  ;—-
-rr-—— . ,.  j-■■:■■■ , ■•■ ,; -v.-.*:.■
to
[Defend Tachens
At All Costs"
Eisenhower Considers Evacuation Aid;
Nationalists Claim 20 Red Ships Sunk
TAIPEH, Formosa (AP)—The Chinese Nationalist air
I force blasted Red gunboats and motorized junks along the
.China coast Friday- by way of1 backing up present official
intent to defend the Tachens despite the fall of nearby
Yikiangshan.
"So far we have/no plan to evac-
1 uate any  of our  island  outposts,"
!' said a defence ministry spokesman
after the Nationalists admitted the
invading Reds had wiped out the
last resistance on Yikiangshan.
"All of them will be defended at
all costs."
Reports from Washington said
President Eisenhower was considering asking Congress for special
i authority to use U. S. naval and air
power to help evacuate some 20,000
Nationalist troops, if need be, from
the Tachens, 200 miles north of For-
; mosa.
Fallen Yikiangshan is eight miles
| north of the Tachens.
Nationalist air force headquart-
| ers said waves of fighter-bombers
' Friday sank more than 20 Red
I ships, most of them motorized junks
.■such   as   those   which  helped  put
ashore more than 5000 Red invad
ers of Yikiangshan.
80 JUNKS ATTACKED
The Nationalists claimed more
than 80 of the junks were attacked
near Wenchow bay about 70 miles
southwest of the Tachens and more
than 20 were destroyed.
,The air force said three 250-ton
Red gunboats were sunk near Nan-
jih island across the strait from
Formosa.
Peiping radio quoted the captain
of the British freighter Edendale,
sunk Tuesday in a Nationalist air
raid on Swatow, as saying Nationalist raiders flew as low as 200 feet
and kept up the attack until certain the ship went down. Another
Peiping broadcast said Nationalist
planes killed more than 120 persons
in a raid Thursday on Foochow
130 miles northwest of northern
Formosa.
! Costa Rica Rebellion
Said All But Over
By CARLOS ESCUDERO
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica  (AP) —
1 The Costa Rican command announc-
Ied Friday the capture of the last
two rebel bases in the north-west
tip of the country and said the leader of the rebellion, former president Rafael Calderon Guardia, may
be trapped.
The government also announced
capture of a "very important person" — leading to rumors that the
VIP was Capt. Teodoro PIcado Jr.,
son of another, exiled ex-president
and second in the rebel high command.'
The general staff said a  flanking column under Col. Frank Mar-
Shall, a Costa Rican fighter of German descent, had closed a trap on'li-.ht
remaining rebels by capturing their said.
stronghold of La Cruz, hard by the
Nicaraguan frontier, and the nearby
Pacific harbor town of Puerto So-
ley.
The feeling at headquarters was
that the rebellion wai over.
Provincial]
LIBRARY
_. — ________________________
(yf
WEATHER FORECAST
Kootenay: A lew clouds; a little- .
colder;* winds light. Low and high
at   Cranbrook.   5   below   and   20;
Crescent Valley; 5 above and 25.
Outlook for Sunday: snowflurries. ..
Vol. 53
.?<*
TAX PLAN
UNITY THREAT
Co I dwell Says
Federal Tax Should
Apply Equally
' OTTAWA (CP) - The federal
government's tax-reduction plan for
Quebec will be "a serious blow to
national unity," CCF leader Cold-
well said'Friday night.
He said a departure from the
principle, that federal income tax
should apply equally to all Canadians is "dangerous to national
unity."
"Just as soon as this is done in
one province, it is entirely possible
that for some reason it may be
done in another," Mr. Coldwell said
in a speech on the CBC's political
free-time series.
His statements were contained in
the text of a speech issued to the
press before delivery.
Prime Minister St. Laurent announced Monday the federal government has decided on a two-year,
10-per-cent personal income tax cut
for Quebec, which now has a pro
vincial income tax and has no tax
agreement with Ottawa. Tbe arrangement will be available to all
other provinces if they want to impose an income tax as an alternative to existing tax rental agree'
ments.
;<?>
NELSON, B. C, CANADA—SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1955
No. 229
B, C. Was Host to
Million Tourists
OLYMPIC 8KATER Barbara Ann Scott (left) gives her French
poodle "Pierre" a lesson In etiquette In her dressing-room as Gundl
Busch, West German champion Ice star, looks on. The lesson
seemed appropriate. Although not on the program, Pierre starred
during Miss Scott's number In the first scene 'as the 1966 Hollywood Ice revue opened at Madison Square Garden, New York.
Unheralded, he walked rfcross the Ice,-shook himself and stared
quizzically at the audience, to the general delight.
—Central Press Canadian.
VICTORIA (CP)—Nearly 1,000,000
tourists poured across B. C.'s borders  by  automobiles  during   1954,
Government   troops   were   re-ja   slight   drop  from   1953  figures,
ported mopping up small pockets! trade minister Ralph Chetwynd re-
of rebels caught In the pincers.    I ported   Friday,
Other groups were reported fleeing over the Nicaraguan frontier
where they faced internment under
an agreement negotiated by the
Organization of American States,
the peace-making organization of
the 21 American republics,
La Cruz and Puerto Soley were
occupied   late    Thursday   against
resistance,   the   government
[Strijdom Would Curb Court
Powers Over Parliament
By ARTHUR GAVSHON
CAPETOWN (AP)—Prime Minister Johannes Strijdoms government embarked Friday on a new
Campaign to curb the authority of
South Africa's courts over Parliament and trim the voting rights of
60,000 colored (mixed blood) voters
in Cape Province.
'The gbvilmrtent'lprogram — iri-
fcluding proposals for even tighter
I New Licence Plates
Unappreciated
VANCOUVER (CP) - Directors
Iof the Vancouver Tourist Association are convinced the provincial
government has fumbled one.
Object of their scorn is the 1955
I. C. licence plate which replaces
[steel tabs issued for several years.
■The 1955 plate is an indeterminate
■yellow, according to some members,
packing symbol or slogan.
R. Rowe Holland said, "If they
fcave to be yellow, why choose this
■particular shade?" He said it makes
la man "ashamed to put them on his
|bar."
Directors felt the word "wonderful" in front of B. C. would have
racial segregation, controls — was
disclosed in a speech from the
throne read by Governor-General
E. G. Jansen when he opened the
third session of the union's 11th
Parliament. v |
The Nationalist parity, which Stri-1
jdom leads, has been trying for more
than two years to. cut the voting
rights of the coloreds. The Nationalists have proposed the coloreds
be limited to sending four representatives to Parliament. Their vote
no waffects eight seats.
now affects eight seats,
this can be accomplished constitutionally only with a two-thirds majority of the Senate and House sitting jointly—a majority which Stri-
jdom's Nationalists lack.
At December 31, a total of 278,-
376 traveller's vehicle permits were
issued to long-stay U. S. visitors
at border points, a drop of one-
point-nine from 1953's record-breaking 283,846 permits.
Estimated 3.5 persons per car, the
total represents an influx of almost 1,000,000 persons. This does
not include arrivals by bus, train,
^ship; or plane; Jf
The drop was attributed to "generally uninviting summer weather
conditions."
"We must do our utmost in the
coming year," said Mr. Chetwynd,
"to increase the number of tourist
attractions in our province which
will draw visitors to enjoy B. C.'s
hospitality."
Four CCFers to Vote
Against Ratification
Convicts Free Guards;
Surrender All Weapons
Marriage Rate Down
'flEW YORK (AP) - The marriage rate in the United States last
yeardropped off to the lowest point
in 20 years, the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co. reports. Its statisticians figured the rate for 1954 at I
9.1 per 1,000 population. The record
high was 16.2 per 1,000 in 1946. The
number of marriages during 1954
fceen some consolation—and a boost j was estimated at about 1,484,000, or
|f.or the province. | sohie 60,000 fewer than in 1953.
Woman Runs for
Union Presidency
MONTREAL (CP) — A 29-year-
old woman has set a precedent by
accepting nomination to run for the
presidency of the Montreal Labor.
Council (CIO-CCL).
Huguette Plamondon, who said
in an interview she feels more at
horhe in turbulent male labor circles
than at women's tea parties, will
be the first woman to seek the
council's presidency. She was nominated at a council meeting Thursday night
Her opponent in the Feb. 8 election is 32-year-old Charles Devlin.
Since joining the labor movement in 1945, Miss Plamondon has
served as secretary for the United
Packinghouse Workers of America
and as the union's international
representative in Quebec and the
Maritimes.
No Freight Rate
Hike on Grain
OTTAWA (CP)—The heads of
Canada's two top labor bodies, representing about 1,000,000 workers,
have agreed not to press for any
increase in freight rates on export
grain moving through the West.
The' Canadian Farmer-Labor Economic Council, a farm-labor coordinating body, said agreement by
labor not to oppose the existing
low Crow's Nest Pass rates was
reached at a meeting Friday.
OTTAWA (CP) — A Quebec Pro-]
gressiye Conservative Friday suggested that Canada is "getting too
big for its breeches" in world affairs.
Leon Balcer, Trois-Rivieres, asked whether the government is letting itself be carriedi Sway by its
ideas of grandeur and whether this
might lead Jhe country._iij$q economy—draining- reifc_m._dbl]it_fl_.^'':'- ^
He was one. of several speakers
in the continuing Commons debate
on ratification of the Paris agreements for entry of a rearmed West
Germany into the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
The agreements still must be approved byf some NATO members-
including Canada—and West Germany before German admittance to
the alliance. A vote, originally expected Friday, now is not likely
before next week.
Four CCF members have said
they will vote against ratification.
They are Stanley Knowles, Winnipeg North Centre, who spoke
Thursday night; Joseph W. Noseworthy, York South; R. R. Knight,
'Saskatoon, and H. W. Herrldge,
Kootenay West. Another member
of the party, Alistair 8tewart,
Winnipeg North, said he will ab
stain.
MUST  BE STRONG
The main point advanced by those
favoring ratification, including
Health Minister Martin, was that
the stronger the West is the better
able it will be to bargain with the
East.
Mr. Martin said the Labor-Pro^
gressive (Communist) party had issued detailed instructions to mem
bers on how to organize a campaign
against ratification. He read a num.
ber of instructions from what he
said was the party's private directive to its members.
All Liberal, Progressive Conservative and Social Credit members
who entered the debate supported
ratification.
Mr. Balcer said he favors German rearmament as an additional
guarantee of anti-Communist
strength but believes the government- is foisting an international
role on Canada which may be too
big for the country's resources.
H.   W.  Herridge   (CCF-Kootenay
West), the fourth CCF member to J
oppose ratification, said he fears'
West German rearmament and that
giving the Germans weapons will
increase the danger of war. No military advantage would be gained
because the Russians would simply
increase their armed forces.
YOUTHSIfe
StANb TRIAL
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) -
A 19-year-old youth accused of
holding a knife to the throat of a
householder in an attempt to get
whisky, was committed for trial on
two charges of possessing an offensive weapon.
Witnesses said James John Mcpherson brandished a knife to steal
beer, personal possessions and a
radio from the home of M. L. Reser.
A 17-year-old youth faces an
armed robbery charge, and a third
person will appear on unspecified
charges in connection with the incident. Police say a gang of youths
forced their way into two homes
Dec. 30.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllll
Nelson Has a
Friend at Coast
VANCOUVER (CP)—A police
magistrate has refused to play
what he called "a dirty trick" on
the city of Nelson.
■Harry  Joyce  pleaded   guilty
Thursday before Magistrate
Thomas Dohm to a shoplifting
charge. He said he had a ticket
for   Nelson   and   asked   for   a    ,
"floater"   sentence   so   that  he    !
could go to the Kootenay city.
After being told that Joyce
had a lengthy record of similar   j
offences. Magistrate Dohm said:    '
"That would be a dirty trick
to play on Nelson. Two months."
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII
SAYS ESKIMOS
SHOULD BE ABLE
TO BUY LIQUOR
OTTAWA (CP) — A 69-year-old
veteran of the North Friday questioned the legal right of the federal government to forbid sale of
liquor to Canada's 7,000 Eskimos
in the Northwest Territories and
urged that the restriction be removed.
Frank Carmichael of Aklavik, an
elected member of the N. W. T.
council who has trapped in the Territories for 35 years, said council
should make Eskimos eligible to
buy liquor. If that were done, he
indicated, the federal government
then might be forced to give the
North's 4,000 Indians similar privileges.
He agreed with other council
members that Indians' and Eskimos
should be treated alike. But he said
Eskimos shouldn't be denied liquor
privileges simply because federal
authorities refused to relax restriction- against Jndiani.' ■
' The" five apjJbiilfeU 'and. tout elected members of the council split
on the question of sale of liquor to
Indians in the Territories.
None Hurt in 3V2-Day Siege; "Some
Hope for Fiiture" Sought by Prisoners
BOSTON (AP)—Four long-term convicts, who held
five guards hostage in Massachusetts state prison for 3.-_»
days in a desperate bid for freedom, surrendered meekly
Friday to a seven-man civilian committee.
The committee, through its spokesman, • Erwin D.
Canham, editor of The Christian Science Monitor, said no
"bargain or deal" was made. (
The convicts were promised
only that everything will be done
to work with state officials "to
get something so that these convicts would have some hope for
the future."
The four, who had offered to
trade the lives of th'eir hostages
for a getaway car and a clear path
to freedom, gave up their pistols
(PA Trans-Arctic
Service Approved
OTTAWA (CT>) - Federal gov
ernment has approved 'an application of Canadian Pacific Airlines to
operate a trans-Arctic service between Vancouver and Amsterdam,
Transport Minister Marler announced Friday.
The minister said the formalities
preceding start of the service should
be cleared away in time to let CPA
start operating by spring.
The proposed route, cutting into
territory north of the Arctic circle,
would reduce by about 1000 miles
the regular flying distance between
Vancouver and the European continent.
Granting of the application will
make CPA the first Canadian opera
tor over the great circle route
across the top of the globe,  .
Found Guilty of
Manslaughter
VANCOUVER (CP) - Tage Rud-
ford, 31, of Vancouver, was found
guilty of manslaughter Friday by a
Supreme Court jury here in the
traffic death of Alois Almeder, 82,
last Oct. 11. He was remanded for
sentence.
The crown said Rudford's car,
proceeding without lights, struck
the pedestrian, hurled him Into the
air, sideswiped another auto and
continued on.
Flour Mill Workers
Share the Wealth
PORT COLBORNE, Ont. (CP)—
A million-dollar trust fund accum-
mulated in two years for the benefit of company employees and their
families in pensions and profit
shares was announced to employees
of Robin Hood Flour Mills Hunv
berstone mill at the annual Robin
Hood family party JFriday.
The figure was supplied, as ttoe
third year of the profit-sharing plan
opened, by Allan Kennedy, secretary of the administrative committee of the fund. It covers the 2200
participating employees of Robin
Hood and the parent firm, International Milling Co., in 23 mills
across Canada and the United
States.
8LIM*-tfCK!NG8 *   *r "^
VANCOUVER (CP)-^The pickings
were small for holdup bandits here
Friday night.
One man, believed to be oarrying
■a toy pistol, robbed one West End
store of $6 and a1 pair of robbers
escaped with $11 in a raid on a
suburban grocery.
and knives and released the guards
and six other prisoners who wer,e
held against their wishes in the
solitary cell block of the antiquated ■
150-year-old prison. None was
harmed.
The men are Theodore (Teddy)
Green, bank robber and jail breaker; Walter Balben, robber-gunman;
rapist Joseph Flaherty, and cop
killer Fritz Swenson.
Green  had  warned   during  the
siege   that for  ''every  shot fired
at us, a guard dies."
DEMANDED CAR
The, first day. Green demanded
an automobile be sent to the prison
sb that the four could escape. The
demand was ignored.
The hostages were served hot
meals daily with the acquiescence
of their captors. The prisoners
themselves had a limited amount
of food in the solitary cell block
kitchen. But *as the hours wore on
the futility of escape hopes obviously became more apparent.
The siege ended just short of 82
hours. The record for a prison uprising of this nature—100, hours-
was set in 1952 at Jackson, Mich.
The outburst started early Tues*
day when the four convicts sawed
their way out of their' cells and
seized the guards after failing to
escape with the aid of a makeshift
ladder,
The rebels made things quite
comfortable for the committee during ' the '-iegollaiioiigr Canham f^ld
when the committee members arrived at the cell block where the
convicts were holed, ."We found a
most amazing scene—11 chairs in
a neat circle with a table in the
centre and a pad and pencils-
facilities for a well-organized conference."
"Peaceful Co-Exisfence" May Be
Theme of Prime Ministers Meet
Fisherman Rescued
From Ice Floe
SUTTON, Ont. (CP) - Between
35 and 50 ice fishermen were rescued Friday after a 30-foot-wide
crack opened in Lake Simcoe ice
and left them stranded on a huge
floe.'
Boats were used by rescuers.
Some of the trapped men managed
to reach safety over plank bridges.
Three automobiles were abandoned on the ice.
Three Quints Die
TRIVANDRUM, India (Reuters)
—Three of the quintuplets born to
30-year-old villager here Wednesday have died.
The three were girls. The surviving two are a girl and a boy,
who is underdeveloped.
The quints, born at Avitam Thi-
runal Hospital, weighed less than
%Vz pounds each.
Relatives May Visit U. S.
Flyers Held in Red Prison
IF THE FACE of Leading Seaman C, Hamer of. Dartmouth,
N.S., looks a little comical at the moment, no comedy is Intended.
Seaman Hamer has Just bobbed up from the depths during a submarine escape test In the water tower at HMS Dolphin In Ports-
mouth, England. He is one of the Canadian naval personnel taking
o course here In the escape technique. Tha man at left Is an Instructor.—Central Press Canadian.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The state
department indicated Friday—without definitely' saying so—that the
U.S. government will not stand in
the way of any Americans who want
to visit relatives held in Communist Chinese prisons.
A department spokesman, press
officer Henry Suydam, said, however, the government could not encourage the visits. He denounced
the Reds for thrusting a "harrowing dilemma" upon American families, who apparently must decide
for themselves whether to risk the
long trip behind the Iron Curtain.
The Red invitation, which also
was announced by the United Na<
tions in New York, was extended to
relatives of 17 Americans captured
during the Korean war, including
11 U.S. airmen recently sentenced
to long prison terms as spies.
The parents of at "least one American airman and the wife of another announced they would accept
the offer, but most of the other relatives interviewed held back for
one reason or another.
"An appallingly callous propaganda gesture" was the way Senator Charles Potter (Rep.-Mich.) described it. Other senators expressed
similar views.
The United Nations looked more
favorably on the offer, which it said
resulted from the recent trip to
Peiping of Secretary-General' Dag
Hamrnarskjold. Hamrnarskjold went
there seeking release of the Amer
ican prisoners.
A   UN   spokesman   said   Ham
marskjold  "has no  doubt about
the safety of those members of
the families wishing to visit China
to see their men."
The Peiping announcement apparently was timed by prearrangement
with UN headquarters in New York
The defence department sent "out1
notices  to  the  relatives Thursday
night, in time to reach them before
the announcement was made at 9:30
a.m. EST.
DOLLAR UNCHANGED
NEW YORK (CP) — The Canadian dollar was unchanged at a premium of 3 17-32 per cent in terms of
U.S. funds Friday. Pound sterling
down 1-32 of a cent at $2.87%.
RICARDO ARIA8 ESPINOSA
has taken over the reins of government of Panama, His first act
wbb to announce that Jose Ramon
Guizado had been placed In "protective custody." Guizado, deposed after 12 days as president,
Is aocuBed of' complicity in the
assassination of his predecessor,
Jose Remon.
—Central Press Canadian.
By ALAN HARVEY
Canadian Press Staff Writer
LONDON (CP) — Commonwealth
leaders meet in London starting
Jan. 31, and it looks as though the
visiting statesmen are in for "a busy
time.
The occasion is the sixth post-war
conference of Commonwealth prime
ministers, the first full-dress gathering of its kind since December,
1952. The leaders also met in Coronation month, 1953, but it was not
considered a full meeting.
The ministers will discuss "almost everything under the sun," a
government spokesman said Friday.
The opening meeting will be presided over by Prime Minister
Churchill in his cabinet room at 10
Downing Street.
The conference will be perhaps
the most important Commonwealth
gathering since.the war, with emphasis on co-existence.between the
Communist and non- Communist
worlds.
Possibly the key figure will be
Prime Minister Nehru, who has recently visited China and will go to
Russia after the Commonwealth
talks. Nehru, leading a neutralist-
aligned India, is perhaps the leading exponent outside the Communist camp of what is known here as
the "Asian view" of world politics,
a. summing up often art variance
with Western attitudes.
Among the premiers, Nehru win
probably find a sympathetic listener in Prime Minister St. Laurent
of Canada, who in past conferences
has stressed the importance of
building a bridge of understanding
between East and West.
And in This Corner...
CALGARY (CP)~Officials of tha Calgary fire department think
Mrs, Daniel Warwick has everything It takes to be a fireman	
' When fire broke out Friday In the basement of her home she:
prepared her four yourtg children for Immediate departure; called
the fire department; then fought the fire herself.
The fire was out when the department arrived and there was
no damage.
TORONTO (CP)—A woman accused of hitting a cab driver with
her shoe during an argument at her home over payment of a farev
was convicted  Friday  of common assault.
, "It seems that now we have to protect men out at night against
women," Magistrate T. S. Elmore remarked as he gave Mrs. Janet
Dineen, 38, a suspended sentence. ■
LONDON (AP)-Clty of London councllmen meeting an ancient
Guildhall ruled Friday that It is all right to smoke sausages In a
smokeless zone. /
A meat dealer had applied for a licence to alter a building In
Lovat Lane for the preparation and smoking of sausages. Councilman
A. A. Instone protested the building was In an area being declared
a smokeless zont and suggested the city should have smokeless
sausages.
His objection was overridden.
TORONTO (CP)—Taxi driver Ed Laffey, who got a bottle of
liquor for a pretty girl, lost his taxi licence Thursday for three
months. v
The girl was policewoman Ruth Neat.
Mayor Nathan Phillips told the police commission he objected to
the low tactics used in getting the conviction.
"The driver was just trying to be a nice guy." said the mayor
"If he did wrong the police inveigled him into it. They put a g««^-
looking girl on his track "
HAMILTON, (CP)—During the last year, five-year-old Gay Cct-
tlngham of Hamilton has swallowed: three buttons, three dimes,
three safety pins, one thimble and one bullet. The bullet was removed
In an emergency operation the other day. Her distraught mother
commented:  "She'll  swallow  anything.   I  don't know  what to  do."
TORONTO (CP)—Sentimental is the word for thieves who staged
a $1500 robbery Thursday night at a drugstore in suburban Swansea.
In gathering up their loot, they took care to include valentines for
their girl friends.
■ -f ■■ ■'■ : ■ : ____________i.jtl^y.:.. -■
-•'■y:ii •, j-Yi^tiiifltiri
•■"■'•■"-'-•^■■jijil
 *———. ,—, . ,—__
i-'^mm
,,., j
—""p*
^--NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22,1955
LAST TIMES TODAY — Complete Shows 2:00-7:00-9:15
&M Ova
TAYLOR"	
Hut   .
FERRER
m
Cinemascope
WWl* wrr_oCTni_ui.ou_n_
•■SB1*
ROUlDTULE'
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•HER
75«J, 90(_, 25<
Extra: "MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR" in Clnomascopo
A MOTION PiaURE EVENT OF THE
FIRST MAGNITUDE!
RITA     ,   STEWART
HAWOFWRANGER
SALOME
STARTS
MUSICLAND
THEATRE
KA8LO, B.C.
LAST  TIME  TONIGHT
Show Starts 8:00 p.m.
"IVAN HOE"
In Technicolor
Robert Taylor • Iflzabeth Taylor
Plu. COLORED CARTOON
and 8HORT8
75-80 Per Cent
Water Bills Paid;
No Borrowing
From 75 to 80 per cent et Nelson
householders have paid their water
bills. The money from that account
will make It possible for the city
to operate without borrowing until
tax returns are in.
City hall cashier experienced a
rush as householders lined up to
pay their bills while the 20 per cent
discount was still obtainable.
There are 1800 householders In
the city. Bills of $27 were reduced
to $21,60 by the discount.
CALGARY- (CP) - Rest, adequate diet and early treatment are
three of the chief weapons being
used .in the fight against arthritis,
Dr. Ovid O. Meyer told medical
men Friday at a one-day symposium. Dr. Meyer, a member of the
medical faculty at the University
of Wisconsin, said the "miracle drugs
are got very helpful in treatment
of the common types of arthritis."
A   TREAT   FOR   YOU
AND   YOUR   FRIENDS
CHINESE DISHES
OUR SPECIALTY
Open 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.
Chungking Chop
Suey House
624 Front St.        Nelson
Large Attendance
At Funeral of
D. A. Aurelio
Funeral services tor Domenlco
Antonio Aurelio were held Friday
from the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate. A large attendance paid
their last respects.
Rev. Father F. Monaghan officiated with the .pallbearers being
L. Santor, J. __ Keegan, C. Arcura,
A. Arcura, L. Freno and P. Defoe.
The rosary was recited In Thompson Funeral Home.
Interment' was In the Roman
Catholic plot, Nelson Memorial
Park. Funeral honors were performed at the graveside, by officers
of the Fraternal Order of Eagles,
who were in attendance.
Lions Gate Bridge
Costs $5.9 Million
VICTORIA (CP) - Lions Gate
bridge, the longest suspension
bridge In the British Empire —'a
total length of. 2778 feet—has been
purchased by .the British" Columbia
government.
Premier Bennett announced the
purchase Friday. The price was $5,-
959.060.
The big bridge spanning Burrard
inlet -a_> the entrance to Vancouver
harbor, was bought from the First
Narrows Bridge Co., controlled by
the Gulness Interests of London,
England.
Lose Low-Rent Homes
VANCOUVER (CP) — Eviction
notices served this week mean the
end of an easy-rent era for 12 homeowners in Suburban Burnaby here.
The houses, known as Barnet village, are on an unsubdivided block
of land zoned for heavy industry.
Although some of the better ones
will be moved, most will be demolished. Occupants have paid from $8
to $20 in rent, the lowest on the
lower mainland.
VANCOUVER (CP) — Tenders for
construction of an $830,000 fisher*
men's wharf on False creek will
be called as soon as present designs are revised, it was reported
here Friday.
Approval of the project, now
planned for 150 seine boats instead
of the original 180, was given by
Public Works Minister Winters.
Surviving Triplet
Flown to Vancouver
.    Hospital Staff Rigs Makeshift
Incubator When Plane Can't Land
One of three triplets, believed
the first born at Kootenay Lake
General Hospital, has been flown
to Vancouver for special care. She
was reported in fair condition Friday night. The other two, o boy
and girl, succumbed.
Ingenuity of a Nelson doctor and
hospital staff played a large part
in transporting the third child, a
girl, safely to the plane at Castlegar airport for the flight to Vancouver.
Tha triplets were born to Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Strohm, prematurely at
noon Thursday, Each weighed
about 2V_ pounds.
A boy died shortly after birth,
a girl Friday.
When a nurse with a portable
incubator had to fly on to Cran
brook baoause Ralph West airport
at Castlegar wai fog bound Friday
morning, Dr. G. ft, Barrett and hospital workera put together a makeshift Incubator including a heater
and oxygen apparatus for the car
trip to the airport. Here the girl
waa transferred to tho portable Irv
cubator which the - nurie had
brought back from Cranbrook on
the west-bound flight.
'Arrangements for the flight v. ore
made by the Public Health Department. Mrs. Ernest Welsh accompanied the tot to St, Paul's.Hospital
where there is a special prematura
nursery.
The parents live in Upper Nelson,
Mr. Strohm ls employed at the city
garage. <
' The mother was reported Friday
night to be doing well.
School Absentees Increase to 702 . . .
Parents Urged to Keep Children
Home From All Public Gatherings .
OtcUn,
WESTERN
MONARCH
ORUMHELIER DEEP SEAM
for Real COMFORT end SATISFACTION
PHONE 889
TOWLER Fuel & Transfer
COAL
New Evening Classes
l at
NOTRE DAME COLLEGE
"PERSONALITY   AND   MENTAL   HEALTH"
' Normalcy, problems, conflict, emotional control,
mental ah'sorder.
DR ROYCE — MONDAY, THURSDAY — 8:2B P.M.
"RESTORATION   PERIOD  LITERATURE"
Dryden, Addison, Steele, Swift, Pope, and others.
MR. BROWN — MONDAY, THURSDAY — 7 P.M.
' SPRING  SEMESTER
JAN., 31 TO MAY 26
With or without college credit. Register at first class.
Tuition $19.50 per course.
With Stane
and Besom
The following are the draws of
the Nelson Curling Club up to Wednesday when a new event, the Col-
llnson Cup, will be drawn:
Monday, 7 p.m.—A. S. Horswlll
vs H. Moore, E. Mason vs J. Teague,
D. Cathcart vs W. Waft, J. Campbell
vs W. Marr.
9 p.m.—H. Hinitt vs L. J. Maurer,
H. Chandler va J. Hlngwing, A-
Ronmark vs H. Farenholt-, T. A.
Wallace vs G. Moir.
Tuesday, 7 p.m.—M. B. Ryalls vs
D. M. Sample, R. Palmer vs J. Harvey, J. Milne vs J. Leeming. A.
Waters vs R. Carmichael, H. Bush,
vs W. Young.
9 p.m.—R. D. Wallace vs L. McEachern, W. Kline va E. Ramsbottom, H. Horton vs W. Tozer, A. Barrett vs W. Burdenle, J. Thorn vs
D. Meakins.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.—J. E. Young
vs spare, W. Gold vs A. B. Gilker,
T. H. Bourque va L. G. Peerless.
Following is the personnel of
rinks for the Collinson Cup competition:
H. Bush, E. L. Vance, N. Sardich,
G. Olson.
J. E. Young, L. Long, John Milne,
W. H. Burns.
A. S. Horswlll, R. Hickey. G. K.
Burns, E. Owen.
H. B. Horton, R. Leeming, G.
Dahlstrom, ¥,. Cooper.
W. Young,'R. Torman, W. Kitto.
E. Wallbank.
J. Campbell, N. Lutkiwich. R.
Riddell, H- McCardle.
J. Milne, V. JCilleen, A. Arcure,
G. Sutherland.
D. Cathcart, D. Porteous, M. Wiig,
D. Winlaw.
L. Peerless, G. Kalway, M. Gee,
J. Wallach.
E. Mason, R. F. Wallace, W. Stern,
A. D. Schneider.
D. Meakins, R. M. Edwards, A. H.
Sinclair, B. Wigg.
W. Gold, J. Sutherland, T. Hall-
bauer, W. Wicken.
W. Marr, A. Reid, M. Buerge, W.
Shukin.
M. Sample, H. Ronmark, F.
Graves, M. VanSacker.
W. Tozer, N. Jennejohn, G. Saun-
by, A. K. MacAdams.
R. Palmer, J. A. Dennison. J. R.
Taylor, H. Lange.
H. Hinitt, R. Boates, F. Ozey.
L. Buccl.
E. Ramsbottom, T. Romano, G.
Barefoot. F. Scott.
R. D. Wallace, J. R. Bailey, Jack
Strachan, Ozey, Jr.
M. Ryalls, V. Davies, L. Maglio,
H. E. Dow.
G. Moir, S. Rogers, D. Elder, Cliff
Clark.
L. J. Maurer, R. Nash, W. H. Riley,
D. Coen.
A. Ronmark, R. Denlson, Jim
Rogers, G.s Belyk.
R. Carfnichael, J. Maber, A. Fer-
vJbrn, G. Grant.
A. Barrett, S. Jefferys, J. Melville,
F. Fllleul.
J. Leeming, G. Clark, I. Hendrick-
eon, J. E. Bradley.
J. Harvey, A. C. VanSacker, L.
Whitelock, J. McAffee.
W. Kline, R. Bruce, W. Tickner,
E. W. White.
T. A. Wallace, J. R. Sinclair, N.
Collett, T. Fox;
J. S. Thorn, A. Dayman, A. Ther-
rien, T. Thompson.
A. Waters, W. Triggs, A, Euerby,
The number of students absent
from,Nelson public schools owing
to the Influenza epidemic Friday
'rose from 538 to 702.
Health authorities have recommended that parents keep children
home from all public gatherings
skating, moving pictures, dances
and 'parties.
Certainly, they said,, all sick chll
dren should be kept home from
school.
"It is" not necessary to close our
schools," Dr. H. T. Lowe, director
of the Selkirk Health Unit said
"Teachers are excluding all sick
children, and parents are urgently
requested not to send sick children
to school so that the disease will not
spread."
Chest Aids Relief
Workrtye Patient;
Ready Statement
The Nelson District Community
Cheat at Its regular monthly matting In the Chamber of Commerce
rooms took otops to prepare for Its
flrat financial statement and Information data' to be presented at the
annual meetlnf In March.,
According to the constitution of
the Chest all member agencies will
be asked to submit a statement of
their operations for the past year
and to present a budget tor the
forthcoming year.
Two requests for'assistance were
received. The Welfare Committee
bl the Nelson Ministerial Association requested and was granted a
further sum of ilOO tb help them
carry out their transient relief work.
The. .previous grant was accounted
for by the association in their request. Assistance In paying for
nursing help for a patient who required an operation on the eyes was
given as the result of a request from
the local branch of the Canadian
Institute for the Blind. A grant of
$50, chargeable against the 19S5
budget of the institute was granted.
8URVI.VORQ  GIG|1TED
HONOLULU (AP)—Seven survivors of a twin-engined navy amphibian forced down Wednesday
night in the central Pacific have
been' sighted on a raft, a coa.t guard
plane radioed Friday.
10 Properties to Disappear When
South Approach to Bridge Is Built
The assessed value of land and The City's property ls a small street all that portion of D.D. 303, refer'
-
improvements in the South side
of 800 and 900 blocks of Nelson
Avenue,, which has been gazetted
by the B.C, government as a proposed public road area for the West
Arm bridge, approximates $.0,000.
Market 'value of the bouses, one
store and property, however, has
been estimated as close to $100,000
The area has been defined, as
consisting of lots one to 12 In block
46, and lots one to eight in block 47
There are 10 property owners. Involved. None contacted frlday by
The Dally News have received official notification from the; government of any Impending transactions.   •
The owners are J. W. filngrose.
802 Nelson Avenue; Louis Colettl,
338 Baker Street; Terence Douglas
Rosling and Doris Mildred Rosling,
505 Davies Street; Margaret Bell.
816 Nelson Avenue; John Campbell.
904 Nelson Avenue; Carl Recardo
Locatelli, 908 Nelson Avenue; Kate
Clerihew, R.R. No. 1, Nelson; Mike
and Doris Hadekln. 914 Nelson Avenue; Mildred Emllie Williamson,
1451 Second Avenue, Trail, and the
City of Nelson.
Mr. Rlngrose, who owns three
lots, Is proprietor of the Avenue
Service Station, a store built In
1930.
Seven lots belong to Mr. Colettl.
Red Crtiss, Community Chest Views
Given in Post-Debate Statements
Jamboree Fund
"Progressing"
Although an actual check of funds
coming In for the senior hockey
club drive has yet to be made, E.
A. Mann, president, said Friday the
campaign was "progressing.1'
The fund is believed over the
$3000 mark. Since the jamboree
many donations, from a few dollars
to $25, have been received by the
executive.
Jimmy Boates, chairman of the
ticket sales for the Booster Club,
reported close to $1300 has been received- from fans paying for their
last three contract tickets a 'Second
time. They originally paid for them
at the beginning of the season.
It's estimated the old timers
hockey game Thursday night would
bring in $125. This, with individual
donations, ls slowly building up the
fund.
Tonight's game will see the "dime
a goal" deal, organized by the
Booster Club members with the aid
of high school students. The students will be at the exits to the
rink and as the fans come in, provide envelopes. Any wishing to help
the effort to lift the club out of the
red are asked to deposit a dime for
every Nelson goal. Envelopes can
be dropped in boxes at the exits or
in stores in the city and the outlying district.
The club'heeds $15,000 to clear
its debts.
The Weather
TEMPERATURE8
Min. Max Prec
Nelson        25       35       .12
Kimberley      0      19       —
Crescent Valley      3      24
Kaslo         16      34       -
T. Wiginton.
J. D. Hingwing, C. Mattice, C.
Schumaker, B. Schneider.
H. Farenholtz, J. Haines, K. Le-
Page, D. Speers.
L. McEachern, L. Bicknell, D.
Yost, Y. Hamakawa.
H. Moore, J. Braybrook, J. Alexander, K. W. Dixon.
W. Burdenie. Jack Taylor, A. S.
Lockwood, R. Brett.
W. Wait, F. Carmichael, J. Far-
gher, W. Ebdon.
■A. B. Gilker, D. Benedetti, S
Linton, J. Spencer.
T. H. Bourque, F. Wah, A. Freeman, H. Doelle.
R. Chandler, E. Leeming, J,
Strachan, A. S. Cook.
J. Teag-ue, I. E. Kraft, W. Eckmier, E. J. podard.
MELODY PALS
DANCE
TONIGHT-9:30 P.M.  .
CIVIC CENTRE
Admission 50c Each
Considerable debate arose at the
recent annual meeting of Nelson
branch of the Canadian Red 'Cross
Society, as to the advlseability or
inadviseability of the Red Cross becoming one of the agencies of the
Nelson District Community Chest.
During the debate, a statement to
the effect that The Daily News had
not seen fit to publish the viewpoint of the Red Cross Association
in this matter, was made.
No approach to The Daily News
at the local level was made to obtain publication of the material in
question.
Subsequent to this The Daily
News felt the best thing to do in
the interests of the Red Cross and
the Community Chest would be to
have briefly stated the viewpoints
of both organizations, and with this
in mind, the presidents of tjoth ior-
ganizations were asked to submit
material, and in line with its continuous policy of attempting to do
public service for the community
which it serves. The Daily News
herewith publishes these statements.
The Red Cross statement presented by N. C. Stibbs, president, and
submitted by the publicity director
of the-B.C. Red Cross: .
"After nearly a century of unremitting and unselfish service in war,
peace and disaster, to people of all
nations and creeds, the Red "Cross
cannot bury its identity in a blanket
organization of diversified philanthropic and welfare groups. This is
the reason why branches of the
Canadian Red Cross Society stand
aloof from mushrooming community
chests that would put all their
"begs in one askit," states Mrs. J.
N. Mawer, president of the B.C.
division of the society.
"During the past few years national bodies of both American and
Canadian Red Cross who, by their
charters, have definite responsibilities to the government, have passed
resolutions to prevent any branch
joining in a federated campaign.
Any weakening of national status of
the society could not only jeopardize its service to Canada as a nation, but could also endanger its
position as a unit of International
■Red Cross.
"It has not proven possible for
a single campaign to raise sufficient
funds to satisfy budgets of all organizations which previously had
their own campaigns, declares Col.
C. A. Scott, B.C. Red Cross commissioner. Records of most cities, which
have tried united endeavor, show
financial disappointment There can
be no monopoly in the field of philanthropy . . . np 'c6rnering of the
market* in campaigns, he points out.
"Red Cross has four major responsibilities," states Mrs. Mawer.
"Its service to the soldier, as a voluntary auxiliary to the government;
its blood transfusion service, providing free blood when needed for every citizen of Canada; its emergency
disaster service, ready when disaster
strikes at home or abroad; Its outpost hospitals, serving on the frontiers of the country.
"Canada has an army of half a
million voluntary, workers, serving
under the Red Cross ; . . one of
every 30 people organized for any
emergency. It is necessary to keep
this civilian auxiliary of the armed
forces and civilian relief body as a
distinct unit, responsible only to the
government and people.
"Wherever the Red Cross ensign
flies in any of t.9 nations, it brings
promise of immediate relief. It must
be ready t6 assist In local or world
disaster and sa becomes a means
of international .friendship and understanding, making' peace more
secure."
Following is the statement from
J. R. Corner, Community Chest
president: j
"To deny that there has been no
difference on opjnion between the
Community ' Chest and the Red
Cross Society would be untrue.
These differences, as far as the
Community Chest is concerned,
have been confined to academic
discussions as to the relative merits
of united, as opposed to Individual,
appeals, to the public for funds.
"At the inception of the Community Chest in Nelson in February
of 1954, the Red Cross Society local
branch had already formulated and
almost completed its plans for its
campaign for futjds. If the membership had so wished, it was then too
late to apply for affiliation with
the Community Chest.
BETTER UNDERSTANDING
"During the following months it
became more and mora apparent
that these differences, were being
enlarged _an<_ a very different cleavage developing in the contributors'
ranks. This was a regrettable situation. In the main it was due to a
lack of understanding of the motives prompting the Rtd Cross Society from refraining in making application to the Community Chest.
This misunderstanding was harmful
both to the Red Cross and the Com-
munity'Che'st.
"In order that clarification could
be obtained, mis-conceptions cleared
up and a better outstanding achieved, I made it my duty to attend the
annual meeting of the local branch
of the Society. Col. Scott, B. C.
Commissioner and Mrs. Mawer,
President of the B. C. Division, were
present and informed of the local
situation. A strong plea was made
to enlist their support in stopping
and preventing any breach in good
relationships. Both these visiting officials were most kind, also mo«t
loquacious, in explaining the Society's attitude toward united appeals and Community Chests. As
a result of this discussion, a statement was given the Nelson Dally
News dealing with this matter. In
addition to the statement given,
was the information that, should the
local branch vote to apply for affiliation to the Community Chest,
the charter would be taken away
from the branch.
"With this statement and information, the directors df the Community Chest felt they had achieved
much in bringing into the open,
contentious points that had formerly
either gone unanswered or misunderstood in their interpretation. By
this means, a better understanding
now prevails among the directors
and executive members of the two
organizations.
CONTRIBUTOR JUDGE
"At this time it might be as well
to emphasize that the Community
Chest have never at any time attempted to exert pressure or influence on any organization to affiliate with them. They do feel, however, that, from both the contributors' and the recipients' point of
view, a combined appeal ls more
desirable. The fact of the success
of the Community Chest in its first
year ol operation in Nelson and the
acceptance by the contributing public of its value, is proof of this contention. Affiliation is a voluntary
move on the part of the agencies.
The Community Chest's function is
not to impede or restrict the activities of those not desiring to associate themselves with the Chest.
"In the final analyst the contributor is judge as to how his charity dollar shall be distributed,",
KIDHEYTROUBLE?
lly--l_r..r(._r__l_n-..r_l___lr_l..._,.i|C.
b-ilioi_.--_t.th_i_._n_ill._.,_i.lh_.l_i__y
l_-l_ni-r-.chlt.lIill.lt...i__-_.-.'-r.,'I.O_
•De WITT'S PILLS*
portion of a block.
The North Shore approach to the
bridge on the Southern Transpro.
vlncial Highway has also been gazetted. A notice In the B.C. Gazette
says:
"Notice ls given, pursuant to section eight of the Highway Act, that
ence plan 647881 ol district lot 372,
Kootenay district, lying south of
plan 647881'of district lot 372. Kootenay district G, shown outlined in
red on a plan on file In the department of public works, under
'road surveys 2538.' ate hereby established as a public road.''
Rosling Re-Elected President . . .
Kootenay Has More to Offer Tourist
Than Scenery, Resort Owner Told
T. D. Rosling has beep re-elected
president of the Kootenay Courts
and Resorts Association,
> Robert Phillips Is vice-president,
B. B. Clark, secretary-treasurer1,
and B. S. Woods of Kootenay Bay,
Fred Jones of Kaslo, Mrs. H. Green-
an of New Denver, T. A. McRae of
Rossland and H. W. Robertson are
dlreotors.
The president In his annual report noted a decline last year in
tourist business, following a trend
set In 1953 after the 1952 peak year.
Last year's drop amounted to between 10 and 20 per cent.
In calling upon the 47 member
resort operators for publicity
action'this year, Mr. Rosling suggested that the Kootenay country
might woo the tourist with mope
than Its scenery.
,"Trail has tha largest, other
than Iron, smelter In the British
Empire. What have the 8locan
and Arrow Lakes to offer? Much.
Nelson has the city-owned Civic
Centre and the only match block
factory In Canada. What has
Kaslo? Bo.well has a glass house.
What has Creston?
"Let us dig out the things that
are unique or unusual, and tell
the prospective visitor about
them, rather than Just advertising
beautiful scenery and fishing?
Kootenay     communities.     Mr.
B Proles!
Assessments
A total of 73 applications have
been filed In Nelson and surround
Ing School District .7 tor hearings
before the assessment court of revision.
6f these 38 have been filed from
the city. 35 in the district.
Court of revision sits February 1
to 3, hearing municipal applications,
then will hear district applicants.
Rosling   added,  should   consider
entertainment of visitors.
"For instance, the resorts at Balfour should work out an entertainment program among themselves to
help the visitors spend the evening
hours. There is plenty to do in daylight: but many complain about the
lack of something interesting to do
after dark."
A Farnrers' Institute request for
support in its drive for better radio
reception and coverage, resulted In
a letter being sent to H. W. Herrldge, MP for Kootenay West.
Mr. Rosling was delegate to the
10th annual  meeting of the Auto,
Courts and'Resorts Association in
Vancouver.
A resolution from the Kootenay.
Association recommending that
fishing licences should be issued to
visitors for a shorter period than
a year, at a fee proportionately
lower than the present yearly licence, was withdrawn.
In his report on the convention,
Mr. Rosling sold the Kootenay Association should try to get support
of local Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commerce and other groups,
and present a new resolution to the
B.C. game convention to be held
In Nelson in May.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMII
Welcome Canadian.
FRIENDLY
&
C.0
*v
HOTEL
Roome With Bath (3.00   .3...
Wlth.ut Bath $2.00   S2.50
Spokane W   213  Riverside
Sales Tax Hike
Would Aid Schools ,
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - A one
per cent boost In the retail sales
tax, with the entire increase earmarked for schools, was Introduced
In the Washington legislature Friday., by two Democrats.
Representatives A. E. Edwards' of
Deming and Ray Olsen of Seattle
sponsored.the bill, which was one of
four revenue measures introduced
in efforts to raise $41,000,000 Governor Arthur Langlie said is required to meet state needs.
SAFE MOVING
is a SCIENCE!
House Opening on TV
. VICTORIA (CP). - Television
cameras will cover the opening of
the third session of B. C.'s 22nd
legislature Tuesday, for the second
time in history, speaker of the
house Thomas Irwin announced Friday,
Opening of the spring session last
year was covered by CBU-TV which
will televise the opening again this
year.
, NELSON COMMERCIAL
TRAINING SCHOOL    ■
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
701 Front 8t .    Phone 1794
Res., 1017-X
FORD THEATRE
SUNDAY, 9:30 P.M. ON
CKt-M
Let our trained, conrteo__i, ,
professional movers "take th*
load off your mind!" Tour
finest furniture, dishes ant
other possessions will bo
scientifically picked and
handled with the utmost car*.
Phone for- estimate.
West
Transfer
Co.
719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C
Phone 33
COMMERCIAL
REFRIGERATION
SALES AND SERVICE
We are equipped to service and install commercial
refrigeration on any scale. See us for advice and
estimates.
ALL WORK AND EQUIPMENT
FULLY GUARANTEED
WELLS SERVICE SHOP
405 Hall St.
Phone 1115
 R^IPPP?^!
■ ■ ■ ■ •
(OOF, Rebekah
Stales In Office
KIMBERLEY — Impressive Joint
Installation was held for officers
of Sullivan Lodge IOOF and Victory Rebekah Lodge here.
Installing officers were DDGM
J. O. McDonald and DDP Eileen
Brown, DD Grand Marshals H. Andrews and Mary McKay, assisted
by M. Hellelson, H. Bryant, A. A
'Watkins, W. L. Mawson, D. Crowe.
W. Robertson and Sisters G. Siple,
A. Crossley, P. Jones, H. Mawson.
E. Blake and E. Thompson.
Installed officers were:
Sullivan Lodge—NB E. A. Mc-
,Kay; VG A. K. Watson; RS C. P
Nesbitt; FS J. 0. McDonald; treasurer E. Nesbitt; warden D. Morrison; conductor L. Craig; OG S.
Blake; IG D. Mackie; RSNG H. Andrews; LSNG T. Mawson; RSVG
H. Bidder; LSVG P. Lye; RSS E.
Lewis; LSS D. Waites; chaplain,
A. A. Watkins.
Victory 61—NG Roberta Skinner;
VG Vi Schneider; RS Annie Walker; FS Hazel Duncan; treasurer
Jean Dodd; warden Ada Calles;
conductor June Wilson; OG Lillian
Lloyd; IG Muriel Torgeson; RSNG
Dot Thomson; LSNG Ella Malcolm-
son; RSVG Marg. Weaver; LSVG
Edna Thompson; RSS Marg Livingstone; LSS Dale Honeyman;
chaplain Betty Oliver; pianist Mary
Grlswold; flag bearer, Edith Blake
The past noble grand's honorary
degree was then conferred upon
Sister Lila Bates, Jr. PNG, under
the direction of Sister Eileen
Brown, PNG.
Among those present for the
occasion were W. Johnson, grand
warden of B.C., and L. Bonnier.
K. Mattice. S. Craig and S. DeLucca
all of Key City Lodge of Cranbrook.
Cranbrook
$520,323
Building
During r54
FIRE DAMAGE
AT KIMBERLEY
DOWN IN 1954
CRANBROOK - This city's property loss from fire in 1954 tumbled
to 92^ cents per capita compared
with the black total in 1953 of $11.47
per capita, the annual report by fire
chief James Gordon to the City
Council shows. Damage resulted
from only seven of the 62 fires for
whreh department runs were made
during the year.
Total loss was $4624, but property
value at stake in the fires which
occurred was $92,000, with insurance carried valued at only $37,500.
In his report Mr. Gordon urges
considerations be given by the city
of replacement of the two fire trucks
one of which is 31 years old, and
the newer one 26 years old.
Other fire department work during the year was raising in its greenhouse of 6000 nursery plants for
city parks, and fire hall headquarters which stores the Cranbrook District Ambulance equipment, dispatched the vehicles on 151 calls
during the year.
G. H. JONG
Ichln... Herb Remedies
For All Ailments
1.0   YEARS'  EXEPERI.
ENCE IN CANADA
Corner 6th Ave. and 1st 8t n,
,..,.,       ... Calaary
lOnlng. Sawmill, Logftsf
and Contract-rtf
Equipment
ATIONAL
ACHINERY
~! Limited
.
Granville   Island
Vancouver 1. _. A
CRANBROOK - Results of residential construction In the city in
1954 shows In all city departmental
annual reports.
City building permits for new
housing or housing improvements
numbered 72 for the year, and were
at widely scattered locations. Estimated value of their construction
was $354,540, and estimated value
of the 10 permits for commercial
.building construction of $165,783
brought the whole total of new
buildings to $520,323.
During the year, city electrical
superintendent George Burch reports a peak 2035 meters on the city
system after a net increase for the
year of 119 active meters. They consumed an all-time record of 8,305,-
800 kilowatt hours, nine per cent
more than in the previous record
year of 1953. These continuous increases will soon require additional
faeilities at the sub-station which is
nOw operating beyond capacity. Also required during the year were
28 new transformers, 168 new poles
and wiring, and 129 new .sets of
service wires.  Replacement of. 599.
street lights was required.
MILE OF  SIDEWALKS
Reporting for the works department city superintendent Emil
Erickson said nearly a mile of concrete sidewalks were built under
local improvements bylaws, and access streets and lanes for the newest
housing subdivision in the southeast
corner were made. Water department installed 76 new water connections during the year with excellent water supply all year.
City Tourist Camp revenue dropped to $14,111.09 in a slow tourist
season, compared to $15,579,49 the
previous year. City swimming pool
life guards rescued five persons,
and administered first aid to 38 persons. Visiting aircraft using the
municipal airport numbered«808 for
the year, and the new 4900-foc.t runway was surfaced during the year
to a 150-foot width by the Department of Transport.*
Bud-Moth Control Qiven
For District Orchards
CRESTON—Of all the insect pests
of tree fruits, the bud-moth would
rank as one of the most destructive
during the 1954 season in the Creston Valley, J. E. Swales, district
horticulturist, reports.
Practically every kind of tree
fruit, including apple, cherry and
pear, was attacked. In a few orchards, where control sprays were
not applied, trees were almost completely stripped of blossom buds
by the feeding larvae of the bud-
moth. At harvest time severe bud
moth injury on apples was noted
in two or three orchards.
Early in the Spring, about the
time the buds begin to open, the
half-grown larvae of the bud-moth,
which are dark brown caterpillars
with black heads, emerge from their
"spin-ups" on the twigs where they
hibernate during the winter. These
caterpillars get into the opening
buds where they feed on developing leaves and blossoms. Leaves
are often rolled up and fastened
together with silken threads to
form a nest in which the larvae
lives for six or seven weeks. During this period, considerable damage can be done to blossoms, developing fruit and foliage.
Towards the end of June, the
larvae become full-grown and
would be slightly less than one-
half inch in length. At that time,
they pupate in cocoons formed in
the rolled up leaves. The moths
begin to emerge in July. They are
ash-gray moths with a broad white
band across the front wings which
have an expanse of slightly over
one-half inch. Several days after
emerging? the female moths begin
egg laying. The eggs, which are
flat, disc-like ovals, and nearly
transparent, are laid either singly
or in small clusters on the leaves.
In about ten days' time, the larvae
hatch and begin feeding on the
leaves. The larvae tend to feed on
the inner portions of the leaves,
creating a skeletonizing effect
Should an apple be in contact with
a leaf upon which a larvae is feeding, the larvae will often chew
small shallow holes in the skin of
the fruit. During August the larvae
move to the twigs where they pupate for the winter, Mr. Swales says.
EFFECTIVE   CONTROL
It has been found that malathion
applied at the pink stage of blossom development provides the most
effective control of bud-moth on
apple and pear. Another malathion
RILEYS'
GROCERY
Corner Cedar and Observatory Streets
(Formerly  Bicker.on's)
Will Remain Open Daily, Including Sunday, From
8:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
Delivery Service On All Large Orders and Meat Orden
Phoned In Before 1 p.m.
PHONE 1707
For a Full Line of
GROCERIES,   CONFECTIONERY   and   MEATS.
EMM and BILL RILEY.
TELEVISION SERVICE
We have one of the most modern service shops in the
province  of  B.C.   and   are   now  prepared  ta   offer
24 HOUR SERVICE on television receivers.
(Daily Except Sunday and Holidays)
For Service between 9 and 5 — PHONE 1300
For Evening Service — PHONE 617-X
Your Television
Headquarters
476 Baker St. Phone 1300
Oul
spray may be required during the
summer after the eggs have hatched. It could be determined whethci
or not this summer spray is necessary by frequently inspecting the
leaves during July. If there is considerable bud-moth activity lt
would be advisable to spray.
As. malathion cannot be safely
used on cherry trees, a dormant oil
and dinitro creosol spray is recommended for control of bud-moth on
cherry. This spray consists of dormant oil, two gallons of actual oil,
and dinitro creosol (40 per cent)
1.4 pounds in 100' gallons of water,
for dilute sprays. For concentrate
sprays, dormant oil, six gallons of
actual oil, and dinitro creosol (40
per cent) four pounds per acre, are
recommended.
As a substitute for the dormant
spray on cherries, a nicotine sulphate spray at 75 per cent petal
fall may be applied to control bud
molh. Nicotine sulphate should be
applied at the rate of one pound
per 100 gallons of water with one-
half pound of washing soda added
in dilute sprays. One-half gallon
of nicotine sulphate plus two
pounds of washing soda per acre
is recommended for concentrate
sprays. One weakness of nicotine
sulphate is that this material is not
very effective when applied at tenr
peratures below 70 degrees F.
Paratliion applied at 75 per cent
petal fall has given excellent control of bud-moth on cherry but because of the high human toxicity
rating of this material it is not
recommended for use on tree fruits
in B.C.
Bud-moth does not usually become a problem on apple trees
where recommended codling moth
sprays are applied regularly.
PYTHIANS INSTALL
NEW OFFICERS
AT KIMBERLEY
KIMBERLEY — A large number
of Knights of Pythias, Sisters and
friends attended the installation of
officers for 1955.
Installing officers were acting
grand chancellor V. Vohradsky for
the Knights and Pauline Burrill.
assisted by grand manager Mary
Vohradsky and grand senior Edith
Helland for the Sisters.
L. Leonhardt received his past-
chancellor commander's pin and
Sisters B. Simpson and L. Bureau
past chiefs pins and certificates.
Installed were:
Knights-CC, P. Olsen; VC, L
Beduz; prelate, W. H. Craig; M.
of W., C. Leonhardt; secretary, R.
Beduz; FS, G. MacGregor; treasurer,
J. McKim; M. at arms, T. Leighton;
IG, J. Hall;  OG, D. Pocock.
Sisters—M. Ex. Chief, Jane Leonhardt; Ex. Sr., Marg. Thomason, Jr.;
Ex. Jr., G. Preston; secretary, M
Thomason, Sr.; treasurer, A. Clar-
ricoates; manager, L. Lang; protector, M. Pocock; OG, Mary Fisher
Mrs. J. Brookes acted as pianist
and flower girls were Susan Oar-
ricoates, Judy Pocock and Shirley
Fairclough.
Cards and dancing completed the
evening, refreshments being served
by retiring officers of the Knights.
Woman Catches
Hen-Raiding Hawk
QUEEN'S BAY—Because of the
efforts of Mrs. J. S. Hirst of Queen's
Bay, there's one less hawk in the
district to maraud poultry farms.
She found a large hawk in her
chicken-run, eating one of her hens.
By backing the bird against the
wire, she managed to catch it. But
she took it to a neighbor for killing.
NEW
INTERNAL TREATMENT
PSORIASIS
Dramatic clinical results show the
new internal treatment, LIPAN,
is succesful in almost 7 out of 10
cases. Even' stubborn lesions of
long standing have responded to
LIPAN.
Ask your druggist for LIPAN. For
free booklet and clinical reports,
write to Greenlove Company, 21
King   St.   E..   Toionto,   Dept   "B".
■
Cranbrook Names
Red Cross Slate
CRANBROOK—The annual meeting ot the Cranbrook branch ot the
Canadian Red Cross elected a number of new officers .to Its 1955 slate.
The honorary officers are J-- F.
Scott president, Mrs. F. B.'Miles,
Mrs. Archie Raworth and Mrs. I. J.
Baxter vice-presidents. C. E. Page
was named as new president, succeeding G. T. Winchester, Mrs. Ernest Laurie vice president, and Miss
Dorothea Hayden secretary-treasurer.
Mr. Winchester will be chairman
of the annqal spring drive for funds
and memberships in March, and
Mrs. Vincent Liddicoat continues
chairman of the blood donor committee.
Clinics for blood demote were
doubled in 1954 when the Southern
Alberta mobile unit made May and
September visits and received nearly 600 bottles from Cranbrook donors. 1954 Spring drive for memberships and funds ended at $2432.31,
slightly below its objective of $2500.
—r—-
m
Rossland Library
M Record Year
ROSSLAND — An active year in
both circulation and book buying
was reported at the annual meeting
of Rossland Library Association by
D. T. Coon, chairman.
Total circulation of 21,920, is the
second highest in the association's
history. Total money spent on books
during the year was $1021, larger
than usual. The increase is almost
totally in the junior section.
Mr. Coon stressed the public recommendation of Alderman H. L.
Christian that the library detract
from the appeal of crime comics by
putting forward the better juvenile
books.
Last year a junior membership
of 944 accounted for a circulation of
12,613 books. Additional shelves
were built for the expanding non-
fiction section. A .book trunk was
constructed for the library.
'During the year Miss Olga Oslng,
librarian, has acted as custodian of
Rossland museum during library
hours.
The financial report for the library showed a balance of $702.85.
Elected directors for two-year
terms were ' Mrs. Howard Bayley,
Mrs. R. J. Armstrong and Cyril Bacon. Aid. H. L. Christian represents
city council on the board of directors.
Fruitvale Lepn
Slate Installed
FRUITVALE — Cecil Pitt of
Rossland, zone commander, installed officers of Fruitvale branch
of the Canadian Legion and its
Ladies' Auxiliary here. Nearly 50
persons attended, and a dinner was
served before the ceremony.
Douglas Haines was installed as
president for this second session.
Vice-presidents are F.' M. Smith
and Barry Robinson, and Alan John
is secretary treasurer. Fred Lind is
the sergeant-at-arms, while tire executive members installed were H.
McCutcheon, K. McCullough, R. W.
Woods and H. Higgins.
The officers of the Ladies' Auxiliary installed were Mrs. J. Campbell, president; Mrs. E. Grieve, Mrs.
G. Metcalfe vice-presidents; Mrs.
G. C. MacKenzie, secretary; Mrs. A.
Wagner, treasurer; Mrs. W. Grieve,
Mrs. G. Grieve, Mrs. E. Allard, Mrs.
J. Rothwell and Mrs. S. Walsh.
MRS. M-cKIE
RITES AT FERNIE
FERNIE — Funeral service for
Mrs. Mary MacKie was conducted
by Dr. N. L. Hughes at Knox United Church Wednesday afternoon.
Mrs. MacKie died in the Fernie
Memorial Hospital.
Born in Pollokshaws, Scotland,
September 5, 1869, Mrs. MacKie
came to Canada in 1910. She married
John MacKie, a Fernie pioneer, at
Fernie, in 1912. From 1914 to 1943
they made their home at Hillcrest,
Alta. From 1943 to early 1954 they
resided at Vancouver. They returned to Fernie early in 1954.
Surviving are her husband, John,
of Fernie, one son, James MacKie,
of Calgary, two daughters, Mrs.
Alex (Effic) Aitken, formerly of
Fernie, now residing in Auckland,
New Zealand, and Mrs. Sam- (Polly)
Rose, of San Diego, Calif.. 15 grandchildren, IB great grandchildren, and
one great, great granddaughter.
Burial was in St. Margaret's Cemetery here.
Ex-Cranbrook Man,
A. L. Piggott Dies
WYNNDEL - Death in the Creston Valley Hospital has claimed a
long-time resident of Wynndel In
the person of Arthur Henry Piggott.
Born in England, he came to Canada in 1910. settling In Cranbrook
where  he  was   employed   by   the
CPR.   Enlisting   in   the   Canadian
Forestry Corps he served In France
in the First World War, returning
in 1918 and continuing to work (or
the CPR as tie Inspector. He pur-
I chased land In Wynndel, where he
i retired. He is survived by four chtl-
I dren,  Mrs.  C.  Gregory,  Wynndel;
Official Opening for
Kimberley Television
KIMBERLEY — Television comes
officially to Kimberley today as
three well-known residents make
their debut over station KXLY-TV
Spokane to mark the occasion.
Appearing will,be Mayor Clifford
Swan, who has guided civic policies
since incorporation; city electrical
head A. Watson, and George James,
popular pioneer of the distirct.
They  will  be  interviewed  over
the Dale Starky Show and Mr.
James will entertain with his "one-
man band."
Stringing of coaxial cable to all
parts s of the city is progressing
rapidly under the supervision of
Mr. Watson. At present, only Channel 6, Spokane, is available, but by
April Calgary's Channel 2 should
be received by the rhombic antenna topping Kimberley's 5900-foot
North Star hill.
Stevens Tells Trail Chamber . . .
Management-Labor Solution
Necessary If Canada To Be Leader
TRAIL—Hon. H. H. Stevens, P.C.,
LL.D., former federal minister and
past president of the Vancouver
Board of Trade, was guest speaker
at the annual meeting of the Trail
Chamber of Commerce attended by
200 members and wives.
"If you can solve the problem
of employer-employee relationships
you will have achieved one of the
greatest things possible," he said,
in delivering an address entitled
"Canada — Past, Present and Future." "Until this is solved we
are not In a position to give the
leadership we could to the rest
of the world."
He gave four chief economic
factors in Canada's future, each
heing vital to the other—manpower,
technical skill, management and investment.
Speaking of present, Mr. Stevens
said that new frontiers are opening up every day and opportunities
for young men equipped to handle
them are greater than ever before.
"Canada has arrived as a nation.
From an industrial standpoint, Canada has matured and is ready to
take her place in the forefront ol
Fernie Group
Names Officers
FERNIE — Bob Hainsworth, manager of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, was elected president of the
Fernie and District Boy Scout Association at its annual meeting. Ev-
aristo Naccarato was returned as
secretary and Jack Baker was chosen as treasurer. Harry E. Miard
was re-elected to the post of honorary president. Harry McKay, who
was appointed district commissioner a year ago, will continue in that
post.
The association decided that the
summer camp, a feature of scouting,
would be held and would be of at
least 10 days' duration. Due to lack
of leaders no camp has been held
during the past few years.
Members of local Scout troops are
undergoing intensive training. Several of the boys hope to qualify
for attendance at the World Boy
Scout Jamboree to be held at Nia-
gara-on-the-Lake in July. This will
be the first time that the World
Jamboree will b,e held in the Western hemisphere
SALMO PYTHIAN
SLATES INSTALLED
SALMO—For the first time in
many years, Salmo lodge, Knights
of Pythias and Twin Temple Pythian Sisters held a joint installation
of officers.
Mrs. Sue Taylor waa installed as
Pythian Sisters' chief by installing
officer Mrs. Hilda Drugge and past
chief Mrs. Lila Thompson. The remaining officers, impressively arrayed in white, were presented for
office by grand manager Mrs. Gertrude Moore and Mrs. I. Larsen.
In an equally impressive ceremony, Ole Jensen was installed for
his second term as chancellor commander of the Knights of Pythias.
Grand master-at-arms Otto Larsen
presented the remaining officers
who were installed by Les Lund.
A guest of the evening was the
chief-elect of the Fruitvale Pythian
Sisters.
The ceremonies were followed by
a buffet supper and an evening of
dancing.
SLAUGHTERHOUSE
BURNS TO GROUND
FRUITVALE - Fire caused by
overheated pipe totally destroyed a
log-constructed slaughterhouse and
its contents on the farm of Mr. Ty-
loe, situated north of the village.
Being located at the back of the
property, fire got a good start be
fore being noticed. Residents across
the valley first saw the. flames and
turned in the alarm.
Shortage of hose handicapped the
Fruitvale Volunteer Fire Brigade
but the heavy snowfall provided
the means of saving the adjacent
building in which Mr. Tyloe had
several  pigs.
Estimate of loss has been placed
around $800.
Arthur, Creston; Ernest, Nakusp,
and Frank, Wynndel; six grandchildren and one great grandchild
His wife predeceased him in England.
the nations of the world."
Glimpsing backwards, he said we
must not forget the great pioneers
of the past.
Presentation of honorary life
membership was made to a well-
known Trail barrister, Donald MacDonald.
NcLSON DAILY N_.Wi, SA i i_-.-_>AY, JANUARY 22, .955—3
SMALL LOGGING OPERATORS NEAR
REVELSTOKE OPPOSED TO CELGAR
REVELSTOKE—A report from small logging oper-
aotrs in the Revelstoke area opposing the granting of the
pending Celgar forest management licence has been approved
by the Board of Trade.
The board asked Vincent Segur, MLA, to oppose the
licence-
English teacher Addresses Rotary
KIMBERLEY—Guest speaker at
the luncheon meeting of the Kimberley Rotary Club was Miss Margaret Schley, English teacher at
McKim High School.
An exchange teacher from Chatham, Jersey, Miss Schley stressed
the   comparative   informality   be
tween teacher and school board In
Canada as compared to the United
Kingdom system. The setting of
Kimberley is lovely; and people
are, she said, very friendly. However, she regretted the Canadian's
tendency to belittle all things
American.
Procter Skating
Family Affair
PROCTER — This Is the third
year of operation of the Procter
skating rink, and a record number
of skaters, including whole families are enjoying the good Ice. Previously this sport was relative to
the condition of the edge of the
West Arm. If it was frozen solid
jenough, there was skating. No serious accidents occurred, but there
were many youngsters with wet
feet and many anxious parents during the brief season.
A level surface was the most formidable detriment to the building of a rink but that was overcome
when R gL. Stevenson offered free
use of a piece of his land half a
mile from Procter. Work crews
readied the necessary space and vol
untary workers built a hut for the
changing of boots. A. Ogden gave
poles for the rink lights, B. J.
Fitchett gave the wiring, A. A. Do-
senberger donated uprights and
plank flooring, and N. Dosenberger
provided a heater and stove pipes.
A skating rink club was formed
and officials are elected yearly the
first week in November. Rules were
drawn up and fees set at $1 per
person or $2 per family for the entire season. Saturday and.. Sunday
mornings are reserved for hockey,
ever-popular with the bigger boys
Even the fathers are forming a team.
Some of the boys show much promise in this field now that they are
afforded more oportunity to practise «and one or two are material
for figure skaters.
Skating hours are set to allow
time for flooding and freezing, and
the rink must be cleared and scraped nightly. Ice makers are Roy
Stevenson, G McMullin, N. Dosenberger, and this years president, C.
Walton.
C. Ferguson organized a crib-
bage party in the Procter hall to
raise funds to defray expenses and
buy more firewood. Door man was
J. Persello and patrons made up 11
tables of play. First prizes were
won by Mrs, N. MacLeod and M.
Sokoloski, and consolations by Mrs.
M. Kirkendall and G. McMullin.
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Wkwrn---;-       -   ,   ,imm^    ,    .fp^i^^
Netemt Ba.hj Nnue
established April 22. 11)02
British Columbia's,
Most Interesting Newspaper
Published ever; morning except Sunday by the
MEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
206 Baker Street,   Nelson.   British Columbia.
Authorized as Second Class Mall,
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MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
Saturday, January 22, 1955
  i
Victoria-Ottawa
Columbia Co-Operation
Best for Canadians
It has taken a British Columbian
speaking in Ottawa to be the first political voice to add a touch of common
sense, uncolored by politics, tb the
provincial-federal capitals' wrangling
over Columbia River power and water
storage development.
Howard Green, Vancouver Quadra,
speaking in the throne speech debate
on a bill designed to checkmate the
B. C. government's deal with Kaiser
Aluminum, said the two governments
will have to co-operate for development of the river's potential in the best
interests of the Canadian people.
We would suggest that there is one
step farther to go. All Canadian governments should get together in the
development of a national policy on
hydro energy.
The Columbia Basin, which is an
outstanding example of untapped resource, has a potential which is only
now beginning to be generally realized.
It can mean more to this and .future
generations of Canadians, if properly
handled, than the oil fields of Alberta.
It can be the means of developing an
industrial region with accompanying
employment . and progress rivalling
any in Canada.
Forty-four per cent of all the water
that flows down the Columbia originates in this Dominion. It has a volume in its 1200 miles almost that of
the St. Lawrence, but a fall nearly five
times as great. It is this fall that makes
it one of the world's greatest power
rivers.
The federal government has already spent 3 million dollars on surveys and studies in this basin, which
includes the Kootenay. This study has
indicated that 40 billion kilowatt hours
of electrical energy could be produced
annually. Only limitless imagination
could encompass the variety and magnitude of achievements that would result from harnessing the million horsepower available at Mica Creek, 75
miles North of Revelstoke. Two other
major and seven more smaller power
sites exist.
History .has shown that Canada
need not worry about obtaining customers to consume this power. Cheap
energy has a way of attracting consumers; industry can be counted upon
to take advantage of any such benefit
if Canada makes it available.
British Columbia has to weigh
whether it is better to obtain revenues
from sale of, ipower or from sale of
water power, and which will spell the
greatest benefit for the province on
a long-range basis. This is a decision
that shbuld not be overshadowed by
the attraction of immediate prospects
to raise provincial revenues without
taxation.
It is evident that time for such
decisions is available because of Ottawa's new bills to strengthen Federal
They'll Do It Every Time
^__Z* M^TME/RE a
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Lottero to tho Editor on any topic of
Genuine Int.rest are welcome If they are
brief, accurate and fair. No tetter will be
Imerted In whole, or In part, except over
the signature and address of tho writer.
Unsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.
Modern Art
Comes From Within
To the Editor:
Sli>-The editorial page of the Vancouver
Sun published an article entitled "Beauty and
the Beast". It concerned the time-worn controversy between academic and modern art,
perhaps not so modern, as in 1948 an exhibition was held in London, "Forty Thousand
Years oi Modern Art," with exhibits dating
back to the third millennium B.C. The writer
deals with one of tho frenzied outbursts that
occur when a certain type of elderly gentleman is elected to the presidency of the Royal
Academy. It seems that so far only excerpts of
the professor's denunciation have reached this
country. The writer is fair, and modestly
places himself among the (quote) "many artistic illiterates who would rather rely on the
word of the professor than on the pretensions
of the abstractionists." In all fields of culture,
as elsewhere, we find rival camps who consider their doctrine supreme.
Professor Richardson (the elected) has
one particular "bee in his bonnet"—(quote)—
"A public building without sculpture Is unthinkable." This seems to slam the door in the
face of all opposition. But architects and
sculptors think differently, each having very;
different ideas as to what kind of sculpture
or design is best suited to the building and
where the piece should be placed, but the necessary unanimity Is lacking. Although the
Royal Academy offers free tuition to any student, providing he or she has attained a certain degree of proficiency, its regulations were
and probably still are akin to the laws of the
Medes and the Persians; no toleration Is
shown to anyone having the temerity to wander on the path of self-expression. They
w,ould be expelled.
About the middle of the last century-the
academicians considered they had exhausted
the subject of art, which appears to have
been summarized as technique, but technique
is not the be-all and end-all of art. While in
Europe a number of artists were being born,
including Gauguin (1848), Matisse (1860), who
eventually founded the Cubists, Impressionists, Fauves, and other movements. Of Cubism,
Picasso says (quote): "It is. neither a matter
of seed or germination of a new art; it represents a stage in the development of original
pictorial forms."
If the professor's remarks on the comparison between idealism and realism in art implies that academic teaching aims at beauty
and idealism, why do the critics (and they are
plentiful and capable in England) year after
year practically boycott the RA exhibition,
while the few who make any comments seldom
find more than half a dozen out of approximately seven hundred oil paintings worthy of
. being mentioned as off the beaten track of
■mediocrity?
Although the professor does not approve
of "stark reality", the term is in fact most
appropriate to academic usage. Idealism surely postulates imagination, conception, something which originates in the mind, and these
elements are the necessary adjuncts of modern
art. The "charlatans", together with those who
neither understand nor wish to, obviously
don't count; the former have no real aptitude
control over export and import of
energy.
Studies such as that proposed by
the Associated Chambers of Commerce
are valuable to prevent precipitate
action on such far reaching decisions
as involved in the development of the
Columbia. This is our neighborhood
and all leading organizations should
be informed and interested.
However, the greatest good will
come from provincial and federal gov-
' ernment, setting aside political considerations, getting together over the
maps, and graphs and statistics that
have been expertly compiled'to .chart
a course of action. In this way the
best interests of the province and of
Canadians can be served and a proper
policy evolyed.
No moves that would prejudice the
overall good could then result.
? Questions?
ANSWERS
Open to any reader Names of persons
asking questions w'll not be published.
There Is no charge' for this service.
Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED
BY MAIL except where there Is obvloua
necesslty for privacy. .    .
A reader, Castlegar-r-Please let me know the
names of car finance companies in this
district.
In addition to those .listed In our issue of
Thursday there is Mountain Finance Co., Ltd.,
212 Medical Arts Building, Nelson.
Reader, Trail—Can cracks in stucco be repaired? If so, how?
Another reader has informed us that
there Is a caulking compound obtainable. that
fills this purpose and is easy to use. It ls sold
by Wood, Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.,
593 Baker Street, Nelson; and Hipperson Hardware Co., 396 Baker Street, Nelson. You will
be able to buy it in Trail also.
J. F.,  New  Denver—Where  can  I purchase
prints of Roland Gisslng's paintings of the
Canadian Rockies?
Write to The Art Centre, Seventh Avenue,
Calgary, Alta.; also write to the Information
Department, Hudson's Bay, Eighth Avenue,
Vancouver.
G. E. H., Rlondel—Pleast let me know where
I could purchase colored aluminum roofing?
Burns Lumber Company, 602 Baker Street;
Laurence   Simpson,   contractor,   Waterfront,
Nelson; T. H.Waters Company, 101 Hall Street;
K. W. Dixon Company, 305 Baker Street
E. S., Christina Lake—To settle an argument,
please tell me the distance by White Pass
and Yukon  Railway from White Horse,
Yukon Territory, to Skagway, Alaska.
Ill miles.
J. B., Trail—Can you tell me how I might get
a copy of Life for June 4, 1954?
You could write direct to J. Edward King,
General' Manager, Life Magazine, 540 North
Michigan Avenue, Chicago 11, 111. If they
have any back numbers they would let you
know and state price—which may be a few
cents higher than on publishing date.
L. F. T, Trail—How does one get a petition
presented to the House of Commons at
Ottawa?
A petition to the House of Commons must
be presented by a member, and such member
shall be answerable that the petition does not
contain "impertinent or improper matter".
One person may petition the House of Com-
■ mons. Petitions may be either written or
printed. Where there are three or more petitioners, the signatures of at least three shall
be subscribed on the sheet containing-, the
prayer of the petition. Every petition should
commence with the subscription, 'To the
Honourable House of Commons in Parliament assembled." Then should follow "The
Petition of the undersigned . . . humbly shew-
eth . . . " The subject matter of the petition
then follows, in the third person thrtrughout,
and each paragraph should commence with
the w,ord "That ..." The conclusion should
be the "prayer", briefly and clearly expressing the particular object which the petitioners have in view in coming before Parliament.
The petition should close.with the formal
words, "And- your petitioners, as in duty
bound, will ever pray ..."
and their methods are haphazard; while the
latter side with the academicians because they
dislike having their pet ideas disrupted. Abstract and semi-abstract painting is not a
matter of chance; it is the work of combining
pattern with pictorial space. Anyone who
fondly imagines it to be some kind of effortless pastime is living in a fool's paradise.
Modern art is based on the theory that art
comes from within. The practice of slavishly
copying from nature is not calculated to produce Idealism.
F. MARTIN.
Box 293,
Robson, B. C.
Your Horoscope
Steady progress should be yours In the
year ahead, accompanied in many instances
by public prominence and increased responsibilities. Today's child may be persistent,
thorough and reliable; also deeply religious.
FOR SUNDAY, JANUARY 23: Better reserve resources and be on your guard against
attempts to mislead you; also beware of self-
deception. Musical and artistic abilitits are
most likely to be exhibited in the child born
today.
Today's Bible Thought
1 girded thee tho thou hast not
known me.—Is. 45:5.
God loves all his children. He
gives manifold blessings to all. He
would do more if we would let him.
One Who Suffered
Voles for German
Rearming
^V DAVE MclNTOSH
Canadian  Press  Staff  Writer
OTTAWA (CP)—It was the end
of a long, day and evening in the
Commons.
External Affairs Minister Pearson had outlined the government's
reasons why it believes the House
should ratify the Paris agreements
for entry of a rearmed West Germany into the North Atlantic alliance.
He had won support from John
Diefenbaker, Progressive Conservative spokesman for foreign affairs,
CCF leader Coldwell and Social
Credit leader Low.
Other members had spoken, with
only one—Stanley Knowles, chief
CCF party whip from Winnipeg
North Centre—saying he would
vote against ratification.
Then a Jewish member rose. All
the drama of the debate was in his
speech.
Leon Crestohl, Liberal member
fbr Montreal Cartler, said 80 of his
relatives had been tormented' and
slaughtered by the Nazis;
LE83ER OF TWO EVILS
He said he had to make a choice
between the lesser of two evils.
Berlin was a lesser evil than Moscow. In a firm voice, he added:
"I will vote for the resolution,
but not without an ache in my
heart."
There was thunderous applause
from al lsectlons-of the House.
Members rushed over to shake
hands with Mr. Crestohl. v
Allow Strasser
In Switzerland
BERN, Switzerland (CP) — Dr.
Otto Strasser, exiled rival of Hitler
who has been living in Canada
since 1941, will be allowed to enter
Switzerland conditionally, the government has announced.
The Swiss decision tb admit
Strasser, presumably under a card
of identity issued by the Canadian
government last year™was made
after officials said that the former
German political leader had promised to refrain from any political
activity while in Switzerland.
The way now appears clear for
Strasser to return \o Europe. He has
been waiting impatiently at his
home ill Paradise, N. S., for his
new West German passport which
he applied for after the Bonn government restored his citizenship
some weeks back.
Canadian Loggers
Reach New Zealand
AUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP) — A
party of 59 Canadian lumberjacks
arrived today on the liner Orcades
from Vancouver to work in New
Zealands forests
■ Hand-picked from 3,000 applicants
in Canada, they will work for the
Kaingaroa Logging Co. at Its Mur-
upar'a milling centre among the big
pine plantations in the heart of
North Island.
Many of the loggers were accompanied by their wives and children. Their passages were paid by
the company and the men are under contract for three years.
Several of the wives went shopping this afternoon In Auckland,
and some who visited a furniture
store said they saw twin beds for
the first time.
"Perhaps you have them here
because It's warmer," one of them
said.
QunL ?Cet
I don't like to hear our preacher
tell sad death-bed stories. If religion can't make you happy you ain't
any better off than a sad sinner.
Residents of the Hawaiian islands are mainly Christians, but
there  are  several  Buddhist  sects.
U.K. Steel Export
Has Banner Year
LONDON (Reuters)—Steel headed the list of items which made
1954 a record year for British exports the board of trade announced.
Exports totalled $7,470,000,000 and
re-exports added a further $283,-
000,000.
Steel exports accounted for $350,
000,000 of the total. Passenger cars
and chassis contributed $308,000,-
000 to Britain's overseas earnings.
Australia continued to be Brit-
Britain's best customer, while the
United States gave up second position to • South Africa, U. S. purchases dropped by $28,000,000 from
the previous year. Canada also cut
her purchases by over $56,000,000.
The dollar area was the main
supplier of imports—with total purchases from the United States and
Canada around $1,550,000,000 against
$1,570,000,000 in 1953.
To Spend $25,000,000
On Outside Traffic
VANCOUVER (CP)—The ci*y of
Vancouver will spend $55,000,000 in
the next 20 years to handle traffic
originating outside Us boundaries,
it was reported.
The figure was given by city
council to, Vancouver's members of
the legislature. The city is seeking
a formula whereby the provincial
government will contribute more
toward the upkeep of main city
roads connecting with the provincial highway system.
Jim VYbdmt diomsL
-c
NHA SMALl HOUSB DESIGNS-.
Different in design, this split-level house
combines comfort and livability. Ths
architect, K. R. D. Pratt, of St Vital,
has planned the house to provide excellent lighting in all rooms and has
nsed a combination of wood and brick
siding and a flagstone patio to create an
interesting exterior appearance.
The living section of the house It
located on ground level while a high,
well-lighted basement is provided under
the sleeping quarters. The conveniently-
arranged kitchen includes a section for
laundry and is handy to the dining area.
A generous supply of closet space is
ErOvided for both bedrooms while a
nen closet is located near the bathroom.
The floor area of this house is 91S
square feet and the cubic measurement
is 13,700 cubic feet The exterior dimensions are 89 feet by 26 feet, six.inches.
Working drawings for this house, known
as Design 701, are available from Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation
at minimum cost
GOV'T ASKED FOR
BOND GUARANTEE
ON PIPELINE
OTTAWA (CP) — Promoters of
the $300,000,000 project for a natural gas pipeline from Alberta to
eastern Canada have asked the federal government to guarantee the
company's bonds. .
While news of the request of
Trans - Canada Pipe Lines Ltd
leaked out unofficially here Thursday, the government officially
maintained silence on its intentions
and even on whether the application has been received.
Trade Minister Howe, in charge
of pipeline matters for the cabinet,
told a questioner in the Commons
no action has been taken and he
indicated there will be no announcement until there is some action.
It was understood, however, that
Trans-Canada's officers made the
application to Mr. Howe and that
he has not placed formally the request tefore the cabinet.
The company's proposal for facilitating the financing of its proposed 2200-mile line, which would
have to be approved by Parliament, follows difficulties which
Trans-Canada has met in clearing
away' the preliminaries necessary
to the financing.
Nautilus Makes
First Test Dive
GROTON, Conn. (AP)—The nuclear submarine Nautilus slipped
under the heaving Atlantic Ocean
in the first atomic-powered submarine dive In history.
She remained submerged for an
hour, under the direction of Lieut.
William H. Layman, ship's diving
officer.
Announcement of the Nautilus'
first dive was not made until nearly 10 hours afterward. The terse
announcement gave no word as to
how the world's first atomic-powered submarine reacted to her first
underwater journey.
She had set out for the diving
trial from the Atlantic submarine
force headquarters here. The navy
declined to say where she was
headed and how long she would
stay out.
5-Day Forecasts
Coming Soon
SEIGNIORY CLUB, Que. (CP)-
The weatherman says it will be
enly a comparatively short time
before forecasts covering a five-day
period are supplied to the Canadian public. Present forecasts are
limited to two-day, periods.
The immediate need is to get a
few more university-trained specialists into the meteorological service, said Keith T. McLeod, superintendent of the public weather
service in the federal transport department's meteorological division.
"We hope we can institute the
service within a year," said Mr.
McLeod in an Interview Wednesday. He is representing the department's weather division at the annual joint convention of the Dominion Marine Association and the
Lake Carriers Association of the
United States.
The fivp-day forecast is already
In operation In the United States.
So is tlje 30-day "outlook"—a generalization of weather prospects for
a montri—not so precise as the
specific forecast for any day In five.
Do It Yourself . ..
This Hot-Bed Is Heated
From Basement Window
A by-product of a heated basement, which home gardeners will
find helpful, is a hot-bed built
around a window, through which
can easily be changed to fit any
size sash you prefer to use.
Staft by making an excavation
in front of the window about 6
inches deep. Its area must be figured carefully, so that lt will hold
basement heat can escape to help
plants grow.
This is a most convenient way
to start seedling plants weeks before they could be grown outdoors.
The basement window will give
easy access to the plants when the
weather is still too cold for outdoor
comfort
Sunlight is as necessary for this
type ot hot-bed as for all others.
For sturdy plants of full transplanting size a south window is required. Temperature can be controlled by raising or lowering the sash,
and use for it can be found throughout the year, especially in protecting plants during winter.
The cost of construction Is small,
especially if you build it yourself
from the complete working drawing which accompanies this discussion. Dimensions in the drawing
provide for a frame covered with
two standard 3x6 sash; but these
a frame fitted to your sash. As in
the case of other hot-beds, a plastic
substitute for glass may be used if
preferred.
Build a frame to fit in the excavation. The sides must slant sharply
from a point above the window, almost to the ground. Fit the sash on
Shipping Industry
At Low Point
OTTAWA (CP)— Canada's oceangoing shipping industry will soon
cease to exist unless measures are
taken to assist it, the Canadian Shipowners Association was told.
President M. G. Angus of Montreal
addressing the association's annual
meeting, criticized federal shipping
policy which he said has led to a
decline in the deepsea fleet- to Its
lowest point in 35 years—20 ships.
"The disappearance of this essential feature of the Canadian economy can only "be accounted for by
the lack of any constructive Canadian maritime policy," said Mr. Angus, who was re-elected association
president.
"As a result, opportunities for
employment of Canadians in the
seafaring trades now are practically
non-existent, a situation which many
Canadians must view with concern.
this frame, using hinges at the top
so the sash may easily be raised for
ventilation. Earth may be banked
around the frame to keep out th»
cold; and the sides should be as
tight as possible to keep out the
-wind. The frame should be caulked
where it Joins the foundation to
prevent drafts,   ,
Heat is supplied to- this bed by
opening the basement window.
AMERA
NEWS
By BILL  RAMSAY
There Is one drawback to living
in'Bali—you'd never get to shoot
snow scenes. However, in our part
of the world almost everyone gets ■
a chance to work in the white
stuff, and doesn't have to travel
far to get to it. For color shooting, as well as black-and-white,
snow is probably the most photogenic of nature's elements.
There   are   a   few   important
tricks  to  shooting    winter
scenes, however. I
First  "off,   it   is
wise to keep
your  camera in
a cold place be- I
fore use to avoid 1
condensation  on '
the lens.
In snow scenes you can compensate for extra light reflected
by the stark, white'surface by
giving about a stop less than
normal exposure. You can record
intensely blue skies with use of
a medium-yellow filter and when
working in color use of a Skylight filter will help to reduce
the excessive blueness typical of
most snow scenes.
You may or may not want to
reduce blueness, but you likely
do want to reduce expenses! You
don't have to be a millionaire to
enjoy the most popular hobby,
for RAMSAY'S CAMERAS have
good cameras and other photographic equipment in all price
ranges. To take' pictures, and
watch your pennies at the same
time, get all your PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT and
SUPPLIES at
RAMSAY'S   CAMERAS,
497  Baker St.,  Nelson.
■MM
________
V. .   ,   _[<„.   u
 \argatns -
FOR
ALL THE FAMILY
AT OUR
Anniversary
SALE
R. ANDREW
& CO,
LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION
Established In 1902
RIZE QUILT
KENTV-LLE, N.S. (CP) — Mrs
by Fraser of nearby West Glen-
_ont has worked 18 years to com-
lete a quilt containing 12,000
ieces, all hand-sewn.
\mm
Engagements
... Mr. and Mrs. F. Mrkvicka ol
Brandon. Man., wish to announce
the ,', marriage of their daughter,
Frieda Agnes to Bdr. Kenneth McLeod, . son of Mrs. Archie McLeod
of Nelson and Mr. McLeod of Ains-'
worth! B. C. The wedding to take
place dn Saturday, January 22, at 7
o'clock in the First Church United,
Brandon, Man. Reception at the
home of the bride, 657 16th St.
Brandon,. Man.
Queen's Bay Guild
Chooses Officers  >
QUEEN'S BAY - Election of officers took place at the annua]
meeting of the Church Guild at tha
home' of Hon. Mrs. Kenneth Aylmer.
Miss Joyce Hirst, who continues
as president, was given a vote of
thanks for carrying on leadership
for several years. Mrs. Norval German was elected secretary-treasurer. The financial report was good,
the Summer bazaar and teas bringing in a considerable sum.
&t |m.r*_ Itttt^ (Mpirrlf
Stanley and Silica Streets
Minister: Rev. G. W   Payne. S.'I M
Director of Music: Mrs. T. J. S   Ferguson, B.A., A.T.C.M.
SUNDAY, Jan. 23rd:
11:00 a.m.-"PRIOR CLAIM"
Coffee served after moming worship.
2:00 p.m.—Harrop
3:30 p.m.—Procter
7:30 p.m.—"QUESTING  TIME"
"THE POWER OF NEGATIVE THINKING"
MONDAY, Jan. 24th:
7:30 p.m.—Annual Congregational Meeting
Members and Adherents.
_3r.tt.tij Itt.ij.i_ ffliyarrlf
Josephine and Silica Sts.
Minister: REV. ALLAN DiXON. B.A., B.D
Organist and Music Director: Mrs. C. W. Tyler
9:45 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.-"ARE YOU SOMETHING, OR  NOTHING?"
(Broadcast over  CKLN)
7:30 p.m.—"DID  YOU   PRAY  ABOUT  IT?"
■■' >?■•'■; ■   ■ i —
Mrs. Hear
SLATE INSTALLED
BY FERNIE LA   "■
FERNIE - dificers of the Ladles'
Auxiliary to Fernie brsmch of the
Canadian Legion were installed in
office recently. .The installation Ceremony was conducted by Mrs. Amy
Erickson of Crestoh, imipedlate pejet
•president of the B. C. Prov.n.!_|l
Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian
Legion, At the installation ceremonies Mrs. Erickson represented
the Provincial Command.
The officers installed were: past
president Mrs. Howard (Del), Up:
hill, president Mrs. Phyllis Daniel-
son, hrst vice-president Mrs. William Vaflbuskirk, second vice-president Mrs. Mary Servello, secretary
Mrs. Ada Howarth, treasurer Mrs.
Laura McLaren, sergeant-at-arms
Mrs. Nellie Miscovich. and executive
members Mrs. Daisy Tyrhchuk, Mrs.
Nell Parsons, Mrs. Victoria Colgur,
and Mrs. .Alfred Thompson.
3ftrst pra_Hjti.rtatt (%.rrjt
Victoria and Kootenay Streets
Minister: REV. CHARLES E. BRAY
11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship
Subject:   "THE   MAN   OF   GADARA"
11:00 a.m.—Church School
No Evening Service
&t. g>at_imir'H jprorCEatlfpfiral
(ANGLICAN)
Diaa Thomas U Leadbeater. D.D.
EPIPHANY III
8:00 a.m.—Holy Communion
-_»
11:00 a.m.—Morning  Prayer
Sunday School as usual.
3:00 p.m.—Willow  Point
7:30 p.m.—Evening   Prayer
into (E.iwttattt
Pastor: E. V. HANSON
802 Baker St
SUNDAY — 9:45 a.m.—SUNDAY SCHOOL
11:00 a.m.-MORNING  WORSHIP
.    7:30 p.m.—EVENING SERVICE
WEDNESDAY — 7:30 p.m.—PRAYER MEETING
FRIDAY —. 6:45 p.m.—JUNIOR LEAGUE
8:00 p.m.—YOUNG PEOPLE'S
ITtrjst lapttHt
Gttjurrlj
Cottonwood and Fourth Sts.)
Ilnlster: REV. K. IMAYOSHI
r_8 Stanley St., Phone 1420-L
3:45 a.m.—Church School
for all ages.
:00 a.m.—FAMILY   WORSHIP
(Trail CGIT Visitors)
:30 p.m.—THE   RELEASE   OF
SPIRITUAL
POWER
EDNESDAY, 8:15 p.m.:
Bible Study and Prayer
RIDAY, 3:30 p.m.:
Mission Band
_0_lj0ua_T'fl
J$-tttt?00_fl
eet In the Eaglet' Lodge Hall,
641   Baker  Street
jndays and Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m.
Educational Bible Study,
ibiect:
'TREEDOM FROM FEAR
IN  1955"
esidents of Salmo Note:
ubllc Talk at  Mrs.  M. Bush's
at 7 p.m. this Sunday.
U Welcome    •   No Collection
3. trat Qltjurd? at
(EhriBi __>rirnttsi
A Branch of the Mother Church
The First Church of Christ,
Scientist, in Boston. Mass-
Sunday School — 9:45 a.m.
Sunday Service — 11:00 a.m.
8ermon Subject:
"TRUTH"
Wednesday Testimonial Meeting
8:00 p.m.
Reading Room. 209 Baker St.
Open Daily From 3 to 5 p.m.
All Cordially  Welcome
(Eititrrli of
tifr Sroprmrr
Anglican CFairvIew)
CANON W J  SILVERWOOD
Mlsi Barbara Lea, Organist
9:45 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Holy Communion
7:30 p.m.—Evening Prayer
South Slocan
3:30 p.m,
Boswell Club Seeks
Party Line 'Phone
BOSWELL — Boswell Women's
Club has decided to ask the B.C.
Telephone Company for particulars
concerning installation of a party
line for this community. 'Phone
service came in for discussion by
members.
At their meeting, held at the
home of Mrs. J. Pryke, members
learned that the financial statement
showed a small balance on hand.
Mrs. H. Bell read the Christmas
tree statement, which showed a
small deficit, which the club agreed
to settle. Mrs. Norman Anderson
donated one of her woven rugs to
aid club funds.
Thieves Get Away
With $1500 Haul
VANCOUVER (CP) — Thieves
who broke into a Super-Valu store
in a south end district carted away
a cargo of tea, coffee and cigarets
valued at $1,500.
Police reported Friday the thieves
used bolt cutters to cut padlocks
from the doors of the store.
Our Father's
Business
The modern theologian, Reinhold
Niebuhr, gives us a new emphasis on
the usefulness of an old problem,
that of suffering.
The common view is that suffering, disappointment, etc./ are the
antitheis to happiness and joy. When
we have a set-back of any kind w*
consider it a "fly in the ointrnent,"
and to the degree that it bothers u_
we consider ourselves hard-done-
by, and unhappy.
Niehbuhr points out that this Is
erroneous thinking from a Christian point of view. In support Of his
argument he refers to the Beatitudes: "Blessed are the meek,"
"they which do hunger and thirst,"
"those who are persecuted," and
"yourselves, when men shall revile
you." A strange source-of enjoyment, indeed! But these were true
words, spoken by Him, "Who, tor
the joy that was set before him,
endured the Cross."'
St. Paul rejoiced in'his sufferings, because he saw that through
them he had a closer fellowship
with his Lord. Reviewing the hardships of a strenuous life of Christian witness and service, Paul found
satisfaction in the thought: "The
things that have happened to me
have turned out to the furthering of
the Gospel" That.should be a commentary on the biography of every
Christian.
There may be a sort of shallow
existence achieved by some people,
who insulate themselves with a lot
of the worldly comforts of these
days, and build a shell of indifference, to the place where they are
self-satisfied, ("where there's no
sense, there's no feeling"), but their
happiness is not much different
from that of well-fed animals. Who
wants to be a "contented cow?"
The example of Jesus, and that of
his true followers, would lead one
to realize that the deeper joys -of
life are found in an all-out investment of life in the adventure of
following "In His Steps."
ALLAN DIXON
SALMO - M.r*._ Alice'
' elected: .president of. Sali
Aid at the annual meeti
church hall, succeeding
Middleton;-':.  \ '      t'
Mrs. 6. P. Larsen wj
vice-president., and _*-_.
garo was. again named
tteasttter., Others are Mrs,
bUrn,. flower fUnci secretar;
H. John, Mrs. Milburrt 'and!
Wrang', executive committee; I
■TH. Young; Mrs. C. Hanien. and. Mi
Middleton, .auditors,  and Mrs. Ci
T^iel, scrapbook.'
The retiring president spoke of
the "splendid spirit" within the. Aid,
and thanked members for their cooperation and unity,
TJie financial statement showed
total receipts-of $2047.91, and disbursements of $1424.96, a gain, of
$361 over the previous year.
In a review' of church work progress, it was learned that a length
of pipe had been purchased to corn
plete the weli, and that some blast
ing is required. Plumbing fixtures
for the bathroom have been purchased. .  ,
Sending of Christmas parcels to
old-timers of the district was a success, judging from oral and written
wbrds of thanks. Twenty-six parcels
were sent, and remembrances of
flowers and gifts, went to former
Aid members. Members donated the
goods for the parcels.
H. Claire has offered to place a
board listing church services outside the church,' and a carpenter
will be engaged for the "glasSed-In"
portion of the sign. •
Choir practice will be held on
Tuesday nights. The Aid plans to
hold a World Day of Prayer service
February 25.
Motions were made that in future
the president shall hold office no,
longer than for a two-year term;
that the evening circle take over
charge of the annual spring bazaar,
with the help of the Afternoon Circle; Circle I to take charge of the
annual fall bazaar. Two members
of Circle I, joining a committee of
Circle II, will form the buying committee. Mrs. G, Thiel and Mrs. C.
Hansen will represent Circle, I. Mrs.
H. Young offered to knit Indian
sweaters and donate to funds money
received for knitting.
MAGNIFICENT GEM
A garnet weighing 89,000 carats
-about 42 p6unds—found in Brazil
is believed the biggest of its quality
ever discovered. n
__ aeal 74fi. With,
TJtevrian, Wjqudih,
Suthrran OJijurrh
Corner Stanley and  Silica  Sts
REV   CARL J. HENNIG
Rea, 317 Silica St. * Phone 729-X
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Worship   Service
You Are Cordially Invited
THE LUTHERAN HOUR
CJAT 8:00 A.M.
Valuation Army
513 Victoria Street
Lt. and Mr.. H. P. Thornhill
SUNDAY:
11:00 a.m.—Holiness Meeting
2:00 p.m.—Directory and
Sunday School
7:30 p.m.—Salvation Meeting
9315
t—10
AFTER .pending • month',
leave with her parent, at Procter,
AW1 Eleanor Henke. above, ha.
done to a new posting at Edgar,
Ont. She Is the daughter ot Mr.
and Mr.. William A. Henke.
E. German Rule
Kills Business
BERLIN (Reuters)—Staffs o* the
state-owned restaurants in Com-
muinst East Berlin fear numerous
dismissals now that the-East German government has made it too expensive for West Germans to eat
and drink there.
Business has slumped in the restaurants, for the prices are beyond
the purse of the average East Berliner.
The Communist government has
ruled that West Germans must pay
in West German currency when
eating in these restaurants. The official exchange rate of East and West
marks is fixed at one to one, although West Berlin exchange booths
sell four to five East marks for
one West mark.
NO CUSTOMERS
' Waiters look in vain for the usual
guests from the "capitalist" West in
East Berlin's show places: The Cafe
Warschau in Stalin Alle>, the Restaurant Budapest and the Hotel Jo-
hannishof.
Privately, they say that they believe a general food shortage has
prompted the East German government to discourage Western
guests.
The East Berlin restaurants had
been magnets for West Berlin gourmets who could have an excellent
Hungarian goulash, for instance,
for. half what I* would have cost in
West Berlin.
Now, each guest has to show his
identity card to the waiter before
be, orders and anyone found to be
fr^m the West German currency
area is required'to pay In West
marks.
MORE CARPENTERS
Between 1941 and 1951, the number of carpenters in Canada increased from 81,773 to 130,000.
9_______C___#,
d #. _tawuL Whs&hh.
USE REMNANTS1
Sew your cherub two new outfits — both from.ONI- pattern! Vary
the neckline tor party time or lesson-learning — the sleeves according to her whim! Use remnants —
contrast fabrics and colors! She'll
adore the high midriff-effect, the
full skirt!
Pattern 9315: Chlldrens Sizes 2, 4,
8, 8, 10. Size 6 print dress takes 2Vj
yards'35-inch gabric.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)
in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send your order to MARIAN
MARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St., W..
Toronto. Ont.
Rummage
Today
SALVATION ARMY
CITADEL
1:30 P. M.
—:—:—
Mrs. Kirkham
Heads Rebekahs
The installation of the 1999 officers of the Queen City Rebekah
Lodge was viewed by a large turnout of. members at the IOOF hall:
District deputy president Florence
Andrews headed the installation
team, which included.deputy grand
marshal Elizabeth Hankin, deputy
grand treasurer Annie Nlcholls,
deputy, grand chaplain Winnie
Strong, deputy grand inside guardian Gertrude Whitehead and deputy
grand outside guardian Ellen Mc
Avinn.
Mrs. D. Immings, noble grand for
1994, was presented with the past
noble grands Jewel and Installed as
past noble grand for 1959. Installed
as noble grand for the coming year
was Mrs. Emma Kirkham. Other
elected officers installed were Mrs.
Edith Wood, vice-grand; Mrs. Madge
Taylor, recording secretary; Miss
pora Perasso, financial secretary
and Mrs C. Hong, treasurer.
, Mrs. Kirkham appointed the other
officers as follows: Mrs. E. Tickner
as right supporter of the noble
grand, Mrs. H. Ozelle as left supporter of the noble grand, Mrs. E.
Bentham" as warden, Mrs. Irene
Dickson as conductor, Mrs. Irene
Day as chaplain, -Mrs. Edith McDonald as outside guardian, Mrs.
Jean' Taylor as inside guardian, and
Mrs. M. Clements as pianist.
The vice-grand then appointed
Mrs. Sadie McClelland as her right
su.ppor.er, and Mrs. Elsie Bereau
as her left supporter.
The noble grand named the following committees: sewing committee, Mrs. Wood, _v_rs. Brown, Mrs.
Kirkham; social committee, Mrs.
Ellen McAvlnn, chairman, Mrs. H.
Ozelle, Mrs. McDonald, Mrs. Ben-
tham; publicity, Mrs. M. Taylor;
staff captain, Mrs_ Tickner; visiting committee, Mrs. Wood, chairman, Mrs. Jeffs, Mrs. Immings,
Mrs. Ozelle, Mrs. Bereau, Mrs. Dickson and Mrs. Kirkham.
. r O
NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22,19SS—5
Justweds Honored
At Wynndel Shower
WYNNDEL — A miscellaneous
shower was held in the Memorial
hall honoring Mr. and Mrs. B.
Rauch, newlyweds.
The gift table was decorated with
festooned streamers in blue, pink
and white crepe paper. Mrs, Fred
Ha^en, on behalf of the community,
presented the couple with many useful gifts for their home. Court whist
was enjoyed, with high scorefgoing
to Mrs. E. A. Hackett and B. Rauch
and consolations to Mrs. Mannie
Hess and J. G. Abbott.
TO IMPROVE LINER
SOUTHAMPTON, England (AP)
—The liner Queeri Elizabeth will
move 'into drydock when she arrives from New Yo.k to be fitted
with giant stabilizer fins to lessen
rolling in rough seas. The Cunard
Steamship Line said the stabilizers
will be the largest of their kind
installed in a passenger liner. The
installation will lengthen the liner's
annual overhaul period from seven
to 10 weeks.
MILLIONS KNOW THE
COUGH
AND
COLD
FIGHTING POWER OF
BUCKLEY'S MIXTURE
THAT'S WHY IT IS CANADA'S FASTEST SELIINO
COUGH, COID, ASTHMA
AND BRONCHITIS REMEDY.
N-129
. Jus. Two of Ihe Many Values In Our
Warehouse Clearance Sale
1   ONLY — 6-P.ECE  MAHOGANY  DINING   ROOM   SUITE
Consists of 3 side chairs, 1 armchair, china cabinet and
large extension table. — Was $625.00,
$297.83
1 Only — COAL and WOOD STOVE.
Was  $110.   	
$91.28
J/UMMOtLL
N. Z. Turns Down Prohibition
E-y J. C. GRAHAM
Canadian Press Correspondent
AUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP)-Every
time New Zealand has an election,
the country also votes on whether
liquor should be prohibited. The
result is always the same—rejection of prohibition.
Yet the question ls reopened
every three years. Three questions
are put before the voters—whether
to continue the present system of
liquor sales by private firms: whether there should . be government
purchase and control of liquor, or
prohibition. To effect a change,
either government control or prohibition must poll half the total
vote.
At the recent elections which returned the National party government with a reduced majority, the
present system of lfquor sale was
given its largest majority in history.
STEADY TREND
When the law was first passed
providing for these triennial polls,
opinion was closely divided. The
first vote in 1918 gave prohibition"
an actual majority over continuance,  but it  narrowly  failed  to
secure half the total vote, so the
existing system was retained.
Ever since then opinion has
turned steadily away from prohibition as a solution to the liquor
problem.
In the 1919 vote, the percentage!
were 44.5 for continuance of tha
existing system; 49.7 for prohibi-
tio__ and 5.8 for state purchase. In
1954, the percentages are 61.9 for
continuance, 23.1 for prohibition
and* 15 for state purchase.
New Zealanders have become so
accustomed to the liquor plebiscite
accompanying the national elections that they seldom question
whether it serves a useful purpose.
Prohibition supporters do not admit that the- triennial, referendum
should be dropped, but they now
suggest that different proposals for
changes in the liquor laws might
be put before the public.
VOGUE STUDIO
460 Ward St.     Ph. 1552
Portrait and  Commercial
Photography
«UJ.__l«»*eKET
*
P. F. ASSORTED ffi
ADORABLE  |ABY SET
Baby looks so cutei cuddly in this
adorable crocheted set! Simple open-
shell stitches make the pretty, cap,
jacket, booties.
Crochet Pattern 612: Jacket, cap,
booties for infants. Use 3-ply fingering yarn. Thrifty! Jiffyl Wonderful
gifts! '
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
for this pattern to Laura Wheeler.
NDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto, Ont
Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER
and SIZE; your NAME and AD-
DRES8.
INSPIRED IDEAS - Pages and
pages of novel designs In our {IEW
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalogue for 1955! Completely differeni
and so thrilling, you'll want to order
your favorite patterns. Send 25 cents
for your' copy of this new, new
catalogue NOW1
Our ^tumiusm^ dmjUMArtMsl
SALE BEGINS TODAY
WATCH THIS SPACE
FOR MORE SPECIALS & «
GREY PER8IAN LAMB COAT (Natural).      &£_C   ftft ^WtY
Regular ,$650.00. SALE PRICE   «pO-__*._/W |-
CENTRE BACK MUSKRAT JACKET (Dyed).     _ \ f\  ftft
Regular $225.00.  SALE  PRICE    __ I V.   \J\J
CHINA  MINK.CLUTCH  CAPE  (Dyed). Tift  ftft
Regular-$235.00. SALE PRICE   _&___,U.UU
CANADIAN SQUIRREL  CAPE 8TOLE _CA  ftft
(Dyed 'Claret' Shade). Reg. $375. SALE PRICE 3j\J.\J\J
"BREATH  OF 8PRING" SHEARED
MU8KRAT CAPE  (Dyed). 1 AA  AA
Regular $150.00. SALE PRICE .....'.,    I -t\J.\J\J
BLACK LAMB % (Dyed). AQC  AA
Regular $510.00. SALE PRICE  _ i. _)iUU
BROWN LAMB % (Dyed). . _13C  A A
Regular $450.00. SALE PRICE  f __.__..UU
FLANK MUSKRAT COAT (Dyed 'Romance'    "*TC  AA
Shade). Regular $285.00. SALE PRICE __ / _> .\J\J
CENTRE BACK  MUSKRAT COAT (Dyed).    JJC  f\f\
Regular $350.00. SALE PRICE   93_   .UU
FLANK MU8KRAT (Dyed.'Starlight' Shade). "I*TC  A A
Size 18. Regular $285.00. SALE PRICE ... _. / J.UU
GREENWOOD FURS
580 Baker St. Phone 272
■    1
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■'•■   ■'-'    ■ •     _&__M_
 , :	
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^iiPfP^.- ■•• •   ■ • • ' ^fPfl
6—NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY.22,1951
■% ,,
,".i*^*_ipN r\** ,    . ""°«s4_.;
»i*_w£y
'^ehrWkWfp- X
.;.>/.'/*'.,_<.:_,.__£___-       ; vr
LIVE HEADPIECES — Michaels Denis exhibits pets
Ihe captured during animal-filming trip In Kenya, Africa, a
bushbaby stop h,er bead ond baby momrooso on her shoulder.
OPENING   A   NEW   PROVINCE, IN   H 0 L L A N D _ A marine "gallery" Is on hand as crane closes the last
openlnB In Holland's dew 15-mllc dike leading to reclamation of the future 500,000-sere Znyder Zee Province.
NO   COAL — A County Msyo, Ireland, player,hangs
goal post after his scoring effort was blocked by T. Shcehan of i
New York during Gaelic football match In New York.
EMULATES FATHER — Donald M. Campbell will try
next sprint: to better the water speed record of 178.497 raph.
Be U s son of tbe late English speed king, Sir Malcolm Campbell.
SUBMARINE HUNTER-KILLER — Secret apparatus boused In elongated tail
of newest Navy P2V-7 Neptune spots submarines under water so craft can attack them with
bombs, depth charges or torpedoes. Pilots call plane Mad (for magnetic airborne detector) Bird.
SPARKLING  TOUCH
— These Items for evening
wear feature s erystal rhlne-
stone necklsce In new "con-
lour" shape, rhinestono earrings and pin of unusual shape.
FOR HEAVY TREAD—A Bashl woman In the Belgian Congo shows her feet weighted down with heavy Iron
anklets to achieve,deliberate gait of the cow, loved by her tribe.
'CORN   TREES' — Farmers near city of Gubblo, Italy,
tie ears of corn to trees for a clean, fast drying job in the fall
sunlight before the long winter .months begin.
NEW   LORD   MAYOR
— Alderman Seymour.Howard
looks from the state chariot
during traditional procession
marking his installation as
Lord Mayor of London.
LILLIAN   GISH   R E T U R N S — LUUan Glsh, who started la movies 40 years ago and
Is returning to them after eight-year absence, chats with director Charles Laughton- and little
actress Sail; Jane Brace during filming of "Night of the. Hunter" in California.
A   TOUR   END S—Vienna students Eduard Edlltsbergei
right, and Norbert .Vijtasel. are interviewed In Bad Homburg
Germany, at end of world motorcycle tour started April 1,1953
CLEARING SEA LANES — u. S. Navy Lt. (j.g.) Wilfred Devlne, right, of South
Portland, Mc,'talks with German Lt. Paul Voss aboard German -manned minesweeper, which is
accompanied oy V. S. Navy ship in West Baltic Sea where World War II mines are still f"—•'
FOR   FASTER   FI R EF I GHTI N G _ A Kent, England, fireman carries two 16-foot lengths of lightweight plastlo
pipe during _. demonstration of high speed firefightlng.
11   STORIES   UP — Benny Fox stands by ss wife, Betty, startles pedestrians hJ
skipping rope on 18-inch platform atop hotel In Phoenix, Arts. She performed feat In many citlcsj
'
■ -   -■■■
__■
 	
'■'■'■■ •'•■.:■■■■■■
' :	
dangers High on Several Leafs;
The possibility of New York
Rangers holding a major training
school In Nelson next fall is in
doubt, although a school of some
sort should be available, said Dennis Ball, Ranger chief talent scdlit
for Western Canada.
Mr. Ball, in an interview Friday
disclosed head man Frank Boucher
was well satisfied with his tieup
with the Leafs and the partnership
would carry on if Coach Charlie
Rayner was satisfied.
The Rangers, having made arrangements a year in advance, have
selected South Porcupine as their
training base. They expect to start
around September 6, said Mr Ball.
"If arrangements can be made we
will hold a school in Nelson th«
week preceding this when some 25
top junior players could be made
available for a tryout."
MA setup such as this could prove
beneficial to Nelson for Charlie
Rayner would then have an opportunity to pick out a crop of youngsters he could use. After they have
attended the pro camp, those who
failed to turn pro would have the
opportunity of playing in the
Queen City. Nelson would then
have little dickering or scouting to
do for players.
"To gather together the material
you have on hand this season without the aid of the Rangers would
have set you back between 18 and
20 thousand."
It is doubted that Rangers will
play exhibition games In this area
next fall. Their plans are always
made a year in advance and a
schedule of games in Northern Ontario has been lined up. He thought
the Rangers would be playing a
series of exhibitions against the
Chicago Black H_jwks.
Asked what prospects Ranger
material on this year's Leafs had
for next season. Mr. Ball remarked
he had not seen them play but
from press releases and heresay he
was high on several. "This lad Ray
Mikulan could easily be playing in
the Western Hockey League this
season. He is better than at least
three netmlnders already in pro
company,"
"Don McGregor, Wendy Keller,
Bruce Carmichael, Buddy MacDonald and Mikulan all have that'determined drive and the will to win,
which is so important to a hockey
player.
"It's possible Keller and MacDonald may be a year away from pro
eompany but the other three we
feel^have a great chance of advancing to the pro ranks. Of course,
after I see them in action I might
feel differently. When I sent them
Spinning
Reels
25% off
JACK BOYCE
MEN'S SHOP
314 Baker St. Phone 160
here I predicted they wouldn't begin to roll until Christmas and from
all reports the Leafs are Just beginning to do just that.
"I believe that to have veteran
players like Joe Bell, Murray Parker and Herb Jeffrey on hand to
teach these rookies is great. They
have been up in pro company and
can pass along a great deal of
knowledge of the game to the
youngsters. From what I have heard
Parker has done wonders with McGregor. Having known Joe Bell, I
know he will aid the youngsters. He
is hockey wise and a great fellow."
An Interesting sidelight to Keller
is the fact he has a younger brother
Ralph playing junior for Prince
Albert who is one of the finest
defence products to come along in
some time.
LIKE TOWN
"It is no surprise to me that Nelson has taken to their team this
season," said Ball. "We know all
these lads' backgrounds and they
are a swell bunch of clean living
fellows. Since arriving in the city
I have talked with them all and
they not only love the city but the
people in it. Many have expressed
the feelings of the fans for hockey
and how even now they are trying
to overcome the financial difficulties of the club.
"Most of these boys could easily
have gone to other teams when they
found the financial setup in poor
shape, but instead elected to take
a cut to aid the cause themselves
I don't think you would find another club willing to do the same
thing, in the spirit of these boys,"
said Mr. Ball.
"Charlie Rayner has done a remarkable job as coach in Nelson
and has assured us he loves the
place. It Is possible he will remain
here. He is now at the stage of a
brilliant career -where he must
think of his family and settling
down. To work with prospective
youngsters, with the hope of seeing them in the Ranger colors
would be a great reward to Rayner."
TAKE8   TIME '
The process of bringing along
players is a slow one, said Mr. Ball.
It takes years to develop a player
to NHL standards. It's not every
day a Gordie Howe or a Rocket
Richard can be found. "In fact, I
haven't found one yet but I'm still
looking.
"Myself, I have been In the Ranger organization but two years and
still have yet to see one of my
prospects hit the big time, although'
I have seven in the Western Hockey
League and five in the Quebec
League.
"The Rangers know it takes time
to develop players'and for this
reason they are happy to have the
Leafs as an affiliated team. When
we get players out of junior company the majority aren't ready for
pro. It is essential we place them
with an amateur club in a league
of high calibre. This league we
know to be one of the best in Canada.
"Building for championship hockey is like anything else, one must
first have  a  firm  foundation.  By
acquiring these farm clubs the
Rangers are building that foundation.    - ,".    i.]''   ■        .':
"It is always nice to look into
the future for your hockey. Who
knows but some day in the future
many of these prospects, who go
to the big time or even the lower
pro loops, on completion of their
pro careers may return to Nelson
to play and live because they liked
It here in their early days and because the citizens made them feel
they too were citizens of their city.
TOO HIGH
"Clubs across Canada are beginning to realize that salaries are too
high. This will not always be so.
A solution will be found. We maintain that future days will see players return to places like Nelson to
live and play just for the fun of it."
In closing the interview, we asked
Mr. Ball what he thought, of the
Detroit Red Wing product, Ray
Kinasewich, and his only comment
was a sigh and a longing look as
he  replied  "terrific."
w
NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22,1953—7
a
ADULT-STUDENT
SKATING SUNDAY
2:00-4:00 p_m.
NELSON'S FINEST RECREATION
25 Rinks in
Ladies Spiel
TRAIL—There are 25 rinks entered in the 17th annual Kootenay
Ladies' Bonspiel. 10 Trail rinks, 4
Nelson, 1 Salmo, 4 Kimberley, 1
Rossland, 1 Cranbrook, 3 Creston
and 1 Trail nurses are entered.
Play will commence Thursday
morning, January _7, at 8:00 p.m.
The annual banquet will be held
Thursday night at 7:80 p.m. Friday
and Saturday draws commence at
8:00 a.m. and continue all day, with
the last draw at 8:30 p_ra.
There are two primary events, 2
secondary and the consolation.
SKI CONDITIONS
IMPROVE AT
RED MOUNTAIN
(Contributed)
ROSSLAND — Old Man Winter
has finally started to do his .ruff
and we are happy to report that
skiing conditions are very much
improved over what they were
weekend before last Very few
stumps and rocks are showing ex*
cept where the "rut runners" have
unthinkingly followed each other
down, one in exactly the lame track
as the runner ahead of him. If they
would only try to turn on top of the
humps, the ruts would soon disappear and everyone" could have a
smooth ride.
The ski lessons got away to a
good start with 42 adults and juniors
in the class Saturday morning and
12 adults Sunday afternoon. Anyone
who wishes to take lessons should
sign up at the downstairs office
in the lodge. TUbse who would like
private lessons contact Gil Page.
The classes are for adults and Juniors on Saturday and for adults only
on Sunday. They last about an hour.
Ladies' Curling
Results of play in the Nelson Ladies Curling Club over the past
week:
Mrs: M. L. Craig 9, Mrs. R. Little
. Mrs. T. A. Wallace 11, Mrs. O. G.
Macintyre 5.
Mrs. M. DeGirolamo 8, Mrs. A. J.
Hesse 5.
Mrs. T. McGovern 11, Mrs. M.
Kubin 8.
Mrs, O. G. Macintyre S, Mrs. M.
DeGirolamo 17.
Mrs, T. McGovern 10, Mrs. T. A.
Wallace 6. .
Mrs. A. J. Hesse 13, Mrs. R. Little
7.
Mrs. M. L. Craig 12, Mrs. M. Kubin 5.
Draws for next week are:
Monday: Mrs. T. A. Wallace vs
Mrs. M. L. Craig; Mrs. T. McGovern
vs Mrs. O. G. Macintyre.
Tuesday: Mrs. A. J. Hesse vs Mrs.
M. Kubin; Mrs. R. Little vs Mrs. M.
DeGirolamo.
HOCKEY SCORES
WESTERN LEAGUE   '
New Westminster 2, Vancouver 5
Victoria 6, Calgary 5
OKANAGAN SENIOR
Kelowna 3, Penticton 7
WESTERN JUNIOR
Edmonton 1. Regina 5
Lethbridge 6, Medicine Hat 5
Tilson Over Tiff
Back With Flyen
SPOKANE (AP) - Capt. Red
Tilson, who quit the Spokane hockey club last week in a huff over a
fine, has changed his mind and will
play In Saturday night's game here
against Kimberley.
Coach Roy McBride, who claimed
Tilson broke training and would
have to pay a fine, said Friday his
captain has agreed to pay and will
rejoin the Western International
League team. Tilson will not be
captain ' anymore, however, McBride said.
WANDA BEASLEY
WOMEN'S TITLIST
TORONTO (CP)—Wanda Beas-
ley, 19-year-old Toronto skater,
Friday night won the Canadian
junior ladies' singles figure skating championship, maintaining in
the free style competition a narrow lead she had built up in school
figures Thursday.
Dianne Williams, 16, and Marg
Crosland, both of the Calgary Glen-
coe Club, were second and third
respectively.
Don Jackson of Ottawa won the
Canadian junior men's' single* figure skating championships.
Nelson Rinks
Set for Zone
'Spiel at Trail
Eighteen rinks froth the West
Kootenay will swing into action at
Trail today in the Kootenay zone
playoffs to decide the four rinks
to represent this area at the provincial playdowns in Kamloops
February 7.
Many curling fans from Nelson
will be travelling to the smelter
city Sunday to witness the event
in which five Nelson rinks are
entered.
Nelson curlers taking part in the
*spiel, with Bkips named first, are:
R. Palmer, N. Jennejohn, G. Barefoot, M. Buerge.
M. Ryalls, D. Porteous, D. Benedetti, R. Nash.
L. Peerless, D. Meakins, L. McEachern, W. Wicken.
J. Harvey, R. Boates, J. Taylor,
and lead.
R. Maurer, F. Carmichael, L.
Bicknell, D. Winlaw.
Hockey Standings
W ,L T F   A Pts.
Montreal     26 12 7 147   97   59
Detroit  27 11 5 119   89
Toronto     19 13 14 106   83
Boston   14 17 12   99 114
New York   11 23 12   99 132
Chicago     8 26 10   94 149
SIGN WITH CARDS
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Stan (The
Man) Musial and Red Schoendienst,
the St. Louis Cardinals' veteran
one-two  punch   and  highest  paid
Fans Join Players in Clash as
Smpkies Edge Dynamiters 3-2
TRAH.—Trail .-Kimberley 3:
Every game has its heros and its
goats. Friday night's WIHL fixture
between the Kimberley Dynamiters
and the Trail Smoke .Eaters was no
exception..
The hero—Seth Martin, the goat
—Ted Lebioda.
Martin, playing his first game in
the new year -displayed the talent
which has endeared him to Trail
hockey fans since he first donned
the black and gold in 1953. The
young Trail goalie held back the
heavier, faster-moving Kimberley
club, letting only two pucks slip
through his agile defence,
• . *   *
P W L T F  A   Pts.
Kimberley   28 14 11 1 109 103 32.69
Nelsori   35 16 18 1 152 136 30.77
Trail   34 15 18 1 148 159 29.03
Spokane .... 29 13 15 1 116 127 28.35
* *        *
On the other hand Lebioda, with
his unorthodox way of proving a
point didn't endear himself either
to the 2000 fans or to his teammates.
Twelve-man hockey at Its best is
hard on the players, but with the
NHL BIG SEVEN
By The Canadian Prest
G A Pts.
Geoffrion, Montreal     27 23 50
Beliveau, Montreal ..:.'....   26 24 50
Richard, Montreal    28 19 45
Olmstead, Montreal      7 34 41
Howe, Detroit    SO 20 40
Smith, Toronto _    24 15 39
Mosdell, Montreal    16 22 88
contracts.
Salary terms were not revealed
but It was understood Musial received the same $80,000 he did last
season while Schoendienst's pact
called for $40,000, about the same
players, Friday signed their 1955 as last year.
Worth $125
Oh, Those Arms That Sag Backwards
NHL LEADERS
By The Canadian Press
Standing: Montreal, won 26, lost
12, tied 7; points 59;
Detroit, won 27, lost ,13, tied 5;
points 59.
Points: Geoffrion, Montreal; Beliveau, Montreal, 50,
Goals: Geoffrion, Montreal, 27.
Assists: Olmstead, Montreal, 34.
Shutouts: Sawchuk, Detroit,1 9.
Penalties: Evans, New York, 91
minutes.
By W. W. W.
"With the Nelson and Trail old
timers under the impression that
Dennis Ball, Ranger scout, was at
the game looking for new material,
the youngsters of the dirty thirties
and the plenty twenties went at it
hammer and tongs in the hockey
game at the Civic Centre arena
-Thursday night. When the noise of
battle rolled away there were the
Nelson lads with 7 goals and Trail
with 6.
Most of the players realized top
late that "more things are wrought
by prayer than this world dreams
of." And as the game progressed it
was more evident to them that rubber limbs, chests that heave like
bellows and produce no fuel and
arms that sag backwards when used
for shooting, have become ^unique
possessions, but are of no practical
use.
Trail led all the way until the
fatal third when Coach Stan O'Gen-
ski directing the team from Bon-
nington (the first time a game has
been coached by remote control)
signalled his handlers to let Bicknell loose. Len was in the curling
rink disguised as a curler. He roared into the arena like a starved lion
into a den of Christians and the
startled Smokies never did recover.
He scored the winning goal with
only 55 seconds remaining. It was
about all the strength he had remaining too.
ELEVATED
In the earlier part of the game it
was Ab Cronie, Mike Buchna and
Archdeacon Waite, who made all
the noise. Waite was only a Deacon
last year but after six assists and
no penalties in the annual game
here he was elevated in the hierarchy. This trio made it plenty hot
for Seaby in the Nelson net and
Trail was leading three to nothing
a. the end of the first period. Then,
either because of lack of wind or a
desire to play more defensive hockey, the Nelson boys made sure they
were not caught up the Ice.
Both Jimmy Wolfe and Jesse Seaby in the nets had the fans In the
aisles with their goal tending. Their
brilliance was only faded by the
super glow of the neutral referees
who succeeded In giving penalty to
Al Euerby before the game started.
It was for delaying the game. Euerby was panting, that Is he was losing his pants and his dignity at the
same time.
Dick Malloy who broke training
rules and was not In shape to play
was fined $5, and this will be paid
directly to the Booster Club. The
briefest career of any old timer this
year was Wee Waite's ot Trail-
Scarce ten minute of practice had
passed before he received a shot on
the foot,*breaking a bone. At this
information Wally Cox of Nelson
nodded his head sagely, "he should
have started cold like I did."
The game placed the Nelson Old
Timers'ln a unique position, so well
are they doing financially, that they
will be able to declare a dividend,
and as the Maple Leafs are the chief
shareholders they will receive
about $125.   .
It seems that Bill Clarke, late of
Kimberley, but now of Nelson, hit
the nail ori'th. head with hfs comment of the game, "I left it with a
good taste in my mouth."
burly Kimberley rearguard sitting to flash the light for Kimberley.
out four penalties in a row in the
second period the onus was on his
teammates to put even more effort
into their game.
The fixture Itself started out fast
and furious with neither team able
to break through the brilliant goal
keeping of Earl Betker and Martin.
Kimberley had their opportunity
to take the lead when Kenny Cook
took a two-minute tripping penality
at the half-way mark. Penalty killer
Bobby Kromm managed to keep the
pucq in motion until Smokies were
back at full strength.
Two old acquaintances met in this
period but Referee Curly Wheatley
broke up the tender meeting before
Gord Andrea and Bobby Kromm
could get properly set for a fracas.
Ray Hamilton broke the tie at
the end of the second period when
he caught a rebound and golfed a
shot past Betker from the right
hand corner. Immediately following
this play Hamilton took a flve-min-
u\e penalty along with Knlppleburg when the two settled an argument with sticks. Knippleburg
left the Ice with a gash across his
forehead. Lebioda picked up a two-
minute penalty for cross checking,
his fourth this frame.
With Trail holding a meager 1-0
edge going into the third period
Kimberley took the ice swarming
the Smokie citadel. Moe Young
managed to pick the puck from the
fray and carried it single-handedly
in a dipsy-doodle manner down the
length of the Ice. He faked Betker
out of his net, then slipped the rubber In from the corner.
Norm Larson scored first blood
for the Dynamiters less than a minute later when he teamed up with
Buzz Mellor and Bell and scored on
a screen shot.
Tempers ran short and a goal by
Bud Andrews at the three-quarter
mark did nothing to improve the
feeling between the two teams.
Barre popped in a neat goal at 18:58
The tilt developed Into a pier six
riot with less than two seconds to
go. Fletcher teed off with Mellor
to start the donnybrook and players and fans flocked Into the fray.
Bobby Kromm, settling a difference
with Lebioda, caught the butt end
of his stick and left the Ice with a
cracked head. Lebioda went out for
a major followed by Fletcher and
Mellbr. The game ended on this
note.
Lineups:
Kimberley—Betker, Jones, Craig,
Andrea, Lebioda, Hockley, Barre.
Mellor, Knlppleburg, Bell, McNiven and Larson,
Trail—Martin, Hamilton, Cook,
Fletcher, McTeer, Kromm, Andrews, Penner, Trentini, Desrosiers,
Young and Kuzma. p
Summary:
1st period: No. score. Penalty-
Cook.
2nd period: 1, Trail, Hamilton
(Desrosiers, McTeer) 17.02. Penalties: Andrea, Lebioda (4), Knippleburg, Hamilton.
3rd period: 2, Trail, Young 2:32;
3, Kimberley, Larson (Mellor-Bell)
3:10; 4, Trail, Andrews (Trentini)
14:27; 5, Kimberley, Ban- (McNiven,
Knlpplebprg) 18:57. Penalties:
Fletcher, Lebioda (five minutes),
Fletcher (five minutes), Mellor
(five minutes).
FRIENDLY
AMILY
INANCE
Personal* Loans
For   Bills,  Fuel,   Repairs,  Cars,
or any good reason.
MOUNTAIN
FINANCE CO. LTD.
Sulto 212,   Medical Arts Bldg.
••> PHONE 1786
FAMILY
SKATING
TODAY
10:00 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.
If you are looking for a
GOOD Place to DEAL
And o
Place to SAVE Money
Then  Join  Our Treasure STAR  CARD   DIVIDEND  SYSTEM
IT'8 FREE — Be Sure to Aik for a Card
STAR AUTO SERVICE
YMIR ROAD
PHONE 1648
GILKERS' LTD. n m.
Cash Only pcwaAy  CLEARANCE
While They Last
Reg. $59.50 to $77.50
HALF PRICE
CUidO 2 ONLY TUXEDOS!  HALF PRICE
Regular $59.50 and $74.50
Sizes 37 and 38
Make Room for NEW STOCK
Esquire and Society Brand To
Regular $42.50 to $65.00
TOPCOATS HALF PRICE
SALE
STARTS
TODAY
SPORT
JACKETS
HALF PRICE
GILKERS LTD
546 Baker St.
MEN'S WEAR
Nelson
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Mm.
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8—NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12,1955
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Market Tends
NEW VORK (AP) - Th« stock
market advanced Friday and the
volume ot business expanded a little
under encouragement ot the higher
trend.
Canadian stocks were generally
higher. International Nickel and
Hiram Walker advanced %, and
Canadian Pacific and Distillers Seagram were up Vs. Mclntyre lost Vi.
TORONTO (CP) - The stock
market, strong all day, gained even
more ground in a final hour surge
of buying Friday. '
• All sections guinea and over-all
strength was the greatest since Jan.
10 when prices soared in a strong
recovery following the sharp break
two weeks ago. Low-priced mines
were extremely active.
MONTREAL (CP) - The stock
market was steady to fractionally
higher in active trading.
■ Great Lakes, Internationa] Nickel
and Donohue gained Vs. Up V.
were Abitlbl, Aluminum, BA Oil
and Noranda. '
LONDON (Reuters) — The Lon
don stock market continued to make
good headway on renewed investment buying. Gilt-edged Issues
were again the exception, however,
because of money rate uncertainties.
Prices declined fractionally.
Ca!<_ie.rv Livestock
CALGARY (CPT - There were
1050 cattle and calves on offer at
the Calgary livestock market, including 375 head held over.
Trade moderately active, with
good to choice butcher steers closing steady at week's advance; me.
dium quality kinds easier; butcher
heifers steady; good cows under
pressure and down 50 cents in
spots; 'canners, cutters and bulls
steady.
Choice steers $19.50 to $20.50; odd
MONTREAL (CP) — Many mar-
riages end on the rocks because of
poor "salesmanship," says James
Watson, head of a New York sales
agency. "It ls because the husband,
or the wife, or both, cease selling
themselves," he told a meeting of
the Advertising and Sales Executives Club Wednesday.
Vancouver Stocks
(Closing Prices)
MINES
Beaver Lodge  	
Bralorne ....	
Canusa, ...' 	
Cariboo (Sold  „ „
Estella   ... j.	
Giant Mascot __
Grandview
Winnipeg Grain
WINNIPEG (CP)   -   W.nnipeg
grain cash prices:
Oats, No. 1 feed, 77V4.
Barley, No. 1 feed. 1.19ft.
Highland Bell     	
Pac Eastern Gold 	
Pend Oreille  _.
Pioneer Gold ___...
Premier Border 	
Quatsmo 	
Reeves MacDonald     1.40
.03
2.75
.04
1.03
.11
.52
.25
.43
.12
4.75
2.10
.04 V.
.14
.78
4.95
.20
.70
.09
.01 _
.03
.50
.171.
.46
Sheep Creek
Sherrit Gordon  	
Silver Ridge _	
Silver Standard 	
Surf Inlet   	
Vanarida    _	
Van Hoi 	
Western Exploration .
Western Tungsten 	
Yale 	
OIL8
Anglo Canadian      5.00
A P Consolidated  45
Calgary & Ed.monton    13.75
Canadian Anaconda  __      .16V4
Home         8.35
Mercury    08
Okalta Com        1.44
Pacific Pete     11.25
Petace River Gas      7.60
Royalite  __    12.75
Vanalta    20.4
Vulcan   _      .35
INDUSTRIALS
Capital Estates      4.85
Int Brew B      5.00
Western Plywood      11.50
sales to $20.70; good $18 to $19.25;
medium $16.50 to $17.50.
Choice heifers $16.50 to $17.50; odd
ones at $17.70; good $15.25 to $16.25;
medium $14 to $15; common $12 to
$13.50; canners and cutters $5 to $8.
Good bulls $10.50 to $11.50; common to medium $8 to $10.
The replacement cattle on offer,
mostly medium quality, sold about
steady; good feeder steers $16 to
$16.50; good stock steers $14.50 to
$15.50; common to medium $12 to
$14; medium to good veal $15 to
$19.50.
. Hogs advanced 25 cents Thursday, grade A $24.50; sows steady
at $14.75.
Good lambs brought $17 to $18;
good ewes mostly $5 to $7.50.
THEN VOL! SUBT-PACT
THE DEBTS FROM THE
CREDITS AND
THAT LEAVES
YOU-
TELEVISION for TODAY
SATURDAY
12:00-Sign On
12:30—Chicago Wrestling
1:30—Sports on Parade
Industry on Parade
2:00—Western Roundup
5:00—Big Picture
5:30^-Captain Midnight
6:0O-Willie
6:30—Starlite Stairway
7:00—Corliss Archer
7:30—Beal the Clock
8:00—Jackie Gleason
9:00—Two for the Money (L)
9:30—District Attorney
10:00—My Favorite Husband
10:30—Chicago Wrestling
11:30—Late Show
SUNDAY
1:30—Sign On
2:00—Omnibus (L)
3:30—Halls of Ivy
4:00—This Is the Life
4:30—Sunday  Matinee
5:30—Annie Oakley
8:00—You Are There
6-30—Lassie (L)
7:00—Jack Benny
7:30—Bristol Myers Playhouse
8:00—Toasl of. the Town
9:00—G.E. Theatre
9:30—Name That Tune
10:00—Father Knows Best
10:30—Late Show
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS
1240 ON  THE  DIAL
(Pacific Standard Time)
SATURDAY,
30—Morning Show
:00— Ne^s
05—Morning Show
lEr-'Musical  Minutes .
:30—News
35—Morning Show
:45—• Rise 'n' Shine
:00— News
.10—Sports News
;: 15—Hits and Encores
:30   Breakfast  Bands
:45—Wax Wagon
':00—Homemaker Harmonies
:15—Saddle Serenade
i:30—Stamp Club
i:45—Sounds Fun
i:00—Musicale
i:30—Story Parade
i:45—News
i;5_—Weather
.:00—Metropolitan Opera
JANUARY 22, 1955
2:30—Songs to Grow On
2:45—Great Days In Sport
3;00J—News
3:15—An Experience of Life
3:30—Sports College
3:45—This Week
4:00—Buff Estes Sextet
4:15—Memo from UN.
4:30—Now 1 Ask You
5:00—Rhythm Pals
5:30—Journey Into Fashion
5:35—Musical
5:45—What Do You Think
6:00—News
6:05—N.H.L. Hockey
8:00—Saturday Special
8:30—W.I.H.L.—Nelson
10 00—News
10:15—Bill Good
10:30—Sports Roundup
10:35—Starlight Ballroom
11:00—NEWS Nightcap
SUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1955
9:0O—Oversea. News
9:15—News
9:30—Harmony Harbor
10:00—B.C Gardener
10:15—Just  Mary
10:30—In His Service
11:00—Trinity Church Service
12:00—N.Y   Philharmonic
1:30—Critically Speaking
2:00—Canadian Scenes
2:30—Jake and the Kid
3:00—News
3:05—Ask the Weathiirnan
3:12—Weather
3:15—UN on the Record
3:30—The People's Church
3:45—All Aboard tor Adventure
4:00—Bethel Fireside Hour
4:30—The Odyssey
5:00—Hour ot Jecision
5:30—Musicale
5:50—News
6:00—Capital Report
6:27—B. C. Weather
6:30—B C Profiles
7:00—News
7:10—Weekend Review
7:20—Our Special Speaker
7:30—Questing Time
8:00—Stage 55
9:00—Passing Parade
9:80—Ford Theatre
10:00—News
10:15—Talk
10:30—Music  Diary
11:00— "NEWS" Night Cap
CBC   PROGRAMS
(Pacific Standard Time)
SUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1955
3:15—U.N on the Record
3:30—Vancouver Symphony
Orchestra
4:30—Odyssey
5:00—Sunday Chorale
5:30—Sonata Recital
6:00—Capital Report
6:27—Weather Report
6.30—B. C. Profile
7:00—News
7:10—Weekend Review
7:20—Our Special Speaker
7:30—Little Symphony Orchestra
8:00—Stage 55
9.00—String Along
9:30—Vesper Hour
10:00—News
10:15—Talk
10:30—Music Diary
00—Sunday Morning Music
:30—Sunday Morning Recital
00—BBC News
;15—Musical Memories
:30—^Harmony Harbor
00—BC   Gardner
15—Just Mary
:30—In His Service
00—Chamber Music
:30—Religious Period
00—New  York Philharmonic
Symphony
30—Critically Speaking
00—Canadian Scenes
:30—Jake and the Kid
00— News
US--A      the   .Veal..errran
:12—Weather  Forecast
MONDAY, JANUARY 24, 1955
00—Fisherman s  Broadcast
15—Musical  Minute*
KHQ-TV
Channel 6
SATURDAY
9:30—Test Pattern
9:45—Color Test Program
10:00—Happy Felton
10:30—Paul Wincheli
11:00—Funny Boners
11:30—Tom Corbett—Space Cadet
12:00—Pro Basketball
2:00—Western Theatre
5:(I0—Swingin' on a Rainbow
6:30—Big Town
7:00—Death Valley Days
7:30—Horace Heldt
8:00— It's a Great Life
8:30—So This Is Hollywood
9:00—Imogene Coca
9:30—Curtain Time
10:00—George Gobel
10:30.-Hit Parade
11:00—Double Indemnity
12:30—News Headlines
12:35—Bible Reading
'     SUNDAY
9:45—Test Pattern
10:00—Color Test Pattern
10:15—What's Your Trouble
10:30—American Religious Townhall
Meeting
11:00-NBC Opera
1:00—Christopher Program
1:30—Frontiers of Faith
2:00—Alice in Wonderland
3:30—TV Theatre
4:30—Curtain Time
5:00—Hall of Fame
5:30—Background
6:00—People Are Funny
6:30—This Is Your Music
7:00—Amos 'N Andy
7:30—Mr. Peepers
8:00—Comedy Hour
9:00—TV   Playhouse
10:00—Loretta Young
10:30—Bob Cummings
11:00—Dangerous Assignment
11:30—News Headlines
11:35—Bible Reading
30—News
35—Musical Minutes
45—Morning Devotions
55—March Past
8:00—News
8:10—Here's Bill Good
815— Bra.Ki.si Club
8:45—Laura Limited
900— BBC New-
9 15—Aunt liucy
9:30—Morning Concert
IU'IK>, Murnintr   Visil
10:15 -The Happy Gang
10:45—Musical Kitchen
11:00—Kale Altken
11:15—Kindergarten ol the Air
11:30—A Man and His Music
l2.1o   News
14:25—Showcase
12:30   BC    -arm  Broadcast
12:55-Five  to  One '
1:00—Afternoon Concert
2:00—B. C. School Broadcast
■_ .'ll—Trans Canadr   Matinee
3:30—Closed Circuit
3:45—Share the  Wealth
4:00—B.C. Roundup
4:30—Adventures of Robin Hood
5:00—Current and Choice
5:15—International   Commentary
5:20—News
5:30—Chansonettes'
6:00—Rawhide
6:15—Rovinfc  Reporter
6:30—Don Messer
7 00— News
7:30—Conversation
8:00—National Farm Radio Forum
8:30—CBC Symphony Orchestra
9:30—Distinguished Artists
i un    Newi
10:15—Provincial Affairs
10:30—Bob McMullin Show
DAILY CROSSWORD
General Electric
Television
NELSON ELECTRIC
CO. LTD.
674 Baker St Phone 260
For
G.E.   ULTRA VI8ION   TV
It's
THE BAY ELECTRIC
1460 Bay Ave. Trail
PHONE 939
IN   CRE8TON   IT'S
Creston Electric
FOR   R.O A.. VICTOR   TV
SALE8 AND 8ERVICE
For
PHILCO TV
8ALES AND SERVICE
Call in at
KLINE'S FURNITURE
AND  APPLIANCES   .
1474 Bay Ave. Trail
3. Moslem cap
4. Before
5. Color   •
6. Scorches
7. Ransorfling
». Gifts to
the poor
9. Cut
10. Habitual
drunkards
16. Mongrel dog
18. Little brooks
19. Denary
20. Dance step
21. National
god
(Tahiti)
23. Man's
name-
24. Seine
25. Before
27.'Glrl'a
nick,
name,
29. Father
31. Follow,
ing
"eights"
32. Agreement
33. Winglike
34. Italian
coin
' _3.Q__.i_.
ULiaa
aca-ana
_3_.l__tI_.E-
E_a._ii_._j
JU'Ji-M
aunt, a
SHUi-IB
Bam . tin hud.!
_a__ii__iaa
a_ra_iH
-3__l__l__l__.__l._li_!
uaa uu    aaa
HidE-HC!
'_L_.__.-I__
aaoraii
aanuiH
_a_i._s.__i
(a__i__iai3
,m__i'_.
WUI^H
Yob .erdny'o   Am .Tor .
37. A reward
(archaic)
39. The bill of
an anchor
36. Wavy (Her.)   40. Luzon nativ*
I:
ACROSS
1. Showy
flower
S. Stupid
11. Sound
noisily
12. Greeting
13. Wearied by
tedium
14. Permit
to enter
15. Subside
16. Tops of
.waves
17. Blunt
20. Needier
22. Hair on
horse's neck
26. Incendiarism
27. A horse who
runs a mile
28. District in
London
29. Indicate
30. Knotty
32. Pale
35. Total
38. Foreign
39. A signer of
the Declaration of IVide.
pendence
41. Fencing
. position
. 42. Musical
study
43. Rock com*
won along
the Rhine
44. Relieved
DOWN
1. Pariah priest
(Fr.)
_. Mud (Ir.) i-i4
DAILY CBYPTOQUOTE—Here's how to work It:
axydlbaAxr
Is   LONGFELLOW
On* letter simply stands for another. In this example _. is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos.
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
CHIGNLUVY    RUTT    JHIG    HS    N L U ft
~2
m
m
WG      LBIK V
tJ      LH AG      UN      IK F V'N
YHEG-.MU JDG V C.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SPEAK IN FRENCH WHEN YOU
CAN'T THINK OF THE ENGLISH FOR A THING—"LEWIS
CARROLL".
Distribute, by King Features Syndlcato.
'   ■   '
 	
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Our New Classified Phone Number Is
BIRTHS
SUTHERLAND - To Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Sutherland of Vallican.
at Kootenay Lake General Hospital,
January IB. a daughter.
SCHAEFFER - To Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Schaeffer, 613 Mill Street, at
Kootenay Lake General Hospital,
January 18, a daughter.
ritir  WAN.ED
WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE
parts and equipment salesman
wanted to call on garages and
industry in Trail area. Stockroom
or mechanical ■ experience is essential. Must reside In Trail district and have 6wn car. Excellent
proposition for right man. Reply
to Box 1975 Daily News.
ACTUAL JOBS IN CANADA, U.S.,
So. Am., Europe. To $15,000. Write
Employment Info. Center, Room
C-484, Green St., Boston, 14.
EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER
with typing, bookkeeping and
shorthand. Apply Box 1973, Nelson News.
APPLIANCE SALESMAN TO
start immediately. For interview,
phone 700.
WANTED EXPERIENCED MACH-
inery salesman. Give all particulars. Apply Box 1962, Nelson News
HELP WANTED: -FEMALE
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES
For the Largest
and Most Complete
Car Selection
SEE
REUBEN BUERGE
TODAY'
For That New or Used Car
NEW AUSTIN SOMERSETS
1955 Pontiac,Sedan
1955 Chev, 4-Door Bel-Air
1954 Austin Sedan
Low mileage.
1954 Meteor Sedan
1954 Ford Sedan Delivery
1953 Ford Hard Top
1953 Ford 2-Door. Radio.
1953 Chevrolet 2-Door
1953 Meteor Sedan
1953 Austin Sedan
Low mileage.
1952 Ford Sedan
WANTED: RELIABLE GIRL TO DO
housework and care for children
while parents work. Sleep in preferred. Phone 1370-X, Trail, B.C.
SEW OUR READY-CUT APRONS
sparetime. Easy, profitable. Free
details. A & B Enterprises, Fort
Smith, Arkansas.
SITUATIONS WANTED
MAN WITH PLASTIC LAMINAT-
ing press wishes to get In touch
with interested party. Write or enquire room 7, Queens Hotel.
Nelson.
WANTED WORK H.T.4 CATER-
pillar shovel. Convertible to D-4
bulldozer. Apply A. H. Shrieves.
1018 Falls St.. Nelson, B. C.
EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER
and bookkeeper open for part
time or relieving work. Ph. 207-L.
GUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP
on alteration and repairs Reasonable estimates  Ph. 434-X-2
RENTALS
FOR RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE,
with garage, North Shore, 2V_
miles from ferry. Phone 773-R-3
after 6:30 p.m.
FOR SALE: SMALL HOUSE ON
corner lot Five rooms and basement Hot water heating system.
Ph. 765-X.
FOR SALE OR RENT: 7-ROOM
house on Hoover St., fireplace,
double plumbing, $65. Also two
building lots. Silica St Ph. 1005-Y.
FULLY FURNISHED ONE AND
two hedroom units, automatic gas
heat at Ken Court, 1V_ miles out
the Ymir Rd. 1581-L-2.
FURNISHED ROOM, CLEAN,
warm sitting room and kitchenette suite. Quiet living business
couple or girl. Ph. 335-X.
FOR RENT: CLEAN. COMFORT-
able sleeping room, close in. Ph.
488-R.
FOR RENT: SLEEPING ROOMS
and housekeeping room. Phone
1194-L.
FOR RENT: 3-ROOM SUITE, PRI
vate entrance. . Phone 992-X or
apply 75 High St„ mornings.
S-ROOM SUITE. SELF-CONTAIN-
ed. Partly furnished, 912 Vernon
St., apply Apt. 1.	
FOR RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE,
suitable for bachelors. Apply 1019
Latimer Street.
• •SPECIAL**
1949 Ford Pickup
Only $495.00
1951 Chev. Sedan. Radio.
1950 Pontiac Sedan. Radio.
1947 Chev. 2-Door. Radio.
MANY MORE CHOICE UNITS
INCLUDING
AN EXCELLENT STOCK
OF LIGHT DELIVERIES
SPOT CASH FOR      ,
1952 AND LATER SEDANS
CASH     TERMS     TRADES
BUERGE
Motors Ltd.
803 Baker St.   Phnoell35
Nelson, B.C.
The Best
of Nelson's
HOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING
rooms, furnished, heated Day
week   monthly  rates   171   Baker
SELF-CONTAINED, HEATED APT.
for two. 916 Edgewood Ave. Ph
1233.
S-ROOM    COTTAGE,    CENTRAL,
suitable for couple only. Ph. 490-Y.
FURNISHED SUITE AND SLEEP-
ing rooms. Ph. 343-Y.
FOR RENT: 3-ROOM APT. HEAT-
ed, unfurnished. Phone 963 or 234.
FOR RENT: FULLY FURNISHED,
modern cottage. Ph. 421-R.
FOR RENT: 2-ROOM SUITE. GAS
heated, gas stove. 723 Silica St.
HOUSEKEEPING CABINS. NORTH
Shore Motel   Phone-1684
PERSONAL  "
THE ALMER HOTEL. OPP C PR
Depot Vancouver BC 100.. fire
proof. 24 .hr Elevator Service
Clean, quiet and comfortable Reasonable rates City Centre
DRINKING PROBLEM? IF ~Y5T)
have a drinking problem, men or
women, contact Alcoholics Anonymous. Box 388.- Nelson. Ph.
161-L-3
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY
ASSAVER8   AND   MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
"TTwTWiDDOWSON is CO"
Assayers. 301 Josephine St  Nelson.
P~S    ELMES    ROSSLAND    BC
Assayer Chemist  Mine Rep
New Cars
1954-Studebaker
Commander
Special In Good
Used Cars
1952 Austin Somerset
In A-1 condition.
1952 Studebaker Sedan
1951 Studebaker Sedan
1951 Hudson Sedan
1949 Hillman Sedan
1949 Plymouth Sedan
1946 Chevrolet Sedan
Truck Specials
1954 Studebaker Pickup
1952 Thames Pickup
1950 Mercury Pickup
YOUR STUDEBAKER AND
HILLMAN   DEALER
DeFoe Service
LTD.
213 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.
PHONE 1234
ENGINEERS  AND 8URVEYOR8 '
"BOYD C   AFFLECK, M.E.I.C.
BC  Land Surveyor P  Eng  (Civil)
218 Gore St     Nelson     Phone_1238
~ A L. PURDY. B.CX.S"
Sui     No  8. 373 Baker St., Nelson
Phone 1118   B   C.  Land Surveyor
ST V    S.HAYL..R   P.C~ 66_ "2-J
Kimberley   Phone 54
B C Land Surveyor Engineer
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine Shop    Acetylene and
electric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593, 3,24 Vernon St
Season's Special on
Ford Products
GIVEAWAY PRICES
'41   Ford Tudor
'47 Ford Pickup
'47 Mercury Panel
'51   Ford Panel
'52 Monarch Hardtop
These vehicles are all priced
well under market value and
if you wish to trade expect
yours to be devaluated accordingly.
COME AND  INVESTIGATE
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES
'Continued >-
FOR SALE: 1948 MERCURY SE-
dan. Can be financed, See B. Monteleone, CP. Express.
ISM' AM1.N, »_.""H_H_.-*'-.
Trade or finance. Ph. 471-X-4
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
ETC. FOR SALE
EXCELLENT BUY    '
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
1—5 Vi acres and. house at highway, Taghum. 2 - bedroom;
brick construction, renovated
recenty. Good bathroom and
^en; $6600
Terms:  $2000 Down  and
Balance $40 and 6% Interest
Per Month
FAIRVIEW
J—Excellent New Home: a really
beautiful home. Oak floors
throughout, double plumbing,
upstairs and first floor. Ultramodern kitchen. Lovely living room and dining room,
open fireplace. Three lovely
badroorps. and many other
flneje.tures.     $15,750
Half Cash Required
COMFORTABLE COTTAGE
4—Good   garden.   3   bedrooms,
Oil furnace; part   <R_4I*>flO
basement.  Price  . "*"*-vv
Some Terms
GOOD  INVESTMENT
5—4-Apartment House. Returns
12%. Fully modern, Large
totMow taxes.   $ J 5,750
Terms: $5750 Cash and
Balance $200 Per Month,
ROSEMONT
First-Class Home
7—3 bedrooms on the ground
' floor, 1 upstairs. Attractive
living room and kitchen with
enclosed porch and good utility room. 3-plece white bathroom. Good cement foundation and cement floor in basement. New furnace, hot air
blower type system. 4 garden
lots, 13 fruit trees. On the
property is also a small cabin,
child's playhouse $7500
and garage. Price
. Some Terms.
LIST YOUR HOUSE
TODAY
We .have buyers. and_also
nave mor.gagc"1.acilltfi.s to
help you.
C.W.Apple-yard
& Co. Ltd.
Established  1912   "
Real Estate and Insurance
' Agents
T. C. Lambert. Office Manager
392 BAKER ST.      PHONE 269
P.O. Box 26 Nelson,-B.C.
$4000
1—ALMOST NEW BUNGALOW
in Upper Fairview. H.W. floors.
3 B.R.S, L.R., D.R., modernistic
kitchen and bathroom. Laundry room, first-class oil furnace. Developed grounds with
lovely view. $12,500
Full  pric» T       '
Some Terms.
2—THREE BEDROOM HOUSE,
close in. L.R., D.R. and kitchen
on main floor. IB.R.s uostairs.
Full basement. This is a wonderful buy
at
We could help finance this one!
3-»NOTHER REAL BUY! L.R..
D.R.. one B.R. and bathroom
on main floor. 3 larae B.R.s
on second floor. Could be ess-
N ilv dunlexed. Locate in 3
level Fairview lots. $7000
For quick sal» **^
Splendid  Terms.
+-A LARGE 3 B.R. FAMILY
HOME for early occupanov.
Cose to public and high
schools. Very well nlanned and
in first-class condition. New
wiring and plumblns. Full
basement and coal stoker, —
House easily heated. — You
should see this one. Ask us
for price and terms.
5—LOWLY HOME in wonderful
condition, located In lower
Rosemont. ' Ond-sized rooms
throu«hout. Oil heated. This
home has to be viewed to be
really jmnreclated Evervthin-t
snlc and soan with no rennlr
1oV to do. Wpll located and
lots of (r^o'inds. ImmpoMote oc-
Cllriar""-.    Hoort    ,*—-    to    *■*.
snonsible buver. tin Qrtrt
Priced »t or.i-     *■»♦«""'
with T.w., r.p    tc; and HotV
■PVK  1.   .95!.. Phone m about
thi* one.
HFPR.P. Arnci<
Real Estate and Insurance
Agencv
PHONE 68 532 WARD ST.
otors Ltd.
PHONE 1454
WILL TRADE 1950 METEOR DE.
luxe 2-door for power boat In
good condition. Apply Box 1932
Nelson Daily News.
(Continued tn next column)
PROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS
ETC., FOR SALE" '
(Continued)
FAIRVIEW
1—Small home in good location.
1 B.R, L.R., kitchen, utility,
room, bath, Full basement;
auto, oil furnace. Electric stove
Included. Newly insulated roof.
Pr0ie_0Wn.terra"'..... $5500
DWELLING ON VA. LOTS
2—Vs basement, stoker furnace.
Completely re-wired, 220. New
plumbing. Good workshop in
basement. Cut stone foundation. New cabinet kitchen, tile
floor. DlningR., Living R:, 1.
B.R.s and 1 den down.,Upstairs: bathroom, 2 large B.
rooms. Carpets on stairs and
hall. Wired for TV. New hardwood floors up. All redecorated inside. Garage with out-
£.,'.,Terma;     $12,500
Agencies Ltd.
Agents for WAWANESA
MUTUAL INSURANCE
Phone 135, or Eves., 290-Y
WILL ACCEPT BEST OFFER FOR
5-room house. 1180 Tamarac Ave.,
Trail, B. C. Write J.. Hubner, .2635
10th Ave., West, Vancouver, B.C.
FOR.SALE: SMALL HOUSE ON
corner lot, 5 rooms and basement.
Hot water heating system. Phone
765-X.
.OR | SALE  MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE - 8-PCE. CHtSTER-
field, dining room table and chairs,
4-pce: bedroom suite, 1 electric
Singer1 Sewing Machine, almost
new. Apply 812 Baker St. Phone
703-R.
FOR SALE - 3-PC. CHESTER-
field, dining room table and chairs,
4-pc. Bedroom suite, 1 electric
Singer Sewing Machine, almost
new.  Phone 703-R.
1 OVERCOAT, LIKE NEW, $10.
Also 2 other coats, 1 pair men's
overshoes, size 9, 4 clasps. 117
Victoria St.
KITCHEN OIL RANGE EQUIPPED
with blower and tank, like new,.
Sacrifice at $98.50. Phone 964-R
between 8 and 6.
MACHINERY
CHAIN SAW
SERVICE PARTS
Now Is the time to get those
sows overhauled and tuned
up for the first of the year.
We Can Weld '
Any of Your Broken Castings
Have Your
Ban Reground and Grooved
Straighten Ban
Make This
Your. Chain Saw Headquarters
USED SAWS
Your McCulloeh Agent
MAG'S
WELDING & EQUIPMENT
CO. LTD.
614 Railway St.      Nelson. B.C.
PHONE 1402
NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1955—9
STOCK QUOTATIONS
The Daily News does not hold Itself responsible In the ovont
ol an error In tha following lists.
MODEL 7 ,CAT FOR SALE OR
trade with bulldozer. Wanted Fork
lift truck, 6-ton trailer, late model
car or planer. Apply Box 1663,
Nelson News. "
TJSB5 Saws PCS sal_. 2, m6d.il
17, Homelite, new saw, guarantee,
$230 each. 1 Maul 1 or 2-man bars,
$90. 1 Spear and Jackson, 2-man
bar, $80. See at 309 Nelson Ave.
CHAJN SAWS, NEW AND OLD,
for rent or sale and repair. Ph.
1728-Y.
WANTED   'MISCELLANEOUS
COPPER, BRASS. ALUMINUM,
etc., Cast and Steel scrap ,wanted
Highest .prices and prompt returns. Write for quotations. Active Trading Co.. 935 E Cordova
St. Vancouver 4, B. C.
TOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR
scrap Iron, steel . brass, copper
lead, etc Honest grading Prompt
paymeri. made Atlas Iron 4 Me
tajs Ltd, 250 Prior St.. Vancou
vet" B C   Rhone PAoifir B357
WANTED—PRIVATE TIMBER,
suitable for winter logging. Small
lot considered. Apply Box 1968,
Nelson News.
WANTED: USED GAS WASHER
and cook stove In good condition
Apply J. Popow. P.O. Slocan
Park. B. C.
CHILDREN'S,SKIS  AND BOOTS,
ages 6-12. Phone 1067-Y.       '
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CUTLER'S NEW AND USED FUR
nlture. basement 301 Baker St
Phone 47 "We buy used furni
ture "
F5R SALE: HICKORY STEEL
edged skis, 7 V. feet,, and table
harness, $5. Phone 718-Y.
BOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-
pacity $45. while they last Active
Trading Co., 935 E Cordova. Van
FOR SALE: ENAMEL COAL,
wood range. Good condition. Ph.
455-X.
GAS HOT WATER TANK, PRAC-
tically new. 519 Silica St,
For   sale!   coal   heating
stove in good condition. Ph. 488-R.
U I C R O N I C HEARING AIDS -
Write P   O  Box 39. Nelson. B  C
Cine portraits by pettit of
Castlegar
FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.
LIVESTOCK,   POULTRY   AND
CWRTSTTNA LAKE. (."OTOE PPO-
nertv at Ch'Mlna Lake for sale
2'3 acre. 1(1.. feet of lake front,
two furnished cottages with
fridges and electricity, one with
running water>Onod sandv shal
low beach, close to hotel, store
and* nhnne. Aonlv Amber Dav's
f.nrtn oak Street, Vancouver 9.'
B.C.
(Continued in next column!
"THE CHICKS WHICH
GIVE   RESULTS"
Write   for  our  BUYERS  GUIDE
before ordering your chicks Thirty-five   years   poultry   breeding
experience ensures high quality.
RO:P   Sired and Canadian  Approved   chicks   of   10   different
breeds and Cross breeds and B.B.
Bronze Turkey Poults. White Pc
kin Ducklings and Toulouse Goslings.  -
Write for special folder on AMES
IN-CROSS  Hybrid chicks
Order early and remember—"It's
Results That Count."
RUMP & SENDALL LTD.
Langley Prairie, B.C.. Vernon, B.C.
ORDER YOUR BABY CHICKS
for 1955 as early as possible Our
change in breeding methods show
great evidence of making our
stock much stronger and more
highly disease resistant Over 8000
breeders on our own farm In
White Leghorns. White Rocks,
New Hampshires, .White Rock by
White Leghorn cross and New
Hampshire by White Leghorn
Cross." Appleby Poultry Farm.
Mission City. B.C.
N. lann latlg 2. rttiH
Classified Advertising Rates:
15c per line first insertion and
non consecutive insertions,
lie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertaion.
48c line for month (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers
lie extra. Covers any number
of insertions.
PUBLIC   (LEGAL)  .NOTICES
TENDERS, etc. — 20c per line
first insertion 16c per line each
subsequent Insertion. '
ALL ABOVE RATES _ESS 10%
FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
Subscription Rates:
(Not  More Than  Listed  Here)
By carrier per week
In advance . .30
By carrier per year ; $15.60
United States, United Kingdom
One month $ 1,29
Three months      $ 3.7S
Six months           $ 7.50
One year $15.00
Mail in Canada outside Nelson
• One month     ..    $ 1.00
three months-     $ 2.7S
Six njonths    __.    $ 5.50
One year    _     $10.00
FOR RENT ONLY, BEAUTY PAR-
lor In payroll, city of Kimberley,
oh Spokane Street. Unfurnished.
Apply to Mr«-_Mary. Scott. Marysville, B. C. or phone 891-X.
GROCERY AND CONFECTION-
try business for sale. Good location. Apply 1103. Hall Mines Road,
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE
for young business man or girl
Phone 443-L.
Royal Family
Denies Report!
LONDON (Reuters) — A royal
statement Friday replied to neWs-
paper reports that Princess Margaret would be hedged around with
formality and needless security precautions on her coming tour of the
West Indies.
The statement < from Clarence
House, where, the princess lives
with the Queen Mother Elizabeth,
said the princess would "of course"
shake hands with everybody introduced to her, and would mix with
the guests at gatherings.
BLAMES PRESS
Ahe announcement spoke of "inaccurate ' and misleading reports
which have recently appeared in
some newspapers."
It did not name the papers. But
typical of several comments on the
princess' visit was an article in the
Daily Sketch last Tuesday that was
headlined, "Set the Princess Free."
It said she would shake hands with
nobody, would make no speeches,
and would stand on a dais at a
garden party _ instead of mingling
wfth the guests.
It is extremely unusual for the
Royal' Family to contradict press
reports aboul it.
TORONTO $TOCKS
(Closing Prloei)
MINES, ,
Acadia Uranium -...-  .19
Akaitcho       .60
Algom Uranium  _    18.00
Amal Larder •. '.14
AkaconLead  -       !.10
Anglo Huronlan      13.00
Area 60
Arjon          16
Armistice  16
Aubelle 10
Aumaque  - —      .15
Aunor      2.15
Bngamac      14
Barymln      2.60
Base. Metals  49V.
Belloterra __  2.80
Bevcourt   19
Bobio    _.......      '.26
Bralornc    _.       2,60 .
Brewls R L -      .10
Broulan   _.     1.55
Brunswick  _.   10.00
Buffadison  _.       06
Buffalo Ank 63
Buff Can    15
Califfan   17
Campbell R L _    8.85
Can Mai _ 44
Cariboo Gold       1.03
Castle Treth      3.05
Central Patricia      1.00
Central Pore  __ _...„   . .18
Chestervllle 33
Chimo G .'.     1.58
Cochenour       67
Cons Golden Arrow 28
Cons Division ....      2.88
Cons Mining & Smelting ....   30 75
Conwest ... ...      4.05
Cons Discovery      2.80
Croinor  23
Delnlte _ _.,.._ 95
Detta R L  18
Dothe _    16.75
Donal^a ......  38
Duvex '....'. : 21
Dyno  „ _    1,15
/East Malartic       2.87
East Sullivan       5.05
Eastern Metals _ 72
Elder Gold  78
Estella  1U_
Eureka  v      128
Falconbridge       23.50
Fed Kirk  _....      .10.4
Francouer 08
Frobisher         4.25
Geco       _....   11.25
Gianl Yel   _      7.60
Gods Lake         .70
Gold Hawk  _ 30
Goldcrest   _ 16
Gold Easle      13   .
Golden Manitou      1.90
Gunnar Gold  30  .
Hallnor     __     3.00
Hardrock     _. 14
Heath  , -..       10V4
Hollinger _ _    15.85
Homer V K / 15V.
Hudson Bay „    53.00 "
Laoa, Cadltla6'"':       -14
Leitch  77
Lexindln               M
Lingman (new)        i23
Little Long Lac -. 65
Louvicourt' . — 18
Macassa             1.80
MacDonald       60
MacLeod Cock _     165
Madsen R L      1.77-
Magnet         11.4
Malartic G F — -     1 95
Marcus G        11
Mclntyre Pore     70.00
McKenzie R L  — 37
McMarmac  19
McWatters   ___ 14
Mining Corp  _    17.50 "
Moneta    —____..._      .55
Negus    15
New Alger ...   _ 24
New Bidalmaque  -      .38
New Calumet  SO .
New Goldvue  _ 12
New Kelore       23
New Larder U 96
New Rouyn Merger-        14
New Mylamaque ....'.        .37
New Thurbols  76
Nipissing     2.44
Noranda •      81.50
Normetals        3.80
North Can .  —      -58
O'Brien 63
 10
 29V4
 _      .48
 _ 70
 38
Kroy
1.36
Fruit Workers
Seek Meet on
Unemployment
PENTICTON,.B. C. (CP)-A resolution calling on the provincial
government to Beek an immediate
unemployment conference will he
presented to the annual convention
of the Federation of Fruit and Veg-
etable Workers' Unlort (TLC) open
ing here Thursday.
It calls for a conference of fed
erai, provincial and municipal rep.
resentatlves -to plan a program of
assistance to meet the unemployment program.       i. ■•'   _
Fifty-five delegates are expected
to attend the three-day meeting
Labor Minister Lyle Wicks will
attend the convention banquet Sat.
urday.
The federation represents employees of practically every pacK'
inghouse and processing plant in
the Okanagan Valley.
Lib Pate      8.75
Mid Cont  ., 45
Nat Pete   _ '..     1.85
New Pacalta  _ 04V4
Pacific Pete  _1    11.37V.
Royalite         13.25
Roxana  _ 11 Vi
United Oils      1.15
INDUSTRIALS
Abltibi    _     27V.
Aluminum     72
Amer TtT  „  174 .4
Bathurst Power _  60 Vi
Beattie Bros  8
Brazilian        ' 7%
B C Electric  _.... 104Vi
B C Forest      9%
B C Packers A   17
B C Packers B ....   t   13V.
B C Power A     26%
Building Products   44
Burns A  __ „    70
Burns B    61
Can Malting  i  60
Can Packers .B _  35
Canadian Breweries   25%
Canadian Canners  „. SOVi,
Can Car __ Fdy A  21
Canadian Celaneia  23%
Canadian Collieries   9%
Canadian Dredge   _ 16
Can Oil  17
Cockshutt   _ 7%
Cons Mining A. Smelt   30%
Cons Paper  67
Dist  Seagram   ,.._ 32Vi
Dom Foundries   19
Dom Steel & Coal B _  17V4
Dom Stores „ 29Vi
Dom Tar 6. Chemical  10%
Dom Magnesium   14%
Eddy Paper __ 33_
Famous Players   28
Fanny Farmer  26%
Fleet Air ..   185
Ford A _ 102 ■
Gatineau   27%
Gatlneau'5%pfd. __   113
Gen  Steel Wares   . 10%'
Great  Lakes __ 31 Vi
Gypsum Lime  „ 54Vi
Hiram Walker  _  68
Imperial Oil  _. 37%
Imp   Tobacco     10%
Int Nickel _  56V4
Int  Utll    _ _  37V4
Kelvinator     21
Inspiration    „... 2.10
Int Nickel  _  56.50
Jack   Waite 11
Jellicoe  __ 14%
Joliet   Que    57
Kayrand        .'. 11%
Kerr  Addison        __ 16.50
Kirk-Hudson Bay  49
Kirkland Lake     _ .45%
Kirk Townsite  .13
Labrador          9.00
Lake Default  78
Lakeshore   ■ 6.15
Lake Wasa  _ 24
Laura  Secord   „ 18
Loblaw A _ 44Vi
Loblaw B       _ 71
Massey Harris   . , - ftft
McColl Frontenac   ' 34
Nat Steel Car  „ 26%
Page Hershey     _  62%
Russ  Industries    17
Shawinigan  _,  54
Sicks Brew      28
Simpsons A   19%
Steel of Canada  _ 42%
Standard Paving __. _ 87%
Union Gas of Can   45
United Corp B  20
United Steel   14%
Weetern Grocers A ..i.'  38%
Weston  George     61%
Winnipeg Gas  _ 18%
Ask Full Markings
On Report Cards      ''
VANCOUVER (CP) - British
Columbia parents want school .report cards, to show exactly taw
their children are progressing/tin
class.
Mrs. Lyle Swain, education chairman of the B. C. Parent-Teacfler
Federation, said Friday 8001) of 7000
questionaires returned by parent!
asked that A, B, C, D, E markings
be used in report'cards in all grades
above three.   .
She said the questionaires, prepared by the federation and forwarded to the department pf education, show that parents are fairly
well satisfied with secondary school
report cards. However, they want
grades four, five and six brought
into line. -j
The parents also want report
cards to show achievement apart
from ability. 1
Ogama   ._ _
OLeary ._.,_	
Osisko ' ...;i	
Fartiour .'. :..:...
Paymaster   	
Pickle Crop       136
Pioneer           2.15
Placer Devel    —    31 00
Powell Rouyn  70
Preston E D      6.40
Quebec Lab  — 10
Quebec Man    75
Quebec Nickel  —     1-31
Queenston      22
Quemont    21.75
Radiore     _ -       .90   .
Raycock  _. 86
Reeves Mac -     1-41
Roche L L  : 42
San Antonio  __ _    2.05
Shawkley ._         12%
Sherritt Gordon     4.95
Sigma M ._      5.30
Silvermiller       105
Silanco ...._ _ 13%
Siscoe  — 42
Stadacona    34
Steep Rock  „     7.80
Sudbury Cont   41%
Surf Inlet       .11
Sylvanite       1.74
Teck Hughes           4.40
Thompson-Lund  _ 20
Torbrit       1.36
Trans Cont Res  —      .40
Union Mining  28
Un(>ed Keno        7.10
Upper Canada  ,__ -.     1.24
Ventures   ...'    21 25
Vlcour            08%
Violamac  .. __ _     2.15
Waite Amulet     12,00
OIL8
Anglo Can           __  5.20
A P Consolidated  44
B A Oil  28.50
Calgary and Edmonton  14.50
Cdn Atlintic       6.25 .
Central Explorers   5,00
Chemical .Research   3.90
Commonwealth Pete   4.05
Decalta " .._      . .65
Del Rio              1.68
Federated Pete    4.00
Home               __  7.55
Imperial Oil  37 87%
"Inter Pete     v l 25.87%
Amerada Buys Oil  {'',
Rights in Sask.
REGINA (CP)r-Amerada Petro-.
leums of Calgary has been granted
oil development rights on nearly
300,000 acres of crown reserves near
Val Marie in southwestern Saskatchewan. Resources Minister J. H.
Brqckelbank announced Friday, i
The company paid $80,730 In Bonus bids for rights on three permit
blocks. The reserves are in Aillistdn
Basin. California Standard Oil Company paid $3952 for 98,818 acres In
the Yorkton area of east-central
Saskatchewan. . ■ *'
3
Metals Prices
NEW YORK (CP) - Spot prices:
Lead, N.Y., 15.
Zinc, East St. Louis,,llVi.
LONDON (CP)-The Rojjal All'
Force has donated £100 towards a
memorial window in a church at
ihe Hague, Holland, bombed, acci-)
dentally by RAF planes during the
Second World,War.
z
LAND li
' ROVER
The
Go
Anywhere
Vehicle
4-WHEEL DRIVE
8 forward speeds, 2 reverse; has 2 power takeoff points, power driver.'
capstan winch can be'
fitted at the front qr rear
Optional metal or canvas
hood. The world's most
versatile vehicle
•    •
PHONE 18
Phone  792-Y  Eveningi
NELSON
MACHINERY
Company Ltd.
'If it's Machinery  Vou Need
Consult Us First"
214 H-.ll St       Nelson, BC
Open SUNDAY
for GAS & OIL
NEW ond USED CAR SALES
Drop   In  or  Phone   1090 for a
Demonstration
PLYMOUTH - DODGE
A-l SPECIALS
1954 Plymouth Club Coup*
Low  Mileage. Air Conditioner.
1953 Plymouth Sector.
One Owner. 2-Tone Paint.
Very Clean. Good Rubber.',
1952 Dodge 2-Door
111" W.B. Immaculate Condition.
1950 Plymouth Sedan
Signal Lights, Air Conditioner,
1949 Plymouth 4-Door
Reconditioned.   Sun-Visor.
1947 Custom  Dodge 4-Door
Color: Black. In Good Shape.
1937 Plymouth Sedan       . ,
PEEBLES
GENERAL MOTORS   "
USED CARS
1949 Pontiac Sedan
. 2-Tone.   Sun-Visor,  Heater.,
1949 Chevrolet 2-Door
Custom Radio. A-l  Condition.
1948 Pontiac Coach J
.    Radio, Sun-Vi.or,  Heater. ,
1951  Pontiac Sedan* , .
Spotlight, Radio, Air Conditioner.
PEEBLES
FORD SPECIALS      ''
1949 Meteor 2-Door
New Paint. Clearance PrlM,
1949 Monarch 4-Door
Custom Radio,  Overdrive. t
1953 Meteor Tudor
One Owner. Low Mileage.
1939 Ford Fordor $97       i
PEEBLES
.\vujm
TRUCKS — TRUCKS
1953 International Vi-Ton
Low Mileage. Like New.
1952 Fargo '/j-Ton Express
Color: Blue. Heater and Defroster.
1947 International Vi-Ton,
1946 Chevrolet Pickup
1949 Fargo 2-Ton Flat Decjc
1951 Mercury Panel
1951 Mercury 3-Ton
•   Dump and  Hoist.
PEEBLES
Prompt Towing and Wrecker
Service. MODERN Equipment.
PHONE DAY or NIGHT 1090
Expert Service and  Body
Repairs.
Come in TODAY for a
FREE ESTIMATE
No Obligation.
PEEBLES
MOTORS
fCHM,SLE8.vPLYMO_UTK
FAP.G.Q
..._/__
■--'-■ ■'       ■    ■'■■^■■'.■■^'■■■>j^-^
i
_________________________________________________________
__________^__________________k
 -_" --
fb—NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 22, 1955
More
/ wim**mk^wi**mmmmmMm
TWm^^^W^''''11''     '
MANN-STYLE
Bargains
•" Hundreds of Cut-Out and Catering Books:
i Reg. 25c and 35e. NOW   14*
W 1955 Calendar Padi, Journals, Diaries:
Now Only    '/_ PRICE
Air Mail Writing Pads: Reg. 35c and 25c. Now .. 140
Table Napkins: 25c and 29c. Your for ...i. _ lie
. Odd Size Men's Woodbury Sets:  >/i PRICE
M Odd Sin Ladies' Woodbury Sets: .,..._ Vi PRICE
Pink Lilac Bubble Bath:
'/_ PRICE
News of the Day
RATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on
. request Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment
Dr.   Brock    (Chiropractor).
Union SL Phone 644-R.
318
' Try chicken in the cup at WAIT'S
NEWS DEPOT.
\ Fuller Brush Representative.
Don E. Sergent — Phone 1339.
Mid-Winter Clearance Sale
Continues at EBERLE'S
The traditional Valentine Gift ,
Fine Quality Chocolates.
GRAY'8 CHOCOLATES
Good selection of used occasional
chairs. Also one used rollaway bed.
HOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE
• MIRACLE INSULATION—We inn-late anything, blown or batted.
Phone 2091 or Box 69, Castlegar.
START 8AVI.NG
Investors'  Syndicate  of  Can. Ltd.
Jan S. M. Harts
R.R.I  -  Phone  289-X-S  —Nelson
Save January 28th for whist in the
W.I. hall at South Slocan. Proceeds
for Handicapped Children's Fund.
Grand Prize.
FLOWER8 FOR  EVERY
OCCASION
PHONE 187
GRIZZELLES'FLORISTS
Make   your   everyday   cleaning
easier with a Bissell carpet sweeper.
A few whisks over the carpet is all
that's needed. Two popular models.
HIPPERSON'S
RADIATORS
CLEANED A REPAIRED
-   RECORINO
Jim's Radiator Shop
610  FRONT  8T. PHONE  0.
J. A. C. LAUGHTON
OPTOMETRIST
VISUAL TRAlNlN*
Medical Arte Building
Suite 206 Phone 141
HAIGH
TRU-ART
Beauty Salon
Phono 82?
670 Baker Street
■<K
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
.-- "Distinctive Funeral Ssi-vlce"
__*    AMBULANCE SERVICE
r:;8JS Kootenay St        Phone 361
I
CAMPBELL, SHANICLAND
§ &co.
■:'   Chartered Accountants
676 Baker 8t . Phono 236
Auditors
Ymir
Dancing
EVERY
Saturday
Night
MICKEY McEWEN
And His Melody Makers
,   COME   AND   MEET   YOUR
FRIENDS IN YMIR
Dancing 9-1. — Admission 76c
Students Must Present Cards
BAHA'I WORLD  FAITH
Books available. Phone 387-X-2
Kirsch curtain rods, adjustable
round or flat; extensions to fit. Also
curtain cranes,' brass curtain rings,
curtain hooks, etc. HIPPERSON'S.
Hats and Handbags to clear at
Half-Price
ADRIAN   MILLINERY
269 BAKER ST.
Heavy   quality   satin   for   bedspreads,  cushions  and   comforters.
15 beautiful shades, 54". Yd. $1.59.
TAYLOR'8 DRY GOOD8
January Clearance of Jewellery
Stock - 1/3 Off
CUTLER'S JEWELLERY
611 BAKER 8T.
Just arrived — a new shipment
of unpainted furniture. We buy and
sell new and used furniture.
Home Furniture Exchange
Motors, radiators, steam-cleaned
High pressure Jenny Service
SHORTY'8   REPAIR   8HOP
714  BAKER   ST.
Wanted — Cottong rags, mutt be
olean and of good size. No wool
acoepted. Will pay 12c per Ib,
Nelson Dally News.
Whist drives will resume in Bles
sed Sacrament Hall, Fourth Street,
Fairview, Monday, Jan. 24 at 8:15.
Admission 50c. Refreshments.
The best tonic for "the Blues" . .
A Bouquet of Spring Flowers
from
COVENTRY'8 FLOWER SHOP
PHONE 962
NOW IN STOCK
1x3  and   1x4   C   and   better,  edge
grain coast fir flooring. Phone 1150.
NELSON   WOODWORKING   00,
'       273 Baker 8t
I.O.O.F.
Oddfellows installation Monday,
8 p.m.. Jan. 24. Rehearsal 7 p.m. All
members attend.
F.  H.   Lippingwell
D.D.G.M.
Mary Maxim Northland Sweater
Wool retains natural oil. For shower
resistant sweaters, use Mary Maxim wool, only 95c per 4-oz. skein.
Your authorized dealer is EBERLE'S
ON BAKER ST.
President A. R. Garrjj
B. (. Growers Depute hail roard fo
Secure Fire, Car Insurance Permit
KELOWNA, B, C. (CP)- British
Columbia' fruit growers, successful
with their hall insurance, may enter
the fire and automobile insurance
fields. . ,;    .
The prospects arose at the closing
session of the three-day conference
of the B. C. Fruit Growers Association. Delegates voted to. have the
hail board. endeavor to secure the
necessary power from the proving ture, be enacted by the federal gov-
cial legislature to permit the formation of a fire and automobile insurance company.
Earlier in the day, A. R. Garrish
was unanimously re-elected president of the association.
One change was made in the directorate of the B. C. Fruit Proces
sors, Ltd. Fred Stevens' of Rutland
replaced S. D. .Price of East Kelowna. On the B'CFGJA executive C.
J. McKenzie of' Summerland declined to run and was replaced by
Eric Tait. * ■
Delegates also pushed through a
resolution asking that a national
system of voluntary crop insurance
embracing all sections of agricul-
ernment.
Delegates also asked for federal
assistance to irradicate mice from
the orchards. Dr. T. H. Anstey of
the Summerland experimental farm
said his department, has "reached
the end of its tether" in combatting
the increase in mice.
FILTER FRY — Takes the spatter
out.of frying, catches grease, permits steam  to eschpe and  washes
NELSON SALES __ SERVICE LTD.
745-BAKER STREET
ViolaMac Nets
$325,000 Profit
;ViolaMac Mines Ltd. has announced the purchase of 1,00_;000
shares of Lake Cinch Mines Ltd.
and the formulation of plans for
the latter company to pursue a vigorous development program on its
uranium property in the Beaver-
lodge ' Lake district of Northern
Saskatchewan. ' The property lies
two miles Southwest of Uranium
City.
Arrangements are now-being completed to resume diamond drilling
on the Lake Cinch block of eight
claims where extensive drilling Indicated 56,000 tons of ore grading
0.283 per cent U308 ($41.03) per. ton
during the summers of 1951 to 1953.
Tonnage is contained in two separate zones, about 1200 feet apart.
These areas are known as the River
Zone an dthe Graphitic Zone.
The River Zone was originally exposed in surface trenches and later
cut in five diamond drill holes. This
Work indicated 22,800 tons grading
0.29 per cent over a length of 24fl
feet and to depth of 180 feet. Four
deeper holes permitted calculation
to 500-foot depth of an additional
35,000 tons averaging 0.08 per cent.
The Graphitic Zone was first located by drilling and tested for over
700-foot length to 250-foot depth.
Ore grade material, according to
'consulting geologist, Dr. J. W. Ambrose, appears to form two pods 100
feet or so in vertical dimension, 8.5
feet thick, and with a combined length of about 550 feet. Tonnage, after
10 per cent dilution, is estimated at
31,800 tons averaging 0.30 per cent
U308  ($48.50).
Lake Cinch, which has in excess
of $325,000 cash on hand, is planning to concentrate present drilling
on the Graphitic Zone although
other excellent ore chances are
known to exist on the property.
ViolaMac's main producing, mine
in British Columbia recorded the
second most profitable year in its
history in 1954, when the treatment
of high grade material aided in offsetting the effects of the reduced
world metal prices. Estimated net
profit of $325,000 last year compared with the record 1953 year of
"$358,000 when approximately 4500
tons more ore were mined and
milled.
Production grossed approximately
$1,374,452 from 22,705 tons of ore
-Shipped to the Western Exploration
plant for concentration (excluding
383 tons hand picked high grade
ore shipped to the smelter, in 1954.
This compared with production of
$1,427,135 from 26,911. tons niilled
and 336 tons of high grade shipped
direct to the smelter in" the freak
year of 1953.
With the close of the year 1954,
ViolaMac Mines (B. C.) Ltd., the
wholly-owned subsidiary former
ly operating the base metal mine
near Ne wDenver, is being wound
up so that In future all operations are being conducted by
ViolaMac  Mines  Ltd.
Try liquid Red Devil in your fuel
oil. Whether you use an oil heater,
furnace, or cook-stove, you will get
more heat and .Jess carbon, soot and
sludge when you add Red Devil to
the fuel oil.
HIPPERSON'S
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our many
friends and neighbors for their kind
expressions of sympathy and many
floral and spiritual tributes received in the bereavement of our father.
We also wish to express special
thanks to Dr. G. R. Barrett, nurses
of Kootenay Lake General Hospi
tal, the Fraternal. Order of Eagles
and Carmen's Union of America
Louis and John Aurelio,
Mrs. Mary Ross.
FAILED TO REPORT ACCIDENT
John J. Kazakoff of Shoreacres
pleaded guilty to failing to report
an accident to the nearest RCMP
station within 48 hours in provincial court Thursday. He was charged following an accident at Rock
Creek when his car was in collision
with another vehicle. About $150
damage was done the other vehicle.
Kazakoff was charged at Greenwood and the case was transferred
to Nelson.
Me was. fined $20 and costs by
I Stipendiary Magistrate William
Evans.
Hotelmen's Officer
To Visit Nelson
Three officers of the B. C. Hote-
men's Association will visit Nelson
Sunday for a special meeting with
members of the local Hotelmen's
Association. The government's new
liquor act as it applies to Nelson
public houses, will be discussed.
J. E. Bengert, presideiH; T. Ely,
secretary, and S. W. Smith, public
relations officer, B. C. Hotelmen's
Association, all of Vancouver, will
attend the meeting to be held in
Hume Hotel.
J fa, diLqkwcupL
No, 3, Southern Trans-Provincial
—Hope-Princeton two inches new
snow, plowed, aanded, carry chain's,,
Princeton-Osoyoos-Cascade g o o d,
sanding. Cascade - Rossland - Trail.
Cast)egar compact snow, sanding.
Castlegat; • Nelson - Balfour - Kootenay Bay. -. Crestpu. • Cranbropk. -.
Fe.rnie-Crow's Nest^ icy. sections,
sanding,
No. 3A Trall-Salmo — compact
snow, sanding. ..'..
' No. 6 — Nelway-Nelson-S o tfth
Slocan Icy sections, sanding. South
Slodan-Nakusp-Needles fair to good,
sanding where necessary. Needles-
Monashee good, plowed, sanding
and widening. Monashee-Vernon
fair, plowing and sanding, carry
chains. '
No. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Gol-
den—plowed, icy sections, sanded.
Banff-Winde'rmere — goodi plowed
and sanded. Nelson-Kaslo, Kaslo
New Denver, Kaslo-Lardeau, and
Lardeau-Gerrard—all fair to good.
French Postpone
African Debate
PARlfe (AP) — Premier Mendes-
France won a minor victory today
when the National Assembly voted
519 to 100 to postpone immediate
debate on North' African problems
and get back to work on the national budget
The premier had urged"" adoption
of the Work agenda drawn up. by
the steering committee, which put
completion of the budget ahead of
other business.
In return he promised there would
be a full debate on North African
questions 10 days <rom now. Dia*
cussion of the budget will take fill
next week.
Top Army Job for
Former UBC Student
OTTAWA (CP)—Lt.-Col. R. B.
McDougall, 40, of Vancouver, has
been appointed director of ogran-
ization at army headquarters, the
army .announced. He will hold the
acting rank of colonel in his new
post.
Col McDougall, a graduate of the
University of British Columbia and
the B C. law school, has served in
Tokyo as assistant adjutant-general
with the Canadian Far East military mission since 1953. He will return to take over the post, which
has been vacant for some time,
in mid-February.
NAME CPR OFFICIAL
VICE-PRESIDENT ARAM
CHICAGO - D. B. Wallace of
Montreal, assistant manager of the
Canadian Pacific Railway's department of public relations, was elected first vice-president of the Association of Railroad Advertising
Managers at their annual meeting
here.
The Association, whose membership includes advertising managers
and public relations heads of more
than 100 railroads in-Canada, the
United States and Mexico, elected
Alfred E. Greco, of the Pullman
Company, Chicago, as its president
for 1955.
DIDN'T KNOW LICENCE
TO DISTRIBUTE NEEDED
Case against C.J.E. Jackman, who
is charged with distributing a hockey hews paper without a licence,
was adjourned to January 24 in
city court Thursday while Magistrate William Brown considered the
evidence.
Jackman appeared in City Court
Thursday testifying he did not
know he needed a licence to dis
tribute a paper. He was charged
under a city bylaw for distributing
a hockey newspaper. The paper con
tained an editorial, advertising and
chance to enter a contest.
Other witnesses who have been
h,eard are Don Ure, assistant city
clerk who testified Jackipan didn't
take out a distributing licence, J.
W. Harris of a shoe store, Miss
Janette McDonald, clerk in a signs
shop and Mrs. Jane Bishop, a news
stand operator who testified Jack-
man had delivered hockey pamphlets at their place of business.
New Healing for Church of Redeemer;
Wardens Re-Elected al Annual Meet
Announcement that Ii new heating system will be Installed for
'Church of the Redeemer and its
parish hall, was made by Frank
Pennoyer, people's warden, at the
annual meeting, as he called for
Increased support for the church
and its endeavors.
Mr. Pennoyer waB again named
people's warden, and John Apple-
whaite, vicar's warden. Jack- Hors-
will was elected secretary, and
Stanley Morris, treasurer. Members
elected to tha1 church committee
were E. E. Hopwood, Thomas Halsey, Guy Mayo, Clarence Ward, John
Burgess, A. C. VanSacker, W. Mel-
neczuk, Norman Buckley, W. Ben-
Missing Eskimos
Return Safely
HALIFAX (CP) - RCAF Search
and Rescue reported here Friday
that nine Eskimos, who were adrift
in Hudson Bay for 16 days, returned safely to their villag^at Povung-
netuk,  Ont., late Thursday.
The nine men were hunting on
the ice when a section broke off
and carried them away from their
equipment. Three planes, from
Greenwood, N.S., Torbay, Nfld.,
and Goose Bay, Labrador, carried
out a search for the men.
At the completion of Thursday's
flights the air force announced they
had called off the search on the
advice of RCMP headquarters in
Ottawa.
It is almost certain that it will
be days before the story of their
survival is known in any detail.
The hunters will be questioned by
RCMP and then a" report will be
sent sotlth to civilization.
There is a possibility, too, that
the   Eskimos   will   make  light  of
their   adventure,  figuring'it  is  a
story  that  doesn't  rate telling  in
any great detail. No further information was available at RCAF headquarters and no more was expect-,
ed, now that the ______ are reported
____.
Moscow Recalls
3 Key Envoys   ,
LONDON (Reuters) — The Soviet government has recalled to Moscow for consultations its three key
ambassadors in the Western world
—those to the United States, Britain and France.
'Ttfe Soviet embassy here announced tonight that Jakob Malik
will fly to the Soviet capital Saturday.
Sergei Vinogradov, ambassador to
France, went back last weekend.
Georgi Zarubin left Washington
Thursday night for what he described as "routine consultations" in
Moscow.
The recall of the envoys gave
rise to speculation in diplomatic
quarters here that Vyacheslav Mo
lotov, Soviet foreign minister, might
be planning a policy reappraisal
Main target of Soviet diplomacy
in Europe has for months been to
defeat the Western plan to rearm
West Germany.
1954 Newsprint
Production Higher
MONTREAL (CP) — Canadian
newsprint production in 1954 -totalled 5,984,207 tons, a 4.6-per cent in
crease over the. 1953 production of
5,721,296 tons, it was announced.
Of last year's produtcion, 5,549,565
tons were exported and 420,896 tons
consumed domestically, compared
with 5,334,287 and 398,277 tons, re
spectively, in 1953.
Shipments to the United States—
the  biggest single  importer—were
CUT LUMBER FOR LESS
VANCOUVER (CP) — Lumber
mills on British Columbia's coast
will be cutting lumber this year
for considerably less money .than
they did in 1954.
L. L. G. Bentley, president- of
B.C. Lumber Manufacturers Association, says "there may be a more
outward appearance of favorable
market conditions than actually
Exists."
TORONTO (CP) — A milkman
was fined $200 or a month
in jail for bookmaking. Constable
Philip Humphries testified that he
bet a total of $9 with Robert Hagen,
39, and won $9.35. Quipped Magistrate Thomas Elmore: "You were
taking the cream of his business."
4,875,031 tons, against 4,861,372 the
B. K. Arlidge was crown counsel, previous year.
_..
HERE IS A GENERAL VIEW of one of the acts staged by Tokyo
firemen as they put on their annual "Diome Shikl," firemen's
festival, at the Imperial Palace Plaza in Tokyo.. Some 5000 firefighters and 109 fire engines, ladders and other pieces of equipment took part In the show, Acrobatlo acts of the firemen was the.
main event—Central Press Canadian,
Mine, Mill fo
Ask Hike In
Gold Subsidies
VANCOUVER (CP) — Demands
for a higher government subsidy
and a federal inquiry into the gold-
mihing industry were made in resolutions adopted at the annual con
vention here of the International
Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter
Workers (Ind.).
Increased' production and sale of
gold ' would provide Canada with
money to develop her own natural
resources, said regional director
Harvey Murphy.
A reduction in the present subsidy, i he continued, might force
closure  of  some  Canadian  mines.
"We don't want any more ghost
towns," Murphy added, "we. have
plenty of them in B. C. right now."
Rich Harvest in
Pacific Herring
PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. (CP)'—
A fleet of 40 seiners has made a
rich harvest of 10,000,000 pounds of
herring worth $150,000 in two days
of steady fishing.
About 50 packers were en route
to reduction plants Friday with
millions of herring caught In the
area of Kitkatla Pass, about 35
miles southwest of here, and Freeman Pass, nine miles from Kitkatla.
Fishing, considered the best this
season by British Columbia herring
fishermen, will continue until 2
p.m. PST today, when the area
will close for 48 hours by government regulation.
The rich run was discovered
Tuesday by the seiner Northisle
while on a scouting trip. Other
seiners rushed to the area as their
rabUos crackled the news.
A number of boats ran into
trouble as well as the large school
of herring. Numerous vessels reported snagging and tearing their
seine nets while fishing in the shallow water. A large seine is worth
up to $26,000, and repairs cost as
much as $3000.
PERMITS SECOND EXTEN8ION
VANCOUVER (CP)—The department of fisheries has authorized a
second extension of 10,000 tons in
the herring quota-for the middle
east coast subdivision of Vancouver
•Island.
A. J. Whjtmore, chief supervisor
of fisheries here, announced Friday
that the extension, if taken, will
become effective at 2 p.m. Sunday
in waters north* and west of Seymour Narrows. The area may be
closed again before the extended
quota, is reached for conservation
purposes, Mr. Whitmore said.
nett, D. R. Grahame and Robert
Foxall! The wardens will be delegates to the Synod, with Mr, Burgess and Mr. Hopwood as substitutes.
Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood,
serving his 23rd year as vicar and
his 30th year in the diocese, pointed
dut that the church is without wealthy supporters and does not receive legacies, but carries on only
by voluntary offerings of its people.
In outlining the position of the
parish and hopes for the future, he
said "our main concern is to serve
the parish and community and bear
witness to the need of t(ie church.
More support and more sacrifice
will help us to do this effectually."
Work of the 10 organizations within the church has increased with
the years, and 1954 was perhaps
the best on record.
Committee meetings were held
fairly regularly, and the spirit o.
co-operation and comradeship left
little to be desired. "In fact," Canon
Silverwood said, "it ls a veritable
miniature churchmen's club." The
number of members was increased
from 12 to 15.
He paid tribute to former treasurer Mr. Mayo, the new treasurer,
J. Payne, parish envelope secretary;
former secretary Mr. Halsey, Mr.
Horswlll, Mr. Buckley, Miss Barbara
Lea, the wardens and Mr. Burgess.
"The rumor that your vicar had
or was resigning has no foundation
in fact. I did on one occasion suggest to the late Bishop that perhaps
a change might be desirable. He did
not agree and would not accept a
resignation If tendered," Canon Silverwood told the meeting.
"I trust that with your continued
help, loyalty and co-operation I
shall be able to continue to,serve
you, which, of course,' is my only
concern."
A minute's silence was observed
in memory of Rt. Rev. F. P. Clark,
whose death occurred suddenly at
Cranbrook last month.
OIL FURNACE
Resting plans were reported by
Mr. Pennoyer. An oil furnace system is considered advisable for the
church.
He also read to the congregation
the vicar's proposal of holding a
"gift day" February 23. Some 200
or more people will be reached by
special letter.
Reports were presented by the
treasurer, Mrs. VanSacker and Mrs.
R. Taylor for the Service Clubs;
Mrs. E. S.ostrom for the Woman's
Auxiliary; Mrs. Grahame for the
Altar Guild, Mrs. Burgess for the
Sunday School and the Junior Auxiliary, Miss i Doreen Evans for the
Vancouver Appoints
New Port Manager
OTTAWA (CP) — Appointment
of B. D. L. Johnson as port man
ager of Vancouver harbor was announced Friday by the national harbors board
Mr. Johnson, 54, Is in the shipping business at Vancouver. He
succeeds A. E. McMaster, who is
retiring.
Mr. Johnson, a native of Vancouver, commanded navy ships dur.
ing the Second World War, serving for two years as senior officer
of an escort group.   •
Eskimo Kayak on
New Canadian Stamp
OTTAWA (CP)—An Eskimo in
a kayak will be depicted in a new
10-cent stamp to go on sale Feb.
21, the post office department an
nounced Thursday.
The stamp is being issued aa "t
tribute to the remarkable people
of our last frontier." It will be
brown.
Piokle Plant Planned
Canada Packers
By
CHILLIWACK, B. C. (CP) — Con
struction of a $25,000 pickle plant
by Canada Packers Ltd. at its existing operations at 540 South Surras road, will begin in the spring,
the  company  announced.
The plant will open up a new
market for cauliflower, cucumber
and onions.
Bean
Bag
JACKETS
For .
SKIERS
Just Arrived
New Nylon Sk! Jackets
Light, Warm, Repellant
ALSO
• TOW MITTS
• DOWNHILL  SUCKS
• SKI SOCKS
• SKI CAPS
at
EMORY'S
LIMITED
Girls' Auxiliary, Mr. Burgess for
the choir, Mr. Hopwood for the
bulletin, and the wardens.
The vicar was warmly commended for his work, his kindness and
his repopt
Have tha Job Dono Right
VIC GRAVES
LIMITED
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
OUR ELLISON BEST
VITA B. FLOUR
Gives Your Home-Made Baking
The Flavor You Like
Ask Your Grocer or Phone 233
ELLISON MILLING
A ELEVATOR C6. LTD.
Front St
Quick Relief From the
Discomforts of Colds
REXALL
COLD CAPSULES
60c
BRONCHIAL SYRUP
75e
HOT WATER   BOTTLES
All Prices
City Drag
Company
Your Rexall Pharmacy
BOX 460 PHONE 34
FOR THE
NELSON
HOCKEY CLUB-
ON EACH AND EVERY NEW AND USED CAR OR
TRUCK DEAL tor THE REMAINDER of THIS MONTH.
1954 PONTIAC  DELUXE SEDAN
Custom  heater,  fceat covers,  only 7000
miles, one owner. Rriced away down.
1953 PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN
Custom  heater, seat covers, one owner.
Very low mileage. Like new.
^^_____________________________-_______--B
1952 BUICK CUSTOM DELUXE
With Dynaflow; air conditioner, radio, seat
covers, directional signals, one owner.
Lovely condition." Priced right.
1951 PONTIAC DELUXE SEDAN POWER GLIDE
Custom heater, seat covers, one owner. City
driven. Immaculate condition.
1951 BUICK  DELUXE COACH
Custom air conditioner, custom radio, and
seat covers. Looks and runs like new.
Priced right.   '
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1950 PONTUC DELUXE SEDAN
Heater, radio, seat covers, one owner,'low
mileqge, like new.
1949 Pontiac Deluxe Sedan
Heater, seat covers.  Lovely condition.
Priced to clear. *
EVERY  UNIT WINTERED
NEW BUICKS, PONTIACS,
AND G.M.C. TRUCKS
FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Wiginton Motors
LTD.
2B1 Baker St.
238 Baker Street
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