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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" 1 &&S7  (?<*\u00bb\/\nNelson Church Groip\nAnd Doukhobors Jam\nHall in First Social\nA-gathering \"to stimulate mutual understanding between English-speaking peoples and the Union of Spiritual\nCommunities of Christ,\" (orthodox Doukhobor group, Thursday night,-surpassed dll expectations.\nSt. Saviour's Memorial Hall was jammed to the doors\nby Doukhobors from Brilliant, Castlegar, Shoreacres, Apple-\ndale and various other valley points, and by a large representation from congregations of various Nelson churches. Nelson\nMinisterial Association organ-\n537\nRussia Profesb\nof Japan\nLONDON, Feb. 15 (Reuters)\nThe Soviet Government tonight sent\na note to the United States protesting the release of Japanese war\ncriminals by Gen. Douglas Mac-\nArthur.\nThe note, broadcast by Moscow\nradio, referred to the \"arbitrary actions of General MacArthur concerning the Japanese war criminals.\"\nCopies of the note were delivered to other members of the Allied\nCouncil for Japan, including Britain and the Chinese. Communist\nGovernment.\nThe note referred fo a previous\nprotest made by the Soviet government Nov. 19 against release before\nhis time of Mamoru Skigemitsu,\n\"one of the chief Japanese war\ncriminals.\" \u2022\nThe American State Department\nreply .the note added, made it appear that the United States Government \"not only did not take any\nmeasures to conceal the illegal order issued by MacArthur, but on the\ncontrary supported his illegal actions in the release of Mamoru\n. Shigemitsu.\"\nRetains British\nBRISTOL, England, Feb. 15 (CP)\n\u2014Sir Walter Monckton tonight retained the Bristol West House of\nCommons seat for the Conservative\nParty in a byelection.\nMonckton, a leading British lawyer\/was a close confidant and legal\nadviser tb King Edward VIII\u2014now\nDuke of Windsor\u2014during tha crisis\nleading to the-abdication Jn 1930i\n|3 He defeated his Labor opponent,\nHarold Lawrance by 17,144' votes.\nLawrance, a 41-year-old railway\nClerk who was rebuffed by Prime\nMinister Attlee for his pacific\nviews, prilled 5072 votes. Monckton\nhad 22.210.\nThe byelection was caused by the\ndeath of Oliver Stanley, one of\nWinston Churchill's closest collaborators. In the general elections\nlast February Stanley polled 24,920\nvotes to Labor's 12,677 and the\nLiberals' 4688.\nGoose-Pimples on\nCoast Cars Puzzle\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP).\u2014\nTHe mystery of the goose-pimpled\ncars has automobile companies and\npaint manufacturers baffled.\nThe phenomena, whic] has raised\nblisters like goose pimples on 500\ncars here, has stumpel a panel of\nexperts :sent to Vancouver by, car\nand paint manufacturers. '   .\u00bb\nThe blisters first turned up here\nin December. Physicists of the University of British Columbia and\nB.C. Research Councjl said they\ndidn't think they were caused by\nradioactivity in snow or rain.\nized the affair.\n' For the first of what is hoped to\nbe a series of such gatherings, about\n300 people joined in prayers and\nsinging of hymns, heard brief talks\nby representatives of both groups,\nthen sat down together to refreshments.\nStressing the \"friendship in Jesus\nChrist\", Very Hev. T. L. Leadbeater,\nDean of Kootenay, said the \"Mend-\nship created today is a friendship\ncreated for all eternity.\"\nThat the gathering was a prelude\nto many more was the hope expressed by John Verigin, Secretary\nof Ihe Doukhobor group, who also\npaid tribute to the work of Emmott\nGulley, American Friends Service\nCommittee representative, former\nProvincial Police Commissioner\nJohn Shirras and Col. F. J. Mead,\nand the Consultative Committee on\nDoukhobors, for their work in\nstriving to solve the Doukhobor\nproblem.\nAN EXAMPLE\nJ. Stoochnoff of Brilliant was\n\"very glad to see an opportunity\nfor fellowship between the English-\nspeaking and Doukhobor people\"\nand hoped that \"in a distressed\nworld the people of Kootenay could\nset an example to the world of\nmutual understanding and fellowship.\"\nRev. Allan Dixon, Ministerial\nAssociation President; opened the\nprogram with an invocation; Rev.\nA. L. Anderson read the 103rd\nPsalm and \"The Sermon on the\nMount\"; and Rev. Theo. T. Gibson\nle.d in prayer. The gathering joined\nin two hymns.\nE. E. L. Dewdney, St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral Warden, welcomed\nvisitors from other churches and\nthe various communities.\nAmong those attending was Lieut.\nAustin Millar of the Salvation\nArmy.\nFollowing Mr. Verigin's talk,\nDoukhobor choir sang about 12\nhymns and songs of a religious nature in Russian, and two quartets\nwere also heard. One quartet of\nfour girls sang in English, \"He the\nPearly Gates Will Open\", and\nWonderful Words of Life\".\nAppreciation of the singing and\nthanks foi;.,their, coming, ;were:j\u00a7x-\nterided by Mr. Dixori;\"and I&.'\"Ver-\nigin .also offered thanks.  . '\u25a0'\u25a0;\nFollowing the benediction given\nby Mr. Dixon, the gathering enjoyed refreshments in the hall basement served by St. Saviour's Anglican Young Peoples' Association\nand friends of Nelson church congregations who provided the lunch,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY i\nCloudy in morning becoming sun-'\nny by afternoon. Continuing mild.\nLight winds. Low and high at Cranbrook 20 and 35, Crescent Valley 22\nand 37. .\nFRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1951\nWhere Rea* J* n\/iiger U.N. Drive\nPyongraek\u00bb\nSBiii^'aiifat^JUti\nBlack arrows locate areas where Chinese and\nKorean Reds have struck back at U.N. forces. On\nthe Central front (A) the Reds have rammed a\ndangerously deep wedge Into U.N. lines, with one\ncolumn Southwest of Hoengsong threatening the\nWonju road. In the West Red defen6eB In Seoul\n(B) forced U.N. patrols to withdraw from the\nouter edges of the city. On the East coast a South\nKorean colulnn doove Into .Yangyang, North of\nthe 38th parallel. Broken line Is approximate front-\nprior to the  Red  attack.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nBritain Builds Jet\nMarine Engine\nRUGBY, England, Feb. 15 (Reuters) \u2014 British engineers have built\nand tested the world's first gas-\ntiirbine engin*: to drive a nocean-\ngoing ship. Built here by the makers\nof the first jet engine, it will be\ninstalled in the British tanker Auris.\nDesigner B. E. Forsling said the\n,'ine's performance surpassed all\nexpectations.\nMORE  MONEY FOR\nCANADIAN NEWSPRINT\nLONDON, Feb. 15 (Reuters) \u2014\nBritain will make dollars available\n\u25a0for a newsprint contract with Canada up to the end of 1954, Harold\nWilson, President of the Board of\nTrade, told the House of Commons\ntoday.\nCanadds Trade Hits\n$6BiMon$i^\nOTTAWA, Feb,\nada's international\nrolled past the $6,000,000,000 -mark\nfor the first time in history. '\"\u25a0>  ;\nBuying and selling incre^sM -by'\nabout $500,000,000 to .$6,331,300,000\nt$W: $5,783,700,000 in 19MJItHe Bu-\nreair\/oi Statistics said.today! Biggest\nstride'-was\/'a half-biU\/on-dollar gain\nin exports tp\/tbe United States.\nExports \"to all \"countries totalled\n$3,157,100,000, a gain of about $100.-\n000,000 from $3,022,500,000 in 1949.\nImports, reaching an all-time peak,\ntouched $3,174,300,000, compared to\n$2,761,200,000 the previous year.\nThis splurge in purchases cut Canada's usual surpluses in trade to a\n$17,200,000 deficit - first since the\ndepression year of 1931.\nBut conditions have changed vastly since then, said the Bureau. The\ndeficit in 1931 was sparked by low\nprices and shrinking markets; Yi'3?'\nyear's deficit \u2014 relatively' small\nwhen compared with the huge overall trade \u2014 was caused principally\nby the great demand for goods in\nCanada.\nMain feature of the year's trade\nadded the Bureau, was the expansion In exports to the U.S. Ship.\nmenfs rose 34 per cent to $2,050,-\n000,000 from $1,524,000,000.\nImports from the U.S. also were\nhigher.   Boosted   nine  per  cent,\n,., they    climbed    to   $2,130,500,000\nfrom $1,951,900,000.\nThis drove a deepening wedge In\nCanada's traditional deficit with the\nU.S. reducing it to $80,000,000, com-\n,,nared with $427,800,000 In 1949 and\nah unprecedented $918,100,000 in\n1947.\nTrade with the United Kingdom,\ni\n15 (CP) T'-mlMT :lh? o'fe\/.i'iand, slipped. Exports\ni\"dne\u201eJi?'7ilr,f|q| W2,|0\u00ab\u00bbiwere down about\n$250,000,000 lfrQM\\'; $705,000,000 in\n1949. Imports it \u2022$^04,200,000 were\nhigher by about $l,6'0',6OjMrom $307,-\n400,000 the previous jf&jp\nParliament\nAt a Qlance\nBy The Canadian Press\nTwo Progressive Conservative\nmembers disagreed with their\nparty's views on compulsory mil\nitary  training for reserve forces.\nVarious opinions were expressed\nby war-veteran members about\ncompulsory training for reserves.\nSenator Arthur Roebuck (L.-On\ntario) urged withdrawal of a motion suggesting reformation of the\nupper chamber.\nTrade Minister Howe announced\nincreased prices for cobalt, strategic\ndefence metal.\nFRIDAY\n. The Commons will resume the\nthrone-speech debate. The Senate\nwill not sit.\nFerry Services\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP)\nResort'operators in British Columbia' will ask the Provincial Government to take immediate steps to set\nup travel bureaus at five key locations in B.C.\nThis action was decided on by directors of the Auto Courts and Resorts Association at a meeting here\nyesterday.\nThe group passed a resolution to\ninform the Travel Bureau of the\nneed for bureaux at the Blaine cus-\ntomes house, Osoyobs - customs\nhouse, Yahk, Hope and Nanaimo.\nAnother resolution opposed any\nlicence fee for sports fishing in salt\nwater.\nThe Association also decided to\nprotest to the Minister of Highways what It termed Inadequate\nferry service at Nelson. It contended the ferry service on the\nTrans-Provincial Highway at\nNelson should be lengthened from\nIts present eight hours to 16 hours\nto render proper service .to the\npublic.\nRadar Device Ends\nAir Pocket Shocks\nSALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia,\nFeb. 15 (Reuters) \u2014 Those air pockets that toss air travellers' stomachs into their throats can be a-\nvoided thanks to a new radar device\ndeveloped by the British Overseas\nAirways corporation. Corporation\nChairman Sir Miles Thomas said\nyesterday his engineers have developed a radar receiver enabling\npilots to see the air pockets on the\nscreen and avoid them.\nTif-For-Taf Af (itude Wifh U.S.\nOn B.C. Power Sources Urged\nPENTICTON, B. C, Feb. 15 (CP)\n\u2014A member of the British Columbia Government suggests that B. C.\nshould play tit-for-tat with the United States when it comes to power\nsources.\nM. P. Finnerty told a meeting\nlast night that since the U. S. is\nreluctant to underwrite the $500,-\n000,000 power and aluminum development in Northern B. C. he be\nAustere Wedding\nSofaya. Esfandlarl (left), 19-year-old granddaughter of a once-*\nrebellious Persian,tribal chieftain, and the Shah of Iran (right) have\nbeen married Iri-a\/ Moslem ceremony in Tehran. It was the second'\nmarriage for the 32tyea,r-old King of Kings, Shah Mohammed Repa-\nPahlevl. Deeply concerned with International war. fearafartd social'\nunrest and povertS'jln-Hhin, the 8hah orderedr a comparatively\naustere weddlngA-AP Wlrephoto.\/ '\u25a0\u25a0,\nFlu Epidemic\nReported Easing\n,       -By. The -Canadtan-'Press v\u00bb\nA mild but widespread epidemic\nof influenza continues to hold sway\nin scattered sections of Canada as\nlaboratory researchers study the\nmysterious virus to determine its\nnature and origin.      .   .\nIn some centres the disease is reported on the wane. In others, the\nepideriiic took on a less serious aspect Thursday as many suspected\ninfluenza cases were diagnosed as\nsevere colds.\nBut some communities were hit\nheavily, a Canadian Press survey\nshowed. Schools closed and factories\nstruggled to keep up normal operations with reduced staffs.\nIn almost .every large municipality, hospitals either banned visitors\npr appealed to them to stay away to\nminimize the danger of infection.-\nSLACKENS IN MONTREAL\nIn Montreal, where 92 deaths\nwere attributed to the epidemic,\nHealth Officer Adelard Groulx said\nthe three-week siege was showing\nsigns of slackehing. But 28 hospitals\nbarred the public and city schools\ndeclared a special holiday weekend\nto give undermanned teaching staffs\na rest. School is out from Thursday\nafternoon unti) Tuesday morning.\nIn Edmonton, 500 students at the\nUniversity of Alberta \u2014 more than\n10 per cent of the student body \u2014\nwere absent. The number of empty\ndesks in Prince Albert, Sask., classrooms ran as high as 32 per cent,\nOntario's largest cities are relatively free of the disease, but scattered cities in all parts of. the province   are   feeling i)\u00ab effects, niore\n:verely'.  .V'\"   \/,  .;    '. {.  \/;,'\u25a0 ,\/' p:...'\nPrMm feffilfctoriWio'* &M\nty .Hiajtftiifliilstery s^ld Irt Toiioh-\nto there IjAllttle doubt uiat.W\nvirus Is the 'same thathai ta'kisn\n7,000   lives   In   Britain,   possibly\ncarried   to   the   Maritimes   and\nspread' Westward   by passengers\non ships and planes.\nlieved the Government was in no\nframe of mind to lease land in\nSouthern B. C. for a power project\nin Washington.\nKeremeos and Cawston in Southern B. C. and Loomis in Northern\nWashington \"are opposed to con-'\nstruclion of} a dam at Sharikers\nEend, Wash. The dam would flood\nmost of the lower Similkameen\nValley, now used as fruit and grazing land.\nRoss Woodward of Loomis said\nIf the dam were built \"we would\nall be wiped off the map.\"\n\"Canada has the power to stop\nthis, and-If you don't you will\nsuffer more than  we  will,\"  he\n'- *#-- --vi---- \u25a0' \" -\n'fMfc-' Finnerty;'' Member' of Tttie\nLegislature for Similkameen, said\nhe would do everything possible\nin opposing the proposed $35,000,-\n000 dam.\nLoomis representatives said\nbackers of the dam were using\nneed for additional power in defence work as an argument'to get\nGovernment assistance for the project.\nAt the same time, the U. S. Government was refusing to help finance a power and aluminum development at Kitimat, B. C, because\noutput might squeeze U. S. aluminum companies out of business although there was at present a critical shortage of aluminum in the\nU. S.\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 251\nP-C Members Disagree\nOn Manpower Policy\nof\nWounded Mother\nVANCOUVER,1 Feb. 15 (CP)\nR.C.M.P. today awaited arrival hero\nof Tony Casano, driving from Kaslo, in the hope he may be able to\nthrow some light on the attempted\nmurder of his wife, yesterday.\nMrs. Rose Casano was sefiously\nwounded in her North Vancouver\nhome by a tenant, Ramon Xandri,\n76 who committed suicide later by\nslashing his throat with a razor.\n'Her condition was described lis\nfair.\n.. Mr. Casano. connected .with Selkirk Mining Co. at Kaslo, left Nel-\ngoriklast night. He is expected here\nrjorfight or tomorrow.\n\"; An inquest into Xandri's death\nwill be held tomorrow.\nOne theory held by police is that\nXandri went berserk and attacked\nMrs. Casano, 39-year-old mother of\nfour, with a .32 calibre revolver.\nATTLEE GOV'T.\nWINJVOTE\nTory Rearmament\nMotion Downed by\n21-Vote Majority\nLONDON, Feb. 15 (AP)\u2014Prime\nMinister Attlee's Labor Government tonight beat down by 21 votes\na Conservative Party attempt to\noust it from office on charges of\nbungling Britain's rearmament.\nA motion of censure introduced\nby Conservative Leader Winston\nChurchill was defeated in the\nHouse of Commons by a vote of\n,308 to 287. In acid debate he had\nassailed Labor's rearmament efforts\nas \"inept and Incompetent.\"\nThe victory margin yvas surprisingly large In view' 6f criticism some left-wing Labor members have directed against their\nown party's arms program. Even\nLabors' pacifists remained In step\nto give the Government Its second largest majority since last\nFebruary's general election on\nany major Issue in the closely-\nbalanced House.\nMembers on both sides of the\nHouse were surprised, by the margin of the vote. There was a great\nshout of \"oh\" mingled with Labor\ncheers. It was the biggest donfi-\ndence vote Labor has received in\nthe year-old Parliament. The Liberals backed Labor on the issue.\nCHURCHILL  CHALLENGED\nJutting out his chin, Churchill\nsaid Attlee's regime had failed\n5% years to produce atomic bombs\nin Britain. In that period, he said,\nthe country actually was \"outstripped by the Soviets\" In the\nfield of atomic energy.\nAttlee challenged Churchill's A-\nbomb statements. The prime minister said Churchill \"is not producing any.evidence that,.given the\nresources.over here, we could have\ndone more than we have done.\"\n.. The Chancelldr, of the. Exchequer,\nHugh Gaitskell, said Churchill's\nspeech was \"completely lacking in\nserious argument of any kind.\"\nThe Labor Government plans to\nspend \u00a34,700,000,000 (about $13,000,\n000,000) during the next three years\non rearmament.\nv To meet this program, Gaitskell\nsaid, British civilians will have to\nget along with \"less clothing, fabrics, radios, domestic . equipment,\npottery and glass.\"\nIM. Troops\nFor Europe\nWarning on Corner Recommended .\nNo Blame Fixed by Coroner's\nJury In Salmo Accident Inquesf\nSALMO, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014 A coroner's Jury fixed no blame in connection with a car-truck collision\nthat caused two deaths near here\nJan. 7, after hearing testimony, at\nan inquest held here yesterday.\nThe six-man jury concluded that\n\"owing to conflicting evidence, we\nare unable to determine which vehicle was' responsible for the accident,''' \u2022\nHowever, the jury recommended\nthaf'ipwing to the reactions of the\ntruck driver, possibly due to a\nstate of-'shock, that his licence be\nsuspended ;sfpr one year or until\nsuch time as a medical examiner\ndeclares him '-, fit lo operate,a\nvehicle.\"-. \u25a0 ' , ,        ,   -' '\u2022\nWjittiesses testified that truck driver Geoi^e; Strookow of Shoreacres,\nhad not assisted the injured men in\nrthe^theriVehicle following the flC-\nclde'rit,''-'.1.''-,\nThe deceased, Francis (Tiny)\n\u2022   * \u25a0\nMorrow of Nelson and Garnet Sauter of Salmo were both riding in the\ncar.\nA further recommendation by the\njury was a request for the Department of Public Works to erect\nwarning signs on the approaches to\nthe accident curve, where it pointed\nout. four persons had met death in\nthe. past two-years.\nTwelve witnesses were heard during the nine-hour hearing, conducted by Deputy Coroner Dr. N. E.\nMorrison of Nelson.\nLouis Bonacci,. passenger injured\nin the Morrow vehicle, was able to\ngive testimony. The hearing Had\nbeen held* up pending his return\nfrom Vancouver where he received\nmcdicaltreafmerit.'\nJ.,H, Gordon of Trail appeared as\ncounsel for Bonacci while L. S.\nGanSner and L. M. McBride of Nelson appeared on behalf of insurance\ncompanies.\nBY ROGER D. GREENE\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 15 (AP)\nDefence Secretary Marshall told\nCongress today the United States\nplans to send 100,000 more troops to\nEurope to serve under the supreme\nallied command of Gen. Eisenhower.\nHe said the new contingents will\ninclude 72,000 men in four combat\ndivisions \u2014 plus supporting units \u2014\nand will raise American ground\nforces in Europe to about 197,000.\nThe U.S. has the equivalent of two\ndivisions there now, with supporting units.\n. Coupled with American air and\nsea forces, the troop reinforcements\nwill lift Ihe total to some 250,000\nU.S. fighting men in the Europe-\nMediterranean area.\nTestifying before the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations\nCommittee, Marshall indicated it\nmay be necessary to keep American\nsoldiers,in Europe for the next 10\nyeats.1!,   '\n.\"Our aim is primarily to deter\naggression if that be possible and\nm defeat aggression.if, in spite of\nall our efforts, the actions of!,the\nSoviet Union or its satellites should\n'precipitate another world war.\"\nHe said emphatically he does not\nconsider it a hopeless task to defend Western Europe against Russia\nand her puppet states \"If war is\nthrust upon us.\" But he warned that\nthe fall of Europe to Russia would\nheighten the possibility of Soviet\nair attacks upon the United States.\nMarshall said that for security\nreasons he spoke \"reluctantly\" In\ndisclosing the plan to send four\nmore divisions to Europe.\n\"I have reached the conclusion\nthat there is a greater peril to our\nsecurity through weakening thu\nmorale of our allies by a debate based on uncertainties, than there can\npossibly be through the public disclosure of our planned strength\nfigures.\"\nLONDON, Feb. 15 (Reuters) \u2014\nBritain's countryside cafes are preparing to start serving strawberries\nand real cream once again \u2014 after\na gap of 11 years. Food Minister\nMaurice Webb said last night that\na wartime order banning the making of creani :(n most of Britain\nwould be revoked this Spring and\nthat cream once again may also. be\nimported.\nApprove Social Credit Motion;\nCompulsory Training Proposal\n\"Not Acceptable to Gov't\"\u2014Claxton\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014Two Progressive Conservativa\nMembers today in the Commons di*sagreed with their party's\nviews on the contentious issue of compulsory military training in Canada's reserve forces.\nFirst Douglas Harkness (PC\u2014Calgary East), wartime\nartillery Lieutenant-Colonel, and then Howard Green .(PC-\nVancouver Quadra), a veteran of the First World War, announced support of a motion calling for compulsory training\nin the reserve forces for home defence.\nThey disagreed with the military spokesman of their\n43-men party\u2014Maj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkes, V.C. (PC\u2014Nanaimo)\u2014who said Wednesday he could not approve the motion,\nsponsored by the 10-man So\ncial Credit Party.\nAs the debate appeared to be\ndrawing to a close, Defence Min\nister Claxton spoke briefly. He\nsaid that because of the reasons\ngiven by Gen. Pearkes and some\nof the others the policy proposed\nin the; motion \"is not acceptable\nto the Government.\" He did not\nelaborate,\nMr. Green said it was better to\nargue the question dispassionately\nnow than with heat and bitterness\nlater after war had started.\nDespite the impending danger of\nwar there was no adequate pre\nparedness in Canada and would not\nbe until the Government announced\na clear cut plan for use of man\npower. The voluntary system of en\nlistment was discredited across the\ncountry because of its unfairness in\nthe last war.\n-The forces were having trouble\ngetting men and he doubted that\ndefence   production    would    get\nenough. It was obvious that some\nform of selective service for both\nwould   be   necessary   If   Canada\nwas to arm quickly.\nThe reserve army, on- the basis\nof its program outlined in 1945 by\nthen defence minister Abbott, was\n100,000 men  short of  the   150,000\nmen Mr. Abbott, had said it would.\ncontain. It had 50,000 men or less\n,}bday....    :'       ... '    ; -i\n'Those ranks must be filled. The\nGovernment should  \"choose them\nby lot from the group best fitted\nto serve\" with others volunteering\nif they wished.\nThe Government should bring in\na selective service that could direct\nthe required men into ^defence in\ndustry and into the reserves. There\nshould be national registration now.\nTom Goode (L\u2014 Burnaby-Rich-\nmond) said he Would go akmg with\nthe views of Gen. Pearkes, his commanding officer in the last. wa,r.\nGen. Pearkes had spoken from experience whereas Mr. Green had\nbased his speech on a \"couple of\nnewspaper clippings,\"\nCASTE SYSTEM\nOne of the \"most disgraceful epl\nsodes\" in the last war was what\nhappened to men called up for\nhome defence. A caste system was\nestablished. Those called for home\ndefence walked down one side of\nthe street while those who volunteered for service anywhere walked\non the other side.\nO. L. Jones (C.C.F.\u2014Yale), a\nveteran of the First World War,\nsaid Canada has not the facilities\nto handle 'compulsory military\ntraining at this time. He said It\nIs costing Canada $200,000 .\nmonth to keep the Army's 10,000\nman Special Force at Fort Lewis,\nWash. This was an unnecessary\nexpense. ,\nHe proposed that the force be\nbrought   back   to   Canada   and\ntrained  at Vernon,   B.C.,  where\nthere were adequate facilities.\nVictor Quelch (S.O.\u2014Acadia) said\nhe had not yet heard a convincing\nargument against his party's  proposal for compulsory military training. He was surprised at the weakness of the arguments of those who\nwere trying to oppose it.\nMr. Quelch said the war danger\nis \"very great\" and, if war came,\nCanada couldn't escape the consequences. The reserve army should\nbe \"thoroughly reorganized\" and\nstrengthened because it \"would have\nah;'important,-role' in defending a\ncountry that could become another\nBelgium.\nThe conference of defence associations had pointed up the sad\nstate of the reserve army by saying\neven the 40,000 men it has are not\nnearly prepared for action. Canada\nhad the arms to train the men\nneeded. The reserve units needed\nthe men.\nSome form of compulsory service\n\"is absolutely essentia).\"\nJ. A. Ross (P.C\u2014Couris), a lieu-\ntenant-colonel in the First World\nWar, said he supported wholeheartedly the views of Gen. Pearkes.\nGeorge Cruickshank (L.\u2014Fraser\nValley), decorated First World War\ninfantry captain, said he still stands\nby his belief'that there should be\ncompulsory training in the reserve\narmy but he couldn't support the\nSocial Credit motion. It would bring\nback to. Canada a \"zombie army\"\nfor home defence only.\nMr. Cruickshank said he was satisfied . with assurances from Prime\nMinister St. Laurent that full conscription will be introduced if and\nwhen the time is right. That tirne\nis not now.\nIn Sales fax\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nThe Victoria Colonist in a frontpage story today says possibility of\nincreasing the three per cent sales\ntax to four per cent to bail out the\nfinancial pressed hospital insurance\nscheme is reported Ming debated by\nthe Provincial Government.\nThe paper goes on to,,say the matter may be placed before the caucus\nwhen the Legislature meets as a\nmeans of avoiding a stiff boost in\npremiums.\nCabinet ministers are reported.,\nstill sharply divided on the whole\nquestion of how to meet soaring\ncosts, which have brought 'deficits\namounting to $7,00,0,000 in two ye^ars.\nOne section i? Stressing Sha> sub^\nsidies by the government should'\nend, that it was always intended\nthat the scheme should stand on its\nown feet. Others maintain that the\ngovernment will have to continue\nsubsidies to keep premiums from\ngoing too high, says the Colonist.\nIt is estimated that the tax would\nraise another $7,000,000 if increased\nto four per cent.\nU\nFish Catch Too\nHeavy to Handle\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Feb. 15\n(CP)~-So much fish has been landed here plants can't, handle it, Kenneth Harding, Manager of the Fishermen's Cooperative, said today.\nSurpassing her own record catch\nof 90,000 pounds of flatfish, the\nVinetta Prince Capt. Adolph Prince\nnetted so many fi:h yesterday she\nhad to continue on to Vancouver\nto unload.\nThe biggest catch of recent years\nmore than 120,000 pounds of flatfish, was taken by the Vinetta\nPrince in Skidegate Inlet.\nNelson, Thursday \u2014 5.25.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Ont., Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014One of the largest family\ngroups ever to fly the Atlantic Ocean has taken up residence here.\nThirteen In all, and Including a 10-month-old baby, the Metson\nfamily left home In Coventry, England, because, said Charles Metson,\nSr., \"there Is-i't enough grub to keep a family alive In England.\n\"I'm sick and tired of eating eight pence worth of meat a week\n\\ahd I don't like whale meat,, squirrel, reindeer or horse meat,\" he\nadded, . v\\\nMrs. Metson, Sr., said she got the shock of her life at the sight\nof the food on the table at relatives' here. \"We Just ate and ate until\nour eyes popped,\" she said.\nNEW\" YORK, Feb, 15 (AP)\u2014The Army never was like this before\n26-year-old Pte. John Doll came ^Ibjig.-\nA typist at the recruiting centre liere, he notes any recruits who\ntake their physical exams on their, birthdays.\nThen he types out a ' Happy Birthday\" greeting, clips it to the\nrookie's X-ray plates and hands-the pew soldier a penny lollipop..\nfor a gift.\nAn Army spokesman called lt \"an act above and beyond the\ncall of duty.\"     ., .   .\n' TORONTO, Feb. 15 (CP>\u2014The Canadian National Institute for\nthe Blind said today It isn't so: five pounds of that bright-colored,\nnarrow cellophane stripping on cigarette packs will not provide a\nblind man with a seelng-eye (log.\n\u201e!!^,Some thousands of Toronto persons, the Institute said today, have\n\/been saving the stuff In all good faith\u2014because of a story the origin\nof which nobody seems to know.\nFor a week now the Institute has been deluged with telephone\ncalls! people wanted to-know what to do with the cellophane.\nIt was a  nice  Idea, the  Institute said, but neither five  pounds\nnor \u00a3000 pounds will buy a blind man a dog.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB. 16, 1951\nTONIGHT-SAT, \u2014 COMPLETE SHOWS 7.00-9,00\nNews of\n111th Battery\nTraining: No parade'will be held\nFriday, Feb. 16.\nIn-Outs:\nGnrs, Loewen Marchmonte and\nE. L. Carmen and Bdrs. Anderson\nand Layte leave for Reserve Force\nWinter courses in Victoria. They\n.will remain until March 12.\n..- Staff Sergeant D. A. Iceton departs for Victoria Friday for Instructional duties at the school of\nArtillery for six weeks.\n...Capt. I. C. Wilson and Lieut.\nSftoppa. were recent visitors to the\nNelson cadets corps.. ,\nThe officers and men of the 11th\n..jajtertained at a military ball in the\n. Nelson Armories Wednesday night.\nAJoout 250 couples attended. Luncheon arrangements were under the\nsupervision of Mrs. S, Cameron,\nMrs. E. W. White and Mrs. J. Nash.\nMrs. Worlhingfon\nDies al Fernie\nFERNIE, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014 A Fertile old timer, Mrs. Joe Ann Worth-\n''ihgton, died in Fernie Memorial\nHospital Wednesday.\" Mrs. Worth-\nington was 78 years of age.\n: Mr. and Mrs. Worthinglon -arc\n;well known here having owned the\nWaldorf Hotel In Fernie for eight\nyears and the boarding house at\nCoal Creek -for 11 years. Mrs.\nWorthington was -always prominent\nin social 'life.' She was an active\ncommunity worker at Coal Creek\nduring the First World War working at all times for patriotic pur-\npx:s. Her husband at that time\nv:s president of (he Coal Creek\n(.-.:'} and an official of the Crow's\nI c:t Fass Coal Company for 25\nj-c-rs. .-\u2022  \u25a0-\nThe funeral will be held Saturday\na'.rrnoon at Christ Church Angli-\nOjh wilh tho Rev. Dennis W. El-\ns':zd officiating. Burial will be in\n.St. Margaret's: Cemetery, Fernie,\nL. Cruickshank,\nHospital Manager,\nBreaks Ankle in Fall\nLyall Cruickshank, Secretary-\nManager of Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, is himself a patient. Mr.\nCruickshank slipped and fell Tuesday while en route from his home\nto the hospital, and broke an ankle.\n\"Sick\" Loggers Go\nBack to Work\nCAMPBELL RIVER, B.C., Febr 15\n(CP)\u2014Some 110 loggers at Camp\nB,-31oedel, Stewart and Welch, voted to return to work today after\na one-day \"sick\" strike. The com\npany said It assumed- the men stayed away from work to protest dismissal of a faller. About 40 men\nstruck for two days last week for\nthe same reason. The matter is\nscheduled to go to arbitration.\nPRESCRIPTIONS,\nWe Fill\nYour.\nPrescription\nExactly as\nYour Doctor\nOrders\nNELSON PHARMACY\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433  Josephine  Street\nPHONE 1203 \u2014 RES. 394-L\nColorful Brownie,\nGuide Ceremony\nSeenalMonlrose\nMONTROSE, B.C., \u25a0 Feb. 15 \u2014\nA large number ot parents and\nfriends attended the Montrose\nBeaver .Falls .Guide and Brownie\ncompanies' joint enrollment ceremony at Beaver. Falls School.\nOn stage beautifully decorated\nwith a camp scene drawn by Mrs,\nH. McGregor, & gaily lighted moon\nand a-flower-decked arch, Mrs. T.\nEdmonson introduced Mrs. A. E.\nCalvert, District Gitfde Commissioner, of Trail.\nAfter opening of the program by\nthe Guides, the Brownies entered\nthe stage to sleep around ihgir toadstool. Mrs. Calvert entered with\nBrownies Verna Weaver and Margaret Shrubsole, who having completed their Brownie work, were\npresented with their final Brownie\nbadge and permitted to \"fly up\" to\nGuides.\nDiane Woodhams, Ellen Ewasuik\nand Deanne Colligan were ^enrolled\nas Brownies a'nd presented with\ntheir pins. \/\nMrs. Calvert also enrolled Sharron\nColligan, Verna .Weaver and Margaret Shrubsole, and presented them\nwith their tenderfoot pins.\nThe Brownies sang a new version\nof the song, \"The Thing\" composed\nby Mrs. H,.\u00ab McGregor, and the\nBrownies played a kno'. game.\nGuides and Brownie had a relay\nrace which ended in  a tie.\nCongratulations and thanks were\nextended by Mrs. Calvert and she\nthen presented the three leaders,\nMrs. T. Edmonson, Guide Captain,\nMrs. H. McGregor, Brown Owl and\nMrs. H. Robbie, Tawnle Owl, with\ntheir leadership warrants.\nMrs. Calvert invited Brownies,\nGuides ahd their mothers to the\nannual Mothers and Daughters banquet at Trail next week.\nHARROP RESIDENT\nLAID AT REST\nFriends from Harrop and Nelson\nwere on hand to pay final tribute\nto Frederick Hindley, resident of\nHarrop, during services held from\nSt. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Thursday afternoon. Mr. Hindley died at\nV<mcou\"cr Inst week.\nVery Rey. T. L, Leadbeater officiated at the service.\n\"Jesu, the,Very Thought of Thee\",\nwas slmg by the gathering with\nCecil H. Burgess at the. organ.\nHarrop friends who acted as pallbearers were R. Stevenson, A.\nCosmo, R. Maida and Ben Crcasey.\nInterment'was in Nelson Memorial Park.\nRe-elecled, Muir\nAsks More Youths\nFor Kiltie Band\nJ. C. Muir was reelected President of the Kootenay Kiltie Pipe\nBand Association at the annual\nmeeting in the City Council Chambers Thursday night.\nThe 1951 slate of officers consists\nof William McLeary and Mayor\nN. C. Stibbs, Honorary Presidents;\nJoseph.Kary, Honorary Vice-President; Ivie Spiers, Vice-President;\nMrs. Gordon Haskell, Secretary; P.\nW. Cro?ier, Treasurer; Mrs.-A, L.\nStevens, James Milne, Jack Neil,\nJames RitcTile, G. C. Wallach, Executive, and three trustees to be appointed by Clan McLeary.\nMr. Crozier reported that the balance on hand In -the bank was\n$86.23. All uniforms had been paid\nfor and the Association had no\ndebts.\nIn the President's report, Mr.\nMuir pointed out that in the past\ncouple of months band leadership\nhad vastly Improved. JSarlier in the\nyear consistent band leadership had\nbeen impossible because of the private endeavors of the pipe majors,\nthough they had done fine work\nwhen able.\nThere were 19 members capable\n6f turning out to a parade and dur\ning the year the band had turned\nout 30 times.\nMr. Muir taiade special mention\nof the Labor Day parade when he\nfelt the band- had excelled itself\nand \"had been a credit to Nelson,\nOut of town concerts were given\nat Slocan City, Procter, New Denver and Nelway. As well, individual\nmembers had performed at Salmo\nand at various functions.\nThe Kiltie Band had also participated at Burn's Night anniversary\nand had served the dinner.\nMr. Muir said he believed the\nyouth of the community should be\nencouraged to join the band.\nDiscussion on the possibility of\namending a clause in the constitu\ntion resulted in the decision to let\nit stand as it was.\nA new member of the Kootenay\nKiltie Pipe Band is Ian Inkster\nfrom Revelstoke. Mr. Inkster has\nheld the Northwest Pacific piping\nchampionship for two years and\nhad received honors in Winnipeg,\nBreaks Leg in\nCar Mishap\nE. P. (Ted) Baker of Nelson suffered a broken leg Wednesday when\nhe was struck by a car on High\nStreet.\n-Police said Baker was pushing his\nown car to the side of the road after\nit had,stalled when a car driven\nby William Marshall skidded into\nthe back of Baker's vehicle and\ncrushed his leg.\nMarshall applied, his breaks upon\napproaching the stalled car, but was\nunable to bring It to a full stop\nbecause of the Icy condition of the\nstreet.\n6-Year-0!d Falls\nJn Car's Path,\nGsfs Only Bruised\nSix-year-old John Simon of 314\nChatham Street escaped with\nbruising and shaking-up when he\nfell In front of a cor Wednesday\nafternoon.\nPolice said the boy fell while\ncrossing Nelson Avenue near Hume\nSchool, directly in the path of an\napproaching car. Police identified\nthe driver as A. J. Dingwall of\nNelson.,\nPingwall was able to bring his\nvehicle to almost a complete stop,\npreventing more serious injury to\nthe boy.\nNelson Juvenile\nTo Coquirlam\nA lfi-ycar-old Nelson juvenile was\ncommitted to the Industrial School\nfor Boys at Coquitlam, B.C. when\nhe appeared in Juvenile Court\nThursday.\nTh}; juvenile was convicted of a\nvandalism charge arising out of a\npre-Gh'rlstmas bulb-breaking spree\non two Fairview exterior light displays. He had, police said, been on\na suspended sentence in connection\nI with an earlier offence.  '\n,-7.\" -77C7\/V ;\u25a0 '\u25a0' ;;\u25a0\u25a0'\" ;    \u25a0 .'\n* One of Canada's lowest priced cars\n*-lr has every Wanted feature \u2022':\n* Built by Standard\n* It's a dis,finc\/iye;,-deluxe small car\n, f, THE TRIUMPH\nmffki^iknu^r\n,. .- 'T.HE STANDARD MOTO* CO; (CANA'DA).LTD.\n4 law'ton.Mvtl. ' .' ' : '-Toronto\nIn  Nelson\nPARKVIEW MOTORS,\n924  NELSON  AVENUE\nNelson lo Provide Hosts For\nVisiting Student Rinks Next Week\nNelson's hard-working Dominion\nSchools Curling Committee is going all-out to assure the visiting\nhigh schoolers of a full visit In Nelson next week.\nExecutive member John Thorn announced Thursday that 10 Nelson\n\"hosts\" had been named, one for\neach of the rinks entered in the\nChampionships.   '\nThe men will look to the lad's\nentertainment in off-curling hours\nin Nelson, such as providing chauffer service to points of interest.\nFqllowing are the hosts; B.C. \u2014\nE. E. Hopwood; Alberta\u2014Walter\nDuckworth, Saskatchewan\u2014-H. A, D.\nGreenwood, Manitoba\u2014J. W. Graham, Ontario\u2014Roy Sharpe, Quebec\n\u2014P. E. Poulin, New Brunswick \u2014\nWalter Kapak, Nova Scotia\u2014N. C.\nMcLeod, P.E.I.\u2014T. H, Waters, and\nNorthern Ontario\u2014Harry Burns.\nRossland Skiers Out to Defend\nKootenay Inter-High Title\nThe 4th Annual West Kootenay\nInter-High Ski Tournament, to be\nheld in Rossland Saturday and Sunday, gives promise of being one of\nthe biggest and best meets yet\nAlready 141 young skiers, including lots of entrants in the girls'\nevents, plan to gather at Red Mountain's attractive layout for the four-\nway competition.\nAmerican schools are sending the\nlargest contingent with 90 entries\nin from the states of Washington,\nMontana and Idaho. B.C. will have\na-large representation from schools\nIn Vancouver, Kimberley, Revelstoke, Trail and Rossland.\nSeattle has the most entries with\n49, representing five different\nschools.\nEleven Rossland skiers, including\nRon Cameron, Don Swift, Jim McKenna, Bill Stevens, Alf Hawkaas,\nand Johnnie Bourchier in the boys'\nsection, will be out to defend the\ntitle won by the home club.every\nyear the meet has been held.\nGirls' team members are Pat Telfer, Peg Telfer, Anne Chamberlain,\nRuth Eek and Donna Davies.\nBowman Opens U.B.C.\nAnimal laboratory    ,\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) -\nA new $20,000 animal pathology\nlaboratory was opened at-the-Uni-\nversity of British Colump'ia' yesterday by Agriculture M'rfisfer Bow-\nThe Weather\nSnow which wis still falling over\nthe East Kootenays will end as the\ndisturbance which is responsible\nmoves Eastward into Southern A1-,\nbe'rta. Clear skies were reported\nalong the Southern coast and in, the\nLillooet South Thompson, region\nwith most other Inte'rior regions expected to follow suit Th'e'Northern\ncoast will remain cloudy.\nKainwill start alnog the Northern coast in early morning and\nspread to Northern Vancouver, Island wilh approach of a new st'orm\ncentre, now moving into the Gulf of\nAlaska. Increasing cloudiness is expected over the Southern coast and\nNorthern Interior later in the day\nas the system moves Eastward with\nsnow beginning in the Northern Interior by evening.\nNELSON     24   35 2.5\nSt. Johns       8   10   .38\n\u2022Halifax         8   20    \u2014\nMontreal    .7   14   \u2014\nOttawa      .4   18    \u2014\nToronto       10   27   \u2014\nKenora    ,     d   28   \u2014\nWinnipeg      9   22   \u2014\nBrandon    -2   29    \u2014\nThe Pas     11   36   \u2014\nRegina         4   25    \u2014\nSaskatoon     18   34   \u2014\nPrince Albert     -1   38   \u2014\nN. Battleford     10   35   \u2014\nSwift Current    22   40   \u2014\nMedicine Hat    23- 42   \u2014\nLethbridge     29   44   \u2014\nCalgary      16   40   \u2014\nEdmonton    19   42   \u00ab\u2022\nKamloops      8   36   \u2014\nPenticton  ;   27\nVancouver    38\nVictoria      38\nKimberley      5\nCrescent Valley    19\nFlyers Blanked\n5-0 by Elks\nKAMLOOPS, b'.C, Feb. 25 (CP)\n\u2014Spokane Flyers, tonight suffered\ntheir second loss in as. many nights,\nthis one by a shutout, vhen Kamloops laced them\" 5-0.\nIt was an inter-league game. Flyers are in the Western Internaliol\nloop, while Elks lead the Malnllne-\nOkanagan league. '\nThe victory was Lome Lufesiers'\nsecond shutout of the season.\nSpokane\u2014Fodey; Mandryk, Marchant; Snider; Carrigan, Scott. Subs\n\u2014Cirullo, Luke, Bentlej, Wylie,\nHorbe, Macauley, McNalley, Nadeau.\nKAMLOOPS\u2014Lussier; Johnston,\nStewart; Stein; Carlson, Wilson.\nSubs\u2014Campbell, Mellor, Wywrot,\nTerry, Fischer, Evans, Bathgate,\nAndrews.\nFirst period\u20141. KaAloops, Stein\n(Wilson) 1:22.\nPenalties \u2014 Horbe, Bentley,\nSecond period\u2014scoring\u2014none.\nPenalties\u2014Stein (major), Johnson\nFodey (major).\nThird period\u20142. Kamloops, Mellor\n(Wywrot( Campbell) 2:12; 3. Kamloops, Stewart (Campbell, Mellor)\n4:07; 4. Kamloops, Wywrot (Stewart) 12:38; 5. Kamloops, Evans\n(Bathgate) 18:39.\nPenalties\u2014Luke, Horbe, Marchant,\nMacfryk, Evans, Stewart\nKELOWNA 6, NANAIMO 6.\nKELOWNA, B.C, Feb, 15 (CP)\nNorm Knippleberg's goal \u2014 his\nsecond of the night and his fifth\npoint in the game \u2014 tonight gave\nthe Kelowna Packers hard-earned 6-5 victory over Nanaimo Clippers\nThe win fashioned from behind all\nthe way put the Packers within half\n'a-'fome of second-place Clippers in\nlh9','Mainline-Okanagan League.\n(I Missing four regulars due to the\ninfluepia outbreak here, Packers\nflagged themselves all the way to\noilfshoot the Islanders in every\nperjod. ,.        .   .  , -'\n(N,ahaimo\u2014McManus; Kirk, Lunk;\nLandmark; O'Hara, Jackson.'iCully.\n1-Jubs\u2014Conway. Waldriff, Warwick,\nGourdeau, Defelice, Shamlock, Carr,\nClovechok. '< f\nKelowna\u2014McMeekin; R. Mtddle7\nton, Kuly; Daski; Durban, Knippleberg. Subs\u2014Kusmach, Anderson,\nSundin, J. Middleton, Lowe, Fritz.\nFrist period\u20141. Nanaimo, Lundmark (Shamlock, Carr) 4:40; 2. Nanaimo. Warwick (Defelice) 7:58; 3,\nNanaimo, Warwick (Waldriff) 12:25;\n4. Kelowna, Durban (Knippleberg)\n13:59.    \u25a0..\u2022:'. :\u25a0''\u25a0\nPenalties\u2014O'Hara, Kusmack, Defelice,  Culley.,\n' Second period\u20145. Kelowna, Kuly\n(Daski, Knippleberg) 3:29.\nPenalties\u2014Defelice (misconduct),\nMiddleton, Daski, Clovechok, Kusmack.\nThird period\u20146. Nanaimo, Gourdeau (Warwick, Defelice) 3:17; 7,\nKelowna, Daski (Knippleberg, Durban) 10:53; 8. Kelowna, Knippleberg\n(Durban, Daski) 15:40; 9. Nanaimo,\nDefelice (Gourdeau Warwick) 16:40;\n10. Kelowna, Kuly 16:48; 11. Kelowna, Knippleberg (Kuly) 17:50.\nPenalties\u2014Warwick, Kirk.\n \"W\/Mi|o\nK-aSlb\/,-\/.\/.';.\/,.. .\nPrince Rupert\nPrince George'\nGrand Forks .\nSeattle    '..''-'38'\nPortland    40\nSpokane     28\nChicago      21\nSan Francisco     45\nNew York   25\nWhitehorse     -7\n,13\n.14\n-.15-\n,48, ,,03,\n45 '.21'\n\"WEAK* BACK?\nWoofs Protection\nFor B. C. Fishing\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15 (CP)-Sena-\niot Thomas Reid (L\u2014British Col\numbia) said today \"it looks like\"\nthe United States is ignoring Canada and her $75,000,000 annual Pacific fishing industry in'negotiations\nfor a Japanese peace treaty.\nCanada is vitally interested in\nwhat the Americans are proposing\nto the Japanese wilh regard to fish\neries. he told the Senate in the\nThrone-Speeicli \u2022, debate. There has\nbren no .dnnrfuhcement, . though\nFoster Dulles, Foreign '-'J^ttajrs ad-\nvfper to President Truman, has re>.\nturned from Japan.\nDulles, he said, \"should come to\nOttawa and place these things before our Government\" so there can\nbe joint action. Otherwise, he fears\nthe IT. S., anxious to rearm Japan\nto meet the Communist threat in\nMany \u00aby they, get \"cold\" In the back- f&f J*\u00bb East may \"hand every\nor the kidneya\u2014so eaHilyl That's why thing\" to the Japanese and allow\nthousands keep Dr. Chaae s Kidney-Liver j them again to send fis*hing fleets\nPills alwaya on hand. For this reliable i across the Pacific to deplete British\nremedy a like two treatments in one\u2014 Columbia nnd Alfiska salmon runs\nworlu faaier to relief painful backachd ' md AlasKl \u25a0\"mn\" *\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0'\u25a0\ndue  to  faulty^kidneya.   Dr.   Chase\u2014\nMELBOURNE, Feb. 15 (Reuters)\n\u2014Experiments on a guided missile!\nto destroy attacking aircraft are in;\n\"rcress on the giant rocket range j\nal Woomera, South Australia.\nAllies Smash\nRed Resistance\nTOKYO, Feb. 16 (Friday) (Reu\ntens) \u2014 British troops moving up\ntoward outflanked Chipyong routed one Chinese unit after another\nin a series oi stiff skirmishes,'latest front-line reports from the central sector said today.\nTOKYO, Feb. 16 (Friday) (AP)\n\u2014An allied tank column smashed\nthrough faltering Chinese Com\nmunist retlstance Thursday and\nlifted a 42-hour siege df a valiant\nFrench-American regimental\ncombat team on the central Kor\nean front.\nThe relief column, smashing\nfrom the South, routed Communist forces that had besieged Chip\nyong, 35 miles East of Seoul and\nthe anchor point of the central\nfront.\nDespite heavy losses, the Chinese\nwere reported massing fresh troops.\nThey apparently were intent on\nstriking again on a new and larger\nscale in an attempt to split the Unit\ned Nations army and isolate 100,000\nallied troops in the West.\nBritish Engine\nPowers U.S. Jet\nNEW YOHK, Feb. IS (AP)\u2014The\nnew F-84F Thunderjet fighter-\nbomber made its first flight yesterday powered with the new British\nSapphire engine, the Republican\nAviation Corporation announced,\nThe announcement said the flight\noccurred at the Muroc Air Force\nbase in California and the F-84F\nout-performed its predecessor, the\nF-84E, \"in every category.\"\nThe F-84F, the United States Air\nForce's newest swept-wing fighter\nbomber, was powered with the new\nWright Sapphire Turbo-jet engine\nwhich develops 7200 pounds of\nthrust, more than 2000 pounds over\nthat of engines previously'used in\nThunderjets.\nNootka Returns\nTo Japan Base\nA UNITED NATIONS NAVAL\nBASE IN SOUTH JAPAN, Feb. 15\n(CP) \u2014 The Canadian destroyer\nNootka is back at this United Na\ntions naval base after her first baptism of fire in the Korean war.\nThe tribal-class ship, under command of Cmdr. A. B. Fraser-Harris.\nof Halifax, arrived in Japan Jan.\n14 :as. a relief for the destroyer\nSioux, now back in Canada. She\nsailed a short time later for the\nWest coast of Korea and things\nstarted popping. -\nOn her first patrol, with the destroyer Cayuga, she engaged1 in a\ngun duel with Hed shore batteries\nal the Korean port of Inchon.\nThen she guarded the approaches\nto Inchon while Cayuga remained\nin 'the hostile harbor with the British cruiser Ceylon and a United\nStates task group providing gunfire support for approaching U. N.\narmies. \u25a0        \"\nDuring sea patrol off Inchon\nNootka spotted and destroyed a\nmine and rescued a Royal Navy\nflier from the carrier H.M.S. Thes\neus who was forced to ditch his\nplane close to her. The pickup was\naccomplished in four minutes, The\nflier was unhurt.\nNative Son Takes\nOver Weather Job\nVICTORIA, B. C, Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014\nA Vancouver native son,- William\nMackie is going to try and forecast\nVictoria's weather. He will take\nover the Gonzales Observatory- here\non March 1.\nNow stationed at Sea Island, Mr.\nMackie joined the Department of\nTransport on graduation from University of B..C. in 1941. He majored\nin mathematics and physics. During\nthe war he served a stretch with\nthe R.C.A.F.  -  \u25a0       .... \u25a0\u25a0: -. -\nScouts Self-Help\nContrasted fo TV\nCatering by Dean\nThe Boy Scout movement develops the enterprising spirit of\nCanadian boys, Dean T. L. Leadbeater told Kiwanis Club Thursday\nnight at the Hume.\nDean Leadbeater was appealing\nfor financial assistance for the Boy\nScout movement in connection with\nBoy Scout Week, and for a volunteer from the Club to aid in a\ncanvass. The appeal was turned\nover to a committee.\n\"We don't want to amuse them,\nwe want to teach them to make\ntheir own amusements,\" the speaker said. The training received by\nthe Scout covered a wide course\nand stimulated his observation. As\na contrast, the Dean referred to\nthe trend to television in the United States, where youth leaders\nviewed with alarm the tendency on\nthe part of children to sit back and\ndo nothing but watch the television\nscreens.\nThe whole plan in Scouting was\nto Uevelop the character of the\nboys. They worked hard to raise\nmoney themselves, and were assisted by the executive, which had\nmany financial ..problems in connection with the movement. The\nScout Hall, for Instance, was in\npoor condition; a provincial assessment had to be paid and money\nhad to be found to send the boys\nto camporees and jamborees, affairs which stimulated the movement.\nThe executive also assisted in\ntraining of leaders who volunteered\ntheir services, receiving, of course,\nno pay. The leaders, particularly\nDistrict Commissioner Don Ure,\nWere giving a tremendous amount\nof time to the movement, and he\nfelt they should not always have\nto \"bear the brunt\" of the financial\nproblem. The movement was of a\ncommunity-wide nature.\nCOMMITTEE SET\nW. G. Hamilton, Chairman,' Samuel Korbin and G. W, Jensen were\nappointed a committee, to bring in\nrecommendations on the Club's annual Spring dance.\nK. W. Jensen was asked to continue as Kiwanis representative on\nthe Midsummer Bonspiel Committee, and support similar to that of\nlast year, when all service clubs\nrallied behind the Bonspiel, was\npromised.\nGuests were Bruce Buchanan of\nMedicine Hat Kiwanis Club and\nDr. W. C. Murphy and Norman Fet-\nterly of Nelson.\nTroubled Monarch\nReturns to Nepal\nNEW DELHI, India, Feb. 15\n(Reuters)\u2014King Tribhuvana, trou\nbled Monarch of Nepal, left here\ntodoy to resume his throne in his\ncapital of Katmandu after more\nthan three months' \"exile\" in India.\nHe\nwilh the\nment of Nepal that wide reforms; T.R.C., ,\u201e,, -, e0Inrar,ing reliey tonight.\nwill be undertaken and the consti- R\u00abromm\u2122ta) (, \u201e,\u201e, \u201ed Jniisialt. 60c\ntution redrafted. auidSUi       ,-.-'.\nQuick Relief for\nARTHRITIC PAIN\nmice inunuia     cauc    hi ahuiu.   n . .,        .. .;\u25a0        . . , ,,, ...\nis .going'back to his throne W. Wj\"jW \"\"-^ \"^T,rtph?iK\nthe promise from the Govern-, Ki\" Z^'llZSn.^''' T*?.\nFROM FACTORY TO YOU\nBABY CHENILLE\nBEDSPREADS\n$5.25 Egeh\nLowest- price In Canada. Beautiful first quality, completely tufted, no sheeting showing. All\ncolors, double or single bedslzes.\nNew centre patterns In flowered\nor solid designs. Sent COD plus\npostage. Immediate money-back\nguarantee. Order one, you will\norder more. NEW ADDRESS:\nTOWN & COUNTRY MFG., Box\n1496, Place D'Armes, Montreal,\nQuebec.\nCHILDREN'S\nBLACK OR BROWN\n-        OXFORDS   i\nPatent Strap!\n(By Savage)\n'Sltts 6 to 8  $4,50\nSizes B'\/z \\o 12  ,  5.60\nSizes 12!\/ii to 3   6.96\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 395 553 Baker St,\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) t-i\nRates for private nurses who special in homes and hospitals in British Columbia may be boosted soon\nto $10 a day.\nThe increase, if approved, would\nmean an extra $2 for an eight-hour\nihift, for which the nurses now receive $8.   ' \/\nI\nBURNETTS\nL O N\nDON\nGIN\nDRY\nBecause Burnett's Is an\nEXTRA DRY (unjweet.\nened) Gin, you can \u00bbdd\n\u2014 or leave out\u2014sweetness, when mixing\ndrinks, and suit every\nindividual taste.\nBe a wise host-\nserve Burnett's;\nThis advertisement Is not-published\no. displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\t\nYou can save up to 30* on\nevery fuel dollar.. \u2022 enjoy\nyear-round comfort with\nat cusfimo ft\nOver 90 ycAt$ ago, Johas-Mnnville developed its first efficient\ninsulating material. Today Johns-Manvjlie manufactures\ninsulations to control every temperature from 400\u00b0 below zero\nto 3000' above, J-M Insulations iave homeowners and\nindustry millions of dollafS every year. Many industrial processes used in\nmodern manufacturing would be impossible without J-M Insulations*\nIn our homes. J-M Insulations are used in furnnces, refrigerators, and\ngas and electrical ranges to maintain efficient temperatures. Look to\nJohns-Manville for the\nnewest developments in\nlnsulatlon-they have been\npioneers in insulation\nfor nearly a century.\nA good home insulation will pay for itself by saving you up to 3W\non every fuel dollar. But you must insist on the best to get\nmaximum efficiency.\nWhen you choose Johns-Manville Rock Wool Batts you know\nyou are getting a tough, strong, firmly felted batt that is\nbacked by eighteen years of research and development. This\noutstanding insulation stays put and will not settle. It fits\ntightly between rafters and joists \u2014 forms a permanent barrier\nthat keeps your house warmer in winter and cooler in summer.\nIt's a lifetime investment in comfort!\nJ-M also manufactures nodulated Rock Wool which is\npneumatically installed in wall and ceiling spaces of existing\nhomes. For free folders on J-M Batts or \"Blown\" Insulation {state\nwhich), write Canadian Johns-Manville, Dept N-1I, 199 Bay\nSt., Toronto, or see your J-M dealer.\nJohns-Mctiiville\nINS\"TTtT\nDUIIDIN6   MATER1AIS   .   DRAKE   LtHIHGS   \u2022   INDUSTRIAL   INSUtATIONS   \u2022\" ACOUSTIC Al   MATERIALS   \u2022   TRANSIT!\nB-3fll\nFIPI\n'\u00bb\u00a3\u00ab,\nM\nX\u00bb4\n\u2022 - x}\/n .,   .    .\n,.:,,;;Ti'''\u25a0' M \"'\/\/\u2022\".'\u2022.'' In Nelson Yoar Dealer Is\nNELSON MACHINERY EQUIPMENT GO.\nHALL SX. ' \u201e-:'-i,!'>l\"''''7 7 .\/PHONE\nIS\nIn Ir air Your Dealer Is\nLA^AttJBFF &  COMPANY\nHolt BAY AVE.;\nPHONE  201\nKIDNEY-LIVER PILLS\n\u2022\u00bb\/JIM\\-\nIn Creston Your Dealer Is\nCRESTON BUILDERS'\/SUPPLY\nPHONE 40\n M\nLibby Dam Would Revolutionize\nSouth-East Kootenay Geography\nQrandsonof\nBeasley Couple\nA.B.S.M. JACK SWEDBERG\n\u2022 . . grandson of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nLeaf of Beasley, near Nelson, who\nIs serving aboard H.M.C.S. Cayuga after a tour of duty on H.M.\nC.S. Naden.\nHe Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\n0. A. Swedberg of Copper Mountain, B. C.\nHeads New\nBoard Committee\nA. K. McADAMS\n... a new member ot the Nelson\nBoard of Trade who has been\nnamed Chairman of the B.C. Automobile Association Committee. The\ncommittee is a newly formed group.\nA resident o,f the city since 1947,\nMr. McAdams is an active member\nof. the Kinsmen Club. He held the\noffice of treasurer last year, while\nthis term is a Club director.\n\u2014Vogue Photo.\nCRANBHOOK, B. C, Feb. 15 -\nInternational Joint Commission\nhearings with regard to effects of\na proposed dam on the Kootenay\nRiver at Libby, Mont, on East\nKootenay are scheduled for various\nEast Kootenay Centers in mid-\nMarch, with Cranbrook's hearing\nto be in the city hall here March\n16, Hearings are at request of. the\nUnited States Government which\nhas conditionally authorized the\nproject subject to state, province\nand Dominion approval.\nThough the project has been under practical consideration for\nthree years no East Kootenay organization has yet taken a public\nstand. Hearings will give every\nopportunity to those affected to\nplace their views before the public.\nCost of the project in 1948 was\nestimated at $258,659,000 to provide\n800,000 horsepower, 4,250,000 acre-\nfeet of usable water storage, and\ndevelop 244,000 kilowatts with 821,-\n000 kilowatts of system prime\npower because plants down river\nwould benefit. The Canadian portion of the reservoir would cost an\nestimated $5,500,000 for necessary\ninstallations above the dam and to\ncompensate operating interests in\nthe area which would be flooded\nin this district, cost to be borne by\nthe American Government;\nRealization of the Libby dam\nwould revolutionize the very geography of Southern East Kootenay.\nIt would create a lake 89 miles,\nlong, approximately the size of\nKootenay Lake in the mountain\nvalley Westward. This lake would\nstraddle the International Boundary at the present village of Newgate, with its Northern end 45 miles\nNorth in the vicinity of Wardner\non the Southern Trans-Provincial\nhighway' about 20 miles East of\nCranbrook.\nWOULD AFFECT RAILROAD\nMost obvious detrimental effects\nare flooding of the sparsely settled\nvalley South of Wardner. It provides excellent farming conditions\nalong the river banks, and timber\nfor small portable sawmill operations scattered along the valley.\nThe Kootenay runs briskly in substantially increasing volume\nthrough this part of East Kootenay\nbut cannot be considered steep.\nSince flat-bottom wood-burning\nboats from Fort Steele navigated it\nfairly regularly South to Jennings\nnear Libby up to about 1910, .it must\nbe considered navigable. Its course\nis   fairly   direct,  tending   slightly\nCommunity Club\nFor Windermere\nINVERMERE, B.C., Feb. 15\u2014At\nan enthusiastic meeting Sunday,\nattended by a heavy representation\nof Windermere residents, a Community Club was formed to plan a\nwell-balanced program of activity\ntor the village.\nElected President was Leo Richer\nwith J. M.. Cummings as Vice-President, Mrs. William Durham as\nSecretary, and H. R. Wannop as\nTreasurer.\nV. S. Kimpton and Vaughan Du-\nBois head a citizens committee to\nserve civic interests. Mr. and Mrs.\nBeverley Harris convene an arts\nand dramatic section, and sports,\nunder M. G. Moger, will cooperate\nwith the Windermere Valley Athletic and Sports Club.\nThe meeting was held at Hotel\nWindermere.\nA. C D'Amour Joins\nNew Denver Legion\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nNew Denver Branch No. 101 Cana-\ndiap Legion was held in the club\nrooms Feb. 13 with the President,\nJ. L. Irwin, in the 'chair and 15\nmembers present.\nRoutine business was transacted\nand correspondence from the Provincial and Dominion Command\nread.\nThe President, assisted by acting\nsergeant-at-arms L. R. Campbell,\nand T. R. Buckham, acting for the\nfirst-vice-president, initiated A. C.\nD'Armour into the Legion.\nA letter from W. E. Warner, a\npatient in the sanitorium at Tran-\nquille was read, thanking the members for Christmas gifts sent him.\nThe auditor's statement was submitted showing good progress being made, major repairs having\nbeen made to the club building and\nwelfare work done in the past year.\nThe acting auditor, D. P. Morgan,\nreecived a vote of thanks for his\nreport.\nT. R. Buckham reported that the\nBuilding Committee is proceeding\nwith the furnishing of the club\n.rooms. T. R. Flint, who painted a\nlarge Legion sign, was thanked for\nhis splendid work.\nAfter the meeting adjourned in\nform, the members were the guests\nof the L.A. for refreshments, hostesses being Mesdames P. J. McCrory, N. F. Brookes and W. E,\nRowe, and a social hour was enjoyed.\nDISCUSS NEW FIRE\nHALL AT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C, Feb. 15 \u2014 The\nweekly meeting of Nakusp Volunteer Fire Department made arrangements to hold a telephone\nbridge party to raise funds for the\n-Department.\nA lengthy discussion upon possible erection of a new fire hall\nwas held, also a question period,\nconvened by Ken Highland, on fire\nfighting.\nNakusp Man Loses\nCar, Garage in Fire\nNAKUSP, B\u201e, C.y,.Feb. kft^-M\nHamling had ftisVecently purchased\n\u25a0new car and his garage completely\n.^destroyed by fire Monday.\nX'JKr. Hamling had had a fire in\nthe1 Viafcjge-' while working in it.\nWhile lie was out to lunch he believed the fire broke out around\nthe chimney.\nThe garage is a complete loss.\nSeek Wage Increase\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nSome 650 beer parlor tapmen and\nwaiters here are asking a 40-eent\nhourly wage increase.\nThe -Beverage Dispensers' Union\n(A.F.L.) Local 676 voted yesterday\nto press for the increase as the main\nproposal in 1951 contracts with\n-Vancouver hotels.\ni\nSoutheastward, and it runs through\na valley' flanked by the Rockies\nand a spur of the Purcells. Level of\nthe proposed dam would be 2440\nfeet above sea level, over 500 feet\nlower than Cranbrook.\nHIGHWAY CHANGE\nRelocation of a few miles of\nSouthern Transprovincial Highway\nand the Crow's Nest branch of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway in Wardner area would probably be necessary. Much of the secondary road\nfrom Elko to Newgate and the\nGateway border station would be\ncompletely inundated.\nTOURIST ATTRACTIONS\ni. It would provide East Kootenay\nwith a resort and tourist attractions\nsecondary only to Kootenay,.National Park, adding a big lake to\nthe Southern section which is already famous for its rugged scenery, fishing and hunting and it is\nwithin comfortable range of Kimberley, Cranbrook, and Fernie, says\nthe project's supporters,\nPower   potential   of   the   dam\nfacilities at Libby would go into\nthe  huge  Northwest power pool\nwhich alio Includes the  Columbia facilities In Washington and\nOregon. There has been  no discussion al to whether East Kootenay would secure direct power\nbenefits. At present power is supplied   by   East   Kootenay   Power\nand Light a few miles North of\nWardner on the  Bull   River be\nfore It Joins the  Kootenay, and\nInstallations   at   Elko   15   miles\nEast   of   Wardner   on   the   Elk\nRiver before  it JoinB the  Kootenay.  Additional  East  Kootenay\npower for Cominco operations at\nKimberley    will    be    available\nshortly in line installations plan\nned from West \"Kootenay across\nKootenay   Lake   and   the   main\nPurcell range to Kimberley. This\nIs in the 1951 expansion program.\nThe huge reservoir is also considered as fountainhead of irrigation, though in the Canadian part\nexcejpt for the Kootenay River bottom now successfully farmed which\nalso provides excellent grazing for\nthe   increasingly   significant   livestock beef industry, the terrain is\nsteep,   rocky   and   not   apparently\nproductive. Irrigation might change\nthis picture, however.\nTHIRD  BENEFIT\nThird major benefit listed by\nadvocates of the project is measures\nfor flood control. Most costly damage on the Kootenay River in recent flood years, notably the 1948\ndisaster, was in Montana, then in\nBonner's Ferry, Idaho district\nwhere diked lands were inundated,\nand further down river 'at Creston,\nB. C\u201e where swamped dikes collapsed running damage into millions. The Kootenay continues from\nCreston into Kootenay Lake and\nNelson, to join the Columbia at\nCastlegar.\nThe Kootenay River occupies 19,\n300 square miles, three-fourths in\nCanada and. the remainder in\nMontana and Idaho. Approval of\nthe American Government has already been given, but must also\nbe given by the two states.' Most\nin the Montana hearings was that\nserious objection turned up in 1948\nseven little towns would be inundated and a state highway obliterated. Zonolite Company, which has\na yermiculite mine in the area, and\nK. .Neils Lumber Company, operating a sustained yield program in\nthe Fisher River watershed which\nwould be under water filed protests.\nBritish Columbia would be re\nquired to affirm the plan, and Ca\nnadian Government approval\nwould be necessary before any\npractical implementation could be\nundertaken. The Kootenay hearings\nat -Nelson, Creston, Cranbrook and\nFernie should determine the public\nattitude toward the project.\nElect Yvonne McKay\nSewing Club President\nINVERMERE, B.C., Feb. 15\u2014At\nthe annual meeting of the Just-a-\nMere Sewing Club, which includes\ngirls from Athalmer, Invermere and\nWindermere, Yvonne McKay was\nelected President, Pauline Maville,\nVice-President; Betty Ann Rogers,\nSecretary, and Wilma Joan Wolfe,\nTreasurer.\nHostess is Marion Pietrosky, social convener, Myrna McKay, press\ncorrespondent, Sally Kamikawaji.\nThe club has been in operation\nfive years and the girls have accomplished some excellent work under\nthe leadership of Mrs. Kenneth\nMarples. This year Mrs. E. C. Phillips has undertaken knitting and\ncrocheting classes.\nSeven new members have joined\nthe class and these are learning\nmachine attachments, alterations\nand types of material. Older members make dresses, blouses, etc., for\nthemselves.\nPlans are under way to have Miss\nEileen .Cross of the U.B.C. extension\nservice;, give coolfing classes when\nshe visits the district.\nSea Calls Wynndel Youths\nA.B.S.W.S.   TERRENCE   DAVIDGE\nDESMOND   DAVIDGE\nFollowing in the steps of his brother, Desmond Davidge left\nlast week to commence training with the Royal Canadian Navy.\nTerrence Davidge Is aboard H.M.C.S. Sioux which has just returned\nfrom  Korea.\nThe two lads are the sons of Mrs. Helen Davidge of Wynndel.\n\u2014Photos courtesy Evelyn Andestad, Wynndel.\nR,A.D.Wesf\nNamed Airport\n(ommiflee Head\nR. A. D. WEST\nR. A. D. West of Castlegar was\nnamed Chairman and R. J. Maurice\nof Kinnaird, Secretary of the Joint\nAirport Committee for the 1951\n1951 term. The officers were elected\nat a meeting of the committee held\nat Castlegar this week, including\nAlderman Joseph Kary of Nelon.\nAid. Kary said Thursday that\nanother meeting of the committee\nhad been cancelled for next Thursday at which time tenders for work\non the airport will be opened.\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nThe Department of Transport has\nmade, a grant of $25,000 to the city\nof Nelson and the municipalities of\nCastlegar and Kinnaird for work to\nbe done in improving the Castlegar\nairfield.\nThe work will provide for a landing strip 4000 feet by 400 feet and\nwill be carried out by the municipalities concerned. It calls for an\nacre of clearing, stumping, and\ngrubbing, 60,000 cubic yards of excavation, 37 acres of smoothing and\ngrading and 100 cubic yards of\nditching.    '\nMayors List Housing\nAs No. 1 Problem\nMONTREAL, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 The\nhousing shortage was listed today\nby the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities as the No. 1\nproblem in Canada.\nThe mayors, holding their annual\nmeeting here, will leave for Ottawa\ntomorrow where they will present a\nbrief emphasizing the housing\nshortage to Prime Minister St,\nLaurent.\nFire Protection\nCertain For\nInvermere Homes\nINVERMERE, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014\nAdequate fire-protection is in sight\nfor Invermere. Purchase of $1000\nworth of fire fighting equipment\nfrom the Cranbrook Fire Department has been negotiated. This consists of a 1932 International truck\nwith a 12 foot roof ladder and a\n25 foot extension ladder. It is also\nequipped with a centrifugal, front\nmounted pump, 2 soda ash chemical\nextinguishers, 2 re-inforced suction\nhoses and a 5 h.p. flasher siren.\nRoy Lake, Ian Weir and William\nBond made a trip to Cranbrook to\ninspect the .equipme \u00bbt and on consultation with the local Fire Marshal\nfeel that such equipment is the\nanswer to the serious problem that\nhas been facing the town which has\nno protection whatever except that\nprovided by local garages with extinguishers and by courtesy emergency help from the Forest Service.\nFour fires within the past year\nhave resulted in complete loss of\nbuildings and contents. Two were\nbusiness premises, one the liquor\nstore the other the Chuck Wagon\nrestaurant. Two were private residences.\nRolls Royce Aero\nFactory Slr(ke\nGLASGOW, Feb. 15 (Reuters)\u2014\nWork stopped at the big Rolls\nRoyce aero engine factory here\ntoday when 3,500 workers went on\nstrike In protest against the dismissal of two union officials.\nProduction at the factory, vital\nIn the present arms drive, had already been held up by the refusal\nof engineers to work overtime.\nThey are claiming more pay.\nThe Glasgow plant Is one of two\nhuge Rolls Royce units now turn\nIng out the latest type of jet en\ngines. Many of the world's air\nforces are supplied with jet en\nglnes from the plant.\nArgue Right to\nCancel Contract\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb.. 15 (CP) \u2014\nThe right of the Alberni School\nBoard to terminate a contract with\nits architect for a $1,000,000 school\nproject, was argued in Appeal Court\ntoday.\n' R. D. Harvey, K.C, counsel in the\nappeal of Hubert Savage of Victoria,\nwho claims $27,560 from the School\nBoard for plans drafted for three\nAlberni schools, said that under the\ncontract the Board was bound to\npay Mr. Savage his full six per cent\ncommission for work done in connection with the plans.\nPASSENGERS SAFE\nTOKYO, (Friday) Feb. 16 (AP)\u2014\nAll ten passengers and 37 crew\nmembers of the storm-wrecked\nSwedish motor vessel Christer Salem are' safe, rescue ships radioed\n.today.\nThe bow of the 4,928-ton.ship\nbroke off Thursday in a storm about\n200 miles East of Tokyo.\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nAll Time Safety\nYear For Cominco\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014 Last year\nwas the safest record for the 9000\nemployees of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, according to figures released today. The\nbiggest gain in safety was made by\nthe 5000 employees at the Trail\nplants. There the accident rate dropped 33 per cent with a new low of\none accident for every 67,000 hours\nworked being set. This amounts to\nabout one accident for every 30\nyears of work per employee.\nThe Alberta Nitrogen' Department\nat Calgary had the lowest accident\nrate for company operations. The\n300 employees there had only one\naccident for every 110,000 hours\nworked.\nAt the Sullivan Mine in Kimberley, the 500-man surface crew worked for 227 days without an accident,\nerasing the old mark of 150 days\nwhich was set in 1933.\nCommenting on the record year\nfor safety in 1950, a company official said that the accident rate\nhas been decreasing steadily since\nthe end of the war. \"The keen cooperation of employees as well as\nthe intensive safety program put\non by the, company have been important (factors,\" he said.\nPORT ALBERNI SCHOOL\nCOST UP 14 PER CENT\nPORT ALBERNI, B.C., Feb. 15\n(CP) \u2014 An estimated 14 per cent increase in school costs for 1951 in\nPort Alberni and district is repbrted\nby District No, 70 Board of School\nTrustees.\nThe Board has budgeted for an\nexpenditure of $1,333,313. Estimated\nrevenue this year is $1,011,563, of\nwhich government grants will\namount to $427,794, by-laws $425,657\nand a surplus of $16,044 from last\nyear, leaving $304,725 to be raised by\ntaxation.\nLast year the Board budgeted for\n$451,513, with an actual expenditure\nof $412,906.\nMain reasons for the sharp jump\nin costs are operation charges of\nnew school buildings, increased debt\ncharges and inclusion of 1951 bylaw expenditures.\nPennsylvania, great coal-producing state, has a-, total'mineral production of more than $1,000,000,000\nannually.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB. 16, 1951 \u2014 3\n$450,000 Trail-Tadanac Share\nIn Proposed New Hospital Project\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 15\u2014Trail City\nCouncil last night was asked for\nassurance that the City of Trail\nwould pay its share of the costs of\nconstructing and furnishing a new\nhospital here. Council referred the\nrequest, from the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital Board, to Aid. L. A. Read,\nCouncil's representative on the\nBoard, for further clarification\".\nThe letter from the Hospital\nBoard said that the building was\nexpected to cost approximately $1,-\n500,000. Government grants and\nhospital funds would pay for a part\nof the project, but the municipalities of Trail and Tadanac would\nbe required to raise a total of some\n$450,000.\nThe Board pointed out that there\nwould be some return on the two\ncities' share. When the new building was completed, the present hospital building would be sold, possibly for about $200,000, and that\nsum  would  be  returned  to  Trail\nand Tadanac in proportion to the\namounts raised for the new building by -the two cities.\nThe communities' share of the\ncost is worked out on the basis of\ncommunities paying one-third of .\nthe total cost and the Provincial\nGovernment being responsible for\nthe remaining two-thirds, part of\nthe latter being paid by the Federal Government through a grant of\n$1000 per bed, which in this case\nwould amount to $150,000.\nThe communities' share then\nwould be one-third, or $500,000 for\nconstruction costs, but the Hospital\nBoard can provide $117,000 of that\nsum through Its construction fund,\nwhich leaves $383,00Q. Added to\nthat is cost of furnishings, expected\nto total $100,000, of which the cities'\nshare is two-thirds, or $67,000,\nbringing the overall cost to the\ncities up to $450,000.\nThere was no indication as to\nwhat part of the $450,000 Trail\nwould have to raise.\nHiggs Named Chairman of Railroad\nGroups; Daylight Saving Fought\nPresident O. C. Higgs of the\nBrotherhood of Railroad Trainmen,\nLodge 558, was appointed chairman\nfor the newly organized joint meetings of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen dnd Enginemen,\nOrder of Railroad Conductors and\nthe Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, at a recent joint meeting. A.\nPeterson was Secretary.\nDaylight saving time was discussed. It was pointed out that It\nwould be satisfactory If all\nwatches and clocks were changed\nIncluding the  railroad,  but that\nCabaref Officers\nPay $14,000 Fine\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) -\nMagistrate Oscar Orr today fined a\ncabaret and two of its officers\n$14,000 for income tax evasion.\nThe fine was suggested by Special\nCrown Prosecutor Paul D. Murphy\nin the case of Nick Kogos, president,\nand John D. Dillias, an employee of\nthe Commodore Cabaret Ltd.\nMr. Murphy told the court that a\ncheck for $111,000 to cover seven\nyears \u2014 from 1942 to 1948 \u2014 of falsified income tax returns was paid\nWednesday.\n\"About half the 2,000,006 population of Latvia, Baltic state, is engaged in food production.\nthis  would   be   impractical. The\nrailroad  would encounter heavy\nexpense twice each year In making the changeover. >'\/\nMost of the men in the running\ntrades were called for work at any\nhour of the day or night, every day\nin the year. The meeting felt that\nthe    inconveniences    caused    by-\nchanging the time for the Summer\nmonths could be overcome if thbsi\nwho favored it got up an hour earlier in the mornings and arranged\ntheir daily program accordingly.\nNecessary steps seeking to \"rectify this matter\" will be taken by\nthe organizations, it was decided.\nNOW-She's Gat\nExciting ZIP\nand GLOW\n...ami Plenty of Beaux\nDon't envy her\ncharm or radiant\nhealth! Make it\nyours the way\nthousands of\npale, listless,\nanemic people\nare doing-with\nDr. Williams\nPink Pills. By\nrevitalizing arid enriching your bloodstream. Dr. Williams Pink Pills may\nbring you new pep, energy, joy in life \u2014\noften in only 80 days. So start today!\nGet back \"in the pink\" with\nDR. WILLIAMS\nPINK PILLS\nSpecial\nBEAUTIFUL\n6 PIECE BREAKFAST SUITE \u201e\nfinished in gleaming white enamel.\n\u25a0\u25a0  only'69.95   '\u2022'-\nBUY IT AT THE STORE -   <\n566 BAKER ST. PHONE 1494\nfrom ingredients .unexcelled, for ^riiy '\nif Iii \u25a0--'.'\u25a0' [V   '      -\u25a0'\u25a0''.   ' '   '   ' '\nana quality \u2014 blended by craftsmen\nwho are masters of the art of distilling.\nT5-Vea^QM Wife\nMother' of Twins\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 15 (CP)-^-\nA 15-year-old girl became a mother\nof twins yesterday, making grand:\nparents of her mother and father\nboth at the age of 32. Mrs. Barbara\nSolomon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Brannen, gave birth to\npremature babies. The twins,\nweighing four pounds, 11 ounces\nand four pounds, seven ounces,\nwere placed in incubators. Both\nthey and their j mother were reported ih good condition.       . X\n.*'\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0   .    I >.:\"\nThrough the Bottle \u2014 A variety of\nGin recipeX,, Easy fpread. 1& full color.\nNOW AVAILABLE \u2014\n,j|ASK FOR IT TODAY\nLONDON DRV GIN\n:M\n>m\nThis aclvertlsement is not published or displayed by the Liquor'C^ijirfcl^Board orfby frig-Government of British Columbia,\nT\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB, 16, 195V\nLeading Comedians bid for\nHollywood's TV Industry\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Feb. 15 (AP) \u2014\nThe \"revolt of the comics\" today\nappeared to be hastening Hollywood's bid for contention in the\ntelevision industry.   ,\nThis is no organized rebellion. It\nis a growing distaste on the part\nof several top comedians for the\nrigors of doing television shows in\nNew York. All of the men I polled\nhave homes here and most of them\nare engaged in movie work. They\ndislike being uprooted for the\nstrenuous life of Eastern TV.\nFurthermore, several of the\ncomics are against \"live\" video, preferring to offer their efforts on\nfilm. Bob Hope is one of these.\n\"Why not take advantage of cutting?\" he inquired. \"Doing a show\non film would cut out the sloppi-\nness.\n.\"The same thing happened in\nradio. People realized you can get\na much better show on tape than\nyou can broadcasting 'live.' \"\nAbbott and Costello, who recently\nmade their TV debuts, also favor\nfilms. They have one more Eastern\nKaslo \u2666. \u2022\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Mrs. D. Wilkenson\nof Howser is relieving on the nursing staff of the Victorian Hospital\nfor one month.\nMrs. A, R. Lawler, who has been\n& patient in the Victorian Hospital,\nis now convalescing at her home.\nAmong the Kaslo guests attending the Fletcher-Mahnn nuptials at\nAinsworth Feb. 3 were Mr. and\nMrs. W. H. Tonkin and Mr .and\nMrs. S. E. Fyfe.\nThe Evening Branch of St. Mark's\nAnglican Church held a.successful\nsale Saturday, when a large variety\nof home cooking was soon sold out.\nIn charge of the sale were Mrs.\n\u25a0M. Ringheim, Mrs. J. Chochran and\nMrs. G. \"Monty\" Armstrong.\nNEW\nMONT ROSA\nEVERBEARING RUNNERLESS\nDWARF BUSH\nSTRAWBERRY\nFruits from seed the first year: easily\ngrown. Bush form, about one foot high.\nNo runners. Hardy perennial. Bears\nabundantly from early summer tillkillins\nfrost. Has an intense luscious flavor and\naroma like that of wild strawberry; rich\nand juicy. Neat compact bushy growth\nmakes it highly ornamental as well as\nvaluable in vegetable, fruit or flower\ngarden, borders, etc. A showy pot plant\ntoo. Though smaller than commercial\nstrawberries Mont Rosa is the largest fruiting of any variety we know from seed, sur-\nfbssing the popular solcmacher and simi-\nir rypes. Its unique bush form and cr*\n?;uisite flavor place it in a class by itself\nor every home garden. Seed supply il\nlimited. Order early. (Pkt. 25e) (3 pkts.\n50c) postpaid.\n\"\"BITIff 0UR   B,G   195]   5EED\n'IfUK AND   NURSERY   BOOK\nDOMINION   SEED   HOUSE\n...    G Ed'H-C-E T.0W.IK 111    Xi\n3how to do and have turned down\n\"fabulous\" offers to do more.\nNOT EVEN SKELTON\nHed Skelton, who has not yet\nmade his TV debut, told me: \"You\ncouldn't get me to New York on a\nbet.'\" He plans to start a TV series\nIn October and he will film a half-\nhour show bi-weekly in Hollywood.\nJack Benny is an advocate of\n\"live\" shows and would like to do\nhis stint from Hollywood. He has\ntrekked to New York for two shows\nthis season. i\nEddie Cantor is reported eager\nto do his show from here on film.\nJack Carson is also anxious to return to Hollywood with his pro*-\ngram in order to pick up motion\npicture offers.\nTlwlkaagL\nby* dmilicL WhjudsVt\nIT'S THE FASHIONI\nIt's the Shrug! It's the handiest\nlittle quick-done fashion ever! Wear\nit now and all Summer, with simply\neverything. Quick crochet!\nCrazy shell-stitch in white, or pastel cotton for this! Pattern 971, directions, sizes 32-34, 30-38.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins, (stamps cannot be\ncepted) for this pattern to Nelson\nDaily News, Needlecraft Department, Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nSend TWenty-flVe cents more (in\ncoins) for Laura Wheeler's Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of patterns\ntor crochet, embroidery, knitting,\nhousehold accessories, dolls toys . ,.\nmany hobby and gift ideas. A free\npattern is prinled in the book.\nWidow Tells Court of\nHusband's Taunting\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 A\n3B-year-old widow told the British\nColumbia Supreme Court yesterday\nher husband used to shout at her\nwhen she asked for housekeeping\nmoney and doled out a few dollars\nat a time.\nWhen Charles Harold Peterson\ndied 27 months ago, he was worth\n$750,000, counsel for Mrs. Ethel Peterson said.\nMrs. Peterson is asking an Increase In the $180-a-month left her\nby her husband. Mr. Peterson was\n58 and she was 18 when they were\nmarried in 1930. .     '\nIn a quiet voice, Mrs. Peterson related how she met Peterson here in\nthinking he would be a suitable\nfriend 'for. her mother. The next\nyear, he asked the daughter to marry him and she had accepted, she\nsaid, to help her mother, who had\nhad to work for their living.\n\"He was kind until our son was\nborn in 1933; after that he belittled\nme and said I would never amount\nto anything,\" the widow said,\n\"I went to church despite his protests but he would not allow me to\ngo to shows.\"\nMrs. Peterson said she had nursed\nhim through long illnesses.\nMrs. Peterson's application was\nadjourned to Feb. 22 for lawyers to\ndraft a settlement for consideration\n1929  and  took him to her home, I by Mr. Justice A. D. Macfarlane.\nIndia Owns Huge\nThorium Supply\nBy ED CREAGH\nWASHINGTON, Feb' 15 (AP) \u2014\nHere's one hush-hush reason for the\npolicy American leaders describe\nas patience and kindness toward\nIndia:\nIndia has three-quarters of the\nworld's supply of thorium, a mineral\nthat may become tremendously important in the atomic race with the\nSoviet Union, and the United States\ngovernment doesn't want to risk\nletting this supply fall into unfriendly hands.\nThe whole subject is shrouded in\nsecrecy, but one government official\nwho asked not to be quoted by\nname, acnowledged today that India's possession of all this potential\natomic material has had its effect\non American policy.\nIt may well have influenced President Truman's request \u2014 endorsed\nin principle by former President\nHerbert Hoover and various other\nleading Republicans \u2014 for a gift\nof 2,000,000 tons of wheat to the government of India to help avert the\ndanger of famine.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nIII Mother Struggles\nThrough 30 Below\nWeather to Safety\nWILLIAMS' LAKE, B.C., Feb. 15\n(CP) \u2014 A desperately-ill mother of\nfive children told here today of a\nstruggle through deep snow in 30\nbelow zero weather to reach the\nsafety of a neighbor's home.\nMrs. Brownie Perry suffered an\nappendicitis attack while her husband was out on the range.\u2022\nShe couldn't leave'her children,\nthe youngest 10 months old, so she\nlashed them on a hand sleigh and\nstarted a trek across the range.'\nShe trudged for miles only to find\nthe first ranch house she reached\nunoccupied, but the door was un\nlocked.\nMrs. Perry entered and telephoned the nearest neighbor, Mrs. Ann\nJohnston at Riske Creek, who went\nto her aid.\nThe two women then hauled the\nsleigh with the children to Riske\nCreek, from where medical aid was\ncalled.\nOne of the children may lose the\ntips of three fingers as a result of\nfrostbite. The others suffered no\ninjury.\nM\/tito\/p \/Morgrafi's m fow\/\"\n..and welcome wherevef\nhe goes \u2014for Captain\n\u25a0..is 'Canad^; 9 .largeSf p-elMij* ijtya. y,\nTry Captain Morgan Rum \u2014\nyou'll like it, too!\n\u25a0    till..; ..- ..\nfull-bodied\nCaptamMorgan\n\"    RUM        !\n.Extra smooth\nand flavourful\nBlended to Perfection from Carefully Selected Rare Old Run\npai\u2014ainii   1 1 IT   r^nTllWMIMIlBn^aQM^BaBaMla^aaBjL^LJI^a^Ball Hnan^ntTTinaBaw\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT- PUBLISHED OR DISPIAYED BY THE tlQUOR CONTROL BOARD OR IVY\nI THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (S '     \u00ab\nPlane Decapitates\nFour at Airport\nBUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Feb.\n15 (Reuters)' \u2014 A small plane decapitated four persons when it dipped in a farewell salute at the Paraguay Encarnacion Airport, according to press reports reaching here\ntoday.\nThe four were friends, who came\nto bid farewell to a lieutenant of the\nParaguayan Air Force.      ' .'\n(. Aluminum\nProject Defined\nTORONTO, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 Mc-\nNeillie Du Bose, Vice-President of\nthe Aluminum Company of Canada, told the Empire Club today\nthat development of the British Columbia aluminum project is the\nquickest arid cheapest way to increase production on the scale required by Canada and her allies for\nmilitary purposes.\n\"Today, after three years of work\nand $1,000,000 spent, the scope and\ndetails of the project are well defined,\" said Mr. Du Bose. ''The\naccess road to the powerhouse site\nis being built and commitments are\nbeing made for hard-to-get construction equipment so that there\nneed be no delay in getting this\ndevelopment under way.\"\nSturdy, Religious Moslems Would\nFight Against Atheistic Russia\nBy  DEWITT  MaoKENZIE\nAssociated Preii News Analyst\nThe Moscow Press, marking the\nfirst anniversary of the Russo-Chi-\nnese alliance, makes much of the\nclaim that the joint actions of the\ntwo countries will have a powerful\ninfluence on the future of humanity.\nCertainly, as thihgB now stand,\nthe vast Asiatic theatre, which contains more than half the world's\npopulation,' presents a grave problem for the democracies. It could\nbe the decisive battlefield of the\nideological struggle.\nGENERATIONS BEHIND\nMany of these peoples .still are\nliving in primitive conditions, literally generations behind the Western\nworld. Poverty and hunger are the\ngeneral rule.\nSo the combination of the Soviet\nUnion and huge Red China comprises a formidable alliance, especially since much of- their territories actually lie within Eastern\nAsia. China, to be sure, suffers\nfrom the common ailment of poverty and hunger. But she has a vast\nreservoir of manpower which\nbacked by Russian resources\nmilitary and otherwise.\nIt ft, of course, too early to arrive\nat any final conclusion regarding\nthe Asiatic situation. A long, hard\nconflict may lie ahead..\nGREATLY ALTERED\nMuch will depend on the trend of\nthe struggle in Western Europe.\nShould war develop there, and\nshould Russia overrun the continent\nthe picture in Asia would be greatly\naltered.\nIn short, Russia would be pretty\nwell queen of the globe \u2014 a cir-\ncumtance which this columh doesn't\nexpect to develop.\nThe Asiatic struggle may take on\na different complexion as Communism increasingly comes up against\nthe Moslem countries.\nWe, may expect sturdy religious\nresistance on the part of the Moslem\npeoples against atheistic Communism. The Moslem takes his belief\nin God seriously, and will fight\nfor it.\nSo we get back to the premise\nthat the outcome of the Russo-Chi-\nnese operations in Asia is bound\nto have a great influence on the\nfuture of humanity; And there is, as\nI see it, no-reason why the democracies shouldn't look forward confidently to the outcome.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nMontreal\u2014William George Maxwell Shepherd, 78, prominent Mon-\ntreal business man.\nMontreal \u2014 Victor Gusson, 81,\nPresident of the Montreal Tramways Commission.\nToronto\u2014E. Lloyd Morrow, 78,\none-time professor of systematic\ntheology at Knox College in Toronto. '\nToronto\u2014Samuel Henry John, 8,6,\na former general manger of the\nRobert Simpson's Montreal store.1\nROCHESTER, N.Y., (AP) - Edgar Crane, 51, formerly an outfielder\nwilh the Reading, Pa., team in the\nInternational Baseba'li League.\nWINNIPEG \u2014 J. B. McNair of\nWinnipeg, treasurer of the United\nGrain Growers Ltd.\nWitness to Keep\nPrices Uniform\nCALGARY, Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014Evidence that efforts had been made to\nmaintain uniform bread prices at\nRegina, Calgary and Edmonton was\ngiven today by Frank E. Alloway,\nEdmonton, a former manager and\nregional sales supervisor for Mc-\nGavin Ltd., when he testified before Mr. Justice Boyd McBride at\nthe alleged bread combine case\nwhich is now in its sixth week.\n\u25a0Alloway said he started the Mc-\nGavin plant at Regina in December,\n1939, and managed it until 1938\nwhen he came to Calgary to open\nthe McGavin plant which he managed for 18 months before he went\nto Edmonton as regional sales manager of McGavin Prairie plants under Archie M. McGavin. He left\nMcGavin's in 1945.\nWhen he opened the McGavin\nplant at Calgary he had \"adopted\nthe prices of the other bakeries\"\nsuch as Canadian Bakeries, Model\nBakeries and Golden West, a Weston plant. McGavin's had become\na member of the Alberta Master\nBakers Association of which George\nWeir was the Calgary secretary.\nAlloway attended Association meetings and said it was an aim of the\nAssociation \"to keep uniformity\namong the trade.\" He said some\nof the larger customers were given\n\"secret discounts\" which were denied the smaller retailers and it was\nthe duty of Weir to investigate complaints of price-cutting or secret\ndiscounts and try to have them\neliminated. The Association also\ntried to regulate the price and\nweight of \"sweet goods\" and to\neliminate Sunday deliveries. Similar- conditions had prevailed at Edmonton, he said.\nHendricks Leaves\nFor Legislature\nWalter Hendricks, M.L.A. for\nNelson-Creston has left for Victoria where he will attend the reopening of the B.C. Legislative\nAssembly  next week.\nMr. Hendricks was accompanied\nby Mrs. Hendricks for the new\nsession which will start Febraury\n20. He will also attend a Coalition\nparty caucus called for Feb. 19.\nCoast Loggers Back\nTo Island Forests\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) -\nThe \"holiday\"is over for most Vancouver Island loggers.\nThey headed back to work today\nas snow plows and work gangs\ncleared up deep snow in lumbering\ndistricts. Boats leaving Vancouver\nwere packed and the majority of\nworkers were bound for Alberni,\nCampbell River, Hillcrest, Youbou\nand Mesachie Lake.\nSome 2300 loggers were laid off\nshortly after Christmas when heavy\nsnowfalls stopped logging operations. Officials said the unemployment list may be back to normal\nby the end of the week.\nRevive Confidence\nGame in B. C. Towns\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 15 (CP.) -\/\nOne of the oldest confidence games\nin the books is being tried on some\nBritish Columbians. Residents of\nCowichan Lake, Greenwood j and\nPrinceton have been contacted by\nletter by a person who alleges he Is\nin a Mexican jail.\nthe letter claims the writer has\ndocuments entitling him to untold\nwealth that is stored in a customs,\nwarehouse and says if the recipient\nof the letter will only send financial\nhelp to get him out of jalli-'-'He will\nshare the great wealth.,,-.('\n'The trick has robbed .many'unsus-\n'Wci'Bg persons of.the'jr savings in\nppst\/ytfars. Police r'f\/fer to it as \"the\nold Spimtshjfjfri^oner game.\"\nEconomical Step\nOTTAWA.'iFe'b,' 15 (CP) \u2014 Postmaster General Rinfret told the\nCommons today his department is\ncontemplating Some'; changes in urban postal.iieliveries,\"in view of\nthe economics that, we have to\nmake.\" Wtl-.t        ':\u2022\u25a0\nHe wa8.replying to'question from\nGordon \/Graydon (PC\u2014Peel) and\nG. K. \/Fraser (PC\u2014Peterborough\nWest.) \/\nVeneer Plant for\nCowichan District\nYOUBOU, B.C., Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nFirst veneer plant in Cowichan\ndistrict's large lumbering industry\nwill be built beside B.C. Forest\nProducts Ltd. sawmill here this\nyear. The plant will employ 20 men,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Feb.\n15 (CP) t~ \"Bad Actor\" Thomas\nBurns was sentenced to 2% years\nin prison today when convicted of\npossessing narcotics while visiting\nthe Federal penitentiary here.\nPolice said he dropped a finger\nstall containing three capsules of\nheroin while at the prison. At the\ntime he was out on bail for another\noffence.\nWhen Your BACK\nBegins fo Ache\nREACH FOR\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n& PILLS   >\nCoastal. Steamer\nUndergoes Repairs\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nThe Canadian Pacific Steamships\ncoastal steamer Princess Elizabeth\ntoday is undergoing minor repairs\nto her propellor at the Pacific Dry-\ndock Company, Limited, in North\nVancouver,\nThe ship developed the trouble\nlast night, forcing cancellation of\nher scheduled departure for Nanaimo at noon today. She will return to service on the midnight trip\nto Victoria tonight.\nTrappers Choo'se\nQueen at The\" Pas\nTHE PAS, Man., Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nA 19-year-old stenographer from\nLynn Lake, Man., today was chosen\n1951 \"Queen of the North\" at the\nTrappers' Festival here.\nAt the* same time, the 140-mile\nCanadian dog derby to Cranberry\nPortage and back got under way.\nAfter 10 miles, at Pike's Lake, Bill\nBeardy of Grand Rapids, Man., was\nin the lead.\nThe new beauty queen is Helen\nLundy, a blue-eyed brunette who\nstands five feet, four inches.\nMiss Lundy won out over three\nother contestants representing the\nNorthern Manitoba communities of\nFlin Flon, Churchill and The Pas.\nA scant one minute behind\nBeardy in the dog derby came Gilbert Lavallee, Pine Bluffs trapper.\nBoth were driving eight-dog teams.\nGeorge Poirler, woodsman of The\nPas, was in third position, a minute\nbehind Lavallee.   -\nThe drivers and teams will rest\nat Cranberry Portage overnight,\ncovering the return lap Friday.\nOPPOSES SENATE REFORM\n. .OXTAIWA, Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014Veteran\nSenator John T. Haig said today\nhe opposes any sweeping reform of\nthe Senate.\nThe 73-year-old Progressive Conservative leader from Manitoba\ntold fellow senators that they no\nlonger were politicians. As senators they were arbitrators or\njudges of the legislation which -\nstreamed from the elected Hd.ilSe\nof Commons. Any suggestion'of an\nelected Senate would;'-. upset this\nindependence.\nSenator Haig, 15 years a member\nof the upper chamber,-was replying\nto proposals by Senator Wishart\nRobertson, Government leader,\nwhich revived the old question of\nSenate reform.\nHighest wind- velocity in the |\nUniJ\u00bbd Slates was recorded al 231;\nmile)5 an iiour at the top of Mt.'\nWashington, New Hampshire, on\nApril  12, 1934.\nMenstrual\nPains*..use\nPARADOL\nBECAUSE\u2014\nBackache ia often due lo\nan upaet kidney condition; and lor oyer half a century Dodd's\nKidney Pills have helped bring relief from\nbackache by treating the kidneys. Get\nDodd's Kidney Pillt today at any drug\ncounter. Look for the blue box wilh the red\nband. You can depend on Dodd'a.      155\nMANCHESTER, England (CP)\u2014\nTwo city councillors from adjoining Manchester wards should work\nwell together, Their surnames are\nLamb and Onions.\ny\nNANAIMO, B.C., Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nGeorge S. Pearson, Legislative\nmember for this city and former\ncabinet minister, is to be honored\nin absentia by his home town Saturday when he is made a freeman\nof the city. Only other freeman is\nformer alderman Charles Salter.\nThe event was to be featured on\nthe program for the official opening of the new $180,000 city hall by\nLieut.-Gov. Clarence Wallace, but\nMr. Pearson, who is saving his\nstrength for the opening of the\nLegislature, Feb. 20, has sent word\nhe will be unable to undertake the Get relief from constipation\u2014tndl-\ntrlp to Nanaimo. |\u00abe'\u00bbtlonl Positive results from\nCouncil members will visit Vic-' FRUIT-A-TIVES proven by tens of\ntoria later to present an illuminated thousands'. FRUIT-A-TIVES contain\naddress to Mr. Pearson. ' mtracta of fruits and herbs.\n\"^\nWAKE UP\nMORNINGS     a\\\nLIKE A GAVE MAN\nEATO!\nReady \u25a0\nfor the warmer months aheaji'\nCatalogue Free on Request\n\u00abT. EATON C\u00b0\n\u00a3 1\nLIMITED\n#^EATON'S\nnnna\nPHONE 700\n\u25a0550 STANLEY ST.\nNELSON\nPeople in evety walk of life are finding benefit in\nPersonal Planning \u2014 and many of them have written to\ntell us how they feci about it. All agree on one\njxiint in particular: the need for Personal Planning in\nthese days of high living costs.\nWHAT IS\nmSawal r i\u00abW,*r\/\n<&M>tt\u00bbtf L\nPersonal Planning shows ;you how to live within your\nincome and enjoy it.\nTill order? Not as tall as you think. Personal Planning faces\nfacts. One, that you have to live within your income.\nTwo; that you must have a budget-plan that works for you,\nnot yt)u for it. Three, that a budget-plan \u2014 to work \u2014\nmujt'be^j'OKr budget-plan, planned for your needs by you.\nIt most fit your individual circumstances.\nAnd Personal Planning goes one big step further, It shows you\nhow to enjoy life within your income, by helping you to\nplan and build on what you have.       n\nYou can only be happy today if you're not worried about\ntomorrow. Pick lip your copy of \"Personal Planning\"\ntoday. It's yours for the asking at any branch of the B of M.\nThere's no obligation ... except to yourself.\nBank or Montreal\nt^UuteU.'i'Piutt^euti   ijp1\nBRANCHES In NELSON AND DISTRICT to serve you\nNelson llranch: I AMI-.:, II.  M.  UARNUM,  Manager\nKaslo (Sob-Agency): \\ '.Open Tueiday and Friday\nNew Denver (Sub-Agency):       Open Monday and Thursday\nCastlegar Branch: RICHARD ELLIOTT, Manager\nKimberley Branch: IAMES MUIRHEAD. Manager\nRossland Branft: E. F. BARNES. Manager\nTrail Branch: GORDON CAMPBELL. Manager\nl-'rnilvalc (Sub-Agency) i '     Open Friday\nWORKING    WITH    CANADIANS     I 11    EVERY    WALK\nYou will like reading out\nB of M booklet about\nPersonal Planning. It's\nwritten in a breety, To*\nformal style and generous,\nly illustrated with light,\ncheerful sketches.\nOF    LIFE    SIHCE    t 8 f7\nI\n m\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nAndrew's\nAnnual February\nSHOE SALE\nSpecial assortment..of\nPumps, Sandali and\nOxfords .   '\nValues to $12.00\nSale Price   $5.95\nValues to $10.95\nSale Price   $4.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nPleaders in footfashion\nEstablished 1902\nW. I., Slocan City,\nSends $10 to U.B.C.\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014\nThe regular meeting of the Women's Institute was held last week\nwith over twenty members in at-\n. tendance. After the roll call the\nminutes of the last meeting were\nread by the Secretary, Mrs. Marchi.\nThe new business to come before\nthe meeting was discussed, with\nMrs. F. Storgard in the chair. It\nwas decided to give $10 towards the\nfurnishing of a room at U.B.C. for\nW.I. delegates in the future. A do\nnation was maije for the Crippled\nChildren's Fund.\nPilot's Licence for\nPort Alberni Girl\nPORT ALBERNI, B.C., Feb. 15\n-(CP) \u2014 Twenty-six-year-old Lynn\nMorris is the first woman in the Alberni Valley to obtain an air pilot's\nlicence, after being the first woman\nin the district to fly solo. She took\nher tests last Fall and is licensed to\nfly' any aircraft under 4,000 pounds.\nMiss Morris is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. T. W. Morris of this city.\nMoyie\nMOYIE, B.C.-Mrs. Alice Guin\ndon of Moyie celebrated her 81st\nbirthday on January 30 and received many cards and gifts from\nfriends. Mrs. Guindon' is spending\nthe Winter months in Cranbrook.\nMrs. Clarke of Seattle, Wash., is\nvisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Saunders of Moyie.\nMrs. S. N. Tarbet left on Monday-\nfor Creston to visit friends and her\ndaughter Barbara, who is attending\nHigh School.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Saunders received word that their daughter\nMargaret, Mrs. F. Colluney, is the\nmother of a son, born Feb. 9,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Crossley of Kimberley, visited Mr. and Mrs, R.\nSaunder a week ago. While in town\nthey called on. Mr. and Mrs. W.\n\\\\ Andrews.\nB.C\/s Own CAKE MIX\nNelson\nSocial.\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 - B. Lowery of Fairview, who\nhas been in Kootenay Lake General Hospital for the past week,\nis reported slightly improved.\n\u2022 Robert Kelley, Johnstone\nApartments, Baker Street, is a patient in Kootenay Lake, General\nHospital, following an accident at\nhis work when his thumb was amputated. \u25a0\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. Lawrence,\nwho were married February 3 in\nWinnipeg, arrived a few days ago\nand have left for Vernon where\nMr. Lawrence has been transferred\nfrom the local Hudson's Bay store.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. T. Hunter, Kootenay\nStreet, entertained, members of the\nUkrainian circle at her home Wednesday night when the prizes were\nwon by Rev. Father Shewchuck,\nMrs. W. Kachluba and Mrs. Jerimko,\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Blazina, Granite Road,\nis a patient in Kootenay Lake Gen\neral Hospital.\n\u2022 William Dribit has returned\nto Browse after a few days visit\nwith his daughter, Miss Sophie\nDribit.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Callaway have taken up- residence on\nthe Granite Road.\n\u2022 Miss Mae McKinley, Terrace\nApartments, formerly of the Nelson\nPublic Health NurSes staff, left\nThursday to reside in Victoria.\nMUSIC EXAMS\nTAKEN IN NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B.C., Feb. 15 \u2014 Music\nexaminations were held in- the\nUnited Church School rooms with\nRev. B. S. S. Hartley presiding.\nPupils of Mrs. Angus and Mrs. S.\nMillwards took part,\nNo. 1 pupils were Miss Joan\nBrown for history and harmony\nand theory.\nNo. 2 Bernard Oxenham? Shirley\nOxenham and Rae La Rue.\nNo. 3 Lorna Aalton and June\nBrown.\nThe papers were sent to. Toronto\nCoservatory of Music for final results.\nNakusp \u2666..\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014John Olson Jr.\nand Miss Norma Funk have left for\nRevelstoke.\nMiss Shirley Rpbinson, P.H.N., attended the District meeting of\nnurses in Nelson.\nMrs. N. A. Herridge and Mrs. C.\nJansen, who spent several days in\nNelson, have returned,\nMrs. Ralph E. Rissor of Edmonton, who has been guest of her son\nand daughter-in-law for several\nweeks, has left, accompanied by\nMr. and Mrs. Rissor Jr., who will\nvisit her for several weeks in Edmonton.\nMrs. David E. Johnson, who has\nbeen guest of Mrs. W. Bishop of\nNelson for several days, returned\nto Nakusp.\nGordon Henke of Trail spent the\nweekend at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. H. -Henke.\nConstable E. G. Forrest of Nelson\nis in the Nakusp district relieving\nfor the resident constable, D. Pye,\nwho is on a two-week vacation.\nMr. and Mrs. W. G. M. Hakeman\nand Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Maxwell returned from an extended\nmotor trip to California, visiting en\nroute at Portland, San Francisco,\nLos Angeles, and Reno, Nev., making a trip of over 4000 miles.\nBROWNIES ENTERTAINED\nAT WILLOW POINT\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, .Feb. 15-\nBrownies and their mothers 'were\nentertained at the church room\nhere by Miss M. Learmonth, Brown\nOwl. ,\nEach Brownie received a Valentine and heart-shaped apron. Novel\nmenus provided amusement for the\nBrownies.\nFour of a Kind\n'\u25a0x'X               {:7\n.'\u25a0.'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n:                        j\nm\n:1\u00ab\nBf\n.. <:\"---:-v::-..   :':. ;   ::'\nR ***\n'\"'Ill\n7\u00a7L\n'f&wsm Bra \u25a0 \u25a0       '' *****\n|Br7---:'-:,......-\u25a0\n\/'--'\"\n'!   i\nhH\nll-\n\\\\\n'     '           I    '           Jatf'\nf      X\nif*\"-**'\nM     14\n|W ':-\nX  \u25a0 '.','\u25a0:\u25a0      -\n'    -'   ^ffi-fl      :--:          X        f.\nrlH\nH\n-::,77\/.:'i;\nliplllfii\nK\nWkw\nThis winsome foursome are children of Mr. and\nMrs. Julius O. Riesterer, 2t0 Robson Street. From\nleft to right tnev are: J\u00b0nn. 9 months; Catherine,\n22 months; Tommy, 2, and Julius, 4.\nMrs. Duff Again Heads\nWillow Point Quide Qroup\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, Feb. 15-\nMrs. C. G.- Duff was reelected President of the Willow Point local Girl\nGuide Association at its annual\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. John\nLearmonth.\nAlso reelected were Mrs. T. J.\nWhitelock, Vice President; Mrs.\nLearmonth, Secretary, and Mrs. M.\nCaunt, Treasurer. Mrs. H. Hankin is\nBadge Convener; Mrs. D. Crissall\nand Mrs. Kelly, entertainment; Mrs.\nC. Healey and Mrs. A.. M. Banks,\nboys' uniforms; Mrs. Whitelock and\nMrs. Riley, girls' uniforms.\nAn active year was reflected in\nreports of Mrs. Duff, Mrs. H. L.\nDahlquist, Guide Captain; Miss M.\nLearmonth, Brown Owl, on Brownies, and yearly reports from Scouts\nand Cubs.\nThe Association has 25 members\nand meets every second Monday in\nthe month.\nThe Secretary was instructed to\nsend for five cartons of cookies for\nCookie Week, April 21 to 28.\nMrs. Duff also told members of a\ntea Nelson Guides and Brownies\nhad held in Nelson in late January,\nto which Mrs. Banks, Mrs. R. Hay-\ncroft and Mrs. Duff.were delegates.\nSandwiches, Cakes Can Be\nStored in Empty Lockers\nBy KAY REX\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWAt Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 Let's\ntake a look at those half-empty\nfood lockers, and a second glance\nat the food budget.\nAt this time of year most of the\nvegetables and fruit stored last\nSummer have been consumed.\n\"Waste\" space is left.\nAnd we literally mean that. Waste.\nBecause that space costs money.\nLockers are paid for by the year\u2014\nso why leave them half empty?\nThis is one problem for which\nhome economists of the consumer\nsection, Dominion Department of\nAgriculture, are trying to find a\nsolution.\nAnd they've come up with some\nencouraging results,\nSandwiches can be kept frozen for\nmonths on end. Cakes also can\nbe frozen, coming, out as delicious\nas the day they were put in.\nThis news should be cheerful to\nthe ear of the housewife who must\ncount lunch-box packing among her\ndaily chores.\nIt means she can pack enough\nlunches  to  last  a month,  putting\nthem in the freezer until needed.\nBEST FILLINGS\nLeftover meat, fish and peanut-\nbutter are the best fillings for sand\nwiches which are to be frozen.\nLettuce, Tomatoes and hardcooked\neggs should be avoided as they do\nnot keep well. Mayonnaise should\nnot be used as a spre.-.d as it tends\nto make the bread soggy under\nfreezing. '\nCooked food to be frozen must\nbe wrapped carefully in moisture\nand vapor-proof paper.\nThe experts say bread also stands\nup well under freezing. In the near\nfuture they hope to look into the\npossibility of freezing such goodies\nas angel-cakes, cookies, rolls and\npies.\nSo far the results they have obtained are encouraging.\nQueen's Bay ...\nQUEEN'S BAY, B.C. \u2014 Albert\nMerz has returned to his home from\nVancouver, where he has been for\nthe past six weeks. Mr. Merz has\nbeen undergoing treatment,,, at.\nShaughnessy Hospital.\nMrs. Hirst found a large hawk\neating one of her bantam roosters.\nLUbkily she had heavy gloves on\nand managed to grab it, and put it\nin a sack. A neighbor shot it for\nher.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates-or)\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nFor Every Occasion...\nPRINTED\nSILK\nand\nNYLON\nDRESSES\nYou will be amazed with our\nwonderful selection of dresses.\nSmartly styled and moderately\npriced to fit your budget. See\nthese today.\n$9.95\nto\n$39.50\nRebekah Spring Apron Sale, Bake\nSale and Tea on Sat., April 28th.\nPythian    Sisters   Valentine   Tea\nand Bake Sale Sat., 17th, from 3-5.\nNew shipment of leather at\nTHE CRAFT CENTRE\nCribbage tonight, Eagles Hall, 8\np.m. Everybody welcom'e.\nELECTROLUX SALES - SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON 1108 OR 55S\nSURPLUS  STOCK  SALE\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices;\nWANTED - CLEAN   COTTON\nRAGS 12c PER LB.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow it away. Prompt service an\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save Iheir soles!\nTONY'S  REPAIR  SHOP\nFor stove and furnace work,\nphone Pounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 1541-L.\nWALLPAPER SALE\nMURPHY'S\n745  BAKER ST.\nValentine Tda and Bake Sale today. First-- Presbyterian Church,\n3:00 to 5:00 p.m.\n. -Beach cloth; sanforized fast color;\npastel shades; 89c yard, at\nSterling home furnishers\nKnit, Knit, Knit! \u2014 Everyone is\n-knitti'nfi.'witn Wool from the\n,'\u25a0'-' l   TQT,N-JEEN  SHOP      . ,-' -\n'\/I'l-if-'y;';,  :'\u201e'\/;\nRemembfer the\/Community Valentine Party a| Shirley Hall! SaU',\nFeb,  17th, at 7:30 p.m.\nit\n!-t-\nP.,T.A. VALE^TlNE DANCE AT\nPROCTER TONIGHT. FREE\nFERRY.    . '\nMOTORCYCLES\nTroubles? We may be able to help\nSAM BROWN, Repairs, Nelson, B.C\nDo you know someone in Hospital? Tell them you care by phoning 125 and ordering a Spring bouquet for them from VALENTINE'S.\nThe Women's Institute Tea, Sale\nof baking and sewing, Fri. Feb.\n16th, Civic Centre, W.I. Rooms, 3 to\n5 p.m. 25c. . \u00ab\nBear paw pattern snow shoes \u2014\nLocally made of finest quality material, Used and recommended by\ntrappers; $10.35 pair.\nHIPPERSON'S\nAttention Carpenters\nImportant    meeting    concerning\nnew wage agreement, Friday night,\n8 p.m., Legion Hall.\nOne only \u2014 Used 8-piece walnut\ndining room suite. Special, $149.50.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nPhone 1560 413 Hall St.\nThose improvements to your\nproperly\u2014are they covered by insurance? If not. see BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY today.\nMake your oven bright and clean\nwith    Oveno,    the   wonder   oven\ncleaner. Works while you sleep, no\nfuss or muss. Get a can today at\nHIPPERSON'S.\nSEW-RITE TAILORS\nLadies' made-to-measure suits.\nSee  bur new Spring samples.\nPhone 1526.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSPECIAL\nFIVE 8-OZ. TUMBLERS\n\u25a0      FOR ONLY 29c\nMe & Me (NELSON) LTD.\n>   .. FUNERAL NOTICE\n\u25a0 Funeral services for the late Mrs.\nAnnie Karchi will be held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home Saturday at 2 am. Rev. Ian M. Presley will officiate and interment will\nbe in Nelson Memorial Park.\n0ASAL llpu Ct\/M.\nyriwJan, WjoJditL\nEASY-SEW  FASHION\nJust look at this easy-sew dress!\nSo FEW pattern parts \u2014 NO shoul\nder seams. And fashion galore \u2014 see\nthe new standaway pockets, deep\nneckline, yokes!\nPattern 9399 comes in sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 takes 4\u00ab\nyards 35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives per\nfeet fit.\" Complete illustrated Sew\nChart show's - you every step.   \\\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(25c) in coins. (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this,' pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\nSTYLE NUMBER,\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMART\"IN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews Pattern Dept., Nelson.\nHvae you seen . . . The new sil\nhouette? The new Spring Suits!\nEnsembles? The new wrap-on? Order our new Marian Martin Pattern\nBook, read all about your beautiful\nSpring wardrobe. Send Twenty-five\ncents for your copy today! A FREE\npattern of a new Spring hat is\nprinted in book.\nSLOCAN CITY REBEKAHS\nINSTAL NEW OFFICERS\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Feb. 15\nMembers of Floral Rebekah Lodge\nNo.   15   met  in   the  I.O.O.F.   Hall\nTuesday night for installation ceremonies.\nDistrict Deputy President Mrs. V.\nPerkinson assisted by Depuly Marshal Miss M. Morrison installed the\nfollowing elected and appointed officers: Noble prand. Mrs. E. Howard\nVice Grand. Mrs, M. J. Derrig; Recording Secretary, Mrs. P. Cooper;\nTreasurer. Mrs. E. Rae;. Warden Mrs.\nA. Clough; Conductor Miss M. Morrison; R.S.N.G., Mrsr-E. Warner;\nL.S.N.G., Mrs. E. Storgard; R.S.V.G.,\nMrs. M.'McKay; L.S.V.G., Mrs. L.\nFife; Inside guardian Mrs. C. Russel;\nMusician, Mrs H, Merry; Chaplain,\nMrs. M. Boudier.\nUpon conclusion of these ceremonies the regular meeting was\nheld. This was followed by a social\ngathering with the Oddfellows and\nfriends. Canasta and other games\nwere played after which refreshments were served.\nThat Easter\nBonnet May\nBe Sensation\nPARIS, Feb. 15 (Reuters) \u2014 Milady's Easter bonnet this year\npromises to become the centre of\nattention in her Spring silhouette.\nReminiscent of grandfather's\nderby, great grandfather's tricorne\nor father's wartime forage cap, 1951\nhats promise a revolution in styles.\nThe newest ones, just shown\nhere in Paris, are worn straight'on\nthe head, titled slightly forward.\nCrowns are important, over tiny\nbrims. High-crowned hats, derby\ninspired, have rippling or scalloped\nbrims.\nContrasting color and fabric Is\nintroduced by means of facing or\ndouble brims.\nThe influence of Scotland shows\nin silk glen plaids used for sailor\nhats, while forage-inspired caps accompany many suits.\nThe most-talked-of hat, the star\nof Pierre Balmain's first separate\nmillinery collection, Is made of plywood. It is a tiny sailor shaped in\nplywood, edged in leaf-green gros-\ngrain and trimmed with a few tiny\nrosebuds.\nPicture hats, for the dressy occasion, have stepped right out of a\nGainsborough painting.\nMadame Paulette offers gay\nWest Indian turbans worn under\nlarge rough straw brims. The two\npieces form one hat but each may\nbe worn separately.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB. 16, 1951\nWill Provides for\nChild's Career\nTORONTO, Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014A\"six-\nyear-old Hamilton girl who befriended Frederick McGregor the\nlast six months of the retired contractor's life, will receive a university education, music lessons,\n$25 a month when she becomes 18,\nand an interest in the proceeds\nfrom the sale of his home.\nMr., Justice Ferguson yesterday\nupheld an interpretation of Mr.\nMcGregor's will benefitting June\nArmer, whose mother and Mrs. McGregor died within a few weeks\nof each other.\nIn his home-made will Mr. McGregor stated: \"I also leave extra\nmoney for her (June Armer) if\nneeded for special education to fit\nher for any profession she wishes\nto follow, musician, doctor. ... She\nhas the right to choose and to follow and demand what money she\nneeds to put her to the top.\"\nCanned Fruit\nIs Versatile\nBy MARGARET CARR\nCanned fruit, whether purchased\nfrom your grocer or preserved by\nyou last Summer, is one of the best\nthings there ever was to have at\nhand.\nWhen you plan to serve canned\nfruit as it comes from the jar or\ncan, your family will enjoy it more\nif the fruit is opened, poured into\nthe serving dish and allowed to\nchill in the refrigerator for a few\nhours before serving.\nWe Have a number of ways we\nlike to serve our \"preserves\" and\nthere follow recipes for some of\nour favorites.\nFRUIT DUFF\nGrease a baking dish or bowl,\nspread drained cherries or other\ncanned fruit in the bottom; sprinkle\nwith brown sugar and drop over\nthe fruit 2 teaspoons of lemon-juice\nthen cover with your favorite bak\ning powder biscuit dough, making\nthe dough a little softer than for\nbiscuits with the addition of a little\nmore liquid. Fit the dough closely\naruond the sides, cover with oiled\npaper and steam for one hour. Then\nlift out of the steamer, remove the\npaper brush over with butter and\nplace under the gas flame or elec\ntrie element of your oven to brown\nthe crust. Serve hot. Sauce is not\nnecessary, as the \"fruit and sugar\nusually form enough sauce for the\ndessert, but if desired, extra sauce\nmay be made from the drained-off\njuice, thickening it slightly with\ncornstarch, and adding to it a little\nmore sugar, a few drops of lemon\njuice and a teaspoonful of butter.\nFRU(T COBBLER\nPlace the fruit in the bottom of a\ngreased pudding dish, sprinkle with\nbrown sugar, dot with butter and\nadd a tablesp'oonful of the fruit\nsyrup to which one-half teaspoon of\nalmond extract has .been added.\nMake your favorite baking powder\nbiscuit dough and roll into an oblong one-quarter inch thick. Brush\nwith melted butter, sprinkle with\ncinnamori and sugar; roll up jelly-\nroll fashion;' cut in one-half inch\nslices, place the slices on^ the fruit,\nthen bake in a fairly hot oven (375\ndeg. F.) for about 35 minutes.\nTABLE CLOTHS\nSunshine Bay . \u2666.\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C\u2014Master\nJoseph Dosenberger was treated for\na cut head in Kootenay Lake General Hosiptal on Feb. 10.\nMr. Harvey Crate of Jasper, Alta.,\nis visiting Mr. and Mrs. Alec Maclean.\nWilliam Adam of Nelson spent\nthe weekend here.\nMiss Janice Fletcher\" Is visiting\nher grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.-J.\nSewell.\nMiss Claudia MacLean of Nelson\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. Nick Dosenberger last weekend.\nDonald Sicotte has moved to Riondel where he is employed.\nMrs. Bert Dunham and daughter\nJane of. Lytton are visiting Mrs.\nDunham's parents, Captain and Mrs.\nJames Ferguson.\nMrs. Vera Blakely and son George\nare- spending a few days in Trail.\nSirdar...\nSIRDAR, B. C. - Mrs. Louise\nHornseth, who has been visiting\nhere, has now left for Kimberley\nwhere she will be employed.\nL. V. Rehmann is spending a\nshort holiday visiting relatives In\nVancouver. l     ,   ,\nMrs. Hornseth and party and\nmusicians attended the dance at\nCrawford Bay Feb. 10.\nWynndel...\nWYNDEL, B.C. \u2014 Miss Shirley\nThompson, who has been visiting\nrelatives at San Francisco, has returned home.\nW. Standidge of Trail visited his\nfamily here.\nMiss Marie Hook of Colfax, Wash,\nvisited her mother and sister here.\nMr. and Mrs. Mclnnis were hosts\nto \"400\" Club last week, high scores\ngoing to Mrs. Thompson and W.\nCooper, -   *\nCommunity Club sponsored a\ncard party in the school house with\n13 tables in play. High score cards\nwere held by Mrs. A. E. Towson\nand C. Carlson. Consolation prizes\nwent to Miss R. Burton and M,\nHindley.\nThe early English Cathedral at\nWells, Somerset, is said to have the\nmost beautiful- West front of all\/\nEuropean cathedrals.\nRegular $4.5? .\nSALE $2.95\nRegular $2.95\nSALE $1.95\nAt\n3>\/mmjcm!L\nThe U. S. Supreme Court recently\nhad to decide if a corporation serving as \"Father of the Bride\" can\ndeduct some of the wedding c~ I\nas business expense.\nDESMOND    I\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. O  Patenaude\nPHONE 293        NELSON, B.C.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiimimiiiii\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nHandy\nCooking\nAid\nNow Vitamin D increased,\ncreamy-smooth Pacific Milk\nadds extra nourishment to\nfavorite recipes. Its uniform\ngoodness makes it ideal for\nbaking, cooking or beverages. And Pacific whips\neasily for party meals.\nPacific Milk\n\"Vacuum Packed and    \u25a0\nHomogenized\"\n'MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIMUUHHIlt\nUnion\nBUY A PACKAGE AT\nVOUR STORE TODAY\nSUGAR-CURED\nBACON\nTastes like\na million-\nJUST SWEET ENOUGH\nand so delicious I\nCanada's favorite\nprepared rice cereal by\nmore than 5 to 11 i\nLOVELY HATS\n.    In\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILAPY'i FASHION SHOPPE\nAfter all is said and done,\nhow does it taste in the\ncup? That is what counts!\nSALADA\"\nTEA BAGS\nyield the perfect flavour.\nIhtiffy.ioo!\nBARGAIN NOURISHMENT! Without cooking, without work I Plus extra servings,\nextra savings in the new big box!\n%afe-fcrrteelf...\n~?Op-\nStick\n\"RJeo Krlapien\" Is a registered trademark ot the Kellogg Company of Canada, Ud., for\ntta delicious brand of oven-popped rice. Copyright 1931 by Kellogg Co. ot Canada, Ltd.\n\u25a0BMBHB\n Established April 22, 1902 -\nBritish Columbia's\nMostjnterestlng Newspaper'\nI' Published every morning except Sunday by the\nI {JEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n1 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as. Second Class Mail\nPost Office Department,  Ottawa\nI i MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\n\"  FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1951~\nArt Wallace's Interest\nIn Youth Brought\nStudent 'Spiel to Nelson\nThey're starting to call him \"Pop\"\nE Wallace- around the curling rinks, and\n|-for T. A. (Art) Wallace there must be\n;'a particular satisfaction in the nick-\nI name. We have known other men who\nhave, after years of work for and with\nyoungsters, earned the tag, and always\nit has been a badge that combined\nrespect and affection. We are probably\nnot going too far to suggest that the\nsobriquet is additionally apt in this\ncase because Art Wallace, without a\ndoubt, is the father of student curling\nin British Columbia.\nNow the hard-working sportsman's\nbig day is near at hand. And it's an\nequally big day for Mrs. Wallace, incidentally, and for all Nelson. The Canadian High Schools Curling Bonspiel is\nonly three days away.\nNelson has been the curling capital\nof B. C. already this season, and will\nin the Summer, of course, again stage\nits famed Midsummer Bonspiel and\nCanadian Summer curling championship. But right now it's concerning itself with being the kid curling capital\nand for all of Canada. It's a job we'\ncould be proud of for its association\n.', with healthful things for youth alone,\nbut we can be additionally proud because, through Pop Wallace, the Kootenay has been represented in the van\nof those who worked for the organization of a benefitting sports movement\non a national scale.\nCertainly, there have been others\nto help, but let's put our share of the\nglory right where it belongs, and that\non Art Wallace's shoulders. There are\nnone among those who are interested\nin youngsters' sport and the investing\nof a healthful, competitive spirit in\nyouth but can remember seeing Art\nWallace at the park encouraging young\nswimmers, at the Recreation Grounds\ncheering on track and field teams and\nball nines, in the arena coaching boxla\nteams or on the ice with his Maple\nBuds\u2014the tiniest but most spirited\ncrew to don skates and hockey gear. In\nall things Wallace's kids were instilled\nwith a spirit of keenness and competition. We can remember, perhaps, as\nwell as any of these things, when Art\nWallace entered a rink of youngsters,\npractically, in the Provincial Bonspiel,\nand the mild stir aroused when his\n. kids showed up in the Little Bonspiel.\nThat was the start. Next came Saturday High School curling, and then the\nProvincial Student Bonspiel.\nIt is no exaggeration to say that\nNelson has been honored with the\nchoice as host city for the national\nstudent championship because of Art\nWallace's hand in the founding of the\nsport on its present scale. Mr. and Mrs.\n^Wallace have had a part in establishing a sport on a national scale, just as\nsurely as they have done Nelson and\ntheir home-district kids a lasting favor.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a norri\nde plume, but the actual name ot the\nwriter must bo given to the Editor is\nevidence of good faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In the waite paper basket.\nTakes Stand for Better\nDeal for Indians\nTo the Editor: \u2022\nSir\u2014I would like to express my appreciation and approval of your editorial championing a new deal for the Canadian native Indian.\nBefore retirement, I worked for a period\namong the Indians, and know from first hand\nthat the Indian is .capable of a greater contribution if glv.eh the opportunity.\nEAST KOOTENAIAN.\nAtom \"Games\" on God's Day\nTo the Editor;\nSir\u2014I was pleased to read the statement\nin the Nelson Daily Newl letter to the Editor\nFeb. 8, from members of the Nelson Ministerial Association and Christian leaders of\nthe community. I am glad that your clergymen answered the S.O.S., not meant for sail- \u2022\nors only, but for Christianity and Christians.'\nAs we go down to the oceans as Christians crying S.O.S., lt means save our soul,\nbut no answer comes from our clergy. As you\nclergymen stated in your letter,. \"In these\nrather grave and perilous days we view with\nalarm the ever-increasing amount of sporting\nactivity that is taking^place on Sunday\nthroughout tlie year\/   \/ ![<':\u25a0\u25a0>,\n\"It is not only ;et- yibl'dtir^.pf the, Christian\nconscience, but a menace to Cn,risitlB;ha),;effort8\nwhich try to uphold the standard'of'oiir Cb,ris-.\ntian democratic way of life.\"' [ -M- :.\";\nBut clergypen and we Christians ate failr' j\ning to mention many more important igarnes' ;\nthat are playing in the Christian era, and, ori\nGod's Day. t'il^e in Nevada, U.S.A., and d,urr!\ning the 'last week pf January, ,1951, and Vthe-\nfirst week of February,, whaf, tttey s\u00abaii atony,\nbomb practice. Isn't it-VioMtirig to Christiaii-\nity?  As blasts went out,  panic struck the\npeople. As they heard blasts animals were\nfrightened to death, windows blown up like\nballoons, then fell to pieces, radiation spread\nover the earth. Does it make us healthy? Is it\nthe Christian way? Will a barbell or basketball shake our windows or our bodies to pieces\nas the atom bomb?\nWake up, Christians! We are sinking.\nWake up, clergy, and go to strange lands to\nmeet and teach people regardless of their\nrace, creed, color and nationality. There are\nsix of- you signed on your letter, and the other\nsix are missing. You have St. Peter's key to\nChristianity; nobody else has it yet. Only the\nclergy. No dictator has it yet; just you. Go\nahead and save our souls.\n\u25a0   CHRISTIAN.\nNew Denver, B. C.\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader, Names of panoni\nliking questions will not ba published.\nThere li no ohargo for this tervlba, ,\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL oxoont whom thoro It obvloui\nnecessity for prlvaoy.\nGardener, Neleon\u2014Is there a quick way to\ndestroy large weeds In a lawn?\nCut them down to ground level, and pour\na few drops of coal oil on the crowns, They\nimmediately commence to decay, and are entirely destroyed, There are of course many\ncommercial weed-killers on the market.\nAdult, Creston\u2014Cart you give, me a recipe for\nbrandy mint julep?\nBrandy, one wineglass; sugar, one lump;\nfresh mint, one or two small springs; orange,\none thin slice; crushed ice, Put lump sugar\ninto glass ahd dissolve in few drop's of cold\nwater, add brandy, mint and a little crushed\nice. On top place a small piece of orange and\na small piece of pineapple, and serve.\nCurious, Kimberley\u2014What Is the origin of the\nword \"jingo\"?\n\"By Jingo\" was originally employed as a\nmild oath and appears to have become common after Motteux translated the phrase \"par\nDieu\" as \"by jingo\" in an edition of Rabelais.\nThe Oxford Dictionary supposes the word to\nhave been \"a piece of conjuror's gibberish\".\nF. K., Nelson\u2014To settle an argument, did Jack\nJohnson die as the result of Injuries received in the ring?\nNo, Jack Johnson was killed In an automo-\n, b|le accident^:1 .'\u25a0'.-.\n-Verse\nThe Waltz Sonnet\nOh thank Thee, God, for those immortal minds\nOf music which- will never, never die;\nMajestic movement of meandering lines,\nAscending softly, sweetly in the sky.\nThey who have their cherlsh'd strings\nOf waltzes graceful as the feather'd flight,\nRomantic as the  Springtime sparrows ,s}ng.-\/\nTheir dreamy tones amid a morning fiUJ\nEnchanting to a pair of glowing hearts\"\nAre  waltzes,  as  they  flow  throughout  the\nnight; !'\nSo noble, truest ih the beauteous arts,\nSo towering over anything that's trite.\nSq be there any who would disapprove,\nThen they their waltzes never did .Improve.\nLINES\nSalty depts, thy Western waves are heaving,\nLashing lisping winds of April's being.\nMisty mountains void' of frost so early\nFragrance of the Spring is come so clearly.\nHidden fibres, waiting Ceres' glance,\nHeralding the drowsy pigments dance.\n\u2014W. D. TURNBULL.\nPenticton, B. C.\nYour Horoscope\nUnexpected good fortune may be yours in\nthe next months, and your fears and forebodings are likely to prove groundless. Success\nmay be looked for by the child born under\nthese aspects.\nIt's Been Said\nYou read of but one wise man,, and all\nthat he knew, was\u2014that he knew nothing.\n\u2014William Congreve.\nr i| 'Making Backward\n, I1 I\\ \\x ; \u25a0 10 EARS AGO\n^,,;',%W'pie: Dally News of Feb. 16, 1941\n' \" Fbr,ty-fpur curling rinks from Cranbrook,\nCreston, Trail, Rossjartd, Salmo Valley, Kaslo,\nSlocan City, West Arm, Grand Forks and Nelson will be seen on the Nelson curling lanes\nthis morning for the- opening rounds of the\nannual Little Bonspiel, *G. W. Dill will be\nChairman of the Bonspiel, while Charlie\nBlunt will take over the secretarial duties.\nThe Frank Putnam Cup, won by the J. J. McEwen rink of Nelson last year, this year will\ngo to the primary winner.\nW. G. C. Lanskail, SecretaryrTreasurer, of\nthe Nelson Board of Trade, leaves this morning for Vancouver to attend a meeting of the\nB. C. Tourist Council.\n25 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom TheDally News of Feb, 16, 1926\nConstable H. W. King of the Provincial\nPolice staff, who is leaving for a 'new post at\nGolden, yesterday was presented with a club\nbag from the staff of the Court House. John\nCartmel, Government Agent, made the presentation on behalf of the staffs represented.\nConstable King will succeed Staff Sergeant\nSutherland at Gold,en.\nMiss Adelene Atkinson. of Rossland is\nspending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. C. W.\nGagnon.\n. 40 YEAR8 AGO     .-.-.''\nFrom The Dally News of Feb. 16, 1911\nV'-'yM. S. Middleton, Ben Hoy-and'J. F. Car-\npenteiJi'\/.AssIstant Horticulturists, left by the\nKokanee'uj^sterday for Kaslo, where they will\nopen a sho^t course in horticulture.\nG.'S. Keeiof the C.P.R. plans to leave next\nweek on.a.iSfip^to England. He proposes to return horrieiyla-'tjie Suez Canal route and Australia. V;fc.\" '   \"'*\u25a0\u2022\u00bb\n0-V,\nSinclair Lewis\nCharlie Crandall, once Managing Editor\nof The Montreal Star, referring to the death\nof Sinclair Lewis, tells of an evening spent\nwith the creator of \"Main Street\" in a Spanish\nrestaurant on Swallow Street in London. Herb\nBailey, of the British United Press, and Hank\nWales,.of the Chicago Tribune, were there\ntoo, and the latter held the stop-watch' in an\nunusual wager.\nLewis bet Crandall that in four minutes he\ncould write a sonnet fitted around any 14 line-\nending, rhyming words the Canadian editor\ncared to jot down. Crandall. wrote down 14\nwords which rhymed but were absolutely\nmeaningless. And he lost the bet. Says Crandall, \"I still have in my files at home the\nsonnet Lewis wrote. It was perfect in rhythm,\nhad a definite meaning from first to last, and\nwas quite printable.\"\u2014Napier Moore In The\nFinancial Post.\nThey'll Po It Every Time\n\u25a0 \u25a0gallf* \u00bb t New oat\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nToday's Bible Thought\nThe world Is not going to ruin,\nGod's plan will triumph In the end,\nt jt Ii dihkeit .before .the dawn.\u2014Let\ninotiiyour \u2022hfeart.be troubled,\n\u2014John 14:1.\ndunt dfat\nA swefct-natured man.'' needs a\nwife who' is' a real angel. That's\nthe only, kind that won't be tempted-\nto impose on him.  ,'\u25a0',!,.-.'\nProm an\nOldtimerfs\nNotebook\n\" by R. G.JOY \"\"\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\nEditor's.note: This is a third in-\nstallment in the story of Martin\nFry, Kootenay pioneer, by R, 0,\nJoy, Historian of the Nelson District Oldtimers Association),\nThe Winter 1876 was put In by\nMartin Fry trading with the Indians. Their only product for barter-\nwas furs, but they brought In lots\nof these, . \u2022\nThere were no wagon roads In the\ncountry only a pack train trail lead-\nIng from Sandpolnt on the Pend\nd'Orellle to the Wild Horse mine In\nB.C,, 100 miles North of Bonnera\nFerry, where Fort Steele now is,\nThe only mall they had the Winter\nthrough was brought from Victoria,\nB.C. once a month, The postman\nbrought the mail on a pack horse\nover the mountains by the Dewdney\nTrail through Colville and Pend\nd'Orellle to Sandpolnt,\nHe always stopped at the trading post which, of coune wai a\ngreat event. When the snow got\ntoo deep for the homos, tho mall-\nman took to snowshoei. The post-\n- man's-name wai Brady. Hli-only\ncompanion wai a good big mongrel dog.'\nDick Fry had an old friend at Fort\nSteel, who was taken very sick and\non his death bed he bequeathed his\nfine bulldog to the Frys. This dog\nlived at the post, but Brady's dog\ncame In and utterly routed him.\nThere was an old Indian mask at\nthe store and the next time that\nBrady appeared Martin carefully\ntied this mask over the bulldog's\nhead. The effect was terrifying\u2014\nin fact so bad that poor Brady's\ndog .left In a wild panic and could\nnot be induced to come back to the\nstore.\nGAME PLENTIFUL\nGame was wonderfully-plentiful.\nUntil the river and the swamps\nfroze up. The place'was alive with\nducks, geese and now and then\nswans. The Indians brought in marten, bear, lynx, muskrat, fisher,\ncougar, mink and otter.\nIn the Spring, Dick and Martin\nwith one half-breed and one Kootenay Indian took out the1 furs by\npack train. They had about 10\nhorses and went by the Dewdney\nTrail to Hope and on down to New\nWestminster. There they left the\npack train apd help and took the\nfurs by steamer to Victoria. Two\nfur dealers bid. on the furs and\nthey were sold at auction at a very\nsatisfactory price.\nWith the proceeds of the furs the\nFrys bought goods for \u2022the next\nWinter's trade. They bonded the\nVictoria goods through Idaho and\nback into British Columbia at Port\nHill. The idea of having the two\nstores, one on each side of the line,\nwas to control the whole fur trade\nof that part of the country.\nFAMILY MOVES\nDick Fry took the pack train back\nMartin went by steamer to Shoalwater Bay where his family welcomed him. After quickly settling\nup their affairs, selling their oyster\nboat etc., Martin and family took\nthe Verona for Astoria at the mouth\nof the Columbia River, from there\nby steamer to Wallalula, near Walla\nWalla, and there transfered to Baker's Narrow gauge road for Walla\nWalla where they met Dick's freight\nteam. This freight team had been\nhired to haul the goods that they\nhad purchased at Walla Walla-for\nthe Bonners Ferry store.\nThe youngest Fry boy, Freddy\nLee, was two years old. The road\nonly went to Semneacquoteen from\nthere the goods, Mrs. Fry and Freddy were taken to Bonners Ferry\nby the pack train.      .,   .\nThe Fry family settled down hap\npily though there were no white\nneighbors. There was another good\nWinter's trade in furs and next\nSpring Dick went off to sell the\nfurs leaving Martin in charge.\n(To Be Continued)\nAbsent Tse-Tung\nRouses Rumors\nBY FRED HAMPSON\nHONG KONG, Feb, 15 (AP) -\nObservers Of the China scene began\nto express curiosity today about the\nwhereabouts of Mao Tse-Tung,\nCommunist Chinese leader.\nThey nottd he had failed to appear at three Important functions in\nthe last tew days.\nReports In this strategic vantage\n>olnt Mi last month that Mao had\ngone or was going to Moscow to\noonfer with Stalin on the Koroan\nwar and other Asiatic developments.\nMao's last known public appearance in Peiping was-Jan, 86, when\nhe attended the celebration of Indian National Day,\nThe huge-Chinese-sponsored celebration of the first anniversary of\nthe Chinese-Soviet treaty signing\nwas held Wednesday in Peiping.\nNearly all the Chinese Communist\ngovernment and party leaders were\nreported there, along with all foreign diplomats. But not Mao,\n. Two hours earlier, RusBlan Ambassador N, V. Roshohin gave a\ncocktail party at the Russian embassy. Reports listed Chinese Red government and party leaders there up\nto Premier Chou En-Lal and Gen.\nChu Teh, the Red's Army Commander. But not Mao.\nCommunist propaganda describing these events did not mention the\nabsence of the Reds' No. 1, but his\nname was glaringly missing from\nthe lists,\nMao does not always attend such\nfunctions. But it was intriguing that\nho did not appear at any of the\nChinese-Soviet treaty celebrations,\nwhich received top billing op the\nCommunists' political-social sched-\nude for the week.\nMOSCOW, Feb. 15 (AP)\u2014Deputy\nPremier V. M. Molotov headed a\nbig group of distinguished Russian\nleaders at a reception given by the\nChinese Embassy last night to mark\nthe first anniversary of the Soviet-\nChinese treaty.\nMolotov led a toast to the Chinese\narmy and the Soviet army and to\nMao Tze-tung, head of the Central\nPeople's Government of the People's Republic of China, and Chu\nTeh, Mao's army commander-in-\nchief.\nForeign Minister Andrei Y. Vlsh-\ninsky led a toast to the \"Korean\npeople's liberation army\" and all\ncountries \"following in the historic\npath which has bean pointed out\nby the U.S.S.R.,\" Sovi,et Press accounts said today.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Bowlers in London's Walthamstow District must\nhave strong arms. Authorities have\nasked the local bowling club to\ntry to reduce the risk of accidents\nto passersby from bowls which roll\noff the green.\nCivil Defence Area\nFor Lake Cowichan\nLAKE COWICHAN, B.C, Feb. 15\n(CP) \u2014 Formation of a Civil Defence Committee in this area has\nbeen started following a meeting of\nLake Cowichan Legion groups and\nthe village council. A committee of\ntwo village commissioners and one\ndelegate each from Canadian Legion Branch 210 end the Ladies'\nAuxiliary to the Legion will draw\nup plans for the organisation.\nPORT ALBERNI W.L.A.\nASKS LICENCE CHANGE\nPORT ALBERNI, B.C., Feb. 15\n(CP) \u2014 James Mowat, M.L.A.-A1-\nberni, will be requested to place before authorities in Victoria a resolution passed by the Port Alberni\nWomen's Liberal Association, asking that the act requiring drivers to\npay five years' licence fee in advance be amended.\ni British   confidence'1,, was,. : never '\npetter showfpiin,the.fact.that.stamps\nSfr^m thereiare the only ones in. the\nworld which do not carry the nanle\nof the country. -         |\nWlwn Mcmtve imokfig-, a cold er\nbrondilHa glvci yew i hacking cough,\nfeat try tuckli\/a MI\u00abtw*., A tow alpa af\nDili tlitierml romody brln'ga quick, ease-\nfarting relief from coughing\u2014clean your\nhead\u2014eaaea breathing. Buckley'a Mixture contain! toothing CARRAGEEN to\nraolilcn ond lubricate dry, Irritated throat\nmombranea ond atop the tickle that keepi\nyou coughing. Get your bottle today\nfor relief right away. .\nOVHJJMILLION BOTRDS tOlllt     Ml\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nHopalongKim\nBuok-toothed Kim Jno Min (oentre) proudly wears hit oowbby\nboots ai he and fellow Korean orphani devour a comlo book at Fifth\nAir Force Orphanage on Cheju Island, off the 8outh Korean ooait.\nThey are among 1000 orphans airlifted from Seoul, The booti were a\ngift from Mn, John Samford of Birmingham, Ala U.S. Air Force\nphoto via AP Wlrephoto,-\n(dunlries Confer On Pooling Plan\nBy CARTER L. DAVID80N\nPARIS, Feb. 15 (AP)-Represen-\ntatives of five European governments\u2014including West-Germany-\nconferred here today on a French-\nsponsored plan for pooling men,\nguns, ships and planes In one big\nEuropean army. ,\nThe first assignment for such a\nforce would be to make its armed\nstrength\" available to Gen. Eisenhower's Atlantic alliance .command.\nSo far individual countries have\npledged Eisenhower only about a\ndozen divisions.\nThe countries represented at the\nconference in addition to France\nand West Germany are Italy, Belgium and Luxembourg. Fjve other\npowers invited to join in the plan\n\u2014Britain, Norway, Denmark, The\nNetherlands and Portugal\u2014agreed\nonly to send observers. Canada and\nthe United States also will have\nobservers on hand.   \u25a0\nSuccess or failure of the French\nplan  may depend  on  the  British\nThe first underground railway in\nthe world opened in London, England, Is 1B63, with steam engines\niiunning four miles.\nattitude. Precedent does not Indicate that Britain's Labor Government will be enthusiastic, It has\nbeen cool toward the Schuman\ncoal-steel pooling plan and kindred\nsteps toward federalization ot\nEurope.\nDiscovers Home\nSkin Remedy\nThis clean stainless antiseptic:\nknown all over Canada as Moone'i\nEmerald Oil, is such a fine healing\nagent that Eczema, Barber's Itch,\nSalt Hheu'm, Itching Toes and Feet,\nand other inflammatory skin eruptions are often relieved in a few\ndays.\nMoone's Emerald Oil is pleasant\nto use and it is so antiseptic and\npenetrating that many old stubborn\ncases of long standing have yielded   I\nto its influence.\nMoone's Emerald Oil Is sold by\ndruggists everywhere to help rid\nyou of stubborn pimples and unsightly skin troubles \u2014 satisfaction\nor money back.\nMANN'S DRUG STORE\nIF Y0URE A MOTORIST.\nAs a B.C. motorist you are paying too rauch to drive\nyour car. You pay lOo Provincial Tax on every gallon\nof gas as well as Federal Sales ,Tax . . . you pay 3%\nSales Tax ori new and used cars . . * you pay the'\nhighest registration fee In Canada. You pay for\nexamination of jour driving ability and a semi'-\nannual car checkup fee!\nAnd your car license? Wouldn't $5.00 be plenty for a\nfour cylinder car . . . $10.00 ample for the average\nsize car\u2014instead of the exorbitant price you pay now?\nOn top of all these overburdening taxes, your government In Victoria is collecting drivers' license fees\nFIVE YEARS IN ADVANCE . . . $5.00 more out of\nyour pocket! Sure, taxes are necessary\u2014but should\nthey be gained by overtaxing you, the motorist? What\ncan be done? Individually, nothing\u2014but collectively\na great deal, Your Automobile Association is the\nonly effective voice working on behalf of the motorist.\nFill in and mail to your local member\nof the Provincial Government\nI believe B.C. taxes bn automobiles\nand motorists are ^nmpIrlHy out of\nline, and that actum'should be (alien\nnow to secure relief from the present\nadministration's tax policy,\nNAME , -^fc\t\nADDRESS Liii\t\nBRITISH COLUMBIA AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION\nHeadquarter 596 Weil Gcoiglo St., Vancouver, B.C.\n SPORTS\nI       BY CLIVE 'FLEMING\nThere will be no rest for Eddio\nWares' wandering Maple Leafs.\nThey start another W.I.H.L, series,\nthree games in as many nights,\nafter just arriving home from a\nsuccessful Coast jaunt, batting .500.\nThe travel-weary locals just left\ntho train at 10 o'clock Thursday\nnight, but they'll be out to play\nthe Kimberley Dynamiters here tonight, before playing a weekend\npair in Spokane,\nNot that a two-win record on the\nroad is anything to hide under a\nbushel, but it was only the breaks\nthat stopped Nelson from coming\nhome with. a better show. I have\nalready mentioned in a previous\ncolumn the break that gave Nanaimo Clippers their 6-5 overtime win,\nbut the breaks were really tough\nfor Nelson around Dinny McManus\nin the final game of the tour at\nllanaimo. In the. first period the\ntired locals should have piled up a\nlead, and at one time when Nelson\nwas all over the Clippers, Eddie\nWares hit the crossbar from close\nin, when he had pulled the little\nIrishman in the Clipper nets, to the\nice. However, that's the way the\ngame goes.\nEddie Wares was playing much\nbetter on the Leaf defence. Johnny\nHarms is still improving greatly on\nthe front line and Neil McClenaghan is also playing better hockey.\nNow that the scribbler has seen\nNanaimo three times, he can't see\nlow the Clippers will get past\nKamloops or Kelowna to represent\nfhe M.O.A.H.L. in the Allan Cup\nchase. Eddie Shamlock has a lot of\ngood players, but if a few of the\nThis advertisement is not published oi\ni displayed by the Liquor Control Board oi\n1 by ,ui Government ol British ColumbU\nlackadaisical stars would buck up\nIn the playoffs, Scotty Milne's ciew\ncould knock off the'Clippers come\nplayoff time.\nPlayers were bothered by smoke\nin both the Kerrisdale and Nanaimo rinks, a trouble which has been\nfound in the Cominco arena too,\nbut to make things even worse,\nthere was cold water ' in the\nshowers.\nExcept that the Leafs are leg\nweary and tired, they came out of\nthe series in fair shape, with no\nreally serious injuries. There are\njust a couple of bruises and stiff\nlimbs.\nIt will be the last appearance\nof the kimberley Dynamlter6\nhere before the playoffs when\nthe same clubs pair off In the\nW.I.H.L. semis. Sully Sullivan\nwill most likely be out of action\ntonight. It Isn't known whether\nhe will be ready for the playoffs or not.\nThe five Nelson players (Ernie\nGare, George Barefoot, Bill Haldane, Johnny Harms and Red\nKoehle) who were picked to play\non the- all-star team which meets\nSpokane Tuesday, aren't overanxious to play in the \"classic.\" In\nthe remaining 10 days of the\nW.I.H.L. schedule, Nelson already\nhas six games, with only a day\nrest before the playoffs. It's easy\nto imagine how much they relish\nthe exhibition match.\nSports Eye got in on a little chat\nbetween B.C.A.H.A. President,\nGerry Thomson and C.A.H.A. bigwig Doug Grimston, who maintained that Kerrisdale could not use\nHerb Lovett in the playoffs. Al Pi-\ncard of the Saskatchewan branch\nrefused a couple of clubs in that\nregion the use of Lovett, recently\nreleased by Saskatoon Quakers,\nand now Grimston was saying unofficially that the Monarchs could\nnot usj2 Lovett in the playoffs.\n(There was a new clause injected\nin the C.A.H.A; constitution this\nseason whereby' players could be\nregistered  'til  February  10.)\nA notice had been sent to the\nvarious clubs that they could ink\nreleased pucksters 'til the tenth.\nThose players would naturally include players from pro ranks, as\nwell as from senior and major circuits.\nThis reporter was not positive of\nthe details of that clause, whether\nthe players had to be registered in\nthe provincial branch by that date,\nor in Toronto, as Grimston thought.\nTn any case, if Lovett is not eligible\nto play for the Monarchs, it isn't\nlikely that Stan Jones, another]\nQuaker castoff who was picked up\nby Vernon, will be eligible. Other\nlate minute roster changes included\nJohnny Ursaki going from Kamloops to Vernon, Alex Watt to Vernon Canadians frbm Nanaimo, Hod\nBooth going home to .Prince Albert\nfrom Vernon, and Lou Holmes supposedly going to. Kerrisdale from\nCanadians. Reinstated pros Busher\nJackson and Kevin Conway had\nbeen picked up by Nanaimo.\nKamloops' protest of the Nanaimo 7-1 triumph, was based on the\nClippers' use of Kevin Conway, an\nunre\/nstated pro. Apparently Busher Jackson, who. was used in the\nprevious Nanaimo win over Kerrisdale, was eligible,  ft,\nQuakers Edge\nFlyers 5-4\nIn Rough Game\nSASKATOON, Feb, 15 (CP) -\nSaskatoon Quakers tonight eked\nbut a 5-4 victory over the second-\nplace Edmonton Flyers in a Western Canada Senior Hockey League'\ngame here.\nThe game had no effect on the\nteam standing. Calgary Stampeders\nare In first place with 01 points and\nEdmonton is two points back. Saskatoon holds down third spot with\n45 and Regina Caps trail with 27.\nBill   Ramsden,  with   two,   Cy\nRouse,   Bob   Wlest   and   George\nSenick scored for Saskatoon. Edmonton   marksmen   were   Steve\nWltluk, AlexPrlngle, Ray Barry\nand Roy Hexlmer.\nFifteen penalties\u2014including four\nmajors and one misconduct\u2014were\nhanded out in the rugged encounter\n-played before 4500 fans.\nA free-for-all broke out in the\nsecond period. The referees broke\nit up after five minutes and Flyer's\nWitiuk and Kilburn and Quakers'\nLarry Zeldel were given major penalties for fighting. Saskatoon's Senick got a major and an additional\ntwo - minute    penalty   for   crosschecking.\nPenalties were heavy in the third\nperiod. There were six men in the\npenalty box with a minute to play.\nQuaker's Bill HCindl was given a\nmisconduct for arguing.\nTrail Bowling\nSugar Ray Eyes\nMaxim's Crown\nCHICAGO, Feb. 15 (AP) -\nMiddleweight Champion Bay Robinson set his sights on Joey Maxim's\nlightheavyweight crown today, still\nclaiming the welter crown.\n\"Sure We'd like to fight Maxim,\"\nI said George Gainford, Ray's manager. \"It's the big money match.\nWe've been after him for a year.\nEven got a $75,000 guarantee for\nMaxim from Bil Kyne in San Francisco. Positively! there's a chance of\nour fighting Maxim this Summer.'\nGainford was equally positive a-\nbout Robinson'swelter title claims.\n\"It's up to us to give it up,\" he\nsaid. Robinson however, added he'd\n\"rather not\" fight a- a welter but\nwould try If \"my manager wants me\nto.\"\nIt's an academic question because\nboth the New York and Illinois\nAthletic Commissions insist he-automatically yielded up the 147-pound\ncrown when his hand, was lifted as\nwinner over Jake Lamotta in the\n13th round Wednesday night at Chicago stadium.  '     ,\nLamotta, the badly-battered and\nbeaten bull of the Bronx, also was\nIn line for. Maxim.\nAl Weill, I.B.C. matchmaker, Indicated a Lamotta-lttaxlm fight Is\nIn the works, He also talked of\nBob Sattersfield aa an opponent\nfor Jake.\nNobody Is talking about a La-\nmotta-Robinson rematch.\nGainford claims the return bout\ncontract calling for a seventh La-\nmotta-Robinson bout in June on a\n30-30-per-cent split is \"an outside\ncontract you can throw in the\nashcan.\"\nRobinson got 15 per cent plus\n$1500 television money or a total\nof $21,873,31, the \"official audit of\nthe Wednesday night fight revealed today. Jake's 45 per cent\nTV cut came to $62,611.93. The\nrevised gross gate was $186,866.05.\nThere was a slight swelling of\nRobinson's left hand and a lump\nnear his left eye today.\n\"I won't fight until I get feeling\ngood,\" he said. \"You know that was\nrather strenuous last nighty\nLamotta, carrying a huge lump\nunder his left eye and a smaller\nbump under the right, was proud\nof his stout defence.\nT hear. I was dead,\" he said without expression. \"I been right here\nin this room ail the time. Take\nI more than that guy to send me to\n'the hospital.\"\nNASSAU, Bahamas, Feb. 15 (AP)\n\u2014Harvey Conover's Revonoc today\nwas named winner of the 13th annual Miami to Nassau sail yacht\nrace in the corrected time of 26\nhours, 30 minutes. 17 seconds.\nLadles Senior League\nHigh single \u2014. I. Bilesky, 263.,\nHigh aggregate \u2014 I. Bilesky, 669.\nHigh team\u2014Aatoms 2723.\nScores follow:\nATOMS\u2014B. Leamon 544, M. Love-\nstone 574, M. Thompson 467, I. Bilesky 669, M. McGilvarey 469. Total\n2723\nMAPLE LEAFS-V. Cox 510, H.\nLamouraux 365, A. Birch 536,1. Martin 575, N. Caputo 542. Total 2528.\nNURSES NO. 1 \u2014 Walkes 371,\nHornett 460, Kay 276, Brown 465,\nspot 102. Total 1674.\nEAST TRAIL - Milburn 654,\nFairley 378, Mineer 432, Makoiu-\nchuk 457, Mohowk 371. Total 2192.\nWHIZZBANGS \u2014 F. Heslop 469,\nB. Maripodi 328, D. Pennie 601, E.i\nAllen 540. T. Murdoch 449, spot 100.1\nTotal 2495. i'J\nCROWN POINT - A. Spowart\n430, D. St. Marie 482, H. Langille\n355, E. Innes 478, H. Archibald 477.\nTotal 2222.\nNOVICES \u2014 L. King 367, B. Lea\n262, M. Slevin 319, T. Parson 432,\nT. Doig 430, spot 408. Total 2218.\nLUCKY STRIKES \u2014 Queenie 392.\nVi Page 295, L. Jarrett 467, Jeanette\n\"'16.  Total  1550.\nCITY \u2014 Tavaroli 386, Secco 450,\nConzan 434, Lenarduzzi 529, Pisa-\npio 301; spot 147. Total 2307.\nNURSES No. 2 \u2014 'Renetta 408,\nTaylor 508, Burwash 310, Mallard\n428, Catalano 487, spot 141. Total\n2282\nGREMLINS - M: Milne 433, L.\nCasey 455, L. Wightman 413, H.\nMiscisco 683, M. Cronie 690. Total\nRangers Take Over Third Place in\nBeating Hawks; Leafs, Canadiens Tie\nBy The Canadian Press\nINKSPOTS \u2014 I. Kendrick 483,\nB. Farresh 393, G. Jenki. 438, D.\nRoss 340, R. Sherlock 265, spot 306.\nTotal 2225\nLIONS \u2014 B. Rhodes 482, L. Lyon\n470, S. Lyon 419. M. Richardson\n565, B. Ross 550. Total 2486.\nSPITFIRES- \u2014 J. Letchetr 559, P.\nReid 458, C. MacDonald 430, M.\nFletcher 571, I Robertson 502, spot\n162 Total 2682.\nAs fine\nas its name is\nHockey Scores\n'   By The Canadian Press\nMARITIME  MAJOR\nSaint John 5, Halifax 7\nCAPE BRETON  MAJOR\nSydney 2, North \u2022 Sydney 2\nQUEBEC  MAJOR \" ,\nValjeyfield 1, Sherbrooke 4\nMontreal 4, Chicoutimi 2\nOttawa 3, Shawinigan Falls 4\nTHUNDER  BAY JUNIOR\nFort' William Hurricanes 5, Port\nArthur Bruins 4\nU.S.H.L.\nOmaha 7, Tulsa 2\nWESTERN CANADA  MAJOR\nEdmonton 4, Saskatoon 5\nNORTHERN ONTARIO SENIOR\nFort Frances Canadians 14, International Falls 5\nCentre  \"Bones\" Raleigh figured\nin six of the goals as New York\nRangers took over third place in\nthe National Hockey League with\na 7-3 victory Thursday night over\nthe   last-place   Chicago   Black\nHawks. The smallest crowd on record in Chicago, 4466, saw the hap-\nJess Hawks go down \"to defeat again.\nIn the night's other N.H.L. fixture,  Toronto  Maple  Leafs  came\nfrom behind to snatch a 2-2 draw\nwith Montreal Canadiens before a\nMontreal Forum crowd of 14,301.\nRaleigh had two goals and four\nassists  at Chicago, with  his  1-1\n\u25a0in Wednesday night's Ranger victory over the Hawks, gave him\n;,- eight scoring points In two successive evenings. Up to this midweek explosion,  Raleigh  had  20\npoints In all for the season.\nThe Hawks how have lost five\nstraight, have only one tie in their\nlast seven games and only one victory   and   four   lies   out   of   their\nlast 29.\nThe game at Montreal was a\nclose-checking affair most of the\nway and took a lot out of the two\nbattling teams, both of whom set a\nfurious pace at the start. \u2022\nCanadiens trotted out three\nnewcomers and all of them showed well. Bob Dawes and Paul\nMeger from the American Hockey League were used largely on\na line with Bernlc Geoffrlon,\ntaken over from the Montreal\nNatlonale Juniors.\nMONTREAL-TORONTO\nFirst period\u20141. Montreal, Mosdell (Harvey) 3:37; 2. Montreal,\nOlmstead (Geoffrion, Harvey) 8:43.\nPenalties \u2014 Flaman, Curry, Barllko. . '    ,\nSecond period\u20143. Toronto, Sloan\n(Kennedy, Bentley) 2:43.\nPenalty\u2014Olmstead.\nThird period\u20144. Toronto, Barllko,\n5:50.\nPenalties\u2014Bouchard, Flaman.\nCHICAGO-NEW YORK\nFirst period\u20141. New York, Slo-\nwinski (Raleigh, Mickoski) 10:43; 2.\nNew York, Mickoski (Raleigh)\n11:20; 3. Chicago, R. Conacher\n(Powell, Mosienko) 19:16.\nPenalty\u2014Black.\nSecond period\u20144. New York, Raleigh (Kullman) 13:06; 5. New York,\nSlowinski (Raleigh) 14:27; 6. New\nYork, Raleigh (Mickoski, Slowinski) 15:10.\nPenalties\u2014Evans, Stanley.\nThird period\u20147. New York, Mickoski (Raleigh) 9:25; 8. New York\nO'Connor (Sinclair, Lund) 14:02\n9. Chicago, Mosienko (Powell, R\nConacher) 14:22; 10. Chicago, Guidolin (Black, Lundy) 19:31.\nPenalty\u2014Kyle.\nCalgary Rink\nAlberta School\nCurling Champs\nEDMONTON, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 Bob\nHarper and his Mount Royal College\nI rink from Calgary today won the\n'Alberta High School Curling Championship by sweeping a three-rink\nRound-Robin final against Edmonton and Gtande Prairie.\nThe Calgarlans will represent\nthe province in the Dominion championships at Nelson B.C., which\nopen next Monday.\nThey whipped Grande Prairie 13-\nII in their first match and then\n[humiliated -Edmonton's  University\nHigh School 14-2 in the second contest. Edmonton had won its opening match 9-6 against Grande\nPrairie.\nOthers on the Calgary rink besides Skip Harper are Roger Lund-'\ngren, lead; Fred Storey, second; and\nFred Bell, third.\nThe rink has yet to be defeated1\nthis season.\n3HO\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB. 16, 1951 \u2014 7\nU.B.C. Opens War\nMemorial Feb. 23\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nUniversity of British Columbia's\nnew war memorial gymnasium will\nopen Feb. 23, it was announced today. The official opening, with appropriate memorial services, will\nbe held next Fall.\nThe $1,000,000 gym. will have a\nseating capacity of 6500, making it.\nthe most modern and largest gym\nof its kind in Canada.\nTop Contenders\nFor Welterweight\nPHILADELPHIA, Feb. 15 (AP)\n\u2014John (Ox) Da Grosa,'- Pennsylvania State Athletic Commissioner,\ntoday said the winner of the ike\nWilliams-Joe Mlceli fight will be\ntop contender for the welterweight\ntitle.\nWilliams, lightweight champion,\nond Mlceli meet in a 10-rounder\nMonday.\nThe first British naval craft to\nvisit Esquimalt B.C., was H.M.S.\nConstance in 1848.\nForsyth Manitoba\nCurling Champs\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 Roy\nForsyth's Winnipeg Strathcona rink\ntonight won the right to represent\nManitoba in the Dominion Curling\nChampionships by defeating Jimmy\nWelsh of Winnipeg Deer Lodge,\n15-4, in a sudden-death final.\nForsyth was never In trouble in\nhis match with the former Dominion\nCurling Champion. He got four\npoints on 'the fourth end and added\nfive more on the eighth to virtually\nclinch the crown. The closest Welsh\n! got to Forsyth was at the end of\nthe third end when he was down\n3-1. Welsh quit on the 10th end.\nMembers of the Forsyth rink are:\nArt Meers, lead; Allister McDermid,\nsecond, Lome Stewart, third; and\nForsyth, skip.\nHarwoods Rye\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by ihe Government 4 British Columbia.\nMIAMI, Fla., Feb. 15 (AP) \u2014\nBattle Morn, Cail Hoy Stable's Flamingo Stakes hope, today streaked\nto a 2%-Iength victory in Hialeah\nPark's $50000 Tallahasseii purse \u2014\nregarded as a prep for-the $50,000\nadded March 3 feature for three-\nyear-olds.\nGAME\n19\nHOCKEY\nNELSON\nV8\nKIMBERLEY\nTONIGHT 8:00 P.M.\nADVANCE SEAT SALE\nTODAY\n10 a.m. \u2014 6 p.m.\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nReserved Seats $1.00   Adults Rush 75c   Students 35c\nBATES  LOSES\nSTOCKHOLM, Feb. 15 (AP) \u2014\nThe Bates ice hockey team of Lewis-\nton, Me,, wound up a tour of Sweden today\" by losing to the Soder-\ntaljfe team 0-3.\nIn five scheduled games the\nAmericans were outscored 20-7.\nStrikes V Spares\nMixed Commercial League:\nLadies' high single \u2014 E. Ray\nbourne, 202.\nLadies' high aggregate \u2014 E. Ray\nbourne, 615.\nMen's high single \u2014 Harry Kennell, 375.\nMen's high aggregate \u2014 Harry\nKennell, 048.\nHigh team single \u2014 Hudson Bay,\n1100.\nHigh team aggregate \u2014 Hudson\nBay, 3210.\nStandings \u2014 Sad Sacks, 21, Atoms,\n13, Accidentals, 13, Jonella's 8, Kelly\nDouglas 9, Hudspn Lay 8.\nATOMS \u2014 H. Kenneil, 948; Mrs.\nL. Kennell, 804; Mrs. L. Koehle, 494;\nL. D. Waterer, 664; F. Koehle, 549.\nTotals \u2014 3159.\nHUDSON'S BAY - E. Laybourne,\n615; S. Grill, 789; A. Ward, 572; E.\nUnser, 396; L. Filiatrault, 475; Spot,\n363. Totals\u20143210.\nACCIDENTALS \u2014 D. Wassick,\n501; C. Mills, 667; W. Valantine, 427;\nL. Piatt, 370; R. V'assick, 402. Totals\n-2367.\nKELLY DOUGLAS - V. Hudson.\n519;   T. Scwell,   500; V. Postnikov.\nOffer Wakefield\n$1 Contract\nOAKLAND, Calif., Feb. 15 (AP)\n\u2014 Dick Wakefield, who flopped as\na $50,000 (plus Cadillac) bonus outfielder for\" Detroit a decade ago, received this Valentine.\nA 1951 contract calling for $1 sal-,\n,ary\/.pl'us expenses with Oakland of\nthe Pacific Coast League.\nOaks President \"Brick\" Ljaws said\nthat in the heat of the 1950 P.C.LJ\npennant race (which Oakland (Won'i\nDick told him: |.-'.V<':'V\n\"Brick, you ajS.4He,fm\u00abst owner\nI've ever played for.-Why, I'd be\nwilling ,Hp' '.'c'6me back to Oakland\n-n^xi-ycar for $1 plus expenses.\"\nLaws elaborated: Wakefield has\nbeen indifferent to oral offers.\nMarch 1 is the P.C.L. contract deadline. If Wakefield signs fpr,,$l he'll\nbeat the deadline and still can bargain. \u25a0\nAnd Laws added: Dick, a great\nshowman,   still   might have the\nlast say . . . sign for $1 and put In\nREMOVE STY FROM\nRIZZUTO'S EYE\nNEW YORK, Feb. 15 (AP) \u2014Phil\nRizzuto, the Yankees' outstanding\nshortstop, had a sty removed from\nhis eye in art,7.qperatlon today at\nLenox Hill HoSfiitiil. The New York\nclub reported',that everything wont\nwell. v.''\nfor $17,000 experjjej\/the'^oun^\nof his 1950 contract.' '     I\nWakefield,, reputed highest paid\nP.C.L. player In' 1950, batted .293,\ndrove In 38 runs and hit seven\nhomers In 87 games.\n578; L. Cartwright, 402; L. Anderson,\n516; Spot, 51. Totals\u20142566.\nJONELLA \u2014 I. Liness, 524; H.\nBentham, 518; B. Iceton, 415; T. Cole,\n564; G. McCulloch, 470. Totals\u20142500.\nSAD SACS \u2014 D, Hunter, 409; B.\nApostoliuk, 461; L. DeGirolamo, 586;\nL. Wild, 557; D. Allan, 584; Spot, 183.\nTotals\u20142780.\nGovernment League:\nLadies' high single \u2014 Betty Wicken, 260.\nLadies' high aggregate \u2014 B. Wicken, 639.\nMen's high single \u2014 F. Jennings,\n175.\nMen's high aggregate \u2014 F. Jennings, 616.\nHigh team single \u2014 Eager Beavers. 1085.\nHigh team aggregate \u2014 Eager\nBeavers, 2680.\nTIMBER WOLVES \u2014 J. Cunningham, 363; B. Ramsden, 609; A.\nBrethour. 277; M. McKinley, 518; D.\nBaker, 472; Spot, 38. Totals\u20142275.\nFLYING EAGLES \u2014 F. Gill,' 581\nG. Com, 518; P. MacLeod, 459; M.\nQuance, 373; B. Latremoulle, 514;\n;Spot, 105. Totals-2551.\nCHIPMONKS \u2014 A. Sien, 448; J.\nWatson, 544; B. Waters, 271; T.\nYoung, 445; G. Gill, 609. Totals \u2014\n2317.\nATOM SMASHERS - B. Wicken,\n476; J. Jennings, 476; O. Christie,\n480; J. Cone, 625; D. Thompson, 500.\nTotals-2557.\nTERRIBLE TERMITS \u2014 L. Tay-\nIqr, 403; D. Drew, 209; A. Boyce, 553;\nJ.,\/Wallach.. 476; M. Ramsden, 567;\nSpot;'ra\/TotaIs-2472. ' ' '-' -'i\nEAGER BEAVERS - C. Mills,\n519; H. Litster, 377; F. Jennings, 626;\nB. Wicken. 639; F. Ozeroff, 528. Totals\u20142689, \u25a0  .\nTake\nYour\nPlace\nWith Men\ntike These\nROYAL CANADIAN\nORDNANCE CORPS\nMILITARY   STOREKEEPERS   TO\nCANADA'S   MODERN   ARMY\n'I Jiff\nIxnj&x\nRUM   '\nOne of the biggest-''}bbs Jn the entire Canadian Army-'rafli|ro tileRoyal Canadian\/\/'\n'\/ Ordnance Corps. Hits corps must obtain and distribute whatever the Army needs '\nfrom shoe laces to tanks \u2014 a list of 195,000 items.\nThe job of the Ordnance Corps is getting bigger every day\u2014as the Canadian Army\ngrows. Right now the Ordnance Corps needs more men\u2014men who can qualify as store-\nmen, clerks, ammunition cxamincf-s,-tailors', shoemakers, leather and canvas workers.\n\u25a0.,.>',iV;-'-\\\\\\''i'-,\\v-''-'\"''\u2022' \"*:\nHere is your opportunity to acquire new skills in an unusually interesting career\nintheCanadian Army Active Force. You\ncan become a soldier in the Ordnance\nCorps by reporting nqw for active duty,\nwith the Canadian Army Active Force.\nRemember, Canada needs ypu now.\nSo act today!\nBuy  and  Sell the  Classified  Way\nTO ENHST YOU MUST:\n.1. 8a a Canadian citizen or British\nsubject.\n2. Be between 17 and 40 years of age.\n3. Bo single,\n4. Meet Army test requirements.\n5. Volunteer for service anywhere.\nREPORT RIGHT AWAY TO:\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot,\n4050 West Fourth Ave.,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nA33eS.BC\nHelp make Canada strong\njaiN^HE CAWAR!A^ ARMYliTIVE F0RCEl4WI^\n_\u2014\u2014.         iiaaaiiaaHa\u00abeaw\u00bbaMMe\u00bbMBnaWMMMpBHBWWMeMlaWattailt1aMM\nFor sparkling entertainment, Oaten to \"Tho Voico of the Army\"\u2014Wednesday evenings \u2014 Dominion Network\n .22%  HOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\n*vj4 SPECIAL CHENILLE BEDSPREADS   S10.95\ni     NELSON\n.    B.C.\n^W^ <=\u00ab\u201e\u201e_\n\u00bb -\u25a0.'.'\n\/\nVy\no! i\/y\n\/rgOlW\nW&h \\\new- \u00bb>l. Pm fawip sp^w, inL\nWmWiijUi,,\u201e,,,$\u2022             *\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nA Victim of Old Man Winter's Vengeance\nScience Marches On\nThis unusual parachute picture was made during a recent survey\nby the U.S. Bureau of Medicine and Surgery at Patuxent, Maryland,\nto determine how the position ot the body and bulkiness of flight\nclothing will affect a pilot's rate of fall in a free fall parachute descent. It was found that the type of suit worn had a significant effect\non the rate of descent\u2014a pilot wearing Winter flying suit falling\nslower than one in lighter, less-wind-resisting gear. Differences due\nto the tilt of the body during the fall were also found highly significant.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nStarving Cougar Invades Hut\n,,.^r-.\u201e_T.,,._..,.^|\nThere doesn't seem to be any relief in sight yet for residents of\nboth Canada and U.S. who have been suffering from one of th#\nworst cold waves to hit the continent for some time. A six-day oort\nof snow and ice has taken more than 200 lives In the U.S., while In\nCanada fires attributed to the cold weather outbreak have claimed\n17 lives and caused over $1,000,000 in damages. A victim of Winter's\nwrath, seen above, is an ice-coated fireman, Capt. Neil Mac-Lean, of\nWinnipeg, Man.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nOutstanding Athletic'\nThe cougar, above, plqnged\nthrough the window of a Government telegraph patrol hut\nnear Campbell River, B. C., attacking Edward McLean, 63, in\nthe small room. Before McLean\nkilled the animal he was clawed\nin the face and arms (right). Obviously starving, the animal\nweighed only 52 pounds, but it\nnearly succeeded in killing McLean.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nNew Steamer Service\nFor Nanaimo\nNANAIMO, B.C., Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nA new steamer service, primarily\nfor freight, is to be started between\nVancouver and Nanainib March 10,\nCapt. O. S. Williams, Coast Steamship head, told , the Chamber of\nCommerce today.\nThe ship will leave Vancouver At\n8:00 o'clock each night and freight\nwill be delivered by trucks to Island points by the next morning.\nOn April 27 an extra passenger\nvessel will be put on the run to\nVancouver. It will leave here at\n8 p.m. each night.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 Hourly pay and weekly wages in leading\nCanadian manufacturing industries\nhit all-time highs at Dec. 1, the Bureau of Statistics reported today.\nAverage hourly earnings went up\none cent from the previous top of\n$1.06 at Nov. 1, while average week\nly pay rose to $46.42 compared with\n$45.75 at Nov. 1.\nPeriicillih', one of the world'^'most\nvaluable drugs {was discovered in\n1929'by^ Alexander Fleming in Eng.\nON THE 'AIR\nFRIDAY, FEB.  16,  1951\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Sport News <.-\"'\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You. Madame\n:55\u2014Meal of the Day\nS:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Musicale\n9:58\u2014Train Time\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n!0:)5\u2014Tom, Dick and Harry\n10:30\u2014Olivers Choice\n10:45\u2014Hobin^ Hood Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n1:45\u2014Notice Board\ni 12:00\u2014News\n12:01\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Friday Serenade r\n1:45\u2014Mr. Prime Minister ,    I\n1:50\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n^O-^-Koolenay Concert\n,3;00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3ji'l\u2014Train Time\n\u25a08:15\u2014Don Messer's Islanders\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n)3;4S-*-Pacific News\n4:00i-O.v.erture, Please\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Time Story Teller\n4:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\n4:55\u2014On the Air\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Sport News\n5:45\u2014Myrt and Marge\n6:00\u2014Christian Science Program\n6:15\u2014Bill Good on Sports\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n7:45\u2014Stafford and McRae\nSATURDAY, FEB. 17, 1951\n-    CKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News i\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Show Case\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Western Hit Parade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014The Stamp Collector\n9:45\u2014Notice Board\n10:00\u2014Train Time and Time Signal\n10:01\u2014Notice Board\n10:15\u2014News\n10:25\u2014Sports News\n10:30\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:00\u2014Dance Music\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Saturday Toen'^eat\n3:29\u2014Train Time-\"' \" ,\n3:30\u2014Saturday 'Pops Concert\n4:30\u2014Sports College\n4:45\u2014Memo From Lake Success\n5:0p^-rSymphony of Strings\n5:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n6:00\u2014News\n16:05\u2014N.H.L. Hockey\n7:30\u2014News\n\\,7:40^Sport News\n:<7:45\u2014Square Dance\n8:00\u2014Your Army Presents\n8:15\u2014Arthur Godfrey Show     ''\n8:30VPrairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014John Sturgess\n9:15\u2014Music in the Night\n9:30\u2014Music in the Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Dance Time\n10:30\u2014Request Program\n11:30\u2014Dance Time\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\n;?Mt\n8:00\u2014Dick Stephens Sings\n8:30\u2014Opening Night\n9:00\u2014Burns Ctmckwagon\n9:30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n9:45\u2014Words, Words, Words\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Nesbitt's Victoria Report\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report   )\n10:45\u2014Musicale >)\n11:00-U. N. Today\nll:15^-Hot Air )\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cap'  \"     \u25a0\u25a0'\nIt is doubtful If any athlete has ever brought more honors to the\nUniversity of Western Ontario than Bob McFarlane, 23-year-old\nmedical student who has been named winner of the Lou March Memorial Trophy for 1950, symbolic of the outstanding Canadian athlete of the year. Bob, a London boy, Is shown left with Western\ntrack coach Murray McNie. Besides playing football for Western'!\nperennial Intercollegiate champion Mustangs, Bob carried Western's\ncolors to the Olympics and to many meets In United States and\nEurope, and owns a flock of Canadian records.\u2014Central PresB Cane\ni| \\\\' \\ ACROSS S    6.A-roVinV7 19. Exclama-\nV xr. Kind of   '    '    dance. tion\ncheese 7. Ireland 21. Tardy\n5. Scope 8. God of war 22. Not eatable\n9. Wear a (Gr.) 23. Total\ncheerful 9. Coin (Peru) 25. Long\naspect .11. Before scarves\n10. River (Fr.)   13. Close 27. Raised\n12. Comply       15. Peruses 29. Baked clay\n13. More tart     17. One of the pieces\nGreat 30. Product of\nLakes suppuration\n18. Travel, as a 31. Emmets\nband, from 32. Portico\nplace to (Gr.)\nplace 34. Enemy\n14. Music note\n15. People of\nChina\n16. Bound back\n19. Confirmed\n20. Pen-name\nof Charles\nLamb\n24. Those who\ninherit\n25. Mild\n26. Arabian\ngulf\n27. Rowed\n28. Wandered\n30. Meat pies\n33,!,Whether\/',<\/\n.'^5,-Nc-t revealed\n' 36! Timber wolf\n38. Shop\n39. Kind of story\n40. Man's\nnickname\n' (poss.)\n41. Fencing\nsword\nDOWN\n1. Enclosed\nwith ban\n2. Perish\n3. Like alo        ,\n4j,'Pp!yt\u00bbmil\"i .\n' '. \u25a0  pronoun\n5. Compoun'd\nfrom aloes\nranHEH \u25a0\u25a0hhhuf\nHBMHW \u25a0 HiailHH\nmma mmim.\naa awni:i m\nhhShieihe nari\n@hbishh lamae\n- 0HB0HH.T\nlaaara hheihhb\nHsu EBiHSiHiimr-i\naa hhctb nis\ntmmnam maias-\nannus naaras-\nrarjrjns aaum\nYcaterdty'i Answer\n36. Fold\n37. Fetish\n(W.Afr.)\n39. Iron (sym.)\niZ\n24\nSS\ni\nft.\nm\n%\n54\nz-it\nDAII,Y CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs L O N G F E L L O W\nOne letted simply stands for another. In this example A fs used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of tha words are ali hints.\nEach dav the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nFOU UAOF, JOMPOWO SO, IAD EIEPB\nLD  XPGUT  GYDg  V A E L V Q,  AEWO\nVDLKR0Y02 GEUO \u2014 ITLDMI.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: TO WORSHIP THE PEOPLE IB TO\nBE WORSHIPPED\u2014BACON.\nSlatrUmtei t\u00bb Haw I\n QHl\nti imwmRESULTS\/\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nPAVLIS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Jo-\nleph Pavlis, of Retallack, at Kaslo\nVictorian Hospital, Feb, 6, a daugh-\nHELP WANTED\n;areers  in  psyshiatric\nnursing.\u2014The B.C.'Civil Service'\nhas a number of openings at the\nProvincail\u00bb Mental Hospital for:\nPsychiatric Nurses - in \u2022 Training.\nYoung women, 18 to 30, with at\n| least Grade 10 education (preferably High School graduation), in\ngqpd health and of good moral\ncharacter, who are interested in\ncareers in this branch of nursing\nwhich offers: Training with pay\nover a 3-year period: Permanent\npositions after training: Superannuation plan: Interesting and\nchallenging work in the service\nof others. Attractive .residence\naccommodation   and   meals   pro-\n- vided at nominal rates. Uniforms\nprovided free.   Monthly Salaries\n1 (including current cost-of-living\nbonus): For Niirses-in-Trairiing:\nFirst year: $136.50; Second year:\n$143.00; Third year: $149.50.. For\nPsychiatric Nurses (after graduation)\u2014$162.50 rising to $182.00 in\n4 years. Further information and\napplication forms may be obtain-\n; ed from the Director of Nursing,\nProvincial Mental Hospital, Es-\nsondale, or from offices of the\nB.C. Civil Service Commission,\n636 Burrard Street, Vancouver or\nWeiler Building, Victoria, or from\nGovernment Agencies in other\ncentres.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nrVANTED\u2014BY INTERIOR'S LAR-\n, gest garage, smart, reliable young\nman for office and front-end\nwork. Some bookkeeping knowledge preferred. Permanent position for right man. Box 4354 Daily\n\u25a0 News. '\nSALE  OF BUILDINGS\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the undersigned until 5 p.m. on\nMonday, February 26th, at the\noffice of the Secretary in Slocan\nCity for the purchase and removal\nof any or all of three temporary\nschool buildings located on the\nschool grounds in New Denver and\ndescribed as follflws;\n1-'-Science Laboratory building\n14' by 28'.\n2\u2014Junior classrooms 14' by 58'\nThese may be Inspected at any\ntime other than school hours by\ncontacting the janitor or Mr. N.\nTattrie, local school trustee. A\ncheck for 10% of the amount of\neach bid must be included with\neach application. The Board re\nserves the right to reject any or all\napplications.\nDated at Slocan City, B.C., Feb\n12, 1951. .   \u25a0\nPaul A. Barber,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFOR SALE-8.3 EVINRUDE\nSportwin Model K. Heavy Duty\nJohnson 8-10 H.P. 5 H,P. Evin-\nrude twin inboard. All in good\nrunning order. W. A. Mackereth,\nBroadwater, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nT A N T E D \u2014 AN INDUSTRIAL\nFirst-Aid attendant for a produc\nIng mine. Duties will include\nsome office work. Apply stating\nexperience and education to Box\n4323 Nelson Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nlEX-CIVIL SERVANT, AGE 60, RE-\nquires full or part-time employment. Well known in district. Experienced in various lines. Phone\n279-R, or P.O. Box 254, Nelson,\npAMP COOK, HUSBAND HELP-\ner. Two small children. State\nwages. Box 4338 Daily News.\nirOUNG COUPLE WANT WORK\nIn sawmill, as cooks- Box 4359\nDaily News.\n\u25a0GIRL DESIRES' WORK BY THE\nhour. Phone 1099-L.\nIWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\n\u25a0TOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steej, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron ii Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancouver, .B.C. Phone Pacific 6397.\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch poles, peeled\nor unpeeled. Glacier Lumber Co.,\nBox ,450, Nelson, B.C.\npHIF US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company;\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. G.j '\nFHIP   YOUR . HIDES \\ TQ' M * P:\nMorgan, Nelson, B.' G.\" ',   '\u25a0' \u2022\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nPT W. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nfl.  S.  ELMES,   ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\npAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\n(ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\npOYDCTAFFLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nMINERS\nNOW IS THE TIME\nTO PREPARE FOR\nYOUR 1951\nOPERATIONS\nwith\nMADE-IN CANADA\nijie\nEquipment\nCompressors, Slusher\nHoists: 1, 2 or 3-Drum,\nScrapers, Air Legs and Drill\nJibs, Stopers and Drifters,\nRock Drills, Mucking\nMachines, Diamond Drills\npnd Blasthole Drills, Air\nTools, SluSher Blocks, Hose\nCouplings, Plug Valves,\nWater Valves, Columns and\nParts, Joy Lite, Safety Electric   Lighting   and   Power\nConnectors,- ~:\nand\nCATERPILLAR\nPOWER UNITS, ELECTRIC\nSETS,  TRACTORS.\nTractor and\n-Equipiii^iit Co.\nf\\ NELSQNj-' B.C.'\nbox ml\nPHONE'930\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nCO., LTD.\nGranville Island MA. 1251\nVancouver, B. C. .\nFOR HIRE - NEW D-6 BULL-\ndozer for contracting work. Apply -to A. Bedwell, Ph. 60-R,\nKaslo.\n[NSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\n|McHARDY AGENCIES LTD, IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\n|VE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H. Harj-pp; Phono 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   acetylene  and\n\u25a0electric welding, motor rewinding.\n7>hone 593 324 Vernon St.\nFkismx Satin JJpuis\n.Classified  Advertising,- Rates:\/\nOf Hi\/ytfy \/firs')?, 'insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie line per consecutive inse'r-\ntion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n; $1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\n| PUBLIC i (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDEflS.'E.lc\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion. 16c per line\neach subsequent insertion.\nI ALL ABOVE RATES LESS\nI 10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy $  .05\nBy carrier, per w,eek,\nin advance  25\nBy carrier, per year     13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month         1.00\nThree months    2.50\nSix months  ..-    4.50 j\nOne year    8.6o -\nUnited States, United Kingdorttf\n1 One  month   ...,    1|00\n! Three   months .,    3.W\n! Six months .'....,    0.00\nOne  year    ,. ' 12,00\nWhere extra postage is required,'\nabove rates pius postage.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDeppt. Clean rooms and moderate\n[\u25a0\u25a0yales. $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n' $3\/.00- ajb)fbies.  Vancouver,  B.  C.\nWINTER TRACKS FOR D6 AND\nRD7 cats in stock. Diesel power\nunits new and rebuilt. Bayes\nEquipment Co., Cranbrook,-B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT-D-4\ncat, ^quipped for excavating,\nroadb'uilding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n588-R or I376-L, Nelson.\nPERSONAL\nCRESS CORN SALVE\u2014FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist sells Cress.\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance' Co.. D. L. Kerr, Agent.\nPERSONAL'SUPPLIES, (RUBBER\ngoods) mailed postpaid' in plain\nsealed envelopes with .price, list.\nSix samples 20o, 30 samples $1.00,\nD. Ralph Mailing House, Box 120,\nAsbestos. P.Q.\nMEN! PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndrics: 25 deluxe samples, $1.00,\nMailed in plain, .scalcc} wrapper.\n.Finest quality,: tested.- guaranteed.\n.. ;Baijgain Catalog free. Western'\n'Drslribulors, Box 1023N, Vancouver. B. C.\nL ABIES ! DUPREE PILLS. IM-\n. proved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods.'$3.00 per box. Also Coles\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 -per\nbox. Western Distributors; Box\n1023 AN. Vancouver, B. C.\nRENTALS\n4-ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT ON\nGranite Rd. Hot and cold water,\nRj, Relkoff, Granite Rd., Nelson.\nLIGHT, , HOUSEKEEPING ( SUITE\nfor 'reht- Business girl preferred,\nPhone 1,4'lfi,-\nFOR SALE - 1 STAR. MARINE\nconversion, marine clutch, water\npump, shaft ond propellor. All\ngood running order. Apply Box\n4016 Daily News.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON  BUSINESS  COLLEGE-\nDay and Night Classes.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n4.\nTRUCKS\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nIf your hauling jobs.are too\ntough for conventional vehicles, or if you need a\ntruck that's bui[t from the\nground up for rugged on\nand off-the-road service, it\nwill pay you to find out\nabout the new -4-wheel-drive\nWILLYS TRUCKS. Now\npowered by Willys' sensational new Hurricane Engine, these trucks thrive on.\nhard work\u2014yet give yeors\nof dependable low-cost\noperation.\nSOLE DISTRIBUTORS FOR\nEAST AND WEST KOOTENAY\nPHONE 18\n214 Hall St.', Nelson, B. C.\nIMMEDIATE\n1951 Mercury\nCars and Trucks\nand\n1951 Meteors\n2-ltOOM UNFljRNJSilED SUITES. I\nJPhone J-464-L2!     \u25a0-,''--\u25a0--   ; j I.\nWARM' BEDROOM   f6r~SENT.\"\nApply 210 Vernon St.\n1950 Meteor Sedan\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1948 English Anglia\n1948 Dodge Coach. '-.-;;.;-,..-:\n1940 Chev Gtacft'.W' W<'(\n1938 .qidsmobile 'Club\n\u2022 ftj'il 'Coupe\n( 1934 Chev Coach\nUsed Trucks\n1949 Mercury 1-Ton\n1949 Mercury li-Ton\n'1947 Mercury 3-Ton\n1945- Ford 3-Ton u,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0;.\".,',-,\\\\\n1938 Ford 2-Ton wilh\nDump Body and   ,.\nHoist\n1937 International   Vi-Ton\n1936 Studebaker 2:Ton\nCab over.       ' :\n1935  Chev' Vi-Ton\n1950 Vincent Motor Bike\nBeacon Motors\nGenuine\/ Ford .Parts Depot\nPhone 578-9 \u25a0      | , Nelson, B.C;\n\"SETTER   BUYS  AT   BEACON\"\nAUSTINS\nEARLY DELIVERY\nUSED CAR\nSPECIALS\n1949 Austin Sedans\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Ford Pickup\n1942 Chevrolet Sedan\n1941.Dodge Pickup\n1941 Dodge Sedan\n1940 Mercury Sedan\n1940 Ford Light Delivery\n1940 Dodge Sedan\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan\n1938 Plymouth Sedan\n1935 Ford Sedan\n1933 Dodge Pickup\n1930 Model \"A\" Coach\nTERMS AND TRADES\nSpot Cash for Late Model\nUsed Cars\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nMcCLARY ESCOTMrCOAL~AND\nwood range. Practically new.\nPhone 1405-R.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB. 16, 1951 \u2014 \u00bb\nFOR'SALE DROP-LEAF K1TCH-\nen table and 4 chairs, also kitchen\nChina cabinet; Phone A14-L.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\n035 E. Cordova St., Vancouver,\nTHE   MICRONIC  HEARING   AID\nSales - PO   Box 39 Service.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nA 3-year-old house, beautifully\nsituated across the lake, 2 minutes walk from the Nelson ferry,\non a fully landscaped corner lot.\nMain floor has living room with\noak floors and picture window\noverlooking the lake, fully modern cabinet kitchen with large\nnook, two bedrooms, with provision for a third to be added.\nBathroom is 4-piece with Pembroke tub. Basement is cement\nwith hot and cold washing machine connections. Furnace gives\ngood and economical heat. Garage attached.\nThe owner is leaving town and\nis offering this house at a bargain\nfor quick sale $5250\nTERMS ARE AVAILABLE\nFor Inspection See\nR. D. P. GILDAY\n. jencies\nReal Estate and Insurance Agenta\n542 BAKER ST. \u2014 PHONE 1460\nOpen Saturday Afternoon\n, For Weekend Inspection\n\u25a0Phone 692-R2.\nFOR SALE \u2014 THREE ROOM\nhouse on 75' x 100' lot in Montrose, B.C. $1800 cash. Apply C. T.\nMoon. Montrose, B.C.\nuvestockTToultry and\nfarm supplies, etc\nire Motors\nPhone 1135   803 Baker St.\nNelson; B. C\n\u25a0\u2022'of the\nMARKET\nUSED CARS\n'36 Dodge Sedan\n'42 Dodge Sedan\n'46 Buick Sedanet\n'46 Pontiac Sedan\n'47 Oldsmobile Sedan\n'47 Studebaker Sedan\n'47 Dodge Sedan\n'47 Plymouth Sedan\n'48 Dodge Sedan\n'A9 Pontiac Sedan Coupe\nTRUCKS\n'47 Maple Leaf 3-Ton\n'49 Dodge 2-Ton Special\n1947    7-PASSENGER,    CUSTOM-\nbuilt Dodge. In very good condi-\n[   tion. $1400.00. Call or write A. p.\nn JBudper, % Royal Hotel, Neljjoh\/\nOrder your Baby Chicks from the\nAPPLEBY\nPOULTRY BREEDING FARM,\nMISSION CITY, B. C.\nBreeders of Large Type White\nLeghorns,   White   Rocks,   New\nHampshires and Cross Breeds.\nThis farm is successfully operating on a complete,y non-forcing\nprogram.   Out-door environment\nWinter   and   Summer.     Hardy,\nvigorous, disease resistant stock.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nFOR SALE ABOUT 25 TONS\nsalted baled hay, mixture Red\ntop, wheat grass, Timothy and\nclover. Also 20-30 Rumley-Oil\nPull Tractor, on rubber, good\nworking order. Or will trade for\n2 or 3 ton truck. Prefer with van\nbox. I. A Williams, Kaslo, B-C,\nFINEST QUALITY R.O.P. - SIRED\nRhode Island Red and New Hampshire Chicks. Mixed sex $5 for $25,\n$10 for 50, $20 for 100, $95 for 500.\nPullets at 36c. Cockerels 10c. -\nTRIANGLE HATCHERY, ARM\nSTRONG. B. C.\nWANTUD \u2014 HIGHEST PRICES\npaid for cattle of any kind or age\nby Dick Kicef. Phone, wire or\nwrite to Dick Kleef, R.R. 1, Nelson. Phone 401-L-4.\nFOR SALE\u2014COW, JUST FRESH-\nened. Apply W. W. Seminoff,\nBrilliant. B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nCOMFORTABLE HOME AND\ncare for elderly person or convalescent Apply Box 4012 Daily\nNews.\nBOARD  AND  ROOM VACANCY\n' .for young business man. Phone\n1392-X.\nROOM FOR RENT, WITH BOARD\nor part board if desired, Very\nclose in. Phone 965-Y,\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n\"SALVAGE\"\n1938 PLYMOUTH\nCOUPE\n$200.00\nCuthbert\nMotors Ltd.\nWANTED TO BUY PANEL OR\nlight delivery. Late model. No\ndealers. Cash deal. Write Box\n4059 Daily News.\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nAcadia Uranium  43\nAkaitcho             1.30\nAmal Larder    22\nAnglo Huronian    13.25\nArjon 40\nArmistice   12\nAtlas Y K  16\nAumaque  .: 27%\nAunor     3.40\nBagamac   25%\nBase Metals  65\nBevcourt   : 50\nBobjo    19\nBonetal  54\nBoymar Gold        .10\nBralorne           7.15\nBrewis R L     \u2022  .12%\nBroulan              1.05\nBuffalo  Ank        1.55\nBuff Can   34\nCalliman        25\nCampbell R iL       2.75\nCan Mai         73%\nCariboo Gold       1.20\nCastle Treth          2.40\nCentral   Patricia   63\nCentral Pore 21\nCentremaque   10\nCheskirk      10\nChesterville    '. 61\nChimo G      32\nCoast Copper      2.05\nCochenour       1.81\nCoin Lake  16%\nConlaurum    75\nCons M Si S  152,25\nConwest           2.40\nCrestaurum    18\nCroinor  _.      .40\nDelnite           1.50\nDetta R L  i 15\nDiscovery    37\nDome     19.25\nDonalda   60\nEast Malartic      1.55\nEast  Sullivan         9.25\nElder  Gold   56\nEldona  29\nEureka   \u25a0   1.16\nFalconbridge    \\ll.B5\nFrancoeur  10\nFrobisher       4.15\nGiant Yel      7.70\nGod's Lake  .'..       .48\nGold Eagle     10\nGolden Manitou       6.75\nHalcrow 16\nHardrock  33%\nHarricana   .-.      .16%\nHasaga         \u201e..       .47\nHedley Mas 70\nHeva  14\nHollinger          1600\nHomer Y. K 10\nHosco   07%\nHudson Bny     61.00\nInt. Nickel    42.00\nJellicoc 12\nJoliet Que 90\nKayrand  20\nKelore 12% J\nKenville    23\nKerr Addison    18.25\nKirk-Hudson Bay 63\nKirkland Lake 98\nChemical Research\nCommonwealth' Pete\nDavies Pete   \t\nDecalta   \t\nDel Rio    ;,\nEastcrest     .1\"\nFederated Pete \t\nHighwood\t\nHome      \t\nImperial Oil  _\t\nInter Pete \t\nMid Cont\t\nNat, Pete   \"\nNew Pacalta \t\nOkalta \t\nPacific Pete\nRoyalite  ~\"Z\nRoxana      \t\nTower Pete\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Sleel \t\nAluminum   \t\nArgus        ....\nAtlas St\t\nBathurst Power  '.\nBeattie' Bros\t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian   \t\nB.C. Electric  '..\".\t\nB.C. Forest . \u201e\nB.C. Packers A ]...'.\"\nB.C. Packers B \t\nB.C. Power A\t\nB.C. Power B\t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Packers A\t\nCan Packers B \t\nChn Bakeries \t\nCan Breweries \t\nCan Canners \t\nCan Car & Fdy\nCan Car & Fdy A . .\nCan Oil  \u00a3['\nCan Dredge l.\u00a3\t\nCan Ind Alcohol  \u00a3\u00a3\"\nCan Steamships \t\nCan Marconi     .\u00a311.\"\nCan Pacific Rly ... .\nCr.n West Lmbr \u00a3\u00a3\nCockshutt    ;.\t\nCoast Copper  \u2022\nC M & S    .'.\u00a3\u00a3.\u00a3\nCons. Paper  ~\u2122\nDist Seagram \t\nDom Bridge  Z\u00a3\u00a3\nDom Foundries   \u201e\nDom Steel & Coal B ......\u00a3..\nFanny Farmer \t\nFleet Air  .\u00a3'\nFord A '\u00a3\"\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pfd\nGen Steel Wares  '.\u00a3\u00a3\nGoodyear       \t\nGoodyear pfd  '\nGreat Lakes        \u00a3.\u00a3\nGreat Lakes pfd  '\u00a3.-\nGypsum Lime     ....\u00a3.\t\nH. R. MacMillan A\nH. R. MacMillan B \"\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco \"\";\"\n1.01\n2.10\n.25\n.30%\n1.25\n.13%\n7.35\n.16 >\n17.65\n34.65\n16.85\n.15%\n2.15\n.13\n2.85\n9.55\n14.15\n.29\n.38\n56\n33\n100%\n12%\n15%\n60%\n'    11%\n41\n25%\n88\n8%\n32\n14V4\n32\n14Y4\n51%\n42%\n34%\n10\n20%\n27%\n17%\n18%\n22\n45%\n16%\n37\n425\n30%\n8%\n29%\n240\n153\n3B%\n32%\n\u25a062%\n47\nS3%\n33\n2.75\n64\n18%\n105\n20\n102\n52%\n38%\n48%\n24%\n20%\n20%\n35\n13\nInt Metal \t\nInt Nickel ....:\t\nInt Pete   ; Z\nMassey Harris \t\nM & O Paper .,\u201e\nMont Loco .:\t\nMoore Corp\t\nMcColl Frontenac ....\"...\nMcColl F'rontenac pfd\nNat Steel Car\t\nOgilvie Flour \t\nPage Hershey \u201e\t\nPcwell River\t\nPower Corp\t\nS. awinigan \t\nSicks Brew \t\nSimpsons A .\n49\n42%\n16ft\n89\n32%\n19%\n26%\n24\n97\n30%\n25\n56\n7%\n27\n35\n20%\n39\nSimpsons pfd  .,     101%\nSoutham        20%\nSteel of Can       33%\nSteel of Can pfd         35\nStandard Paving        15\nStandard Chemical         13\nTaylor Pearson   6%\nUnion Gas of Can       11%\nUnited Corp B  \u201e.       29%\nH. Walker        59%\nVancouver Stocks\nMINE8 (Closing Prices)\nBralorne \t\nCanusa  \t\nGrandview  \t\nHedley Mascot'\t\nHighland Bell \t\nInt C & C  ;\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nQuatsino \t\nSheep'Creek .\u00a3\nVanada  ;\t\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Uranium\t\nOILS\nAnaconda\t\nA P Consolidated .'....,...\nCalgary & Edmonton .\nCalmont\t\nCommonwealth \t\nHome \t\nMercury  ....; '\nOkalta Com  \t\nPacific Pete \u201e,\nRoyalite  \t\nVan,Rot  \u201e\nVanalta  _\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries \u201e.,\nCapital Estates\t\nInter Brew  ....\u201e..,\nAlberta Dist \t\nAlberta Dist Vt\t\n6.80\n.10\n.40.'\n.70-\n1.08\n.40\n9.00\n2.20\n.18%\n1.65\n.12%'\n.85   \u25a0\n1.80\n.18\n.43\n12.00\n1.14\n2.30\n17.85\n.16\n2.95\n9.70\n14.50\n.49-\n.28\n4.7J\n23.75\n3.50\n3.25\n3.19\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 15 (GP) \u2014Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 1.03%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.53%.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 indus .253.61 off 1.49 or 58 pe.\n20 rails    88.10 off  .55 or 62 pc.\n15 utiis    42.95 up   .14 or 53 pc.\n65 stocks    95.07 off  .43 or 45 pc.\n'1934..ZB0M&'\/SEP^N\/\/:PERFECT\ncondition. New'motor', anti-freeze,\netc. Can be seen at 104 High St.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n1 LARGE DUO-THERM HEATER;\n1 small Duo-Therm oil heater,\u2014\nNew, cheap for cash. Kitchen set,\nsingle mattress, hall tree, display\ntables, meat safe. Phone 77, 321\nBaker Street.\nFOR'SALE\u2014FULLY COMPLETeJ\n, \\ ^eelyiene cutting and ; welding!\noutfit in A-l condition, ^itH-'krge\ntool chest and tools. $200.00 for\nthe lot. John Brown, Reeves MacDonald Mine, Remac, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014KODAK PRECISION\nA Enlarger, 2y4x3%. with 4.5 Ilex\nParagon lens, dustless negative\ncarrier, double condensers, excellent condition; $90. Hal Bavin,\nPhotographer,   Windermere,  B.C.\n2-PIECE CHESTERFIELD SUITE,\nas new, for sale. Can be seen at\nNelson,Upholstery, 409 Hall St.\nTerms' can be. arranged.\nFOR SA\/LE-i8-^PCB:.--\u00bbWALNUj\ndirjjng idom Buite. Phdne 954-L\nMfBS p.m. \"\nFOR; SALE\u2014 G.E.  WASHING MA-\ncliine, hB new. Ph.^314-Y after 5.\nt. Dissolve Morton's Tender\nQuick in water.'Pump this pickle\nInto hams and shoulders along the\nbones. This sum the cue INSIDE,\n2. Rub with Morton's Sugar-\nCure. It strikes in from (Be OUTSIDE, caring toward the center-\ngives a rich, wood-smoke Havoc\n3. Result\u2014 the beat-ttstin&\nbest-keeping meat you've ever had\n..f...uriiformlj\\cured from-rintl to\n. v bone . , . no bone-taint, no waste\n... home-cured meat ftt its very best\nNelson Farmers\nSupply Limited\n524 Railway St.  '\n>Phone 174..        \u25a0 Nelson\nIL\nCure your meat t\nMORTON LtS?*\nWAY  \"-< \u2014*\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\t\nLakeshore \t\nLake Wasa _~.'\t\nLamaque \t\nLeitch  '\nLingman (new) \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLouvicourt  \t\nLynx  .';','\nMacDonald \t\nMacassa\t\nMacLeod Cock ...\"\t\nMadsen R. L Z\nMagnet  .'..'\u00a3..\nMalartic G. F\t\nMarcus G\t\nMclntyre  '\t\nMcKenzie R IV ,\u201e'\nMcilarmac  \t\nMining Corp .\"\"\nMoneta \t\nMylamaque  \u201e\u201e..\nNegus \t\nNew Calumet\t\nNew Jason\t\nNew Lund \t\nNew Thurbois \t\nNoranda \t\nPend Oreille ,\nPickle Crow\t\nPioneer   \\\t\nPore Reef'\t\nPreston E. D\t\nQuebec Man\t\nQueenston  _\t\nQuemont  \u201e\nRoche L. L\t\nSan Antonio ]\t\nSen. Rouyn __\t\nShawkey \t\nSherritt Gordon  ,\t\nSigma  ! \u201e...\nSilvermiller\t\nSilanco  , \u201e _,;_\nSiscoe  ............\nSladon Mai ....,\u201e,\nStadacona\t\nStarratt Olsen \t\nSteep Rock  \u201e.\nSurf Inlet  \u201e.\u201e\t\nSylvanite  _ \u201e\nTeck Hughes -....^..^y...-.,\nToburn ...... '..C ..':.;'   \u201e..\n,Tofbrit '\u2022.:.:.: : \u2122\nTrans Cont Res \t\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Canada \t\nVentures \t\nWatte Amulet  \u201e.,.,\nOILS\nAnglo Can \t\nAtlantic Oil \t\nB. A. Oil\nSalgary and Edmonton\t\nCalmont    ' ;\t\nCentral'Leduc Si-V'-Tv\n8.60\n1.05\n10.75\n.36\n600\n1.10\n.30\n.90\n.24\n.14\n1.00\n2.12\n3.70\n2.65\n.27\n2.70\n.10\n67.00\n.48\n.10\n19.50\n.40\n.11\n1.11\n3.35\n.20\n2.25\n.10%\n83.00\n8.80\n1.00\n2.40\n1.30\n1.68\n2.50\n.69\n28.00\n.09\n2.85\n.23%\n.23%\n4.00\n7.16\n1.49\n.35\n.85\n.69\n.41\n.70\n9.65\n.13\n1.30\n: 2,30\n'\u25a0 <{&!\/\u25a0\n1.90\n.77\n11.35\n2.10\n13.65\n13.35\n6.40\n2.90\n33.50\n12.00\n15\n59\nUse This Form\nTo Order Extra Copies of\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY IN\nBLACK PENCIL-\nMAIL; OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER\nOR TO THE DAILY NEWS CIRCULATION\nDEPARTMENT\nName _\nAddress\nCity  \t\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n(Continued)\nBUbfiETBLITZED?\nGETA\nI In In C<t AAA LOANS LIFE INSURED\nUP \u00bb0 $1,000 AT NO EXTRA CC)ST\n(Continued In'Next Column)\n(Continued In Next Column)     *_\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nName _\nAddress\nCity  _\nName _\nAddress\nCity   \t\n\"',,\u25a0\/\/. i< 'XT\nName\" i\u00a3\nAddress\nCity  \t\nName _\nAddress\nCity'\nYour Own Name\nYour Own Address'.\nCopy |5C + jc Postage\nPlus 3% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 21c Per Copy Covers Wrapping and Mailing\nby Us to Anywhere in Canada, Great Britain or the\nUnited States.\nPHONE 144\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEB. T6, 1951\nOne Teaspoonful Daily\nQives Full Protection\nfrom the cradle to the teens.\nThis modern multi-vitamin provides\nprotection against hidden or unexpected\nvitamin deficiencies.\nINFANTOL\n2 Sizes\n'1.00    '3.25\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nItaly, France to\nConsult on All\nEuropean Issues   ,\nSANTA MARGHERITA LIGURA,\nItaly, Feb. 15 (AP) \u2014 France and\nItaly, closing a three-day conference\nhere, announced today they will\nconsult each other on international\nquestions and present a common\nfront on problems of German rearmament and European defences.\nThe Premiers and Foreign Ministers of the two countries issued n\ncommunique urging \"intimate solidarity to thwart a movement attempting to upset Atlantic unity,\"\nadding that such solidarity is extremely important in the light of\ntoday's international situation.\nTake or Leave Offer\nFor Civic Workers\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014\nSome 1600 civic workers today were\noffered a take-it-or-leave it nine\nper cent pay boost.\nThe latest across-the-board Increase was offered to the outside\nworkers in an effort to end. long-\ndiscussed wage negotiations.\nThe increase would boost wages\nto about $215 a month. They want\na 10 per cent increase.\nCity officials said it was the fi-\nnal offer, and it would go to conciliation if not accepted.\nr. It is fifty to one against war, according to Lloyds of London. The\nCanadian   Philatelic   International\nSatisfaction Guaranteed on\nEllison's Vita B\nAll Purpose Flour\nELLISON   MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nExhibition has insured itself against\nhostilities interfering with their ex-\ntion takes place in September.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nS15 Kootenay St.        Phone 361\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING!\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuit 206 Phone 141\nHAVE YOUR  FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson'Upholstery\n409 Hall St.\nPhone 146\n'7\/\nWe pride ourselves on carrying the finest tools obtainable,\nnames you know and trust. . . names that mean years of\n*he finest'service and performance.\nO\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nthis week's mwRe\nPARKER\nCOPING\nSAW-$1.10 '\nA sturdy saw for cutting\nwood or light metal. Adjustable for angle cuts. 4%-lnch\nthroat, 6i\/2.ln, blade. Hardwood handle.\n\\\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\ni\ni\nAdjustable\nHack Saw-$2.50\nDlsston\nA fine quality adjustable saw.\nHas  hard   rubber  pistol   grip.\nBlade can be set to four positions.\nBailey No. 5\nJack Plane-$11.45\nHas screw and lever adjustment\u2014endwise and sldewlse\u2014\nfor coarse or thin shaving.\nHardwood handles.\nSimonds\nHacksaw\nBlades\n16-Oz.\nHammer-$2.70\nFinest quality,, perfect balance\nclaw hammer. Special steel\nhead Is tough for heavy duty\nwork and Iqng life. Compare\nthis for valuel\nMaster\nPadlock\n55c\nStrongest type\nconstruction\nknown,   Built\n\u25a0   from many\nsections of\nchrome steel\nplates. Case\nhardened  '\nshackle. 2 keys\nare   Included.\nPeterboro\nLock Sets,\nFront Door\nSets, Store\nDoor Sett, etc.\nIn many\nshapes   and\nfinishes,\nSee Our\nDisplays\nStraight\nShank\nDrills\nElectric\nSander-$22.95\nIdeal tool for home use or light\nshop use. Vibrator type motor\nruns cool. Can easily be set up\nfor buffing and  polishing tool\n30c\neac,h .and up\nAM sizes drills\n. jtir\/fland or\npow^drllls,\nSpecially\nmilled, tempered ,' atrtj.\nground fpr v\nwood or metal\ndrilling. \\\nCABINET\nHARDWARE\nby Amerock\nLatest design matched sets cabinet hardware. Heavily chrome\nplated.\nCabinet or Cupboard Combination Catch and  Latch   88c\nDrawer Haridle  46c\nDoor Pull 46c-\nDoor Hinges   77c\nYale\nNight \\\nLatch-$3.55\nHeavy Iron case': 'jwlth' bjick\nkrackle finish, B-dlsc eyltriler.\nBrass knob. Two keys furnished.'\nHand\nHatchet-$3.45\nForged steel head broad hatchet Black oxydlzcd finish resists rust. Straight grained\nhickory handle. Will take and\nhold keen edge,\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nPhone 1530       Retail Store   e   Nelson, B.C,\nConciliators\nFail lo Settle\n(.P., Guild Case\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15 (CP) \u2014 Proposals for settling a dispute between The Canadian Press, national\nnews-gathering agency, and the\nAmerican Newspaper Guild (C.I.O.-\nC.C.L.) were submitted today by\na Federal Conciliation Board and\naccepted in part by the CP.\nThe majority and minority findings of the board, which reported\nto Labor Minister Gregg it had\nfailed to settle the 10-month dispute are not binding on the parties.\nThe Canadian Press, in a state-\nmerit issued at Toronto headquarters\nsaid it is in accord with a majority\nrecommendation for five-per-cent\nsalary increases for editorial men\nwith a minimum weekly increase of\n$3. It also accepted a minority finding for minimum pay bases for editorial men in their first two years\nwith CP.\nThe Guild countered with a Tori\nonto statement saying the majority\nreport was proof of 'complete lack\nof good faith\" on the part of CP\nin its dealings with the Guild. It\nsaid the board had seen through\n\"the sham and hypocrisy of the\nCanadian Press ca^e.\" '\nThe Guild did not say whether it\naccepts the board's proposals.\n(The majority report stated it was\ndifficult to accept CP's \"unyielding\"\nattitude on some points in negotiations as evidence of hargaining in\ngood faith.)\nThe CP statement said It most\nemphatically denies evidence of\nanything other than good faith was\nshown in its position that it must\nhave authority in transferring, promoting, demoting and dismissing\nemployees engaged. In- handling\nnews.. It had sought common ground\non salaries and working conditions.\nThe majority report was filed by\nCounty Court Judge Archibald\nCochrane of Brampton, Ont., Board\nChairman, arid Herbert Orliffe,\nToronto lawyer and Guild nominee.\nGordon \u25a0 Munnoch, Toronto lawyer\nand CP nominee submitted the minority report.\nThe findings dealt with a dispute that has been in progress since\nlast April 5, when the Guild was\ncertified by the Canada Labor Relations Board as bargaining agent\nfor a unit of employees in CP's\neditorial department. The board Included editorial workers and messengers in the unit.\nThe CP, news co-operative owned\njointly by 91. daily newspapers, informed the board that at last Oct. 1\nthe unit as designated by the\nC.L.R.B. consisted of 73 employees,\nof whom 15 were messengers.\nBoth majority and minority findings represented compromis In varying degrees between the views of,,\nthe union and management. In\nsome cases, Guild demands were approved. In others continuance- of\nCP practice was recommended.\nElsewhere, middle ground was suggested.\nBoth reports proposed upward\nslary adjustments. The majority suggested in the light of living costs,\na five-per-cent increase with a $3\nweek minimum, with messengers,\ncomprising 15 of the bargaining unit,\nexcluded. These increases would be\nretroactive to Jan. 1, 1951.\nPresident Mines\nSafety Association\nMRS. N. R. SHILLINGTON\nof Kaslo who was elected 1951\npresident, of' the West Kootenay\nMines Safety .Association. The\ngroup this year plans to hold its\nannual mines safety competition in\nKaslo.\nMrs. Shillington has had wide\nexperience . in St. John Ambulance Association work in Vancouver and Calgary before\" she and\nDr. Shillington made their home in\nKaslo.\nIn Calgary, Mrs. Shillington was\nladies corps superintendent of the\nassociation, organizer of the Senator Patrick Burns Division of St\nJohn Ambulance Brigade which\nwon Dominion and provincial\nchampionships. She also organized\nthe Lethbridge nursing division\nand' supervised the work of-St.\nJohn nursirig division each Summer at the Calgary Stampede.\nDuring the war Mrs. Shillington\nstudied chemical warfare and obtained instruction certificates in air\nair raid precautions following\nwhich she instructed hundreds of\nA.R.P. wardens.\nHer work with the Order won\nrecognition with the award of the\nVellum of Thanks signed by Alexander of Tunis..\nThe trombone, brass wind instrument was orginally known as a\n\"Sackbut.\" '\nOttawa Boosts\nCobalt Prices\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15 (CP)\u2014Trade\nMinister Howe today announced\nthat   the   Government   will   increase payments for cobalt by 60\ncenta a  pound 'tb  boost  production of this strategic metal.\nCobalt,   in   scarce   supply,   is   a\nmetal used extensively in Canada's\ndefence program for the production\nof jet engines and blades and electrical equipment.'\nMr. Howe said In the Commons\nthat, the Government will offer to\nbuy the, metal at jricreased prices\nfor a period of three years, with\nthe Deloro Smelting and Refining\nCompany acting as its buying agent.\n-Cobalt is produced in Northern\nOntario and is usually a by-product\nof silver and nickel mines.\nThe Government's n,ew prlcei\nfor ores and concentrates range\nfrom $1.35 to $1.45 a pound, depending on the percentage of\ncobalt.\nSentenced to 3 Years\nHAMILTON, Bermuda, Feb. 15\n(CP) \u2014 Cpl. William Lawrence\nHelsel, a 24-year-old United States\nairman; stationed- at Kindley Air\nForce base was found guilty by a\nBermuda supreme court jury, after\na four day's trial of the rape of an\nunidentified Canadian girl tourist.\nHe was sentenced to three years'\nimprisonment.\nBrought here from her home in\nVancouver to testify, the tourist\naged 27, alleged that she \"fought,\nbit and scratched\" to ward off the\nairman's attack. The offence took\nplace on the night of Dec. 10, only\na few hours after ' ,e girl had arrived in Bermuda and taken a room\nat an hotel.\nKIRKCALDY, Scotland (CP) -\nTwo rugger teams decided to play\ndespite a referee's decision to cancel the match because of frost. Now\ntwo players wish they'd taken his\nadvice\u2014they both broke legs.\nFOR DEPENDABLE\nPAINTING AND\nPAPERHANGING\nSee\nMURPHY'S    i\nPhone 555 745 Baker St.\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n660 Baker St.\nPhone 235\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St\nPhone 327\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED &   REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\nROMSEY, Hampshire, England \u2014\n'CP)\u2014Bertram Waller Attlee, a\ncousin of Prime Minister Attlee,\ndied here at the age of 80. Sixty\nyears ago he won a bicycle contest\nby cycling 21 miles, 180 yards in an\nhour.\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and  Paint Work Specialty\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302 446 Ward St.\nYOUR DOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nIS SAFE IN OUR HANDS\nGRADUATE  PHARMACIST\nPURE CHEMICALS\nPRICES MODERATE\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day - 807-R Night\nBOX 460\nSee the\nDOMINION\nSCHOOLS'   \"\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nCURLING PLAYOFFS\nat the   \u2022:\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE ARENA\nMon., Tues. and Wed. \u2014 Feb. 19-21\n3 DRAWS PER DAY\nMorning, Afternoon and Evening\nBuy a Book of Tickets for $2.00\nfor admission to all games played\nSingle Game Admission 25c\nTickets may be purchased from:\n7 TAXI  STAND NELSON   PHARMACY ,\nGILKERS' LTD. CIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nDON'T MISS THIS EXCEPTIONAL\nSPORTS EVENT\nShoe\nNecessities\nLynn, Kiwi, Nujget;'l'A'\nPolishes\nSaddle Soap\nLexol Conditioner\nLaces and Insoles\nPine Tar Dubbin\nOil Compound\nNugget Polish Kits\nWADE\nRIGHT IN\nCottage, Farm\nOr Trailer\u2014\nPROPANE GAS\nServes You Best\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nTHE WARDROBE\nART  TARLING,. Prop.'\nLadles'  and  Gents'  Tailors\nCleaning -j! Repairing    '\nAlterations\nPHONE 1256\nP.O. BOX 36 - NELSON, B.C.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nMAK\u00a3 VOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nWORK\nCLOTHES\nOur work clothing Is\nbought with the same\ncare as our finest suits.\nWe handle only the\nbetter   lines.\nKITCHEN,  G.W.G.  and\nHEADLIGHT\nEverything for the\n.working man.\nEmory's Ltd.\nThe Man's Store\n. KUALA LUMPUR (CP) - Cor\ntinuation of Communist activity hi\nled the government ot the Feden\ntion of Malaya to call up 20,000 me\nfor service in the security force\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Bllb\nPHONE 25\nMATCH BLOCK\nWOOD\nfor Immediate Delivery\n$10.00 per Load\nW.W. POWELL\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPhone 176\nSPECIAL\nWomen's Black Velvet Overshoes, with fur trim and\nzipper front. .\nThis overshoe is of the finest quality. Cuban or low\nheel.\nRegular $6.95 to $7.50\nREDUCED to $3'9$\nThe NELSON SHOE Co. Ltd.\nPHONE 1114\n411 Baker Street Nelson, B.C.\nCook or heat water\nwith more safety\nand convenience!\nBurns clear. Odorless. Tanks installed at low cost;\nit's economical to\nconvert from your\npresent fuel. Order\nyour supply now!\nPHO%\n544\nPrompt Delivery\nMcKAY & STRETTON LTD.\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\nO.K.\nUSED CARS\n1946 MERCURY COACH.\nHeater, radio, fog lights\n1950 HILLMAN SEDAN.\nHeater   \t\n'1450\n$I450\n1941    CHRYSLER     ROYAL\nSEDAN. $QOA\nHeater, radio _  <f\\J\\J\n1937   CHRYSLER     ROYAL\nSEDAN.\nTo clear._\n1947 OLDSMOBILE HYDRA-MATIC\nSEDAN. Conditionaire\t\nf350\n1800\nUSED\n1949 MERCURY 1-TON EXPRESS.\nHeater  ,\t\n1946 DODGE 2-TON.\nFirst class condition .__:\t\n1945 INTERNATIONAL 2-TON.\nPriced at .. \u25a0 \u25a0;'_ \\'y>V \\\\\\\n1949 AUSTIN PrC^'-UP\nPriced at  \t\n;194'9'AUSTIN PICK-UP\nPriced at  \t\n__$1400\n__$850\n1$M\n1940 CHEVROLET 1\/2-TON PANEL.\nTo clear  !LLA\t\n900\n1150\n$1000\n'350\n1946\" CHEVROLET 51\/2-TON. Complete \u00bb\/[\/>A\nwith almost new 3:4 yd. dump box  \u00ab4\"wW\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and mast completely equipped       \u25a0'\ngarage in the Interior of B. C.     ;\n35   PHONE   35\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_1951_02_16","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\/1.0424068","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 Company, Limited","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":"1951-02-16 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":"1951-02-16 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":"Nelson 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":""}]}