime Minister's salary totals $23,000 a year, but most of it is
taxable. Tha salary is small compar-
Mujic Festival
Judges Chosen
TRAIL, B.C. — J. Peebles'Conn,
rioted British musician,' will adjudicate all instrumental and" vocal
classes In the Kootenay Musical
Festival In Trail May 4, 5, 6 and 7.
Elocution adjudicator will be Mrs.
Ethel Ferguson, well.knownjelocu-
Uonist and' drama teacher who
Judged elocution and drama entries
at the 1948 Kootenay Musical Festival in- Nelson. Previously she has
adjudicated in Trail, '";,
(ihqrged.Vyith Murdel'
Of Indian Woman
LrfcLpOET B.c^Aibert Paacal
has been charged by police with
murder in the Christmas Eve death
of Mary Ann Billy', 85-year-old Indian woman,
.. The woman Is reported to have
died as a result of a fight in which
Edward BUs, Creekside Reserve Indian, was severely injunjd.
A coroner's jury earlier said the
woman had beeh struck on the head
with, a blimt mstrmriierit.
ed to what a man with a comparable rank in the business world
could draw down._    •;.'■'■•'.
TRANSPORTATiON
The Royal Commission on TranS'
portatiqp will be, opening operations
soon, but even the Government rijoes
not know jiis't when."     ...
A Cabinet source says it all de'
pends qn Hon. W. F. A. Turgeon,
Chairman, and his two fellow Commissioners. "Mr, .Turgeon is still in
Eire, where he has been serving
as High Commissioner, but the Government has'wired him to get back
as soon as he can. It hasn't been advised when he will be leaving.    .
Late February looks like about
the best guess for the 'time, of open*
Ing of ■ public hearings before the
Commission, '"i   ■■"■''
REFUSE LEADER OF U. K. EMIGRANT
PLAN CANADA ENTRY ON PAST RECORD
By SHAUN   McQUILLAN   '
Canadian Press Staff Wrltei"
BEXLEY, Kent, England (CP) -
Thomas A. Blake,. British nurseryman, who formed what he called
the British Settlers Association and
planned to lead 100 families to a
new settlement in Northern Ontario this year, has been told he will
not be allowed to enter Canada,
It was disclosed here that he was
deported from Canada in' 1827 and
since then has had a police record
in England. ;  ,
G. C. Congdon, in charge of the
Canadian Government Emigration
Office jn London, ■ said, however,
that Ontario House was willing to
assist the 109 families'of the Association if they still wish to emigrate. It is not yet known if they
still plan.; to go to Canada,^
"This Is a terrible blow to me,"
said Blake. "I am a man with a
bad record, perhaps, but this was
my big chance to go straight at
the age of 49,
"I went to Canada In 1922. In 1925
I ran into, trouble iri Winnipeg in a
bootlegging racket , . . I was sent
fenced to two years, which I served
in' Winnipeg. I wa*; deported when
I came but, and came back to England. Then I was framed on a blackmail charge "In 1029 and sentenced
to three years." ,'. ■
Scotland-Yard officials aatd they
were Investigating Blake's activities arid the makeup of the Settlers
Association. Blake said he had not
received, any money from any Of
the applicants.
'The 100 families, all from Kent,
had planned to cross the Atlantic,
later this, year to set up a self-supporting community on 100,000 acres
of uncultivated land near Tlrnmlris,
Ont. They planned to name it Kent,
and split it up into 350-acre farms
tor wheat-growing and pig-raising.
When. Blake • first I announced the
scheme he said that, although the
Ontario Government was iriterestedt
the capital would be found by the
emigrarits. ■'.""•':'    '...,,:
K«ttle Valley r
Train Delayed
By Derailment
A slight engine derailment at
Corktodale, between1 Farfon and
Castiegar, delayed the Kettle Valley
train due in Nelson Saturday evening. It did not reach here until 4:30
a.m. Sunday. '
The pony or guide truck ori the
engine was derailed, 'and took seven
hours to be rarailed.
The mishap; occurred half way
down the hill near Corkindale.
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FREIGHT TRUCKS
'     .     LEAVE NELSON DAILY
At 10:30 a.m. — Except Sunday
Trail Li very Co.
Trail—Phone 135     Nelson—Phone 35
m
J2L
_»_
 pngs Keep Lead V/i^h
lie; HawksBesti
65 Canadians To
Compete in
Ii DETROIT (AP) - Detroit lied
Wings came from behind with a,
trial in each- of the last two periods
und'ay night to tie Toronto 3-2
.and: retain sole possession. of the
'National.Hockey League leadership.
SA crowd of 14,781 fans saw the
game.
^SUMMARY
First period—1. Toronto, Watson
(Gardner)  1136; 2. Toronto, Ezln<
| ickl (Watson)   16:07.
Penalties-jBoesch-2, Fogollh.-  :
. Second, period—3,  Detroit,'. Mc-
I Fadden (Pavelich, Couture) 10:06.
Penalties—Thomson 2, Enio.
Third   period—4.   Detroit,   Enlo
((Poile, McFadden) 13140.
Penalty—Fogolln. -..-.•.'
|RECORb CROWD
.CHICAGO <ep)-<:hicago Black
Hawks defeated Boston Bruins 4-2
in a National Hockey League game
before a season's record crowd of
'17386 fans.
' The Hawks had gone four games
•Without a victory up to, Sunday
: flight. Three of those were defeats
'and one, at Toronto last night, a
■tit.: v..
Nummary •
First period—Scoring, none,
Penalties—None. ,
Second period—l! Boston, Ronty
I (Egan)   2:48;   2,   Chicago,   Brown
(Guidolin, Prystal) 4:25; 3. Boston,
Harrlson"(Durhart) 7:83; 4.' Chicago,
R. Conacher (Mosienko, Goldham)
13:49. ;,''..
Penalty—Egan. '■'.'.'
Third period—5. Chicago, R. Conacher. (Bentley). ■ 7:35;, 6. Chicago,
Bodnar (Bentley) 19:13.   ' ,
Penaltles^-None..'
STANDINGS UNCHANGED
NEW YORK (AP)-Montreal Ca.
nadiens and; New York Rangers
battled to A 1-1 tie in ,a ragged,
penalty-filled National Hockey
League game' before 15,925 fans'1 In
Madison Square Garden.
The deadlock, marked by. frequent periods of listless play, left!
the two teams In the same place
in the standings in which they, had
started..the ganie—Montreal In , a
fourth place tie with Toronto ahd
New York at the bottom of the
pile.
Summary
Plrst period—1. Montreal, Carveth 7:35.. ,--
Penalties — Reardon, Leswick,
Stahowakij Moe..
\ Second period—2. New York, Ka-
leta (O'Connor, Gordon) 14:51.
Penaltles-r-Chamberlaln (2), .Mcpherson, Leswick, Moe, Mickoski.
' Third period—Scoring, none,
Penalties — Mbe <minor and 10-
hninute   misconduct)   Chamberlain,
(minor and 10-minute misconduct.
^kutJc-fimmja^^
■   By CLIVE FLEMING
It was surely a bad night -for
Nelson Saturday night, losing three
games to different Kimberley clubs,.
The Nelson Midget Reps.dropped, a
4-3 game to the Kimberley Midgets,
the Legion Senior B's lost 5-2 to
the Kimberley Lion Juniors, and.
the Nelson Maple Leafs were beaten
6-3 by the Kimberley Dynamiters.
.The first two mentioned games
were played in Nelson; to1 top off
an exhibition series between the
two Kimberley teams and Trail and
Nelson teams. All games, were won
'by Kimberley, with scores being
3-2 and 4-3 in the midget games,
and'5-4 and 5-2: the junior victory
margins. ,,--!
From reports, the game between
the Trail Juniors and Kimberley
Juniors, played at Trail drew a
capacity crowd, and wat about
the best'this year on Smelter
City lee.
When the Lions played here; they
I'never showed us their best hockey,
mainly because it is hard for any
team tb play good hockey against
Nelson's scrappy style of play.
'Their coach said Nelson players
jwere all over'the ice,' arid naturally
' their speedy passing plays couldn't
1 get going properly.
.    Coaching .the visiting-junior club
was   a   former   Kimberley   star,
Benny   Redisky,   who   went   into,
retirement a few years ago, Another
j of the players Is Tommy Shrieves,
I one ot the members, of the Nelson
, Juveniles,  two years, ago,  when
rthey wonthe B.C. Championship.
I   The Chicago Black Hawks have
their strings out for two of their
players! James McMahon and Bill
Fergus.,.-"    -' - .'*■-■
McMehon.starred on the first line;,
and scored two goals, while Fergus
stood out on defence..
Red Livingstone ii the son of
former Dynarqlter President Jimmy
Livingstone, and Jtodger Stanton is
the brother of. Trail's Kenny Stanton. :."'
Benny Redisky had lots of words
of praise for Nelson Maple Leafs
coach Fred Hergert in'his,Job of
running the Leafs: When asked
about Nelson's showings at Kimberley, he sajd If Nelson .just skated
the Dynamiters into theIce as they
did in the last encounter at Kimberley, when Nelson' won 4-2, they
could win again Saturday.
Well, we didn't win at Kimberley,
but you can't really blame the
Leafs for'that They showed us
when they played here last game,
the Dynamiters can play about as
good hpckey as any. team around
the Kootehays, as can Nelson, and
as far as that goes, probably in
Western Canada. But still TU say
that Nelson is the better team.   ,'
Frank'Sullivan, who I figure Is
the best player in the. :W,I.H.L.>
moved into first spot in the scoring,
with a goal and three assists,  '.■.,-;
Hergert, Haldane, Lubeck and
Vickers, who are bunched around
20 to 25 points all moved Up a point
at.-: the game. The league's leading
scorer, Spence Tatchell of the Leafs
also moved up a point, with a goal
The next game at Nelson is Wednesday, when Spokane plays here.
There will be some changes In the
lineup' due to the departure of
Johnny Fargher,'   -
Manchester United, Arsenals
Continue Winning Ways in Soccer
I*   LONDON (Reuters)—Stalwarts of
the Football League' Saturday battled their way through the third
round ol the Football Association
Cup competition and took the high
road to the Wembley Cup final April 30. ,
In showery weather relieved by
hursts of sunshine, close to 1,000,000
fans attended the 32 cup fixtures
with Everton and Manchester City
—both first division teams—drawing the largest crowd, 64,000, at Everton.
Everton edged Manchester City
1-0 in a fast, well-balanced game
taking full advantage of rather hesitant tactics by the Manchester For?
' wards.
Fifty-five thousand saw Manchester United, a first division'team unbeaten in  12  consecutive  games,
- tcdunce the third division's Bournemouth- 6-0. Three goals in as many
minutes knocked the heart out of
plucky Bournemouth after, which
the game developed into an exhibition with Manchester's superiority
ruling the play.
Arsenal, another first division
team, also maintained their reputation by blanking their second
'  division  adversaries,  Tottenham
Hotspur, 3-0. Though this wat regarded at the classic contest of the
day the expected record attendance did not materialise. : -
With a capacity for 60,000 spectators the. Arsenal Stadium drew no
m6re than 50,000 to the surprise ol
countless fans who had sat up shivering all night for seats.
Results of games played:
' FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION CUP,
THIRD ROUND
' Arsenal 3, Tottenham Hotspur 0.
Aston Villa 1, Bolton Wanderers 1
(after time),
. Barnsley 0, Blackpool 1.
Birmingham ■ City ' .1,   Leicester
i City I (after time).
Blackburn Rovers 1, Hull City 2
S (after time).
- Brentford   3,   Middlesbrough.-2
It a (after time). ■*•' '
Bristol City 1, Chelsea 3.   '■'•;'.
Burnley 2,  Charlton Athletic 1
. (after time),
Crewe Alexandra 0, Suriderland
|l Derby County 4, Southport 1. ■
,  Everton 1. Manchester City 0.
Fulham 0, Walsall 1 (alter time)
Leeds United 1, Newport County
-3,   .
Gateshead 3, AMershot 1.
Grimsby Town 2, Exeter City I,
Lincoln City 0, West Brbmwlch
Albion.l. '.! ...
Luton Town 3, West Ham United
1. ■ 'I • -:'
Manchester,  United   6,   Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic 0.
Newcastle United 0, Bradford 2.
Nottingham Forest 2, Liverpool
2 (after time). ,
Oldham Athletic 2, Cardiff City 3.
Plymouth Argyle 0, Notts County
1 (after .time). .
Portsmouth 7, Stockport County
0.  .'   '.-•  '
Preston North End 2,'Mansfield
Townl.
Queen's Park Rangers 0, Hudders-
field Town 0 (after time).   .-."
Rotherham United 4, Darlington
2. '■
Sheffield United 5, New Brighton
2.
Sheffield Wednesday 2, Southampton 1.', - -
Swindon Town 1, Stoke City 3.
Torquay United 1, Coventry City
0,        .:">'■ y
Wolverhampton "■ Wanderers 6,
Chesterfield 0.
Yeovil Town 3, Bury 1.
THIRD DIVISION NORTHERN
(Games;added to day't schedule)
Bradford City 0, Barrow 2.    .
Hartlepools United 1, Accrlngton
Stanley 0. .'■"'-
Wrexham 1, Chester 0.
York City 2, Doncaster Rovers &
THIRD DIVISION SOUTHERN
(Games added to day's schedule)
Crystal Palace 0, Reading 1.
Port Vale 3, Watford 1.
SCOTTISH LEAGUE ",
DIVI8I0N "A" '       .
Aberdeen 2, Third Lanark 2.
Albion Rovers 2, Partick Thistle
3.
Clyde 4, St. Mlrren 1.
East Fife 2, Hibernian 3.
Hearts. 0, Dundee 1.   ■
Morton 0, Celtic 0.
Queen of the South 0, Falkirk 0.
Rangers 2, Motherwell 0.
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
DIVISION."B"
"ArbroatK 2, Alloa Athletic 1.
Ayr United 0, St. Johnstone 2.
Cowdenbeath 5, Alrdrieohlans 1.
Dundee United 4, Dumbarton O.
East Stirlingshire 3, Kilmarnock
0.       . ,        ' '' '      '■ ,
< Hamilton Academicals 3, Stirling
Albion 1. !   '
Queen's Park 1, Rslth Rovers 1.
Stenhouiemulr   3,   Dunfermline
Athletics.
FRIENDLY MATCHES
Halifax Town 2, Rochdale 1.
MillWair 3, Ipswich Town 0.
Carlisle United 2, Tranmere Rov-
OTTAWA, (CP) "-.'.'Canada will
send about .65 athletes ahd 10 officials to the 1950, British Empire;
Games in Auckland, New Zealand,;
it was learned here Sunday;
The team will be away about;
two months, and the Dominion
Government will ;be asked to pay!
the shot—about 1100,000,' '„;"-i,.,i
"We shall try .to tenter eight
events,": a well-informed' source j
told The'Canadian Press. "We shall
leave by boat Dec. 22 and'return
by air shortly after the' week-long
Games end Feb. 11.";, V,
* B.E. Games sports are:; track and
field, boxing, cycling, fencing, rowing, swimming, w e I g h t - lifting,
wrestling arid lawn bowling.       -
Lawn bowlers, according to. preliminary information from the New
Zealand B.E. Games Committee;
will pay their own expenses. A
Canadian - lawn-bowling '-team probably will participate arid .will receive only uniforms.
HonorFargher
Al Banquet
"    -    ;;.-,;,    ,'-../..;.'      '       '- '   "       -. '.
The Nelson Senior Hockey team
With trainer, manager, and the
executive, attended a banquet ahd
presentation lor "Johnny Fargher in
the Hume Hotel Silver Room Friday night with the staff of the Finning Tractor and < Equipment Ca
Ltd. -.■'..'. !J
Main speakers of the. evening,
who congratulated the Maple Leat-
ion, who is going to the Coast and
wished him luck were Jack.Moss,
President of the Club, Leo Atwell,
Team Manager, Fred Hergert, Team
Coach and ,R. E. "Bob";,WUJlamsv
Nelson Branch Service. Manager,
under whom Fargher received Jrjla
vocational training with the Company during the past three years.
Other speakers* were Team, Captain, Jack Kllpatrlck, j N.. C.. Sttbbs
and Archie Birse, Civic -Centre.
Manager. Mr. Birse stated that. it
was through good citizens and good
sports, who give all they have In
their ventures of life, that make
them a success as well as the team
they play for,' or the organization
they, work tor, Mr. Birse also said
that the Civic Centre, profits by
such persons.   -    V
Walter Duckworth, President of
the': Western International Hockey
League, then presented Fargher
with a leather club bag, on behalf
ot those present.
Mr. Duckworth, who was responsible' for bringing Johnny Fargher
to Nelson, said he was pleased to
see that he had become an outstanding'citizen.    ,"*-'
The gathering wished him good
luck and a speedy return to Nelson.
Fargher replied that be had enjoyed
every minute of his stay in Nelson,
and that he hoped to be back before, long, ., -   -
Acting Chairman H..' (Fritz)
Farenholtz, and the gathering .'concluded the get-together by singing
"For He's a Jolly Good Fellow"
With Siane
And Besom
Daws for this week of the Nelson Curling 'Club's plugs and Colts
Competition-follow:
Tuesday!'- '■-■<-
6:45 p.m.—V. Irwin vs L. L. Bobra-.
er; A. Bate vs H. C. Came; T. Dod-
man vs F..Dickens; J. E.'Holmberg
vs N. Lutkovitch; J. Sutherland vs
A..Sereda.   '
9:15 p.m.~-R. E. Horton vs F.
Kline; G". S. Fleury vs A. H. Whitehead; H. Norton vs A. G. Ritchie;
A. H. Allan vs S. Haydon; ,H.
Sutherland vs E. C. Hunt.
Thursday:
6:45 p.m.—R. Palmer vs A. Ar-
cure; A. Waters vs T. S. Foxall; 11,
E. Norton vs S. A. Maddocks; A. J.
Hamson vs T. S. Jemson; W. "J.
Horswill vs F. Kline. :
9:15 p.m.—L. Desireau vs D. D,
McLean; H. Harrison vs F. D. Cummins; J. Teague sr. vs J. H. Allen;
H. A. D. Greenwood vs G. S. God
frey; J. Smith vs t. Koehle.   :
Friday:
6:45 p.m.—W^H.Burns vs F. Holt;
C. Arcure vs R. W. Hogg; A. VanSacker vs W..J. Hipperson; C. W.
Ramsden.vs F.. Irwin; T. F. Rbmano
vs J. Bell.
9:15 p.m.—S. Haydon Vs A. H.
Whitehead; .J. E. Holmberg vs. C,
L. Race; R, D. Wallace vs'-D. D.
McLean; G. S. Fleury vs A <J,
Ritchie; H. Horton vs A. H. Allan.
PANTHER BANTS
EDGE DODGERS
Sam Brown's Panther bantam
hockey squad eked but a close 2-1
victory over the Dodger bantams
in a league game, at the. Civic
Arena Friday afternoon. The Panthers scored the opening goal in
the initial stanza with defenceman
George Tralnor scoring unassisted.
In the second period Rosling put
the Panthers two up on a play from
Moran. The Dodgers got back in tho
game as Larry Scott converted
Sherwood's paSs.
In the final frame, both clubs applied the presure,, but goalie Ackert ot the Panthers and Ray Wei-
bourn ot the Dodgers came through
with several fine saves.
Doug Brown was the referee. Pat
Poulin kept the score and Herb
Chaluk the tune.
KIMBERLEY, B, O-The Kimberley Dynamiters beat the Nelson Maple Leaft 6-3 In the Kimberley Arena Saturday night The
game was hard, fought and well
played . by   both   teams.   Nelson
took the lead early In the game,
hut the Dynamiters toon tied It
up arid went ahead, and didn't allow the Leaft to regain a lead at
any point In the rest of the game.
Shorty Coombs., led- Dynamiters
with two goals, other Kimberley
marksmen' being Frank "Sullivan,
Sammy Calles, Buck Kavanagh and
Lyall Swahey. Leafs' scorers; were
Jerry:.- Lubeck,. Bill. Haldane.. and
Spence Tatchell. Vi
Both teams hit the scoring column
before the game was many minutes
old. Nelson's Lubeck started the
scoring on ah assist by Bill Vickers,
but COombs of Kimberley tied it up
in short order. Then Sullivan split
the Nelson defence in a lovely solo
effort to beat Jesse Seaby cleanly to
put the Dynamiters in the lead.
QUIgley of Kimberley was called on
to make several lovely saves as the
Nelsonltes bore iri on'them to try
for a tie up. v:
LYALL SWANEY BACK
Lyall Swaney made his first appearance on the blue line for Kimberley this Season and made It clear
early In- his first game that he
means, to bounce opposing forwards
Just as hard as ever.
The Dynamiters added to their
lead early iri the second when Sullivan set up Calles and the winger
made no'mistake. Kimberley fans
were treated to some bruising
hockey in the middle session as both
teams handed out some stiff body
checks with. Swaney ot Kimberley
featured in most of them. Nelsbn
was given the main advantage<when
Johnston was given a hooking penalty. They threatened.several times
WINS CHE8S TITLE •
HASTINGS, England (Reutera)-*
N. Rossollmo of France Saturday
won the International Chess Congress championship here .with a
final score of 6%-2% in the' nine'
round tournament.
ers-1. ii.
Southerid United 3; Leyton Orient
0.    '  '.:'.'' '- '.'   •-
Swansea Town 1, Bristol-Rovect
2., '   ■
IRISH LEAGUE
Ballymena United h Portadown 1.
Bangor 3, Linfleld 3.
Belfast.Celtic 10, Distillery 2.
Derry City:2, Ards 3.
Glehavon 4;Coleralne 1.
Glentoran'2,Cllftonvllle 0.
Kimberley 6, Nelson 3 . . .    '
Dynamiters Win
on their power plays but failed to
click the red light.
. The Dynamiters took a convincing
four-goal lead early in the third, on
a goal by. Coombs arid Kavanagh.
A lovely two-man play by* Hjldape
and Hergert gave the; Leafs their
second, goal. . ::,;. ■
LEAFS'SHOW POWER
' A 'minute, later Swaney beat Seaby on a long one that was well
scored. Bill Jones was sent to the
cooler.for tripping and Nelson put
on aanlce'a Wot power as Kimberley has ever seen. They held that
rubber in -the Dynamiter zone until they got'their well earned counter from Tatdhell at 11.07. of the
third. Nelson, .was given .another
chance to put on their power in the
closing minutes of the .game when
Jones was again.'serving -time. out
this time they failed to click."      -,
Lineups:    '■'.'•.
Nelson—Seriby; Bicknell, Barefoot, Nelson, Tatchell; Kllpatrlck,
Vickers', Hergert, Allen, Haldane,
Fargher, R. Koehle, F. Koehle, Lubeck. r. '..    ;',-'- . -.'. -y.y
Kimberley — .Quigley; ; Brown,
Johnston, Jones,.Swaney; Kavanagh
Calles, SUlllvan, Tartfow, Hrye'uk,
Wilson, Kromm, Coombs,       V -
Summary:  i ■■'■ .   :'
. First period—1, Nelson,. Lubeck,
(Vickers)     2:17;    2,    KJimbWley,
Coombs  (Swaney; Calles) ,4:14; 3,
Kimberley, Sullivan, 11(31.
Penalties—none, ;,      ' , ■■■'
Second period—4, Kimberley, Calles (Sullivan, Coombs) 6:15,   '
Penalties—Johnston.  .;       '
Third Period —5, Kimberley,
Coombs (Sullivan) 4:17; 6, Kimberley, Kavanagh 5:12; .7, Nelson, Haldane (Hergert) 6:07; 8, Kimberley,
Swaney <Snlllvan, Kromm) 7:36; .9,
Nelson, Tatchell (Barefoot) lli07-.
Penalties—Jones, Barefoot, Jones,
Nelson Midgets
Drop (lose
One to Kimberley
••■'■',   BVcUVBrLBMINQ     '
Flaying an altogether better brand
of hockey than the Nelson Midget|
Reps, the visiting'Kimberley midget
crew came through with a well-
deserved 4-3 win hero Saturday
night in an exhiblUon tilt. The KliS-
berloy Port-McMohon-Pagura line
was outstanding for the visitors,
with their fine attacking play*.
' Nelson netminder, Silvio Bene-
detti, was the only factor in holding
Kimberley's . score, within reason,
pulling off repeatedTiiee stops."-'.-'■'■
Port and Malvln Matthews paced
the visitors to the win with two
goals apiece, Marvin Matthews garnered the only assist on the Kimberley ' goals, LUdlow,, Mclvor and
Ackert flicked the red light for Nelson,-while; assists, went to Jmaeff,
Coskey and Choquette.
Lineups:
.Kimberley: Thomas; Radelja, Marvin Matthews; Port; McMahpn, Pa-
gura; Davidson, Malvln Matthews,
Carter, Geigerlch,
Nelsohi Benedettl; Burns, Twflls;
Coskey; Mclvor, jarrett; Brown,
Jmaeff, Ludlow, Ca'rmichael, Mayer,
Ackert, Choquette; Poulin; Renwick
Summery:. ■     ■■■    ■. "
1st period: 1, Nelson, Ludlow
(Jmaefl) 19\M. ] ;      '   ..    -
Penalties: Geigerlch, Twells, McMahon1. ' ■' '-,'■ c'
2nd-"period: 2, Kimberley, Port)
9:41; 3, Kimberley, Port (Marvin
Matthews), 16:09; 4, Nelson, Mclvor (Coskey) 18:41. .
Penalties: McMahon, Brown.'.
3rd period: 5, Kimberley, Malvln
Matthews. 12:13; 6, Kimberley, Malvln Matthews 16:43; 7, Nelson, Ackert (ChoqUette) 18:21.
Penalty: Davidson.
Kimberley Lions Hand Legion
First Defeat of Season at Nelson
By CLIVE FLEMING
Led by the two goals and one
assist each to James McMahon and
Bill Beatty, Kimberley Lions handed Nelson Legions their first defeat
of the season here Saturday night
by a 5-2 score; Flay had its; bad
spots, arid two players were hurt,
one from each teafn.
Kimberley goalie Larry Brown
was badly shaken up when one of
Swede Larsen's bullet shots caught
him Just below the neck. Play was
halted for a while until he was revived, but he looked a little shaky
for the remainder of the, second
jHsriod..        .   , ',.''•; ,
Don Longden was knocked unconscious when bis own stick
Jabbed'him on the temple as he
Wassailing.': .'- ,,_,-, ■.;;
Scoring opened at the 5:26 mark
of .the-first period when McMahon
received a gift goal, as the puck was
deflected past Madden In the Nelson cage by one of the Legion de-
fencemen. ' .
A minute, 17 seconds later, when
Nelson vat starting a power play
with a two-man advantage. Larsen
rilled a 75-footer-which streaked
into the Kimberley goal to knot the
score,', y; ,- .''" ' ,,''   ' ■ :  , '•
McMahon' dented the twine 'late
ih the period with-Beatty assisting,
to send Kimberley ahead 2-1.
Red Matthews sent Kimberley
ahead another notch early'in the
second, but Buzz McDonald got that
one back four minutes later, when
Brown was still suffering the' ef
fects of Larsen's drive. .
, At the 14:57 mark; Beatty scored
from Cimilio to boost the. score to
4-2. Beatty finished oft the scoring
[at 12:53, with Young arid McMahon
in on the play. ,   ■"■.
It was the second win tn two
nights for the visiting juniors, hav<
Ing beaten Trail 5-4. Nelson may
play a returri match, while Trail
Juniors will seek their revenge with
a two-game series in Kimberley at
the end of January.
■ Lineups:       ?i a*.
Kimberley — IJrown; Fergus,
Young; Matthews; Livingston, Stanton; Cimilio, McMahon, Beatty, Mc-
Wirter, Shreives, Wanuck and Mac-
kle.
Nelson—Madden; Larsen, Koehle;
Defoe; Allen, Winlaw; Wassick,
Longden, Wicken, McDonald, Hickman, Nash, Gallicano, Kraftu „,
.' Summary: ~
; 1st period; 1, Kimberley; McMahon 5:26; 2, Nelson, Lassen 6:43;
3, Kimberley, McMahon' (Beatty)
14:53.'
Penalties: Young, Stanton, Kraft,
5 mins., Fergus, 6 mlns. .
(.-.2nd period: 4, Kimberley, Matthews (Livingstone) 1:44; 5, Nelson,
McDonald (Wicken) 5:35; 6, Kirh'
berley, Beatty (Cimilio) 14i57.
' Penalties: None.
3rd period: 7, Kimberley, Beatty
(Young, McMahon) 12:53. '.<;■ -.
Penalties: Livingstone, Fergus,
McMahon,AJlen.';-,-' '■'.. :;:.■/,
.Referees — Sam Brown and Johi-
ny Lang. Scorekeepeiv-Ray Johnston, i';/;' ,■' ;?v v ,y Jv
Begins on Legion Alleys Tonight
Legion 10-plh bowlers will swing |
into the Robert Main Cup competition Monday, seven teams of four
bowlers having been drawn up,
Games will start at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday bowling! has been cancelled, so that there will not be.too
Many games a week for any one
team. There will also be no games
on hockey nights or. when the Canadian Legion general, meeting Is
called.
There are five more cupt tor
competition, which is expected to
be. keep.   -  - ' T /
Teams, in order, ot skips, thirds,
seconds and leads, have been lined
up as follows:.
J. Thomas, T. Parkinson, Mrs. M.
DeFepo and Ji MacMillan,
Mr*,. .V..I,'-Graves, V. !• Graves,
9. J. Newell and J. Hamson. :.
R. Fereno, C. O.' Anderson, R.
Olsen and J. DeLucrezlo.
-B. Smith, Mrs. C. O. Anderson,
W. Simpson and W.^Leslle.
J.   Joy,   J,   Brlndley,. Mrs.   V.
Graves and V. Graves.
Mrs. S. J. Newell, C. DeFerro, B
Veochio and R. Brown.
It,  Olsen,  Miss D. Bowker, J,
Drummond and Mrs. H, Edwards.'
Schedule follows:
Jan. 10—MacMillan vs Hamson.
Jan. 13—DeLucrezlo vs Leslie.
" Jan. 14— Graves vs Brown. '
.   Jan. -17—Edwards vs 'MacMillan'.
Jan. 19—Hamson vs DeLucrezlo,
Jan. 20-^Leslle.vs Graves. " ...
Jan. 21—Brown vs Edwards.
•-Jan.  24 — MacMillan vs  DeLucrezlo. '■ ;-   ■ ■.
. Jan. 26—Leslie vs Hamson.
Jan. 28—Graves vs Edwards.
Jan. 31—MacMillan vs Leslie.
Feb. 2—Hamson vs Graves,
Feb, 4—DeLucrezlo vs Brown,
Feb. 7—Leslie vs Edwards.
Feb. 10—MacMillan vs Graves.
Feb. 11—Hamsori vs Brown.
Feb. 14—DeLuqrezio vs Edwards
Feb. 18—Leslie vs Brown.
Feb. 18—Hamsori vs Edwards,
Feb. 21—DeLucrezlo vs Graves,
Feb. 23—MacMillan vs ^rown. ,
F.A.Cs EDGE
LION JUV|S 2-1
Fairview Athletic Club's Juvenile
hotkey. team, won. one! of their
hardest fought games in the local
Juvenile League-Friday evening as
they edged out the fast skating
Lions 2-1. ';■'.-'
The game was featured by an
almost free-for-all in the middle
bt the third period' as tempers
flared. Scoring by both teams was
all in the middle .'frame with other
periods being scoreless. .The Lions
opened the scoring with Christen-
son driving In Loawen's pais. The
Fairview club' evened the ceunt as
Watkins banged in Pitts' pass back,
Mclnnes shoved the F.A.C.'s, into
|.tho lead on a screened shot. Loewen
drew-the: only Lion penalty in that
fram»-' '
, iri the,,final .period Christenson
drew a major for fighting-with
Goalie Argy Dozzl of the F.A.C.'s,
Hunger served • Dozzl's penalty,
while other, penalties in the mix
up went to Brett of the Lions and
Pitts of the F.A.C.
Clive Fleming Was the relerce
Frank Hufty "kept the score and
time.    .       _   ,
American Curlers
Win Trophy for First
Time in Five Years
t)ETROIT(AP)—American curl;
era broke a 'five-year Canadian
monopoly on the International Bori-
spl^l's top prize' today as J. J.
Ahern's- St. Paul, Minn., rink came
from behind with (three counters in.
the final end to edge W:.B, White
of Oshajva, Orit., 12-11,
The St, Paul victory was the first
for an American rink slnce-the Detroit Curling Club won the trophy
in 1942.   . .  ,-.'
Locke Twice Breaks
Course ReeOrdf
'' JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -
Bobby Locke, South African oham-
Sion, was. in brilliant form Satur-
ay in winning the Stanley Motors
1000 guineas ($4200) open golf
tournament by 16 strokes.
Locke twice broke the Royal
Johannesburg course record of 68,
with rounds of 65 and 67. His earlier
rounds were 70 and 69 which gave
him an aggregate bf 271 for 72 holes.
Three Qualify lor
Nipawin Round Robin
NIPAWIN, Saik. (CP)- Three
rinks qualified Saturday for the
round-robin competition leadlnfl
to the Nipawin Bonsplel's major
prize of four 1949-model automobiles, one of them being the Ab
Gowanlock group from Dauphin,
Man. which upset the favored
Jimmy Welsh foursome from
'.Winnipeg to-e.
Other rinks reaching the round-
robin: by virtue of winning their
Suarter-flnal games in the 'spiel's
fo. l,event were Bert Robertson of
Edmonton and Billy Rose of Sedge-
wick, Alta. ..'   ,y,,;.;:. .:-■■'
Robertson defeated Fete Hume of
Flin Flon, Man., 12-10, while: Rose
trounced Leo Johnson:of Winnipeg
14-2 In the Bonsplel's most one-sided match to date.
Remaining' quarter-final game, In
the. No. 1 event will see Al Junker
of Balgonie, Sask., pitted against
Wllliard -Cleveland of '•' Fairlight,'
Sask,    ■; '■'■--." ';-,'.»- ■,;■'--
As was the case Thursday, oyer
night, draws were played as the
Band
CALGARY (CP) *- Iri a series ot
17 games played here Friday and
Saturday against Southern and
Central' Alberta'eurlers, Scots of
the Royal Caledonian Club chalked
up •• an Impressive total of nine
victories against six defeats. Two
games were drawn.  '.'•
The.' Western contingent of a
group ot 50 visiting curlers from
the. Land of the Heather, spent
Sunday sightseeing at Banff."
Gaye Stewart
TORONTO,—, Chicago Black;
Hawks hockey player Gaye Stewart
—who: was seriously Injured in Saturday night's hockey game with
the Toronto,Maple L.eafs—is reported to be rapidly, improving. 30-rays
taken of the injured player revealed ribskull fracture; but he suffered
concussion and bruises tp the brain.
He is being kept under observation
In Toronto General Hospital,  .
Stewart was struck in the head
by a puck in the third period and
after dressing-room treatment, he
returned to the game. Hdwever-^-he
collapsed iri the.'showers after the
contest. Stewart was in a delirious
condition when rushed to hospital.
Doctor Norman.Delarue—the Maple|
Leafs' club physician — said Wis
riiornirig that an operation; Is not
necessary.
Hockey Scores
SUNDAY"
A.H.L.
. Springfield 1, Indianapolis 11
Cleveland 4, St. Louis 3
Washington 3, Buffalo 5       ';> ■
Philadelphia 3; Providence 10
Hershey 6, New Haven 2
U.8.H.L.
Minneapolis 2, Kansas City 1
Tulsa 5, Fort Worth 2,
Houston 1, St. Paul 6
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE    -'
Louisville .4, Muhcie 2
QUEBEC JUNIOR
Montreal Canadiens 1; Quebec 2
ValleWleld 3, Vlctorlaville 8
Verdfin Cyclones 5, Three Rivers I
QUEBEC SENIOR '
Shawlnlgan Palls 6, New York I
SATURDAY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
, Chicago 3, Toronto 3.
Detroit, 4, Montreal 1.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Pittsburgh 7, Washington 0,   '
Providence 4, Cleveland 3.
Hershey 7, Indianapolis 1.
: Springfield,'6, PhUadelphia 3.
p. ft, A. SENIOR ; l<
Toronto    Marlboros    8,    Owen
Sound3.,
WESTERN CANADA SENIOR
Lethbridge 9, Saskatoon I.
Edmonton 6, Calgary 3.
UNITED 3TATE8 LEAGUE
Minneapolis 3, Houston 1.
Kansas City 3, Tulsa 1.
Fort Worth 1, Dallas 1.
St. Paul 2, Omaha 2.
QUEBEC SENIOR
■ Ottawa 6, Valleyfleld 3.
MARITIME BIG FOUR
Saint John 5, Halifax St. Mary's 3.
CAPE BRETON 8ENIOR '
Glace Bay 4, Sydney 0,
WESTERN CANADA JUNIOR
Moose. Jaw 12, Lethbrldge 2,
NORTH SASKATCHEWAN
JUNIOR
Humboldt 7, Saskatoon 5.
MANITOBA THUNDER BAY
Winnipeg Nationals 8, Kenora
Thistles 4. ■
O. H. A. JUNIOR
St. Catharines 2, Toronto St Michael's I., j','.'-"'
Stratford 6,'Toronto Marlboros 3.
Oshawa.;a,;GaIt 5.
Windsor 9, Guelph 2. "
PACIFIC C0A8T
Tacoma 5, Vancouver 3.
' Los Angeles 8, New Westminster
2.'-'
Oakland 3, San Francljco 2.
San Diego. 3, Fresno 2.
INDIANS SWalEP MATCHES'
VICTORIA (CP) — -The Indian-
Thomas Cup badminton team
wound up Its tour of Canada with
a clean sweep "of Its matches against
Canadian players in an exhibition
here. Saturday night. The squad
now will invade California.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY^, JAN. 10, 1949 — 7
%v
Bonspiel Committee sought to get
the schedule back oh an.even keel
after mild; weather earlier breed
postponement ot several matches.
■ Wnen play resumed Saturday after a few hours' pause the first draws
in the No; 3 event started, Rinks entering the fours of the No. 1,,2 and
3 events qualify'for the two-group,
six team round-robin series leading
to the best-of-three series for the
cars.. .-:'- ..
, Best match In the .opening draw in
the;No, 3 was the one between Fret-.'
Bralthwalte of Dewberry, Alta,, am
Bill Lawrence of Nipawin, with t...'
Alberta rink winning 14-7.
In N(i. 2 event games. Al De»eu
of Winnipeg, recent Winner of tne
Portage La Prairie Automobile
Bonspiel, had a tough time of It In
overpowering Stan Jackson bf Ar-
borfield, Sask., 9-8. Grant Watson
and Howard Wood, made clean-
sweeps ot their games. The two
Wlnnlpeggers set back Nlles Nicholson of Nipawin and T. Forbes of
.Choiceland, Sask, 14-8 and 11-6
respeetlvely,  ,
Local Curlers, Disfricl Rink To
Match Shots With Visiting kols
Testing the skill of the Scottish!
curlers who "Invade' Nelsbn toflay
will be several rinks drawn from
the Nelson Curling Club' and a district rink representing the British
Columbia Curling Association..
Tonight two draws: will be, played
In Civic Centre, flve'Nelson rinks
and the district rink matching the
Scots With their five-foot brushes.
Games start at 8 and 10 p.m.'
Nelson rinks playing tonight will
be;- .-. "■ --. ■'
A Waters, J. C. Miilr, H. Farenr
holtz and J. H. Long*    :.
H. Bush, A. B, Gllker, D. Cath-
cart and S. Haydon.
J. S, Thom, A. H' Allan, H D.
Hickey and T. A. Wallace.     .   .
W. Marr, A. G. Ritchie, R. D.
Wallace and R. A. Peebles.
R. ;E. Horton, E,< C; Hunt, L.
Desireau and R. L. McBride.
The district rink playing tonight
wlll.be:- '. .,      .   ....
Andy Ogston of Chapman, Camp,
Ey J. Avery of Salmo, Bob Wilus.
of Cranbrook and Russell Joyce -ot
Creston.    : ,
Three Nelson rinks have been
lined Up tor Tuesday afternoon's
play starting at 2 p.m., as well as a
local rink to play the district entry.
One sheet ot Ice will be available
Tuesday' afternoon, tor scratch
games. -. '-'.-.'-:
Playing the Scots, Tuesdajr will
be:
G. S. Godfrey, W. A. Duckworth,
T. S. Jemson and C. J. Hughes.
P. E. Poulin; R. Foxall, A. H.
Whitehead and A. S. Horswill.
H. M. Whlmster, H, A. D. Greenwood, W. G: Harold ahd William
Forrest; ;• -   •■'<-■ ."'."•   '    .  .:■' ---
Playing the district rlpk Tuesday
wUl be: ' '-,■■.
J. H. Allen, M. Ryalls, T. S. Short-
house and T. Dolphin. ;-.
MAYOR TO THROW FIRST ROCK
Mayor T. ;H. Waters will deliver
the first rock to the broom of J.
Montelth, Captain of'.thei Scottish
rinks. The Mayor's son, Art Waters,
President of the' Nelson Club, will
skip, this-game against a Scottish
rink at 8 p.m. .Other Nelson rinks
on the 8 p.m, draw are skipped by
W- (Scotty) Marr: and Howard Bush
The 10 p.m. draws will be skipped
by Andy Ogston, R. E.-Hortop and
John Thom. Mr. Thom is represent
ing the Dominion Curling Association, being an executive member of
the organization; He has just received   a   distinguishing   curlers'
medal, emblematic df his position.
: Three sheets of loe have been
laid out on the Civic Centre rink."
.Matched sets of new rocks have
been loaned by the Club members and will be marked by red
and   blue  tassels.  Three, large
score boards have been, erected at
the arid of the" r|nk to enable
spectators to keep touch of the
•score.  ...   v      '.   ' ■   ■   -
The games on the 8 p.m. draw
w|ll be broadcast over CKLN, .
.Umpires for Monday nlghfs
games will be Roy Sharp, All Jeffs,
L. S. Bradley, T. Dolphin and J. H.
Allen, R. Bell, N.'R. Sardlch arid
Robert Andrew will referee Tuesday. Y ',.■■■■
Of the party ot 25 curlers coming
to the Kootenays, 13 will remain In
Nelson while 12 continue to Trail.
The consignments, for each centre
follow:
Nelson—J. Montelth, Captain; J.
M. Lamb, Duncan Stewart, W. S.
Henderson, A.' A. Mayes, W. C. Morrison, A. Mathleson, R. Mitchell, J.
McWhirter, C, A. Rogeri J. F.
Waugh, George Garrett and A. M.
Cowan.
Trail—James Altken, D. S. Davles,
J. Young, (J. McClung, James Noble,
A. Fate, Matthew Mather, Laurence
Jackson, Dr. J. W. Dalgleish, John
Agnew, Thomas Hamilton and J. F.
Sproat, .
Dimock Scores in
Wolves First Win
'"" ,;- ■ ,'■•'■ ■ . '*.'■,.,"'    '■"•■'' \
DUNFERMLINE, Scotland (CP)
—Goals by Joe Tergesen and BUI
Dimock during the last four minutes
of play Saturday night gave Sudbury Wolves hockey team ! a 5-3
victory over Paisley Pirates, It was
the first game the Wolves have won
during their current European tour.
They have played six games. -
Dimock, a native of Trail, B.C.,
contributed two goals, his; first
within: 15 seconds of the start of
play,- '■   ■ ■« ■ '       :-:-■   '
Our country produces
precious  trietalS, the
world  wants.*
Scotland produces
'BLACK l> WHITE'
the superb whisky
Canadians want.*
ly Appolntmsnt
H KM. King OaorjaVl
Scotch Whisky Dlatlllan.
Jomo, Duthonan & Co. Ltd.
BUCHANAN'S
»
SCOTCH WHISKY
Distilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland
I'his advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor
Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
i\
 TODAY'S News Pictures
President Outlines Program
President Truman places his "re-deal" program before a Joint session of Congress In Washington. Seated behind him are Senate President
Pro Tern Kenneth McKellar (D„ Tenn.), left; and
House Speaker'Sam Rayburn (D., Tex.). The President asked for $4,000,000,000 of new taxes arid a
vast-expansion of Government Iri social; and economic fields.    ,   -;   <•■'.■■- —AP Wlrephoto;
Booked on Bribery Charge
-   Four men were charged with bribery after a
George Washington University basketball player.
David  Shapiro, of Brooklyn, told authorities the
. quartet had tried to get him to fix a game, and -
booked at Elizabeth Street Station Houae In New
Aly and Rita Qo Skiing
Aly Khan carries ski equipment a* i.'j u,\u r\„^i;.a,i .ia...
Rita  Hayworth  set out (or; the ski  run  at  Murren,  Switzerland.
—AP Wlrephoto by radio from London!
York. Left to right are Detective William Flanagan; Philip KJeln, 34, of Brooklyn; Detective James
Hughes; Joseph Aronowltz, 35, of Brooklyn; Jack
Levy, 34. of Miami, Fla.; Detective' George Jaeger; and William Rlvlln, 43, of New Yorki
—AP Wlrephoto.
Named Chairman of
Conciliation Board
VICTORIA-{CPl-^RobertK.Hejw
derson,. Nanaimo, has bden named
Chairman of a -Conciliation- Board
appointed to deal with a dispute between /the -Nanaimo Foundry and
Engineering Works. Ltd. and the
Nanaimo Machine Shop arid Foundry'Industrial Workers' Union, Local No. 1, it Is reported by.the B.' C.
Labor Relations- Board., ■ /
Associated with Mr. Henderson on
the' Conciliation Board are' F. W,
Wilfert, Nanaimo,: representing -the
employer, and Dan Radford, Vancouver, representing-the- employees.
The dispute which affects 27'employees, is over the Union's demand
lor a 20 per'cent'wage increase! two
week's, vacation with pay after'three,
years' service, and a.change iri the
dates ol pay days.;  ■   .•■
Cal. Vegetable
Prices to Rise
VANCOUVER (CP) — Lettuce,
celery, oranges and lemons will-Increase in price because of weather
damage to California crops, it has
been announced,
I. W. Chess,' Vancouver fruit and
vegetable wholesaler, said California suppliers have wired him that
nearly. SO per cent of the citrus crops
were damaged by frost,
Lettuce and celery will go up
about five cents, while the citrus
fruit is expected to rise from five to
10 cents a dozen..
However, egg prices were expected to drop four to seven cents.a dozen before the end of thefmonth. The
rice decrease was blamed on a de-
line In United Kingdom purchases.
(PHONE 144 for Classified Service
TheyH Do It Every Time
a^MllliMMOeW
By Jimmy Hatlo
"\fitlEN THE DIMiSLEOOMES built their.
IjBURBAN HOME TriEy SPENT A VWNS
FORTUNE IN UNDERGROUND WIRING —
"THErJ-EVEMAS YOU AND I-1HE/
BOUGHT A TELEVISION SET*--?   -
GntheA:r
Monday; jan/jo, 1949.
'■'-.■ X      CKLN
, 1240 ON THB DIAL
7:0O-M3 Canada
7:02—News Summary
.,7:07—Sdnrlse Serenade      ■"     •
'IUyO—CBC News ;-,-        '.■■■:•■•'
8:15—Breakfast Club
8:45—Morning. Devotions
9:00-BBCNews
,9:15—Western Tunes   ,
0:30—Morning Concert
9:59—Time Sigrial
10:0O-Train Time    -
10:01—Woman's Program ... Ellen
""Harris • '
10:15—Five Roses Radio Kitchen
10:20—Midmorning i Varieties;
10:45—They Tell Me
11:00—Musical Varieties
11:15—Air Kindergarten
11:30—Famous: Voices    ■'
12:00—The Notice Board     -    .
12:15V-CBC News
12:25-:-CBC Showcase »•
12:30-rFarm Broadcast.',
12:55—Interlude ;
l:00^Old Favorites   V
1:30—Bernie Braden Tells, a Story
'1:45—Community Program CBC
2:00—Feature Concert ,.  .
, 2:15—Family Favorites
2:30-The Little Show '/
2:45 -Don Messer:   ■
3:00—Ethel arid Albert
3:15-rTravellers Tales
3:30—Divertimento
3:45-BBC News
4:00-Chico Valle'
4:14-Tralri Time      ■■''..
4:15—Afternoon Serenade
4:30—Magic Adventures
4:45-iEasy -Listening
5:00—Sacred Heart Program
5:15—Old Chishblm Trail >
5:80~Pfeertess News ,..;..
5:45—Sport News '-..-'' \'-"   '•'.-'
.6:00—Three^QUarter Time   -
6:1&-Flrefighters
'6:30--CaValcade of Melody
7:00-£BC News
7:15—CBC News Roundup
7:30-Paciflc- Recital
7:45VOnvMike tonight
8:00—Piano Rdcitai   • ■';...'■'--
8.30—Vancouver Theatre •" ;
(9:00—Curling Broadcast. with the
'*■,-.;.'' scots. . ■/ ■
10:00-CBC News
10SI5—Provincial Affairs
10:30—Biltmore Hotel Orchestra
11:00—God Save the king
CJAT
;     810 ON THE DIAL
7:6o^-Peerless'Ne,ws „
7:RK-Brerikfast tor Two
7:40—Fun at Breakfast
7:45—Breakfast for Two
8:00-CBC News   'i '".'.- .
8:15-rBreakfast  Club
8:45—Laura Ltd. '.
9:00—Music Workshop
9:15—Aunt Lucy.
0:30—Lake of the Wood Milling
9:35—Good Morning Neighbor
9:45—Good Morning Neighbor
Mhlo^-Happy Ciang "
10:45-They Tell Me
11:00—Musical; Variety "
11:15—Famous Voices   '•''-.-
Il:30-Muslc. Hall'Variety
11:45—Wakely Trio ...
12:00—Luncheon Concert ■
12:30—Press News 	
12:45—Plantation': House Party
1:00—Moods in Melody
1:30—Bernie Braden
1:45—Housekeeping .
2:00—B. C; School i Broadcastl ■
2:30—Air Kindergarten .
rtS^-Dori Messer    '  ■        '-''
3:00-CJAT Goes Calling
8:45-BBC News'
4:00—The Inside Story.
4:16V-Jack Smith Show
4:30—Favorite Dance Band;    /
5:00—Northern Electric Hour f
5:30—Sweetwbod Serenade  >*
6:00-:Lux Radio'Theatre      -■■'■
7:00—CBC News"
7:15—News Roundup
7:30—Pacific Recital
7:45*-Ori Mike; Toriight
8:00—Piano Recital   ,:
8:30—Varicouver Theatre;
9:00—Music Ifbu Love ,.;,
9:15—Meriiory Lane-
9;30—Swlngtette Orchestra
10:00—Press News
10:15—Political .Talk.  ,  ,   .
10:30—Tabernacle Choir   '  ',
10:45—Biltmofe Hotel Choir
11:00—Musical Fill   ..;.
11:30—Peerless News
U:40-Sign Off-The King./ ,,
THE ANSWER, QUICK!
1. In mariner's measure, what Is a
cable length?"-,     j   ;
'2. What Is a newi?.
.8.. What was the name of the explorer who was second to reach the;
South Pole,- and died on the way
back?       •    /,..     '.,,     '.. '; ;.
4. What is an oviparous animal?
5. In Mariner's measure, what Is
a league?
HOW'D YOU MAKE OUT?
1.720 feet,.
2. A salamander—a Hzardllke an-
l.ip".i:,Th».newt lives In ditches or
quiet waters.,
3. Robert F. Scott, an Englishman.  •*■•": V
4. One that lays eges.
5. Three marine miles. "', .
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MODERN MANNERS
Thoughtfulness and consideration
for'other peoole's feelings are the
height of good manners as well as
a way "to make friends;and Influence people." Estimate the good
points of the people-with^whom you
associate; ignore their less desirable
ones. ' •>'•''-
YbURFUTURr
This is an excellent time to push|
your business affairs. During, the
.next year. cultivate optimism; as
whatever problems you- meet during this time will nass, and success
will be vours. A child born on this
date will probably be a somewhat
reserved individual. b,ut Industrious, thoughtful.' dependable and persevering. ',--■
IT'S BEEN SAIV
A State, to prosper must be built
on foundation? of a moral character,'and this character is the principal element of Its strength, and the
only guaranty of its, permanence
and prosperity,—Jabez L.M, Curry^
IT HAPPENED TODAY
Ori Jan; 10, 1918, the fifth All-
Russian Congress adonterl a written
constitution for the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republics.'
Count Shlgenobu Okuma. Japanese statesman who banished the
Shoguns and established the Emperor as Sole ruler of the Empire,
died Jan. 10, 1922.
'■;  ' '■ --■' -
h
1
 53
CLASSIFIED
PHOME144
HELP WANTED
Main or "Youth
MOTORCYCLES,  BICYCLES
AUTOMOTIVE    :
To mate home deliveries in
area above Houston St. between Ward and Falls Sts.
rime required, about Wt
iours doily;
'..  '   Apply to
Nelson Daily News
CIRCULATION DEPT.
JADUATE NURSE WANTED AT
once for general duty. Salary $160
a month gross, less $30 for
lintenance, Straight'8 hour shifts.
6 days on duty and 2 days off.
2% days holiday credits for every
month worked. Apply Matron,
Michel Hospital, Michel, B.C.
ANTED—FEMALE. BOOKKEEP
er, stenographer for general business in city. Apply Box 2513 Daily
News.
SITUATIONS WANTED
UTCH BOY, 19 YEARS OF AGE,
wishes lob on dairy farm. Experienced milker. Write to; Mr,
Arle van der Glessen, P.O. Box
10, Grand Forks, B.C. ..-■
3D JOB MAN. PH. 256-R. Carpen-
ter, heating service, kalsomlnlng.
/ANTED, MISCELLANEOUS
HIP VS YOUR SCRAP METALS
or iron. Any quantity. Tpp prices
paid. Active Trading Company,
916 Powell. St, Vancouver, B.C.
BTP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR-
fian, Nelson, B.C.
IUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
USINESS CORNER FOR SALE,
on Baker St. 2 stores, basement
25'x50'xl0'. Has-stove and 2 large
tables in basement. Grocery store
containing 2 counters; showcase,
electric coffee mill, cheese cuttle,
cash register, glove stand for delights, . office safe,'" desk, office
chair. Store.has Bhutan shelves.
Under 3^4 year lease,'Over Wore
are .6 large rooms incl. service
pantry, kitchen pantry, large bathroom, one furnished room. On
Railway. St behind; Store, are 5
two-room furnished apartments,
each have woodshed. Overall price
SJ43.800. Apply 507 Railway; St.
ANTED — BY BUSINESS MAN,
age 34. A good investment in the
City of Nelson', either commercial
or residential, a good business or
■ -working interest in same.
'Either retail, garage, etc. A good
Job with ropm for advancement.
Not afraid bf work. -Box 2508,
Daily News.
IIRST MORTGAGE INVESTMENT
opportunity. 8% interest, double
security, approximately $15,000
required. Box 2515 Daily News.
BUSINESS AND
'ROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
ASSAYERS AND. MINE
flEPRE8ENTATIVE8
i W. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-
5 sayers,' 301 Josephine St, Nelson.
S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, R C.
Assayer, Chemist, Mine Represnt
G. THOMPSON U CO, — AS-
eayers & Metallurgists, All work
given prompt attention. 1155 Pender St, W, Vancouver, B.C.
■    CHIROPRACTORS
, COLIN MCLAREN, D.C., CHIRO-
practic X-Ray, Splnography,
Strand theatre Bldg. Trail,-Ph. 328.
diamond drillers
National diamond drilling
I Co, Ltd, Drilling arid Bit Ser-
I   vice. Box 508, Rossland, Ph. 420.
,. ENQINEER8 AND 8URVEY0R8
ifeAGGEN AND CURRIE, B. C.
, Land Surveyors, Mining and Civil
Engineers,    Rossland,    Kelowna,
Grand Forks.
bOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.
I Nelson, B.C, Surveyor, Engineer.
.IN8URANCE AND REAL ESTATE
ilCHARDY AGENCIES  LTD.  IN-
aurance. Real Estate—Phone 135,
' MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine Shop, acetylene and
electric welding, motor rewinding
Phone 593 324 Vernon St
fcTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP—
Specialists in mine and mill work,
708 Vernon St., Nelson. Phone 98.
Machine work, light and heavy.
SALES AGENTS
frllLLER SALES AND  SERVICE.
.J. C. McKim, Box 123, Nelson.
Phone 234. "  .   ,    ■'. •■,   -
LIVEStOCIti POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
Super-qUality  New. Hampshire-
and Rhqde Island Red chicks: :
$4.50 for 25, $9 for 50, $17 for l00,"
$80 for 500.   '.'"..
.. GEORGE W, GAME .    .
Triangle Hatchery,;. Armstrong'
FOR . SALE — 7! WEEKS OLD
Yorkshire pigs W. E Storbo,-
Slocan Park. ■' '■
PERSONAL
top; prices PAi,b . for an-
tiques. Phone 1032 or 640 Baker SU
Tie; Detroit Whips Canadiens
,1947 CHEVROLET SEDAN
1947 DODGE COACH
'1946 PONTIAC SEDAN
1942 CHEVROLET SEDAN
1941 CHEVROLET SEDAN
1941 CHEVROLET COACH
1940 FORD COACH     .
1948 FORD PANEL
1947 FORD LT. DELIVERY
1932 MODEL B FORD
1929 PLYMOUTH SEDAN
',"■■' Tferms and Trades
WE PAY CASH fCm 2
GOOD-CARS' .". T
Empire Motors
Phone 1135 ' 803 Baker St,
NELSON
Gar Exchange
1940 S.tudeboker '
Chahripiqn
1939 Mercury Coach
T939 Dodge Coach
1938 Ford Coach
1929 Plymouth
Coach
DEPENDABLE   -
MERCHANDISE.
Smedley Garage
Vernon St.: '  .,.""   Nelson
FOR SALE - % T. 1848- CHEV-
rolet pickup. 5 heavy duty tires
700-17 »(8 ply). Electric block
heater, also heater in cab. New
set chains and tools. Apply J. P.
Adams, Neat Craft, R.R. 1, anytime during day. .. ...
FOR SALE — 1937 LIGHT DELIV-
ery International' truck, recently
' overhauled motor,-. good tires,
good buy at, $625. Apply, Kani-
gan's Garage, Perry Siding.
FOR SALE—1940 FOUR DOOR SE
Han. Plymouth car, fair shape, will
sacrifice at $1050. Apply Kanigan's
Garage, Perry Siding.     .,■■'.',;
WILL- PAY SPOT CASH FOR
late model passenger.,.cars, any
make. Queen City Motors.
NEW AND USED PARTS. FOR ALL
makes of cars. City Auto Wreck
ers. Box 24,'GranIte Road.
MACHINERY
Inserted or
Solid' Tooth'-.
' -  - Sawiy -■;
We can supply these in'the
following  populate mokes.
'    SPEAR & JACKSON     .
SIMOND5
DISSTON. "
SHIRLEY-DIETRICH
& ATKINS   ,
Saw Bits and
Saw Bit Holders* •
;   Our stock Is large
•Nelson Machinery
Equipment Co.
214 Hall St Phone 18
Mining,  Milling  and  Sawmill
Machinery, Building and Con-
_ ..tractors' Supplies. ..-
"If  It's  machinery . you  want,
" consult us."
CUSTOM MACHINE' WORK AND
welding. Portable welding equipment for field work. Stevenson's
Machine Shop, 708 Vernon St.,
Nelscn, B.C.
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
TOR SALE - GOOD BALED HAY.
One Ayrshire heifer, one 1930
Chevrolet one-ton truck in good
order. Apply R. J. Dauphtnais,
;"Salmo, B,C '
'MEDIUM' SIZE COAL HEATER,
brick lined, almost new. Floor
board, back screen and stove pipe
included, $18. Phone.344-L-2 or 317
2nd St. .' ,  \ '    .
ONE SQUARE GRAND PIANO IN
beautiful; mahogany finish. Late
model. Excellent-condition, $300.
Phone 692-R-2.
.CHESTERFIELD   BED   AND
chair.- Kitchen range and other
'.household   articles.   Apply   1208
' Crosley Ave,
'Sack boyce gun exchange,
Guns for sale and exchange and
expert gun repairing.
; Electric heater for sale.
Like new, Apply Suite 5 — 723
',   Silica.      '      . <' ■	
.PIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES, SPE-
I   cial  low  prices.  Active   trading
: Co.. 916  Powell Si..  Vancouver
FOR SALE — NEW REMINGTON
• model 31,12 gauge pump gun, $100
cash. Write Bpx 1445 Dally News.
The Classified Phone Number Is 144
TWO   D7   CATS,   ONE D6J   ONE
TD18  for sale,  fully equipped.
B a ye s    Equipment Companj-,
Cranbrook,  B.C.     -
SAWMILL, WOODWOHKNG AND
Contractors equipment of all
kinds, National Machinery Co.,
Ltd., Vancouver, B.C.
FOR HIRE - NEW -H.D. 7 BULL;
dozer. 713, Victoria Street.
LOST AND FOUND
WOULD PARTY WHO TOOK
man's overcoat by mistake from
the Civic Centre New Year's Eve;
please phone 1389-L and arrange
to pick up his- own.
LOST — FOLDING JACK, COR-
• ner   Stanley   and   Victoria   Sts.
Christmas Eve. Reward. Box, .880
Dally News.
FOUND—CAR KEYS ON BAKER
St. Owner can receive sarne by
paying for, this Ad. -,.. - ..     ,
WA.WANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN
surance Co. D. L, Kerr, Agent
10, CENTS! BIRTH CONTROL IN-
formation and catalogue of hy<
gienic supplies. Write Westertt
Distributors.. 61-L Ray Building,
Vancouver,
ATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD
Secretaries. We have a large stock
of newsprint niimeo and bond
paper and can fill any order immediately. Dally News' Printing
Dept, Nelson, British Columbia.
MEN'S .PERSONAL .DRUG . SUN-
- dries,,,1a) Deluxe  assorted  $1.00,
mailed. In plain sealed wrapper;
Finest quality, tested, guaranteed.
Bargain catalogue free. Western
Distributors, Box 24RN, Regina.
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
FOR SALE'— 8 ROOM STUCCO
• bungalow.  Fully 'modern,  Fair'
view.  I m mediate^ occupancy.
Phbne 749-Y.■'.-■ \':'/'■
ROOM AND BOARD .
GENTLEMAN WANTS ROOM AND
board; Write Box 2500,DalIy News;
FOR ROOMS OR "ROOM AN,D,
board, Phone 678-R-l. ,    .'*: v'.y,
FOR ROOM AND BOARD PHONE
337-Ry-  '      "".••':-.
FARM, GARDEN » NURSERY
FRUIT   TREES,   ORNAMENTALS
: and Roses. See H. C. Carne, Agent
Layritz Nurseries. Phone 312, Box
,37, Nelsbn, R.G   , ■   :..:--'
RENTALS
WANTED — FURNISHED OR UN-
furnished suite by commercial
traveller and wife. Phone O. V.
Stevenson, 1322-Y.      .-■'■'
WE URGENTLY REQUIRE,SMALL
house or'apartment. Please phone
Ralph Johnston at 1160.,
URGENTLY -NEEDED .3 ROOMED
unfurnished house in or near Nelson. Box 2390 Daily News,     »■■
YES WE REALLY ARS DESPER-
ate-HI you bear or know of anything please phone Ralph John;
stoh at, 1160,.   . .    -   ' '
W A N T E D r-. HOUSEKEEPING
apartment by elderly lady. Write
Box 1186 Dally News.
A   WARM   ROOM   FOR-RENT.
, Phone-778-X.
FOR RENT ■-, 1 SMALL HOUSE,
Apply 522| VernOn St...;■ '
Mmn lailg few
Classified Advertising Rates;
15c per Une first insertion; and
non-consecutive insertions; '■" ■ •
lie line per consecutive Insertion -Mler-first insertion.  -
48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions. ' ,"'• ■/■!''•'      .. . . ' -
$1.56 line per. month  (28 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra; Covers any number of insertions.s-
PUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,
TENDERS, ETC.-20c per line,
first insertion, 18c per. line each
subsequent insertion.-  -     '-''"■'- ■•
FOR PROMPT PAYMENT -
ALL ABOVE-RATES LESS 10%
Subscription Rates:
.Sihgle copy. '-..	
By carrier,' per week,
in advance  .*	
By carrier, per year ...
. Mall In Canada, outside Nelson:
One month  $ 1,00
/Three months "...;..,.^..'...»— '  2.50
"Six-months  ' ■ 4.50
One-year   ',..+      8.00
United States, United Kingdom:
One;-month:; .'„.„..:..„.....    1.00
Three months --;-.»,»;  ' 300
Six months ,     6.00
One year  $12.00'
above, rates plus postage
Where, extra postage Is required:
[ar Radios
WASHINGTON-Traffic officials
In .Washington believe auto' radios
may distract drivers and the officials are thinking about outlawing
tne'iri. Interest developed' 'after a
'defendant, tpld a Washington Traffic Court that he failed to get out
of the way of some fire trucks because, he. .was listening to his car
radio. He-explained he Just didn't
.hear, the sirens.     „  ■
This caused Traffic' Prosecutor
Clark'King to observe that too
many people may be doing too much
radio listening instead of attending
to their driving. He acknowledged
that the District of Columbia has no
law against car radios, but he- added:',- Y
"It is illegal to fall to give full
time and attention to the operation
of your automobile, and you- may
be fined $300. You surely are not
giving full .time and attention to
your driving ilf. you are listening to
a radio."     .', ,., ,'■ .,' ,'     '
King has received considerable
argument. against, that. view and
Some of it comes from the American
Automobile Association. A A.'A.'
spokesman Walter Hubbard pointed
put that, not one state has passed
laws agaibst car radios. Actually, he
added: "There are many advantages
to the car radio..It's of great value
in keeping a^ driver, awake.. ...
.-"And suppose you arb,driving to
New York," he,continued, ''lf;you
havp.your;radio on, you'll pick up
weather reports, ir a; st3f m'is inov-
Ing in, it gives you a chance to turn
back." ■ '.;■■
$  ,03
13.00
Vancouver Canary
Best of 237 Entries
VICTORIA—A canary owned by
Jack Atkinson" of Vancouver out-
chirped 237 other entries to be named, the'best bird at the .Victoria
Canary Club's song coMest
Atkinson's bird also won (he
Club's cup for the best old bird of
the show.   .
The J. Corlett sliver cup for the
champion young f bird went to a
canary owned by Mrs. Eleanor Re-
naud of,Vancouver."
Each! canary entered in the show
was judged on Its song ahd delivery.
The Victoria contest was a wartnr
up for the Western Canada championship which will be held in Vancouver Jan. 17,    !'<',.-''
LOST - LADIES' WRIST WATCH
on Baker St. Wednesday. Phone.
883-R.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND - CHILD'S SLEIGH,
owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad.
Phone 1215-Y,.
/ "
Winnipeg Grain" .,
WINNIPEG. (CP) — WInn i» e g
grain quotations (basis Lakehead):
Oats!-- .:'■'■ '.'I-'      ••">  :
May  ........   77'      77'     '75%    76%
July      -73%   ,73%.  72%    73.
Oct ..;;  — ; —    — -. 79 ;
Barley:       -. .,;, ':■-.,-
May   ........ 1.08% 1.08% 1.07% 1.08%
July  1.02% 1.02% 1.01% 1.02%
Oct.   ..;.....:   96%    —.     —       96%.
Rye: ' -,v ..     . ■'"
May  1.58% 1.58% 1,54% 1.55%
July   ,.....:. 1.58     1.56     1.53% 1.63%
Oct..  :  1.51% 1.51% 1.49% 1.49%
Flax!    "' . .   . - !
May  ........ 4.05%   —      — ' 4.05«i
July  ;..:....   «-      —      »-    4,08
Cash-prices: -
. Oats—No: 2 C.W.' 78%; No. ex. 3
CW. 75%: No. 3 C-W. 75%; ex.l
feed 75%; No.,1 feed 73%;;No. 2feed
"t'A; No. 3-feed 67%;,'track 87%.  ■'
Barley—No. .1 CW. 6-row 1.25%;
No. 2 CW. 6-row 1.25%; No. 1 CW,
2-row . 1,14%; No. 2 ; CW. 2-rbwi
1,14%; No; 3 C.W.'6-row''1.18%; No,
1 feed I.10%;No. 2 feed 1.09%; No.
3 feed 1.06%; track .1.06%; No. 2
CW. yellow 1.11%; No. 3 CW.
yelibw.1,11%. s .
Rye—No. 1 CW. 1.51%; No. J
CW. 1.51%; No-. 3 CW. 1.47%; re].,2
CW. 1.35%; Nb, 4 CW. 1.40%; track'
1.51%.-    '
Flax—No. 1 CW. 4.00; No. 2 CW.
3.95; No. 3 CW.-3.84; No. 4 CW.
3.76; track 4.00. , ,
(
TORONTO -^ The Toronto Maple,
Leafs registered their seventh tie of
the search iri the National Hockey
League Saturday night They came
from behih,d,to earh a.3-3 deadlock
with the third place Chicago Black
HaWks. The -tie .boosted Toronto
into a fourth place deadlock.
- Penalties played a, major part. ih
the contest as. the. Leafs'took eight
of the 13 minors handed out by Referee- Butch Keeling. The first two
Chicago-goals Came while the Leafs
were short handed. But the Stanley
Cup champions also notched' a
couple while they had a man sitting
in the cooler. ':...'..'
Gaye Stewart was-hit in the head
by the puck as Garth Boescll attempted to clear the puck down the
ice in the second period. He returned to action but collapsed in
the showers after;the.game.
The Chicago player was Ydellr-
ioits; in the Maple i Leaf Gardens
emergency hospital and an ambulance was summoned to rush him
to Toronto General Hospital.-Sunday, he was "rapidly Improving.".
First period: 1, Toronto, Kennedy (Metz) 4:15; 2, Chicago, Doug
Bentley (J. Conacher, Stewart)
■15:37. '   .-■'.-'-
- Penatllea:. Max- Bentley,.-Ezinlcki,
Thomson, .Bodnor, Nattrass, Mort-
eon, Stewart, Goldham.   .
■ Second periodijit. Conacher (Bod-
nar) 5:03; 4, Chicago, Prystal Gads-
by) 8:02; 5, Toronto, Watson (Gardiner Ezinlcki) 9:15.      -  '
. Penalties:     McCaig,    Buchanan,
Mortson, Gadsby.
Third period: 6, Toronto, Barilko
(Ezinlski) 12:17, ■   -;•
Penalty: Taylor.    .
MONTREAL -^-The Detroit Aed
Wings racked up two goals In the
first period'Saturday night against
Montreal Canadiens.. ■ These; were
enough to carry Red Wings to a 4-1
win over the Montrealers and shoot
them back into first place, In the
National Hockey League,
Except for the second period, the
Detroiters held the edge .all, the
.way, .-' , . ;■
, In losing, Canadiens lost a great
chance in their bid for a spot
against the League leaders.
First period: 1, Detroit, Poile (Mc-
Fadden) 7:22; 2, Detroit;Abe! (Lindsay) 18:56,
, Penalties: Reardon, ;Relse.
Second period: 3, Montreal, Reay
(Carveth, Harmon)  1;07. -
Penalties': Stewart, Mosdell, Enlo,
Chamberlain, Harmon, .Abel Cam-
eau.    ,
Third period: 4, Detroit, Gee.(Pavelich) 2:03; 5, .Detroit, Pavelich
(Stewart) 18:07. .--.-
Penalty: Horeck.  ■/
GiORGE DAHLGREN
RETIRES, HONORED
ATRIONOEL
RIONDEL, B.C.—The workmen at
the Bluebell Mine gathered at the
home of Mr. Selby, the Superlntendr
ent, to extend their wishes to
George Dahlgren on his retirement,
On behalf of the CM. & S.. Co.,
Mr. Selby presented Mr. Dahlgren
with a beautiful silver serving tray,
suitably enscrlb'ed as.; a. token of
appreciation for the 30* years he
had been with the company. He
wished him many happy years, ot
retirement After Mr Dahlgren
thanked the gathering,, refreshments
were served and community singing -enjoyed, .- -  . ■■';';;, -
Eric Thast- spoke on .behalf oi
the., workmen- and; also , gave an.
enjoyabla rendition of a song,'    •
Siocan-Arrow
Lakes Hockey
League Set Up
Gplfer;:'Outdrives" r
Cricketer \
. BROADSTAIRS, Kent, Eng. (AP)
r^A golfer Sunday successfully defended the power, of his golf: sticks
against the arm of a cricketer.
Ernest McLennan, captain of the
North Forelahd'a Golf Club, won a
freak 18-hble golf match over Beverley Eyon, five and four,
'■': McLennan .played orthodox golf.
Lyon sought to "outdrive" him by
throwing the ball between the tee
and the green but damp runways
slowed the roll of the ball. He holed
out with a putter.
juniors Win
senior crowds
in que. hockey
By VIC M0RR18,'JR.''   '
Canadian Press Staff Writer
MONTREAL (CP)—Senior hockey in Quebec Js slbwly; giving up
cash customers to the junior circuits. This has become more evident
since the start of the present-hockey
campaign 1han ever before.
Quebec Citadels bf the .Junior
Amateur Hockey Association,, Canada's oldest"' organized hockey circuit.' have consistently out-drawn
their big brothers—Quebec Aces of
the Quebec Senior League. They did*
itlast year, too.
In Montreal where five' junior
teams operate, the increasing num'
ber of fans attending the games is
becoming' more noticeable as the
season advances. ,'..   .
. Frank Selek, General Manager of
the N. H, L. Canadiens, predicted
when; he came here from Toronto
three years ago that "Quebec would
eventually develop a Memorial Cup
hockey team." Quebec has yet to
produce .a Dominion junior title
club, .but the foundation -has been
laid. . -.ji .
' The junior league embraces' five
cities and one town. '...
The teams making it up are: Montreal Royals, Montreal Canadiens,
Montreal- Nationales,. Verdun Maple.
Leafs, Verdun Cyclones, Vlctoria-
vllle Tigers, Quebec Citadels: Three-
Rivers Reds and Valleyfield Braves.
LION BANTAMS
EDGE E.A.C, $4   i
, George Benwell'S Bantams edged
out. the Fairview. Athletic Club's
Bantam hockey' team , 2-1. In a
League scheduled game at the Civic
Saturday afternoon. It was. the first
time that the Lions Bantams have
been able to eke out a win over the
FA.Cs."   '
Play was close most of the game
with McRory netting the F.AiG.'s
goal in the first period. Olson tied
It up .for the Lions in the middle
frame while Burdett scored the
Lion's winning goal as the bell went
to end the game. The Lions drew all
tour penalties of the game, Olson,
Burdett, Benwell and V. Botch being the offenders.
Referees were Ken Cooper, Chuck
Crosby and' Al MacDonald. Scorer
was George Tralnor and the timekeeper Jim Butgess. ,/
DAILY CROSSWORD
Young girl   32. Sea eagle
Little Island 35. Book of    <
Girl's name       Old
Weep Testament
convulsively     Apocrypha
Choked       3«.Maat :'■)"
37. Employ
38. Dancing
girl
(Egypt)
Over
(Poet.)
Cover
Sayings
An amount 40. Break
niaani    hlibihi.
UlHkilBU   C-II'lCIHIJ
unnua Hciratnn
HUH   IJHCI   UKH
HucanH
ntiiiiiuii BHurj
Hautiti aouiBLi
ramnH ni'iHiaiibi
HHUHO
tiuH urjn linn
UP1P1HH   ClUHtlU
lauui'in    istiriu
Eggs
Flowed
Old times
(archaic)
Self
suddenly
41. Book
division
42. Malt
beverage
Sitlrlar't Ailwn
44. Pig pen     .
46. Wine
receptacle
ACROSS
l.Carp.
6.Letin
11. Arrange
In aline
12. Stop   •
13.Intended
14. Troubles
15. Lamprey  .
16. Pronoun
18. March date
18. Bobbin
21. Final
24. In front
28, Harden ■
30. Competitor 29,
31. Impair
33. Pluck (sling)
34. Point of the;
compass
38. Rough
growth
39. Negative
;.', reply," .;-.".-.
40. Mineral   '
'    spring
«, Pellets of.
medicine
48. Trite
47. Medieval     '
v helmet.
«8.Semblance
49. Prepared
50. Strips of
' woven cloth
DOWN
1. Arrived
2; Toward    ,
the lee
3. Small bottle
4. Tavern
5. Abatement
icolloq,)'
(.Highest card
7.Anpotopua.
DAILV CRyPlOQUOTE-Here's how to work lit.
' AXTDLBAAXR/
IsLON OrELLQW
'   One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used
-    for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single lettersj; .apofr
trophes, the length and formation of'the words are all hints, Bach
day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
'VXB    AVIMIPPBAV    VMQB1    XOA    KM;y
''   V'X.B'   XNPXBAV    QORR-YMIINA. ;. V
Saturday's Oryptoqtiotei    THE  EAR IS A LESS TRUSTWORTHY WITNESS THAN THE EYE-HERODOTUS.
DIslrlbuM by King Features Sl-ndlcatt, Inc.
f ■
NEW DENVER, -B.C—A meeting
was held.in the New Denver skating rink to organize a Siocan-
Arrow. Lake Hockey League for the
1949 season;  ". ,■■"■•--,
Representatives from Slocan City
were James HesUp, Des Hood and
Stanley Hesllp;; from Silverton,
George Groenhuysen, Richard Ham-
bly jr. and John Hambly; from
Nakusp, S: mardi "G.Armstrong, L.
Parent and P. Biengesner; from,-
New Denver, C. R. Tipple, G; A.
Forsythe,.-W.-'.O;' Thrlng. and Fred-
B. TeSsmaii. ■-. v.- :
. League. President Is W, E. Graham
of Slocan Cityi Vice?Presldent, C.
R. Tipple, of New D.enver; Secre-
tary-Treasurer, Reld Gardner of
Nakusp.. ;     . - ;»•
It. was decided .that games hot
played due to inability to ice a
team shall be forfeited. Every
effort to avoid this, wlir be' made.
Games called because of lack of
ice are to he cancelled arid played
later if; possible.'. Two .league
referees will be appointed to handle
all games and each team is to supply a. linesman.     Y    -
It was moved that all players up
to 18 in New Denver be- registered
with the league secretary by Feb. ,1:
and no: additions allowed after that
date. Each team will, have two
home,and home' games,,,First and
third and second and fourth teams
are to play a best two out of three
series,. winners to play off a best
two out of three for the cup, ,
.Schedule .for, the Siocan-Arrow
Lakes League: '     .... '■ :
Jan.-11—New- Denver at Nakusp.
, Jan. lr~Slocah City at Silverton.
Jan: 1,4,— Slocan Cltytat New
Denves> ,: " -   »    :     .
■ ■ Jan. 15VNakusp at Silverton.
Jam 18—Silverton at New Denver
Jan.. 18—Nakusp at Slocan City, i
; Jan..21-rSlocan City at Nakusp.
■ Jan.' 21—New Denver at- Silverton.
Jan. 25—Nakusp at New Denver,
Jan. 25;-;Sllvarton at Slocan City.
N«W Hotfl Owner
At Silverton,
H. V. Barnes, Dies
SILVERTON, B.C. — Mrs. H. V.
Barnes, Mrs. S. Clark and R. Mac-
Phee ' left Friday for Vancouver
where they accompanied the body
of HV'Vj Barnes.
: Mr. Barnes died suddenly in the
Slocan Community Hospital at New
Denver on - Wednesday, and interment will take place in Vancouver.
Mr, and Mrs. Barnes have only resided in Silverton a short time,
having taken over the Selkirk Hotel
In July.  ■'■■;:
Big Coast Fire
Sews Up Traffic;
Expect Report Today
VANCOUVER—Fire Department
officials in Vancouver have not yet
definitely established the cause ot
the three-alarm fire which roared
through a plumbing plant and two
rooming houses at Main and Georgia
Saturday night.''   ,
However, they believe its origin
may have been In the basement of
the now gutted J. Reld Plumbing
Plant, and the Fire Marshal Is expected to release a report Monday.
No official estimate of the resulting damage has been released but
firemen said it was "extensive."
While 250 fire fighters battled desperately to quell the-blaze, home
ward-bound traffic was In Chaos for.
almost two hours.    .
Service was disrupted on theTra-
ser-Cambie trolley coaches, and on
Fairmont, Broadway East, Victoria
Road, Joyce Road and Kerrlsdale
lines. ...
Tenants from both rooming houses
covering the sheath of ice on Main
Street the aftermath of fighting the
Maze in bitterly cold weather,
FRENCH FIGHTER
BATTLES FOR 10
BLOODY ROUNDS
NSW YORK; (CP)- Somebody
said "a hungry.fighter is a good
fighter," explaining the^good showing made by some European boxers
here. '-,,;'
Robert Vlilemain, French middleweight, must have been hungry Friday night. Although badly mangled
and bleeding freely from deep cuts
on both eyes, he stuck it out, for 10
bloody rounds-with .belting Steve
Bellolse 6f New York-.
The decision went to the Bronx
battler; who weighed, 157% to Vll-
lemalft's 159%. Bellolse threw dynamite with both hands but Vlilemain kept crowding inside,. chop,
ping viciously to the head and body
with staccato lefts and rights.
WORCESTER, Mass, (AP)—Alfred-Mattel of Worcester, a 21-year;'
old. student at Holy Cross, is reported in critical condition from injuries suffered Jn his first professional
heavyweight boxing bout   .
Billed as "Freddie Martin," he
was struck behind the left ear Friday night during the second round
of WS-scheduled. four-round preliminary bout with Dick Bellan of
Boston.    .
At hospital, Mattel's Injuries were
diagnosed as a "concussion and a
possible skull-fracture."
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JAN, 10, 1949 — 9
A. W. Idiens, Head of Land Registry
Office Here Since 1922v Retires;
ign
-. A, W. Idlehs has retiredjas Registrar .at-the Land Registry Office In
Nelsbn, a position he' held for the
last 28 years. x .    , "
Hls.-successor Is'.a veteran of the
Second World War, Graham Simms,
itormerly of" Nsw Westminster and
a native of New Brunswick'.
"; Prjor to his appointment as Registrar In 1922, Mr; Idlens was on
?the staff of the Landy Registry In
Victoria. He came to Canada; In 1812,
going to Victoria; and'joined-the
80th Battalion ih Victoria at the
outbreak of the-First World .War.,. •
In'France, he was transferred to
the, 16th Canadian' Scottish;Regiment, and saw action'In France and
Belgium. He took part in the battles
of Flanders, Yores, and Festubert,
and was .woiraded in the latter.
■ Returned to England for hospital
treatment, ■ he - Was ' subsequently
transferred to; the 'legal department
of the Canadian Army in London,
and was with the department three
and a half years, where he-was suf
perlhtending clerk. In 1919 he was
back in Vitcoria and remained there
until coming to Nelson. *.'■".-,
. He Is a> member of the Canadian
Legion,
Mi". Idlens was born in the Cots-
wold country of 'England, hailing
from ■ Wickhamford, in; Worcestershire;-; He started his career as a
lawyer, and ; was first ■ articled to a.
firm- of solicitors' in Evesham,
Worcestershire. He qualified- as a
B.C. solicitor' in 1922:   '• imi r
IN WORCHE8TER YEOMANRY
In. his' youth, he joined- the
Queen's. Own Worcestershire Hussars; Imperal- Yeomanry- He also
followed the sport of fox hunting,,
and was for many years a member
bf the'rJorth1 Cotswold Hunt. His
family and father also were ardent
followers of the hounds.
: JIf.'- Idiens was an outstanding
athlete' In his younger, days, and is
perhaps  best   known'..among  the
^ootenay sport; fraternity'.' He
achieved skill In a number, of
sports.  ■  -    - '';,'■-'-
! . He <was - ■ captain,', of. the grass
hockey..eleven In .Victoria before
coming to .Nelson;. As-.a tennis
player, -he won-'the'doubles cham-
plonshlpsT for-. West .Kootenay,for,
four. years,' partnered with Major
Mattiand Harrison of Howseri when
the net game was at .Its. peak ot
nopularity in the district
P'0WERFUt.;8WllVIMER    .
He has ployed tennis most of bis
life,,arid engaged in.a,host of other
sports- Including badminton, football, shooting and, cricket. He was
a powerful..' swimmer; and spent
long .hours In.Kootenay 'Lake ah'd'
'(Vest Arm waters.
■He.is an.ardent angler, and still
goes on; fishing trips, each Spring
and Autumn.'. V.-.
' Most of, his years In Nelson, Mr.
Idiens has lived'with his family; at
807 Carbonate' Street.
He is married, and .'has two
daughters, Molly; jean, - In Victoria,
and Nancy, who {attends Nelson
High School. He also has two
sisters,.one at Wellington, V.I., and
the other at Coldstream, pear Victoria, and three brothers, two at
Comox and one in'the Old Country.
P.O.W. OVtiR A YEAR. ; .;,
The new .Register practiced Jaw
in New Westminster for.,,a'.year
after being called to the Bar in
.1947. A graduate of the. University
bf'.New Brunswick, he-went t(j. the
Coast in 1938 and enlisted ..in the
New. Westminsten Reglmerit. He
participated In the Italian .campaign
as a major in the infantry, and was
captured In December of 19J3. He
was imprisoned at a,German camp
near Brunswick, -Germany, 'and
was not liberated and repatriated
Until 1945. ..,-.■
; At present living on!- the-',North
Shore; he Is married and has two
children, one born in Nelson.*shortly
before Christmas.    '    .,.-.'-'j.;.    .
to
By NORMAN ALTSTEOtER
; Canadian Press Staff Writer
! LAKE SUCCESS (CP) - This is
Canada's'month-to shine In the
United Nations Security Council
/with the Domihlbri's Gen. A. G. L.
McNaughton as President of the
li-member body.
But. even before the 82-year-old
McNaughton gave the gavel blow
Friday opening the Council meeting, it was evident he would have a
busy month with such problems as
Indonesia, Berlin, Palestine and
Kashmir. -
.' The first session of the New
..Year, brought sharp condemnation
of. Netherlands "police action"
against the Indonesian Republic
and a'call from Australia, the
Philippines and India that Netherlands forces withdraw from
areas they took oven since Dec,
18.
The Council's "Good Offices"
Committee, which has worked in
Indonesia towards a settlement for
more'than a year, reported,on the
'Netherlands, action and suggested
that it be dissolved since it could
do nothing about,the conflict. The
Committee accused the Netherlands
of hampering the operations of the
grqup by permitting no military ob-;1
servers into the field.
Egypt joined the three Pacific
countries in condemning-the Netherlands' action. But the Council
made no decision on the question,
adjourning ' until next Tuesday
when the same problem would' be
discussed. , "
RESOLUTION DEFEATED
In Paris last month a resolution
calling on the Netherlands to withdraw her troops to positions held
before the. "police action," was defeated in the Council.
Five countries supported the resolution but a majority of seven is
necessary ior.-passage.-i-.
Canada was among those abstaining from" the voting. The Dominion
has consistently held that the Council should' not give orders beyond
its powers.''       -,
Tha Netherlands^ role In the proposed- Atlantic pact is another factor
believed to be affecting Canada's as
well, as that of Britain> and the
United States.        ..'','■,.-
'But ;three  new- non-permanent,
members — Egypt, Cuba *nd Norway—took their seats at the Co'un-.'
oil table for the first tlmeyesterday.
There was speculation that withjthe
Change ih. membership a strong resolution might be passed.     ' , .;
TRIED TO MAKE SURE NEITHER MOTHER
NOR FATHER WOULD GET CHILDREN
NEW YORK (AP)—A 37-year-old
Brooklyn truck driver dressed his
small son and daughter In their best
clothes, and'took them to a church.
■Before the altar, he knelt With
them and prayed. He taught them-to
make the sign of the Cross.
Afterwardi he took the two, by
the-hand and led them to the centre
of the Kosciusko bridge, spanning a
creek lowland -between Brooklyn
anH. Queens.  -.       .  , .
there, In three swift motions, Gabriel Nicolettl Friday threw his two
children over the railing and then
-jumped after them to the ground
One-Legged Player
Entered in Toronto .
Badminton Meet
TORONTO (CP) — Toronto's
Strathgbwan Club!s- fifth International Badminton Tournament next
week..will have as a contestant a
one-legged racquet-wlelder . from
the Uhited States.   .
He is Don Kerr of Montclalr, N. J.
Joe Noble, Strathgowan Club, pro,
said Kerr 'Is a "remarkably fast"
player, using his one good leg and a
crutch.
175 feet below.
Nicolettl and the boy, Arthur; 8,
were killed; Gall, 6, was taken to a
hospltal,;Her condition was reported
still .critical.	
A motorist witnessed the tragedy.
The Rev.Harold Buetown, of the St.
Cecilia's- Roman Catholic Church,
described, the visit ;of;fthe father
and his children at his church.
Mrs; Agnes Nicolettl,.33, the -widow, said'heir husband: had ordered
her to leave their home; a week ago.
A "relative quoted theVfather. as
telling his wife, after a ^quarrel:
' "YOU won't get the children. Neither of us will have them;" -
Deaths
VICTORIA (CP)—William David
Mlchell, 76; one of the oldest and
best known farmers ot South Saan-
lch-fand. President of the South- Sa-
anich Farmers' Institute for 27
years.
VICTORIA (CP)—G. H. "Harry"
Davy, 80, widely "known old time
telegrapher. ' -' .    ,
TRADE DEVELOPMENT
PROSPERITY SECRET
MONTREAL (CP) — President
Beaudry Leman of Banque Cana-
dlenne Natlonale told the annual
general meeting Saturday that'Can-
ada's prosperity depends in large
measure on the activity of her foreign trade.
In his address to shareholders, Mr.
Leman said the European Recovery
Plan will temporarily stimulate exports. But "we must endeavor to de-
Veiop as soon as possible our trade
with the world at large, keeping in
mind mutual Interest, which alone
offers guarantees of stability."
The death rate in Canada from influenza has fallen 81 per cent during
the past 20 years.   .
Five in Hospital
After Coast
Traffic Accidents
VANCOUVER—Five, persons are
in hospital at Vancouver with injuries suffered in weekend traffic
accidents, ,
Two 21-ycar-bld youths, William
Murray and Larry McBrlde are in
hospital after crashing into a'.telephone pole on Fraser while driving
a "hotrod" automobile.
Vancouver General Hospital officials reported Sunday that Murray,
who is suffering from head injuries,
is in fair condition. McBride's condition Is good.
Two women are in hospital following a two-car collision at a
downtown intersection Saturday
night
Mrs. May Hatch is suffering from
side injuries, and Mrs. Ann Carter
lis being treated for Injuries to her
shoulder and side.       ,.
A 64-year-old pedestrian, Mike
Benson, who stepped into the path
of ani automobile is being treated
for facial lacerations.
Police siid the car,which struck
Benson was driven by-Francis H.
Hoad.
Tons of Berries
Lack Markets
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C —
British ■ Columbia's Fraser Valley
raspberry-growing Industry faces a
bleak future, With no markets in
sight .for thousands of tons Of berries.; %;■'■
Growers estimate their. loss,
brought on by the United Kingdom's Import restrictions, at $1,000,-
000.
Pacific Co-Operative Union Officials say the situation may result In
thousands, of growers going out ol
.' business.
 10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JAN. 10,1949
:
Did You Know. •.
THAT the per capita consumption of paper is exceeded
only by milk arid water.      •..'.'•'"-
THAT there are papers made from cotton, linen, esparto,
straw, hemp, manila and jute besides'Wood and rag. ■'
THAT the hornets knew tho secret of paper malting ages .
before men found it out.
-.-.- i
THAT the female hornet, with her strong jaws shaves oft
tiny particles of wood, and chews them "'into a pulp.
THAT the pulp is spread out thin, layer after layer, and
as it dries turns Into a tough springy paper as seen in a hornets
paper, house;- -
THAT paper, fibres shrink and expand in width with
changes in Relative humidity. •;' hi
THAT Mann's Drug.Store has the finest stock of writing
-papers and of office stationery In the Kootenays. /
.PHANN S
DRUC STORE.
Beaverbrook To
Retire From
Conservative*
LONDON (CP) — Lord, Beaverbrook, for many years.- one- of- the
most colorful figures In British politics, has decided to retire frorri the
Conservative Party.   '
The Canadian-born Peer, one .of
the world's leading publishers, has
dropped out of the Party,'-it was reported Friday night.
The report,was published iri one
of Lord Beaverbrodk's own papers,
the London Evening StandaiJ.lt
said he had informed the Conservaf
Uve agent tor the area Iri which he
lives that he Is no longer a member
of the .Party, and would not'renew
the Party donation which he-has
made..for. many,years,   .      : '   "".
Speculation'was that Lord Beaver-
brook dropped out because of his
opposition-to the Conservatives' support of dependence on United States
economic aid.
Capital Gloseups... ;'
Parliament Building Scrubbed
Out lor Coming Session Jan. U
a    By GEORGE  KITCHEN
Canadian Press Staff Writer
OTTAWA; tCP)—There's a bustle
of activity iri the House on the Hill
and you- can tell they're expecting
visitors*, important ones ,too.'; ,
The great, grey-stoned structure,
known 'popularly as the Parliament Buildings ot Canada, is being
scrubbed, pollened, swept, vacuumed and generally Te-fufnished, with
plenty"; of; emphasis on the elbow
. grease. .->-'.'
The visitors are Important. They
" regard this place as their home for
six months, ot the year. They are
the 245-odd members of Parliament,
who come iri mid-Winter and stay
until Summer to debate, discuss and
finally, pas's on Canada's laws.
In preparation for their coming
—Parliament resumes Wednesday,
Jan. 26—a small corps pf char
Women and char-men are Spend
ing long days dusting and otherwise cleaning the scores of rooms
which   serve   as  offices  for  the
legislators.     .
'"in   the   long,   green   Commons
chamber, and the red-carpeted-Sen
ate chamber as well, vacuum cleaners hum across the floor.
Out on the marble-floored corridors workmen manipulate hefty
sanding-machines to grind off the
grime, leaving a bright polished
surface to lighten the parliamentary
footsteps.  -'.■■■'. ,
Some members already have arrived and are getting ready,for
their sessional chores. While their
own'offices are being made ready,
they are occupying temporary accommodation until the Jan. 26 meeting date.
fiURNEY
COAL and WOOD
RANGE
$123.75
Nelson Electric Co.
Authorized
General Electric Appliances
674 Baker St. Phone 260
Have the Job Done Right
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
AT REASONABLE COST
RELIABLE SERVICE
Smedley Garage Co.
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MURPHY'S
■>.'.■.,;-  - ■; For     ';'
Wallpopen — Kalsomines
Paints — Varnishes
746 Baker St. Phone 655
■iiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiEiiiiiiiiiiJii
NOW Is the Time
For That Winter
CHECK-UP
Right now before the weather gets any rougher, you
should have your car's performance checked. — Keep
your car in good condition.
Bring it in todayv
Your Car Is New Again
ALL REPAIR WORK CAN
BE ARRANGED ON
Easy Budget Terms
:•' at. ••"-.; :-M
UTHBER
MOTORS
To Fly Vaccine
To Arctic Pries!
OTTAWA (CP) —The R.CAX
will undertake a mercy mission to
Igloolilt, deep inside the Arctic Circle, with supplies of vaccine for
Father Ostran, a young Roman
Catholic Priest who was bitten by, a
mad Eskimo dog.
Father Ostran, described as a man
of about 20, is an Italian-born Priest
who came to Canada.less than'two
years ago to do missionary work in
the Arctic' His post at Igloolik at
this time, of year is in complete
darkness, making the mercy flight
more difficult.
Word of the case wes relayed to
Ottawa by Dr. Osborne, a Health
Department doctor at Pangriirtung",
Baffin Island.
R.CA.F. officials said the mission
would be flown from Winnipeg. '
It waa expected the aircraft would
land first at Southampton Island or
Repulse Bay, and then move on to
Igloolik; which is' situated on an
island just North of the Melville
Peninsula, about 200 miles Inside
the Arctic Circle.
Nelson's First
"Planed
Owner Passes
By R, G.JOY
.The Daily Province of Dec. 28,
1948,' carried1 an Item showing that
'Clarence Madison. Lammadee, aged
70 years, died at Victoria. He had
•been visiting .his son-in-law, John
Nickle at Esquimelt. His funeral
took.place on Jan. 3, at Vancouver
where he had; resided for. 'Some
time. Mr. Lammadee had been in
the service of the Canadian Pacific
Railway, having obtained employment-with them as a young man,
On retiring, he was a locomotive
engineer; One daughter survives
him, ll/Irs'-J. Nickle.-'
Mr. Lammadee, was for many
years a locomotive engineer in Nelson. He resided on Latimer Street
It was about'the time when the first'
airplane visited \Nelson, and gave
the,.crowd a thrill'at our annual
fall fair. Mr. Lammadee thought
he would like_to fly one of his own,
so he sent ti£a firhvin the United
States that sold knock-down mach-
•ines. His neighbors saw that an
airship" was in the making, arid
Nelson boys, especially those 'who
lived on Josephine and Latimer
Streets,' were very curious. The,
machine stood for a time outside
the basement door; One evening,.!-
heard the roar of the engine, and
propellor. I went up to Larnhiadee's
basement and asked' hiih if he in-"
tended going-up in it-.sometime.
He said "Yes". -, *,       •'-
It seemed, to be a frail; arrangement similar to the,Edward's ma:
chine that pioneered'flying at Nelson. If. was built, of bamboo, canvas
and; wire, plus a great array of
tacks. Mr. Lammadee ■-. was busy
-pouring oil into the engine, and it
seemed.that every.part of the engine needed to be bathed in oil.
I said to him, "It seems it needs
a lot of lubrication."       -■   ,-■
"Yes," said he, "arid gas."
: ft was a considerable time later
when he took it down to the QP.R.
flats and was intent on going up,
but I failed to find if he attained
flight. , ,-,
St. Boniface Police . V
Worried About
Ol'Nick's Arrival
ST. BONIFACE, Man. (CP) —Police in this sister-city of Winnipeg,
are not quite sure when Winter
started. In St, Boniface, Winter traditionally begins with the arrival
of Ol' Nick. This year he didn't
show up. . ■>..-
Of no fixed abode, the old man
appears in police court here each
year, early in December to plead
guilty to a charge of vagrancy. Each
year he is sentenced to .six months—'
the cold months—in Headingly JalL
Nick has been wintering in jaU1
fos 18 years and his trip is invariably via" St. Boniface.
Police, who usually don their.fur
hats and settle down tor a cold Winter when -Nick appears ori the scene,-
kept, their headgear in moth balls a
little longer this, season.' But with
no Nick in sight and; ears nipped by
Jack Frost they, were, forced to
break- an 18-year' tradition..
-'.'We're kind,, of worried about
Nick," says Chief J.yH,-Baiidry.-'"I
doubt if he'd deliberately break his'
time-honored custom." »
Church Destroyed
OTTAWA (CP)-St. Mary's Ro-
rnan Catholic Church, the 60-year-
old edifice in Ottawa's West End,
was completely destroyed in a spec-,
tacular two -„alarm blaze which
Caused damage estimated at between'$150,000 and-$200,000.
. Actual cause of the blaze has not
been determined, but it is believed
to have been touched off from an
explosion.in the hot air furnace. '
Business Outlook . . .'
Forest Consumption Equal io Yearly
Regrowlh Need of Future
Fires Destroyed 60 Per Cent of
Original Stand, Only 13 P.C. Cut-
Firebugs, Insects Unknown Factors
;■'.   By FORBES' RHUDE '■>. ;
. Canadian. Press Business Editor
The productivity of the Canadian
forests, provided they are properly
utilized, can be maintained for all
time, says a study by the Canadian
Pulp and Paper Association,'
But—"The. critical,, point' in the
Utilization of the Canadian forests
is; approaching. Sooner or later the
anriual consumption will equal.the.
regrowth. Except for one thing this
would not be a particularly hazard''
ous state-of affairs. , .-'-y,-<y
;"That one thing^s bugs;: firebugs
and insects. They now account for
25.9 per cent of our annual forest
depletion. '
"The. Canadian public has every
reason to worry about its forests,
because their future is definitely
endangered by the spruce budworm
plague, which has reached epidemic
proportions. Some 22,000 square
miles of forests have been utterly,
devastated and destroyed. It now Is
present in roughly one-third of the
accessible productive forests of the
nation.' -    - . '
"With fire, no less than 60. per
cent of the original forest has been
b"urried4-6nly 13 per' cent has - been
cut, for use .... , '
"A basic need In the Canadian
forest situation Is a compilation of
the facts so that, when and where
required, consumption.can- definitely be limited tb annual re-
growth."    .
The Pulp and Paper. Association
review is a 16-page book called "The
Pulpwood Harvest".«
Canada, it says, Is, above all, a
forest country.
The forests fall-Into two eate-
' gorlei, the unproductive, mostly
along the Northern edge of vegetation, covering 477,850 square
miles; and the productive, covering 813,110 square miles.
The productive forests fall Into
another two groups; the accessible, covering 435,000 square miles,
and the Inaccessible, 378)110 square
.. .m|le«. :-.'.'''■ ;'-.' :"''-'■-
: "But'Hcces'stbillty• Is a relative
term. With a road, a. railway, a "mill,
or even a dam, Inaccessible forests
become.accessible." ..-•
The productive forests - cover ah,
area equal to two Ontarios; are
twice the size of the Union of Soith
Africa, or equal to seven New Zea-
lands. .   ...
$2 BILLION '.-...-'
OUTPUT
From them come products with
an annual gross value of nearly $2,-'
000,000,000, half of,it from pulp and
paper operations. Salaries and
wages exceed $500,000,000.
The review is enriched with passages like, this:    ..-,-,    '   >.. ..
"In the hurly-burly of Canadian
life', amidst the roar of industry, iri
the activity of the ports and surrounded by majestic engineering
exploits, few Canadians recall that
bears haunt theforests within sight
of the, cities, and that the 'woods^
man's axe, often a stone's throw
from civilization, rings a tune that
reverberates throughout the land.
In -short, the forests, as ever,' remain a great-bastion of Canadian
commerce." .   . '
"Pep Up With
VITAMINS"
Parke-Davis
KAPSEALS COMBEX
High'Potency Vitamin B >'.
Compound
Per 100 capsules _ $4.95
.'-,.:■ At Your Rexall tjtore
City Drug Co.
Phone 34 Box 400
BRITISH HOSPITAL ACCOMMODATION
THREATENS TO BECOME ACUTE
LONDON   (Reuters).—Apprehen-
, sive British doctors fear that large
jfnumbers.of their patients urgently
' rSquirin'g hospital treatments 'this
year will be. unable to get it.
Shortage of hospital accommodation, whibh has been a serious problem slhce theVwar ended, threatens
to' become acute within' the next
few ninths. -
"Though the Winter, has hardly
begun, it is already difficult to secure abed for anyone who is likely
to occupy It for, a long time" the
medical journal, The' Lancet, - reports.*'; .',  .  ■
Elderly patients are most seriously,
affected, A British Medical Association spokesman-said "there is no
doubt that there are no beds available for the chronic sick."
, In London an emergency bed'
service' helps doctors urgently requiring abed for patients. The doctor makes contact, with' the service,
which then approaches as many hospitals as may be necessary in order
to find a vacant-place.;
Applications to the Emergency
Bed Service now are three times as
numerous, as at the same time last
year.. Many, have to be. refused as
beds cannot:be found;
About 22,000 hospital beds are'
normally kept available for emergency cases In England and Wales,
The latest total of beds available
Is 533,000, compared with 466,000
before the war. i
About 60,000 of the''total--cannot
be used; because of shortage of
nurses" and .trained, staff—this (despite the 51,000 nursing students now
in training Compared with 43,000 in
1938. ."■ ■:•',,■
While there are about 8000 tuberculosis- "cases awaiting hospital
treatment, more than 4500 sanatoria
beds- are empty because of staff
shortage.
Energetic short-term- treatment of
the chronic sick and improved home
nursing services have; been suggested in some quarters to ease the pressure. ■     '■-"-■.■"    ,        ..-•".
Another, proposal, canvassed by
The Lancet, is that-some closed
wards of hospitals should be reopened for the coming three-months
danger period temporarily staffed
by part-time nurses arid helpers. "■-
Lawyer Claims
Premier Tried to
Eject Him From Meet
REGINA i(CP)-W."W. Lynd of
Estevan, Sask., and counsel for coal
operators involved in the Estevan-
Bierifait coal strike settled Friday
night, has charged: Premier T. C.
Douglas of Saskatchewari. threatened to eject him forcibly from' a negotiation'meeting.
The ■ Premier issued a counter
statement which■.'said the 'lawyer
had walked uninvited iiito the meeting where settlement 'terms. were
being signed and used language "I
do noUcare to repeat."
Six Killed in Aii-
Lift Plane Crash
WARRINGTON,' Lanes., England
(AP)—Six men were killed when a
United States air-lift.plane crashed
Friday; ih Lancashire swampland,
The plane, a. cargo-carrying C-54
Skymas,ter, ,was en route from
Frankfurt to the.;Burtonwood Air
Base for inspection. It dropped eut
of sight after establishing radio contact with the base* and asking for
clearance to land.    .    .
A rescue team reached the crash
scene early Saturday from the Burton-wood base, near Warrington.
PHONE.144 FOR. CLASSIFIED
at
Lobsfer Industry
Al Coast Again
' OTTAWA (CPJ-The Fisheries
Research Board of Canada was Saturday asked to continued one of its
toughest projects —attempting^to
start a'lobster industry on the Pacific1 coast.       '
The recommendation was placed
before the Board's anriual meeting
by Dr. R. E. Foerster, Director of the
■Pacific Biolcv;icaI, Station at Nanai-.
mo, B. C, -   '
Dr. Foerster said there were;prom-
ising Indication from the last experiment, in 1946, when 2000 lobsters
were taken front Prince Edward
Island to the Pacific coast and planted in a lagoon on Lasqueti Island,
near, Nanaimo. .
Tabling a report prepared by
' 'PfiA-^TB^ u"lv«l;"t>' f|mentsTasrweek°°as"'Sl markets'
British Columbia, who vvae .«t- started.'the New Year with maior
taohed to. the station-last Sum- prices firm and supplies tight; -
.' ""I1' Or. Foerrter^sald experl.-;| A bUl to extend suspension^of the
ments have proved that Canadian import duty on copper until March
lobsters, heretofore confined ex- 31,1951, was introduced in Congress
Major Metal
Prices firm
NEW YORK (AP)-The atteritlon
of the, non-ferrous metals, industry
focussed  on  Washington  develop-
cluslvely to Atlantic, coastal waters, can live'off the Pacific coast
Individual   lobsters   have   been
known to survive 'for more than
two years under natural conditions
in the Strait of Georgia.
Of the 2000 lobsters transplanted
tn 1946, only a few had been located
later.,However, the fact that these
were able to survive was basis for a
recommendation that further experiments be carried out.
Peak Reached
MONTREAL (CP)—The Montreal
Gazette iri its anual commercial arid
financial review finds, despite continued economic expansion last
year; "reasonable basis to conjee- _
ture'V that the peak was reached in' COPPER DOWN
1948, "or nearly so."    / , *..._-..   -
The economic buoyancy of the last
LONDON (CP)"— Admiral Sir
Geoffrey Blake, 66,, -/resigned as
Black Rod—"liaiapri officer" between the.Hoiises of Parliament'—
because of deafness caused by gun
blast. i     .,
ELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT
PASTRY FLOUR
BE8T FOR CAKES AND
PASTRY    -
GUARANTEED TO 8ATI8FY
Your Grocer Has.lt       '
MAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE
OUR TELEPHONE LINE /
WEST KOOTENAY
STEAM LAUNDRY
PHONE 1175—182 BAKER 8T.
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
"Distinctive Funeral Service"
AMBULANCE SERVICE
515 Kootenay SL Phone 361
several years "has been, drawn
largely from abnormal, economically artificial and emergericy factors
whose dependable duration is relatively short-term."
The Gazette recallsr however, that
similar difficulties and uncertainties
loomed at the end of 1947, and justified cautionary hirits of a, levelling'
off in economic vigor.
Some . "anxious prospects" of a
year ago, such as those concerning
external trade1 and exchange difficulties' and ;;the lasting power of do
mestic-consumption demand," were
relieved "by developments which,
though hoped for, were by no means
assured at the. outset of-the year."
"The serious loss of vital foreign
trade threatened by the world shortage of dollars and Canada's Inability
to continue large scale credits was
averted by, the initial workings, of
the European Recovery Program,
and substantial diversions of IT. S.
dollars under that program to purchase of Canadian products.
"Cariada'8 own deficiency of U.-S.
dollars to settle trade balances with
the neighboring Republic was abated, beyorid sober expectations, by a
combination-of EJt.P, buying here,
a curtailment of imports by the emergency restrictions of November,
1947, and expansion of our exports
to.theU. S. '■'■
DEFENCE
8PENDING
Similarly, the hesitations and
flattening-out influences which promise tp make their Impact felt in
1949 could well be blunted or even
riegated by factors working on the
contrary direction,  .-
"The shrlrikageln Interrial spending, eriiployment and iricome that
could occur from a drop iri overseas exports,- a cutback of capital
expansion and a softening of consumer demand could be eased by
the already-begun stepping up of
defence expehditures, by a furtffer
broadening of exports to the XI.' S.,
and by bolstering of domestic purchasing power by a decline in price's
or .further wagejadvances." ;•'■-'
But such braking or avoidarice of
a recession "would be illusorjr arid
Inflationary, as was the similar process in 1948." .   ■'..
by representative James I. Patterson (Rep.-Conn.). Support for the
measure was, voiced by several industry   spokesmen,   including'  C.
Donald Dallas, Chairman of Revere
Copper & Brass, who said in a state-
merit: "Cbntiriuation of unrestricted
imports of foreign copper is, vital
for industry- and national; defence.':
.The Import tax on copper of
two cents a pound as set forth In
the Geneva Trade Agreement will
be reinstated April 1 unless the
present law suspending the duty
. Is extended.
President Truman's'annual economic report to Congress, like his
state of the union inessage, contained-no surprises for metals men; lie
asked' that,,. mandatory - allocation
powers be authorized; and recommended selective price control authority be made available to the
Government.
The jBureau of Mines reported
copper production down about one'
per cent last year from 1947, although higher prices resulted in ari
Increase of nearly three per cent in
dollar volume. Zinc output was, reported down four per cent frofri 1947
with dollar value ..of 22 per cent
Lead production was off six per
cent, with dollar volume up 18 per
cent' ■  i
Major non-ferrous metals prices:
Copper—23,5 cents a pound, Connecticut Valley; foreign, 23.5 cents,
New York.       ;
Lead—21.3 cents a pound, St. Louis; 21.5. cents, New York; foreign,
npminal, 22 cents, Glilf erf Mexico
ports., ■
Zincr-17,5 cents' a pound, East St.
Louis; 18:15 _cents, New York; foreign, ' nominal, 18 cents, Gulf of
Mexico ports,
Aluminum—17 cents a pound. Ingots, shipping point; pigs, 16 cents,
shipping point '    .
Antimony—41.67- cents a pound,
cased, New York; 38.5 cents,, bulk,
Laredo, .Texas.
Nickel—40 cents a pound, electrolytic Cathodes,-Port Colborne, Ont;
42.9 cents, New York. ..::
Platinum—$93 an ounce, wholesale; $96 retail; New York.   :
Silverr-70 cents an: ounce, New
York; 42.5 pence, London.
Tin—$1.03 a pound, New York.
Quicksilver—$90-$93 a flask of 76
pounds, New York.
Tungsten Ore—$28.50 a ton, delivered; Chinese, $24.50-$25.0O, New
York.
Not a Romance;. '. ;
LOS ANGELES (APWThls is
not romance," said Mrs.. Adrians
Eugenie Nicholson, 90, as she obtained a licence to marry her- 28-
year-old Negro chauffeur.'  .
"This is more in the nature of a
contract," she', explained. "Mr.
Woods drives riiy car, cooks for me
and attends to'my personal wants.
He is a very kind man. I want him
to have my property when I am
gone."
Mrs. Nicholson, white, and.'the
chauffeur, Allen Lee Gustard
Woods,' got .the licence yesterday.
She has been'widowed twice, and
he'is divorced.' They have not set a
wedding date; , .: .'- T
Vancouver Police
Seek Pay Boost
VANCOUVER .(CP) —Vancouver's 650 policemen will press for-a
$50 monthly wage increase in 1949,
It-has been learned,    i   '
The deriiand' will be the main
Item »f the -1949 demands by the
Police. Federal Union. Negotiations
were scheduled to start Jan. 2ft.
If granted, the increase would
add nearly $400,000 to the city's
present payroll of' ,$1,700,000,
HALIFAX (CI?) - The first two
displaced persons to take one-year
Contracts, as .domestic: workers in
Halifax have finished their term
and have plans for the future. Aina
Slls, 24, from Latvia, will stay, in a
department store *. job here and
Helena Balowski, a, 23-year-old
Polish girl, intends to go to Ontario,
where she has Polish friends.
SUTTON, Surrey, England (CP)
—Records of symphonies and concertos are used in .the treatment
of neurosis patients at Sutton
Hospital.   '
MESS,
SHIRTS
by FORSYTH
and ARROW
Buy shirts by names yovi
know and can rely on. -
Arrow and Forsyth shirts;
are guaranteed, pre-
shrunk "and correct'sleeve:
lengths. In plains or.in,
fancies., ,
$£.00      $«V.O0
Emory's i-fati
TfHE,MAN'S STORE.
Rival Young Liberal
Group Organized
VANCOUVER-rA rival-ydui
Liberal group whloh Is in favor-
the Coalition Government is bell
organized in Vancouver.
' The young Liberals in divisii
six, meeting, in Vancouver; voted 8
strong to support the Coalition.
The original B. C. Young Libet
Association recently voted again
continuing of the Coalition.   .
Suite 20S
.   MEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDING
J.A.C. LAUGHTOI
Optometrist
CAMPBELL, SHANKLAND
* IMRIE
Chartered Accountants
:    Auditor* >
660 Baker 8t, Phono 2M
■ waaaaajera»afa»aaaja»-aawaBajafa»yaai»W
Help Yourself to Bargains
MID-WINTER
CLEARANCE SALE
.",:at.the'
Children's Shop;
have your furniture
Expertly recovered
'. : -   'at-lth'e       .  ,;■{
NELSON UPHOLSTERY
418 Hall St        '■;.   Phone 14*
aaa,aiaaaaayajajwjwa|aiajajatajaiil>aia|
YES — Your New Wave
ll bound to be MORE STYLISH
LAST LONGER and
LOOK LOVELIER.
atthe v.
HAIGHTRU-ART
«aiaiala»«ala«a»«ul<i'«'f»'*-T^lTTt--
FLEURY'S Pharmacy
Preicrlptiom
Compounded
Accurately
Med. Arts Blk
PHONE U
ROSCOE
AND
FOURNIER
GARAGEMEN      ,
SKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE
Phone 122 Nelson, B.C.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIM'
Cleaned and Recored
RADIATOR REPAIRS
JIM'S RADIATOR SHOP
-301 Ward St ' Phone 83
IIIIIIIIIIIUIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIUIIIII,
\
MODERN SANTA MARIA — The Santa Maria, half-scale model of the ship on which
Columbus sailed to America. Is tied up at Buffalo, N. Y. On board are Capt. and Mrs. A'dolpli H.
Klippstein of Detroit and their daughters, Elizabeth, 13, and Diane, 11. The family has lived on
boat since they boiight.it in (Ictobcr, 1947, They arc on a sailing trip to Florida.
, - ' • ■' '   - '
-■',■',"-  ■-''  :        . -'''^ ■   ''     '.'■   *". ■■-' ' T     ■;.;"!
IRENES
Dress Reductions
Are Worthwhile
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF'THIS SALE
All-wool, silk crepe and'spim rayon DRESSE8, sizes II to 42.
' ;     SALE ON BLOUSES
GIRDLE8, regular $4.50. <tt tc
To clear" _; .;..'.. ^m.st9
GIRDLES, regular $2.50." ""'       '"      a«j
To'clear ....:  .. '■  '   •»J»p ■
FLANNELETTE,-GOWNS, regulur'lsl&V c<l EA
To clear .:.■!  " ^)>C>OU
ALL WOOL VE8TS, regular $i.'»5' ct ^E
To clear .: y..,,. 4>AaaC9
SUEDE HANDBAG8, regular $5.95.'   " «1 EA
To clear. ..(  '-j ■ 3><J«3U
Long strand PEARLS .....,.; ^■I'ZZZZlZ!ZZ"'i\MJ'-Pn\tE
Broken lines of merchandise greatly reduced.. E
IT'S THE
DETAILS
THAT
"A skirt whose hem has been
pullcd'out of shape, a button
that is missing — these are
things that can mar your appearance. Our operators carefully guard against damaging
your garments In the slightest,
degree. ,-
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED;
3-PIECE SUITS
LADIES' SUITS
l-Piece Plain
DRESSES
90*
WINTER COATS Y
1.25
Two Day Service I
We Call
and
Deliver
JUST CALL 288
EMPIRE
CLEANERS
f
