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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nTAX FORMS TO UNTANGLE \"HERETOFORE\nRATHER COMPLICATED CALCULATIONS\"\nOTTAWA, Jap. 30 ,(*JP) -\n' lomt of (ht moit comforting\nwordi since Income tax WU\nnothing but a dirk twist In\nsomebody's mind fill upon Canadian tart today. Thoy won:\n\"For practically it por oent\nof tho taxpaylng public now (Income tax) forms dispense with\nsubstantially ill calculations Of\ntax.\"\nEliminated wero \"tho heretofore rather complicated calculation!.\" With that Revenue\nMinister McCann announced\nthat tha forms for 1MB Income\nwere being distributed acrosi\nCanada.    .\nThoy wera, he aaid, two In\nnumber. They would ba avail,\nabla at district inoomo tax of*\nficei and at poit' off leu within\nthi noxt few daya,\nTho flnt form, generally\nipeaklng, li for those making.,\nlon than $3000 and tha other _\nfor those making more than that\nFor the first category tho exact\ntax li ihown In a tabic Forttho\nothen tho tax li itated on ,a\nminimum cf a range of Income\nwith a Itated percentage of the\nIncome above the minimum\nrange to be added to the dollar\nititement contained In tha table.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMHIIIIIIIIII\n H\t\nArgue Occupation\nof Tax Fields\nBy D'ARC .  O'DONNELL\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Jan.' 30 (CP)\u2014Argument as to which Ux fieldi\n\u2022hould be occupied by the Federal Government and which by tho\nProvincial Government! wai reported tonight to have developed at\nmeetlnge of the Co-ordinating Committee of the Dominion-Provincial Conference.\nNova Scotia and New Brunswick were laid to have aiked the\nFederal Government to state flatly It would relinquish auch taxation\nfieldi aa gaiollne, parl-mutueli, electricity, amuiement and other\ntaxes which before the war were regarded aa Provincial.\nThe Dominion .authorities were\nlaid to have \"hedged\" about making such an undertaking and to\nhave indicated they want every\nfield of taxation the Federal Government now holds.\nDelegatei said it ***as hard to\nfudge whether any progreu wait\nbeing made, because, new fields\nwere explored constantly. One delegate aaid ho thought current discussions would extend ,'ihto next\nweek ond later there might be an\nadjournment until next Summer.\n\"The situation at one time looks\nbright for a comprqmise and at another time It Is dark,\" said one Pro-\nrlncial leader. \"To-?'?!'\u25a0N'\u2122\"'?\"5\nseemed to me utterly futile. AU the\nProvinces want to get back iome of\nthetr taxation fields, but some take\nl stronger stand than others. We\nlust cannot come to any agreement\nuntil the Dominion is prepared to\nleave some of those fields.\nNO COMMITMENT\nON INCREASE\nAnother Premier said the Dominion wu taking a cautious position.\nWhile Federil authorities had hinted they wera- prepared to increase\nthe per capita grant from the original offer of tri no definite commitment hed'T-een made.\nIt li know Premier Angui Macdonald 0. Nov* Seotla hu aiked\nconstitution rtvlilon so taxation\nrlghta of Federal and Provincial\nGovernment! would be clearly\n'ittlnti.\nVi Macdonald was uld to be-\nli\/ie the coMtltution glvei the Fed-\nJhl Government the right to enter\niny field of taxation, direct or in-\nlirect. He wanted assurances, if the\nProvincea a*repd P__[_2$_?.J_\nthe Domtoiott -acliuive rights on\npersonal Income,. corporation and\nInheritance tans, there would be\noo further .federal invasion of di-\nted taxation fields.\nPremier Maurice Duplessis of\nQuebec was understood to favor the\nOntario counter-proposals which\nluggested the Provinces share with\nthe Dominion income and corporation tax fields, but take over ex-\ntluilvely taxes on successions, gasoline, amusements and other direct\nlevies.\nHowever, Mr. Dupleuls hu told\ntonference newspapermen he still\nhu an \"open mind\" on the proposal! end counter-proposals.\nOne delegate said discussions\nwould be long-drawn. He pointed\nto the Dominion's offer to assume\nresponsibility for employable unemployed. While this proposal was\nfavored In industrial provinces It\nwas opposed by agricultural provinces. Tbe Federal offer did not\ncover aelf-employed persons such\nis farmers who might lose their\nlource of income.\nDenies Hess Hit\nApplication\nto Defend Himself\nNUERNBERG, Jan. 30 (Reuters)\n\u2014The War Crimes Tribunal today\ndenied Rudolf Hess his application\nto defend himself.\nThe court spent several days considering his application and ln announcing its decision it appointed\nDr. Otto Stahmer, counsellor for\nHerman Goering. to defend Hesa.\nPUN TO HAV! \"HAMS\"\nRIADY TO COOPERATE\nIN TIME OF EMERGENCY\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 30 (CP)-Plans\nfor a network of radio amateurs\nacrou Canada ln cooperation with\nthe R.CA.F. are under consideration,\nKeith Russell of Toronto, said here\ntoday.\nMr. Russell, former director of\nsignals at RC.A.F. Headquarters,\nOttawa, said the object is to have\na group.of operators trained In the\nuse of R.C.A.F. signals procedure\nwho would be able'to cooperate with\nthe air force in time of emergency.\nKen  Reynoldi\nSAYS DIEPPE\nAIDED D-DAY\nINVASION\nAchieved Object as\nReconnaissance in\nForce\u2014Williams\nNot Successful Raid\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (CP Cable) -\nOne development of the costly Canadian-led attack on Dieppe ln 1042\nwas the \"conception of floating harbors and the brilliant surprise landing on the open belches of Normandy,\" says Francll Williams, former British Controllir of news and\ncensorship.\nIn \"Press, Parliament and People,\" just publlihed, the man who\nli now public relation! adviser\nto Prima Minister Attlee, uyi:\n\"Knowledge essential to the Invaiion ind without which D-Day\nwould have been Impossible bad\nbeen acquired; practical experi.\nence of how difficult It would ba\nto capture a gnat harbor ana)\nestablish an Invasion bridgehead\nhid been gained,\"\nMr. Williams In hil official capacity attended meetings before ev-\n__iA^0l__y_u__mm__wL*_ttwl_sm\nLord Louli Mountbitten, then Chief\not the Commandos ind his planning\nstiff described the purposes of each\nattack.\nDESTRUCTION\nNOT OBJECT\nWith the benefit of this background, Mr. Williams makes the\nfollowing assessment:\n\"It wis by fir the largest ind\nlongest raid undertaken; t reconnaissance in force, the main purpose\nof which was to find out whit\nwould happen when \u2022 great port\nwas attacked.\"\n\"Iti object wu not so much the\ndestruction-of strongly-held enemy\nposition!, slthough it was hoped to\ndo that, but the acquiring of knowledge; knowledge of the extent of\nthe.Germin defences in the West,\nof how far lt was possible to bitter\ndown those defences by sei md\nair bombardment, on whether lt\nwaa possible to land on a heavily-\ndefended shore with Insufficient\nlarge tanks and guns to break\nthrough the shore positions and capture and hold a port large enough\nto be of use to an invading force,\nand whether the landing lnd other\ncraft designed by combined operations were suitable for their purpose in every respect.\nCASUALTIES HEAVIER\nTHAN  FEARED\n\"In the result\/ casualties were\nheavier than had been feared, particularly among the Canadian troops\nof whom there were 3350 kHIe*.\nwounded or missing out of a total\n5,000 employed.\n\"Defences of the port were found\nto be of so formidable a character\nthat IWwas impossible for the tanks\nwhich were landed to break\nthrough them ln force and capture\nthe town.\n\"Although some of the lecondary objectives, notably thi provoking of the Luftwaffe to battle\nIn which vary heavy loiiei wire\nInflicted upon It, wan achieved,\nthe raid, regarded as a raid, wu\n.not successful.\n\"But as a raconnaluanoa In\nforce It had achieved Iti object.\"\nrUlSON,  1RITI8H COLUMBIA.  CANADA-THURSDAY   MORNINQ,  JAN.  81.  194)\nNUMBER MS\nFamed Schooner Blue note Goes Down Off Haiti Coast\n\"I think I can locate your\nwatch\u2014offering any reward for\nIt In tho  Now: Wont Ads?\"\nAPPROVE MEMORIAL\nAT UNIVERSITY\nVANCOUVER. Jan. 30 fCP) -\nApproval of ptam to construct a\npermanent building at tho University of British Columbia r.i a war\nmemorial was Riven todav iy the\nBoard of Governors. Dr, N. A. M.\nMackenzie, President, announced tonight.\nTWOTHOUSAND,\nFIVE HUNDRED\nWHITE MICH TO DIE\nNEW YORK, Jan. 30 (API-Two\nthousand, five hundred white mice\nare doomed to die becauie nobody\nwant! them enough to piy the price.\nThey belong to the City of New\nYork and were kept for anti-toxin\npneumonia teits until sulfa drugs\ncame along and rendered their services unnecessary. The health department ordered their execution\nbecause only one bid, deemed Insufficient, wu made when the mice\nwere offered for public sale\nTAMPA, Fla, Jan. 90 (CP)\u2014Thi famid schooner Bluenose, once\na crack Canadian racing veaiel, hee been loit off the coait of Haiti, hir\nownen were notified today. \u25a0_\nQeorge F. Mllllkin said hi wai notified the veuel struck e reef\nMonday and sank Tueiday. Her crew ef eight wu rucued.\nBuilt In Nova Scotia In 1021, thl two-master wu uied flnt is a\nrailng veuel In International competftlon. She held many racing recordi and defeated thi best Maritime! and New England rivals.\nThe ship's likeness appears on the Canadian dime and the Canadian M-cent stamp.\nThe    Intercontinental    Shipping   Corporation    converted   thl\nschooner Into \u2022 cargo ihlp during the war end the was used In trade\nbetween South and Central American porta and Tampa.\nThe Bluenose, then pride of the Nova Scotia fishing fleet, In October, 1938, successfully defended thi title and International Fisherman!' trophy, which ihe hu held with the exception of one year\n\u2022Ince 1921, In the 1938 but of five series agalnit the Gertrude L. Thebaud, American challenger.\nIn 1123, the trophy wai held Jointly by the Bluenose and the\nColumbia of Gloucester. The Bluenose after winning the first of the\n1923 series, was disqualified for cutting a buoy In the sscond race and\nwas withdrawn from the race.\nNew High in\nLumber Oui\nWINNIPIO, Jin. 80 (CP) -\nD, D, Rosenberry cf Ottiwa, Federal Timber Controller, told the\nannual convention of the Weitern\nRetell Lumbermen's Aiioclitlon\nhere today Indications wen lumber 'production In Cinada would\nreach a new high In 1941,\nIn addition, the estimated 400,-\n000,000 to 500,000,000 feet used\neich wir year directly or Indirectly for war purposes would be diverted te civilian use end Iwi\nlumber would be exported than\nfer years.\nDespite thli, he warned, short-\nige of many lumber Items .probably would contlnui because of\nthe heavy demand.\nIt wu neceuary te retain lumber controli becauie otherwise a\nmajor portion of thi Canadian\noutput would go to export market! which wire paying a higher\nprice then obtainable in Canada.\nAt the aame time the export demand for Canadian lurfiber wai extraordinarily high and lumber wss\none of Canada'i major exports. Both\nthe domestic consumer and the export market had to be protected and\nthli could beit be done by controli.\nDelegate! from Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta are attending\nthe two-day meeting.\nToday Deadline\non Free\nTravel fo Jobs\nSkipper, Who Raced and Won With Bluenose,\nand Saved Her From\nAuction Block, Takes Loss Philosophically\n_^ronWBTOG,:N.S, Jen. 80 (CP)\n\u25a0^Jw^^^S^^Mruthltig\nBluenose when lhe sailed and won\nfive international fishermen's\nschooner race series against Gloucester schooners, tonight accepted\nthe news the big fisherman had been\nwrecked off Haiti philosophically.\nShe wu launched ln 1S21 and\nitood up remarkably under con-\nitant hard uae, her former skipper\nlaid u hi took time out front a\ncurling match to receive word the\nLunenburg-bullt vessel wu gone.\nAlthough ihe wu never defected\nln championship contests, the Blue-\nnote wu edged out by her bitterest\nrival the Gertrude ______ Thebaud, ln\nan exhibition serlei In 1930.\nThe Bluenose wai aold to the\nWeit Indiei Tra*ng Company Ltd.\nof Halifax ln 194] and operated between West Indian Islands and United States uprts with freight cargoes.\nHer rival, the Thebaud, had Joined\nher in thii trade a year or two later.\nThe Bluenoae was a racer and a\nwork-horse, sailing to the Grand\nBanks with the deep sea fleet when\nshe was not racing or being groomed\nfor a competition. She also wai\ntaken by her skipper, on exhibition\ntours to England and Toronto.\nThe schooner had englnei put In\nher hull in 1936, end had them.tak-tn \u00bb   \u2022 \u2022-,\nout again for the International races \u25a0\"\ntwo yeatl later.\n\"MELLtR DRAMA\"\nThe enginu were placed back in\nthe veuel, and Capt. Walters said\nthey have been there ever since,\nserving her well.\nIn 1939, Capt. Walters dug down\ninto hii own pocket and handed\n$7,000 over to the Sheriff one hour\nbefore the Queen of the Atlantic\nFleet was to go on the auction block\nfor money claimed for the installation of diesel engine! three years\npreviously.\n\"I wu the only one to come to the\nrescue,\" Capt. Walter! said at the\ntime.\nA algnal honor was paid to the\nfamed fishing schooner when a 50-\ncent Canadian stamp was issued in\n1930-31 with two pictures of the.\nBluenose on lt. One picture showed\nher broadside on, under full sails\nwith one rail under water and lhe\nother was a head-on view. The dull\nblue stamp, considered at the time\none of the most beautiful stamps\never printed, was listed by philatelists at tl.50.\nThe Canadian 10-cent piece also\nhas a picture of the Bluenose on it\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP)\nNational Employment Sirvlce of\nflclali hare said\nchance for displaced\nend ex-urvlcemen te obtain free\ntransportation te former homu or\nto point! offering prospect of employment falli tomorrow.\nTha Federil Department of Labor order, released Dec. 3, wai\nprovided to eniure transportation\nfor displaced warworkers, ex-\n\u2022ervlcemert and otheri unable to\nfind work In Vancouver or Victoria, who deilred to return to\nformer homei or when \"there li\na reaionable prospect of obtaining\nwork.\"\nMore than 1400 parsons Hive\ntaken advantage of the offer.\nMeanwhile Job vacancin In\nB.C. have taken a drop since lut\nweek.\nMale vacanolu for thi week\nindad Jan, 24, total 4924, a de\neraaie of 38f> over the prevloui\nweek. Female vacanolu itand\nat 1714.\nWife Sure A.W.L.\nHubby-Soldier\nShell Shock Victim\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP) -\nMri. M. V. Smillie, wife of Pte. Mc\nKelvoy Smillie, uld here today she\nis quite certain the reason her husband went AWL for 430 days In\nItaly was due to shell shock and\ntoss of memory.\nReports from Alton. Hampshire,\nEngland, said Pte. Smillie told psy-\nthiatrists at a court-martial that he\nwent AWL to remain faithful lo his\nwife.\nVANCOUVER\nWEATHER FOILS\nWEATHERMAN\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP) -\nVancouver's weatherman Is having hla -troubles.\nSnow which started falling\nhere around 9 a.m. today stopped\nat 2 p.m. At that time, the weatherman said It would clear up and\nbe clear and colder tonight,\nSo It snowed again between 4\np.m. and 6 p.m., then was follow\ned by a heavy rain.\nDoctor, Nurse\nOWN RIFT\nUNO Decision\nFollows 4-Hour\nHeated Debate\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (CP) \u2014 In its first major action, th*\nUnited Nations Security Council agreed unanimously tonight\nto permit Russia and Iran to settle their dispute by direct negotiation but reserved the right to request information on th*\nprogress of their negotiations at any time.\nThe decision climaxed a four-hour debate, sometimes\nheated. Andrei Vishinsky, Soviet Foreign Vice-Commisar,\npounded the table at times. Foreign Secretary of Britain charged that Russia had conducted^ \u2014\u2014 ,\nwhat \"looked to us like a war m llll |\\ 11II tj 1 If\nBE NAMED TO\nWORLD COURT\nFORT ST. JOHN, B.C., Jan. SO\n(CP) \u2014 A doctor and a public\nhealth nurie were battling mountainous snowdlfti tonight aa they\ntought to reach Rose Prairie\nwhere one child Is dead and others\nare known to be III from what la\nbelieved to be diphtheria. They\nare travelling on a horse-drawn\nsleigh.\nKay Marshall, two, died, while\nher father and neighbors using\n-a-slx-horse team battled drlfti on\nthe 25-mile trip to Fort St. John\nIn the Northeastern corner of\nBritish Columbia. The team finally got through with six-year-old\nJimmy   Marshall,  Kay's  brother.\nDr. Qeorge McCormack ot Fort\nSt. John said he la not sure of\nthe child's Illness but the boy le\na \"diphtheria suspect.\" The lad\nis reported to be doing well In\nhospital tonight.\nOn the mercy trip to Rose Prairie are Dr. G. H. Kearney and\nNurse Gladys Skinner, They are\ncarrying anti-diphtheria toxin and\nother medical supplies. They have\nskis for use If the sleigh cannot\nget through.\nA special meeting of the Fort\nSt. John Board cf Trade has been\ncalled to frame a proteit to the\nBritish Columbia Government\nurging Immediate action to keep\nside roadi leading to the Alaska\nHighway open.\nUS. OFFICERS' FAMILIES\nMAY.GO OVERSEAS\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (AP). \u2014\nThe United States Army announced\ntoday the families of officers and\nhigh-ranking non-commissioned officers would soon be able to join\nthem overseas. Families of men of\nlower ranks will have to wait indefinitely.\nof nerves   in the Iran case.\nLater, ai the attempti to reach an\nagreement progressed, M. Vlahln-\nsky became conciliatory and Mr.\nBevln assumed a calm but direct\nattitude on the controversial issue.\nThus tha big poweri threw off\nthe cloak of secret diplomacy and\ntackled their problem*\u2014and.thoie\nOf smaller countries\u2014In the open,\nM. Vishinsky argued that the\nquestion could be kept on the\nagenda only if the council believed\nthe dispute endangered international\npeace and security and this, he declared, It does not do.\n\"The caie is empty,\" he argued.\n\"It Ls a manifestation of distrust,\nthe same distrust which has prevented cordial relations among all\nnations.\" _\nS. H. Taqtzedeh, chief Iranian\ndelegate, supported by Mr. Bevin\nand Edward R. Stettinius of the\nUnited States, argued that the coun\ncil should retain jurisdiction.\n\"It will not hurt the Soviet Union\nif lt is on the agenda,\" M. Taqijadeh\nsaid, \"and it may harm us if lt is\nnttf.\"\nBut as debate developed It became\nobvious that the council members\nwere agreed thlt Russia and Iran\nshould be allowed to iron out their\ndifferences directly. Th-, Netherlands,* CBB-FWtoSnrarwiiafHfc\nacquiesced ln that\nThere were times during the discussion when Messrs. Bevin, Vishinsky and Stettinius conferred,\nworking over draft of resolutions\nto bring about an agreement At\ntimes the good-humored remarks of\nMr. Bevin brought a laugh from M.\nVishinsky.\nIran's charge that Soviet troops\nln Northern Iran Interfered in the\ninternal affairs of the country by\npreventing Iranian forces from suppressing an uprising in Azerbaijan\nprovince was referred to by M.\nVishinsky during the debate.\n\"REACTIONARY CtAIMJ\"\nHe said \"reactionary elements\"\nmight claim the events in Azerbaijan were a \"consequence of the\npresence of Soviet troops\" but that\nthe trouble actually arose from\nwhat he said was \"the wish of the\nnative population to attain autonomy.\"\nM. Vishinsky said Russia \"will not\nallow any bloodshed in this area on\ninsufficient grounds.\nMr. Bevln stated that \"on Vi-shln-\nsky's admission,' 'the Iranian troops\nwere stopped by order of the Soviet\nHigh Command.\n\"If they were stopped, they (the\nRussians) Infringed the treaty (the\nRussian - Iranian - British treaty of\n1942 covering British and Soviet\nforces in Iran),\" Mr. Bevin added.\n\"That ls clear. What is there to\nnegotiate about?\"\nSSS Scientists to Probe Arctic Wealth\nHIGHER FARES POSSIBLE\nFOI VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 10 (CP)-Dli-\ncusioni wert under way today between City Council and Britiih Columbia tltctrle Railway officials,\nwhich may load to higher street\ncar fares for Vancouvar.\nBy JACK   BRAYI.EY\nCanadian  Prtu Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Jan. SO (CP) -\nScientist! havt itarted Investigations timed at disclosing th* untold wealth In vast uninhibited\nNorthern wastes, eliminating the\nscratch and buu of Aurora Bore-\nll|l In radio., Improving navigation and generally Increasing\nman's knowledge.\nFint step taken by tht newly-\ncreited Arctic institute of North\nAmerica\u2014tstabllshtd through In-\nternltlonil cooperation by Cinada, United Statu, Newfound-\nlind md Denmark, but oonducttd\nts t private organisation \u2014 hai\nbttn tht offtr ef two $1500 fellowships for Arctic tcltntlfle itudy.\nThis Is a itart In wiving the secrets of the Arctic and building a\nstorehouse of information on every\naspect of that great silent area\nwhich can be used for both commercial and military purposes.\nASSOCIATI  ON\nMUSKOX  TREK\nAn official hu declared, however.\nIt li coincidence, rather than ilg-\nnlficinct that one of the board of\ngovernors of the Institute Is Lt>Col. i government bureaus, but will work\nJ. T. Wilson, leader of the forth-' closely with international scientific\ncoming army Muskox operation ; expeditions and surveys that may be\nwhich will trek through 3200 miles conducted extensively in the future,\nof Canada's sub-Arctic. j    No  nationality  restrictions  have\n\"The military aspect of our work ' hf on piaccci on the fellowships\nIs only Incidental and It might in-; which will permlt ,U|dy o( , w|ae\nlerest you to know that we hope' \u201e\u201e%_ o( Arrtic objects from bl-\nto arrange a comprehensive ex- \u201eiogy t0 meteorology,\nchange of Information with other; In general the Institute will act as\nn Ar_.c!__ Tl\" coordinating centre in North America for scientific research in con-\nBy ROSS MUNRO   '\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (CP Cable)\u2014\nCanada missed out by dim margin*\nln two big United Natloni appointments but it appears now that John\nRead, legal authority in tile External Affalri Department and \u2022\nmember of the Canadian delegation\nto the General Assembly, stands a\ngood chance of being named ai a\njudge on the International Court at\nJustice.\nThe gray-haired, 57-year-old native of Halifax is Canada's Ibn*\nnominee for the 15-member court\nwhich ls an organ of the new worlfl\norganization. There are 75 nominations from other countries to tb*\ncourt, which probably will be set\nup shortly.\nMr. Read has a broad knowledge '\nof international law and Canadian\nconstitutional problems. In varioui\ncommittees he exercises considerable influence in legal matteri it\ntheprestnt-aSsemwy meeting.\nI In lobby talk he la boosted at *\nprobable member of the court and\nit is understood delegates from th*\nother dominions are meeting with\nthe Canadian delegation in an endeavor to aid his appointment\nUnited Nations authorities ar*\ncautious now about forecasting such\nappointments with any certainty\nfor twice Canada failed to obtain\nwhat appeared to be likely appointments\u2014on the Security Council and when the council agreed to\nsupport Trygve Lie, Norwegian\nForeign Minister, rather than L. B.\nPearson, Canadian Ambassador ia\nWashington, as secretary-general.\nIt is felt, however, that the fact\na Canadian was not favored by th*\ncouncil as secretary-general increases the chances of Mr. Read\nbecoming a judge of the international tribunal.\nSo far the only big jobs Canada\nhas received ln the United Nation*\nare membership in the Economic\nand Social Council and in the Atomic Energy Commission.\nWhile the Canadian delegatea did\nnot appear to do much if any lobbying for Mr. Pearson, considering It\nwiser to let his case stand on merits,\nthey were disappointed a Canadian\ndid not get this No. 1 post-war Job.\nMr. Read's appointment to the International Court of Juitlce is the\nnext hope.\nPOLICE NAB\nSUSPECTS AFTER\n80-M.P.H. CHASE\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP)-An\n80-mlle an hour police chaae landed\ntwo suspects in Jail here today after\nsafecrackers blew the safe at Western Air Command and escaped with\n$1700.\nPolice said the $1700 is missing\nand that a thircrman Is believed to\nhave participated in the robbery.\nThis is pay-day at RC.A.F. Headquarters at Jericho Beach, and Police believed a large vault which\nbalked the safe-crackers, contained\nabout $10,000, however, air force\nofficials would not reveal the\namount.\nThe two men were captured after\nI a wild chase across the city and are\nbeing held for questioning In connection with the case.\nsearch such as Ruula, which al\nready hil made extensive studies\nIn this area.*' he added.\nEstablishment nf the institute was\napproved tn bills before the last\nsession of parliament and Congress.\nHeadquarters were set up in Montreal where Lincoln Washburn, 84-\nyear-old Yale geologist from Hanover, N.H , presides as director. Dr.\nL. M. Gould, president of Carltton\nCollege, Northfield. Minn-, second-\nin-command of the last Byrd expedition to the Sout'-i Pole, recently\nlucceeded Dr. Charles Camsell,\ndeputy minister of tha Canadian Department of Mines and Resources.\nCOORDINATING CINTRI\nTha Institute plani to leave practical work, such ai establishment of\nweather and geological stations to\nnection   with   the  Arctic  and   sub-\nArctic regions.\nScientists hope the practical application of this program eventually will see the Arctic opened to\nyear-round regular transport and\nco-incident development of mineral deposits. Study of the effect\nof the disruptive but colorful\nNorthern Lighti on radio communications may have far reaching effects on reducing noise and\nInterference on regular commercial radio networks.\nInvestigations of magnetic conditions at the magnetic North Pole\nand a study of atmospherics likely\nwill result ln Improving both\nPolar and world navigation conditions and facilities.\nNo Cut in Butter\nRation, February\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30 (CR) - A\nPrices Board spokesman, said today \"there definitely will be no\nreduction In the Canadian butter\nration during February.\"\nHe made the statement when\nquestioned on reporta which said\nthat dua to a seasonal decline In\nf_rf.nn.rry butter production a\nfurther reduction In the ration\nmight be necessary. Soma reporti\ntald tha reduction might ba from\n\u2022fx to four ounoes a weak,\nTha iltuatlon la reviewed on a\nmonthly basil and rationing plani\nhave not been decided beyond\nFebruary, said the spokesman.\nSays Britain\nShould Pay Debt\nWith Bases\nALBANY, N.Y., Jan. SO (CD-\nCanada's Wartime Munitions Director-General, WllllSm T. Drysdale,\nsaid tonight Britain should pay her\n.debt to the United States ln Western-Hemisphere bases or by iny\nother \"mutually satisfactory\" settlement\nSpeaking as \"a private citizen,\"\nhe said the \"grim spectre\" of debt\nforgiveness must not arise \"in thtj\nnew age of Infinite threats and\ndangers\" as It \"so unhappily arose\nafter the First World War.\"\nIn a speech to the Albany County\nHistorical Society. Mr. Drysdalq also urged closer economic and educational liaison between Canada and\nthe United States .\nBritain's obligations to the United\nStates arc and remain debts, \"until\nthey are fully acknowledged and\nliquidated.\" he said.\n'Contractual arrangements for\npayment could be either by permanent cession or by leases of\nlengthened tenure of present or different lands ln or contiguous to th\u00ab\nWaters of the Western Hemisphere;\nand\u2014or by such (.ther media of Installment payments as are mutually\nsatisfactory.\"\nThe Weather\nTemperatures-\nsnow\u2014trace.\nForecast: Kootenay\ngenerally lair and cold.\nMin. 109, Max, \u00bb;\nLight winds,\n\"\u25a0***---   '\n_______\t\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1946\n; \u25a0 \u2022_.   ft!\nin woody, Williamson, Jcoll Are\n| Trophy Winners al Forks 'Spiel;\nAllen or McDonald, Consolation\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Jm. 80\u2014\nW. R. Dunwoody of Nelson defetted\nSandy McLtrtn of Trill to capture\nthe Btrnei competition ln the final\nday's play of the Sunshine Valley\nBonspiel which concluded here tonight. Mr. McLaren, who was also\ntn the finals of the Merchants competition, defaulted his final game\nIn thtt event to give Tommy Williamson of Grand Forki first place\n1 thtt event.\nIn the last open event final, P.\nfcott of Grand Forks, late at night\nnosed out his club mate, Leo Mills\n1-t to win the Grand Forki Cup.\nThe day's results:\nFinal In the Consolation, between\nJ. B. McDonald, Orand Forks, and\nJ. H. Allen, Nelson, thc last game\nof the 'spiel, began at 11 p.m.\nMERCHANTS\nRound It-\nSandy McLaren, Trail 14, W. J.\nPearson, Grand Forks, 4.\nSemi-finals-\nSandy   McLaren,  Trail,   10,   Leo\nMills. Grind Forks 8.\nTommy Williamson, Orand Forks\nT, H. C. Clark, Grand Forks, 6.\nFinals\u2014\nMcLaren defaulted to Williamson\nORAND FORK8 CUP\nSemi-finals-\nSandy   McLaren,   Trail,   8.   Leo\nMills, Grand Forks 10.\nP.   Scott,   Grand   Forks   12,   Pat\nFraser, Osoyoos, 6.\nrinal-\nP. Scott, Grand Forki 7, Leo Mills,\nOrand Forki 8.\nBARNES\nSemi-finals\u2014\nJ. Wright, Rossland. 7, W. R. Dun-\ntvoody, Nelson, 8.\nPat Frtser, Osoyoos, 8, Sindy\nMcLaren, Trtil, 10.\nFlntl-\nDunwoody 11, McLaren 10.\nCONSOLATION\nRound 1\u2014\nC. A. S. Atwood, Grand Forks, 10,\nH. Henderson, Grand Forks 4.\nJ. C. McCalg, Grand Forks, 8, J.\nH. Allen, Nelion, 8.\nA. Downey, Grand Forks, 5, C. W.\nClark, Grand Forks, 9.\nJ. B. McDonald. Grand Forks, 10,\nW. Liddicoat, Grand Forks, 7.\nG. McMynn, Midway, 11, W. J.\nPearion, Grand Forks, 4.\nRound 2\u2014\nD. Topping, Osoyoos, 7, C. A. S.\nAtwood, 8.\nJ. H. Allen, Nelson, 8, C. W. Clark,\nGrand Forks, 4.\nJ. B. McDonald, Grand Forks, 7,\nG. McMynn. Midway, 5.\nH. C. Clark, Grand Forks, 6, Pat\nFraser, Osoyoos, 8.\nSemi-finals\u2014\nJ. B. McDonald, Grand Forks 9,\nPat Fraser, Osoyoos, 7.\nJ. H. Allen, Nelson. 9, C. A. S.\nI Atwood, Grand Forks, 8.\nLouis Wowner,\nNelson Resident\n40 Years, Passes\nLouis Wowner, 808 Front Street,\nwho has been a resident of B. C\nfor the past 40 years, died in Kooteniy Lake General Hospital, Tuesday night at the age of 79, after a\nlengthy illness.\nFor the past 30 years Mr. Wowner\nhai lived in Nelson. Born in Rus-\nlit, he was single and had no\ninown relatives.\nToast-Tea\nIi there after all, any solace\ntnd consolation in Language?\nIt ll Logan Pearsall Smith who\nukl the question in All Trivia,\nend he continues \"Wh:en I am\ndisconcerted by thc unpleasing\ntspects of existence, when to\nme, ti to Hamlet, this earth\nseems a sterile promontory, it\nll not ln Metaphysics nor in Religion that I seek for reassur-\nince, but In fine phrases. The\nthought of gazing on life's Evening Star makes of ugly old age\n\u2022 t pleulng prospect; if I call\nDeath mighty and unpersuad-\ned, it has no terrors for me;\nI am perfectly content to be cut\ndown like a flower, to flee as a\nihtdow, to be swallowed like a\nIt-Owflake on the sea. These si-\nmilei soothe and effectually\nconsole me. I am sad only at the\nthought that Words must perish\nlike all living things; that the\nmost perfect Metaphors must\nbe forgotten when the human\nrt-- is dust.\"\nCOOIERHAM'WORTS\nLimited\n' TORONTO. ONTARIO\nHEADACHES\nBlindinr Min, cm*\n\u2022Unt t-iro..binj un\nmtk* lift 1 inii-rr)-.\nMtnyhmUchwnuyi\nht umad by the f\u00bbil -\nun ol the kidneys te\np\u00abrfonn their nomul\nduty at 6kerinf pet-\n\u2022onoui -rates tnd excess sods from the\nfailed. II kklrwy i fail tnd poisons remain in\nthe ij-stim, hesdsches, hscksche, rliru-\nmific pains, -disturbed rest miy often follow. Dodd's Kidney Pilli help your kidneys\n(lrirouttroiihlr-niikinjpoiionnndrirrn\n\u25a0cids se thst you feet b\u00abtfer\u2014real better\u2014\nwork  belter.   Gtt Dtddl  today.      141\nExpress Opposing\nViews on\nGov't Building\nWINNIPEG, Jn 30 (CP) - R. Jr\nGourley, President of Beaver Lumber Company of Winnipeg and D. D\nRosenberry, Federal Timber Controller, have different views on the\nsuccess of the Federal Government's\nhouse-building activities. Both addressed the Western Retail Lumbermen's Association convention here\ntoday.\n\"Private builders with no priorities, no special privileges, operating\nunder the most adverse conditions,\nhave done the only house-building\njob in the last year and their activities accounted for fully 90 per cent\nDf all new housing accommodation\nmade available in 1945,\" Mr. Gourley told the convention.\nSaid Mr. Rosenberry: \"It has\nbeen said that private Industry\ncould have provided low-rental\nhouses as rapidly as the Government could provide them. The fact\nremains that this was not done and\nmaterials were being used in fantastically large quantities in cities\nall over Canada for speculative\nbuilding. In those circumstances\nand in order to get immediate action, the Government undertook the\nconstruction of low-rental houses.\"\nSentenced to Hong\nEDMONTON, Jan. 30 (CP)\u2014Anton Zelman, 42-year-old farmer of\nthe Athabaska District, late today\nwas sentenced to hang at Fort Saskatchewan jail April 30 by Mr, Justice G, B. O'Connor after an Alberta\nSupreme Court jury, which recommended mercy, had convicted him\nof the murder of his employer, Ab-\nner Hingley, a native of Truro, N.S.,\nwhose charred body was found in\nhis burned farm home Oct. 18 last.\nTORIES FIGHT\nHARD BUT BILL\nPROGRESSES\nBy JAMES McCOOK\nCanadian Press Itaff Writer\nLONDON, Jan. 80 (CP Cable)-\nTha Label1 Government's bill to\nnationalize Britain's ooal Industry received second reading tonight In the House of Commoni\nafter a vigorous two-day debate.\nThe House endorsed the measure without a recorded vote after\nrejecting by a vote of 350 to 182 a\nConservative Party motion te\nthrow It out. The bill thus wat\nvirtually assured of final passage.\nThe Labor benches loudly cheered the result and William Gallagher,\nthe lone Communist member, shouted: \"Who owns the coal mlnea now?\"\nThe bill, which also provides\n\u00a3150,000,000 (about $675,000,000) to\nre-equip the mines and step up lagging production, Is a major plank\nin the Government's socialization\nplan.\nAn excited House heard an amiable Anthony Eden, acting Conservative Leader, stand up stoutly\nagainst the measure during the day.\nHerbert Morrison, Government\nLeader in the House, said the administration would send the measure to committee \"upstairs\", meaning that it would be discussed in a\ncommittee room of limited capacity.\nMr. Eden said the Government\nshould reconsider and added that\nalthough the opposition might be\nweak in numbers, it would do Its\nutmost to oppose the Government\nproposal.\nThis was taken to mean the Conservatives will fight the bill vigorously in the committee stage. Beyond that, Mr, Eden's attitude demonstrated that the Opposition does\nnot intend to cooperate with the\nGovernment in hastening through\nParliament the maas of legislation\nMr. Morrison hopes to see completed\nat the present session.\nMaj. Gwllym Lloyd George entered the debate amid cheers from\nthe Opposition benches and laughter\nfrom the Government side. Although a Liberal like his late father,\nhe supported the Conservatives in\nopposing the bill.\nFreighter Hits Mine\nBORDEAUX, France, Jan, 30 \u2014\n1 CAP)\u2014The American tanker Antie-\n; tarn, carrying 8000 tons of tar from\nj :he United States, struck a floating\n1 mine in Bordeaux harbor and sank\nI today. L'Agence Francaise de\n1 Prcsse said one crew member was\nkilled and two injured. The others\nwere rescued.\nDoes Your Stomach Rebel\nAfter the Meals You Eat?\nThe bloated, hravy feeling after meals; the empty,\n\u2022inking,gnawing Mure meal\/.; the belchinc nf gui and\n\\\\*W -ktulenry between Duals; the rising ami souring of\nI food, all theae, and more, fall to the lot of thoee suffering\nfrom atomarh trouble.\nBurdock Blood Hitters help* tn stimulate tho sluggish action of the\ndilative and intettinaJ ivstem hy promoting the flow of tne important gastric\njuice* ao Dere-swirv for the proper digestion of food.\nYou will finH when you tak* B, B. B. that digestion, ami miction and\nelimination are greatly improved by its tise.\nfc Ask at any drug counter for B. B. B.    Price $1.00 a hottl*\nTha T. Milburn Co , Litnit*d, Toronto, Ont.\nCanada lo\nExtend Overseas\nBroadcasting\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP) -\nCanadian short-wave radio broadcasts, already heard with great\npower and clarity in Britain and\nthroughout Europe, will be extended during the next year to South\nAmerica, Australia and South Africa, A. Davidson Dunton, Chairman\nof the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Board of Governors, announced here today.\n\"The present broadcasts can be\nheard in Britain and Europe better\nlhan any others from North America,\" he said. ''We are broadcasting\nto Canadian service personnel still\noverseas, to Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Czechoslovakia,\nand test transmissions to South America, And all those who listen get\nsome knowledge, some understanding of present-day Canada,\"\nMr. Dunton said the funds for the\nC.B.C.'s international short-wave\nservice do not come from listener's\nlicence fees but are separately provided by the Federal Government.\nThe 33-year-old head of Canada's\nnational radio outlined the growth\nand basic problems of the C.B.C,\nincluding the combination of scat-\nj tered population, vast distances and\n! five different time zones.\nI \"In the last fiscal year, the C.B.C.\nI carried 55,000 network programs.\nj Of these, 9500 were commercial, and\n45,500 were non-commercial. Of\nthese nnn-commercials, 3000 came\nfrom the United States, 3000 from\nBritain, nnd 39,000 were our own,\nproduced in Canada.\"\nMr. Dunton said he has never\nheard of any one program that\neveryone likes. '\"So it becomes a\nmatter of trying to build a live,\nshifting pattern of various colors,\nrelated as closely as can be Judged\nin number, and time, and to the\nvarying needs and tastes and alms\nof tiie Canadian public.\"\nHe invited the public to tell the\nC.B.C. frankiy and fully what it\ndoes and does not like to hear on thc\nair.\nBrisk competition inside Canada\nand from abroad, he declared,\nwould prevent the C.B.C. from ever\nbecoming \"stodgy,\" even if Unwanted to do so. \"I think the C.B.C, is\nmaking a very considerable contribution to tht: growing culture of\nCanada, and I don't mean culture\nthat is a tea-time subject for the\nfew, but the living expression of the\nminds of all the Canadian people.\"\nBELIEVE DOCTOR VICTIM\nOF HUNTING ACCIDENT\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP)-Dr,\nWesley Walsh, 33, was believed to\nhave been killed in a hunting accident yesterday in Queen Charlotte\nCity. Kelley Logging Co., which operates in thc area, said no details\nof the accident were available here.\nDr. Walsh was a graduate of University of British Columbia, and\nstudied medicine at University of\nAlberta.\nHART REPORTS        |\nPLANT USE TO\nBE RECONSIDERED\nVANCOUVER, Jin JO 'CD-Th-\nDaily Province ln a newipage atory\ntoday Mid Premier Hart, ln Ottawa attending the Dominion-Provincial Conference, reported that Reconitruction Miniiter Howe today\nagreed ,he question ol future occupancy of the Boeing Aircraft plant\non Sea liland would be submitted\nagain to the Cabinet for consideration\nPremier Hart laid Mr. Howe nad\npromlied to have the Executivo\nCouncii reconsider iti former stand\nthat the building ihould be uied by\nthe Canadian Army for storage pur-\npoiei.\nMr. Howe, explaining the Cabinet's previous decision, said the only definite proposal received from\nprivate industry had been an offer\nfrom a distillery which wanted the\nplant for storage ipace, \"and their\nproposition wai ridiculous.\" He added war Aiseti Corporation had received no other definite propositions\nfor the plant.\nIn Vancouver, Oeorge Murphy of\nPortland, Ore., spokesman for the\ngroup that wants the building for\nmaking plywood and pre-fabricated\nhouses, said he had placed full details of his proposals before the Regional Council of the Reconstruction\nDepartment.\nTHEY'VE GOT\nA DODO\nBY ARTHUR ED80N\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (AP)\u2014\nA nawly constructed dodo rooiti\nIn the 8mlthlonlan Institution today.\nAnd Smithsonian scientist!,\nevery bit as proud as Dame Dodo\nmust have been whin she laid the\negg more than two centuries ago,\nreckon It's the most complete dodo specimen In North America,\nIt's half real dodo (bonei, that\nli) and half imagination helped\nalong by careful reiearch Into\ndescription! written by early explorers.\nThe bird was put together once\nbefore, iome yeari ago, but the\nscientists found later that that\nwasn't what the dodo really looked like, at all.\nSo they tore the specimen down\nand began all over again. They\nthink they've got It right this\ntime.\nDr. H. Frledmann, of the Initl-\ntutlon's Bird Division, told a reporter today he doein't know why\nman has paid so much heed to the\nluckiest dodo.\nWhy, In North America alone,\nmore than 100 birds have become\nextinct In modern tlmei. Yet deei\nanyone say \"as dead as a passenger pigeon?\"\nNo, says Dr. Frledmann, It's always \"dead as a dodo.\"\nOriginally the expression wai\n\"as dumb ai a dodo.\" Actually, Dr.\nFrledmann declare!, It probably\nwas ai heavy a thinker as other\nblrdi.\nBut the awkward dodo, which\nlooked like a pigeon and wai 11\nhuiky ai a duck, had forgotten\nhow to fly. And it wai too heavy\nto run.\n\u25a0 ' \u25a0\u25a0'\u2022    \u2022\"\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0''-'\u25a0'.   '   .'\u2022'\"'\"i7* \u201e   '\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u2022'\u25a0    \".   ' \u25a0\u25a0 ...!?U.w.\"\nr , r .\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0   :\u25a0:' .   \u25a0 {:?t\nS i       i j.ij     ii     ll.   iimlji \u00bb'      i    \"  I '.\"I \u00bb      ,1', '.*\u25a0)\"   -II\nDominion Rubber\nDraws at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C., Jan. 29-Curling for\nthr- Dominion Rubber Trophy of\nlhe Trail Curling Club starts Thursday\nFollowing are the draws for the\nbalance of  the  week:\nThursday\u2014\n6:00 pm.:\nW. P. Robertson vs. H. A. McLar-\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C MUIR\nPhones: Nelion 77; Rossland 171\nSALMO\nConnections For:\nKASLO   -   CRISTON\nNAKUSP\nEDMONTON, Jan. 30 (CP) - In\nthe last four years almost 2,000,000\npounds of forage crop seed have\nbeen distributed to farmers under\nthe Alberta Agriculture Department's conservation of seed supplies\npolicy, it was announced today.\n! en\n1    W Rae vs. R. C. McGerrigle.\nj    T. H. Weldon vs. V. Vance\nV. E. Ferguson  vs. A.  D. Turn\nbull\n7:30 p.m:\n|    J. Leckie vs. E  L. Jones.\nI    R. Somerville, Jr, vs. C. D. Stu\nnrt.\nC. Strachan vs. T. J. Plester.\nH. Currie vs. A. E. Allison.\n|    9:00 p.m.:\nD. McLeod vs. S. Gray.\nJ. Bell  vs. A. C   Allison.\nD  Forrest vs. W. S. Ross.\n.1   Atwell vs   A. B. Clark.\nFriday\u2014\n6:00  p m_:\nT. A. Rice vs. G. G. Service.\nF. Strachan vs. J   Devito.\nT  Nixon vs. A. Crichton.\nI    H. Marshall vs. R. McGhie.\n!    7:30 p.m.:\nG. S. Ortner vs. J. D. Hartley.    \u25a0\nD.  McLennan   vs.  R.  Somerville\nSr\nA   W. McDonald vs. G. W. Weir I\nR  P. Dockerlll vs. R. Dunlop.\n9:00 p.m.:\nA. B. Ross vs  A  M Chesser.\nA   Robb vs   G. F. Reimann.\nW. L. Wood vs. T. D'Amour.\nII  II. Miller vs. W.Baldrey.\n',    Saturday:\n6:00 pm.:\nD. Wetmore vs. F  Wendel\nJ. A   E. Montpellier vs   H.\n.tt.\nD. MacDonald vs. M   M. Butor\nF. Willis vs. W. Carrie.\n7:30 p.m.:\nI-  F Mclntyre vs. F. Hudoklln\nA. 11. Woolf vs. F. J. Glover.\n9:00   pm:\nL. L. Fortin vs. A. G   Cheyne\nR  Stone vs. A. E. Calvert.\nW. H. Shepherd vs  R. E. Hill\n]    Winner   W.   P.   Robertsnn-H\nMcLaren  vs.  winner W.  Rae-R. C. |\nMcGerrigle.\nNEW G-M\nWAGE OFFER\n15,000 to Go Back to\nJobs as Minor\nDisputes Are Settled\nStrike Control Bill\nNEW YORK, Jan. 30 (API-General Motors tonight served notice It\nwas unwilling to renew any main-\ntenance-of-union-membership In a\nnew contrict and offered again a\ntemporary 13tt-centi-en-hour wage\nincrease \u2014 which union leaden\nspeedily rejected.\nThe offer and rejection ware top\ndevelopmenti ln i day which saw\nthe number of strike-idle ln the\nUnited Statei reduced by 19,000 to\na total ot 1,390,000 through settlement of a numbar of minor labor-\nmanagement disputes.\nThe corporation propoied the\nUnited Auto Workeri (C.I.O.) return to work it the mi-cent raise,\noriginally offered three monthi ago,\nduring new contract negotlatloni.\nIn breaking with the union regarding membership maintenance,\nGeneral Motori said a provision In\nthe old contract \"forced ui to dlicharge 1690 satisfactory employeei\non the union's demand becauie theie\nemployees were not willing to piy\ntheir union dues.\n\"We are unwilling to put any iuch\nprovision ln the new contract\"\nNO CONTRACT, NO\nNEW   OFFERS\nThe coporatlon served notice alio\nit had \"nothing further\" to offer ai\na wage boost until It obtains l contract with the C.I.O.-U.A.W. enuring \"uninterrupted production\" and\n\"efficient work effort.\"\nPreiident Truman'i. fact-finding\nboard propoied a' 19ii-centt-an-hour\nIncrease.\nThe divergent statement! were Issued after the first direct negotiations between the partiei in more\nthan a month in a renewed attempt\nto settle lhe 71-day strike of 179,000\nproduction worken.\nHowever, Jamei T. Dewey, government conciliator who brought\nthe parties together In renewed efforts to settle the dispute, said he\nwai not discouraged by the results\nand that negotiations would be Resumed tomorrow.\nMeanwhile, settlement of the vait\nsteel strike of 750,000 appeared to\nhinge on what price Increases the\ngovernment will grant for iteel.\nFORWARD STRIKE\n8UPPORT BILL\nIrving S. Old! chairman ol the\nboard of United States Steel laid today a price increaie \"greatly ln\nexcess of $6.25 a ton\" wis needed\nto meet the HV, cents hourly wage\nboost the union has agreed to accept. Most top officials In Washington have been reported favoring\n\u00ab (4 a lim boost and tha Office of\nPrice Administration is.said to t*t\nholding out firmly for MJ0.\nAt the same time In Washington, a strike control bill, containing far more sweeping provisions\nthan advocated by President Truman, was pushed to the floor of\nthe House with the backing of\nRepublicans and Southern Democrats.\nThe bill, approved by the House\nRules Committee and sent to the\nfloor for debate Thuriday, woeld\noutlaw violent picketing, provide\ntor civil suits agalnit violator! of\nlabor contract!, subject unloni to\nInjunction! and nullify foreman'!\nunloni.\nThe measure, bitterly opposed by\nbackers of labor unjons, also -would\ncreate a labor-management board to\nhelp settle disputes and require\n\"coollng-off\" periods for strikes and\nlockouts.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nPLUGS  AND  COLTS\nCOMPETITION\nTuesday\u2014\nE   Kraft won by default from J.\nDolphin\nF. Ewing 8: R. A. Peebles 0.\nA   H.  Whitehead B;  A. G. Har,\nrey 12.\nH. S. Forbes 8; Richardson 5.\nS Livingstone 12; N. Sardich 7.\nWednesday\u2014\nA. Arcure 11; J. Stewart 14.\nA. Jeffs 6; G. S. Godfrey 11.\nC. A. Jensen 9, Strachan 3.\nJ. Morris 3; W. L Thompson 12.\nH. Farenholti 9; T. S Jemson t>\nBeck-\nof Our Good\nWinter-Dresses\nCrepes and wool \u2014 On* aruf two piece styles.\nRegular up to $16.95\n\u2022*_*.\nSale Price .... $   $95\ne\nRegular up to $25.00\nSale Price .... $1495\nFINAL SALE OF\nWinter Coats\nlONLY\nBLACK SEAL\nDyed Rabbit\nSite 16\nRegular $189.50\nSale Price .. \u00bb10950\nlONLY\nBLACK OPOSSUM BlMlB\nRegular $149.50\nSale Price..*   7950\nJuit Received ...\nA new shipment of\nChecked Wool Skirts\nSite 12 to 18\nfS.M\nReceived: a ihlpment of New Spring Hati\n(foody, - io - irOmh,\nteil\nWhat's Your\nTrouble . . . ?\nm Chinese Herbs are used ln\nJto, treatment of Constipation,\nZ\/*L Arthritis, Lung rroubli\n7J ^ Gallstones,       Rheumatism\n_o Kidney Trouble Herri\na__i Trouble Eciema. Impetigo\n*T_\\ etc See\num WING W0\nCHINESE   MEDICINE  CO\nOffice Hours:  10 te I\nN126'\/> Wall Street, Near Male\nSPOKANE,  WASH.\nVEGETABLE PRICES\nADVANCE\nVANCOUVER, Jan, 30 (CP) -\nBritish Columbia Coast Vegetable\nMarketing Board here, today reported seasonal wholeiale price Increases of $10 a ton for beets, carrots, paranlps and turnips, and one-\nhalf cent pound Increaie for cib-\nbe|e No Increaie was reported In\nwholesale price of potatoei.\nBLACKHEADS\nQt*. two oaatM of Mf-Mltl* pow-ttr trim\nfour druffflit. Apr-Bill* on ft hot, wet HoU\n\u2022nd ftpplr to th\u00ab (tr* gMitlr. T.rtrj blurt-\n_mul will h* dlMolvMl. The \u00ab_\u00ab mi\"., nr*\nud alrnpl* wftjr to r-anevt blMk-Mt-fe.\nUNCOVER NEW\nCON. RACKET\nVANCOUVER. Jan. 3(1 (CP) -\nDepartment of veterans Affairs said\ntoday they had exposed a new confidence same operated by an Ingenious racketeer In the Kerisdalc\nDistrict of Vancouver.\nThey said the man goes from door\nto door, flashing a general service\ndischarge pin. and declaring he has\nbeen told by D.V A. officials to find\n250 wsrm-hearted cltitens who will\nhelp finance his wsy through a vocational training course by paying\nhim a \"measly five cents a week.\"\nThe catch comes when he adds\nthat the duration of the course n\n2'i years\u2014and alas for a check for\n.MHO covering the whole amount In\nadvance.\nSure Slayer\nHad Knowledge\nof Dissecting\nCHICAGO, Jan. SO (AP) \u2014 The\nbox containing the human ear mailed to the mother ot kidnapped and\nslain Suzanne Degnan bore the\nscribbled threat, \"will cut your ear\nne\u00bbt,\" Detective Chief Walter\nStorms disclosed tonight.\nStorms said he still believes the\near, which police believe to be that\nof an adult male, wss the work of\na prankjter.\nHe said the small cardboard box\ncontaining the ear was mailed to\n\"Mrs. Degnan\" at the home addreas\nof the parents, Mr. and Mrs. James\nDegnan and that the threat was\npenned on the box.\nThe box wss received Tuesdsy\nand apparently postmarked at 11:30\np.m. trie previous nigh', Storms said.\nHe said the writing, on the inside\nof the box, would be compared with\nthe writing on tbe ransom note left\nwhen the six-year-old girl was\nabducted Jan. 7 by a killer who dismembered her body and dropped\nthe pieces ln sewers snd catch basins In the vicinity of the girl's home.\nThe detective slso exhibited four\npictures of the child's dismembered\nbody and told newspapermen police are convinced the slayer was\n\"either a professional man or someone who knew a lot about dlaaect-\nlng a body.\"\nMAN SHEDS BOTTLES,\nGUN, COAT, HAT\nTO EVADE OFFICER\nLADYSMTTH, B.C, Jan. SO (CPl\n\u2014Constable A. B. Cunningham saw\na man leaving the liquor vendor's\nstore here early today carrying a\nsack.\nThe stranger dropped the sack\nland eluded capture. It contained 12\n; bottles, four of which were broken.\n, The man dropped bis hat and overcoat In his escspe. In the coat poc-\n! ket was found a .Bl-callbre revolver.\n.The hat and overcoat were found\nI to have been stolen fmm the Ijdy-\nsmlth Trading Co, store here Jan\n10.\nTRAPPED DOG\nDAMAGES CHURCH\nFUN FLON, Man . Jan. JO (CP>-\nWhen first discovered, extensive\ndamage to the Inside of Christ\nChurch here was attributed to vandalism, but Investigation showed it\nto have been caused by a dog locked In the building.\nApparently trended In alemptlng\nto escape, the dog chawed the doors\nand several window frames, knocked the brass of the communion and\ncredence table, badly bant the brssa\ndesk, chewed and scattered various\nvaluable books and several gowns.\nThe worst feature ware multiple\nscratches to the blghly-pollahed oak\n.communion table.\nHESS HAD 6 POINT\nPEACE PUN\nNUH.NBEf.0. Oermany, Jsn 30\ni Reuters) \u2014 Rudolf Hess, former\nDeputy Fuehrer of Cermsny, flew\nt. Scotland ln May. 1MI, with a\nsix-point proposal for establishing\n,)eece between Britain and Oermany, It was learned here tonight.\nThe proposal was reported to hsve\nbeen outlined by Hess during sn\nInterview with Viscount Simon.\nLord Chancellor In Britain's wartime government.\nFormer Nelson, Trail\nWoman Diet. y y;4   .\nVICTORIA, Jan, SO (CP)-Mra,\nLaura Estella Sherman, 75, wife\nof Arthur Sherman, died today.\nBorn In Wisconsin, she lived at\nNelson and Trail for many yeara\nbefore coming here two years\nago.\nThe Weather\nicross Canada\n\u25a0 Min. Max.\nNELSON   .,_  'r    11 M\nMontreal   *.. - 8 3\nToronto  _ \u00a3..   17 \u2014\nNorth Bay  _4_ - 5 '   \u00ab\nPort Arthur  ..s.    * 10\nKenora   - 9 - 2\nThe Pas  -39 -12\nBrandon   -13 - 7\nWinnipeg  -13 - 4\nRegina  -21 - 9\nSaskatoon ...._    \u2014 -12\nPrince Albert     \u2014 -11\nNorth Battleford   -28 - i\nSwlf Current       -25 .\nMedicine Hat   -24 15\nLethbridge    - 5 28\nCalgary  - 7 28\nEdmonton   -10 13\nKamloops        3 15\nPenticton    -    10 25\nVancouver      28 38\nCranbrook            - 8 22\nPrince George  - 7 24\nPrince Rupert     27 3d\nSeattle         30 43\nPortland       28 44\nSpokane         8 31\nChicago    \u2014 42\nLos  Angeles       40 64\n\"WE WANT TO GO\nHOME\" STRIKE\nIS CALLED OFF\nNKW DELHI, Jan. 30 (CP)-\"We\nw\u00bbnt to go home\" Mrlkt by RAF\nperionnel at Cawnpore waa called\noff today by leaden of the movement pending \"an honest and wtl|-\nfactory conaideration\" of the striker*' demandi by higher authorities.\nEight hundred and 50 RAF men\nit Lahore who also had been on\nstrike returned to thetr Jobs at the\nlame time, concluding an India-\nwide aeries of demonstrations estimated to have involved a total of\n10,000 men.\nTrail Would\nProvide $25,000\nfor Service (lob\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 30\u2014On condition that, the Canadian Legion\nBranch No. 11 at Trail alter tha\nMemorial Hall to provide a suitable\nclub for ex-servicemen and women,\na grant of $28,000 haa been made\ntrom the post-war rehabllitaton and\ncontingency fund of the Trail District Patriotic and Welfare Society.\nThe grant came out of the $30,000\nwhich had been, set aside during th\u00bb\noperation of the Society. The decision to make the grant was mada\nat the annual meeting of the Society, after all present had unanimously endorsed a recommendation\nof the directors that the Society\ncontinue In the post-war period.\nThe directors had made this recommendation after canvassing public opinion and the views of member organizations over a period of\nseven montns.\nWhen\nChildren's Eyes\nAre Bigger Than\nTheir Stomachs...\nr,\u25a0,>..:.I (\u25a0 Um < lnl i -\u00ab>..\u2022 <-.\u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0 v, t %\u25a0\u2022\ntick tr vp**t il Mnta (mn oTirMUitl\ntttttf and oUt-tr tith toodtt*- hut. _4oth\u00ab,\nU_y* |> mi *t*i now to tdMlnUUr druUa,\n\u25a0M-1-fi .hli-nr-l U*tllv\u00ab which wu thoek a\nrhIH'i tri-u-A \u00bbn-l U\u00bbw Ulan fMllai \u2022***\u2022*\n\u25a0 n-t HttW Try Hw n\u00abw Mo-Joni Mo *_>\nChlMrtn'i Own T\u00bbhlt'a - nwb \u2014p\u2014tally\nfor SMm tmm I to ll t**-* Thty fo Jo\n<*Mk *t rmttt to Wit ikmUr Um it\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab.\ni-vlUva cUi.rtt* ml bring \"Vont \u2022 Uwrow\nfrOTforW-MIM of UM hi.w-.li U \u2022 v-tit\nnuait-ir. Yea HW hiw\u00bb wH-m to* wtU\n%a*t Si Mp of CMMran'i Own TmhUU-*-\n\u00ab\u2022 W on Om t*U al-U-Mt \u2022 ?\u2022\u2022**** \u25a0**\n\u2022Jar. On.T Ui *\u00bb mr u-anm \u00ab\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u00bb 5\nlha mahara of \u00bb\u00abhy'\u00ab O***- TaMeto-mr\nfMrtnUa of \u2022 raUioU product.\nTOKYO, Jan. SO (AP)\u2014General\nMacArthur ordered the Japaness\ngovernment today to prepare 343,-\n200 pounda of raw silk for early export\nA DEODORANT OF\nOUILE ACTION\nHELPS PREVENT\nPERSPIRATION SPOTS AND ODOR\nWITHOUT IRBITATINQ THI IKIN\nAKRID gives you double protection. It\nprotects you from penpiration odor, and\nhelps protect your clothes from petsplrs-\ntion spots. Arrid is so odorless deodortm,\nwith the fine texture of a beamy creim.\nIt nnilhes instlndy \u2014 giving immediite\nresults. With Arrid, you sre absolutely\nssfe \u2014 csn enjoy vowidf wherever you\nsre \u2014 regsrdless of the weather. Protect\nyour dsiotiness end chirm with Am,I.\nSt \u2022 rt using it today, Ir is very economical.\nltd, M-i-ndS**.\nARRID\nTha Lnrflftl\nSailing\nDvoderon\n-______.\n 1\t\n ^\u00bb\nLONDON ICP)- Good fox iklm,\nbrought \u00a329 to \u00a330 ($112 to $139) at\n\u2022 Hudion'i Bay Compiny tale, lhe I\nflrit held by the company ilnce i\n1941.\nWest Coast Lumber\nIndustry\nSet for Boom\nBy LELANO HANNUM\nSEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 30 (AP)-\nThe giant lumber industry of the\nUnited States Pacific Coast, with\nunfilled orders on its books totalling 700,000,000 board feet, appears\ntc be ready to swing into high tempo\nai soon as weather permits.\nSUFFICIENT MANPOWER\nNOW AVAILABLE\nThe current outlook for this area's\nmajor Industry, is seen by the United Statei. Employment Service, li\nthat sufficient manpower now ii\navailable. The paralyzing lumber\nstrike has ended, except for a few\nholdouts. Demand is heavy. But\nheavy snow in most logging areas\nwill prevent full employment belore March or April.\nThe closely allied Industries \u2014\nlumber   manufacturing,   pulp   and\npaper milli uid plywood, mills\u2014are\nrunning at capacity. Their manpower shortages are over.\nThe Weit Coait Lumbermen's Association, summarizing reports from\nits member mills, laid the industry's\nunfilled order file itood at 738,232,-\n000 board feet at the end of 1943,\nwith gross stocks on hand of only\n400,405,000,\nThe cumulative production fofthe\n92 weeks of last year was 5.790,672,-\n000 board feet, against 7,902,289,000\nin 1944.\nMEETS ONE CRISIS\nAFTER ANOTHER\n\"Since VJ-Day,\" the Association\nrecalled, \"the industry has met one\ncrisis after another. It faces market\nconditions which defy prediction,\nbecause of scarcity of building labor\nand the low supply of key materials.\"\nSeek Solution fo\nCrowding, University\nEDMONTON, Jm. 30 (CP) -Dr.\nRobert Newton, Preiident of Alberta University, uid today \u25a0 muting will be held with i five-nun\ndelegation representing veterans\nattending the Unlvenlty ln lit ittempt to resolve complaints ot the\nstiff of thi two mens resiliences\nbecauie pf \"congestion in the buildings.\"\nMore thin 300 memberi ot the Returned Men'i Aiioclitlon met Monday in proteit against a proposal to\nmove them to living quarters ind\nlecture rooms at the United States\nArmy air base, obtained from the\nDominion Government, i\nWith mut on the short ildt, Bulmans\nFancy Quality Dehydrated VtjcUblts\nkelp you to maintain nutrittoui, hcalth-\nffvinf mtak Eleven vnietiei maltt\ndlibei    laity,   interelting   and   varied.\nTjiee\n24 CAGE\nHCCIPE BOOK\nBULMANS   LIMITED,\nVERNON, I. C.\nPltoM w~\\ m*\\ frM o* eKorg*- o ciJov\nof your *-\u25a0\u00ab*\/ Re-ac* Book -mtitltd\n\"Dthydrotld Vtg-etcbltt\"\nCrerar Says \"No\nNew Invention Has\nEver Hailed War\"\nVICTORIA, Jan. 30 (CP)-Gen.\nH. D. G. Crerar, former commander\nof the First Canadian Army, said in\nan interview here today while commenting on the atomic bomb, that\nno new invention has ever stopped\nwar.\nAsked about the possibility of the\ninvention of the atomic bomb and\nrocket warfare eliminat'ng future\nconflicts, Gen. Crerar said:\n\"No matter how horrible the weapon, lt never stops an aggressor.\nThe history of warfare and the history of Germany shows that\"\nThere would be no two or three-\nyear preparation for the next world\nconflict. It would come suddenly.\n\"Isolationism has been definitely\nruled out,\" said Gen. Crerar. \"Nations can't sit ln their countries and\nbe wiped out.\"\nGen. Crerar smiled when it was\nsuggested that he was basing his\nstatements on the fact that there\nwould be another war.\n\"There's no indication,\" he said,\n\"that war has been eradicated.\"\nHe predicted that the infantry\n-would be as important ai ever pointing out the foot-soldiers had played\na major part in the Second Great\nWar.\n\"The men on foot,\" he said, \"will\nhave to go out and clean up the\nbases from which the rocket weapons are fired.\"\nGen. Crerar expected Canada and\nthe United Slates would continue\nworking in close cooperation with\nregard to defence. He pointed out\nthat total range of weapons in future conflicts was unknown adding\nthat Germany was working Just before defeat on V-3 and V-4 weapons\nalong with a rocket bomb that\nwould cross the Atlantic.\n\"Such weapons,\" he said, \"will\nbe taken into account in planning\nstrategy.\"\nTake  hot\nin Ski-Pack Thtrmoi\n7-Year-Old in\nthe Dog House\nBOISE, Idaho, Jan. 30 (AP) -\nSeven-year-old Patty Peck thought\nshe was \"in the dog house\" because\nshe stayed away from home to play\n\u2014so she slept there. Her foster\nmother, Mrs. James Pheiffer, said\nPatty was found in the dog kennel\nafter a night-long search.\n-    ll\n._l\n\u202217A\nBULMANS LTD,, VERNON, B.C.\nPARADOL\nCLIP AND MAIL\t\nBULMANS\nVEGETABLES\nDr.CHASES\nParado\nFOH l)UICH HUM I\nHtAUACHE S Otiiti Pdi\nStart Surveys\nof Employment,\nUnemployment\nOTTAWA, Jan. SI (CP) - The\nCanadian and hli work\u2014or lack of\nit\u2014emerged within the ranks of\nnew statistics today as the Dominion Bureau of Statistics made public the results of Its first sample survey of the civilian labor force.\nThe Bureau called lt \"the first application on a large scale of sampling techniques ln the Investigation\nof the Canadian labor market.\"\nIti  primary almi, the  Bureau\n\u2022aid, \"are to obtain current Information about tho volume of employment  and  unemployment at\nwell aa tha detailed compoiltlon\nof the labor force.\n\"In addition eitlmatei wlll ba\navailable concerning the number\nand eharacterlitloi of penoni not\nIn the labor forct auch ai houie\nwives, students, retired penoni\nand people who are too old or unable to work,\"\nBY PERSONAL TALK*\nThe aurveys, to be made quarterly, wlll be based on personal interviews \"with responsible members of\nsample household!,\" between 25,000\nand 30,000 in number, or representing about one per cent of the Dominion's people. They \"represent\nan effort to utilize modern developments in sampling technique to obtain statistical data on the characteristics of the people quickly and\neconomically.\"\nIt is sometimes known as \"area\nsampling\" In which the country is\ndivided into primary sampling units,\nthen stratified, then one unit selected from' each strata so, for example, one would represent the\ndairy farming areas of Ontario and\nanother the wheat farming areas of\nSaskatchewan.\nFrom there the selected areas\nwere narrowed down until the proportion of households to be sampled\nin different areas was adjusted lo\nyield about one per cent of the\nhouseholds in the area.\nThe week covered in the first bulletin was that of Nov. 11-17, 1945,\nAs \"employed\" the survey considered anyone who worked that week\nor had a job or business. Housewives, students and retired persons\nwho worked more than an hour for\npay or profit were \"employed,\" as\nwere ptraons who had a Job but did\nnot work because of weather, vacation, labor disputes or because of a\ntemporary layoff with definite instructions to return to work within\n30 days.\n\"Employed,*' too, were those\nwhose main activity was seeking\nwork but who worked more than\nan hour that week, unpaid family\nworkers on farms or In businesses\nand farm women who devoted more\nLlsfof World War II (Milan\nDead Find Place In Abbey Shrine\nBY GORDON  McKEAN\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (CP)-West-\nmlniter Abbey, historic burial place\nof Britain'! great, hai a new shrine.\nIt contain! the tint Hits of nearly\n80,000 civilian! killed by enemy action ln the United Kingdom during\nthe Second Great War, compiled by\nthe Imperial War Graves Commission.\nNames of rich and poor, great and\nhumble, now are enshrined in the\nAbbey where princes, statesmen\nand poets lie, and where Britain's\nkings are crowned.\nThe shrine, designed by Sir Charles Peen, surveyor to the Abbey, Is\nfixed to the West wall of the Chapel\nof St. George, cloae to the tablet\nto 1,000,000 service dead of the First\nGreat War and a few yardi from the\nbright popplei surrounding the\nTomb of the Unknown Soldier.\nPAGE TURNED DAILY\nThe lists are in four volumes,\nbound by the late Douglai Cocker-\nell in red leather. The shrine measures about three feet square on the\nfront, and is two feet deep. One vo\nlume llei open and t page Is turned\ndaily.\nThe present typewritten lists will\nbe replaced by printed or emboiaed\nlists when the record ii complete.\nRelatlvei may consult duplicate\nlists in London and Edinburgh, at\nthe Imperial War Graves Commlision Offices\nHere are two typical entriei lilted under Edmonton, Middlesex.\nBoth obviously are casualtiea from\n[a flying bomb or rocket, as both occurred after attacks by aircraft\nceased:\n\"Martin, Pamela Maureen, aga\nfour weeki; of 5 Fairfield Road,\ndaughter of Joieph and Sarah\nMartin. 18th OcL 1944, at Fairfield\nRoad.\n\"Quire, Ellen Ann, aga II. Wlfa\n1   of Victor Frederick Qulra, of 170\nOuranti   Road;   died   10th   Aug.\n1944, at North Mlddleiex County\nHoipital. Islington Cemetery.\"\nI Thus the Martins and the Quires,\nthe Smiths, Joneses and Robinsons,\ndescribed by the King as \"all ln the\nfront line.\" have found in death\ncommemorative honors beside their\ncountry's great.\nthan 20 hours a week to other than\nwork in the home.\nThe labor force, as a definition,\nconsisted of employed and unemployed and represented \"those who\nare either at work nr have jobs or\nare available for work if they can\nfind jobs.\"\n4,531,000 \"WORKERS\"\nThe survey reduced that force to\na number of tables. One showed\nthat the force, covering persons older than 14, included 4,531,000 that\nweek of whom 1,902,000 were be\ntween 25 and 44 and 1,239,000 were\nbetween 45 and 64.\nThe ranks of the employed included 4,364,000\u20143.248.000 men and\n1,116,000 women. Of that total 1,-\n094,000 worked between 35 and 44\nhours, 1,654,000 between 45 and 54\nhours and 1,110,000 more than 55\nhours.\nAgriculture accounted for 1,054,000\nworkers\u2014166,000 of them women.\nOf 3,308,000 non-agricultural\nworkers 2,488,000 were paid workers\nfor private employer! .\nOf 167,000 unemployed, 31,000\nwere women and of that iame total 58,000 were between 25 and\n44 and 106,000 had been seeking\nwork between one and three\nmonthi.\nWide Power\nProjects\nlor Scotland\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, JAN. SI, 1946\n$689,449,000 in New\nLife Insurance\nSold During 1945\nTORONTO - Over the past 12\nmonths, new \"Ordinary\" life insurance was sold in Canada and Newfoundland to a total of $689,449,000\naccording to figures compiled by\nlhe **Liie Insurance Sales Research\nBureau and announced by The Canadian Life Insurance Officers Association.\nBy Provinces, the sales were as\nfollows:\nBritish Columbia        49,541,000\nAlberta       40,417,000\nSaskatchewan        33,117,000\nManitoba               40,491,000\nOntario         291,786.000\nQuebec       174,058,000\nNew Brunswick         ..      19.131.000\nNova Scotia 26,737,000\nPrince Edward Island 5,816,000\nNewfoundland           8,355,000\nTolal UB9M9.n.\nDecember sales totalled $65,536,-\n000.\nEYH\nANNOUNCE'\nCHANGE OF SCHEDULE\nNew SCHEDULE\neeeeeeeeta+fee*\n3^ '   if\nEFFECTIVE\nvB_T'J\"\nmV   \\            FEBRUARY 1 ST\nv\\...\n*   loft,  comfortibl\np.  reellnlr\ng   test         \"V    h^\nn   a   luxurious  Greyhound\nSuper-             v \"*\n\"ouch   li\nan   Invlt\nIt ion   to\nt___\nind enjoyable trav\n1.\nBOUND\nw\nWI8T\nEAST BOUND\nRead\nDown\n~ Daily\"\nNELSON      TRAIL\nRead Up\nDaily\nBally\nDaily\nDallv\nDally\nDaily\nDaily\nDally\nDaily\nA.M\nAM\nAM\n1130\"\nPM\n~ too\nP M      I\nNelson\nP.M\nA.M.\nP.M.\nP.M\nAM.'\n7:00\n6.3H\nLv\nAr.\n1:15\n10:10\n3:10\n8:40\n7:15\n11:48\n4 18\n6 43\nTighum\n1:07\n9:52\n4:52\n8:22\n7:20\n11 .56\n4 26\n8 .50\nBenley\n12:39\n9:44\n4:44\n8:14\n7:30\n1204\n4 34\n700\nBonnington\n12:50\n9:35\n4:35\n8:05\n7:35\n12 10\n4:40\n7 05\nbouth  Slocin\n12:44\n9:29\n4.29\n7:59\n7 41\n12:18\n4:46\n711\nShoreacjei\n12:37\n9:22\n4:22\n7:52\n7 45\n12 20\n4 50\n7 15\nGlada\n12 32\n9:17\n4:17\n7:47\n7 49\n12.24\n4 M\n7 19\nTarryi\n12:27\n9:12\n4:12\n7:42\n7  .3\n12.28\n4 58\n7 2.1                                 Thru mi\n12:22\n9 07\n4:07\n7:37\nB01\n12 3*1\ni nn\n7 31\nBrilliant\n12 14\n8:59\n3:59\n7:29\nH07\n12 42\n5 12\n7 .17\nCa-.tlegar Ferry\n12 08\n8:53\n3:53\n7:23\n10 15\nS 14\n12.50\n5 20\n7:44\nCaitlegar\nKinnaird\n12 00     ,     8.43\n3:45\n7:15\n10:05\n10 2.1\nAM\n12 V\n528\n7 52\n11:54     i     8:39\n3:39\n7:09\n9:59\n10 29\n_.2S\n1 05\n5:35\n7 58\nBluebirry\n11:48     1      8:33\n3:33\n7:0.1\n9:53\n10 34\nA 32\ni in\n5 40\n8 02                              Poupora\n11:44    ;     6 29\n3:29\n6:39\n9:49\n10 37\n8 36\n1 IS\n545\n806    ,\nQenelll\n11:39    I     8:24\n3:24\n6:54\n9:44\n1041\n8:40\n1 21\n5.SI\nA 10\nBlrchbink\n11:34    I     8:19\n3:19\n6:49\n9:39\n10 47\n8 46\n127\n5 57\n6 16    1\nStony Creek\nTrail\n11:28     1      8:13\n3:13\n6:43\n9:33\n11 00\n900\n1:40\n6:10\n8.30    1     Ar\nLv      i    11:15    |     8:00\n3:00\n6:30\n0:20\nNow Greyhound offer you ol! winter through strvict, via Northport, Wash,\nbetween Nilion, Trail ond Vancouver.\nGREYHOUND\nLINfS\nDeaths\nBy THOMAS CHALMERS\nI GLASGOW, Jan. 30 (Reuters)-\nExtensive schemes to harness the\nI untapped   water   resources  of   the\n| Scottish Highlands to provide electric power and light for industry,\nagriculture and homestead! are beginning to get under way.\nSome of the plans were shelved\nduring the war because of equip-\n, ment shortages and because they\ncould later provide capital schemes\npn which demobilized men could\nbe employed.\niP.O.W.'S LABOR\nI    Taking the first step to get the\nambitious projects started, the North\nof Scotland Hydro-Electric Board is\npressing the government to grant\nlabor priorities for the construction !\nof   two   hydro-electric   systems   at i\nj Loch Sloy in Dumbartonshire and\n! Pitlochry in Perthshire. So far lhe\nonly  laborers available \u2014 German\nprisoners of war and Polish soldiers\n\u2014have begun to build roads as part,\nof the Loch Sloy project.\nWhen the schemes were published, I\nit was estimated that 7000 men\nwould be employed on construction\n, work alone. The Loch Sloy power\nstation is expected to be in operation by the Winter of next year\nand the Pitlochry station a year\nlater.\nj A third construction scheme, at\nj Loch Fannich in the County of Ross\nand Cromarty, will employ 500. The\nboard's fourth construction scheme,\nat Cowal, was published last Monday, a scheme for Skye will be published next Monday and another\nfor the Orkneys later.\n1 In addition to the construction\n! schemes a number of distribution\nprojects have been authorized by\nthe electricity commissioners and\nelectricity, produced at oil generating stations until supplies from\nhydro-electric stations are available,\nwill soon be within reach for the\nfirst time of many villagers and\nhamlets in thp Highlands and islands\nwhere up until now the people have\nhad to rely on candles or paraffin\nlamps for light.\nINCORPORATED   2rf MAY 1670.\nSPECIAL SHOWING     *\n500 YARDS OF\n\"Sunnivale\" Spun Rayon|\nPrints and Plain Shades\nA delightfully spun fabric with a small check slub ground.\nEvery new spring shade in this collection . ..\nLost year we sold out this fobric in a few days\nCOME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION\n38 inches wide. \u2014 Yard: _\n95c\nBy Tha Canadian Pren\nOTTAWA - Benjamin S, Bolton,\n57, former member of the Comtrol-\nlers'  Branch of  the  Munition  Department.\nLONDON - Sydney Jones, 77,\nwell-known English composer and\nconductor.\nLAD BOYISHLY\nKICKING SNOW\nUNCOVERS BONDS\nUNIONVILLE. Ont. Jan- 30 (CP)\n--Nine-yea-old _Vid.do Christensen,\nboyishly kicking snow on his way\nhome from school, uncovered Victory Bonds to a value of $6000 in a\nroadside ditch yesterday. Police believe they were part of $55,700 loot\nfrom an overnight break-in of the\nBank of Nova Scotia branch at nearby Markham Jan. 19,\nYork County police said finding\nof hte bonds brings to nn end a\nsearch for the loot. Most of the rest\n\u25a0\u2014 some $49,000 in bonds and the remainder cash\u2014was discovered in an\nToronto occupants were arrested\nautomobile when its two youthful\nnear Hamilton a few hours after\nthe break-in,\nthe snow near the $6000  in bonds\nA wastepaper basket was found in\nand police said they believed the\nbonds had been used to pad the\nbasket and prevent silver coins from\nfalling nut. At the time of the robbery it was said Lhe thieves had\nfilled a basket with silver and carted it through a window.\nLift Ban on Dutch\nShip Sailing for\nthe Netherlands\nSYDNEY. Australia. Jan 30 (Reuters)\u2014Australian waterfront unions\nbave lilted their ban on one Dutch\nship sailing for the Netherlands\nEast Indies This ship will piake .\ntrial trip carrying food, clothing\nand medical supplies after which\nIhe unions will receive reports ami\n!hen will decide whether to lift\nthe ban on four other Dutch ship^1\ndue to carry .8,000 tons of supplies\nLast Autumn Australian water\nfront workers banned the loading\nand sailing of Dutch ships for Java\nin case supplies were used to sup-\noress the Indonesian Nationalist\nmovement\nPacking Tim* Hal\nStarted at P.O.W.\nCamp, Lethbridge\nLETHBRIDGE. Alti., Jan. 30 (CP)\n\u2014Packing time his stirted in earnest at the Urge prisoner-of-war\ncamp here, now that more than 9500\ncaptives in the establishment have\nbeen officially notified that they\nwill ihortly be evacuated to Britiin.\nA flurry of excitement flashed\nthrough the barbed wire enclosure\nlate yesterday ifter captives were\nnotified ot the impending evacuation but camp authorities said there\nwas no wild celebration.\nCol. E. D. B. Klppen, camp commandant, notified the German camp\nleader that all captivet are to be\nevacuated to Britiin during the next j\nseveral months and the news spread\nrapidly.\nDampening the enthusiasm of captives was the fact they are to be\nmoved to Britain lnd may be expected to work there for some time\nbefore going to their shattered\nhomeland.\nIt is learned reliably that the first\nbatch of captives to b_ evacuated\nfrom the local cimp will be leaving\n'about the middle of Februiry.\"\nAttlee Sends Cable\nto Mrs. H. Hopkins\nLONDON. Jan 30 (AP>- Trime'\nMinister Attlee sent the following\ncable to Mrs Harfy Hopkins last\nnight:\n\"I am deeply distressed to hear of\nynur husband's death Please ac-1\nc .pt my most sincere sympathy We\nmourn a great friend The work\nwhich he did tn further the common cause during the war and tn\npromote Anglo-American friendship and cooperatinn will never be\nforgotten \"\nUNRRA Supplies to\nWhite Russia\nMINSK, Russli, Jin   30 (API -I\nGoods from the UNRRA now are j\nirrivlng In White  Russia lnd thc\nUkraine.   Relief   supplies   include\n1000 tons of beans. 380 tons of con- '\u25a0\ndensed milk and rice.\nFIND LIQUOR CACHE\nAFTER STORE BROKEN\nNANAIMO, B.C.. Jin. 30 (CP>-\nA lone burglar Jimmied the door of\nLadysmith llouor store early today\nand escaped with about $150 in liquor. The cache nf stolen liquor was\ndiscovered later In i line behind the\npremises. No arrests have befn\nmade.\n900 DESIGNS\nRECEIVED FOR\nCANADIAN FLAG\nVANCOUVER.  Jan.  30  (CP)\nMore than 900 designs for a dlstlnd\ntlve Canadian flag have been nlq\nmilted to the government.\nTom Reid. Liberal member d\nparliament fnr New Westmin\u00bb-ll\ngave the figure to a service clul\n(Rotary) luncheon yesterday I\nmember nf the Commons commit\ntee charged with the task of recom\nmending a design, promised tf-j\n\"nn flag will he adopted that doe\nnot have on it somewhere the'Unioi\nJack.\"\nGROW\nSTRONG\nVIGOROUS\nHUSKY 1\nHIGH EHERCy tonic\nGood-U-rtlBf Scott'i Emuliloa conUial\nrithiril A mri I) Vitamin\" often needed to\nhelp build it* mini ind r \u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0__itioce to coldi\ntnd mlnnr illi. Helpe build i-tronf bone*,\n\u2022ound teeth ind \u25a0 sturdy frame, (lire\n<-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'm chili.rnt \u25a0 ml dunes In life, (.ire\nthem Scott'e Emulsion (nlj, tb* J**t*>\nround.\ncontains suttvem vnAjma\n\u25a0 ^SCOTT'S\n1 EMULSION\n'\u25a0-  IHR-ltOUHO 10NH\nSnowmobiles Off on\nExercise Iceworm\nCHURCHILL, Man, Jan 30 fCPl\n\u2014Four snowmobiles 1 pft today for\nLittle Seal River and Long I.akp\nan a four-day Northward swing officially designated \"Exercise Ice\nWorm\" in honor of the fabled crpa-\ntu[e supposed to inhabit Arctic ice\nblocks.\nThe four \"snows,\" which will\ncover 177 miles, were commanded\nby Maj. Gordon Sangster of Sherbrooke, Que., and Capts. Vaughan\nStewart. Riviere Du Loup, Que,\nFrank Riddell. Kingston, Ont, and\nOttawa, and Bob (Beany) Inglis,\nRegina and St. Thomas, Ont.\nThe exercise ii designed as a\npreliminary to the full-drew Musk-\nox exercise which starts Feb. 14\nLEEDS, England (CP)-A saf-*-\ncontaining bonds, securities, savings\ncertificates ahd jewelry valued it\n\u00a31.4.006 I$67,_100) was stolen rrcrn'-\nly from the house of Mrs Paulelt*\nYarm, ol Moortown, Leeds.\nBLUE RIBBON\nBAKING POWDER\nfa\nVoduMIM\nCaJwiTooikw\n-rl\n\u00abv\n_______________________________\n.\n-_.\n *******\n\u25a0\u2014\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\n\u2014_______________\nL NILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. II, IMC\nALEGAR, CRESTON AIRMEN\nITIONED IN DESPATCHES\nBTAWA\u2014Air Force Headquir-\nf todiy announced that the tolling perionnel have been men-\nEd In despatches on the over-\niKing's New Years Honors List.\nntloned In Despatches:\n(ir Vice Marshiil C. R. Slemon,\nLC.B.E., Ottawa, Ont.\nEr Commodore J. G.' Kerr, St,\nbits, Ont.\nSoup Captain R. J. Lane, D.S.O.,\nP.C. and Bar, Victoria, B.C.\nfcoup Captain G. R. McGrtgur,\nintrcol, P.Q.\nROUP Captain D. W. Stoneham,\nEwe, Ont.\nfiuup Captain J. A. Verner, New\nWtminster, B.C.\nfrotip Captain A. C. Hull C, 1256\nI.C:, Ottawa, Ont.\nIrdUp Captain J. L. H. Lecomte\nSttl D.F.C, Acton-Vale. P.Q.\nfltog Commander E. M. Bryson\nM16 D.F.C, Barrie, Ont.\nWing Commander D. D. Car-Har-\n;, Winnipeg, Man.\n1\nsonsy\nto make\nICE CREAM\nYou  dont  need  a  r*)ilge\u00ab-lor1\nWhtn  Hi   SO'   obo..  iwo or\ncolder outilde, luil Kll London-\ndsrty, lugai ond tablt cream (ol\nEVAPORATED MILK\nOf powdw.d Milk), cMII. ihM\nwhip and pu I 0 uldood to !'*\u2022!\u2022.\nDklkloM \u2014 * smooth. No lco\navilalt. 15e package maket 16\niitvlnot. y<\u00bb> oii my Utrrow.\n(Make dtlightM Ifonn deturti\nwllh milk oi tkiM nllk.) II vow\nflfOCW downl canv London-\ndeny, tend $ 1.00 loi 7 package!\nand tO l-Jmoui ledpei, poilpatd.\nfreeze tr\n\\* OUTDOORS!\noLOnDOnDEKRV\nHS DOMINION SQUARE BlDO.,\nMONTRIAL\nWing Commander J. F. P. Clark,\nD.F.C, London, Ontario.\nWing Commander N. B. Eaton,\nVictoria, B.C.\nWing Commander C. B. Guest, Ottawa, Ont,\nWing Commander G. A. Hiltz,\nD.F.C, Croix de Guerre, Frederic-\nton, N.B.\nWing Commander L. Lowensteln,\nMontreal, P.Q.\nWing Commander J. G. Stephenson. Ottawa, Ont.\nWing Commander 0. W. Durdin,\nLondon, Ont.\nWing Commander J. F. Edwards,\nBattletord, Sask.\nWing Commander C. S. Harris,\nChester, N.S.\nWing Commander E. P. Hey-\nbroek, Victoria, B.C.\nWing Commander H. Lamb, Over-\nbrook, Ont.\nWing Commander A. D. R. Lowe,\nD.F.C, A.F.C., St. John. N.B.\nWing Commander J. M. MacLen-\nnan, Vancouver, B.C.\nWing Commander K. C. Wilson,\nPerth, Ont.\nSquadron Leader D. C. MacLean,\nVictoria, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant D. A. Briscoe,\nVictoria, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant R. II. Burden,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant F. R. Darling,\n, Vancouver,  B.C.\nI    Flight   Lieutenant   J.   W.   Fuller-\nton. Vancouver, R.C.\n|    Flight   Lieutenant   R   E.   Gallag-\nIher. Powell River. B.C\nFlight Lieutenant W. G. H. Grant,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant W. S. Harvey.\nVancouver, B.C\nFlight Lieutenant I. C. llempsall,\nVancouver, B C.\nFlight Lieutenant J. M. Hilton,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant A. J. Ireland,\nCourtenay. B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant W. G Klassen,\nVancouver, BC.\nFlight Lieutenant M. F. Lewis,\nSidney. BC.\n\\    Flight Lieutenant H. W.  McDonald. Prince Rupert. B C.\n1    Flight Lieutenant I)   A. McPher-\n\u25a0 ' \" ' , ,.;.-;,. _   '   '   *. ,\nHollywood Gossip\nMacArthur First Toscanini Last,\nBob Hope in Between, Says Ann;\nSeiderman to Do Plastic Surgery\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Jtn. 30 (AP) \u2014\nAnn Richards ilnds Americtn men\n(ascinating.\nBecauie ol thli, the Australian\nactress on \"The Searching Winds\"\nset was asked to select the 10 American men she linds most fascinating.  Here la her list:\nGen. Douglai MacArthur, \"because\nhis aid to Austral^ in its dark hours\ninspired my countrymen.\" Dr. Ernest Hocking, philosopher. Bing\nCrosby, as much a part ol America\nas his songs. Richard Byrd, tor\nhis vital interest ln humanity and\n(or opening new vistas ot science.\nJimmy Durante, \"the sweetest person you could hope to meet.\" Arthur Rubensteln, (or his musicianship and humanity, Bob Hope, who\nmade the world laugh during dread-\n(ul years. Gen. Joseph Stilwell, because he stuck to his guns in the\nlace o( political adversity. William Saroyan, who has portrayed\nAmerican youth \"so delightfully.\"\nArturo Toscanini, one ol the (inest\nconductprs o( all time.\nMilton Berle may sign with\nM.O.M. . . . Joan Leslie became Hi\nSaturday but she wants her fithtr\nto continue handling her ifliln\u2014\nhe's i certified nubile accountant...\nthe Dick Powelli miy buy \u25a0 rinch\n. .. alter a little difficulty, the Dotty\nLamour baby Is all right , . . John\nHalt and Francei Linglord hive\nbeen promised delivery on their\nnew ilrplane in February and their\nnew car in August . . . Attention,\nBangkok, Siaml \"Anna an** the King\not Slam will be premiered there\nwhen lt is finished . . . Bill Boyd\nwlll make six Hopilong Caiildyi a\nyear with Ben Bogeaui for thi next\nthree years. First one starts May 1\n. . . Abbey Theatre alumni\u2014Dudley\nDlggs, Barry Fitzgerald, Sara Al-\ngood, Arthur Shields and his wife\n\u2014are talking about hopes to return\nto Dublin.\nHollywood training for the postwar world: Ace makeup man Maurice Seiderman is leaving R.K.O. to\nhelp recreate (aces (or disfigured\nservicemen . . . Kay Kyser's new\nvocalist, LuCty Anna, is clicking.\nLibrary Board in\nRossland Asks\na Larger Grant\nROSSLAND, B.C., Jm. 19-Ap.\nplication of the Rowland Library\nBoard for an increase in the City\ngrant was referred to the Fintnce\nCommittee by the city Council\nMondiy night. The City grant hu\nbeen $300, md the Libriry Association asks (or this to be increased to\n$500, as the Provincial Library Com\nmission had advised that its grant\nike sweeter, tastier bread I\nFLEISCHMANN'S\nFRESH\nNO WAITINO-no extra steps! Full-slrengtb-\nFleischmann'i fresh active Yeast goes right to\nwork. Makes sweeter, finer bread! And makes it\njaster! You can bc sure of tender, smooth texture\n\u2014 lightness \u2014 delicious flavour every time!\nIF YOU BAKE AT HOME, insist on\nFleischmann's fresh Yeast with the\nfamiliar yellow label. It's dependable\u2014Canada's tested favourite for\nmore than 70 years.\nson. Kamloops, B.C.\nFlight lieutenant H. B. Odium,\nVancouver B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant W. H. Reed,\nMrs. J. R. Reed (wl(e) Castlegar,\nB.C.\nFlight Lieutenant A. H. Rose,\nPowell River, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant T. A. Salo, Vancouver, BC.\nFlight Lieutenant C. R. H. Salt,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant G. A. Stratton,\nVancouver. B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant R. H. Strouts,\nParksville, Vancouver Island, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant H. H. Wood-\nhead, Victoria, B.C.\nFlight Lieutenant R. H. Otter-\nhalts. Vancouver. B.C.\nFlight Officer E. U. Gear, Van-,\ncouver, B.C\nFlying Officer O. A. Allen, Vancouver. B.C.\nFlying OKicer L. E. Fitchett, Victoria, B.C.\nFlying 0((lcer A. W. Goldstone,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFlying OKicer A. M, Grant, New\nWestminster, B.C.\nFlying Officer J. J. McDowell.\nVancouver, B.C,\nFlying Ofdcer H. E. Misktman,\nVancouver, B.C.\nWarrant OKicer F. M. Smith, Van-\ncouver, BC.\nFlight Sorge.nt H. L. Harper,\nVancouver. B.C.\nFlight Sergeant D. W. Watson,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFlight Sergeant J. A. Young,\nMrs. 8. M. Young (mother) Ore-\nion, B.C. \u00a3\nSergeant A. N, R. Peacock, Holly-\nburn. B.C.\nSergeant J. D. Duchak, Wells.\nBC.\nSergeant P. A. Reeve, Vancouver. BC.\nCorporal D. A. Hopgood, Vancouver, B C.\nCorporal T. C. Mark, Victoria,\nB.C.\nCorporal II. Partltt, Victorli, BC.\nLeading Airwoman D. M. Thompson. Chemiinus, B.C.\nFormer Nelson\nMan Drowns\nin California\nEdward O'Neill, former resident\nof Ymir and Nelson, and for tne last\nfive years proprietor ol a grocery\nstore and service station at Fair\nOaks, Cal.. was drowned on Jan. 12\nwhile on a hunting trip near Yuoa\nCity, Cal.\nHe was a son o( Mr. and Mrs. A. C.\nO'Neill now ol Hollywood and (rom\nthe early 1900 s residents o( Ymir\nuntil 1918 and until 1923 o( Nelson.\nHe was a brother of Mrs. R. R.\nBrown ol Nelson and of Mrs. C. A.\nLarson of Calgary. Other brothers\nand sisters are Mrs. George Hull,\nPatrick and Louis O'Neill, all of\nSeattle, and Mrs. J. C. Smith and\nOwen O'Neill of Los Angeles.\nHis father, A. C. O'Neill, was Cin-\nadiin Immigration OKicer who\nchecked passengers on Great Nortn-\nern trains crossing the border at\nWanela.\nI Edward O'Neill, who was 52 years\n| of age, was on a hunting trip with\ntwo mends and his son Pat.\n| Mr. O'Neill and one of his friends\nwere in a boat which overturned.\nThe boy Pat stripped o(( his clothes,\nplunged into the water and succeeded in bringing his father's (rlend\nand the boat to shore. The (rlend\nsaid Mr. O'Neill seemed to be stunned by shock (rom the cold water\nwhen the boat overturned, an(i it\ntook some hours to recover the\nbody.\n' A movement has been started to\nsecure a Carnegie medal (or Pat (or\nhis rescue o( Mr. O'Neill's (riend and\nhis attempt to save his lather.\nj Mr. O'Neill was a native ol Mon-\nj treal and after leaving this district\n(went to Mount Vernon, Wash.,\nj where he was in the garage business\nfor some years.\nof (IKM would not bt forthcoming lt\ntht elty did not increaie ltl grant to\ntn equal amount.\nA report and program of tht Britlih Columbia Library Aiioclitlon\nwis received and referred to Alder-\nm&rf C. Bacon, who was appointed\nto represent the Councii on the Library Board.\nR. F. Sewell, Secretary of the\nUnion of B.C. Municipalities, wrote\nuking the Council to send ln any\ncomment! on the Cameron Report\nrespecting school finances as soon\nas possible. This litter was tabled\n(or future reference, ud Mayor J.\nR. Comer asked thit ill the Aldermen mike a thorough itudy of the\nReport and bring forwird their\ncomments.\nCopy of the resolution sent from\nBurnaby Municipality to the Pre-\nmttr In regird ta luthorlilnt deliy\nln ichool estimites pending legislative iction on the Cameron Rtport,\nwu filed.\nA requeit from the British Columbia Mineral, Resource! St Development Compiny it the Cout\nsoliciting order for cist iron pipe,\nwas referred to the Fire, Water and\nLight Committee, which was asked\nto make a list of cist iron pipe thoj\ndepartment would need.\nAlderman H. Elmes, Chairman of\nthe Finance Committee, reported\nthat the Committee accepted with\nregret the resignation ot Miss Olive\nMills, City stenographer, and recommended that the City advertise\nfor a male Junior clerk. This was\nconfirmed.\nThe Removal of Ice and Snow Bylaw was given its final reading.\nMtmbers of tht nubile present il\nspectitors lncludtd J. L. Webster,\nM.L.A.-elect for Rosalind-Trail, ind\n\u2022 roup of members of the Junior\nBoird of Trade.\nThe earliest record of in \"April\nFools Diy\" was In England in 1713.\nSALMO\n,($fWfbW[4\nMADE IN  CANADA\nIndians Fined for\nIntoxication\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014Two Indians of St. Mary's Reserve were convicted in City Police Court of m-\noxication under the Indian Act,\nwith Constable William McLaughlin making the arrests and prosecut-\niry charges.\nAs a result Joe Dominic was fined\n$2,. and Melcoir Burnaby was fined\n$20.\nMagistrate C. R. Ward presided\nat the hearings\n\"I COULDN'T\nWAIT TO\nTELL MOTHER!\n\u00bb\u00bb\n\"I couldn't wait to tell Mother about the\nbrisk flavour of Lipton's Tea I so enjoyed at\nthe party. I made her get a pound of Lipton's\nthe very next day!\"\nYes, Lipton's fresh, lively, full-bodied flavour\nmakes ordinary teas seem flat and dull. Tea\nexperts say Lipton's has brisk flavour, always\nspirited and tangy, never insipid or wishy-\nwashy. That's why you get finer tea pleasure\nin every cup. Ask your grocer today for brisk\ntasting Lipton's Tea.\nSALMO, B. C. - Bill Gretchen.\n| Steve Bellek. Ken Henderson, Mar-\n; shall McDearmld and Gordon Moir\nJ were visitors to Trail.\nI R Reisterer, J. Smith and J. Morrison of Nelson were recent visitors\nI in town\nI Miss Norma Irving spent the\nweekend in Nelson visiting friends.\nMr, and Mrs. G, G Fair were\nI visitors to the city.\n| S. Curwen was a visitor to Sheep\n- Creek.\ni    Chris Mandin  spent Tuesday   in\n| the city.\n; Pte. John Paul who recently arrived Irom two years' service over-\nI seas is visiting his sister and brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. C. Scrlbner.\nMrs. Jim Dodds is spending a (ew\nidays at Creiton visiting friends.\nMiss Elizabeth  Repin  visited   in\n; Nelson for a (ew days.\nMiss Olga  Myers was a shopper\nin Trail.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Jack   Benton   of\nMesdows were Trail visitors.\nDoug  Reid   of  Erie   was  a  Trill\n. visitor.\nMr. ind Mrs, Orphic Ballovince\n\u2022nd daughters, Dennle ind Suiy of\nI Sheep Creek, were Silmo visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hemstri o( Meadows were Salmo visitors en route\n, to Nelson.\n,    Lei Lund wis i visitor to Trail.\nMiss Elsa Hemstri and Miss Lore\nForch who spent the  weekend  at\ntheir homes at Meadows hsve returned to attend high school.\nMr. snd Mrs. Sandy' Bell ol Park\nSiding were Salmo visitors.\nF. J. Avery was a visitor to Nelson\nMr. and Mrs. O  Johnson Bakka\no( Nelway were shoppers to Silmo\n|    Mrs,  George   McDougsll   of   Erie\nvisited friends In Silmo.\nI    H. John and his two sons, Ed ind\nDavid, were visitors to Nelson.\nMrs  H. MrEwing wss s city vls-\n1 itor.\nMr and Mrs. H. Doelle of Sheep\nCresk were visitors to Nelson.\nArchie Minden visited ln Nelson\n| Mrs. Bill Mlllburn ind Mrs. Jim\nI Dodds were Joint hostesses it tha\n', home of the former in honor of\ntheir two sons. Dennie and Bobby\non their birthday. Games were en-\n; Joyed by the young guests, after\nwhich the guests ill down to rein\/iments Two beautiful decorated birthday rakes centred the refreshment table. Invited guests wera\nMons elen. Ermlnnli, Sheila. Allan\nland Stinley Grutchfuld, Ronnie\nI Avery, Ritchie and Terry Heirn,\nVests, Cirol, Howird ind Dili\nEscht, Pit Strsndberg. Blllle ind\nChirlei Scrlbnir, Ronnie Erlckion,\nDsnnli Smith, Ruby Dodds ind Hirvey Moon. Mrs. C. Smith, Mrs. J.\nHesrn. Mrs W. Hum. Mri H\nOrutchllild. Mrs. B. Klovinci, Mrs.\nj S. J Orutchfleld.\n| LONDON iCPl-When in unoccupied    bomb-dimited    houie    In\n! Shoredltch collapsed, pirt nf the de-\nI brll (ell on i horse and vin causing the horse to bolt and eome into\ni collision with \u25a0 pissing car.\n(t\nDo you know these winter\nWAYS t. SAVE\ntime, work, fuel?\"\nKetWflfl\nHorn*\nEeW>orn\n_\u2022\u2666\n\"Of course you're looking for ideas to help you make\nmeals more interesting for your family, and easier for\nyou! Cereals can help you. In thousands of homes\nKellogg's play a leading role not only at'breakfast but for\nquick snacks anytime. Serve them these different ways...\"\n\u2022 \u25a0  \u2022 ;.\nAn easy-to-get winter-lime breakfast\u2014\nKellogg's Brin Hakes with milk (hot milk,\nif you like). Reidy in 30 seconds, Kellogg's\nBrin Flikeswith Other Pirts Of Wheit hire\nl hearty flavour everybody likes!\niMh^,\nWhen tht gong drops In, serve a snick\nthlt's tasty ind satisfying; AILBran muffins\nwilh honey; cups of hot chocolate. The\nrecipe for eisy-to-make brin muffins is on\nthe Kellogg's All-Bran package.\nComplele-in-one-dlsh luncheonl Cut\ntomitoes in hilf ind sprinkle them with\nKellogg's All-Wheat crumbs ind grited\ncheese. Bike together with little pork sius-\niges. Your fimily'll yell for morel\nTo make moat go further, idd Kellogg'i\nshredded whole wheit Krumbles to your\nfavourite meat lolf recipe. Quick, eisy!\nA dish the fimily will enjoy, Krumbles hive\nI uniqui flivour only Kellogg's can cipture.\nWlnttr appetites ort hearty. When the\nchildren come In hungry from pliy, let them\nhelp themselves to crisp Kellogg's Pep\nflikeswith plenty of milk. A treit (or them,\nno trouble for you!\n\/\u25a0*?\nWant a before-bed mack thus satisfying,\nyet eisy-to-digest? Hive a big bowlful of\nKellogg's Rice Krispies with milk ind sugir.\nRice Krispies ire the criipir cereil thu\nttayi crisp to the very list spoonful!\nNot just for breakfast, a\nfor any meal, any time!\nCEREAL grains are a basic Canadian food. Few\nothers are at once jo appetizing, so nourishing,\nind so convenient. There's a Kellogg's ready-to-serve\ncereal to suit every taste. They're made from corn,\nfrom wheat, from rice...some tre Baked, some are\nshredded, some are popped. Serve t different one\nevery day! Kellogg's pioneered ready-to-eat cereals\nover a quarter of a century ago. Kellogg's is the\nfavourite of Canadian housewives . . . hy long odds\nthe most famous nime in cereals.\nKelltfg't Cam Flails an tbl facearitl riady-te-iat cireal\nin a majority ef Canadian hemii,  Velid first fer flivour\nhy 4 eat if' i Canadian heusewivts! Ready-te-ial instantly, ,\nsatisfying, sluiys frith! Medi hy Ktlligg'sit London, Canada.\nSAVE TIME...SAVE WORK...SAVE\n_______________\n A\nNew Arrival\nBUCK SUEDE SANDAL\nBlock Heel\nSmart and Comfortable\n$5.95\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLeaders in Fobtfashion\nFLEXAIRE BRASSIERES\nby \"FLEXEEe\"\nSizes 32 to 38\n$1.75\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nFor Extra Pep at work or play\nDRINK MILK\nK-V-D\nilllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIII\nSPENCER SUPPORTS\nFor health garments and\nfigure control, see\nMRS. THEA A. GIBSON\nHO Kerr Apts., Nelion.\nIlllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllllll,llllllll\nWedding,\nInvitations\nor,..\nAnnouncements\nCorrectly Printed and on\nGood Stationery.\nWEDDING   CAKE   BOXES\nAND ENCLOSURE CARDS\nOur work is the best\nNelson Daily News\nPrinting Department\nNELSON, B. C.\nMany Attend Lasf\nRiles for\nA. H.W. Crossley\nAlfred Horace Wlnlfrlth Crossley,\nwho for many years was actively\nInterested ln mining ln the district,\nand who died Monday at the age of\n65, was laid to rest in the Anglican\nPlot, Nelson Memorial Park on Wednesday. Among the large attendance\nof mourners at St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral, where funeral services\nwere held, were members of the\nmining fraternity and of the Chamber of Mines.\nThere was a profusion of flowers\nat the funeral. Very Rev. F. P.\nClark officiated at the ceremony,\nand F. E. Wheeler was organist.\nPallbearers were Harry Burns,\nWilliam Oliver, F. Osborne, J. Draper, H. B. Penny and W. Sturgeon.\nNELSON\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nChirgt fur engagement announcements on thli ptgt ll J1.60\nNorman MacLeod,\nAir Force Veteran,\non Jail Staff\nNorman G. MacLeod of Nebon\nhas joined the B. C. Provincial Police here, and will be a member of\nthe staff at the local jail. Mr. MacLeod, who holds the DFC, served\nwith the RCAF for five years, reluming home from overseas last\nOctober.\nThe son of Mr. and Mrs. N. MacLeod, 611 Hall Street, he was born\nand educated in Nelson. Once lifeguard at Lakeside Park, he took\npart in many sports here. After enlisting he served for two years with\nthe Service Police before remusterlng to the air crew. '\nPrincess Attends\nOfficer's Dinner\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (CP Cable)^-\nPrincess Elizabeth, who is honorary\nColonel of the Grenadier Guards,\ntonight attended a private dinner\nwith senior officers of regiments of\nthe Brigade of Guards. Mrs. Vicary\nGibbs was in attendance on the\nPrincess.\nBRAN\nMUFFINS\n_H CP* bron, 1 cup paltry flour, 4 tto-\nipooni baking powdtr, 'j cup brown\niugar, 1 egg, !\u00ab cup milk, 1 tablespoon\nmelttd butter, 2 tablespoons SOYHART\nSPREAD.\nSift flour ond baking powder together,\nodd bran and brown sugar, mix milk vlth\nbea.-n egg, melted butter ond SOYHART\nSPREAD and  odd  to  dry   ingredients.\nPill greaied muffin tin. \u25a0 _ full. Bake ot\n375\" tfl 4001  F. fir 20 to 25  minutes.\nA Recipe on Each Label,\nSOYHART\nJ.L.TRUMBULL LTD.,Vancouwer,B.C\n\u2022 Mr. ud tin. Harvey Grummett were shoppers trom Brilliant\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrt. R Pitta, Fair-\nview, have returned from Coast\nwhere former received discharge.\nWhile there they were guetta' of Mr.\nPitts' brother and iliter-tn-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry H. Pitta.\n\u2022 Bill Townsend hu returned\nfrom receiving his discharge tt tbe\nCoast and is with his mother, Mrs.\nH. H. Townsend, 314 Mill Street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Grubbe,\nHendryx Street, have as guest Rev,\nA. Gardener of Cranbrook, who ls\nattended the Clergy conference for\nthe archdeaconry Wednesday and\nthe rural deanery meet today under\nRev. W. J. Silverwood as rural\ndean.\n\u2022 Miss Ann Stanwlck, who haa\nbeen a patient ln the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital following an operation for appendicitis, has returned to her home.\n\u2022 Mrs. Fox of Trail and her\ndaughter, Mts. Stanley Doyle, visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Lou Jennings was a shopper\nfrom Procter yesterday.'\n\u2022 Mrs. Oscar B. Appleton of\nSunshine Bay is guest of her sister,\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, Nelson Avenue.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon L.\nThompson of Bonnington visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F ,B. Pearce,\nHoover Street, have as guest Ven.\nB. H. Resker, who is among clergy\nattending the conference.\n\u2022 Yesterday afternoon Mrs.\nHarry Korolak, Victoria Street, entertained members of the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate at her\nhome when those attending were\nMrs. A. G. Gelinas, Mrs. Edith Edgar, Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Mrs. M.\nJ. Vigneux, Mrs. J. P. Herron, Mrs.\nG. F. Steveni, Mrs. Louis Colettl,\nMrs. D. A. McPherson, Mrs. D. Mclnnes, Mrs. Louis Alexandra, Mrs.\nA. Ling, Mrs. Henri Gagnon, Mrs.\nJ. Morrison, Mrs. W. E. Kopeckl,\nMrs. George A. Tapp, Mrs. D. Aur-\nelio, Mrs. W. G. Fullerton, Mrs. Ann\nAduddell, Mrs. i. Muraro. Mrs. L.\nH. Choquette, Mrs. Philip Rahal,\nMrs. M. DeGirolamo, Mrs. C. F. McDougall, Mrs. Norbert 0. Choquette,\nMrs. I. gmelt, Mrs. P. DeFoe, Mrs.\nVito Romano, Mrs. P. Kirstiuk, Mrs,\nTony Bell, Mrs. Foisy and Mrs. V.\nDoyle.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Waters, 811\nCarbonate Street, have as house\nguest Mrs. Waters' nephew, Rev. F.\nM. Gilbert of Nakusp. who is here\nto attend a clergy conference.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Qerlemans, who spent\nthe past couple of months visiting\nat the home on Carbonate Stfeet of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. I. Smelt, returns today to\nher home in Medicine Hat.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Milne\nof Edgewood have returned after a\nshort visit in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Bumfrey of Rosebery\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city Tuesday\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. W. Kline of\nProcter.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.\nBeltner, Stanley Street, have as\nhouse guest Canon Proctor of Invermere, who is here attending the\nClergy conference.\n\u2022 Sgmn. Leo McKinnon. who\nhas spent the past two weeks visiting relatives in the city returned\nTuesday to Vancouver where his\nparents. Mr .and Mrs. Leo McKinnon reside.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. B. L. Dewdney, Stanley Street, is visiting in Trail guest\nof'Mr. ond Mrs. R. W. Diamond.\nI   Mri.  E.  Arlt ot Creiton  It\nSueit  ol her  dtughter  on  Silica\ntreet.\nt, Mr. tnd Mri. Hirold Lakes,\nRoiemont, have ts gueit Alex\nCoatei ot Edgewood, who li en route\nhome from receiving hli discharge\nIn Vtncouver. He plant on visiting\nhi brother, J. Percy Coatei, ln Trail\nbefore returning home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Brake recently returned home from Van.\ncouver where they attended the\nwedding of their daughter, Jacqueline (C.W.A.C).\n\u2022 Perry Brock, who has apent\nthe last two weeks at the home of\nhis brother and sister-in-law, Dr.\nand Mrs. Brock has left lor his\nhome In Powasson, Ont.\nEri^ta^ements\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Bundy,\nPort Moody, B.C., announce the engagement of their second daughter,\nMargaret, to Wright Mcintosh, eldest son of Mr. and Mri. Stuart Mcintosh, 140S Hall Mlnea Road, Nelson,\nB.C. The wedding will take place\nat Mount Pleasant Presbyterian\nChurch, Vancouver, B.C., March 2nd\nat 1 p.m., Rev. F. G. St. Denis officiating.\nMichel Lad Receives\nCommander-in-\nChief Certificate\nNATAL, B.C.-After being mentioned twice in despatches before\nthe first official word came the\nother day to Gnr. Donald Mac-\nFarlane, eldest son of Ken Mac-\nFarlane ot Michel, when he received the Commander-in-C)>ler\u00ab\ncertificate which was awarded by\nField Marshall B.L. Montgomery\nhimself, for devotion to duty while\nin action in Italy. The citation\nreads \"It has been brought to my\nnotice that you have performed\noutstanding good service and\nshown great devotion to duty during the campaign in North West\nEurope. I award you this certificate as a token of my appreciation\nand I have given Instructions that\nthis shall be noted in your Recod\nof Service.\"\nThe certificate wai signed by\nB. L. Montgomery himself who was\nField Marshal B. L. Montgomery\nChief of the 21st. Army Group at\nthe time. The certificate was dated\nSept. 7, 1945.\nGnr. Donald MacFarlane joined\nthe Lanark Renfrew Scottish in\nMarch 1941 and served oveneaa\nfor nearly five yean, landing in\nEngland In August ot the same\nyear after a short training period\nin Canada where he trained at Vernon, B.C., at Brandon, Man. and\nat London, Ont.\nHe first saw action in Italy where\nhe won the certificate award for\ndevotion to duty before going ln-\nt>, France tnd Germany.\nHe arrived back to Canada\naboard the Louis Pasteur and wai\nin tiMe to celebrate VJ-Day at Na.\ntal-Michel when Germany surrendered. This unexpected award Is\none of the first to be received by\nany Natal-Michel soldiers to date\nalthough on a few occasions some\nhave been mentioned in dispatches.\nCranbrook Miss Weds\nKimberleyite\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - In Knox\nPresbyterian Church, which wai\nfilled with friends, Fay Christina\nMcMaster, youngest daughter of\nMrs. G. M. McMaster was married\nto Wilfred Selwyn Scott of Kimberley, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. G.\nScott, with Rev. T. E. Roulston officiating.\nThe bride waa given in marriage\nby her brother, Otto McMaster, and\nattended by Miss Merle McMaster\nand Miss Catherine Hetherington of\nSeattle as bridesmaids and Miss\nBobbie McMaster as trainbearer.\nGroomsman was Orvllle tieal, and\nushers were Jerry Mason and Norman Liddicoat. A reception and\ndance followed at the K. P. Hall.\nThe couple lett on a wedding trip\nlo Seattle and will make their home\nat Kimberley.\nMrs. Scott was born and grew up\nIn this district and has been with\nthe Kelly-Douglas staff for three\nyears. Mr. Scott recently received\nhis discharge from the Canadian\nNavy and ls now employed at the\nSullivan mine at Klmberley.\nBenefit Concert Marks\nF.D.R. Birthday\nNEW YORK. Jan. 30 (AP) - A\nmemorial concert for the benefit of\nthe National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis marked thc Mth anniversary of tho birth of tho lato\nFranklin D. Roosevelt, wartime\nPresident, tonight.\nFormer Cranbrook\nGirl Weds\nVancouver Man\nCRANBROOK. B. C Of Interest\nto many friends here wns the recent\nmsrrlage at Vancouver nf June Esther Thompson, formerly of Cranbrook, lo Cordon R. Walmsley of\nVancouver, formerly of St. Thomas,\nOnt. The bride's sister. Ada, was\nbridesmaid, and her brothers, Ben,\nDave and .Ilm were ushers A reception followed the ceremony at the\nhome nf Mrs. Gollghtly.\nThe couple left for SI. Thomas on\ntheir wedding trip and will visit In\nt'ranbrook on their return Journey\nlo the Cotst.\nimberleyiles\nCelebrate\nBurns'Night\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - Sponsored\nby the St. Andrew'i Society approximately 200 guesta were present at\nthe annual Burns' banquet, concert\nand dance, held In the KP. Hall\nhere.\nThe sumptlous aisortment of dellcioui Scottish dlshei made up 'The\nMenu.\" Haggis, Great Chieftain o'\nthe Puddln' Race, wl' aome roast\nveal an' ham, wi' chapplt tattles wi'\npeas, an' carrlts, lettuce and tomatoes an' a bun or twa, Ice cream an'\ncookie* tea or coffee. Wi' wine or\na wee hauff. The haggis was piped\nand carried in by Captain and Mrs.\nStout.\nThe toast list Included the community song \"There Was a Lad\";\naddress to the haggis, Archie Tait;\nSelkirk Grace, Rev. S. T. Galbralth;\nto the ladies, C. Duncan; response,\nMrs. Park.\nThe Immortal Memory was given\nby Hon. President Robert Beck, who\nreferring to the life of Robbie Burns,\ntold of visiting many of the beautiful spots which had inspired the\nScottish bard to poetry and song.\nThe musical program Included \"a\nfine selection of Scottish music,\nvocal and instrumental. Those taking part were: Robert Davidson, L.\nByrne, Miss Frances Park, Frank\nMcLafferty, Albert Hay. The Scottish dancers were Joyce Beattle,\nBetty Park, Lorraine McLellan,\nMargaret Stout, Alleyne McGlllivray, Lillian Morrison, Myra Beat-\ntie. Accompanist, Mrs. C. Chisholm.\nPipers, A. Scott, H. Scott, J. Stout.\nMaster of ceremonies at the dance\nwhich followed, J. McGillivray. The\nentertainment closed with the singing of \"Auld Lang Syne\".\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1946 -\nOn th Oih\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 31\nMiss Wilson Dies\n5 Months Before\nHer 109th Birthday\nADAMS, Mass., Jan. 30 (AP) -\nMiss Margaret Wilson died last\nnight, less than five months before\nher 109th birthday'. On her 105th\nbirthday she vowed: \"If I live long\nenough to see the Allied nations\nwin this war and take care of Heel\nHitler, I will walk down to the\nTown Square and publicly thank\nGod.\" She did.\nWounds Self, Does\nOwn Stitching\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 30 (CP)-\nWhen i bread knife slipped and\nInflicted a 3'\/i Inch gash In hli\nabdomen, a Winnipeg resident\nperformed some amateur surgery\nto stop bleeding.\nThe wound which bled profusely, although superficial, cauied\nthe alarmed tenant to run for the\n\u2022ewlng baiket for a needle and\nthread.\nAfter a 10-hour ileep, he told\nhli landlord of tha Incident, wai\ntaken to hoiplttl where hit condition Win reported good.\nFlriffull-tlme chtlrmtn ot tht\nCBC, A. Davidson Dunton, brings\nto hli new poit wide tnd successful executive experience.\nStill In hit thirties, he his won\na reputation as one of Ctntdt's\nleading newspapermen. He wti\neditor of the Montreal Standard\nfor four yeari and general manager of Canada's Wartime Information Board for three yean prior\nto hli recent CBC appointment.\nEducated In Canada, England,\nand the continent, Mr. Dunton hai\nan interesting connection with\nBritlih Columbii. Hli wife li the\nformer Ktthleen Blngay of Trail\nand Vancouver, B.C., who was\n.a well known lawyer before her\nmarriage.\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nMORNING\n7:30\u20140 Canada\n7:_tl\u2014Musical Reveille (CKLN)\nB:00-CBC News\n8:15\u2014 Breakfast Club\n8:30\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Toast and Coffee Club\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15-At Your Service (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014Pops on Parade\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\ntf.00\u2014Miniature Concert.\n10:15\u2014CKLN Press News\n10:30\u2014Musical Roundup (CKLN)\n10:45\u2014Matinee for Moderns\n11:00\u2014CBR Presents\n11:15\u2014Women's Forum (CKLN)\n11:30\u2014 Soldier's Wife\n11:45\u2014Dancing Till Noon\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C.  Farm Broadcast\n12:15\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:2_r-The Notice Board  (CKLN)\n12:30\u2014CBC News\n12:45\u2014Matinee Memories\n1:00\u2014 Modern Minstrels\nl:15-Deeds That Live\n1:30\u2014Old Favourites (CKLN)\n1:45\u2014Old Favourites (CKLN)\n_:00\u2014School Broadcait\n2:18\u2014School Broadcait\n2:30\u2014Roblnion Ftmlly\n2:45\u2014Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Weitern Five\n3:15\u2014Headline Hiitory\n3:30\u2014Serenade\n3:45\u2014Swing Time (CKLN)\n4:00\u2014Evening Scrtpbook\n4:15\u2014Evening Scrtpbook\n4:30\u2014Stock quotations\n4:43\u2014Top Bandi\n3:00\u2014Sacred Heart Programme\n5:13\u2014Concert ln Miniature\n(CKLN)\n5:30-Peerlesi Newj (CKLN)\n5:43\u2014Ray Bloch Presenti (CKLN)\nEVENING\n6.00-Kraft Muilc Hall\"\n8:15\u2014Kraft Mualc Hall\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody (CKLN)\n6:5_-C.P.R. Train Time (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014CBC Newi\n7:15\u2014Newi Roundup\n7.30\u2014Panorama\n8:00\u2014Drama\n8:15\u2014Drama\n8:30\u2014Story of Music\n8:45\u2014Story of Muilc\n9:00\u2014Modern Romancei (CKLN)\n9:15\u2014Music For You\n9:30\u2014All-Star Dance Parade\n(CKLN)\n9:45\u2014Lean Back and Listen\n(CKLN)\n10:0O-CBC News\n10:15\u2014The Frasen\n10:30\u2014God Save the King\nEDGAR BERGEN\nMARRIED SECRETLY\nHOLLYWOOD, Jan. 30 (AP) -\nThe Edgar Bergens not only have\nbeen married again, they've been\nmarried again secretly. Weeks\nelapsed between the comedian's\nfirst marriage to the former Frances Westerman in Mexico last June\nand their announcement. Today the\nnews was out that they did a retake Jan. 19.\niiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!\nFreema\nFURNITURE CO.\nTht Houn of Furniture Values \"\u25a0\nPhont 115 Nelson S\nBUY ON OUR     I\nBUDGET PLAN      j\n\u25a0 ii\nTermi ln accordance with Wtr-.\ntime Prlcei tnd Trade Regula-     it\ntions. .   j\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiii \u25a0*\ntut *-(U\nA scientist has calculated that lt\nmay take 1,000,000,000,000,000 snow-\nflakes to cover an acre of ground.\nFor Relia&le Witch Repain\neoniult\u2014\n491 Baker St,\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nStorage\nRepairs \u2014 Alteratloni\n659 Baker St      Phone 960\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii\nSALE   CONTINUES\nTWO MORE WEEK8\nNew Spring Merchandise\nArriving Daily\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOP\n\u2022 Authorltlei uy the difference\nbetween husky children tod tho*\nwoo tre poor eaters, underweight\ntnd nervous ii often limply t nutter\nof proper nourishment, especially an\nadequate lupply of vitamins.\nBut vitamins tlone tre not toougha\nFor authorities now agree thtt Yita-\nmini do not work tlone. They wort \"3\nti t team with certain other food\nelements.\nFor thii reason, thouundi are\ntwitching to Ovaltine. Unlike intra\n\"vitamin carriers,\" Ovaltine food\nbeverage contains not onl; extra\nvitamins but nearly ill the precioui.\nfood elements needed for heilth tnd\ntop vitality. Theie include Vita.\nmini A, Bl tnd D, tht important\nminerals calcium, phosphorus lnd\niron, high quality proteins tnd quick\nenergy fuel-food\u2014* combioation of\nfood elements authorities agree ara\nneeded for belt reiulti.\nSo, if year child Ii thin, nerroul\ntnd not developing properly, why\nnot turn to Ovaltine ss thousand! ara |\ndoing. Three normal meals plus two\nglutei of Ovaltine a day gin yotL. '}\nchild all the extra amounts of vitamin* j\nand minerals needed for heilth and*\ntop vitality. '\u2022*__\nOVALTINE\nTHI   PROTECTING   FC.OD-DI.l_HC\nMilady's\nfloHUtVty.\nbjrijuWooiL\nCOATS - HATS - DRESSES\nAll Selling At\nGENEROUS REDUCTIONS\nALL\nFUR COATS\nMust Be\nCLEARED\nAn extra ipeclal group of model Fur\ntrimmed Coats in too many different\npricei to mention in thii ipace , , .\nGREATLY REDUCED FOR\nTHIS SALE\nAll Drenei, Coats ond Sports Wear,\nHats,   Blouses  and  Skirts   Included\nMuit Be Cleared\nALL MODEL HATS \u2014 Ranging in\npricei up to     $7.95 and $10.95\nAlio Greatly Reduced!\n23 EXCLUSIVE MODEL DRESSES\nFairly Reduced for thii Big Sale\n25 Lovely\nFur-Trimmed\nCOATS\nVALUES\n$35.00 to $39.50\nREDUCED TO\n$2750\n50 Untrimmed Coats\nValues to $25.00\nREDUCED TO\n$1975\nENTIRE STOCK OF\nValues to $35.00\nREDUCED TO\n$2750\nFall and Winter Dresses\nOn Sale at Genuine Clearance Sale Prices\nVALUES TO\n$5.95\nREDUCED TO\n$395\nVALUES TO\n$8.95\nREDUCED TO\n$695\nVALUES TO\n$12.95\nREDUCED TO\n$895\nAU Fall and Winter Hats\nMuit Be Cleared.   Drastically Reduced Prices\nSPECIAL   MILLINERY   BARGAIN\nVALUES TO\n$3.95\nREDUCED TO\n$|95\nVALUES TO\n$4.95\nREDUCED TO\n$295\nVALUES TO\n$5.95\nREDUCED TO\n$395\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe Ltd.\n449 Baker Street\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 87.:\n\t\n\u2014^_^_\n Sfrtam Batty Newa\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\nBritish Columbia's\nMojt Interesting Newspaper\n.Published every mornlnj except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, 200 Baiter St.. Nelson, British,Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPostoltlca Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTHURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1946.\nThis, Vancouver, Is Really\nToo, Too Much\nWe all know what consistently\nlovely weather is enjoyed by Vancouver. Leo Sweeney, its energetic\nTourist Bureau chief, often tells us\nabout it, with occasional whispers to\nthe Vancouver people to keep their\nlips pinned up when it snows too hard,\nor freezes too bitterly or rains for too\nlong.\nHe even made Dean Acheson, Assistant Secretary of State apologize the\notMr day because the Washington official made a suggestion that ice-closed\nCanadian ports were hampering shipments of wheat to starving Europe,\nwhich Vancouver took as a bitter affront\nke in Burrard Inlet? The howl from\nVancouver was so loud that the radar\nexperts that day thought that they\nwere getting reverberations from the\nmoon.\nThe fact that Acheson wasn't talking about salt water harbors but about\nIhs Great Lakes didn't make any dif-\nftrsece. It was an opportunity to promote the knowledge that Vancouver\nis a wheat-shipping harbor and Mr.\nSweeney went to town on it. He had\n' the gardeners working away in their\nshirt sleeves, the birds singing and the\nflowers blooming and got the story on\nthe press associations' leased wires,\ntoo. Mr. Sweeney should get a salary\nraise just as soon as Donald Gordon\nwill okay it.-\nBut when a Vancouver paper\nstretches its cooperation with Mr.\nSweeney to the extent of covering up\n4 Vancouver snowfall last Sunday by\ntelling the world that Nelson had a\ntemperature the preceeding day of 3\nbelow zero we in the mild and salubrious climate of the Interior must\nreally rise in protest. Nelson's temper-\nsture Friday night did not get lower\nthan 22.3 degrees higher than the figure in the\u2014should it be called slanderous?\u2014article in the Coast paper. Just\nto keep the record straight, Nelson's\nminimum temperatures were 28.1 on\nWednesday night, 25.8 on Thursday\n\u2022night, 14.3 on Friday night, 16.5 on Saturday night and 21.3 on Sunday night;\n411 of course above zero.\nCharged With One Offence,\nPunished for Another\nFor having a registration card\nother than his own, Ernest Golding\nwas fined $500, with six months in jail\n\u25a0s an alternative, in a Vancouver Polks Court.\nArrested he had in his possession a\nNational Registration card bearing the\nname of Kenneth R. Smith, and a medical rejection card from the armed\nforces bearing the same name.\nThe court was told that Golding\nwent A.W.L. from an overseas draft in\n'December, 1944, and had since been\nsought as a deserter.\nSo, Golding was fined $500, or six\nmonths in jail, not for the offence with\nwhich he was charged and convicted,\nbut because of the alleged offence of\ndesertion of which he was neither\ncharged nor convicted. Obviously, no\nmagistrate would have inflicted such\n4 heavy penalty for a technical violation of the national registration regulations.\nSuch cases are a travesty of whst\nwe proudly rail British justice. They\nbring the administration of the law\ninto disrepute.\nBut they make it easy lo under-\nwhy some of our police authorities\nwant compulsory possession of National Registration cards continued. It\nmakes it easy to get someone soaked\nfor offences that might, he difficult\nor inconvenient to prove.\nIf Golding is a deserter then he\nshould be tried, and upon production\nof the necessary proof, punished hy\nthe appropriate authorities. As matters\nstand he has been punished without\nsuch proof of guilt.\nThe sooner we get rid of Ihe compulsory National Regiitration law the\nbetter.\nLead Market Situation Is\nGood for the Producer\nThe market for letd, sn important\nmatter to Kootensy snd Boundary,\nseems to be in an exceptionally strong\nposition from the producers' viewpoint\nwith prospects of an increue in the\nAmerican price.\nAn Associated Press dispatch from\nNew York ststes that American manufacturers will demand st least a million tons of lead in 1946, and that this\namount will be nearly 300,000 pounds\nmore than the United States domestic\nproduction of this metal.\n\"The United States Government has\nbeen negotiating for foreign lead but\nIs finding that European nations, which\nare also in great need of the metal, are\nalready competing in the Mexican\nmarket.\nThe United States Government's\nstock pile of lead is dwindling. Lead\nquotas are being imposed, and there\nare repercussions in the storage battery, telephone cables, ethyl gasoline,\nbuilding, chemical and paint industries.\nChief reasons for the shortage in\naddition to the exceptional demand is\nthat during the war little development\nwork was done in the mines. There\nwas such a demand for the metal for\nurgent purposes that mining companies devoted their efforts to mining ore\nalready explored.\nThere was no chance to do much\ndevelopment. Consequently proven\nore reserves are low. They will not be\nbrought back to normal until time has\nbeen given to adequate exploration\nand development. The second reason\nis that while the United States needs\n12,000 men in the industry of producing lead at the present time, it has only\n8000.\nPress Comment\nTHE BRITISH  IN  INDONESIA\nTo those who have been crying out again-;.\nthe presence of the British in Java, it must\ncome as a surprise to read that the Javanese are not anxious for the British to leave\n\u2014not yet awhile.\nOn the heels of Russia's demarche ln the\nGeneral Aswmbly of UNO, demanding tho\nprobing of British actions in Greece and Indonesia, Premier Sutan Sjahrir has declared\nthat Indonesians would prefer to have the\nBritish remain until the Japanese have been\nremoved, since otherwise the Japs might refuse to lay down their arms.\nIn saying this, the Premier appears to\ngive fullest credit to the stout British claim\nthat they are in Indonesia merely to keep\norder and to disarm the Japs, in conformity\nwith this assignment from the Allied Powers.\nThere is evidence that the British have\nbeen playing the game impartially in Indonesia. They have used force against the Javanese, but they likewise have sternly denied\nentry to Dutch forces whose presence in Java\nthey considered likely to fbment further disorders.\nThe British know their actions In Java\nare anxiously watched all over Asia, and particularly in their own colonial possessions\nthere, and they are not anxious to lower their\nprestige or trade away goodwill,\u2014Vancouver\nSun.\nINITIATIVE SHOWN\nIt is a healthy sign when private initiative\nbegins to pick up again the plans it was forced\nto lay down when war intervened. In British\nColumbia in many different directions now\nthere Is growing evidence of developments,\nnew starts and extensions on the industrial\nand business scenes. The British Columbia\nElectric Railway's $50,000,000 program of new\nwork over the next 10 years was one of the\nfirst of the postwar announcements. Others\nare now maturing. Amongst them will be\nnoticed and welcomed, plans by the Union\nSteamship Company to convert three Castle\nclass corvettes to coast-wise passenger and\nfreight vessels for use on this Coast.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nPOST-WAR YEARS UNEA8Y\nIt was in 1919 when the One Big Union up?et\nthe apple cart in Canada. It looks an if the\nsame apple cart is in for an upsetting again in\n1946. Post-war years are uneasy years. Lethbridge Herald.\nToday's Horoscope\nYou are ambitious, but are easily discouraged, and give up too easily where you might\naccomplish many things. You are kind, just,\ngenerous, and have an artistic temperament.\nCultivate perseverance and confidence in your\nown ability. You are fond of children. Take\nit easy today, as speed can be dangerous. Put\nthe brakes on your emotions, too, for this\nday. Also don't take a new acquaintance on\ntrust.\nWords of Wisdom\nKnowledge of the world is dearly bought\nif at the price of moral purity.\u2014E. Wiggles-\nworth.\nTest Yourself\n1. What music precede! the actual performance of Hn opera''\n2 What ii the hymn called Out Is sung\nat the beginning nf a church service whan\nchoir and clergyman enter?\n3. What is the music called at the end of\nthe church servict?\nTEST ANSWERS\n1 The overture.\n2 The processional\n3 Tht -faetaaional.   \\\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOcien to any reader Names ot periont\n-uking queitlom wlll not be publlihed.\nThere le no charge for thli urvloe. Queitlom WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except when thera li obvloui necee-\nilty for prlvaoy.\nA. S., Birchbank\u2014My wile and I are on tho\nverge of a aeparatlon and I am solely supporting the children and, the queitlon I\nask, who ihould have the legal rights to.\nthe Family Allowance check. Would I\nhave to have complete proof that ihe is\nnot spending the check on the children,\nbefore'I could get the check turned over\nto my name?\nWe would advise you to write to W. R.\nBortes, Director of Family Allowance, Victoria,\nB. C, and are sure that you will, receive the\nInformation thit you require.\nReader, Nelson-What ls an N.H.A. Loan?\nA N.H.A. Loan ls made by a loaning Institution at 414 per cent to enable a person\nto obtain funds to build a home by way of\nmortgage under the National Housing Act,\n1M-, the major portion of which ls guaranteed to the loaning Institution by the Dominion of Canada.\nHow can this be obtained?\nAn applicant must apply to a loaning institution and make application for such loan\nand present plans for the proposed home,\nwhich have to be approved by the loaning institution  and the Government of Canada.\nF. H. W., Nelson\u2014How old was Henry Ford\nwhen his car was put on the market?\nHenry Ford began his experiments a mere\nboy. He was 40 years of age before he offered\nthe Ford car to the world. His first car was\ncompleted in 1896. Until 1903 he worked quietly and experimented. He then Introduced the\nfamous \"999\".\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetters may be published ftver a nom da\nplume, but the actual name of the writer\nmust be fllven to tha Editor ai evidence ot\ngood faith. Anonymous letten go In tha\nwaste paper baiket.\nLong Ferry Route May\nLead to Bottleneck\nWhen Tourist Rush On\nTo The Editor:\nSir\u2014I have been pleased lo see that The\nDally News has been continuing to carry on\nits campaign to obtain improved road facilities\nfor the Interior of B. C. May I draw the\nattention of the public to thc situation regarding tha, proposed new ferry on Kootenay Lake\"1\nIt would seem absolutely absurd to spend\nabout half a million dollars to put a new\nferry in .-.ervice on the Like, plus the cost\nof two new ferry landings, and not take ad-\nvarttage of the shortest possible route, where\nthe greatest service could bc provided for the\ntravelling public.\nThe present route takes about one hour from\nthe time thc ferry gets undtr way at Kras?r's\nLanding till it is rrarty to land at Gray Creek,\nWith the same cost of operation and the same\namount of capital expenditure on the ferry, it\ncould make at least double the numb r of\ntrips in thc same time, if operated on the much\nshorter route from snme point in Queen's Bay\nto Kootenay Bay. It would seem that the en-\nKineers of the Public Works Department were\nprejudiced in their decision against the sh'-rt^r\nroute, as steam:r captains of hng experience\nhave assured us that there would be nn difficulty in makint; lanriii-^s at these points if\nthe proper facilities were provided, For the\nlast 30 years a floating wharf held only by\ntwo cables without piling has been constantly\nin use at Kootenay Bay\nWith completion of the Hope-PrmceUm\nlink and the hard surfacing cf the S-':'u.rn\nProvincial Highway, tourist traffic may be expected to increase to such an extent that the\nlonger ferry route would develop intu a real\nbottle-neck, which thr Minister nf ruhlic\nWorks seems determined to foist nn \\\\\\* Kootenays.\nThis shorter ferry route would, of course,\nentail the improvement nf ihe nad through\nCraw-ford Bay, Tins has been promisrd by one\nGovernment after another for the past 40 y_ _irs.\nWith the Cameron report on education beeom-\ning effective, we lock fnrward to a consolidated school district and a grad'd school This\nwould make the improvement of our mad a\nnecessity so that school buses could operate\nin safety.\nApart from all other reasons, surely fanners in a settlement of this size, after being deprived of the regular steamer service which\nran whf-n they settled in this country and invested their capital, are now entitled to a\nroad fit for a freight truck and n schnol bus.\nW   Fraser.\nKootenay Bay, B. C, Jan. 27. 1M6\nGems of Thought\nLOVE ONE ANOTHER\nLove is never lost   If not reciprocated  it\nwill   flow   hack   and  soften   and   purify   the\nheart. -Washington Irving.\nIt is the very essence of love, of nobleness,\nnf greatness, to he willing to suffer fnr the\ngood of others - Spencer.\n\"Love one another, as I have loved you\"\nNo estrangement, no emulation, nn deceit, enters into the heart that loves as Jesus loved. It\nls a false sense of love that, like the Summer\nbrook, soon gets dry\u2014Mary Bsker Eddy\nDivine love n a faered flower, which In\nIts early bud is happiness, and tn its full blnnm\nIs heaven\u2014Eleanor L. Hervey.\nHow shall I do to love? Believe How shall\nI do to believe\"* Love \u2014Leighton\nEtiquette Hints\nIf a friend comae to you for advice and\ntells you about his or her personal affairs,\nyou should keep the confidence, even if later\nyou are a member of a group which i* diieuss-\n1m thoit affaire.\nHITLER HIMSELF ENUNCIATED THE NAZI\nPOLICY OF EXECUTING DEPORTEES\nNUERNBERG, Jan. 30 (AP) -\nAdolf Hitler hlmielf enunciated the\nNatl policy of exciting deportees\nln order to Intimidate the populations of subjugated European countries, French Prosecutor Charles Dubost told the International Military\nTribunal today,\ncrimes court a document he descilb-\nM. Dubost submitted to the war\ned as a directive from the German\nHigh Command instructing German\nmembers of the French-German Ai-\nmlstice Commission to reject all requests from the French delegation\nor the International Red Cross for\nbetter treatment of prisoners.\nThis directive said the policy\nwas ordered by Hitler, who said:\n\"Effective, lasting intimidation\nof the population cannot be\nachieved except by the death penalty or by measures which leave\nthe criminal's (deportee's! close\nrelations, and the population ignorant of his fate.\"\nThe prosecution also cited an order which lt said waa handed down\nby Gestapo Chief Helnrlch Himmler in April, 1949, directing that\nno prisoner ihould be allowed to\nfall Into Allied hands alive.\nOne ot the defendants, Arthur\nSeyu Inquart, former German Governor of the Netherlands, waa stricken ill during the' night and wai\nabsent (rom the prisoners' dock today.\nM. Dubost, Introduced a German\nHigh Command directive Instructing\ncommander*, of war prisoners'\ncamps not to observe the general\neonventlon regulation for delay in\nexecutions. The convention provides\nthat execution of prlaoners cannot\nbe carried out until three months\nafter the protecting power has been\nnotified.\n\"For war prisoners themselves, it\nls more humane not to have to wait\nthree months for their execution,\"\nthe directive said.\nAnother document showed how\nthe command ol the Gerl-nan Air\nForce attempted to curtail Allied\nair attacks by placing war prisoner's camps near large German cities.\nRehabilitation Council...\nAgrees to Operate\nOld Hotel as\nVeterans' Hostel\nPresent Occupants to Remain\nUntil Council Takes Over\nFinds Generalissimo Franco Has\n\"No Private Life\" When Delving\nInto II; Protected From Intruders\nBy DEWITT MacKENZIC\nMADRID, Jan. 30 (AP) -f. When\nyou set out to delve Into the private\nlife of Generalissimo Franco you\nsoon discover that, as a friend of\nmine here puts it, \"there is not any.\"\nThat may strike many as strange\nin view of the glaring black marks\nin thc Allied books against Franco'i\nname.\nFranco lived after the fashion of\na studious professor, but in the surroundings of a king. I do not mean\nthat he is at all a humble person,\nfor he definitely is not, but hia personal wants apparently are simple.\nHe likes hunting in Winter and\nfishes during his Summer vacation.\nBeyond that he likes to stay at\nj home.\nI The Franco family\u2014the General-\n, issimo, his wife and their daughter\n\u2014live in the ancient town of El\nj Pardo, BH miles from Madrid, in\ni one of the royal palaces. It waa\nthere, amid the georgeous trapping\n1 of monarchy, that I had a long talk\n\u25a0vith him.\n! PROTECTED  AGAINST\nINTRUDER8\nIt was not surprising to find the\nGeneralissimo heavily protected\n1 Hgainst  intruders.   I arrived  in  E!\nPardo half an hour ahead of my\nappointment and used this tima in\nlooking over the old place.\nWithin a few minutei an alert\nlittle man popped up from nowhere,\nflashed his secret service badge on\nme and smilingly but firmly wanted\nto know something of my history\nand my intentions. Later a big squad\nof armed officers at the palace gate\nexamined our car and party and\npassed us inside.\nAt the entrance were two of the\nGeneralissimo's famous moorish\nmounted bodyguards aitting proudly\non their horses like statues, with\nspiked iteel helmets blazing in the\nsun through the tops of their turbans, and lances erect against their\nstirrups,\nj DOESN'T USE\nTOBACCO OR ALCOHOL\nFranco looks so fit in his military\nuniform at the age of 55 that he\nmight easily be mistaken for 45. This\nprobably is partly a heritage of his\nvigorous African campaigns as a\nyoung officer \u2014 service which\nbrought him a brigadier generalship\nat the age of 34. Another reason for\nhis physical well being may be that\nhe is said to be a light eater and\ndoes not use tobacco or alcohbl.\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP)-The\n53\u00a3-room old Hotel Vancouver will\nbe operated as a veterans1 hostel by\nthe City's Rehabilitation Council, it\nwas decided last night at a special\nmeeting of the Council's Executive.\nCANADIAN ARMY\nHAS CONTROL\nWar veterans who walked into\nthe downtown Vancouver structure\nlast Saturday will stay until the\nCouncil is ready to begin \"cleanup\" work prior to taking over the\nhotel. The Canadian Army has control of the building until midnight\nThursday when its lease expires.\nCouncil officials said they had\nbeen in touch with the Canadian\nPacific Railway, owners of the hotel,\nand a new lease would be concluded\ntoday, giving them the right to operate it as a hostel. Thc Federal\nGovernment will meet any deficit in\noperating costs.\nPreiident A. P. Allison of tha\nCounoll iaid while the preient oc-\ncupanti would remain until the\nCouncil wai prepared to take\nover, \"we wilt not operate the\nhostel if they do not move out at\ntheir Committee agreed.\"\n(Representative of the veterans\nnow in the hotel agreed two nights\nago to move out if the Council took\nover. They requested only that thii\nCouncil give preference to present\noccupants when the hostel wai\nopened.)\n35 INCREA8ED TO\n700 WHO WALKED  IN\nThe 35 ex-servicemen who march*\ned into the former hotel last Satur*\nday because, they said, they could\nfind no suitable living accommodation in Vancouver, now have in*\ncreased to more than 700 including\ndependents and a number of women\ndischarged from the Armed Force*.\nEagle Variety\nof Oats Tests\nWell ai Creston\nFinds House of Commons Library\nHasn't Books Members Want\nBy   JAMES   McCOOK\nCanadian  Pren Staff Writer\n: London, Jan. 31 fCP)-Thc\nMouse of Commons library has\nlive rooms\u2014including the \"Silence\nRoom\"  where peace  is profound\u2014\nI hut  a  select  committee  has come\n1 to ihe conclusion it has not got the\nbook members want.\nThe library, rich in venerable\nbooks, was found to be deficient in\nvolumes on finance and political\neconomy, social science, history\n\u25a0md constitutional law, the Dominion.-;, the Colonies, Russia and\nAsiatic countries,\ni Prompt action to make good th?\ndeficiencies was recommended by\nthe committee. New book puhli-\n\u25a0_.. r>n   w.is   restricted   during   the\n' war and still is controlled by lim-\n: ited paper supplies.\nModern card index catalogues of\nauthors and subjects were declared\nindispensable,   and  appointment  of\ni additional   librarians   with   speclil\n! qualifications who could give\nmembers advice quickly was re-\ncommended.\nSecret Room: When members returned from their Christmas holiday they found additional accomodation for secretaries at No. 5 old\npalace yard, a three-storey building facing the House of Commoni.\nThis was the home of Henry La-\nb-ouchere. \"Labby\", a fiery radical\ni_nd friend of Joseph Chamberlain\nin his Liberal days.\nIn the old library Is a dummy\nbookcase which gives access to a\nsecret chamber, where a hard-\npressed member sometimes may\nfeel like hiding from delegations\nwhich harry all his tribe.\nAll taped: Many a new peer did\nnot feel he could spend \u00a3 100\n($450) on the robe he must wear\nwhen he takes his seat in the\nHouse of Lords. If he was more\nthan five feet eight inches all wai\nsimple. He-could borrow one of the\ntwo baroni' robes In the house,\nmade to* men between five feet\neight inches and six feet. In the\nold lush days a short peer would\nbuy a new robe to fit him rather\nthan staumble over the long skirts\nof theie borrowed garments. But\ntimes have changed.\nSpecial provision has been made\nfor some shorter labor peers. So\nthey could make a dignified entry\nthe two robes available for borrowing have been fitted with tapes\nattached to the lining. The wear-\nrr slips his arms through the loops\nand adjusts the robes to any length \"he likes The robes have two\nrows of ermine trimming, a major\npart of their cost.\nOTTAWA\u2014An examination of the\nfinal information for oats and barley\nvariety trials conducted in the Fraser Valley, North Okanagan and\nCreston areas during- 1945 does not\nindicate any major change in varietal recommendations for the forthcoming season, says M. F. Clarke,\nExperimental Farm, Agassiz, B.C.\nVictory retains its place as a general purpose oat in all three districts\nprovided seeding ia not too late.\nOn very heavy soils in the Fraser\nValley and at Creston, Eagle is an\nexcellent choice on account of its\nshort, stiff straw and high grain\nyield. Mention should be made of\nthe new stem-rust resistant oat, Exeter, which has shown outstanding\nyielding ability for three successive seasons. This variety ls medium\nlate and very stiff-straw ed, but has\na tendency toward thick hulls. High\ntotal yield, however, reaulti in a\nsatisfactory net kernel yield.\nExeter was grown under field\nconditions at both Ladner and Chilliwack during the 1945 season and\nproduced heavily. An increase in\nthe distribution of thia variety will\nundoubtedly occur, particularly in\ndistricts possessing a heavy soil and\nample moisture, despite its tendency\ntoward high hull content. For later\nseeding in all three districts mentioned or wherever moderate earli-\nbeas is required, the rust-resistant\nvariety Ajax is suggested. This variety has performed consistently\nwell and replaced Erban in the 1945\nrecommendations.\nIn regard to barley the short-\natrawed, rough-awned Trebi is a\ngood choice in the Fraser- Valley.\nOf the smooth-awned -sorts, Plush\nIs the standard recommendation for\nthe Fraser Valley, North Okanagan\nand Creston areas. In those sections\nof the Okanagan where lodging is\nnot serious Byng can also be used.\nThis is a very heavy yielding barley, but also very soft strawed.\nIRLIEST and BEST\"\nTOMATO\n1 iitr-i-lnrt-i-l br ui i-jTenl yun a(t> nnr* )_j\nthtn merit It hti ouUold til other -rirfatica\n\u2022raong both horn* and commn-ciil growers\nrich Hakon, in \u00ab?erjr part of Canada. Cm*\ntorn en rtpuUdly tell ua \"Earliutaod Beat\"\nli itlll better than we claim. Product*\nlarge, beautiful, mild, perfect iMpplag\ntomatoei, earlier than inj other variety.\nHigh crown tv***-, without core, and moil\nbeautiful red with fineit flavour. No\nrrlpptei, ireldi, cracked, wrinkled, unevei,\n\u25a0rarrtd fruit, and often ten fruiti la \u25a0\nduiter. Amazing jifld-r. (Pkt 13<) (ei 7SO\nptttptrd.\nMEE-OUR BIO 1946 MED AND\nNURSERY  BOOK-Ltacli  Again     H\nPOWIWaM SEED HOUSE. GEORGETOWN, OUT,\n$25,000.00\nTO BE GIVEN AWAY\nWIN\nA $15,000 RANCH\nOR FRUIT FARM IN\nSUNNY BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA.\nOr the equivalent In\nVICTORY BONDS\n2nd Prize, 1946 Lincoln Zephyr\n3rd Prize, an all-expense trfp to\nEurope or $1000 ln Cash.\n87 OTHER PRIZES ln all\ntotalling $25,000.\nMail this ad. with $1.00 for eaci\nsubscription desired to the\nKIMBERLEY  AND DI8TRICT\nMEMORIAL SOCIETY\nBox 430 Klmberley, B.C.\ntogether with your name \u00abnd\naddress. Proceeds to be used to\nerect a Legion Memorial Hall\nand Recreation Centre for our\nReturning Veterans and Citizen!\nof Kimberley and District.\nDate of drawing will be announced in the Press.\nDONT  DELAY . . . ACT NOW |\nAgenti Wanted\n$2,300 00 in cash prizes to sellers\nof winning subscriptions.\nClosing Date Feb. 28, 194) -\nNDN\nRouland to Have $80,000 Hotel;\nCity Sells Site to P. Zaharachuk\nROSSLAND, RC. Jin 23- Erection nf nn W0,000 three-storey hotel\nin Roisland wu facilitated by the\nCity Council Monday night, when,\nnn thr recommendation nf the Property Committee, sale of the three\nbuilding lota on the corner of Columbia Avenue and Washington\nStreet, owned hy the City, to P\nZaharachuk fnr W50. the amount offered, was authorized The agreement to be drawn up by the City\nSolicitor will obligate compliance\nwith the Building Bylaw\nIn reporting the Committee'* rec-\nommendatlon. Alderman H. Lefevre,\nChairman, stated the Committee had\ninterviewed Mr. Zaharachuk. who\nstated h-\u00bb proposed to build the hotel\nas soon as huildlng materials were\navailable, but that it might require\na couple of years to complete It\nwould be operated on the American\nPlan. >\nThree other applications for building lots were received, and referred\nto the Property Committee for investigation and report.\nSCOUTS WANT CINTRAL SITl\nThe Roy Scout and Oirl tiuide\nAssociation applied for the lot East\nof the Telephone Office on First\nAvenue president Edgar Jamieion\nmide a personal appeal, stating the\nAssociation had purchased the Veteran Hut at the Arch, and would\nlike to move it into a rtntral location, and that il planned to make it\nas attractive *\u00bb powihle The Boy\nScouti and Guides were handicapped\nas they had not a meeting place. It\nwas felt that the training tht boys\nand girls received helpta to mike\ngood citizens, and that thty had\nproved their worth ln the war work\ntht\/ helped in, such ai ulvaft collections, ART and clothing drivei,\netc\nThe Rowland Transportation Co\noperative Society applied to buy thc\nI Iota West of its property on Columbia Avenue\ni F. M. McKenne applied for \\_\ni lots on LeRoi Avenue, where he\nwished to build a home.\niA8K   INFLUENCE\nRE ARMORY\nThe Rowland Arena Athletic Association asked the Council to interview the Department of National\n\u25a0 Defence and endeavor to get per-\n! minion for the Aaaodatlon to obtain '\n| use oi the Armory for community\nsports.   Action was promised.\nI Two application! for business lie- '\nenaea were dealt with, the first\nfrirn H. J. Thompson, who wishes to\n< conduct  a   retail   building  supplies\n\u25a0 and  etrvices.     Thu   was   granted\nI Application of Mrs Tupper to open\nja Cafe on Washington Street, to bc\n1 known as the Home Cafe, was rt-\n.ferred to the Medical Health Officer and ftunitary Inspector tn investigate, it being understood if theu\nreport is favorable the license will\nIbe granted\nI LONDON (CP)-British hosier\ni manufacturers have been called\njupon to produce !_,400,000 pairs \u00bb-f\nj sAcka in the six months beginning\nJan. 1, required mainly for service\nmen being demobilized\nFavourite Recipes\ntcute better\nwith\nhook again\nMAKE SURE\nYesterday's plans for to-morrow may\nbe out of date to-day.\nChanges  in family  and   business,\naltered resources and income, higher\ntaxes   and   succession   duties,   new\nlaws and regulations\u2014all may affect\ni\nthe best laid plans.\nYour Will is your plan for the\nfvture security of those you wish to\nprotect. You owe it to your family to\ncheck your Will periodically in the\nlight of changed conditions and when\nnecettary amend it to better guard\ntheir interests and avoid needless loss.\nRtvmw yotn Villi once a yeai.\nTalk it ovec wllh us.\nTHE ROYAL TRUST\ncoieo\u00abA.i\nIICUBItY\nCOMPANY\n105 St. Jamti Street, Welt\nHArbour 4?_]\n'\u25a0'('\"\u25a0i.i.\n111 VIC?\n (\t\nPORTS\nii Juveniles Edged Out 5-4\nibition Game at Fernie\n8.C, Jan. 30\u2014Fernle Ju.\ntered with additional Iti'\n\u25a0taged a last-period rally\nthe visiting Nelson Ju-\nin an exhibition game at\nInk Tuesday evening.\ndrove in the winning\nust seconds to go belore\n111. It was one-all at the\nfirst, 4-2 (or the Nelson-\nclose ot the second, but\nptriod penalties proved\nthe Fernle boys drove in\nwith visitors resting In\nnotching the ti'-al ones\nbell was about to go.\nwas a standout for the\nas well as Kusnir in\nBosslo. For the visitors\nHyssop    and    Koehle\ntek.\nHod\u20141, Fernie, J. Bosslo;\nHyssop (Koehle).\nI\u2014Perrler, Clark and M.\nperiod\u20143, Fernie, J. Bos-\nillon, Hyssop; 5, Nelson,\nSbthle); 6, Nelson, Hyssop,\nI \u2014 Longden. Mclntyre,\nleton, W. Bosslo and Zu((.\nThird period\u20147, Fernle, Hughes\nICatavett); 8, Fernle, Shannon; 9,\nFernle, MUner (J. Bosalo).\nPenalties\u2014Ross, Magllo, and Singleton.\nOfficials\u2014\nReferees\u2014Slavo and K. McNabb;\nScorer, Bob Koehle.\nTeams were\nFernit-Kusnlr, Zuff, MUner, Gig-\nliott. Singleton. J. Bosslo, W. Bosslo, Shannon, Hughes, Catavitt, Marasco, Callcld and Sprlngall.\nNelson\u2014Sllverwood, Pitts, Clark,\nLongden, Ross, Koehle, Hyssop, Stuart, Clark, Magllo, K. Maclntyre.\nBrelt and Holmes.\nrings quicker,\nsjwhenwu\nBlue Gillette\nts lecausB th^\n&e sharpest,\nathestflhcJiai\nsever honed.\nps to ask for\nie Gillette\nBlades\nKtta shaving\ny prepare yovx\nearn with\nette lather\nam* **33l\nHard-Fighting\nBruins\nRegain Lead\nBOSTON, Jan. 30 (CP)-Operat-\ning at top speed (rom start to finish, Boston Bruins regained the National Hockey League lead by topping Chicago Black Hawks, 4-3, tonight betore a packed 13,900 crowd\nat the Boston Garden. A blistering\nsecond-period attack which netted\ntwo tallies clinched thc matter (or\nthe home (orces.\nLineups:\nBoston: Brimsek, Egan, Henderson, Schmidt, Bauer, Dumart.\nChicago: Karakas, Relse, Hamilton, Gee, Hamill, Grossd.\nBoston Subs\u2014McGill, Cain, Reardon, Clipper, Church. Gallinger,\nGuidolin, Shill, K. Smith.\nChicago Subs\u2014Smith, Moslenko,\nHoreck. M. Bentley, Cooper, Marl-\nucci, Wares, Kaleta.\nReteree \u2014 Clancy; Linesman \u2014\nCleiry lnd Smith.\nPint Period:\n1, Chicago, M. Bentley (Moslenko) 5:14; 2. Boston, Shill (Gallinger)\n8:42; 3, Chicago, Horeck (Wares)\n13:44.\nPenalty\u2014Church.\nSecond Period:\n, Boston, Reardon (K. Smith, McGill) 14:15; 5, Boston, Guidolin (Gallinger)  19:21.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird Period:\n6, Boston, Clapper (Schmidt) 2:09;\n7, Chicago, Moslenko (C. Smith)\n12:22.\nPenalties\u2014Gee.   Egan,   Wares.\nHockey Scores\nBy The Canidlin Press\nQUEBEC 8ENIOR HOCKEY\nLEAGUE\nValleyfield 4, Ottawa 9.\nPROVINCIAL HOCKEY LIAGUI\nLichine 4. Victoriiville 11.\nOHA SENIOR A\nHamilton  Pats  3,  Toronto  Staf-\n(ords 8\nOHA JUNIOR A\nGait Red Wings 14, Hamilton\nLloyds 3.\nBiggest Golf,\nRacing Year\nAhead for Britons\nBY JAMES R. CHAMBERS\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (AP)-Britain\nis on the eve ot iti biggest and\nbrightest golf and racing season.\nThe Piofessional Golfers' Auociation ln conjunction with newipa-\npors and various business organiz-\nations, has drawn up a program ot\n13 major tournaments and three\nopen championships to be played\nbetween April and November.\nNumerous overseas stars, including Byron Nelson, Gene Sararen\nand the South Alrlcan, Bobby\nLocke, are expected to compete in\nthe British open at St. Andrews in\nJuly ln pursuit of the title now held\nby Dick Burton, who won it on the\nsame links In 1939.\nBritish r.'ofessionals are looking\n(orward o..ce more to matching\ntheir skill against the best (rom the\nUnited States after six years 'of\nwar during which the only real goil\nplayed was for war charities.\nDAILY FARE\nRailng ts iet to come back with a\nrush. The program for the first halt\nof the flat racing season provides\nsport for .the turf fans on every day\n(rom April until the end ot June,\nexcept for four Mondays.\nFigures just released disclose a\ntotal of approximately \u00a37,142,000\n($31,791,000) was bet through the\ntotalisator at British tracks last\nyear, during much of which the\ncountry still was at war. This took\nno account o( the sums wagered\nwith bookmakers at the tracks.\nCanadian Cousins\nJoin N.H. Relatives\nfor Nimrod's Sport\nCONCORD, Ttt. H., Jan. 30 (AP)-\nUncle Wiggly and his relatives art\nhaving a lot ot company this month.\nSixteen hundred snowshoe rabbits\ntrom Canada were liberated in New\n\u00a7_ampshlre swamplands for hunters\nurlnf tht past month, the State\nFish and Game Department announced todiy. The Depirtment\nhopei to have distributed 2000 by\nthe middle of February.\nSTRIKES\nand\nSPARES\nHigh total of 153\u00ab was rolled by\nAces ln Mixed League five-pin\ngames at Gellnas Alleys Tuesday\nnight, when games resulted as fol-\ntows: i\nARISTOCRATS\nSpot         Jl     81- 122\nG. Laughton     117   127\u2014 244\nN. Bennett      78    89- 187\nM. Gould     103   157\u2014 260\nLow score     71     40\u2014 111\nLow score      71     40\u2014 111\nTotals           501 514-1015\nHIGH 'N' DRY\nF. Gill   97 117- 214\nJ.   Butler     168 125\u2014 283\nM. Dunster   120 120\u2014 240\nB. Booth      71 40\u2014111\nC. Fornelli   140 104- 244\nYANKS WILL BE CHAMPS\nSAYS BUD\nNORFOLK. Vi., Jan. 30 (AP)-\nWith the opening of the regulir\nbaseball season still weeks away.\nArthur Beauregard (Bud) Metheny\nclimbed out on the prediction limb\nhere today and didn't flinch an\neyelash in predicting New York\nYankees would win the 1946 American   League  championship.\nSorry,\nEMctO rials\naLl\nOLD\nthe\nare\nout\nThe 1946 Pictorial Edition goes on\nrecord os having a larger distribution\nthan ever before More than 12,000\ncopies hove been sent fo all parts of\nthe  world within  the   last  three  days\nPlease Note: The Dolly Newi hai sold\ntht whole of iti lupply, but your dealer\nmay still bt able to supply you with\ncopies.\nCash  for sny orderi that we set nn-\n\u25a0 bit to fill will be rtturnsd promptly.\nSMflmt lath} Npuib\nCirculation Department\nBantam League\nWill Boos) All\nScoring Records\nAt the four-fifths mark at the\nBantam Hockey League schedule,\nit seems certain that every scoring\nrecord for Bantam hockey or for\n\"kid hockey\" generally, set in the\nlast 10 years at the Civic Centre\nArena, will go by the boards, Ht the\nhands or \"sticks\" of the F.A.C. Bantam sharpshooters, led by Jimmie\nTodd, who was also last year's league leader and the setter of new\nrecords then, when he personally\nscored most of his team's goali.\nOwing to Todd's preeminence, the\nBantam League is the most unbalanced in Civic Arena history, as\nhe has carried his string-mates with\nhim, and new marks for a string, an\nindividual player, and also for a\nteam .are certain in goals, assists,\"\nand total points\u2014or nine categories.\nIn most of the nine ,the old marki\nhave already been passed.\nEight games have still to be played, the F.A.C, Dodgers, M.R.K.,\nand Panthers each having three\nclashes coming up while the Bruins\nhave four last-round games to play.\nIn the 32 games so far worked off.\n13 F.A.C 13 Dodgers. 11 Bruins,\nnine M.R.K. and seven Pantheu\nhave figured in the scoring, out of\naround 80 players that have taken\nsome part in the games.\nTOP POINT-GETTER8\nFollowing are the unofficial player standings of the 12 boys who have\nmade 10 scoring points or better to\ndate, the figures being for goals, assists, and total scoring points.\nG   A   Pts\nJim Todd, F.A.C 86   43    109\nRod Carmichael, F.A.C 38 40 78\nRon Brown. F.A.C 18   25     43\nLaurence Ludlow, Ddgr. 22 6 28\nKen Coskey, M.R.K. 18 9 27\nBrian Johnston, F.A.C. 8 17 21\nAlvin Towriss, M.R.K. 14 8 22\nJack Woodall, Dodger 14 3 17\nBill Carmichael. F.A.C. 9 4 13\nBuddy Mayer, Ddgr. 4    9     13\nGene Mclnnis, Panther 5 6 11\nLouie DelPuppo, Ddgr.     4     6     10\nLEAGUE  STANDINGS\nIn the Bantam League standings,\nthe fight it this stage, as throughout the schedule, ts still between\nDodgers and M.R.K. for second\nplace. F.A.C. with 13 straight wins\n\u2014and the reasonable certainty of\n16 straight when the schedule is\nconcluded\u2014being unchallenged for\nthe top spot. The Bruini, operating\ndirectly under lhe N.A.H.A., and\nconstituted for the purpose of giving training to boys from the Pool\nwho next season will have to play\nMidget, are almost necessarily it\nthe bottom, and are therefore getting the toughest and best training.\nFollowing is the table of standing*, with also unofficial figures of\ntotal goals icored for and against\neach team at this stage:\nW   L   D   GF GA Pts\nFAC .13     0   0    148     16   28\nDodgers 9     4   0     53     39    18\nMRK. 7      6   0     40     58    14\nPanthers 2    10   1     22     55     5\nBruins 0    11    1      13   108     1\nPASSES 160-MILE\nMARK IN\n250-MILE SHUFFLE\nBINGHAM. Me., Jan. 30 (AP)-\nStill shuffling along with itrong,\npven stridrs. Albert Dandurand\npissed through here today, 90 miles\nfrom his Lrwiston goal on a 250-\nmlle snowshoe trip from Quebec to\nthe International Congress of Snow-\nihop Clubs.\nTho Canadian Army Corporal was\n*tlll optimistic that hf would roach\nLrwiston in time for thc Ih tp Friday\nr-invention opening hut convention\nofficials wore less optlmi-ttic.\nTho colorfully-garbed Dandurand\nreached Jackman. 51 miles North of\nh*r#, last night and resumed hli trip\nafter a few hour's rest He was\nwearing a bright blue suit with n\nhrnad white sash, a blue hat with\nwhite taisel, white gloves and white\nmocassins\nAt Jackman and at Bingham,\ntown official.-; signed his \"recod\"\nbook tn prove he had bten there. He\nlunched here and continued on toward Skowhegan. 70 milei from\nL-ewiiton.\nDandurand. who removei hli\nsnowihoe-. and walki occasionally,\niaid he had to break mow for oni\nM-mlle stretch in Quebec.\nDuring the history of volcanic\nmountain*, there may be long periods of Inactivity.\nTotals   596 506\u20141102\nACES\nSpot      28 28\u2014   56\n<\\. Kuhn     140 121\u2014, 261\nM.  Ramsden    120 218\u2014 338\nT. Locatelli      96 112- 208\nO.  Patterson   161 152- 313\nB. Maloney   147 213\u2014 360\nTotal            692   844-1536\nHigh single. M, Ramsden, 218.\nHigh aggregate, B. Maloney, 360,\nTOPS\nSpot         73     73- 146\nB. Renwick     139    136\u2014 275\nH. Hughes      98   154- 250\nN. Brake     102   IW- 219\nM. Speirs     133   100- 233\nLow score      112     92- 204\nClaims Rookie\nWill Wipe Out\nCooper Memory\n\u25a0y BIN PHLEGAR\nST. LOUIS, Jin. SO (AP)-Mtn-\nager Eddie Dyer ot St. Louli Cird-\nInili promises that he has 1 young\ncatcher who will make the tans\nforget Wilker Cooper by the time\nhe his pliyed 25 games.\nThe youngster ls Joe Garagiola, a\nSt. Louli boy now ln the army ln\nthe Pacific.\nThe wiy Dyer put lt today in an\nInterview Garagiola ls short on experience, long on ability. He entered the service in 1944 after being\nsecond-string catcher at Columbus\nduring the 1943 season.\n\"The kid hit everything,\" Dyer\n\u25a0eld enthusiastically. \"He's i powerful left-handed hitter, has a wonderful arm and Is i smart receiver.\n. , . Give him a little\" tlmeTi^oul\n23 or 30 big leigue games, and the\nfans will forget all about any loss\nwe may have suffered in the sale\nof Cooper to the Giants.\"\nDyer SBid Garagiola probably will\nbe discharged by mld-seaion under\na recent War Department ruling\nwhich calls for the discharge of all\nmen with two years' service by June\n30, and \"my catching worries wlll\nbe about over then.\"\nDel Wilber, another rookie catcher who comes highly recommended\nby Enos Slaughter and Howie Pol-\nlett, is due for an army discharge\nnext week. Left over from last\nyear's catching department are Ken\nO'Dea, Del Rice and Gene Crum-\nling.\nTotals         \u00ab55 672-1327\nOIEHARDS\nSpot             1\u00ab 18-   32\nV. Phillips   124 181- 305\nV  Blaney   198 96-r-292\nt\\. Brown     112 92- 204\nT.   Tulloch    200 124- 324\nM. Ross   125 220- 345\nTotals       773 729-1502\nATOMICS\nSpot             i  29 29-   58\nM  Murray   179 160- 339\nLow score\n92\u2014 188\nR Brown  Z          144   138- 282\nK. Mangen     133   127-260\nD. Norfield     150   245- 395\nTotals          731   791-1522\nHigh single, D. Norfield. 245.\nHigh aggregate, D. Norfield, 395.\nJOI.ELLA8\nSDOt       23     23-   48\nLEnnis           12.    Hr- 274\nL  Dunnett      92   118- 210\nM Paterson     167 -226- 393\nM   Bowkett     132    49- 181\nM   Dingwell     175   150\u2014 325\nDodger Midgets\nSwamp Panthers\nDodger Midgets completed their\npart of the Midget Hockey League\nWednesday afternoon with a 13-1\nj victory over the Panthera. It was the\nDodgers' fourteenth win to one loss\nin their 15 games. The Panthers\nhave still to meet both F.A.C. and\nM.R.K. in the fifth and final play-\naround.\nHyssop led the Dodger icorers\nwith four counters, Bachynski\nmarked up three, Kennedy and\nMores two each, and Stainton and\nNelson one each. Kennedy gave five\nassists, Bachynski four, Hyssop\nthree, and Stainton two, Brendon\nHopwood tallied the only Panther\ngoal on an assist from Swedberg.\n\u00bb Stafnton and Bachynski were in\nthe penalty box.fo'r the Dodgers, and\nHanic, Turnbull, Swedberg and Zeznik for the Panthers.\nTeams were:\nDodgers \u2014 Mair, goal; Carman,\nNelson, Stainton, Mores, Trickett,\nMcLean, R, Johnson (Bantam playing up), Staples, Bachynski, Hyssop, Kennedy.\nPanthers\u2014Dozzl, goal, Stong, Hanic. B. Hopwood. Misurnc-H. Zrznik,\nTurnbull, O. Brown, Swedberg.\nCOAST TRUNDLER\nSPILLS MAPLES\nFOR PERFECT 450\nVANCOUVIR, Jin. 30 (Qt) -\nHirry Harper, member ef the Abbott team, Joined thl bowling Hill\nof Fame liat night whtn he hit\nthl maples for I perfect 460 gime\nof five-pint, Whllt pii-formlng in\ntht Vancouver Commercial League. ,\nNelson Bird\nTeams Open\nTourney Tonight\nFlnt bird tournament ln yeirs\nwlll be staged by the Nelson Badminton Club tonight, with Red,\nWhite ind Blue Sections participating In an American style competton.\nThe tourney will take, place at the\nCivic where Wedneiday night shuttle sessions have been held.\nThe Section teams follow:\nRed Section\u2014\nE. Hearn and Mrs. B. Stanfield;\nA. Godfrey and Misa M. McLeod;\nR. Fleming and Miss E. Simpson;\nD. Male and Miss F. Prestley; G.\nColettl and Miss J. Fraser; D. Tye\nand Miss B. Moran; G. Allan and\nMrs. Robert Thompson; R. Collin-\n\u00bbon and Mrs. D. Male; R. Thaln and\nMrs. N. E. Morrison; P. Berry and\nMiss D. Todd.\nWhite Section\u2014\nI. McLeod and Miss L. Hendricks;\nW. Waldie and Miss M. SutcUife; R.\nEmory and Miss M. Davis; K. LePage and Miss P. McLeod; W.\nHorner and Mrs. D. McKay; R.\nThompson and Miss M. McLennan;\nA. Wilson and Mrs. S. G. Page; B.\nHamilton and Mrs, Staples; J. White\nand Miss S. Dawson; Ted Rutherglen and Miss C. Martin.\nBlue Section\u2014\nJ. Waldle and Mrs. I. Turyk; A,\nTemple and Mrs. H. Sidenlus; W,\nS. Hamilton and Mrs. Rutherglen;\nM. Turyk and Mrs. J. Orr; S. Page\nand Miss A. Hamilton; R. Brown and\nMiss L. Kokott; J. Creech and Miss\nB. Lawrence; J. Glover and Miss\nM. Arneson; D. Abbey and Miss\nNancy Idlens.\nNILSON DAILY NIWI, THURSDAY, JAN. IT, 1946 \u2014 7\n\"Yankee\" Visitor Impressed With\nKoolenay Scenery, Friendship\nAppreciation for hospitality hi\nreceived it Nelaon last Summer li\nexpreued by T. Sgt. William F.\nBerk, Information and Educition\nSection, Gelger Field, Wash., In \u25a0\nletter to Mrs. Frederick Nlven ot\nNelson, and In which Sgt. Berk asked that hii \"sentiments\" be pasted\non to the varioui people he met.\nThe letter, ln part, follows:\n\"After living at an Individual, lt\nla difficult to be pressed, compressed and moulded to fit the re|lmen of\nArmy life. After training, mud,\ncussing, the,eternal wilting which\nIt so much \u25a0 pirt of military life,\nmore training and more routine day\nln and day out, a fellow beglni to\ndream of getting away for a leave\nsomewhere, even if only for a few\nhours. He dreams of a place where\nhe can be an individual and not \u2022\nnumber, where he can order food\ninstead of having lt splashed at\nhim, where he can converse about\nsubjects other than military and\nhear other than barrack's room\ntalk ... In short, where he can\nbecome an individual again.\nFINDS  FRIENDLINESS\n\"It was on just such a short leave\nthat I originally chanced to visit\nyour city of Nelson. Besides being\nmost favorably impressed by the\nnatural beauty of the Selkirk scenery, the hilly residence streets and\ngardens bloomfcng with a profusion of flowers, I met with a degree\nof friendliness which I had believed\nexisted only In books.\n\"Perhaps thc friendliness was best\nepitomized by Mr. and Mrs. T.\nTemple and their son Alan. While\ngiving me a lift In their car they\ndiscovered that I waa on a trout\nfishing jaunt. Bright and early the\nfollowing morning I was Invited to\ngo down the Arm of the Kootenay in\nAlan's canoe, extra tackle appeared\nTO BUILD BULKHEAD\nPORT ALBERNI. B.C., Jan. 30\n(CP)-A bulkhead 470 feet, long\nwith a large float attached is to be\nbuilt in Port Albernl harbor by the\nDominion Government at a cost of\n$60,000. Numerous floating houses\nnow occupied by fishermen will\nhave to be removed before the work\nstarts.\nfor my uie and liter i tasty lunch\nwas laid out ln proportions which\nwould have made in Army cook\nbluth. Everybody went out of their\nwiy to bl Mindly. M^Fred Kiun\ndrovi mi to Gny't Linding, Mr.\nJ. B. Griy took special pains to mall\nhome a piece of English chini for\nme, the Brooki Invited me to visit\ntheir Summer camp. Mri. Kapak\nkept mc posted as to what to see in\ntown. Mr. Creech phoned friends to\nascertain the locale of-the best fishing, George Green took me out in\nhis boat... and only the Kimloop\ntrout remained iloo_ ind disdainful\nof a Yinkee fUh-hook. And her\" '\nhive mentioned only i few of t\nfine people whom I had the plea\nof meeting in your country.\nFRIEND* ENJOYED VISITS\n\"Since that first visit more than\na year ago, I have made several\nother fishing trips, all limited to\nonly a day or two due to the ex-\nlgenciea of Army life. A number\nof theie times I brought with me\nother Army friendi to whom I had\nboasted about the beauties of Nelson. They, ln turn, generally became\nas enthusiastic as I was about your\ntown and Iti people. ,\n\"I am iure' that many mother\nYankee traveler has enjoyed him-\nself as much as I did, but I thought\nthat you should know about it.\nTravelling in Mexico, the United\nStates, South America and Hawaii,\nI have seen many a picturesque and\nbeautiful scene, but when you\ncouple scenery (fishing) and genuine friendliness in a town, then you\nhave Indeed an unbeatable combination. It ls my sincere hope that\nyour community will not allow such\nan unusual spirit to diminish.\n\"May I, through thli medium, express my thanks to all of you, and\nwish you as well as your city of\nNelson, the best in 1946.\"\nMORE\nLIGHT\nfor\nYOUR\nMONEY\nKenora Males in\nWhiskers Race\nKENORA, Ont., Jan. 30 (CP) -\nThe longest whlikers will win honors at the annual Kenora Snow\nCarnival opening Feb. 14.\nMore than 100 men, staid merchants and bankers, and the town's\nyounger set, are growing beards for\nthe whisker contest.\nGENERAL ^4) EI\nLAMPS\nCANADIAN GENERAI I\nELECTRIC\nTotals   H8 713\u20141429\nPALM8 ,.      \u201e_\nSp\u201et         13 13-   M\nN   Wood   128 \"7- 303\nM. Arnot   199 146-. 345\nP  Hickey          165 173- 338\nH   Pearson   189 145- 334\nR. Ross    147 138- 28.1\nTotals   - 839   792-1831\nHigh single, M. Psterson, 226.\nHigh aggregate, M. Paterson, 393\nt_.0_.TI.OU8E\nSpot\nH. Skilton\nJ. Gentles .   .\nA. Lewis\nLow score\nfi. Shorthouse  .'   134    128-\n29     29\u2014   58\n185 105\u2014 350\n184 178- 362\n15S 103\u2014 258\n92 49- 141\n262\nTotals\n779   652-1431\n'Peg to Have Allan\nCup\u2014Sometime\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 30 (CP.-Rabid\nhockey fans, thoughtfully immeri-\ned in the chances of district junior\nteams when the Memorial Cup (rials\nroll around, have been given something else to think about\nA little man with big hockey\nIdeis, Stan Evans, has caused a bit\nof eyebrow raising by saying that\nWinnipegs, city's only senior outfit might win the Allan Cup.\n\"If I can't do it this year,\" he says.\n\u2022Til do it next year, and if I can't\ndo it then, I'll do it the year after.\"\nEvans, who has fostered amateur\nhockey in Winnipeg for a number\nof years, recently took over Wihni-\npegs, and has hopes of picking se-\nnior hockey's juiciest plum. At the\nsame time, there are a few people\nwho can't exactly say he won't accomplish it this season, because\nWinnipeg s have yet to take part in\nregular competition.\nEvans thinks highly of Winnipeg\nas a hockey player producer. \"The\nbest hockey players in the world\ncome from Winnipeg,\" he said, adding that \"it's about time someone\nkept  them here.\"\nWith the possible exception of\nFlln Flon Bomberi. former members of the Saikatchewan Senior\nLeague. Winnipegs are the only\nManitoba entry in the senior group\nplayoffs Evans said today arrangements were being made for a home-\nnnd-hnme series with the Romberg\nOn Saturday Winnipeg fans will\nget a ppek at the home town hope-\nfuls when the club tackles Kenora\nThistles.\nKRAMER FIRST\nBROWNS HOLDOUT\nST. LOUIS. Jan. SO (API - St.\nLouli Browns today reported thair\nflrsl officiil holdout of the base-\nbill season when Pitcher Jack\nKramer refund to ilgn a contract\nwhich he laid called for a $2000\n\u2022altry cut.\nSfcHTOMTOFTHEAIfc!\nUTE tn not ixiggirttlng wkm wi uy thit ELEPHANT BRAND high inilyili CHEMICAL\n\" FERTILIZER cimi out of tht tlr. Hirt'i thi storyi\nAbout 1958 our rtttirch chtmlits win given thi Job of finding ways lo ullllu thi wailt sulphur\n91111 from our imiltlng operations. Flnt, thiy took these gases out of thl tlr tnd made sulphuric\nadd; next thty took nitrogen from thl tlr tnd hydrogen from wattr tnd mtdl immonli.\nAmmonlt tddtd to sulphuric add makes AMMONIUM SULPHATE, t vtlutbli chimlctl\nfirtlllur. Thi tdditlon of phosph.it rock mikti AMMONIUM PHOSPHATE, thi firtlllzir\nihtt hu proven io good for Cinidiin fruit tnd gnin cropi. ,\nThtt, In brief, It lhe itory of thl birth of t Ctniditn lnduitry which (o dalt hu paid\nout $1 3,000,000 In wages tnd itltrln tnd now provides Job*  for nearly 1,000 Canadians.\nThtn ll nothing unique tbout this itory. It ll Juit typical of whit hundredi of otheri hivt dont tnd\nin doing icroii Ctntdt\u2014from lha Individual who dtcldtt lo go Into builntsi for himself lo thi\nlargi compiny ipendlng millions on t niw plant. Both mtin greater prosperity tnd mon jobi.\nBolh in possible btcauit thl majority of Cintdlam btlltvt In free anterpriie.\nBARONS SIGN WINOIR\nEDMONTON, Jin SO (CP)-BIU\nCook, manager of the Cleveland\nBarons of the American Hockey\nLeague, announced today he had\nsigned BUI Rlrhardion, i'> .car-old\nleft winger of the Camrose Maroons\nto a Baron contract.\nTBE CONSOLIDATED\nCOMPANY OF CANADA\n& SMELTING\nTRAIL, B.C.\n_______________\n____.\n________________________________\n_\n__\n \u2014\u2014\n\u2022 \u2014 NILSON DAILY\n9AILY NIWS, THU\n-\"\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u2014\nTHURSDAY, JAN. SI, 1946\nH' i ''  ;\" '\u25a0\nf -\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nRUNNER-UP: Trygve Ut, Norwegian Foreign Minister who wee\nRussia's choice n president of the\nUnited Natloni Organiutlon. Mr.\nLie waa defeated fo the general\nassembly presidency by Paul-\nHenri Spaak of Belgium. In discussing the conference Mr. Lie\nremarked that they were making\na better beginning In London\nthan In San Francltco. Many dele-\ngatei In San Franciico had learned to work together, a lesion now\nbearing fruit\nF.D.R. STAMP COLLECTION ON VIEW. Here ll part of the\nfamoui stamp collection of the late Preiident Rooievelt, which Is now\non publlo exhibition. Part of tha collection ahown .here lncludei a\npreientatlon album from Loula II, Prince of Monaoo, and an album of\nWeitern Union Telegraph free franki, which Is held by Miss Polly\nTallmann. The exhibit wlll tour major cities of the U, S. before It li\nput on sale In New York In February.\nFAITHFUL FRIEND MOURNS PATTON.AIong with th* many\nmillions who mourned th* passing of General Qeorge S. Patton, Jr.,\nwai \"Willie\", th* late Otneral'i pet Bull Terrlv. Here, \"Willie\" li\n\u25a0 hown lying beside hli maiter'i belongings t\\ Bad Nauhelm, Qermany, which await ihlpment to the United Statei.\nGLAMOR CHECKUP: Miss\nLucie Clayton, head of the Mannequins Legion In London, Eng., recently held a \"man audition\" of\nmodels, to check up on their\ncharms and to determine whether war work had greatly affected them. Hera she la shown\nchecking the measurements of\none of the models.\nALLIED 80LDIER8 ARE HAVING FUN IN\nSWITZERLAND: Allied soldiers skiing at Davos.\nSwitzerland, seem to be  having the time of their\nlives. Soldiers station In the European theatre,\nwhen possible, are granted seven-day furloughs In\nSwitzerland.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nHCW-DEE, FOLKS-TMIS HERE IS VOUR OLD\nFRlE-CHAWK tMXOQK AN' HIS EM3 LITTJ.E\nBAND-AN' SAV, FOLKS-ITS MkSHTy SWELL\nTO SEE THE HAPPv;SMILING FACES OFOU&\nSTUDIO AUDIENCE HERE TODAV. ytP^\nVOU.TOO, BE SURE TD WRITE IN FOR TICKETS\nFOQ OUR AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION SHOW.\nHE'S 6OT A STUDO AUDI\nENCE LIKE HE'S 60TA\nSPONSOR-STRlCTLV\n\\ EMPTY SADDLE FROM\n,AN V ANCLE-\n|ON THE\nAN' NOW, FOR OUR NEIGHBOR IN THE    -\\m\nTHIRD ROW WE PL Ay -EMPTY SADDLE\n::^-T.   IN THE OAT-BIN'\nSTUDIO\nB\nAND IM SUP-N\nPOSED TO CLAP\nAND HOLLER ,\nLIKE A HERD\nOF YOKELS. '\nI THINK I'LL\nWRITE IN\nAN'QUIT.\n\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0.\n\u25a0.... 1. \u00ab__(j\nWhen television\ncomeS in this Guy\nWILL HAVE TO PULL\nHIS AUDIENCE IN\nOR SHUT UP.\n\u2022fymt^_fTe2^tdct,\nTODAY'8 NEEDLECRAFT:\nJiffy crochet done. In two strands\nof string makes this handsome\nscarf-and-mat set. Wonderfully\nversatile as an Interior \"decorator\",\nPineapple border adds elegance\nto this beginner's \"luck\"! This\nscarf has many uses. Pattern 502\nhai direction! for icarf and mat.\nSend TWENTY CENTS (20c) In\nfor thli pattern. Print plainly\ncolni (itampi cannot be accepted)\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS. STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to Dally Newi\nPattern Department, Nelson, B. C.\nK5NRY - IF VOU GET v\nYOUR FEFT WET JUST\nONCE MORfc TODAY-\nYOU'LL BE SW.NKED\/\nm\n^AH'LLiAm-*  *Z,\nh Rt?S.tooc-\n*  TOUT-CHISEL\n\u00a3 \u00bberr-HSAHTto\njohn rrr\nAUNT HET\nTH' PURSUE O' TURNIP   )\nTERMITES HAINT DUE   A\nIN DOCFWCH   TO' TWO  L\nDAYS-V-THEr MEANS\nTHEY  1* NOW WHOOPltt\nIT UP IN EAST\nMISERY.V-\nTHAR THEY >\u00ab.'.'-\nMILLION* OF 'EMf'*\nA-MArr-ONE IS\nNOW ATTRACTED BY\nTH' SMELL O' FRESH\nTURNIPS FUM THIS\nTRUCK.'.''\n^ifolksi\n7,\nAN' 50 - LIKE TH'\nPIPER IN TH' FAJ.J\n-AH'LL LEAD TH*'\nMURDEROUS MB\n'EMI* OOCPATC\nYAK %__\u2022\/\u25ba THCY-ll. 0\nEV'RYTHtNO\n\u25baAV BHOTWEBOMWvKJUST\n'PHONED HE'S   IM  THE\nMOVlUe PICTURE BUSINESS-\nUS SAID TWEVBE TAKIUS\nPICTURES OJ THE CORNER\nOF NINTH AND PINE -ISN'T IT\nOUST WONDERPUU? r- \u25a0 J\nI'M GLAD tT I\nA PICTURE! <\ni-TWHI\niSHB-t\/i\nENOLXSH\nTHANK GOOONESS, )\nBLONDE DIDNT <\nSEE IT-SHELL <\nBE IN THE KITCHEN)\nPREFIARING v^^f\nSUPPER   Ir^o\nSs\nw\n9399\nSIZES\n5-14, 14\nM- 19, 20\nL   42 ' i\nf)    E< 1.8-52\n0lV40\n\\%^o*o%\n%njaJttDn   -mahtm    ;.!\nCOVERALL APRON: Apron\npattern 9389 glvei you complete\nprotection: wide bib; long length;\nnonillp straps; note fabric-iaving\nyardages; wide size range.\nPattern 9399: small (14-18);\nmed. (36-40); large (41-46); ex.\nlarge (48-52); large, 1 yard, 35-In.;\ny, yard trim. Size 40, V\/i yards\n36 In., all one fabric.\nCHIC WRAPAROUND: \"Bright\nas a button\" dresil So efficient\nand attractive, Pattern 9259 Is eaiy\n\u2022ewlng, wearing. Note illp-lnto-\nand-button convenience, handy\npocket, chic yoke.\ni DONALD. THJ OTUEB,\nSANDWICH BOARC\n<cfP\n\"They ought to sell eggs by the\npound. Look at these little pills Jim\nsent me. It would take twenty to\nmake a dozen.''\nTally's sallies\nW-WHAT TOM, KINS\/.. Rl Pfc SOI N* 1\nGCE4 ON L KILL _.,BECAUSE lit\nrl-HEREr# WON Ht MURDERED\nBATOCHE AND T\n\u25a0*nw\nSO, MY BLINO UTTLE FOOL, YOU WOULD\nSPURN A RENOWNE0. GOLDEN-VO1CE0\nNOBLEMAN FOR THAT PEASANT, THAT\nPLANE JOCKEY. 6UZ .AWVER\nA FOOL? YES, PERHAPS\nYOU'RE RIGHT, FRANCO.\nthank; ron making me\nREALIZE IT,\nTHEN YOU 0^\nLOVE HIM!!\nIF YOO\nWANT TO\nKNOWTHE\nTRUTH, IVE\nALWAYS\nLOVED HIM\nALWAYS! once, because i tk\nOF MYSELF, 1 LOST HIM. NOW,\nFLOORS....IT 00 ANVTMN0J\nHAPPY. YOU CAUGHT ME ON Tttt\nBUT THI\nPRETfl*\nYOU a\nHIS PI\nYOUR\n\"But he like* mir home \u00bbo much.\nFather,  and  there is a housing\nshortage,\"\n|\/-*iW\u00abED UPON THI*        \\\n'  i*UWD DUO 1 -ENT 1W0\n\u00abN AM0RE  TC   .if KRU0D\nBURV THE -TREASURE\".. T-\n11 WAS HI* iDEA TO KILL\n\u25a0IHEM, TO PREVENT THER\n\"I0N6.E* FRO* WAOOlNC\ni Ct_EHTE3   1\u00bbE   \"MB OH\nTHERE *ERE AWJ\nOfiERT.ON* AlW    KRvDO]\nOBTAIN *, SHALL 'RATI AND CONTAj\n_____\n.\n . ;\nATIONS WANTED\nJ low rates lor non-com-\nadvertisements under\nlifioatlon to assist peo-\nng employment. Only\ne week (8 days) covers\n\u00abr of required lines,\nadvance. Add 10c lf\nIs desired.\nTOIRL WISHES\" TO\nren lo  evenings,  Mc\n. _; 29 cents per hour ex-\n[.Must bt 1\" vicinity of\nCentral Schools ln Nel-\n! Dally Ne*#i.\n- TWENTY YlfARS\n-i good reference, would\noin Senior BAii Band,\ni suitable light employ-\nKTORK BY THE\n: per hour. Ph. 807 after\njg - Mfc iitWTrt\ntot mine. Ph. ____\u25a0\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS  AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\n[MACHINERY\n>R SALE\nft. Model A. D03 No.\n1 Chicago Pneumatic Die-\ntieml) 1 cylinder\u201418VS\"\n\u201421\" stroke 300 horse-\nir^-230 RPM Horliontal\nahead Type, Including\ntag air tanks tnd acces-\nL Type ATB1 No.\n18 MO KW, General Elec\nBaited Generator 3 phase,\n[pa, 480 volts. 600 RPM\nInitrument panel,  and\n;e regulator.\n,  No.   Jlfn)   Central\ntrie   belted   exciter   125\nJM RPM.\nlb first-class condition.\nWrite to\n\u00bbGORE STREET\nb-\u00a7X, or Phone 225R.\n_..,DC.\"<aHllO-\n__^______m_m\nDIAIvtA--D PRILlktf\nNAWofs-AL DIAMOND DRUilRS\nCO. LTD., milling and Bit Ser\nvice, Box 508, Rossland, B.C.\n'iri'aitiitnt aNd tult^VAfti\nft, \u00bb. mm. umm SUB\nCivil Engineer. B.C.: Und_ Sur-\nvtyor Rossland and GrandForU.\nmb '\u00a3 fmXSK, .18 oOftk SI,\n*' )n. B.C. Surveyor, Englnti\nRet! Estate.\n'  AimlrtWsT\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene tnd\nelectric welding, .motor rewinding,\nPhont\"M3 124 Vernon St.\nPERSONAL\nr\u2014\u2014\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP it\n! . >\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\neto).\nMCTroWwfewm J_\nh.p. Chess' Second Hand Store, 824\nVernon fit. Phone 1081.\nflAVf Wti 1 tkiWui to*\nsale. If so send description to LA,\nBrodle, 2555 Granville SL, Vancouver,\n25c-rTPrP25c\nP.O. Box 434, Vancouver\nHi \u25a0    '\nSTEVStofOiJ'fc tiAtiMiNt sh6P-\nSpeclilliti in mine and mill work.\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nElectric and Acetylene welding.\n108 Vernon St, Nelson        Ph.\nlng your old Army rifles to iporter\nmodels. All types of guns blued\nand' repaired. Guns bought and\nsold. Precision Instrument Co., 589\nRfchirdi St. Vincouvtr.\t\n. ed (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. Reprints 3c etch, For your snapshots\nchoose Krystal Finish Guaranteed\nnon-fade prints. Krystal Photos,\nWilkle. Saskatchewan. Established\nover 30 years, <J\nafrm aj__wwo M-Hwre\nteller help you wltb your famllj\nproblemi Lucky days uid fortunes told with six questions for\none dollar. Please write with Ink\nto Mdme. Albina, 143 Rupert Ave.\nWinnipeg.      \u2022\nPW M \"W T-ioSE hffijffl\nparties. Send $1.00 for giant No\nvelty Pak. 10c Hitler Comic\nPhoto, 10c Lover's Fun cards, 10c\nComic Post Cards, Homecraft and\nNovelties. Box 387, Cranbrook,\nB C\nSTOP ITCHING TORTURES OF\neczema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's foot and othtr skin irritations wltb Ellk's Ointment No 3\nprescription of noted skin specialist Itch relieved promptly, $ki.\nhealed quickly or monev refunded, $1.00, $2.00. MaU orders filled\npromptly. Order today from Ellk's\nMedicint Co.: Dept. 42. Saskatoon.\nSask\nEarlier hatched chicks trt\nneeded next statonl\nIt will pay you to order\nbefore 31st Jail., 1946\nWrltt tor further particulars.\nRbmp&Sendall\n1       -\"\u25a0'\u25a0\" Vt ftWpM-M\nBOX N, LANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C\nBox N' Vernon, B. C.\n(Branch Hatchery)\n\"CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT\nROGER M. HOYLAND\nChartered Accountant\n815 Victoria St, Trill        Ph. 380\n' SAW PlLM\n4A\u00bbs tttJto ANb itTW> AT\nNorbtrg's Filing Shop, 836 Stanley &___\n_*LLAift)lX(--_A_.a_!.\nWhat havt you? Ph. __ Ark 8tore.\nMEDIATE DELIVERY\nRELIABLE MINING\nMACHINERY   '\nha Trams and Muck-\nAachlnes, Mine: Ralls,\nCompressors, Rock-\n,ers, Boll Mills, Stop-\nock Hammers, Valves.\nicouver Sales &\niraisals Liitiited\n|tf Beach Avenue\nVancouvtr, B. C\n_ Single and Doublt\n(him Gasoline Hoists\nfor Log  Loading,  Land\nng, Dragline and Building\nConstruction.\n)NAL MACHINERY CO.\nLTD.\nVancouver, B.C.\t\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE\n4 ROOM HOUSE\nSunroom, fully modern, full\nbasement, furnace heat. Some\nfurniture, possession ln two\nweeks. . Also Summer home,\ncompletely furnished.\nFor particulars\n\u2022PHONE 234\nMR. BROOKS\nCASH IN\nOn Your Good Name\nYou can get from 120 to $1000 .\nat  Campbell  Finance  on  the\nstrength ot your good name,\nWhatever basis you choose to\nmake a loan on, character\ncounts most. You can rely on\nCampbell's time-tested dependability. Life insurance has been\nadded but loan costs reduced.\nCAMPBELL\nFINANCE CORPORATION\nLIMITED\n880 Baktr St Phont 1005\nAbovt Fink's Retdy-to-Weai\nWANTED TO EXCHANGE-4 RM\nsemi bungalow on IU seres wtth\nfruit trees, barn and hen house,\n, modern' plumbing, city light and\nwater, Just outalde city limit on\nbus line, for farm In or near Nelson. What have you? Write 400\nCulduthtl Rd\u201e Victoria, B.C^\nWE HAVS A NUMBER C* VC-\ncellent farms for sale ln the Eastern Irrigation Diitrict at Brooki,\nAlta. Wrltt ut for particulars.\nGARROW AGENCIES, Brooka,\nAlberta.  \u25a0\nSEE OS IF YOU NEED A GOOD\naccident or sickness Policy. C W.\nAppleyard, 3J2 Biker St\nWANTED TO BUY\u20144 OR 5 ROOM-\ned house. Ph. 604-X.\nRtNTALi\nONE FURNISHED ROOM FOR\nrent IH blocka from Baktr St.\nSuitable for t girl or woman. Ap-\nply 614 Josephine 8t\nDESIRE 3 OR 4-R60M\n\u2022\"\"\u2022tractor\nwith inglJdoter\nFOR SALE\nCATERPILLAR\n\"78\" ln very good shape.\nIQUTPMJNT It REPAIRS\nBtft-JBROOK. B.C.\nJE   Portable   saw-\nut strongly built forjeco-\niroduction to suit West-\n_\u00bbJian Umber. Manufactur-\nIJATIONAL MACHINERY\nVancouver, B.C.\nWfSS X-3.\nlists for Immediate dellv-\nstock. PURVES E.\n_.& SON LTD., 658 Horn-\nVancduvej, B.C\nAY   COMFRfcs&OJul\nl with host and guns. In\nMR   EQUIPMENT   BER-\n, 1401 Hornly St, Van-\n5ira~SAWMtLL~CAR\"\ngood condition.  Apply\nOk Sawmills Ltd, Cranio\t\n!tt \u00a9atlii 3-Iruts\nHON! 144\nlied Advertising Rote\n\u25a0 Unt per Insertion\n\u2022 line ptr week <6 con\n_ Insertions lor cost of 4)\n11 lint t month\n,11 lines ptr Instrtlon\nnbtrs Ho extra. This\nr numbtr of timet\n\"(LEGAL) NOTICES,\nDEHS, ETC\nt lint first instrtlon and\n_ subsequent insertion\n\/ABOVE RATES  LESS\nPR PROMPT PAYMENT\nICIAL LOW RATM\n\u2022 commercial situations\nI for I8o (or any required\n> o( lints for six days.\ni In advance.\nION RATM\n I .ei\nk, per wttk\n.____-      at)\nWar, per vear     13.00\n\u25a0 outside Neiton:\nnth   tn\nptbs     3-0\nnoo\n3 ADULTS DESIRE FOTT\ned suite or small-house. Ph.\nduring business hours.\n120\n\u00a5i6p sUTFfe-1-.G 7rom fol\"\nlowing stomach Disorders! Acid\nStomach, Indigestion Heartburn,\nCoated Tongue, Bad Breath, Sick\nHeadaches, etc. Use Ellk's Stom-\nich powder No.-2, prepared by\nexperienced Pharmacist It must\ngive Immediate results or money\nback. 31, fl Elik's Medicine Company, Dept '42, Saskatoon, Sask.\ned, 11.00, 32.00. Mall orders filled\npromptly Order today (rom Elik's\nTO ALL BUYfefta or B*\nCHICKS IN 1946.\nYour future profits from poultry will bt dttermined by the quality of stock you l)uy. Our new\npoultry firm, backed by thirty\nyears poultry breeding experience, ls devoted exclusively to tht\nproduction of strong, healthy,\nproduction-brad stock. Only birds\non this farm art used to produce\nour babv chicks In White Rocks,\nR.O.P. Sired Whltt Leghorns tnd\nNew1 Hampshires. Write for our\nillustrated 1946 price list\nAPPLEBY POULTRY FARM\nMission City, B.C.\nFARM, GARDEN * NUMttV Pouring of Nitro at\n* Turn\u00abr Valley Begins\n\u25a0    \u25a0. '       '   '\ntm'iwwi'sw ****** ,\nVsDo\/\nWALNUT TRUS-IUM CO-CtJ\nlus available. Wrltt Jtck Oellat-\nly, Canada's leading producer oi\nnew end bettor, nut trees. Box 19,\nWestbtnk, B.C.\ntm  Will  TO*  tiAMMN\ngrow? Soil production mty be Increased up to 700 per cent without\nthe aid of chemical fertilliert. Results are beyond Imagination. You\ncan htve tht finttt toptoll known\nto mtn. Wrltt for the astonishing\nbooklet which reveals the drama\nconcealed inside tht earth. Written for the farmer and non-farmer, for those who grow (lowers,\nfruits or Vegetables. Send name\nand address plainly printed along\nwith a dime to cover postage end\nhandling to: Sollmiiltr Syitem\nDept. 73, P.O. Bex 323, Winnipeg,\nManitoba. \u25a0\nWANTID, MISCELUNEOUS\nSHIP US YOUI1 SCR AP METALS\nor Iron, Any quantity. Top prices\nBill ^ctwiTrtding Comptny,\nJig P6well St., Vancouver, B.C,\nSt\u00bb\"YM* __\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb I P. SR*\ngsn. Ntlson. B.C.\nFOR EXCHANGE, GIRL'S BRASB\nntw slzt 8 C.C.M. skttes for larger ilze. Apply 809 Latlmer_St\nBOLIVAR CHICKS\nWhen you order Bolivar chicks\nyou get the benefit of 34 years-\nexperience in breeding, hatching\nand handling chicks. White Leghorns, New Hampshires, Barred\nRocks, Leghorn-Hampshire Cross.\nIllustrated folder and prices on\nrequest. There are mort Bolivar\nchicks sold than any strain In\nB.C. There must bt a reason.\nBOLIVAR HATCHERIES\nR.R. No. 4, Pacific Highway, .New\nWestminster, B.C. A modern sanitary Jiatehery supported by a\nbreeding farm Operated undtr\ngovernment supervision.\nby-eXserViceman\nLOST AND FOUND\nWAftTED\nand wife, 2 roomed suite, no (am'\nily. 'By Feb. 9th. Ph. 897.\nWANtttl\u20148-4   AtJOMEb   H6USE j FOUND - SMALL WHITE TER-\nnear town, if possible. Ph. 2J7-X. I   rler pup. Ph. 849-R.\nNORMAN  DRAPER\nInternationally Known\nGraphologist\nHe X-Rtyi  your  handwriting\nand reveals the REAL YOU! He\nalao gives you your PSYCHO-\nANALYSIS-a detailed description o( your personality and a\nguide lor  your  future ... ill\ntaken from your handwriting.\nComplete Reading, Including\nPsycho-Analysis 50c\nSimply mail a large, self-addressed stamped envelope and\nencl6se a note of five or six\nlines in your natural handwriting and state your birthdate in\nfull. Enclose 50c for each reading desired. Mall orders tilled as\n?ulckly as possible. Mail to:\n943 Robion St., Vancouver. B (J\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n7. Astrtngint\nmitt\n3. Urge\nvolumf,\n10. gfalrway\nposti\n11. Chela of a\ncruftac-e\"\n18. Roman\nmoney\n18. Forests\nlt. Asterisks\n20. Vehicle\n31. Put\nJJ. Narrow\nInlet\n).. Blunder\n26 Observe\n29. Attempt\n28. Fracas\n10: Body of\nwater\n, 32. Milt,\nas snow\n31. Western\nstate\n34. Urge\norange and\nblack Itsard\n38. Corridor\n37. UMle\n38. Boy's name\nIt. Moat\nexcellent\nytaUet.,; AllwM\n41 Spawn\nof (lib\n.3 Held\n(slang)\ntrttts apply In Canidi\nJtatti mic\nI subicrlbtri Uvln\u00ab ou'\nIttd King-\nliving out-\ncarrier art*\ni snd to Cinadi\nnottagl ls required:\n,U) 31 50; three months\nmonths $800: ont year\nJ\n*>\u25a0-\nACROSS\n1  Irish\ndramatist\n8. Final\n9. Cart\n11. Greeting\n12. Maki\namende (or\n13. Maxim\n14. Plead\n15. Pale\n17. Charge (or\nlervleii\n18 Obnoxious\nplants\n20   C\"MlHtlilf-S\nsongi\n23 Proof\n27 Premiums\n(or currency\nexchange\n28 More\nInfrequent\nIt Highway\n30 Two-seated\ncarriage\n31 Drenches\n33. Expression\n.7. Befall\n37 Sailor\n40 Cbronet\n43 Join\n44 Permit\n45 Cliielfles\n48 Robust\n47 A spot,\nts of Ink\nDOWN\n1 Sponge on\na handli\n3 Dttett\n3 Eager\n4 Cal nnt\n0 Slack\n6 Arabic letter\n< mTTlH-t'oTr-A cryptogram quotation\nV X 11      XNRRA      Oil     NSOIBAV     QXNWX\nMDI     WXNRHNAX    UIBV   XOTB   W It N Y F-\nBH     V x ) I     BOJRNBAV-qXNVVNIl.\nVeslerdty's Crypt_\u00ab)_o*ii   TRUTH IS THE STRONO THINO\nl.rr MAN S UFI BI TRUBI-BROWNma\nDlililbutet or But features \u00bbr\u00bb41c\u00abU, Im.\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS,\nCALOARY, Jtn. 80 (CP)-Pour-\nlng of 9000 quarts o( nltro-glyctrlne\nin Turner Valley has begun, according to reports thli morning. All\nequipment Including aluminum tubing, marbles, nitro pilot tube, tnd\ncomplicated shooting apparatus, wtl\nIn place in Uit bottom 400 feet of\n0900 foot holt Tuesday evening.\nThe steel tubing hid bttn polished\nand run..\nThis morning tht bolt wu read;\nto btgln receiving the nitro. Pouring ot the11000 quarts is expected to\nbt completed somttlmt tomorrow,\nwltb the explosion icheduled tor\ni few hours liter.\nThe Guinea pig well ll Weit Flmk\nNo. 2, a mile tnd t hall North of\nLohgvlew, Just off Hit main road\nln Turner valley.. After the bltst tht\nwill will hivt to bt cleaned out\nIt may bl two or thrte weeks before the reiulti art known. It nearby wells ire affected, lt ls thought,\nthat production would Increase very\nsoon after tbt txplosion.\nIfiht experiment is a success It\nwilfTmesn1 that many exhausted\nTurner Valley wells will have a new\nleast on lift; it will mean in effect\nthe rejuvenation ef an oil field, the\nfirst in history.\nVIOLIN.   PERFECT   CoTfomON.\nGood bpw>*hone 100D-L.\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM\nHigh quality chicki that will\nprove-profitable to the poultry-\nman. They grow ln popularity as\nls evidenced by repeit orderi end\nincreastd sties. Leghorns, Hampshires, Barred Rocks, Crossbreeds. Write today for cttelog.\nOrdtr chicks early, demand will\nbe heavy. Plant and hatchery under Dominion Government inspection.\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM\nA. E Powell    .    Hammond, B.C.\nCOLES' QUALrtY1 CHfHS\nBe wise, order Coles' Quality\nChicks today to insure your poultry future. We do everything poi-\nlible to give you healthy, Vigorous chicks that will develop Into\nhigh-egg producing (locks. White\nLeghorns, New Hampshires, Barred Rocks, R.I. Reds. Light Sussex, Black Australorps and Aua-\ntra-Whltes.\nWrite for a price Uit\nL. S. COLES HATCHK.Y\nKlng^t, Cloverdale. B.C.\nJO.OOO^NEWTlAMPSHIRE FEMA'C\nES ALREADY BANDED FOR\nHAMBLEY HATCHERY egg sup-\nply in Fraser Valley. Also many\nGovernment Approved pullorum\ntested flocks in other parts of B.C,\nand Alberta. You can depend on\nHambley quality and\nservice (rom Calgary or Abbots-\nford. 32 page catalogue. Prices and\ncomplete information now ready.\nWrite J. J. Hambley Hatchery,\nCalgary, Alberta, Abbotiford, B.C.\nQUALITY CHICK'S. APPROVED\nLeghorns and Hampshires. Order\nchicks now (rom our specially selected breeders. 20 years' experience with chicks and poultry. Full\nparticulars in our catalogue. A.\nBalakshin,   New Siberia   Farms,\nRJt. 2._ChillKvack, EC.\t\nFINEST QUALITY\" FtO.P.-SIRED\nRhode Island Red snd New Hampshire Chicks at my regular price\nof H (or 2J, *8 (or 80,113 tor 100\nBook your 1940 Chicks now.\nGEORGE GAME, R.O.P. Breeder,\nArmstrong, B.C.\t\n5RDER CHICKS NOW. R.O.P. SIR-\ned White Ughorns, R.O.P. sired\nNew Hampshires, Leghorn-Hampshire crosses. Austra-White crosses.    G     T.   Armstrong,   Surrey\nCentre, B.C._ |\n\u2022^AN-m^'HORSE.-COW,   YE_-Rt\nold hens. Box 521, Kaslo, B.C.\n2_YEAR OLD BULL FOR SALE. P.\nRepln. Winlaw, BC.\t\nCalgary Livestock\nCALOARY, Jan. 80 (CP)-Cattle\nmarket steady at week's advance.\nTuesday's receipts: 1373 cattle 918\nhogs, 04 calves and 149 sheep. This\nmorning's receipts: 70 cattle, 41\nhogs and 60 sheep.\nHogs-sold Tueiday at $17.10 for\nA's at yards and plants. Sow! $12.50-\n12.65 live weight.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n11.50-12.35; coinjnon to medium 9.00-\n11.20. Oood-to choice butcher heifers 10.50-11.50; common to medium\n860-10.00.\nOood cowl 8.75-9.00; common to\nmedium 7.00-8.50. Ctnnen tnd cut-\nten 5.00-8.50.      .\nOood bulls 8.5O-9.O0; common to\nmedium 7.00-8.00.\nGood to choice veal calves 10.00-\n11.00; common to medium 8.00-9.50.\nGood lambs 12.50.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEO, Jan. 80 (CP>\u2014Oraln\nquotations:\nRYE:        Open   High  Low   Close\nMay    224y*   22614   221      221\nJuly    216%   219.4   213.4   213%\nOot    180%   183H   177tt   1T7V4\nOats: (all futures at cellipg prices\nof Sltt).\nCASH PRICES:\nOats: 2 C.W. 5U4; Ex. 3 C.W. Sltt;\n3 C.W. 51tt; Ex. 1 feed 51tt; 1 feed\nBltt; 2 feed 50tt; 3 feed 49. Track\n61tt.\nScreenings $12.50 t ton.\nMONTREAL SIOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nCm Car Is Fdy pfd   3475\nCan Steamship pld  50.00\nCon Min & Smelting   88.50\nDom Steel & Coal B  15.50\nH Smith Paper pld  32.75\nNitlonil Brew Ltd \u2122,  49.85\nTOawnigafi W *fT'-Z.  21.50\nSt. Lawrence Corp  915\nBANKS\nCommerce   21.85\nDominion   25.50\nImperial   28.00\nMontreal     24.00\nNovi Scotia   33.50\nRoyal   23.65\nHambley Toronto   34.00\nNELSON DAILY NIWI, THURSDAY\/JAN. II, TM6 - t\nUNO Nominee Is Veteran Trade\nUnion and Labor Leader\nSAVINGS $2,865,329,000\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30 (CP)-Savlngi\non deposit ln Canada's chartered\nbanks Dec. 31, 1949, were $2,885,-\n329,000, agalnit $2,816,218,000 Nov.\n30 ind $2,422,963,000 Dec. 31, 1944,\nthe chartered bank statement for\nDecember showed today.\nCall loans In Canada were $251,-\n166,000 Dec. 31, against-$236,515,000\nNov. 30 and $91,780,000 Dec 31, 1944.\nCANADIAN BREWERIES\nPROFIT $2,294,34\/\nTORONTO, Jm. 30 (CP)-Cana-\ndlan Breweries Limited report a\nconsolidated net profit of $2,294,347\ntor the fiscal year ended Oct. 31,\n1943.This was ihe first tnnual statement to Include the earnings of\nthe company's new United States\nsubsidiary, Brewing Corporation of\nAmerica, Cleveland, O., 'and the\nfigures are therefore not comparable with the previous annual report,\n1,000 Candiates to\nSeek Office in\nJapan's Election\nTOKYO, Jan. 30 (AP)-The newspaper Mainichi today predicted\nmore than' 1000 candidates will seek\noffice in Japan's March 31 general\nelection, and credited Social Democrats with tba bejt chance of emerging as the nation's majority party.\nBY STANLEY HILLIUR\nLONDON, Jan. \u00bb (Heuttri)-\nTrygvt Halvdan. Lie, Norwegian\nForeign Minister unmlmously nominated todty by tht United Nitloni\nSecurity Councii tor the poit ef\nU.N.O. Secretary-General, ll S veteran trades union tnd ltbor leader.\nTbe 49-year-old lawyer, ion Ol\nan Olio cobbler, left university In\n1919 to become secretiry (it Norway'* Libor Pirty tnd tn 1922 began en 18-year stretch u legal advisor to the trades union congress.\nMr. Lie, tn ithtlttle youth, starred in tennis md skiing tnd ilso\nshowed an early leaning toward\npolltlci. Only thi laws of his .country prevented him trom starting\nhis parliamentary career before the\nige of 30, then the minimum age\nfor a Norwegitn member.\nHe started accumulating a political background at 16 when he\nwas named leader of Norway's\nSocial Democrat Youth Movement\n\"I don't suppost I ever really htvt\nhad a rest from in oldce,\" he once\n\u25a0aid.\n. A hefty man \"with \u2022 chubby, boyish face, Mr. Lie gained hit first\ncabinet post in 1935, when he wu\nnamed Minister of Justice in t\nLabor government. When v*ar\nthreatened ln 1939 he took over is\nMinister of Trade and Supply, a\nvital post ln time of blockades,\nand built up vast reserves ot emergency supplies.\nWhen the Germins Invaded his\ncountry in 1940, Mr. Lie waa the\nlast cabinet member to leave Oslo\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 lndstle. 204.84 off .51\n20 rails    67.55 off .34\n15 oils _.'    40.9\u00ab off .33\ntor London. At the tlmt be wu\norganizing the transfer ot vital\narmy end civilian luppllei trom\nlouth tnd north. #\nAt the samt time he ienied in\nordtr bringing Norway's 4\u201e000,\n000-ton merchant fleet undtr government control, I characteristically swift, decisive move which\nproved valuable to the Allies al.\nthe wu contlnuid.\nHis wife tnd two dtughtcri\nwtnt with him to London but mott\not thtlr Ufa In exile wu dj_rkenad\nby fun of whit might hiaptn to\nnine-year-old Metto, the third and\nyoungest diughter, who WU staying with htr grandmother It the\ntlmt ot lnvulon tnd could not escape\nEtch time Mr. Lit broidcut to\nhil countrymen there wu the\nthreat of \"retaliatory meisurcs\" igalnst Metto. Finally iht wu taken\nto Sweden by the underground\nmovement md escaped to Britain.\nISSUE ORDER OF\nNATIONAL\nBANK HOLIDAY\nRIO DI JANKHtO, Jin. 30 (AP)\n\u2014Provlslonil President Jose Lin-\nhares issued an order today extending through Friday a national\nbank holiday originally decreed Last\nThursday, when bink worktrs\nthroughout Brszll wtnt on strike.\nThe strike now ls ln Its sixth day\ntnd attempts at settlement of demands for salary Increases hava\nreached an Impasse.     \\\nToronto Stock Quotation!\nMINES\nAldermac _     .Wei\nAquarius        .72\nArmlitlce       .90\nAstoria  80\nAtlas       .52\nAubelle       .62\nAunor       0-25\nAnglo-Huronian    10.00\nAumaque\nBagamic\t\nBase Metala Mining .\nBear Exploration \t\nBeattle Gold Mines .\nBelleterre\t\nBtvcourt  -\nBldgood Klrkland\t\nBobjo Mines\t\nBonetal\t\nBralornt\t\nBroulan \t\nBuffalo Ankerlte\t\nBuffalo Ctnadian ......\n1.39\n.52\n.24\n1.58\n1.50\n.15 Vs\n.85\n.38\n.22\n.46\n17.85\n.73\n8.60\n.37\nRegcourt \t\nRoche L L ______\nRouyn Merger \t\nSin Antonio Qold\t\nStn Rouyn \t\nShttp Creek  _.._\nShtrrlt. Oordon .\u201e__._\nSigma Rouyn ..............\nSiscoe Oold\t\nSladen Malartlc      ,     ,\nSpringer  _\u2014_.\nSteep Rpck \t\nSturgeon R \t\nSullivan Cons ......._.._..\nSylvanlte\nT C Reiourcei\nT Lundmark .\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nSMITH MARKINO DEVICES LTD.\n\"Let us solve your marking problems.\" We specialize In machine\nengraving, badges, rubber stamps,\nsteel stamps, inks, pads, pencils,\ndies. 622 Homer St.. Vancouver.\nfr AN D AlTtTT(E(___._PT~ _S6cTKn\nreceipts to page with duplicate\nsheets, Nelson Dally News Printing Dept.\nfOR \" SALf^' 3~iPC\u2014CHfcSTIR-\nfleld surte. bedroom furniture, etc.\n400 Observatory SI Ph. 391-R1,\n(H4-L.\nlTM CHEVrSAW'BUG, FAIR-CON-\ndiUon. good tires, two saws. Price\n3125. A|>i>ly 12<m Silica St.\nPipe - FiTTTff5SvT(5ui_s;\"-3T\nclal   low  prices.  Active  Trading\nCo. am  Powell  St.,  Vancouver\n6\"NF. \"   BRTcK-LINiib     HEATER\nCall 3 to 7 p.m., 219 Silica St.\nBABY CAI.I.IAGE,   ALSO    HIGH\nchair and crib  Ph. 328-R4.\nffNGLfSH  PRAM. GOOD CONbl-\ntlnn  Applv (108 Stanley.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAmerican Can   101.50\nAm Smelt tc Ref  71.50\nAmer Telephone  194.75\nAmerican Tobacco  90.00\nAnaconda   49.15\nBtth Steel   108.25\nCanadian Pacific  21.75\nDupont   193.00\nGen Electric   50.25\nGen Motors   80.00\nInternational Nickel  4085\nKenn Copper   55.25\nStan OU of N J  06.75\nUnion Pacific   160.00\nU S Rubber  71.00\nU S Steel  93.50\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK, Jan. 30 (CP) - The\nCanadian dollar was unchanged at\na discount of 9\"4 per cent in terms\nol United States funds in closing\nforeign exchange dealings today.\n(Ottiwa Foreign Exchange Board\nrites 909-9.91 per cent dis.) The\npound sterling was 'unchanged at\n$4.03 Vt.\nEXTERNAL TRADE IN 1945\nOVER S4 BILLION\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30 (CP)\u2014Value of\nCanada's externsl trade, excluding\ngold, amounted to $4,853,199,000 during 1945, a 7.4 per cent decline from\nIts all-time high of 1944, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. The balance of trade was\nin Canada's favor by $1,081,649,000,\ncompared with a favorable balance\nof $1,724,200,000 thc preceding year.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBid\nAsk\nB R X\t\n.164\n...      .22\n.18\n.24\nB R Con\t\n...      .22H\n.24\nBralorne  '.\u2022\u25a0<\u2022\n...   17.75-\n18.25\nCuyunl \t\n...    2.25\n2.30\n\"ariboo Gold\t\n...    2.80\n2.85\n_      .39\n\u25a039 H\nGolconda .....\n...      .42\n.44\nGrandview \t\n..      .30\n.35\nGrull Wihksne .\n...      .24\n.25\nHedley Mascot ..\n...    3.05\n3.10\nIsland Mount\t\n...     1.92\n1.95\n...      .42\n.45\n,12\n.1314\n,32\n.34\nPacific Nickel ...\n.26\n212\nMlnto \t\n..    .oey\u00bb\n.0814\nPioneer OoTd\t\n...    6.50\n6.65\nPrem Border\t\n...      .09%\n.10\nPremier Gold ...\n...    8.06\n3.10\n...      .81\n.82\n.17\n.18\n....     1.48\n1.50\n 13H\n.1414\n...      .25VJ\n.27\nSheep Creek \t\n\u2014\n2 09\n.\u2014\n1.50\nTaylor Bridge ...\n....     1.05\n1.07\nWellington \t\n 0714\n.0814\nOIL8\n 08\n.00\nAnglo Cm \t\n....     1.25\n\u2014\nA P Con\t\n...      .22\n\u2014\nCal Is Ed\t\n...    2.71\n2 80\nCalmont   \t\n 47\n.48\nCommoil \t\n 34\n\u2014\nCommonwealth\n 49\n.50\nDalhousle \t\n....      .65\n.70\nFoothills  \t\n....     1.80\n179\nHome   \t\n....    3.13\n3.90\nMcDougall Seg .\n 12\n\u2014\n 09\n'.09%\nModel \t\n 24\n.2414\nNational Pete ....\n 164\n.18\nOkalta com \t\n.65\n.75\nPacific Pete \t\n....     1.88\n1.45\nRoyal Can \t\n 0514\n.0314\nRoyalrte \t\n.   24.30\n\u2014\nSunset \t\n.08\n\u2014\nUnited  \t\n 13\n.1314\nVanalta  \t\n 1214\n.13\nVulcan \t\n 34\n.36\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates\n\u2014\n5.65\nCoast Brew \t\n...     2.74\n2.75\nUnited Dls \t\n....   14.50\n\u2014\nPacific Coyle ....\n 3514\n\u2014\nPowell River\n.   3200\n3.1 00\nCampbell R L - J.8S\nCanadian Mai - _ 1.2S\nCariboo Gold Quartz  2.7S\nCastle-Trethewey  1.8J\nCentral Patricia   2.90\nC Porcupine   M\nCltralam   Jl\nCoin Lake  S8\nChestervllle  1.73\nCochenour  4.65\nConiaurum Mines _ - 122\nConsolidated M lc S .'.... 88.30\nConwest t... 1.50\nCroinor  153\nDelnlte  \u2014 2.90\nDome Mines  80.S5\nDonalda  :. -  1.46\nDuquesne  1.42\nEast Amphl 52\nEast Malartie  -  3.20\nEast Sullivan  - 4.00\nElder  1.83\nEWona - 1.10\nFalconbridge Nickel  6.20\nmajilud JrVLndA .\nFed Kirkland\t\n 19\nFrancoeur \t\n       .70\nFrobilher  .'....\n     3.23\nGiant Yellowknife .....\n     8.50\nQlllies Ukt\t\n       _\u00bb\nGod's Lake Gold \t\n        .70\nGold Crest \t\n i      .65\n 19\nGold Dale\t\nJ5\nGolden Arrow\t\n.60\nGolden Gate \t\n 3314\nGolden Manltou\t\n      2.36\n.55\nHard Rock Gold\t\n      1.23\nHarker Gold\t\n.28\nHarrlcana\t\n '    .31\nHasaga  \t\n      2.53\nHeva Cadillac \t\n 32\nHollinger \t\n    18.23\n.......      M\n       .67\n.51\n    43.00\n      1.45\n    45.00\n      1.80\nJacknife \u2014\n 39\n 32\n.41\n 16\nJollet Quebec\t\n      1.19\nTeck-Hughes Gold\t\nToburn Oold Mines _____\nTowgamac    \u201e \t\nUpper Canada \t\nVenturei \u2014   \t\nVicour  ________\nWaite' Amulet\t\nWasa Lake\nW Malartlc\nWilttey\"\t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYtllorex ,\t\nOILS\nAnglo-Ctn \t\nBritish American ..._.-....\nBritish Dom\t\nC _ E Corp \t\nCalmont  \t\nChemical Reiearch\t\nDavlei Petroleum\t\nEast Crest ....'. \t\nFoothilli \t\nHome Oil\nImperial  _\nInter Petroleum\nMM Continent ....\nNational Pete ....\nOkalta\nPacalte \t\nPacific Pett .\nRoyalite\n.39\n.21\n.53\n675\n1.47\n2.01\n2.90\n16.00\n1.20\n.90\n1.40\n425\n.38\n3.20\n3.70\n1.70\n.77\n575\n2.00\n.35\n2.80\n14.35\n.70\n4.85\n1.53\n.40\n.28\n550\n.80\n1.33\n17.00\n.47\n280\n.48\n.95\n.18\n.11\n1.99\n3.73\n11150\n24.83\n.14\n.16\n.75\n.15\n1.43\n24.75\n.07\n.18\n.121\nM\n9.50\n98.50\n25.00\n20.00\n40 50\n87.00\n28.73\n27.00\n41.50\n29 J3\n4.65\n28 50\n8.00\n27.23\n23 00\n1923\n29\n17 00\n2.85\n.35\n10 50\n25.00\n823\n143\n3.1\n1.27\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nWANTED TO PURCHASE LIOHT\ndelivery truck. Must be In good\nmechanical condition. F. Eberle,\n5r7 Ward St Ph. 0\u00ab.\t\nFor SAi.iP-l'fifc-KrrwTf-TT'r\n7 Internationals, with- dumps and\nhoists, ilso some tins. Prefer to\nsell rn bloc Also Falrbtnlu-Morst\ncompressor. J. F. Mertden, Tig-\nhum. B.C\nNIW YORK, Jin. 30 (AP)-Steeli\nand selected Industrials advanced\nfractions to a point and more in\nthe stock market but there were\nabout an equal number o( losers.\nCHICAGO\u2014The un(ettered May\nry^ swung briskly up and down in\nlight Mures trading as all other\nRrslns. except oits, held tightly at\nceiling prices.\nMay rye. only ceilln\u00abless grain\ndelivery in any of tha pits, fluctuated ova* a range of iround (our\ncents \u2022 bushel most o( the time.\nOats were ott fractionally most\no( the diy, but the May delivery\nheld it the Govirnment-flxed 81-\ncent celling.\nTORONTO-Oold, lndustrlil and\nWestern oil itocks showed \u2022 margin\nof losses over iglns at the end of\nthe exchangl session. Base metal\nissues had a surplus of gains over\nlosses lnd some Issues of. the group\nchanged hinds in volume. Turnover\nthl dty  wis iround  2,400,000\nWanted to buy i MooTcC^ff'\nor 1 Model \"A\" Ford engine. Ap- shares\npl^Box 13SI DlllyNews. .   MoNTREAL-Trends were steidy\nifo WHIPPFT'SKDAN,   SERIAL\nNo. 9SA37332, 9 good tint, $195.\nPhone S47-Y. J. Mtber.\nsealed   Seam   HfABtToHTS,\nCltr Auto JTre.kers. Nelion, B.C. win depressed.\nlo Irregular ln tridlng on the itock\nexchange Ind curb mirket In tht\nIndices, benki moved up end utilities, Induitrlili, pipers and golds\nVANCOUVER - Mines remilned\nsteady while oils slipped on the\nstock exchange. Sales were 102,147\nshares.\nWINNIPEG \u2014 Rye futures prices\non the grain exchange gave an Irregular display and fluctuated widely with light flurries of buying and\nselling.\nNtw seasonal highs were recorded st one stage of the trade, with\nofferlngl Increased In the latter part\nof the.session as Pctober fell the\nfull five-cent limit.\nAt the close prices wert 314 to 5\ncents lower with Mty at $2.21, July\n$2,131i, Oct. $1.7714.\nTrading was moderately active.\nExport business In Canadian\nwheat wis tbe disposal of 523,000\nbushels to the United Kingdom. No\nother sales were Indlcited.\nLONDON\u2014Fractional' gains predominated on the itock mirket. Outstanding were Britlih funds with\ngilns up to 3-16 ln fllrly ictlve trading after the tnnounctment by the\nChancellor ot the Exchequer regarding protection tor flit edged Issues.\nMONTREAL\u2014Provlnct at Quebec obligations win ln demind it\nhigher levels but the bilince ot the\nhigh-grade lilt wai firm but Inactive.\nKayrand\t\nKerr-Addison \t\nKirkland Lake\t\nKirk Townsite\t\nLabrador  \t\nLake Shore Mlnei \t\nLamaque Gold\t\nLeitch Gold\t\nLexlnden  ,..,\t\nLlngman Lake \u2014\nLittle Long Lie  8.20\nLouvcourt _  1.05\nLynx 40\nMacassa -  4.90\nMacLeod Cockshutt  3.50\nMarcus   '  1.70\nMldsen Red Liki  3.23\nMiltrtlc Oold F  3.50\nMclntyre-Porcuplm  73.25\nMcKenzIe Red Like  1.35\nMcMarmac  .45\nMcWatters  30\nMining Corporation  11 35\nMoneta   - .77\nMosher    41\nNegus        2 30\nNew Bidlamaque   \u2014 .48\nNib                         29\nNiplsslng Mining  4 50\nNoranda             70.00\nNormetal  1.35\nNorseman 2814\nNorth Canada  1.30\nO'Leary  J8\nOmega Gold   _35\nOrenada      44\nPamour Porcupine   140\nPlymaster 82\nPend Oreille  4.38\nSouth End Pett \u2014\nUhlted \u2014\nVermllata \t\nColomac  - \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbl Power  \t\nAbitlbl Power pfd .\t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nBatbunt A  \t\nBeatty \t\nBell Telephont  _..\nBraxlllan Traction .._..\nB A Oil\t\nB C Packers     ....\nB C Power \"A\"\t\nB C Power \"B\" _.\nBuilding Products\t\nCanada Breid  \u2014\nCan Brew\t\nCanada Canneri\t\nCan Car & Foundry ....\nCanada Car ts Fdy pfd    34.75\nCan Dredging    28.50\nCan Malting     60.00\nCan Marconi      4.75\nCan Pacific Rly -    24.00\nCan Ind Alcohol A     21.23\nCockihutt Plow  ._.   17.50\nCons Bakeriis     1823\nCons Piper     17.13\nDistillers Seagrams   11000\nDom Steel It Coil B    15 B5\nDominion Bridge     44.25\nDom Foundries     36 OO\nDom Tar Is Chem  _   26.00\n58.00\n31.30\n16.00\n108 00\n19 50\n28 50\n108 00\nGt Likes Paper    23 25\nGypsum Lime\t\nHamilton Bridge ....\nHiram Walker pfd .\nImperiil on      ......\nImperiil Tobicco\nInt Metila\nInter Nickel\t\nLake of the Woods\nLaura Secord\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B\t\nMaple Leat\nMaisey Harris\nMassey Harris pfd\nMcCoil Front\nMcCoil Front p(d\nMontreal Power\nMoore Corp\t\nNat Steel Car ....\nPtgt Htrshey\nPowell River\nPower Corp\nPressed Metals\nShiwlnlgan\nSicks Bnw\nFanny Farmer\nFord of Canidi \"\nGatineau   \t\nGatineau 3% pfd .\nGen Steelwarei ...\n\u00a3eorge Weiton\t\nTloodycar Tin .\nPerron Gold\nPlcidllly\nPickle Crow Oold ...\nPioneer\nPowell Rouyn Oold .\nPremier Gold \t\nPrttton Ent Domt\nQueenston\n185\n.39\n21.10\n6 45\nIM\n1.13\n3 73\n122\nQuemont    20.23\n16.83\n10.50\n22 65\n10 50\n13 50\n31.50\n44 30\n20 50\n23 00\n2925\n27 50\n15 50\n17.00\n33.00\n19.00\n105 00\n24 50\n73.50\n28 25\n33 50\n32 50\n13 50\n2150\n21 50\n43 00\nSlmptons pfd   103.30\nSouthtm      19 50\nStetl ol Canada   82.50\nSttel of Cm pfd           840O\nUnion Gu           II.IB\nUnited Steel                9.M\nUnlttd Corp                    .. 20 00\nWinnipeg Elec pld   ...     . 98 50\nWinnipeg Elec com   16.50\nV\n' .\n\t\n ______\n_______\n  \u25a0     \u00ab- \u25a0- 9\n10 - NELSON DAIL NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. II, 1946\nfg&\u00ab#\nHaughty, beautiful,\nfiery, lovely ...\nthis wildcat meets\nher match In the\nboldest buccaneer\nthai ever roomed\nlh* seven Mall\nPAU MAUHEN VAITH       MP\nHENREID- O'HARA- SLEZAK 1^^MM\n.lit IINNIE BARNES \u2022 JOHN EMESY\n* FRANK BORZAGE ProducUon\nin mn rufnr mimT mm-i \u2022 tmim htemt Own wm\naarmi**tif*s*sk**Q*A*a^^\nExtra\u2014Cartoon: \"HARE TRIGGER\"\nTONIGHT\nFRIDAY\nSATURDAY\nCivic\nLatest Newt\nComplete\nShowi\n7:00-8:48\nCapitol\nTONIGHT - FRIDAY\nShows at 7:00-9:23\nChester Morris, Victor\nMcLaglen\nin\n\"ROUGH,TOUGH AND\nREADY\"\nThe  danger   crammed   story\nof two deep sea divers.\nPLUS-r\n\"THEMANWHO\nWALKED ALONE\"\nHelium ls the hardest gas to Isolate. It can't be seen, tasted or\nsmelled.\nEXPERT WATCH\nREPAIRING\nW.G.VALIN\nJEWELLER\n864 Baiter St. Phone 42\nCUSTOMS WAVING\nADMIRED\nTor depth.of wave NOTED (or\nsoft springy curls.\nPROVED by popularity.\nClerihew's  Beauty\nLane\n538 Josephine SL       Phone 1149\nAnnual\nMeeting\nThursday\nJanuary 31\u20147:30 p.m,\nROSSLAND\nCITY HALL\nROSSLAND ARENA\nAND ATHLETIC\nASSOCIATION\nElection of five membera\nto Executive\n\u2014 and \u2014\nProgress  Report  on\nconstruction of\nNEW RINK\nMemberships on sola at\nstores\nllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nEAVES TROUGHS\nMade to Order\nLES BROWETT\nPhone U52      910 Kootenay St.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nwniTiii...;....\nNEW OFFICE AND\nSCHOOL DICTIONARY\nw'f.oV\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\niiiiHiiiimiHiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRates: 22c Una, tie line blaok tact\ntype, larger type rattt on requeit.\nMinimum   two   lines.   IOC  dls-\nI count (or prompt payment.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWanted: Boy or girl tor Province\nroute in Fairview.\nFor Insurance, see Ron Sonars,\n30$ Baker St Ph. llll ;    i\n  , i '\"\nJust arrtved-AU Metal Waste Pa.\nper Baskets. Kootenay Stationers.\nWasher and pump engine repairs\nat Beatty Service. Ph. 91.\nTHE FAIRWAY MEAT\nPHONE IS 265.\nIf It's worth owning, It's worth\ninsuring. See BLACKWOOD AGCY\nBrier Virginia Tobacco Mc Vi lb.\nat Valentines.\nOet your Potatoes new from\nWright's Grocery \u2014 Ph. 44.\nRadio and Electrical Appliance\nRepairs, Ph, Reg. Walker (formerly\nwith Nelson Electric) 917 Vernon St\nSTUDENTS\nJust arrived\u20143 ring zipper\nbinders - $3.79.\nKootenay Stationers.\nSHRAM LODGE\nAND BOAT BUILDERS\nBALFOUR, B.C.\nKeep Youth\u00bband\nLoveliness with\na Permanent.\nHaigh Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nPhone 327\nI Tub Filordrains! Indispensable for\n| filling ahd draining wash, tubs and\nwashing machines. Hipperson'-..\nCOMING \u2014 THE ROTARY\nCLUB'S 4TH ANNUAL ICE CARNIVAL MARCH ITH AND (TH.\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nand all Electrical Repairing\nColl\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nPhone 2.0 574 Baker St\nIt It's Electric\nF. H. SMITH\nPhone 666      351 Baker St.\nBURGLARY INSURANCE TO\nCOVER DWELLING CONTBNTS\n$5.00 per annum. Call 980. 677 Baker\nSt. Stuart Agencies.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nWE ARE SHORT OF RUBBERS\nBUT ... We have some\nFINE SHOES FOR ALL THE\nFAMILY\nat the\nThe Bootery\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii\nELLISON'S BEST\nAll Purpose Flour\nPhone your grocer for it\nimiiiliiiiiilllillliliiiillilliiim.iiiiiuii\nLACO MAZDA\nLAMPS\nMcKAY & STRETTON\nPhone 544\nLimited\nNtlion\nR. NADEAU\nLICENSED PLUMBER\nPhone 1157-615 Victoria St.\nSECTION 2, R.O. 11749\nTECHNOCRACY INC.\nPresents\nA. A. MILLIGAN\nAuthorized Speaker of Victoria, B. C\nAT A PUBLIC LECTURE\nSubject:\nBlueprint for the Future\nCanadian Legion Hall, Friday, Feb. 1, 9 p.m.\nADMISSION\u20148So\nQuebec' Issues\nSpeciol Licence '\nfor DTptSitiatS \u2122-   -\nQUEBEC, Jan. 10 (CP)^-As e result of suggestions, put forward by\nvarioui cultural organisations- to\nImprove relations between Canada\nand foreign countries, the Provincial Government has given the necessary instructions for a special\nautomobile licence to be used by\nall. Consuls and diplomatic representatives in Quebec Province, lt\nwas announced- today. The plates\nwill bear the letters DPL, tbe conventional sign adopted by many\ndiplomatic representatives ln the\nUnited States.\nIFirsfSOOMil\nthe Toughest\n-and Chilliest\nJuvenile Sent\nto Coquitlam\nfor Car Thefts\n* One Juvenile wu sentenced to\nthe Juvenile Industrial School for\nboys, and two others were remanded\nuntil Feb. 4, when they appeared\nbelore Magistrate Parker Williams\nin Trail Juvenile Court on car theft\ncharges. All three Juveniles were\naged 15 to 16,\nTile charges arose from car disappearances ln Trail and Nelson\nrecently. A car belonging to Oscar\nVan ot Columbia Gardens was reported missing from Tadanac one\nday, and 'was recovered on Falls\nStreet, Nelson, by Neljon City Police the day after. The day this car\nwas found, C. D. Stallwood missed\nhis car from the CPR station at\nNelson, and this was afterwards discovered at Park Siding by Salmo\nProvincial Police.\nThe sentenced boy confessed to\nstealing the cars. The others said\nthey went for a Joy-ride.\nCop Signs Petition\nAsking Own Removal\nNEBRASKA Cm, Neb., Jan. 30\n(AP)\u2014Raymond Bossung, Nebraska\nCity night policeman, heard several youths were circulating a petition\n\u2022,'skiiu: his removal from office. He\nfound the youths, whom he recently had picked up on traffic charges,\nand they had the petition. The policeman signed It.\nCHURCHILL, Man., Jan. SO (CP)\nThe first BOO miles will be the\ntoughest when the man ot Muskox\nitart their 8200-mllea Northland trek\nFeb. 14.\nFrom Churchill Northwest to\nBaker Lake and Cambridge Bay,\nthe expedition Commanded by Lt.-\nCol. P. D. Baird of Montreal Will\ncross perhaps the chilliest chunk of\ntountry on th$ continent.\n\u2022'Chilliest\" ls used advisedly.\nSqdn. Ldr. P. M. Mlllman, co-ordinate of research on exercise\nMuskox for the RCAF, has drawn\nup a complicated \"wind chill\" chart\nwhich combines temperature and\nwind velocity in measuring lon of\nheat per unit per hour.\nThe chart shows the highest aver\nage \"wind chill\" ls recorded at\nChesterfield Inlet, about 400 miles\nNorth of here and base of an Arctic\nCircle area from which weather re\nports seldom are received.\nThe \"wind chill\" chart gives a\npeak figure of 1000 tor Chesterfield\nInlet which is in the same general\nweather zone as Baker Lake and\nCambridge Bay. Churchill has a\n\"wind chill\" figure of 1800, higher\nlhan Aklavik and Coppermine\nwhich are shown at 1700, Yellowknife 1600 and Fhrt Norman 1500.\nSqdn. Ldr. Millman, astronomer\nformerly with Dunlap observatory\nin Toronto, says he believes the\nchart gives a true picture of chill\nconditions because It does not rely\nsolely on temperature.\nThe Andes mountains He across\nmore degrees of latitude than any I\nother range.\nStaticless Radio\nListening on\nYap for Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30 (CP)-Ca-\nnadlan Broadcasting Corporation\nwill build a 250-watt frequency-\nmodulation transmitter In Vancouver \"as soon as possible\" end It\nwill be redy when FM receiving\nsets become available to-the public\nne_-it Tall, It was announced here\ntods**, hy A. Davidson Dunton,\nchairman ot the CBC Board pf Governors, It the conclusion of the\nBoard's three-day conference.\nWhat it means is that Vancouver\nlisteners this year will hear for the\nfirst time, science's wonder-working new staticless radio.\nMr. Dunton said tbe 250-watt\ntransmitter will operate ln conjunction with, the present standard-\nbroadcasting or aplltude modulation\" facilities of station CBR, the\nCBC's big basic outlet ln Vancouver\n\"We realize 250 watts ts not a\ngreat deal of power,\" Mr. Dunton\niaid, \"but it will__give us a start,\nanyway, and will give the public a\nchance to become accustomed to\nFM\" Power of CBR's standard-\nbroadcast transmitter ls 5000 watts.\nUnofficially lt has been reported\nthe first FM1 receiving sets, probably combined with AM, will go on\nthe market next Fall. It Is expected they wlll cost much more than\npresent radios.\n\u25ba s^S\u00bbiweee\u00bbseeaies-H\nWe operate a Complete\nBODY and FENDER\nREPAIR SHOP\nEstimates gladly given.\nfUTHBERT\nV MOTORS. LIMITED I\nSTUDENTS\nJust arrived\u20143 ring ripper\nbinders -13.75.\nKootenay Stationers.\nLost\u2014Truck tire chain, also box\nprobably between Nine-Mile and\nNelson Ferry. Finder please advise\nWilliams Transfer.\nSTAR TAXI\n. Day Phone 1154\nFor   your   convenience.\nAfter 12 o'clock phone 204-X.\nStand at Walt's News Stand.\nAll Risk Insurance. We write II\nagainst Fire, Theft, Water Damage\nSmoke Damage, and other hazard*\non your furniture. Get our rates. Robertson Realty.\nSTUDENTS\nJust arrived\u20143 ring zipper\nbinders \u2014 $3.75.\nKootenay Stationers.\nJanle Dear\u2014Not much to tell you\nbut may have more later. Have a\nhot tip that Color-Back ls back.\nWhen I know more for sure will\nlet you know right away.\nThe all time speed record was\nmade on a Royal Typewriter. More\nranking professional speed typists\nuse Royal than other makes. Evidence that Royal Is a faater^wrltlng\nmachine. Get yours today. D. W. McDerby \"The Typewriter Man\" 536\nWard SL\nE. A. CAMPBELL & Co.\nChartered Accountants,\nAuditors\n342 Baker SL  - Phone 235\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFor Reliable Watch Repairs\nPROMPT   SERVICE\nHARVEY'S\n684 Bsker SL\nIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIMIIIIIIMMIIII\nTHE HOME FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE\nWill Be Closed for Alterations\nUntil Jan. 25th.\nKOKANEE\nSERVICE STATION\nend GARAGE\nExpert Repair Work\nPromptly Done.\nGai, Oil, Washing, Greasing.\nOpposite Bank-of Montreal\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR\nHOOD'S\nSupreme Milk Bread\nimiii.i.MtimiiiiiiniiMiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere\nthanks for all the kind acts and\nmessages of sympathy extended to\nus in our recent sad bereavemenl;\nalso to Dr G R. Barrett, nurses and\nstaff of the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital for their kind care to Alfred H. W. Crossley during hU Illness.\nMrs. A. H. W. Crossley\nand Family.\nC. W. House N. A. House\nKOOTENAY GIFT SHOF\nDt Baker St.\nHASTI NOTES AND CARDS\nby RUST CRAFT\nu**u^^^a__^t_______*__a\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLOUIS BONDERUD\n\u00bb12 SIXTH STREET\nFAINTER AND DECORATOR\nFOR ORDERS\nPHONE  11J\u00ab  AFTER  6  P.M.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nANNOUNCEMENT\nI wish to announce that I have sold that part of my\nMotor Freight business between Nelson and Nakusp,\n\u2014-to \u2014\nClark and Miller\nTransport\nI would also like to take this opportunity of .honking\nmy many customers for the support given me, and\nto bespeak for my successors the same friendly spirit\nand cooperation that have made my business relations so pleasant\nR. BUERGE\nBUERGE'S MOTOR FREIGHT\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 203\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDING\nHove the Job Dons Right\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 81S\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service-\nSin Kootenay St Phone 361\n11.: 11111 s. \u25a0 i \u25a0 \u25a0 111 j 11 ] 11111 111 \u25a0 i > _ r! \u2022 i s 111\nWINCARNIS\nA   tonic,   restorative,   ttt)\nblood - enricher. Recommended fer anaemia,\nnervousness and\nconvolescence.\n$1.25 par bottle\nSold at your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nfox 4(0\nPhona 34\nDOUGLAS, Isle of Man, (CP)\u2014\nWith the exception of one man too\nUl to be moved, all German pris-\noners-of-war on the Isle of Man,\nnumbering 490, have been moved\nHava Your Furniture Expertly\nRecovered at the\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n413 HaU St. Phona 14S\n'SKI\ncloth!\nEnjoy this popular wl\nsport in the right kln|\nclothes.\nSKI MITTS\nSKI CAPS\nSWEATERS\nJACKETS\nEmory!\nLIMITED \u25a0\nThe Men's Store!\nto England for farm work.\nOp\nening Music Studio\\\nin Nelson N\nTHE WESTERN ACADEMY OP MUSIC\n603 WEST HA8T.NG8 ST., VANCOUVER\nwishes to announce it ls enroUing students for vidlin and gul\nInstruction in a Nelson studio. Future orchestral work. lustrum!\nfurnished where necessary. Enrollment closes Feb. 10. For furfl\ninformation call between 2 and 4 p.m. daily or write,\nD. 1. GIBSON, Registrar, Savoy Hotel, Nelson, B. C.\nAlso opening studios in Trail and Rossland\nHOUSING\nTo assist In relieving the housing situation wt I\nprepared to undertake construction af houses under I\nCentral Mortgage and Housing Corporation, thi <\nernment body that makes loam undar the Natic\nHousing Act. Any person wishing to take advantage\nthis method of securing a home should act at ones.'\nwill help you with ths Plant, Specifications, Af\ncation, etc.\nT.H. Waters & Co. Ltt\nNELSON'S PIONEER CONTRACTORS\nWoodwork     Glass      Floor Sandinc\nPHONE 156\n101 HALL S'\nPHONE\nWe Call For and Deliver\nMen's, ladles' suits, ladles'      QA>\nDresses, plain      ****>'\nMen's and Ladles' Cl II\nSummer Coats #*\u2022__*->\nEMPIRE CLEANERS 1 OYERS\n\u00bb\u00ab5S30-\u00ab*X\u00bb\u00ab-5a55\u00bb-\u00bb*3-\u00ab5\u00bbS\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nOARAOEMEN\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 122 Nelson. B C\nSS_\u00bbK_*-\u00bbJ\u00ab\u00bbe_\u00abJi*\"K\u00ab-S-SSK\n22'.',:\nL R. Downlnj * C J   Hirrli\n\"ROSELAWN CHAPEL\"\nCrematorium - Branch  al  Kaslo\nNELSON PUNERAL CHAPEL\nLTD.\n(Successors to Somers Funeral\nHome).\n702 Baker SL     Phone 2SS     Neiton\nIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nHot Tasty Meals\nAT THI .\nMelon Dew Cafe\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nANNOUNCEMENT\nWe wish to announce to the public that we have\ntaken over\nBuerge's Motor Freight\nBETWEEN NELSON AND NAKUSP\nDating From\nFEBRUARY 1ST, 1946\nWe can assure you.that all business entrusted to us\nwill be handled to your complete satisfaction.\nClark and Miller\nTransport\nC. E. CLARK\nj. R. MILLER\nQuality\nS*ttVt ^.\/UDJCi^\nNELSON'S FINEST FOOD STORE\nPHONES 10 OR 11\nFREE PROMPT DELIVER\nNABOB PURE EXTRACTS\nVanilla or Lemon\n2-oz. bottle .-. 23c\n4-oi. bottle  39c\nCOFFEE: Chase 4 Un-    A_l\nbom's, Ib, pkt     *a\nTENDERLEAF   TEA:   Super\nduality, 71\nLb. pkt     **\nOVALTINE: A recognised has\ndrink, QI\nlarge, 1S ot. tin    a%\nTHICK SAUCE; Crosse 4 Blai\nwell's, Of\nS ot. bottle     ***\nPANCAKE FLOUR: Aunt IOj,\nJemima, 28 or pkt ' \u00b0r\nVEQETABLE    SOUP:    Aylmer,\ncondensed, 9Q\/*\n10 oz. tins, 3 tor     \"\u00ab_\u25a0\u00bb\u2022\nSODAS:   Red   Arrow,   plain   or\n\u2022p*^'\"'\"'  23tf\nCHEESE: Medium Cana-\ndian, Ib. \u2022\t\nQUAKER OATS: Quick 10,-\nCooklng, \u00ab oz. pkt ' a*r\nBREX: A vltamtn B 99^\noereal, 2 Ib. pkt  \"I**\n33\u00a3\nOXO CUBES\n10 to 0 pkt., each 25\nFid. Oxo, Sf\/i-ot. 43\nFid Oxo, 11 os.  ,1*\nFid. Oxo, 16 oz. $1.1'\nCHAN SPEED COAT\nSelf Polishing\nPints \t\nQuarts _ \u2014\nNOODLE SOUP: Llptons',\n2 pkts.        ...     \t\nPASTRY FLOUR: Tea\nTime, 7 Ib. saok\t\nEGGS: Grade A, large,\nIn cartons, dot. \t\nKAM: A pure pork\nproduct, 12 oz. tin     \t\nPEA8 and CARROTS:\nBroder'i, 20 at. tin\nPEARL BARLEY: Ogll-\nvle's, 2 lb. carton\nDOQ  MEAL:  B. 4  K.,\nwith cod liver ell, 5 lbs.\nLUX SOAP:\n4 ban  -\t\n2!\n31\nI\n31\nSTAR QUALITY PRODUC\nSUNKIST NAVEL ORANQEB, sweet and Juicy\nExtra large size, 150's, y r  .\nLarge size, 220's,\n2 doz.\nMedium size, 28S's,\n3 doz.\nGRAPEFRUIT: Texas Ruby Reds, Isrge  -}7-k\nsize, TO's, 3 (or        \u00b0 ' V\n95tf\nLEMONS: Sunklst, 300's,\n\u00ab for\n25C\nAPPLES: Okansgan Delicious, fancy\nwrapped, 3 lbs. \t\nBRUSSEL SPROUTS:\nLb.  ...\nCARROT8: California, bunches,\n2  lbs.\nLETTUCE: Large lolld headi,\nLb.\nCELERY: Crlip green stalks,\nLb. \t\nSPINACH: Texas,\nLb. \t\n2i\n3\nThese cold wintry days, why bother to walk down town to do your shopping? Why not pick u|\nyour phone and call 10 or 11 and have your groceries delivered to your door? We have our owl\ntruck on the road and offer you the most e'flclent delivery service' In town. This Is oil\nschedule:\nUPHILL\u20149 a.m. and 2 p.m.\nFAIRVIEW\u201410:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.\nIf you haven't already a charge account at the Star, arrange for one now. Ya(\nwill find it a great convenience. All purchases today will be charged to you\nFebruary account.\n.-)-.._-.._; -..-....\n '\nLa_r_^_,_^__\n^^^\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1946_01_31","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0417839","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1946-01-31 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1946-01-31 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}