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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":" To Explore India,\nCeylon Trade\nCanadian Delegates Plan Talks\nAfter Commonwealth Meet; May\nTrade Wheat for Coconut Products .\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 Canadian delegates\nto the Commonwealth .Foreign Ministers Conference are to\nhold trade talks with India arjd Ceylon before they return\nhome, it was learned today.\nThe Indian trade talks will discuss stimulation of trade\nbetween the two countries and the possibility of an, over-all\ntrade agreement. The discussions with \"Ceylorl will explore\nthe possibility of trading Canadian wheat for coconut products.\nThe Canadian delegation to the\nIndo-Canadian talks, to start Jan.\n22, will be headed by L. R. Pearson, the Dominion's External Af-\nlairs Minister who now is attending the Commonwealth Foreign\nMinisters Conference . here. Commerce Minister K. C. Neogy of\nIndia and officials of the Commerce\nand External Affairs Ministries\nwill represent India at the New\nDelhi talks..\nCeylon   Is  anxious  to   discuss\nflour purchases with  both Canada and Australia. The possibility\nof Ceylon buying Canadian flour\nWas first discussed after Australia   raised   the   price   of   wheat\nfollowing devaluation.\nAlmost all Ceylon's flour imports\n\u2014she does not Import wheat\u2014have\nbeen coming from Australia. When\nAustralia's wheat price was raised,\nwith a corresponding Increase  in\nthe price of flour, Ceylon protested\nto the International Wheat Council\nin London.  -\nThe main difficulty about Ceylon\nchanging her policy of buying flour\nfrom  Australia   and  taking' from\nCanada is the dollar shortage.\nFAVORABLE BALANCE'' ; :.';'\nHowever, T,, N. Rpaupre, .Executive Assistant to. Canada's Deputy\nTrade Minister, said in an exclusive\ninterview in the times of Ceylon\nthat dollars \"should not present.a\nproblem to Ceyloix because she has\na favorable balance of trade with\nCanada.\"\nWhile Ceylon officials concede\nthat under the international wheat\nagreement they are obliged to accept the price charged by the producer country, they complain that\nthe Australian increase was not\nonly unjustified but would have a\nserious effect on Ceylon'B economy.\nAs the reason for this they point\nto the large increase in consumption of flour since rice became\nscarce during the wan.   .\nAny increase ih the local price of\nflour, Ceylon officials maintain,\n:W0uld result in a rise In the cost\nof living .already abnormally high.\nl\\\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with snow by\nafternoon. Continuing cold. Light\nwinds. Low and high at Cranbrook\nI below and 10 above,' Crescent\nValley 15 and 25,\nVOLUME 48\n*\n\u00bb,8 CENT8 A COPY\nNEL80N, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 10, 1950\nNUMBER 211\n6. *\nV\n^pavers\nProvinceSwash.\n\u2022    \u2022   : \u25a0       .  '.'   '\u25a0*'.'   \\\\ ..;' \u25a0 \u25a0'*'     '  .\"    \"      ','>\nStiff Winds Threaten Bigger Drifts\nFor East Wash.; Rural Schools -V\nClosed; 15 Inches Fall at Cranbrook\nVANCOUVER, Jan. t& (CP) \u2014\nThe weather played the same old\ntricks overnight, cushioning, the\nsouthern coastal area,of British Columbia with another fall of snow.\nBelow freezing temperatures\nprevailed and motorists once again\nskidded to work. \u25a0 j\nAverage snowfall for the j area\nwas three inches..     .   (\nAt Cranbrook 650 miles East,\nanother 15 Inches of snow fell\nduring the weekend, bringing the\ntotal fall since Deo. 17 to more\nC.C.F. Demands\nProbe in Train\nService Cut\nSecond1Large Coal\nStoppage Starts\nIn United States\nPITTSBURGH, Jan. S (AP) -\nMore than 37,000 soft coal miners\nwent on strike today in Ohio, Pennsylvania ,and West Virginia In the\nsecond large coal-work stoppage in\nthe United States in two weeks.\nA half-dozen steel companies, and\nthe giant Pittsburgh Consolidation\nCoal Company reported their: pits\nclosed by miners' refusal to work.\nMiners gave no reason lor not\nworking, but a. sign posted at a\nRlvesville, W. Va, mine of Pitt\nConsol'said:    ' .       \u25a0   ,\n. \"No Contract, No Work.\" j\nU.M.W. President John L. Lewis\nhas instructed his men to work\nthree days a Week, even though the\ncontract expired, last June 30.\n'LlWiS 1SPEAK8 ''OUT\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 9 (AP)\u2014\nJohn L. Lewis spoke out today\nagainst demands for Government\naction which he said would \"oppress the mine workers and cripple\nIheir Union.\"\nThe United Mine Workers' chief\ndenounced Senator Taft (R., Ohio)\nfor urging President Truman to go\nInto court under the Taft-Hartley\nAct seeking to force miners to work\nfiva.days a week instead of three. \u2022\n' He said Taft asked the President\n\"to herd the coal miners into the\nlethal gas chamber of the infamous\nslave statute.\"\nLewis also sharply criticized Robert Denham, general counsel of the\nNational Labor Relations Board,\nwho is expected to decide this week\nwhether to seek. a court order\nagainst the three-day work week\nin the mines under,a Taft-Hartley\nsection, lie called Denham a \"hatchet man for the high-profit gang,\"\nLewis issued his, statement, as. a\ngroup, of Midwestern legislators\nagreed to try to push, a .resolution\nthr'oitgh.. Congress ) cajligg; on. tha\nPresideht'fd declare a\" national coal\nemergency.\nRepublican- lawmakers led this\nmovement at an informal meeting\nin which they heard retail coal\ndealers urge Congress to step into\nthe coal dispute. Rep. Mason (fi.,\n111.) told the dealers he believes\nimpeachment action against the\nPresident is Congress' \"only reme\ndy\" for curtailed coal production.\nInternational Bill of Rights\nUrged by Diefenbaker al Coast\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014\nJohn .Diefenbaker today told a\nmeeting ot the Women's Canadian\nClub that Canada should adopt the\nInternational Bill of Rights.\noffence . . . combines Investlga\ntlon should be designed to punish\nand prevent profiteering.\"\nMr.   Diefenbaker   also   urged   a\nRoyal Commission of Inquiry into\nHe said the question should  be \u00abno tender\" Federal  contracts for\nplaced  before  the  Dominion-Provincial Conference in Ottawa.\nEarlier, Mr. Diefenbaker, Progressive Conservative Member of\nParliament for Lake Centre, Sask.,\nsaid In an interview that investigation of combines is in danger of\nbecoming a \"mere witch hunt.\" He\nwas commenting on the Ottawa report charging a combine in the\nmatch industry  in Canada.\n\"British law has always recognized that bigness In Itself Is no\nbuildings purchased in Vancouver,\nIt .has been charged that buildings\nwere purchased here without the\ncalling of tenders. \"';\n\"There is no justification for the\naward of large contracts without\ntender,\" said  Mr.  Diefenbaker.\nIn discussing the bill of rights\nset out by the United Nations a year\nago, he said that Canada has not\ntaken a definite stand on the ques\ntion of human freedoms.\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 The\nNational Cbuncil of the C.C.F. today\nlashed out at the Canadian National\nRailways' cut in passenger service\nand demanded an Immediate investigation \"of a situation which\njustifies doubt regarding the motives and efficiency of the C.N.RI\nadministration.\"\n.In a statement released to 'the\nPress after a closed meeting, the\nCouncil said it \"strongly condemns\nthe action of the Canadian National\nRailway in the 25-per-cent' reduction in necessary passenger-service,\nwhich went into effect today;\"\n\"It is clear that the administration of the C.N.R. is guilty either\nof mismanagement or of a deliberate attempt to discredit an essential\npublicly-owned utility,\" the statement said.\n\"The Council finds it difficult to\nunderstand why the Caandian Pacific  Railway  should  be  able  to\nmaintain   its   full   services   If  the\nleason for the C.N.R. cut is really\na shortage of coal, as alleged.\"\nThe statement said the curtailment   \"appears   particularly   In\ndefensible    In   the , Maritime!,\nwhere coal-production  Is being\ncut at the same time that a coal\nshortage is claimed to exist,\"\nThf  Council  also,  attacked, the\nFederal'-Gijj'ernmeot policy-oti tiritie\n.support'for^.agHcultliral^producti\nand'its attitude toward agricultural\nsurpluses.\nThe statement said the Council\n\"condemns recent statements and\nactions,by the Federal Minister of\nAgriculture which indicate the\nGovernment intends to drop the\nprice support policy for agricultural\nproducts in August of this year.\n\"The C.C.F. demands the Agricultural Prices Support Act be\nmade permanent legislation,\" the\nstatement said.,\nURGES FLOORPRICE8\nIt urged'establishment of floor\nprices for eggs and potatoes because of \"a drastic drop in price\nand the loss of overseas markets.'\n\"Appropriate action\" was also advocated for the hog industry.   .\nOn the problem'of .food surpluses\nthe Council \"condemned the Government's tendency to regard\nmounting surpluses as a calamity\nto the Canadian people.\" It advocated national policies to encourage maximum consumption by Canadian and international policies to\nmake the surpluses \"available to\npeoples needing them everywhere:\"\nIn other business the Council laid\nfurther plans for the three-year\nexpansion program and discussed\nproblems of organization. The\nStatement made no mention of dis-\nsaid policy decisions were set back\ncussions of party policy but officia..\nuntil the. 1950 biennial convention\nto be held in Vancouver next July.\nthan 44 Inches. Residents began\ndigging out for the seventh time\nthis season.\nROADS TREACHEROUS\nVICTORIA, B.C., J&. 9 (CP) \u2014\nVictorians awoke this '{horning and\nsaw; with some surprise a three-\ninch blanket of wet I snow on the\nground.\nRoads on most of Vancouver 'Island were treacherous this morning, with police advising motorists\nto use chains on highways.\nSix to eight inches of snow fell\non the Malahat Sunday night, covering a thick coat of ice on the\nhighway.\nDuncan, 40 miles North of here,\nhad a -six _lnch blanket today following what B. C. police described as \"a regular blizzard\" up. till\nmidnight Sunday,     ' \u25a0* ,\nNanaimo, 37 miles farther North,\nand Port Alberni 135 miles from\nVictoria, each reported three\ninches of fresh snow.\nCampbell River, 175 miles up-is-\nland, where two feet of snow is already on the ground, had about two\ninches more.\nROUTES OPEN\nSPOKANE, Wash., Jan. 9 (AP)\nWinter's heaviest wallop left the\nNorthwestern. States still struggling\nto get its breath today.\nA record snowfall in the Eastern\npart ot Washington and Idaho plugged State and County roads. Maintenance crews operating on a 24-\nhour basis had opened all main\nroutes today, but a stiff wind was\nthreatening to bring more and bigger drifts.\nBusiness and travel at Bonners\nFerry, Idaho, was at a standstill\nA snowfall of more than 40\nInches In three days burled ears\nand forced the closing of all\nschools,   ' ,\nThe major part of Spokane County's rural schools Were, closed.\nDrifts were eight to 10 feet high.\nCHICAGO,\/Jan. 9 (AP) -\nWabash River, straining at its mi\nmade bulwarks, threatened toi\nto flood thousands of acres of\ndiana land, adding to the devas\ntteh of one major levee bre;\nthWgh.   \u2022 J!.:    :-\"'.    *\"\u2022 \u2022':\u25a0''\nThe Nlblack levee seven mill\nNorth of Vincennes, Ind., collapse\nSunday night, flooding 16,000 acn\nof lowlands and forcing evacuatioi\nof all persons in the area. But thi:\nrun-off of water is expected to havi\nlittle effect on the pressure of rive:\nwater inching near the top of Vin\ncennes' sea wall.\nSoldiers, volunteers and State\nTroopers were on hand at Vincennes to prepare for tbe rampaging Wabash.\nSTUDY FRENCH\nWHEAT SALES\nU. S. Dollars Given\nFrance for Grain;\nSold to Holland\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 9 (AP) \u2014\nThe Economic . Co-Operation Administration reported tonight that\nFrance, which received millions of\nUnited .States dollars last year' to\nbuy grain, recently sold $2,500,000\nworth of wheat to Holland.\nDr. Dennis A, Fitzgerald,\nE.C.A.'s director of food and agriculture, confirmed the fact that\n* the sale had been made and said\nthe recovery agency takes a\n\"dim view\" of the transaction.\nBut lie and other E.C.A. officials\nsaid, there was nothing, illegal about\nIhe sale of some 30,000 tons of\nFrench wheat. Fitzgerald' said E.\nC. A. does not intend to cut off all\ndollar aid to France because of the\ndeal. However,' the.agency might be\nreluctant to provide further money\nto France for wheat purchases.\nFitzgerald said he believes the\ngrain came from France's 1949\nbumper wheat crop. E.C.A. had given France no funds to-buy wheat\nsince early July, when the 1949 crop\nwas  harvested.       -\n\"However, we take a dim view of\nthe matter since the French did\nnot notify us of their intention to\nmake the deal and since there is a\npossibility that France may find\nit necessary to.ask for more dollars' later this year to buy grain\nbefore the 1950 harvest is in,\" he\nsaid. '\nMumors of the deals cropped up\ntoday in the Chicago grain trading\npits. These trade reports said that\nFrance had been\u2014or soon would be\n\u2014cut off from Marshall-plan funds\nallotted to buy wheat In the United\nStates.\nWrangle Expected in\nOttawa\nWill Allow Bacon\nShipments to U.S.\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9  (CP)\nWith\nWould Legalize\nBetting on Public\nSports Events\n\u2022NEW YORK, Jan. 9 (AP) \u2014 Mayor William O'Dwyer proposed today that New York State legalize\nbetting on public sports events and\nput it under the control of a state\nagency.\nThe Mayor's surprise proposal\nwhich seemed to stir up a far-\nspreading controversy, came on the\nheels of a sharp new crackdown\non gambling in New York City,\nwith 51 high-ranking police officials transferred and bookmakers\nreported fleeing to New Jersey.\n* Governor Thomas E. Dewey and\nleaders of the Republican-controlled State Legislature declined immediate comment.\n'nited Kingdom market declin-\njanada has decided to allow her\nroducers to ship bacon to the\nStates for the first time, in a\nindustry likely will be told\n\u25a0a day or two that export\nfcwifl.be.- jnftdc~i'VallaMe'*Ibr\n' of surplus smoked or cur-\nto, the U.S. This includes\nlermits, to be made available\nthe   Trade   Department,\ncover shipments of fresh\nwhole pigs either in live\nid form.\nhpnge in policy\u2014to grad-\nfopen the U.S. market for\nCanadian bacon\u2014follows the recent\nannouncement that the U.K. will\nbuy only 60,000,000 pounds of top-\nquality bacon from Canada {his. year\nat,a reduced price' of 29\" centa a\npound.\nThe U.S. market was closed early\nin the second world war when the\nU.K. placed contracts for the shipment of as much as 700,000,000\npounds of Canadian bacon in one\nyear. The U.S. market had to be cut\noff to send every available pound\nof bacon to the U.K.\nBotft the U.S. and Canada erect-\nted. barriers against the movement\nof .pork products between the two\ncountries.\nRecently, the U.S., with a large\nsurplus of standard-quality pork\nhas been trying to Increase Its\nmarket In Canada and the embargo against the U.S. product worked to the advan'tage of Canadian\nproducers. The U. S. product\nwould have sold at a lower price\nIn Canada than the Canadian con\nduct.\nU.K. POSITION\nSTREHGTHEHED\nCripps Says Record\nAs Good as Any Other\nCountry in Position\nBy ALAN HARVEY .\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n: LONDON, Jan. 9 \u2022 (CP) - Sir\nStafford Cripps said today that\nBritain's 1949 record is at least as\ngood as, and probably better than,\nthat of any other country in \"anything like similar circumstances.\"\nIn a widely-ranging review of\neconomic affairs, the Chancellor of\nthe Exchequer told a Press conference the country's financial position has been \"basically strengthened\" by the rapid rise In industrial\nproduction. Earlier, he paid tribute\nto the \"enlightened and. helpful\npolicies pursued by our American\nand Canadian friends\" in seeking\nto solve the world financial problems.\nIn  his  review  of the  British\nsituation,   he   said   It  was   time\n.everybody   recognized   what   a\ngood   job   British   workers   and\nmanagement   have   been   doing.\n. .Some' political commentators  Interpreted his statement as slightly\nelectioneering In tone.   -.\n\"My own assessment of the sltua\ntion,\" the \"Chancellor said, \"is that\nthere  is  no  country  in  anything\nlike similar circumstances that can\nput up a better or indeed as good\na record as we have done over the\npast year,\" and I am prouder than\never of the efforts of my fellow\ncountrymen.\"\nFor the first time, Sir Stafford\nlinked the problem of \"unrequited\nexports\" with the efforts of the\nfree world to pheck the spread of\nCommunism.\nUnrequited exports are those\nBritain sends to pay off debts incurred during the war.\nThe Chancellor meant that these\nexports have helped countries like\nIndia and Pakistan, to, build up\n.'their.,,.production- an^'. thttR* Stiffen,\niiite'rnal' resistance to Communism.\nCUT EXPENDITURE\nAs of Jani 1, 1950, Britain has\nsucceeded in bringing about 25 per\ncent reduction* In dollar expenditure as arranged at the Commonwealth Finance Ministers Conference last July. The Chancellor said\nhe iees no immediate likelihood\nthat dollar imports will have to be\ncut further.\nThe United Kingdom's changeover from dollar, to non-dollar\nsources of supply has been \"very\njgreat indeed.\"\n\"The proportion \u25a0 of- United\nKlngtjom Imports coming from\nthe\" dollar area has fallen fron\n34 per cent In 1947 to 22 per cent\nboth In 1948 and In the first 11\nmonths of 1949.\" . .\nThe fact that the . sterling area\nas a whole had been able to make\ndollar cuts without seriously injuring their economies was \"a\ngood measure of progress which\nwe,have made during the last two\nyears in restoring productive power\nof the non-dollar world, building\nup new sources of supply, and\nbuilding up our own' capacity as\nan alternative source of goods for\nthe non-dollar world.\"\nTells of Last\nMeeting With Coast\nShooting Victim\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 A\npretty, 18-year-old grade eight\nstudent today told a coroner's jury\nof her last meeting with -her boy\nfriend, Raymond Stanley Hamod,\nfour hours before he was shot to\ndeath by a police officer.\nHamod died of three bullet\nwounds from the gun of Constable\nAl Eburne Jan. 6 after he is alleged\nto have attempted to hold up\nEburne and his partner in their\nprowler car.\nChoking back tears, she told the\njury how Hamod had asked her to\nmarry him and of her decision to\nwait a couple of years. He told her\nhe was going to Port Hardy, and\nwhen he came back they would\ntalk it over again.\nHis last words as he left her\nwere: \"I won't be seeing you.\"*\n* His mother was the- last person\nto see him alive. She said when he\nleft her at the door he seemed to\nbe in a happy mood and told her\nhe would see her the next day.\nHalf an hour later, Hamod got\nInto the police car and was shot.\nEGG PRICES JUMP\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Ej\nprices jumped three cents a dozen\nhere today. Reason given by wholesalers was that customers have been\neating more eggs since the price\ndrop.\nGrade A large will now be  41\ncents   wholesale,   and   39   cents\ndozen for Grade A medium.\nTwo Kootenay Trainmen Die in Passenger'Freight Crash\nNo Agenda Drafted for Dominion,\nProvincial Meeting; Believe Other\nThan Constitution May Be Discussed\nBy DARCY O'DONNELL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 Heads of Canada's 11 governments will gather around a conference table in the Commons\ntomorrow to discuss plans for giving Canada power to amend\nits constitution on matters under Provincial jurisdiction.\nIt is expected Prime Minister St. Laurent will lead off\nwith a statement'outlining the purposes of the gathering.\nThere was some speculation in political circles that the\nopening will be marked by a wrangle over procedure. The j\nFederal Government has not drafted an agenda and as q. result matters other thqn the constitutional amendments may\nbe interjected into the discus-* ; \u2014\nslon. | agree to transfer power as far as\nProvincial premiers, arriving\nthroughout the day frqm their various capitals, said that since no\nagenda has been prepared they did\nnot know what procedure will be\nfollowed. Some came with prepared briefs but were. not certain if\nthey would have an opportunity\nto present them.\nA number ef the premiers\nAero cautiously optimistic that\nsome measure of agreement can\nbe reached, But they indicated\nthey feel agremnt may hinge on\na rconclllatlon of the constitutional views of Premier Duplessis\nof Quebec and Prime Minister St.\nLaurent\nMr. Duplessis holds that the British North America Act\u2014the basis\nof Canada's constitution\u2014is a compact that cannot be changed without the consent of all the Provinces.\nMr. St. Laurent holds, that Parliament has the power to amend the\nconstitution on matters under Federal jurisdiction.\nHe called the constitutional conference to discuss whether Parliament should be given power to\namend the constitution on matters under Ptovinclal jurisdiction\nor under joint jurisdiction of the\nFederal Government and the Provinces.\nUntil the -last session of Parliament^-}he posyer.to amend-.the con.\ntotutiori On Federal matters rested\nwith the United Kingdom Parlia\nment. Mr. St. Laurent, sponsored\nlegislation transferring the power\nto Canada. Additional legislation\nwill fee required If the Provinces\nSydney Dockers\nReturn to Work\nMELBOURNE, Australia,' Jan. 9\n(Reuters)\u2014Sydney dockers, whose\nfive-day strike against non-union\nlabor had threatened to spread to\nall Autralian ports, have decided to\nreturn to work tomorrow, it was announced today.\nEmployers claimed the men were\ndoing so without gaining their or-\naid men should be members of the\niginal demand\u2014that all docks first-\nWaterside Workers'Federation.\nBut Tom Nelson, Sydney Secretary of the Federation, said the\ntrouble had been ended today by\nlifting the suspension of the men\nInvolved.\nSeventy ships were held up in\nSydney..\nAn engineer and a brakeman died In this collision between a\n. Canadian Pacific Railway Eastbound passenger and a freight train\n.standing In a siding at Fasslferne, five miles West-of Cranbrook.\nThey were Engineer Peter Linton and Brakeman W, J..Myles, both\nof Cranbrook. Nine other persons were Injured In the Jan. 6 accident.\nPicture of the scene shows a Oar from the passenger, thrown\nInto the ditch, the mall oar reared over a crumpled express oar, and,\nat the extreme right, the noses of the two engines \"welded\" together\nby the Impact.\nEmphasized In the accident were safety features of the all-steel\ncars used on the passenger train. Passengers In the Pullman were\nnot Jarred despite the severe crash, and some had to be wakened\nfrom sleep to transfer to chartered bus to continue to Cranbrook.\nThe accident unofficially was reported caused by an \"open\nswltcn.\" \u2014Photo by Charles Wormlngton, Kimberley.\ni . . ...   . .    ..   -.\nKuzych Doesn't\nCount Union's Vote\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014\"It\ndoesn't mean a thing,\" said Myron\nKuzych, rebel union man!, tonight\nwhen told that the Saturday referendum vote qf the Marine. Workers\nand Boilermakers Union- (CCL)\nmembership, excluded him from\ntheir ranks by a refusal to Issue a\nmembership card.\nUnion- President and Secretary\nWilliam White and William Stewart\nhave placed their members in\n\"ridiculous position,\" he said.\nThe vote was 979 to 28 agalrist\nadmitting Kuzych to the union.\nMr. Justice Whittaker ordered\nKuzych reinstated and found White\nand Stewart guilty-of \"contempt of\ncourt\" In. refusing to do so. They\nwere committed to Oakalla but\nreleased on a stay of commital\norder.\n\"This vote makes it appear as If\nthe Boilermakers Union members\nwant White ..and Stewart ,to act in\ncontempt of court,\" said- Kuzych. 'v\nJ3-\nProvincial matters are concerned.\nShould  such  agreement result\nfrom the conference, a formula.'\nfor making constitutional amendments will be drafted,    \u25a0 ' ,~   \u25a0\nThere has been some speculation that Premier Duplessis will\nIntroduce the question of taxation\nrights at tho conference* His dele,\nnation Includes two of his financial advisers.\nThe first session of the conference will be open to the public, but\nthe conference as a whole will decide whether other sessions should\nbe open or closed..\nPremier Douglas of Saskatchewan also hoped the conference will\nbe open, but 'Premier Smallwood\nsaid he felt better progress would\nbe made if the conference was closed and the delegates realized they\ndid not have to talk to a gallery.\nPremier Manning of Alberta, Premier Campbell of Manitoba and\nPremier Johnson of British Columbia declined comment.\nMr. Douglas indicated that' Saskatchewan is in favor of changes\nnecessary to make the constitution\nworkable. But it would not lose\nsight of such important matters\nas economic problems.\nHe said he had and still favored\nresumption of the general Dominion-Provincial conference to deal\nwith- all thet.problems Involved lit'\nrelationship between the Federal\nand Provincial governments,\nHealth and welfare and, unemployment were some of the matters which were equally important\nto the Canadian people.\nWandering Boathouse\nFound 20 Miles Away\nCAMPBELL RIVER, B.C., Jan. 9\n(CP)\u2014Harold Ingram has found\nhis wandering boathousy. And today he's faced with the problem of\ntowing.it,.home from Deep Water\nBay, 20 miles North.\"\nThe boathouse apparently slipped\nIts moorings last week. Search w^s\ninstituted when Ingram arrived to\nfind lt missing. When the .wandering craft was located, his power\nboat was still intact inside.\nA Diaper Shortage?\nMONTREAL, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Maybe\none husband just got desperate.\nSamuel Nadler, owner of a Montreal diaper laundry, reported to\npolice today that one of his trucks\nwas stolen Sunday. It contained 90\nbags of dirty diapers and 12 bags of\nclean.\nThe truck was found abandoned\nlatfr\u2014but .the diapers were missing. Mr. Nadler' said they were\nworth $2000.\nHealth Insurance\nAnnouncement\nExpected Soon\nVANCOUVER, Jan^ 9 (CP)\u2014The\nVancouver Sun says in a dispatch\nfrom Victoria today that before the\nLegislture meets, the Government\nwill be ready to announce reorgan-'\nization of the British Colunjbia Hospital Insurance Scheme.\nPossibility of the whole scheme\nbeing placed in the hands of a com-\nmlsion, similar to the B.C. Power\nCommision, is hinted, the Sun report says. It adds:\n\"Whether administration will continue under the direction of Health\nMinister Pearson's Department is\nproblematical.\" ,   \u25a0\nFREEZES TO TREE\nSPOKANE, Jan.-MAP) \u2014Firemen said it wasn't a case of the cat\nbeing afraid to come back down\nthe tree. The feline, reported Saturday by a housewife, had its tail,\nfrozen to a limb and had to be\nchiped loose .with a knife.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nPITTSFIELD, Mass., Jan. 9 (AP)\u2014A soda-fountain sundae was\nbanned today as a fire hazard by Fire Chief Thomas F. Burke.\nThe concoction, featured by a local drug store, was known as the\n\"Flaming Nut Sundae.\"\nIt consisted of half a pint of ice cream, 1% ounces of hot fudge, an\nounce of marshma])ow, a cube of sugar, nuts and three drops of lemon\nThe extract, 70 per cent alcohol, was set ablaze before serving.\n' Burke ruled the delicacy was a fire hazard to fur coats, sweaters\nand cotton dresses.\napple,\nATLANTA, Jan. 9 (AP)\u2014There wasn't Just one big, red\nbut a whole bagful\u2014and they weren't for the teacher, either.\nOne of them was for Turnkey C. H. Hammock at the police station.\nIt bonged him square on the head.\nOthers went sailing at other officers trying to fingerprint a 40-\nyear-old woman brought In on a minor charge, Most of them, however,\nmanaged to duck In time.\nHer apples all gone, the woman was led away to a Jail ward \u2014\nunflngerprlnted.\nNANAIMO, B.C., Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 Are. British Columbia's 27,000\ntraditionally hard-drinking loggers turning sissy?\nTheir representatives to the International Woodworkers of America\nconvention here yesterday maintained they are not, but:\nDelegates to the loggers''conclave voted down a.resolution asking\nthe Government not to dilute bottled liquor, if such is the case.\nThe convention felt the loggers shouldn't tell the Government how\nto run its business, whether or not snake oil is mixed up in it.\nPITTSBURGH, Jan. 9 (API\u2014Police are looking for a yes-man\nwith cuts on his face.\n.When Louis Stein returned home unexpectedly he found a burglar\nransaoklng his home. Stein told him to get out. The man stammered,\n\"Yessir, yesslr,\" and dived out a first-floor window In a shower of\nglass,\nST. LOUIS, Jan. 9 (AP)\u2014The State Government is going into the\nbaby sitting business here. And residents soon will be able to get\nco-eds to mind Junior for between 50 and 75 cents an hour.\nPaul S. Connole, Manager of the St. Louis office of the Missouri\nDivision of Employment Security, said he believes, it will.be the first\nagency of its kind to be operated by a state government. X;\nHe said applicants will be carefully screened, as will potential\nemployers. \u25a0'     ,   ,,   \u2022 , .    .\n\"College girls, teen-age girls and older women have expressed a\ndesire to do this kind-of wprk,\" he added. \"It will be a conyenience\n,-for parents-and a means of making money for the sitters;  .,,;.\u25a0\n '\" ''\u25a0\u2022' \"'\u25a0';\u2022 '\u2022:'',-.. '\"-^\"..V\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,TUESDAY, JAN. 16, 1M0\nLast TlinoD Tonight\u2014Complete shows 7:00-8:54\n\u00ab ORANo'COMBINATION -OR A HIlAMdUS TIMII-^ifSI    Kb: \u00abKfc \u2014\nLate\nNews\nI Starts Wed,: \"THE MAN FROM COLORADO\"\u2014Technicolor\nL R. Smith of Cranbrook Promoted\nC.P.R. Superintendent al Penficfon\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Jan. 9 \u2014 J.\nI L.   Palethorpe,   Canadian    Pacific\nRailway   Superintendent   at   Pen-\nticton, since 1941, has retired be-\nI cause of 111 health, after close to 40\nI years  of  Valued  service  in  B.C.,\nMontreal and the Prairie Region.\n\u2022He Will be succeeded by Leslie R.\nSmith,  formerly  Assistant  Super-\nI lntendent at Cranbrook, Announce-\n;,merit  of  Mr.  Palethorpe's' retlre-\n1 ment and subsequent new appointments   was   made   by   E.   S.   Mc-\nCracken,   General   Superintendent\nof the C.P.R. Pacific Region.\nMr. Smith,- first entered the\nC.P.R. service at Revelstoke, B.C.\nIn 1937 as an operator, and later\nserved In Winnipeg as operator\nknd   Travelling   Car   Service\nAgent;  Assistant  Superintendent\nat   Moose   Jaw,   and, Assistant\nSuperintendent    at    Lethbridge,\nAlta. He returned to British Co-\nlumbla   In   September,   1947   as\nAssistant Superintendent at Cranbrook In June, last year, 1949.\nDavid P. Shepard of Winnipeg,\nMoose  Jaw   ahd   Vancouver   who\nwas named to the post of Assistant\nSuperintendent, Revelstoke, in June\nlast year, has beeh transferred to\nCranbrook,   replacing   Mr.   Smith,\nand W. R, Flett, formerly General\nYardmaster \/at Cranbrook replaces\nMr.  Shepard  as  Assistant Superintendent at Revelstoke.\nOver Million in Trail Building\nFor Second Successive Year\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 9\u2014Mew Construction in Trail in 1949 was worth\n$1,032,687. The figure was slightly\nlower than the $1,199,931 of 1948\nwhen a large veterans housing projects was completed In Sunningdale\nj subdivision.\nBiggest construction of 1949 was\nthe $500,000 Cominco Arena.\nIn December $8400 in building was\n: t mddol tablet?  %&\nWhen a Girl doesn't want to leave\nclass :-and have to ma'ec cmbarrast'\nrod explanations\u2014it's Paradol she\nasks for. For Paradol vae&tti quick\ntdicj- from suffering caused by\nperiodic pains\u2014headache, too\u2014\nwithout disagreeable after-effects.\nAsk j^our druggist for Paradol,\nscientifically compounded from 4\ningredients. The name \"Dr. Chase\"\nie your assurance, 22\nDR. CHASE'S\nPARADOL\n\u2014Quick Relief from Pain \u2014\u25a0.\nauthorized compared to $987,087 In\nthe same month of 1948, Building\ninspector T. N. Sttetton said in his\nreport to City Council Monday\nnight. Permit for a $7000 house wis\namong the nine Issued last month.\nNames Council\nCommittees\nMayor N. C. Stibbs named City\nCouncil members to various commi-\ntees for the new year at Monday\nnight's meeting.\nA Ihree-man Finance Committee\nwas named of Alderman A. Sutherland, Chairman, Alderman J.\nKary and Alderman T. S, Short-\nhouse.\nAll Council members will serve\non the committees, whose chairman\nare;\nLight ahd Power Committee \u2014\nAlderman N. R. Sardich.\nFire and Water Committee\u2014Alderman A. G. Ritchie.\nGas ahd Transportation Committee\u2014Aldeman   T.  S.   Shorthouse.\nParks, health and Castlegar Airport .Committee\u2014Alderman Joseph\nKary. \u2022\nPublic Works Committee\u2014^Jder\nman W. S. Smith.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n80 Imjustrials'201.98 up .04\n20 Hails \u00a35.00 ..up .48\n15 Utilities 41.64 off .08\nABOUT\nMajor Turner Lee, Veteran of Two\nWars, Churchman, Rancher, Passes\nA veteran of the South African\nBoer War and of the First Great\nWflf,. Major Turner Lee, 88, well-\nknown fruit rancher of Boiinlhgtoh\nFalls since 1911, died at Shaugh-\nrtessy Military Hospital at Vancouver Monday morning,\ndoming to Canada and to Bon-\nnington from England 39 years ago,\nMr. Lee took up frlut ranching till\na year ago when he moved to Nel'\nson where he made his homo at 712\nLatimer Street. He was always an\nactive worker and Supporter of activities of the Farmers' institute Ih\nthe Bonnington District. For 25\nyears Major Lee was layreader in\nSt. Mathews Anglican Church at\nSouth SlOCart, '       \u00bb .\nBorn lit England in 1861, the Major received his education ih Rugby Public School in England and\ntrained as a solicitor. He practiced\nIn this field in London and Notting\nham before tHe Bber War, add during the war served as a captain Iri\nthe Robin Hood Rifles. He also served overseas Ih the First World War\nas Major with the 54th Batalllon iri\ncharge of D. Company. Major Lee\n\\vas a keen supporter ahd member\ndf the Nelson Branch of the Canadian Legion. ,\nBesides his wife, in Nelson, he is\nsurvived by two d&ufehtsts,,Mrs. #.\nA. Lazenby, North Vancouver, and\nMiss. N. V. Let, Public'HBaith Nurse\nin Nelson: two sbhs, James W. Lee,\nfruit inspector dt, Oliver, and C. H.\nLee, Principal of the Nelson Senior High School. A youhger brother\ndied in England last week While\ntwrf! Mothers died ih the Channel\nislands during the German occupation ih the last war.\nthe Body will be forwarded to\nNelson where funeral services will\nbe Held later.\nWould Remove\nBuildings Near\nPropane Plant\nNecessity of completion of the\npropane gas plant installation ana\nremoval* of Several surrounding\nbuildings, hear the plant which have\nhampered the construction of a\nfence* aroulid the plant, before gas\nCoUld be put into the Jarge tank,\nwas stressed to the City Council\nMonday night by Fire Chief G. A.\nMcPortald.\"\nIn a Written report, Chief McDonald pointed out that Upon inspection\nof the plant and the surrounding\narea he found it Would be necessary\nto remove several existing sheds and\nbunkers to complete the fence\narotlhd the plant; to remove coal\ntar sUmps ahd have' them filled ih;\nto post proper Wartlhg Signs attd\ninstal fire extinguishing stations\nnear the plant; remove Coal sheds\nahd fill In the pits and to remove\nthe road asphalt tanks to a polht\n100 feet from the plant.\nThe.Chief also observed that the\nCity's present gas holder had been\n\u25a0patched in several places and- warn-\nthe Council that should a leak take\nplace at any time, it would mean\nmuch danger to: the .surrounding\nproperty and life. He recommended\nthat the plant be removed or kept\nclosed. Chief McDonald described\ngas leaks as the ''most dangerous\nin the world,\"\nHe asked that the Council give\nfull support to eliminate the danger\nof the possible loss of life and property. The Fire Chief was given full\nassurance that the Council. would\ntake immediate action.\nA. C. VanSacKer, City Electrical\nSuperintendent, in a letter to the\nCouncil regarding the: gaS platit,\nstated that it was necessary to install a larger lighting service in the\nplankartd in the power repair shop.\nBoth reports were referred to\nthe Gas Committee. ,\nm say it m\nr\nIt's the\nPictoriaUndustrial\nEdition\nof the\nNetemt Italy Jfefoa\nWhy not send your friends a copy. Let\n.others know the beauty and opportunities that the Kootenays have to offer.\nPublication dote, Jon. 28th\nCopy 15c plus 5c postage\nPlus 3% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nANYWHERE  IN CANADA, GREAT BRITAIN OR\nTHE  UNITED STATES\nThe Weather\nSYNOPSIS\nihe intense storm off the West\nCoast of Vancouver Island is expected to moVe inland over the Washington Coast. The Southern - B.C,\nCoast and the lower mainland are\nnot expected to receive the full force\nof the storm, however. Strong Easterly winds over the Coastal waters\nwill decrease.\nSnow will spread into the Southern interior as the storm moves\nEastward. The Northern interior\nwill remain cloudy with a few snow-\nflurries while the Northern Coastal\nregion, will be relatively clear.\nNelson      14   23    2\nSt. Johns       4   10 .10\nHalifax    -11   11 \u2014\nMontreal      -4   11 \u2014\nToronto       10   40 \u2014\nNorth Bay       11   31 .01\nPort Arthur     -1  .14 .01\nkenora        -6    8 \u2014\nWinnipeg I      -9    0 .01\nBrandon     .12   \u2014 .01\nThe Pas     -30 -12 \u2014\nRegina     -20   -4 .15\nSaskatoon     -20 -15 .04\nPrince Albert    -30 -18 .01\nN Battleford    -33 -19 .01\nSwift Current    -26 -12 .IT\nMedicine Hat    -28 -14 .1\nLethbridge     -31 -12 .04\nCalgary    -20 -11 .03\nEdrhdnton  .\".    -31 -12 .01\nKamloops  :       4   14 \u2014\nPenticton ..-.     13   28 .07\nVancouver      25   31 ,21\nVictoria       20   36.30\nKimberley  ;      0   10.22\nCreesent. Valley     14   21 .34\nKaSlo      16   24 .22\nPrince Rupert     10   18 \u2014\nGrand Forks     13   24 .20\nSeattle     30   35 .04\nPortland      34   40 .28\nSpokane  ,     21   26 .10\nChicago  ,. , 32   46\nSan Francisco     37   56 .08\nLos AngeleS  .,.,;    34   56 .57\nWhitehorse  ...   -12'  -2\n.Nels.oh'Cranbr.ook \u25a0'* fair with\nsome ioOSe Show. \u2022'\nNelson-Kaslo \u2014 Fair with some\nloosesnow.\/\nNelson-Monashee \u2014 fair with\nsome loose snow to Edgewood. Mcm-\nashee pass closed.\nNelson-Nelway\u2014Fair with loose\nshow.\nNelsbn'Tfail\u2014Fair With . lodse\nsnow.\nRossland-Cascade\u2014Fair and liable\nto drifting. Carry Chains.\nB.C. leaders To\nAttend Nelson\nRed Cross Annual\nMrs. J. Florio\nHeads Trinity Senior\nFriendly Club\nMrs. Jopeph Florlo was elected\nPresident of the Trinity Senior\nfriendly Club at a meeting at the\nhome of Mrs, J, C, Muir, Monday\nnight, Other officers elected were,\nMrs, K, Ozelle, Vice-President:\nMrs. J. W. Peck, Secretary! and\nMrs. Nora Martin, Treasurer.\nFire Hall for\nEast Trailr More\nFiremen Asked\nTHAiL, B. C\u201e Jan. 9\u2014More City\nfire fighters ahd a fire hall ih East\nTrail are Urgently heeded, fire\nChief L. W. Ronald told City Council Monday night,\n\"I consider two men on duty Very\ninadequate protection for a City the\nsize of Trail\", the Chief said the\nDepartment's 25tH annual report.\n\"I feel that a fire hau Ih East Trail\nshould be seriously considered,\"\nSpeaking tq Fire, Water and Light\nCommittee Chairman C. H. Jcffar-\nes, the Chief had requested that\nCouncil obtain estimates for a hall\nto house i2 firemen and on the cost\nof a 500 gallon pumper.\nThe City also required more fire\nhydrants \"especially ih the' hillside\narea. Fire fighting in this area is a\nreal problem due to the shortage of\nmen oh shift and the lack of wi\nFire loss in Trail in 1949\n$13,306, a per capita loss of $1.20.\nValue of buildings and CohtenViiby\nvolved in fires was $514,841.' % i,-!}\nFireman A. Blaine Was proiho^d\nto lieutenant Monday night obv.irw\ncommendation of Fire ChiefiiRo*\naid. The -Chief's recommenjlatl^}\nWas placed before the Counllli t$\nAid. Jeffares. .'\nSEEK AGREEMENT ?.': \u25a0.'\/\nFire, Water ahd Light Committees\nof Trail and Tadanac are th meet\nalong With the two fire chiefs W\na view to drawing up a faiuthalj\nagreement for use of fire 'fiBBfla\nequipment. Tadanac Department\nMonday night appealed for a written agreement between the two Departments \"In case of an emergency\". There was A gentleman's\nagreement at present, a letter pointed out.\nVocal and Piano\nRecital Enjoyed\nVocal and piano pupils of Mrs,\nAmelia Hanna Oliver performed at\na recital held at the home of her\nmother, Mrs. Maud Hanna, Cedar\nStreet.\nPupils-taking part were:\nVocal \u2014Donna Mary Boothroyd,\nJune Vaile.\nVocal and piano\u2014Frances Ebber-\nley, Alex Hanna, Wanda Lindgreh,\nDauna Jorgenson, Jewel Tattrle,\nAnn Fawcett, Joan Gibbon, SybH\nChalmers,\nPiano \u2014 Larry Simpson, Milton\nJorgenson, Billy Gibbon, Joan\nStaliwood, Irene Martin.\nA group of boy singers \u2014 Alec\nMcClelland, Edward Thompson,\nGerry Berryman, Malcolm Elmes,\nterry Elmes and Bijly Gibbon \u2014\nsang several songs. Two Soloists In\nthis group were Edward Thompson,\nand Gerry Berryman.\nOffers Free Oil    s\nFor Locomotives\nEDMONTON, Jan. 9 (CP)-lm-\nmediate. Conversion ot more Catia-\ndlah National Railways locomotives\nto oil fuel Is urged upon Prime Minister St. Laureht in a resolution\nsent to Ottawa today by the. Lloyd-\nminster Board of Trade.\nThe resolution is part of a continuing protest from the-town of the\nAlberta-Saskatchewan border the 25\nper cent reduction in passenger\nservices by C.NiR. train* WhlCh went\njnto effect todya,\nLast week the town Offered to\nprovide free oil from its black crude\nfiled If the railways would provide\nan oll-burnlng engine to maintain\ndaly service lb Edmonton. The offer\nWas declined,       ..   ,\nIN TELEPHONE HEARINGS\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9* (CP)\u2014Ar-\nmand Sylvestre, Deputy Chairman\nof the Deportment of Transport\nBoard, will replace Board Chairman Mr. Justice Archibald when\nthe hearings of a telephone rate\nincrease open here tomorrow.\nMr. Justice Archibald was taken\n111 and will be confined to a Winnipeg hospital for a week and return\nto Ottawa.\nCommissioners Frank -MacPher*\nson and H, B. Chaio are the other\ntwo members,\nSherwood .Lett  will   make  th\nenmuany  submission   While D.  E,\nMcTaggart, K.C., .former city, corporation   counsel,  will  handle the\ncily's case .opposing the increato..\nK\nt-ri-H\nV#4\nJPi\nW-,\n..'\u25a0. '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0&\nnil\nm^!   1     I\nwLJ   1\nMB:':'J9K\nm\nlilm. J\nSeeks Protection for\nEhMdgedUS. Ship\nBy WAYNE  RICHARDSON\nABOARD    THE'  AMERICAN\nFREIGHTER    FLYING    ARROW,\nJarl. 9 (AP) - Extensively damag'\ned by 30 to 40'shells from a Chinese Nationalist gunboat, this American blockade-runner lay at\nanchor tonight in international waters off the approach,to the Com1\nmunist port .of Shanghai. .      ';\nThe Nationalist naval .vessel continued to stand guard . nearby.\nCaptalh David Johoo, 31, do-\ndared the FlylHg Arrow unsea-\nworthy add demanded that the\nUnited States State Department\ntake steps to provide safe passage\nInto the nearest port for repairs,\nIn   accord   with   international\npractice for disabled ships.\nThe nearest pott is Shanghai, lot\nwHich this ship sailed edtiy Satur*\nday from Mbng Kong in defiance\nof the Nationalist naval blockade\nand the danger of mirleS.\nJottes Said the attack occurred 19\nmiles off shore, clearly outside ter'\nrltorial Waters.\nNone of the crew of 43, Including\nthis correspondent, and the 13 passengers, ihdudlng seveh women,\nwas injured. \u25a0   .\nThe* Flying Arrow, however, was\nhit in many places and set afire,\nthe.Rdyal Navy sloop fcteck Swan,\nwhich was 'patrolling nearby, sent\na. fire-fighting . party aboard and\nhelped subdue the flames Ih a hold\nfind on the after deck in a three-\nhour struggle.\nCaptain   Jones,   a   determined\nCOL, C. A. SCOTT\nThe annual general meeting ot\nthe Nelson branch of the Canadian\nRed Cross Society Will be held lh\nthe City Hall Council Chambers\nThursday night and two of the top\nranking B. C, Red'Cross-officials\nwill attend. They are Col, C. A.\nScott, Commissioner of the British\nColumbia Division of the Canadian\nRed Cross Society and. W,. Orson\nBanfleld, current President of the\nBritish Columbia Division 6f the\nCanadian Red CfoSf Society:\n\"Both of these men should have\na great deal of interesting information to pass along to the general\nmeeting and lt IS the ardent hope\nof local officials that there :will be\na record turnout for the annual\nmeeting.\" Nelson President B B.\nMorris said Monday.     '       ;.\n-A   nominating    Committee    has\nnearly completed Its task of obtaining persons who win consent to\ne their names stand in the forth-\nJng election officers.  The an-\n.1 meetlhg can nominate further\nditlales for the various offices,\n. number of Nelson ladies have\njfert quietly vrorklng since V-J day\niking dressings, swabs and, other\nimforts for thdse people unfbrtun-\n\u00bb enough to haVe been involved\nan accident or requiring blood\nansfuslbris or plasma. An ejthlbl-\non  of the work  turned  out by\nJJhese ladies will be staged irt the\nourtcll Chambers the night of the\nleeting.\nU.S.r Canada\nIn Joint Defence\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 The\nNorth Atlantic Treaty is bringing\nthe chiefs of Stdff of .Canada ahd\nthe United States together to fit\nttrateglc plans for North American\ndefence into the broader picture il.\nIhe defence of what amounts to\nWestern Civilization.\nThe move represents a nbw\nchapter lather than a hew book.\nThe chiefs' meeting at Washington a Week from tomorrow is the\ninaugural meeting of the U.S.Canada regional planning group,\none of five in the pact organization,\nbut lt selves to underline twb\nfactors in cooperation between the\nNorth American neighbors:\n, 1. Their group will have the\nadvantage of years of discussions\"\nthat already have brought into'be\ning detailed, long-range strategic\nplans for continental defence. Those\npast discussions did not involve th..\nchiefs directly but senior officers\nthey delegated.\n2, The chiefs now enter the\npicture directly to fit the existing\n\"plans, largely geared to a continental cohtext, into the larger picture. What changes that will require, if any of a substantial\ncharacter, remains to be seen.\n3. The Joint Permanent Defence\nBoard, fc-Mnded lh wartime 1940 as\nthe pioneer body In continental\nmilitary cooperation, will continue\nits work,, which has become less\nconcerned With- strategic planning\nthan with meeting problems that\narise out df'present cooperation.\nThus the new development In\ndlcates the more oh less multiple\ncharacter Of the cooperation that\nHas been  going on  quietly  be\ntwecn   Ottawa   and  Washington\nfor years. The Board, a; a recent\nexample, takes on Jobs Such .as\nCanada's claims that U.3. troops\nshould have less civilian rights at\n. Newfoundland military bases,\nThe  Strategic  planners,  directly\nunder the.eye of the chiefs of staff,\nare Concerned with,what would be\ndone,, what troops or aircraft Would\nbe. supplied, say, to meet a variety\nof situations. This has been going\non Since the war,\nimperial Penny Postage was Introduced between Canada and Britain on'Christmas Day, 1898,'\nI Was Nearly Crazy\nWith fiery Itch-\nUntil t dliuuvrtoll Dr. D. D. Dsmill1 oiiulnj.\nly Hit t\u00abli\u00abl-D, D. D. nSaJg&ffi, World\npopular, this fnirp, cooling, liquid medication\n\u25a0liucda iihiico mid comlort from creel itclitnc\ncaused by bciemn. pimples, resiles; Mliloto'o\nToot mid other Itch troublos.Trlol bottle, Hi\nFirst application chocks oven tho most Intonsb\nItch or money back. Ask druggist for D. D. O.\nProscription   (ordinary or oxtrn strength).\n240-pounder from Chicago, estimated the number of shell hits\nat 30 to 40. Ho said 14 woro In\nthe after steering-gear house.\nSome, two to fOUr Inches in diameter, were Only four Inohes above\nthe wfltoi'llno,\n(A Nationalist, navy spokesman In\nTaipei, Formosa said the,shelling\nwas done by the gunboat wuiing.\nSuch a ship usually is armed with\nho more than three-inch guns, plus\nSmaller six-poUrtders and machine'\nguns;\n(Tho Nationalist spokesman said\nthe shelling was Intended only to\ndisable the Flying Arrow to save\nher frorn complete destruction by\nblundering, into mines planted in\nthe Yangtze estuary. He added that\nthe Flying Arrow wis being \"detained\" and that \"trade-crazy\nmerchants ohould learn a good lesson.\") \u2022     ' '    \u25a0\nTho master of the Black Swan\nreported by bUhker that lt li \"uh\nderstood\" thera really are at least\n20 mines lh the estuary.\n\u2022 The Plying Arrow venture W\ngan at Hong Kong shortly after\nmidnight  ; Saturday     morning,\n-   Jan. 7, when this freighter sailed\nWith an assorted 510,000,000 cargo\nfor Communist Shanghai.  Bales\nof cotton were piled high around\nthe superstructure for protection,\nFearful Of the mines the Nation-\nallsts said had been planted, 11 of\nthe crew were given special State\nDepartment permission to sign off.\nBritons and Other Nationals replaced them.\nST. STEPHEN* N.B., Jan. 9 (CP)\n\u2014Election of \\yilIiani.N, Campbell,\nLibdral candidate in the Charlotte\nProvincial by-clepllon, was reported\nby the Canwlian Press an hour artd\n23 minutes after the polls were closed. At that time 31 polls out of 1&\ngave him 2l93 votes against 1141 for\nhis only opponent, Douglas Everett,\nProgressive Conservative.'\ntha Liberal Party thus retained\nthe seat, ohe of four in Charlotte\ncounty won by Liberal candidates\nih the general Provincial election\nof June, 1948..-the fCsUlt r\u00abStored\nthe standing in the New BfurtsWlck\nLegislature to the totals of the 1948\nelection: Liberals 47; Progressive\nConservatives five.\nThe vacancy was caused by appointment of Horn J. j.' Hayes\nDoonc, Provincial Secretary Treasurer to the senate last July,\nToday's    successful    Candidate\nlives at St. George. .Mr. Campbell\nIs a pulp and paper company sup-\nerlntendant and  has  been active\nIn community work.\n. Mr, Everett, an agent at St, Andrews, contested- Charlotte for' the\nProgressive  Conservative Party  in\n1948, when he was one of the four\nlosing candidates.\nWith only small polls unrepbrted\n\u2014Pleasant'Ridge and Wood Island-\nwhen counting ended for the night,\nMr, Campbell had 6547 votes, a ma-*\njority \"of 2391 over Mr, Everett's 3150,\nDEMANDS PROBE\nST. STEPHEN, N.B., JSn. 9 (CP)\n\u2014Dalton K. Carnp,.Dir.eblW-\"of Political Affairs for the PrdgresSiVe\nConservative Party in New BtUhs-\nwick, said ih-a statement tonight\nthat he had sent a ieiegf am to Pf env\nier McNoir demanding \"full investigation of the gross abuses ahd Violations of tHe Provincial Elections\nAct.\"\nHe Was referring to administration\nof today's .Provincial by-eieetWn lh\nCharlotte County. THe Liberal Candidate, William N, Campbell defeated Douglas Everett, PrbgreSsive\nConservative, .0647 to 8l5t) With OHljr\ntwo small (Sails unreported:\nMr. Camp Said the telegram to\nPremier McNair, in Ottawa fof the\nbdfhinlon-PfbVirteial , Conference,\nwas sent this afternoon.\nHe released the text as follows:\n\"THe Government has dismally\nmismanaged the administration of\ntills ChaHotte County by-election\nThe proclamation, of notice of grant\nof a poll was not posted rtof. issued\nin accordance With tHe instructions\nunder section 48 of the act respecting elections to the Legislative Assembly.\n'Polling stations Have been fhov\ned as late as polling Jay without\ndue and proper notlcft being given\nto the voters. Ohe polling station\nwas moved on polling- day to a\nhouse situated within the boundaries of another polling division,\ncontrary to section 49 (1),\n\"By its lack of reSpDhslblllly the\nGovernment has impinged upon the\nrights and privileges of the voters\nof  Charlotte  County.   We   protest\nthe complete inadequacy of Govern-\nWith Stane\nAnd Besom\nMonday night's results in the Nelson   Curling   Club   Round   Robin\nCompetition follow: \u2022\nD. ValentineO L. F. Tlnlirig 12.\nW. Marr 8, H. A. D. GreenWdod 11.\nT. S. Jemson 10, J. Smith 1.\nJ. D. Hingwlng 6, H, Ronmark 0.\nJ. Forman 7, S. A. Maddocks 9.\nW. A. Triggs 6,- J. HarVey 6.\nE. C. Hunt 8, J. Milne 9,\nA. H. Whitehead 11, A. B. Gilker 8.\nW. DeFoe won by default from'R.\nA. Peebles.\n' H, M. Whlmster 11, W. Brow'A 5.\nSeattle Man\nKilled in Accident\nSEATTLE, Jan. 9 (AP) \u2014 Ont\nman was killed ahd four persons\ninjured last night in an accident involving an eastbound cfoss>state\npassenger bUs, ah oil tanker and an\nautomobile four miles West of East-\nton, the state patrol reported.\nThe dead man Was Identified as\nElmer Anderson, 34, of Seattle.\nThe accident occurred, when the\ncar apparently tried to pass the\nbus on the snow-covered highway\ndepslte the approach of the tanker.\nBoth the bus and automobile\nplunged Off the i'dad into the ditch,\nshearing dff the rear of the bus\nwhere Anderson was rlduig. He\ndied en route to a Cle Elum hospital.\nIH hospital *ere John Rosenau of\nBelfaitJ his wife, Beatrice; and Everett and Helen Rosenau, both of\nHayward, B.C. It was not known\nwhether they . were passengers in\nthe bus or the automobile.\nADVERTISING MAN DIES\nTORONTO; Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 Morgan Eastman 09, widely-known Canadian advertising hiah, died in\nhospital last night following a cerebral haemorrhage.\nHe Wis vice-president of McCon'\nhell, Eastmah and Company advertising agency and president of the\nCanadian Association of Advertising Agencies,\nment preparations for this election\nas defined in the PrOVihclal EleC'\ntlonS Act We demahd full investigation of the gross abuses and\nviolations Of the Provincial Elections Act.\"\nALL\nDRESSES\n% PRICE\nfINK'S\nMezzanine Shoe Floor\nCily Need Only\nSurvey Lois in\nHousing Scheme\nIn a brief report on the housing\nconference called by Premier By-\nrO\u00bb Johnson and held at Victoria In\nDecember given to City Council\nMonday night, Mayor N. C. Stibbs\nStressed that the City need only to\nsurvey, lots available on which to\nbuild houses before the housing\nscheme discussed* at the conference\nwould go into effect.\nProposals in the scheme were\nthat the City sell land to the Province which would install services\nahd add the cost to the sale price\nof the lot, or that the.'munlclpaiity\ninstall these services and collect\nfrom the purchasers. The municipality must take the lead and make\nthe request to the Provincial Government before they would take\nthe initiative steps In the plan.\nDuring the conference Premier\nJohnson stated that the Federal\nGovernment would bear 75 per cent\nof-the Cost and that the Provincial\nGovernment would bear the remaining 25 per oent. The City\nwould not have to put forward any\nmoney.\nIndividuals' could apply for ldihs\nat 4% per ciirit interest.\nIt'was planned that .cities would\nset aside acreage and lots serviced\nwith sewerage and water which\nwould be added to the cost, Scattered lots whlcH had already been\nserviced would be accepted.\nThe houses would be built with\nthe object that persons would move\nInto them with the intention df\npurchasing the homes, Mayor Stibbs\nsaid that a $8000 home would require a down payment of about\n$1000. However, nO provisions\nwould be made for apartment?\nhouses, he said.\nIn Chinese Waters\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)-The\nVancouver freighter SS. Lake\nCanim, with 38 Vancouver teamen\naboard Is still in troubled Chinese\nwaters.\nJohn.Rosene, President of Western Canada Stearnshlps, said today\nthat daily reports from the vessel\nindicate she is safe.\nThe ship sailed for Shanghai on\nNov .25, and Is under oharter to a\nHong Kong shipping company.   ..\nRUBBER\nFOOTWEAR\nBe it for city, country or for\nhard work, we'have a rubber\nor an- overshoe for you.\n\u2022 CITY RUBBERS\n\u2022 CLOTH OVERSHOES\n\u2022 RUBBER OVERSHOES\n\u2022 RUBBER BOOTS\nPlain or cleated\n\u2022 FELT BOOTS\nGODFREYS'\nPHONEST-Z70--HBOX\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR\nPhones:   Nelton 77; Roislbnd 171; Trail 1001\nSALMO\nConnections for:\nKASLO \u2014 CRESTON\nNAKUSP\nMORB i. K. JOHNfeTON L.  S.  MACKERSY *\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA EXECUTIVE CHANGES\nImperial. Bank of Canada announces that Mr. W. G. More has resigned as President and becomes\nDepilty Chairman of the Board of Directors. Mr. I. K. Johnston, formerly a Vice-President and Geheral\nManager, has been elected President of the Bank, and Mr. L. S. Mackersy, formerly 1st Assistant\nGeneral Manager, has been appointed General Manager. i\n BUTTERFLY\nHOSIERY\nMade with the smart side out\n61 gauge\n45 gauge\n42 gauge\nIn'all the new shades.\nThe SHOE\nCENTRE\n553 Baker St.\nPh. 895\nCONNEL, Argyllshire, Scotland\n(CP)\u2014Dr.'D. li. COnnan found a\ncoin which has been identified oy\nexperts as a groat of the reign of\nDavid II, 1329 to 1371. The coin was\npresented to Oban Museum,\nSTRAWBERRY GUAVA\nDcJJcIouf, Swoof and Spicy\nTblt Ii a luscious trop-\nleal fruit which nitkei\nft useful ai well as ft\ncharming and beautiful\nhouse plant. It bears\nboth flowers ind fruit\nat the same time. The\nflowers \u00bbre pure white\njuid delightfully fragrant. The fruit is\nabout the tire of ft\nwalnut, of ft beautiful\nreddish color, tad of\ndelicious, iweet ind\nipicy flavor. Fine for\neating out of hand,\ntod unsurpassed for making Jelly. These piano\n* are usually grown from seed and begin to bloom\nand bear fruit while quite small. (Pitt. 25p)\n\"nali\"\nU.N.LisfsFour\nProjects to\nAid Middle East\nBy NORMAN ALT8TEDTER \u2022\nCanadian Press Staff Writer ,\nLAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Jan. 9\n(CP)\u2014A- United Nations, economic\nmission today recommended tour\ndemonstration projects be undertaken as an approach to large-scale\neconomic development of the Middle East\nThe mission had the job of molting recommendations for rehabilitation of Arab refugees from the\nPalestine war and for promoting! \"\nstable economic conditions in the!\ncountries involved. |\nThe mission hinted that peace\nand stability .in the Middle East\nare a long way off In Its listing of\nelements in the problem which the\nU- N must recognize. |\n1, Peace and stability cannot be\nachieved in the Middle East until\nits peoples enjoy a higher standard\ndf living.\n2, The path to a higher standard\nof living in the area is a long one,\n3. Improved agriculture must be\nthe basis of development\n4. Obstacles to economic development leave few if any opportunities for immediate undertaking of\nlarge-scale schemes. Lack of capital, technicians, skilled labor and\nco-operation among Middle-East\ncountries are named as the obstacles to large-scale development\nSome of Them Said it Was Too Warm\nA couple of well-bundled Brooklynltes are\nshown looking on as members of Coney Island's\nIceberg Athletic Club splash around  In tho At\nlantic surf. .The .Iceberg Club members annually\nturn out Christmas Day for a dip In the Icy waters.\nIn addition, they regularly meet for an Icy swim.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n8ELL  THE   CLASSIFIED  WAY\nIRENE'S\nOF WINTER MERCHANDISE\nHandbags\nReg. to $6.50\nSale   $2.50\nHats\nReg. to $6.95\nSole $1.95 - $2.50\nDresses\nReg. to $22.50\nLimited number\nSale  $9.75\nGirdles\nReg. to $6.95\nSale  $3.95\nSKIRTS\nReg.  to $7.99.\nSALE\n4 95 and 3.95\nGLOVES\nHand stitched. Reg; $2.50\nSALE\n$1.00\n8EE OUR WINDOW DISRLAY\nCold War Takes Biggest Bite From\nTrumanBudget; BenefitPlahs and\nHealth Insurance for All Classes\nBy CHARLES MOLONY\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 9 (AP)\u2014\nPresident Truman today recommended a $42,439,000,000 spending\nbudget to Congress. He said It\nwill plunge the United States\nGovernment $5,133,000,000 deeper\nInto the red unless taxes are\nraised.\nBut even with '^moderate\" tax\nincrease he wants, the President\nset no date tor a balanced budget.\nThe cold war with Communist\nRussia takes the biggest spending\nbite\u2014$18,356,000,000. That figure for\nthe 1951 fiscal year beginning July\n1 includes $13,500,000,000 for defence\u2014up $400,000,000 from this\nyear\u2014and $4,700,000,000 for foreign\naid. The combined total is $856,000,-\n000 lower than current outlays. '\nNext in size comes cash for domestic programs, including Truman's \"fair deal.\" This figure\njumps $923,000,000 to $12,478,000,000.\nThe $42,439,000,000 spending total\nis equivalent to $282.17 for each\nman, woman and child In today's\nU. S. population. It Is larger than\nlast January's record peacetime\nbudget estimate, but $858,000,000\nless than the $43,297,000,000 now expected to be spent by June 30.\n80LID BASE\nTo legislators clamoring for less\nspending rather than more taxes,\nTruman stressed the Importance of\nThat's the\nPictoriaHndustrial Edition\nof thi>\nYour friends would enjoy this special edition,\nSend them a copy.\nPublication date, Jan. 28th\nCopy 15c plus 5c postage\nPlus 3% S.3. and M.A. Tax '\nANYWHERE IN CANADA, GREAT BRITAIN OR THE UNITED STATES\nFederal dollars to an expanding\ndomestic economy. He said, his\nprogram, embracing a \"moderate\"\ntax increase, is \"prudent\" and provides \"a solid base for > moving. toward budgetary balance in the next\nfew years.\"\nThe White House said the administration tax bill is still under draft\nand would be ready for Congress\nin a few days.\nTruman sketched the make-up of\n1951 spending in broad strokes,\nHe charged off nearly $30,000,000-\n000 or the 71 per cent his budget\nallotted to national defence, foreign affairs, veterans programs and\nInterest costs of the Federal debt\nwith these words:\n\"Financial requirements to pay\nthe costs of past wars and to\nachieve a peaceful world.\"\nThe President urged today several  acts   by   Congress   that  would\nbring a bigger ,'telntp the country's pocketbboks.\n8TARTING TAX\nOne Truman proposal would hit\nboth employee's and their bosses\nwith a starting tax of 25 cents on\nleach $100 of pay, beginning Jan. 1.\n1951, to \"defray Initial expenses\"\nof his National Health Insurance\nProgram.\n' The big benefit proposals we)\nlashed  to  aggressive renewals\nlong standing Truman alms, amoi\nthem:\nBigger jsoclal  Security   benefi\nfor more people, both with respi\nto old age Insurance payments aj\nunemployment   compensation;\ncreased   relief   payments   to\nneedy aged, the blind, and depei\nent children; further housing aii\nbusiness loans, farm price suppoi\nand so on.\nGrants Legion\nIntervention\nOn Rent Control\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014The Supreme Court of Canada today grant.\ned the Canadian Legion permission\nto intervene in the Jan. 30 hearing\nto'test Federal rent controls.\nChief Justice Thibaudeau Rlnfret\nsaid a similar request by the Montreal Tenants- Association should be\nturned down because tenants as a\nwhole will be represented by a\ncounsel at the Court, John J. Robl-\nnette of Toronto.    '.\nPerley Robertson, counsel for the\nMontreal Association, asked for adjournment until next Friday to discuss the matter with the Association. Adjournment was granted.\nThe Legion is expected to join\nthe Federal Government, the ten\nants and the Canadian Congress of\nLabor to argue that the controls\nd. It is on record as asking\nmtrols be continued.\n;ng with the Montreal ten\npplication, the Chief Justice\nwas \"not going to allow the\ncountry to Intervene in the\nChilliwack Child\nResponds to New\nLeukemia Cure\nCHILLIWACK, B. C, Jan. 9 (CP)\n\u2014Parents of torna Newmann,\nthree-year-old leukemia victim, to-\nday reported amazing improvement\nin the child's condition following\napplication of a cure not recognized\nby Canadian and American Medical Associations,\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Newmann\nclaimed a series of glyoxyline\ntreatments given little Lorna dur-\ning the past two weeks have help.\ned her. The child, whom doctors\nhave given Only two months to live,\ntoday Is out of bed and resuming\nsome activities.\nThe parents said the treatment\nwas recommended to them by Dr.\nTony Newby, a Chilliwack dentist\nwho claimed it saved the life of his\nown little girl when she was doomed to die of a brain tumor five\nyears ago.\nThe parents said two cubic cent!\nmetres of glyoxyline Were Injected\ninto Lorna's muscles on three occasions during the past two weeks.\nThe dentist, they said, approached\nthem about the treatment when he\nread newspaper stories of the\nchild's predicted short life span,\nBold Gunmen Rob\nHong Kong Bank\nHONG KONG, Jan, 9 (AP) \u2014\nBold gunmen today robbed the\nHong Kong Branch of the Chase\nNational Bank of an estimated $33,-\n000.\nFrank A. Howard, American\nManager, said the robbers made off\nwith 195J00O Hong ,Kong dollars\n(about $30,000 U. S.) and some $3000\nin United States currency.\nHoward said the robbery was executed within a 10-mlnute period\nby six or seven Chinese gunmen.\n. The bank's loss was covered by\ninsurance.\nNEXT ASSOCIATION CUP\nPLAY ANNOUNCED\nLONDON, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 The\ndraw for the fourth round of the\nFootball Association Cup to be.\nplayed Jan. 28 was announced today. The draw follows:\nChesterfield vs. Aston Villa or\nMiddlesbrough; Blackpool vs. Don-\ncaster Rovers; Chelsea vs. Newcastle United; Blackburn Rovers or\nLiverpool vs. Exeter City; Bury: vs.\nPort Vale; Arsenal vs. Swansea\nTown; Stockport County vs. South-\nport or Hull City; Watford or Preston North End vs. Manchester United; Bournemouth and Boscombe\nAthletic vs. Northampton.\nd World War\nlem for\nmon wealth Meet\nOMBO, Ceylon, Jan. 8 (CP)\nip British Cabinet official declared today the outstanding problem for the Commonwealth , Foreign Relations Conference opening\nhere tomorrow is how to stop a\nthird world war.\nPhilip Noel-Baker, Secretary for\nCommonwealth Relations, told a\nPress conference that great importance will be attached to building-up\nresistance against authoritariahisirf\nby adjusting the economy of the\nCommonwealth to meet the situation.\nOther delegates saw the spread\nof Commounism throughout Asia\nand a, peace treaty with Japan\nas vital' subjects.       _        , <\nThe Canadian delegation, headed\nby L. B. Pearson, External Affairs\nMinister, arrived Saturday. Canadian delegates said they will bring\nthe North American approach to\npolitical and economic problems.\nThe economic section will give\nmost of its attention to the balance'\nof-payments position in the sterling\narea, probably country by country.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n(aim, in Good\nHealth, Guay\nAwaits Trial\nQUEBEC, Jan. 9 (CP) -J. Albert\nGuay, the Quebec jeweller accused\nof murder in the Sault au Cochon\nair disaster Sept 9 appeared briefly in Court of King's Bench'today\nwhen his trial was deferred to Feb.\n13. '\nHis lawyers protested the adjournment to February and said the\nCrown had created a \"special assizes term\" to try the jeweller who\nallegedly arranged to have a time-\nbomb placed on an airliner in\nwhich his wife was a passenger. All\n23 aboard the plane were killed.\nMr. Justice. Albert Sevlgny put\nan end to defence counsel's protests' when he said siniply \"nqxt\nterm.\"        . I\nBertrapd Marcotte, counsel for'\nGuay, told the court he felt the\n\"special term\" created by the At-1\ntorney-General's \u2022 Department was\nprejudicial to the accused..  -.\nHe said he had requested the\ncase be postponed to the usual April term of the assizes In the hope\nthat \"the popular sentiment aroused   against   the   accused   be   ap-\nm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 10, 1950 \u2014 S\nFarmer Seeks Security\nFromChanging Income\nMr. Marcotte and lawyer Gerard\nLevesque, also In the case for Guay,\nsaid there had been \"imprudent\nstatements majle byhigh police officials\" and that some newspapers\nand radio stations had given \"yel-\nlow\" reports on the case.\nCrown Counsel Paul Mlquelon,\nacting for Prosecutor, Noel Dorlon,\nsaid that the date of the trial had\nnot been fixed \"officially,\" but that\n\"we will proceed Feb. 13.\"\nIn the prisoner's dock.Guay looked calm and .in good heaHh.\nGRACIE FIELDS\nCANCELS\nCANADIAN TOUR\nLONDON, Jan. 9 (CP)-Cahcel-\nlatlon of a pepjected Canadian tour\nby Grade Fields was reported today by the London Star's gossip\ncolumn as the consequence of the\ndeath of Monte Banks, her actor-\ndirector husband. >*\u25a0'    '\nThe column said the heart-broken Miss Fields had cancelled all engagements, Including the Canadian\nvisit scheduled months ahead.\nBy FORBE8 RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor   i\nAny   One   gets   alarmed   if   he\nthinks his income is going to drop,\nIt   Is   not   surprising,   therefore,\nwhen the farmer becomes vocal, as\nhe has done recently, over a falls in\nthe prices for his products. I\nThe. farmer, it seems, is always\non the tiring line. His stock-in-\ntrade is in the wide open spaces\nand only rarelyT is everything\nfriendly to him. |\nThere is too little rain when he!\nneeds it and top much when he can]\ndo with less; too mucb sun or too\nlittle; frost at the wfrmg time; insects to attack his crops and illnesses to kill his animals.\nIn fact, the farm looks best of all\nto city dreamers who see only\ngreen fields and softly-lowing cattle which somehow milk themselves,     -\nON FIRING LINE . ,\nThe farmer is on the firing line\nnot only to weather but to economic changes. Let conditions slacken and, for a while at least, the carpenter, the' bricklayer, the lawyer\nthe doctor, still charge the same\u2014\nand there is unemployment insurance.\nBut the farmer's Income changes\novernight It is the most-sensitive\nof all. Those big fat hens are only\na liability if .their eggs won't bring\nenough to pay for their feed.\nAnd so the farmer looks around\nAureomycin Sold\nOn Doctor's\nPrescription\nOTTAWA, Jan. ,9 (CP)\u2014Aureomycin, the new drug which has\nbeen found useful in the treatment\nof some infections not affected by\npenicillin and streptomycin, may be\nsold to the public only on prescription, the Health Department today\nannounced.\nThe Department said the regulation was made because relatively\nlittle Is yet known about aureomy-\ncin's therapeutic value and because\nit should be used only by doctors\nor specially-qualified medical research workers.\nfor some:' of  the  security  which\nother people have been trying to\nbuild for themselves. And some attempt Is made to give, it to him, by\nmeans of floor prices which guar-'\nantee him against a drop beyond a\ncertain point, But like any one else,\nhe probably thinks they are .'not\nfixed high enough.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 Virtually everyone! wants the farmer to be well off, because we\nthink if he is not well off neither\ncan any 'one else be prosperous.\nAnd we see people calling f&r low-1\ner prices for food, and yet sympathizing with the farmer if food prices\nstart to drop. '\u2022'..'. \u2022\nIMPORTANT\nBROADCAST\n'3h*7laJtioriA\ntBllMWAL '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\nHear\nHon.\nHugues\nLappint,\nMP.\nSolicitor General\nSpeak Over\nCKLN\n8:15 p.m. Tuesday\nYugoslav on\n17. N. Council\nYugoslavia's Deputy Foreign\nMinister, Ales Bebler (right), a\nnew permanent delegato to the\nUnited Nations Seourlty Council,\nIs shown with Trygve Lie, U.N.\nSecretary General, at Lake Success, N. Y. After presenting his\ncredentials, Bebler told reporters\nhe was exceedingly happy to take\nhis seat on the Council because\n\"I want to collaborate In making\npeace more stable.\"\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nJoin the Thrifty Shoppers\nSHOP THESE OUTSTANDING SAVINGS\nLOW EVERYDAY PRICES All THIS WEEK\n39'\nHOT CHOCOLATE Gl\u2122\u00b0\nLb. cello\nl\/l\/\"AD 1ft   ^?\u00a3\u00b0-'\u00b0te mQ'ted syruP>\nLARD   Lb.-22*    3 lbs.\nflEifLIEC Brentwood, halves,\nPCACHC J15 oz. tin _\u2014\t\n\/\u2022Anil   Creom style, Royal City,\nV.UKN   15 oz.tin \u201417*     6for___\nMACARONI     Cut 2 lbs .____\nCHEESE  Kraft or Velveeta, Vi lb. ___\nSUNLIGHT SOAP Sfc*\nSANI WHITE TISSUE\nSOUR RELISH ifS\u00a3?fc_\n19*\n65*\n19'\n$1.00\n29'\n28'\n31'\n27*\n25'\nStrawberries or Raspberries,\nfresh frozen, pkt. \u2014\u201e____\u2014\n35c\nQuality Meat\nSPECIALS\nYour choice of any one\nWEINERS,  BOLOGNA\nLIVER BABY BEEF,\nSTEW BEEF AND\nKIDNEY\nlb. 40C\nHousehold Needs\nVaporub, Vicks. 4g\u00a3\nHalibut Liver Oil 75*\nCapsules, 50 tor ...l  \"    T\nShampoo, Woodbury!s. Coconut Oil, castlle. . 39^1\nJergeii's Lotion,tor soft akin.\n.   Medium \"................. ''^\n..    Large  - ::~.,.~~ \"\"*\nDelnor Foods\nSpinach. 31<ft\nLb. pkt. \u2014 **v\nCorn Kernels. .-  ?A|k\nLb. pkt.  *T\nMixed Vegetables.        306\n306\nPkt.\nPeas and Carrots.\nPerpkt\t\n.)   Robin Hood Week\nat the\nFlour\n'6 Ib. bag\n38c\n.   24 Ib. bag\n$1.65\n49 lb. bag\n$3.19\n98 lb. bag\n$6.19\nDelivery 10o\nextra on above.\nHood Oats\n31 c \u00abGt! '!*!\"!:... 43c - \"Z..... 40c\ns5\nRobin Hood\nQUICK COOKiMO\nOits\n\u00a7jL\nPlain.\n48 oz. pkg.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 10, 1950\nFather of Twins\n\u00a7pi' Herman Wedemeye'r, pro grldder last seaso'n with the Los An-\n1 geles Dons and former St. Mary's College star, looks over his twin\nboy and girl babies born In Oakland, Calif., to his wife, Edna. Looking on Is Or. D. A. Burrows (left), the attending physician. As can\nbe seen, mother and babies are doing very nicely. Father has himself\nbraced against the wall.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nI    Large Doses of Swing and Bebop\nNot Popular in European Shows\nBy BOB TH0MA3\nHOLLYWOOD, Jan. 8 (AP) \u2014\nIhlrper J9 Stafford Is going to give\nluropean radio listeners large doses\nit Swing and ballads, a'taste of\nAmericanism and a minimum of be-\n\u00abi>.:' ':\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0       ;   \u25a0. ..\n;The popular-singer\" hopes that\necipe will bring her success as the\nIrst United States entertainer to blade- Europe with a disk Jockey\ntogram. , .   \u25a0  ,\nD-Day for the Stafford invasion\nIme last week when her first half-\nComc Out from.\nUnder the\nShadow of\nPA I\nTry DOLCIN Tablets for prompt\nrelief from arthritic and rheumatic pain.. .Try DOLCIN...\njjpt a bottle of 100 or 500 tablet*\nfrom your druggist today and\njoin the thousands of relieved\niufferers who by taking DOLCIN\nhave, come out from under the\nshadow of Pain...\nMost druggists carry DOLCIN.\nIf yours does not, write direct to\nDOLCIN LIMITED\nToronto 10\nOntario\nhour show was beamed from Radio\nLuxembourg. The station can be\nheard in Britain and throughout\nWestern Europe.\n\"One of the things we tiave already found out about the show;\"\nsaid Miss Stafford, \"is that Europeans are not so hot about bebop.\n\"A friend of mine told me they\nwere. He said that you could find\ndozens of night clubs in Paris featuring bebop. But apparently that\ncraze is limited pretty much to\nParis. Radio Luxembourg has told\nme to Include less bebop in the future.\"\nROUNDED PROGRAM\nThe songstress has tried to present a well-rounded program, based\non European musical tastes. She has\ndiscovered, for example, that the\nBritish like. their own performers\nsuch as Ted Heath, Vera Lynn and\nAnne Shelton. They go for the\nbands of Stan Kenton, Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, and performers like Danny l?aye, who have\nappeared'there. \" \u25a0'\u25a0\" T *   '. \u25a0'-,\n\"Thelma Jordan\" (Par.) tells of\nthe reluctant prosecutor (Wendell\nCorey) of a murder suspect (Barbara Stanwyck).. Except for a slow\nstart, it is well told, with some sus-\npenseful, moments. However, some\nmay see it as just another treatment\nof the screen's most overworked\nthemes\u2014adultery and murder. Miss\nStanwyck is her smooth self, and\nCorey is also good in a stone-faced\nway.\nVICTORIA, B.C., Jan. 9  (CP)\nNorman  Charles  Stewart,  British\nColumbia's Surveyor-General, will\nretire Jan. 31.\nMr. Stewart, however,' will continue as a member of the B.C.-Yu-\nkon-Northwest Territories Boundary Commision.\nHe took part in many major surveying projects, including the'Haz-\nelton and Trench routes for the proposed B.C.-Alaska highway.\nAT THE\nEmpress Hotel\nVICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nWinter jmi'\/ej In Evergreen Victoria\n...where the Ivy-clad Empress\nHotel offers lis own special brand of\nOld English hospitality. Close at\nhand there's golf, tennis, riding...\nswimming in the warmed sea-water\nof the Crystal Garden pool.\nAll this... topped off by fine food\nand traditional Canadian Pacific\nservice offers a delightful winter\nholiday in a pleasant climate Where\nyour dollar is worth one hundred cents.\ninformation and raiorvatians from ony\nCanadian Pacific ogenf or v\/r\/lo\nHotel Manager.\nVICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nLived With Nativei\nTo Gain Rich Lore\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) - A\nhusbahd-and-wife team of anthropologists,' Mr, and Mrs. Ronald\nBeriidt, \"went native\"\/ for 18\nmonths among the primitive tribes\nof Arnhem Land, in Australia's\ntropical North.    '.\u25a0'?; ;'\u25a0'.- i\nThey - lived on nativev food\u2014fish,\nsmall game,' yams and emu eggs.\nTheir shelters were the bark huts\nor \"humpies\" of the Arnhem Lend\naborigines. i\":'; -;V.. ,':-.\nBut they brought back with them\na collection of native carvings, and\nTbiMscAa^L\nby, 3JauM (tfhmkh.\n8MARTEST CROCHETI\nNewl Important fashionl The\nchoice of the young set. Cloche\nand a bag of 2 Identical pieces\nare crocheted in knitting worsted.\nCrochet these for \"a high-school\nor college girl\u2014she'll' love them.\nPattern 530; directions.\nLaura Wheeler's improved pattern\nmakes needlework so simple with\nits charts, photos and concise directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps \"cannot be accepted) for this pattern to (Name df\nYour Newspaper), Needlecraft\nDept, Address. -Print plainly PATTERN\" NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.    -\nGood news! Send twenty-five\ncents more, in coins, for our Laura\nWheeler Needlecraft Book. 104 Illustrations of your favorite needle\niobbies. Beginer-easy designs and\nideas worthy of an'expert's attention. Free needlework pattern is\nprinted in the bookl\n(Omm, lip, will,\nmcudan, Martin\n!r 9030\ni SIZES\n12-20\n30-12\n,\u2022   INDOORS, OUTDOORS\nYou'll whistle while you work\nand sing as you cook when you\nwear this ruffly housefrockl Easy-\nsew; and. best ot all it's so pretty\nyou'll wear it downtown, too!\nPattern 9030: 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30,\n32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16 3% yds.\n35-in.; % yd. contrast.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(2Sc) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern, print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE ..NUMBER!\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of (Name of Your\nPaper\/, Pattern Dept, address.\nIt's ready! Send. Twenty-five\nCents more, in coins, for our new\nMarian Martip Pattern . Book for\nSpring. Fashion' news, one-yard\nskirtsand blouses, styles for everyone. And\u2014free pattern for a hand-\nbaa is Drinted In the book.\na-fund of aboriginal lore that have\nbeen ranked' among the most remarkable anthropological finds of\nthe century,\n'The carvings, which Include\ntftatuei, are the only carved hu-\nmen figures \"In the round\" to be\nbrought, out of Arnhem Land,\nwhich Is more than 2000 miles\nNorthwest of the Berndt home\nIn Sydney. They were presented\nby the natives as tokens of trust\nand friendship, The BertidU >e\nturned a If to of flour, tea and au\ngar.\nHusband -and wife also travelled\nfrom one native camp to another,\nstudying various, tribal languages,\nceremonials and religious customs,\nCatherine Berndt is shy and modest, She dislikes'city, life ahd is\nlooking forward, to the next expedition, which she and her husband\nplan to make early this year,\nNelson Little\nPlay in Trail\nThe Nelson Little Theatre group\nwhich presented\" the mystery drama\n\"Night Must Fall\", last month, will\nagain stage the popular play, this\ntime for drama lovers, of Trail;\nThe three-act play drew a full\nhouse to both performances here\nand was rated a top perfomance.\nPlans for sponsoring the presentation by the Nelson group was discussed at a meeting of the Trail\nLittle Theatre. D.HX Mollison,\nPresident of the Nelson group, and\nFrederic Wheeler, Director, attended the meeting at which it was decided to stage the play in the Trail\nHigh School auditorium Jan. 14.\nThe cast will include Connie Andrews as Mrs. Bramson, Margery\nMcBain as Olivia, Hewitt'Ferguson\nas Hubert Laurie, Alice'Stevenson\nas Dora, Pauline Niven as Mrs.\nTarence, Robert Coventry as Inspector Belsize and George Dick as Danny. O. P. Roberts, former i Nelson'\nresident who left for New Westminster a short-time ago, played\nthe role of Lord Chief Justice and\nit has not yet been decided who will\nreplace him.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B, C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Norman F. Brookes returned\nfrom Oliver where they were the\nguests of the latter's parents,\nand Mrs. W. H. Crook, and\ner-in-law and sister, Mr. and:\nAllyn and family.   .'\u2022\nMiss Marie Soga, R.N., of\ntreat-, ia visiting her parents,\nand Mrs. S. Soga\": .....   .  -\nTak Kataoka returned to T^sjon- Ifvices Board.\nBound for Blue Skies, Sunny Land of \"New Zealand\nFrom snow-covered Vaanoouver, B. C, to sunny\nlands of Auckland, N. Z., Is destination of these\nwinsome lassies. The girls, three of Canada's representatives to British Empire Games, to be held\nFeb. 4-11, are,Kay McNamee, left, swimmer from\nNorth Vancouver; Peggy Moore, Vancouver, sprinter, and Rosella Thome, hurdler from  Montreal.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHope Wisecracks\nAfter Accident\nRIVERSIDE, Calif., Jan. 9 (AP)-\nBob Hope was injured tonight when\nhis car skidded oft a road during a\nrainstorm and overturned. 13 miles\nSouth of here.\nThe comedian, who was driving,\nand his passenger, Fred Williams,\none of his gag-writers, both were\nhurled from the machine. They\nwere returning from a weekend in\nPalm Springs.\nHope, taken with Williams to Riverside Community Hospital, said:\n'I feel fine, The Doc says' my\nshoulder is dislocated, but he may\nbe underplaying it.\" -\nThe car rammed into a walnut\ntree' beside the highway. Hope and\nWilliams were brought here by a\nmotorist   :\u25a0\u25a0'.,.,\nWilliams was treated for bruises.\nAfter Hope's shoulder was X-rayed,\nhis arm was placed in a sling. Later\nboth were given permission to leave\nfor Hollywood.\nDeaths\ni By The Canadian Press1\nBoston -r J. Wesley A. Gordon,\n62, President of the Metropolitan\nFederal Savings and Loan Association and Gordon-Dawson Company.\nMontreal \u2014 Percy Conrad Stevenson,' 80, former Manager of the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce.\nNew York \u2014 William A. Brady,\na top showman for 50. years,\n\"ilan, Italy \u2014 Monty Banks, 50,\nor, film director and husband of\ntish comedienne Grade Fields,\nlorence, Italy \u2014 Prince. Joseph\n\" oiirbon-Parma, 75.\nttawa r-^-Wilbur F. \u25a0 Chowan, 54,\nfeuty Foods Administrator of the\nBy NORMAN CRIBBEN8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nDUNDEE, Scotland, Jan. 9 (CP)\n\u2014 A revival of the Scottish dances\nof '200 to 500 years ago is sweeping\nScotland, No age group has escaped\nthe resurrected charm of music thai\nNlel Gpwand Scot^. Skinner once\nplayed,\nMembership . of, the Scottish\nCounty Dance Society has soared\nto around 8000. It has 42 branches\nand 63 affiliated clubs. But the\nswitch from Broadway rhythms to\nlilting rural\" music has come too\nfast for the faculties available.\nIt has left Scotland with a great\nshortage of floor space and has produced, so many eager pupils that\nthe number of qualified teachers Is\ninadequate.\nOne Dundee club has such  a\nlong  waiting  list that.members\nlose their places after four weeks'\nabsence\u2014and   the   next   In   the\nqueue steps In,\nDundee   corporation   has   been\nto, Ont., alter visiting his pan\nMr, and Mrs. K. Kataoka,\nS. Soga and his son' Georgi\nturned to Vernon after visitim\nformer's wife and family.\nMr. and Mrs. Albert E. A-\nwho visited the former's, bri\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, H.\nH. C. Avispn at MacDonald College,\nMontreal, also Mrs. Avison's neph-\"\new, Fred J. Greer at Montreal,\nhave returned.\nMiss Lillian Lewis, Who spent\ntwo weeks visiting friends in Spokane, and her parents at Calgary,\nhas returned.\n'W. S. Ellis, Manager of Mines,\nwho visited his family in Vancouver, has returned,\nMr. and1 Mrs. Andy Anderson and\ntheir daughter Sandra returned\nfrom v.islting their cousins, Mr. and\n,Mrs. T. Osen at Tacoma, Wash., and\nMr. and Mrs. A. Hammon- at Alder-\nwood Manor, Wash.\nAndrew Jacobson returned from\nholidays at Bcllingham, Wash.,\nwhere he was guest of his cousins,\nMr. and' Mrs. J. Jacobson.\nCliff Caron of Trail, is visiting\nhis wife, Mrs. C. Caron, R.N.\nMrs. Quentin A. Forsythe, Miss\nMarjorie H. Butlin and Mrs. John\nTaylor were Nakusp visitors to attend the meeting of Martha Chapter No. 24, Order of the Eastern\nStar and the installation ceremony\nof the 1950 officers.\nMiss Adelia . Mikita returned to\nNew Westminster, B. C. after\nspending holidays with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs, J,.Mikita..\nCrawford Clarke, and his brother\nDennis, of Vancouver, who were\nguests of their parents, Mr. and\nMrs. T. W. Clarke, have returned.\nMiss Evelyn G. Telr, P.H.N., who,\nvisited her parents, Mr. and. Mrs,\nJohn Teir, returned to EllenviUe,\nNew York State.\nMiss Marie Soga, R.N., of Montreal has. Joined the nursing staff\nat the Slocan Community Hospital,\nNew Denver.\nMrs. Norman F, Brookes left for\nOliver, B. C, where, she was called owing to the illness of her\nfather, W. H, Crook,\nI J. A. Dennison, District Engineer\nof Public Works, attended the fare\nwell ahd presentation of a gift at\nNelson, to O. P. Roberts, Provln\ncial Public^ Works District Engineer\nfor Nelson District,\nST. STEPHEN'S W .A.\nELECTS OFFICERS\nNEW DENVER, B. C\u201e Jan. 9 -\nThe annual meeting of the St. Stephen's! Church Women's Auxiliary\nwas held at the Vicarage, Mrs. M.\nC. -T. Perclvall, hostess. The President, Mrs. S. E. Thomlinson presided. Annual reports were received\nand RdV. Perclvall took the Bhair\nfor election of officers; President,\nMrs. M. C. T. Perclvall; Vice-President, Mrs, S.-E. Thomlinson; Secretary-Treasurer, MIss.M: H, But:\nUn, reelected,\n.The small number in attendance\nfor the annual meeting was very\ndisappointing but the weather, water, and lights worries were felt toi\nbe the cause.\nJfredericton \u2014 Lt. Col. Edgar A,\nDolron, 38, Assistant Adjutant\nQuartermaster General of the\nBrunswick Military Area,\nlartford; Kent, England \u2014 Dick\nth, winner of the British light-\n\u25a0ywelght boxing championship\nin 1914 and 1918.\nBirthday Party for\nNew Denver Miss\nNEW DENVER, B.' C.Jan. 9\nMrs. H. T. Butler entertained at a\ndelightful birthday party in honor\nof her daughter Sharon's 11th birthday. Games and contests were enjoyed by the 14 young guests and\na sit down supper was served.\nThe table center was a large decorated birthday cake topped by 11\nlighted candta.\nCardigan for\nResort Wear\nAmber Silk Resort Dress\nBy GRACE THORNCUFFE\nThe cardigan sweater, so long a\nfavorite with women everywhere,\nlends Its lines and Interest to\nmany of the new resort numbers,\nCurrently shown Is a dress In amber colored silk with a camisole\ntop that'uses matching grosgraln\nribbon for shoulder straps, to edge\nthe bodice top for the waistband,\nComplementing It Is a matching\nwool Jersey Jacket lined in silk,\nwith grosgraln edge and matching buttons. Here again, we see\nthe Importance of the dress and\njacket ensemble, already established for the season ahead.\nScots Jettison Tangos,\nSambas for Old Dances\nquick to cash.in on the craze, At the\nlast municipal country dance in\ngreat Caird Hall, 1200 dancers took\ntha floor after queueing for more\nthan two hours,' Hundreds were\nturned away.\nTEAM VISIT8 FRANCE \u25a0\nThe.beat-of Scottish feet is also\nbeing heard abroad. Recently the\nEast SterUngshire branch of the\nScottish Dance Society sent a team\nto Quimper, France. Quimper Is to\nreturn the compliment by sending\na French team tO'Scotland,  '\nUnder Dr\/E. Forbes Sempill, the\nDanqers of Don, famous Aberdeen\ngroup, are to make a tour>of the\nUnited States and parts of Canada\nnext Spring.\nONTARIO MISS\nWEDSTRAILITE\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan, 9\u2014A wedding\nof interest to local and Eastern\npoints was solemnized by Rev. John\nScott in the Emmanuel .Baptist\nChurch in Trail,' when Audrey Louise, third daughter of Mr. ahd Mrs.\nWilliam Arthur Woodward of Wai-\nlaceburg, Ont., was united In marriage Dec. 31 to William Leslie,\nyounger son of Mr. and Mrs. James\nWilUam Turner of Trail.\nThe bride, entering the church on\nthe arm-of W- H. Johnson of Trail,\nB, C, was charming in a two-piece\nstreet-length gown of burgundy red\nbengaline with matching suede\ngloves. She wore an bfi-the-face hat\nin Winter-white and carried a satin\nprayerbook with an'all-white spray\nof baby 'mums and hyacinths tied\nwith knotted ribbons.\nMiss Sybil G. Scott-Lauder ot\nVictoria, B. C;, In dove-grey crepe\nwith black accessories was the sole\nattendant, and carried a spray of\nbaby 'mums in tones of rose pink\nand burgundy.\nWalter Turner, brother*of .the\ngroom, was best man. During the\nsigning of the register, wedding\nmusic was supplied by Mrs. Paul\nEdwardson of Trail. ,\nThe bridal couple, with the parents of the groom, received relatives and. a few close friends at a,\nsmall reception at 839 Eldorado'\nStreet, before leaving for a honeymoon in Spokane. For travelling,\nthe bride wore a scarlet gabardine\nsuit topped by a.muskrat coat, with\nblack accessories and a chrysanthemum corsage. Upon their return the\nyoung couple wiU reside In East\nTrail.\nSunshine Bayr\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C. - Miss\nBarbara Ridge of Trail visited her\ncousin Roberta Stevenson during\nthe holidays. ,- -m\nNo Longer Nagged\nBy Constipation\n\"I always had to i\ntake laxatives\nuntil I discovered\nKELLOGG'S ALL-1\nBRAN and began I\neating it regularly. I\nNow, I can truth-1\nfully say\u2014no more I\ntrouble with constipation.\" Mr.!\nCharles Bowes, 127 Rubridge St, '\nPeterborough, Ont. One of many\nunsolicited letters. It you suffer\nconstipation due to jack of built\nin the diet, try eating an ounce of\ntoaaty ALL-BRAN daily, drink\nplenty of water. You may never\nneed another laxative! If not\nbenefited after 10 days, return\nempty box to Kellogg's, London,\nOnt. DOUBLE TOUR MONET BACK I\nTake Advantage of Today's\nLOW PRICES at SAFEWAY\nKitchen Craft\nFLOUR\nBest for all Baking\nSib.-bag\u2014 39<\n$1.65\n24\nIb. bag\n'1\nAirway\nCOFFEE\nGround fresh\n16 oz. bag 69\u00bb>\n3$<n.02\nIb. bag=_      U\nCRISCO\nPure Veg.  Shortening .\nlooz.can .      \u201439\u00abi\n|b. can _\u2014     I\nit Polly Ann Bread\n* tomato Soup\n* Margarine\n* Jello\n.15 oz. loaf,\nsliced, wrapped\nAssorted Flavors\n3 for 28c\nAylmer, 10 oz. can      \\ J0J   \/Vjf\n3for89c\n3 for 25c\nCanada  Packers,  Margerie,\n16 oz. : i\t\nLARD Burns 16 oz. ctn :... JLIC\nSYRUP  Roger's Golden. 5 lb. can  65C\nI \"A   Canterbury, IB oz. ctn. 5\/C .\n0\u00abTS Robin Hood. 5' lb', bag IL: 4UC\nCREAM OF WHEAT loz29c\nWAX PAPER ipo\/ioptrou' 2>C\nSUGAR- RCUSranulated. 5 lb. bag 53C\nRINSO Giant size pkg. 6\/C\nEGGS   Grade \"A\" large in ctns. Doz.4\/C\nCHEESE   Berkshire mild. Lb :... 4oC\nOranges\nCalifornia, Navels,\nsweet 'n' juicy'\u2014..\nArizona white,\nplenty of juice _\nMacintosh Reds, the all\npurpose aple\t\n2 lbs. 23c\n2 lbs. 23c\n3 lbs. 25c\nTOMATOES , 'R^ripe. Lb.   26c\nCELERY\nTender stalks, Lb.\n14c\nCAULIFLOWER gS\u00b0whit!:   21c\npotatoes folbt.!!.\u2122.: 39c\nPRICES ELECTIVE JAN. 10th and 11th\n \u2014\nS3)\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nMartins of Glasgow\nGenuine Scotch Grain   ,\nBrown\nBrogues\nDouble soles and leather\nheels with waterproof welt-\nings. 6V4 to 11. C and \"E\nwidths. $1^.50\nPair _! \u25a0\"\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   F0OTFASH10N\nEstablished 1904\nSlide Cub Off\nFernie Water\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Jan. 9\u2014The\nCity ot Fernie 65 miles East of\nhere had an extra fHip to its New\nYear celebration on top of a staggering 48-inch snowfall over two\n.weeks. A slide cut off the city's\nentire water supply New Years day\n\u2022for eight hours. '\nFernie people returning home\nfrom the various parties found no\nwater in their taps, and some went\nto extensive efforts lo thaw ' their\npipes before discovering they were\nfrozen.\nProvincial and City Public Works\ncombined forces in an excellent\nemergency job locating and repairing the trouble. 'Bull-dozing of the\nroad up to the city reservoir on\nFairy Creek under even heavier\n\u25a0 snow, was completed and discovery\nmade that a huge slide of snow and\nIce had ripped out a section of concrete in the dam, damaged the penstock gate and cut the main. Trucks\ncould not be used because of the\nheavy snow, and the necessary rock\nand sandbag fill was done by hand\nand with bulldozer. Repairs were\n.effected and water service resumed\n,the middle of. the morning.\nIn making a report on the emergency to the City Council, City\nEngineer Geoffrej Hunt said that\ncement repairs would be necessary\nto replace the broken concrete as\nsoon as Spring weather allows,\nand he recommended installation\not a new 18-inch main further up\nthe creek at a depth where slides\ncould not cause interference in difficult Winter conditions.\nThe Romans were the first to\nIntroduce cobblestones as road\npavement\nSlight Decline\nIn Industrial\nEmployment\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Employment in Canada's eight major industrial groups showed a further\nslight decline, at the beginning of\nNovember,     ,\nThe Bureau of Statistics reported\ntoday that the working force dropped ,3 per cent: from the beginning of October to the beginning of\nNovember. \u2022,     '\nAt the same time, however, there\nwas a small increase in amount paid\nin wages and salaries.\nInformation received from .20,712\nrepresentative employers indicated\nthat the reduction in the. working\nforce was .3 per cent among male\nworkers while the number of women working was up .5 per cent.\nBased on  the 1926 average as\n100, the general employment Index   In  eight  leading   industries\nat Nov. 1  was 201.9 as compared\nwith 202.2 at Oct. 1 and 203.6. at\nNov.  1,  1948.\nExcept for Nov. 1, 1948 the latest\nindex is the .highest in the record\nof 29 years, the Bureau said.\nAlthough the Nov. 1, 1949 figure\nwas .8 per cent below that of the\nsame date a year earlier, there\nwas an increase of three per cent\nin the index of payrolls, which\nreached an all-time high.\nWeekly earnings averaged $43.78\nat Nov. 1 as compared with $43.55\nat Oct. 1 and $42.15 at the beginning\nof November a year ago.\nThere was a moderate increase\nin employment in New Brunswick,\nQuebec and Saskatchewan with reductions oft about the same size in\nthe other provinces.\nSTAFF ADDITIONS\nFOR HOSPITAL\nIN WINDERMERE\nINVERMERE B. C, Jan. 9\u2014\nLady Elizabeth Bruce Memorial\nHospial at Invermere which has\nbeen functioning 'with capacity patient accomodation all Winter now\nhas the largest staff in the history\nof the institiution.\nMrs. Morris Thomas R.N., a graduate of the Royal Jubilee Hospital\nat Victoria, is matron-adminstrat-\nor of the hospital with her Miss\nArlet West, R.N., who was acting\nmatron pending the arrival of Mrs.\nThomas, Miss Thora Longair, R.N.,\nand \"Miss Sylvia Jamleson, R.N.,\nboth graduates of the Vancouver\nGeneral, and Miss Margaret Ash-\nworth R.N. graduate of the St. Eugene Hospital at Cranbrook.\nArriving Saturday to complete the\nnursing staff were Miss Helen\nKennedy, R.N., of Dunrobin Ont,\na graduate of Ottawa Civic Hospital, and Miss'Mary Sheller R.N. of\nPort Lambton, Ont, a graduate of\nChatham General Hospital.     V\nHeads Engineers\nEdward  V.  Buchanan  of  London, Ont., prominent In Canadian\nelectrical engineering for the paat\n40 years, who  has  been  elected\nPresident  of the   Association  of\nProfessional Engineers of Ontario\nfoffl950.. Mr. Buchanan Is General\nManager  of  the   London   Public\nUtilities Commission and the Lon-\ndon   Railway  Commission.  Largest of the Provincial Engineering\nf Associations, the Ontario body has\na membership of more than 7000\n.graduate engineers and 3500 student engineers.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nHoliday Dresses\nArriving Daily\nFor Satisfaction. .'\"..'\nTerms available.\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\n'IVootenay   Valley   1\/aifiy\nC. P. Freight Traffic\nChief Here, Sees\nPeriod of Progress\nJ. Fullerton, making his first trip\nin the West since his appointment\nas- Canadian Pacific Railway Assistant Freight Traffic Manager for\nWestern Lines, was in Nelson Monday.\nHe was \"very much of an optimist,\" he said, after his travels\nfrom coast to coast, that a period of\nincreased progress was ahead for\nCaaada.\nMr. Fullerton's headquarters are\nin Winnipeg.\nINSTALL FERNIE\nELK OFFICERS\nFERNIE, B.C., Jan. 9 \u2014 With\nFrank Britney as chaplain and Milt\nRay as District Deputy Grand\nMarshall officers of .Elk River\nLodge No. 35 A.F. and A.M. Fernie\nwere recently installed.\nNew Worshipful Master is Stan\nley Edgar, with B. J. Hawkey be\ncoming Past Master. Other officers\ninvested for, 1950 were senior\nwarden K. N. Stewart, \" junior\nwarden A. L. McPhee, secretary\nJames White, treasurer Morley\nObee, Frank Britney chaplain, and\nE. W. Gibson, Ken Whitelaw, Milt\nRay, J, ,D. Irvine, William Thomson, R. B. Lobb, Dr. M. McRitchle\nand J. R. Shaw. .\nGREAT-GRANDPARENTS\nPRESENT AT BAPTISM\nSILVERTON, B. C, Jan. 9 -Anglican services were conducted in\nSilverton by Rev. M.C. T. Percival,\nduring which the small daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs, E. H: Hall was bap-\ntizedi receiving the names \"Lynne\nMaureen,\" godparents being Mrs.\nW. Peterson and Gordon Hall. Later Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Hall entertained at a family dinner party, a\nfeature of the occasion being the\npresence of the child's great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Mansfield of\nVictoria.\nNEW DELHI (CP)\u2014An Himalay-\nan expedition left here recently to\nselect a site for a high altitude\nresearch station. The station will\nstudy astronomy, cosmic rays.glac-\nlology and biological sciences.\nAsk your friends\nto afternoon tea\nSA1ADA\"\nTEA\nNelson Social\n\u2022 Miss Mollle Arneson . and\nBruce Arneson who spent the holidays with their parents Mr. and Mrs.\nG. C Arneson, Stanley Street,* returned to resume their studies at\nU.B.C.\n\u2022 Miss Alberttae Choquette,\n507 Carbonate Street, has returned\nfrom Trail where she spent the Holidays at the home of her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge McKay.  .\n\u2022 E. Stangrelin, 110 Silica\nStreet, iB a patient in the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital..\n\u2022 , Rich Brown son of Magistrate\nWilliam Brown and Mrs.* Brown,\nVictoria Street, has. returned, to\nU.B.C. following his vacation spent\nat his home.    . '   .?)'\n, \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shannon of Willow Point have returned\nfrom several weeks in Fort Ord,\nCalif,, near San Franslco, Calif,,' at\nthe home of their*son-to-law and\ndaughter, Lieut and Mrs. R. L. Ru-\ndat.\n\u201e By MRSM, I. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Miss Shirley McDonald, who\nspent the vacaton at the home of\nher parents, Chief McDonald and\nMrs, McDonald; Ward Street, has\nreturned to resume her studies at\nUJB.C.\n\u2022 Jimmy'Madden, Madden Ho\ntel, left yesterday on a trip to.Vancouver^\n\u2022 Major and Mrs. F. Mathisen,\nformerly of Lbhgbeach and Trail,\nhave taken up'residence in- their\nnew home at 324 Fifth Street\nWedding\nAnnouncement\n..' Mr.'and Mrs.vW. Wood; ofBrilliant No. 5 Plant, wish to announce\nthe marriage of their * youngest\ndaughter, Margery,, to.;Willlara W.\nHarrison of. Trail, formerly of Nelson and Vancouver, on pec. 14,1949\nat Coetir d'Alene, Idaho.\n~t\nPlans To Reduce Death Rale From\nTuberculosis Among Indians\nEDMONTON, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014The\nIndians of Alberta and the Northwest Territories have a death rate\nfrom tuberculosis 16 times as high\nas that of the general Canadian\npublic and a quiet grey-haired doc-\nin Edmonton aims to do something\nabout it. \u25a0 \u25a0 ,\nDr. W. L. Falconer.of Ottawa,\nnewly-appointed Medical Director\nof the Charles Camsell Indian\nHospital, predicts that in live years\nthe incidence of the disease among\nIndians will be reduced 50 per cent\nThe-doctor's appointment represents the achievement of a longstanding ambition.\nAs a young doctor In the mining\nfields of Northern Alberta In the\nlate 20s, he said he was shocked to\nsee the conditions under which\nthe native population lived and\ndied.\n\"It makes quite an impression on\nFORMER NELSON\nWOMAN\nDIES AT COAST\nWord has been recieved of Vthe\ndeath of MrS; Agnes .Vallacott,-78,\nat the Royal Jubilee Hospital at\nVictoria last month. Mrs. Vallacott\nwas well-known in Nelson and lived\nhere for many years. She was formerly Mrs. Billingsley. Her husband,\nWalter F. Vallacott, was for >niany\nyears Customs Agent in the East\nKootenay,\nShe was an active member of the\nHospital Aid, now the Hospital Auxiliary, for many years, and also\ntook active part in the St. Savior's\nChurch and Red Cross work. Mrs,\nVallacott was the sister of Percy\nHortdn, well-known Kootenay mining man.\nBorn in Cheshire, England, she\nhad been a resident of Victoria and\nBrentwood for 57'years.\nBesides her husband and brother\nshe is survived by a shister, Mrs.\nM. L. Hall of Cornwall, Ont,\nniece, Mrs. E. D. Todd, Victoria and\ntwo nephewes, William McLean and\nNorman Elwin, both of Toronto.\nPremier Johnson\nAsks Questions\nOTTAWA, Jan, 9 (CP)\u2014British\nColumbia's Premier Johnson arrived on the .scene of the Dominion-\nProvincial Conference late today,\nbut his first questions weren't, a-\nbout politics or the constitution. He\nwanted to know who scored the\ngoals for Toronto Saturday night\nas the Maple Leafs licked Chicago Black Hawks, 5-2.\nWhen reporters started asking\nhim about the conference he started asking them about the game. He\nwanted particularly to know if\nMax Bentley scored any for the\nLeafs. The reporters said he didn't.\nMr. Johnson said that was too bad,\nHe had always been interested iri\nBentley's career. He declined comment on the conference.\nHe arrived'some hours late by\ntrain.\nTall, Silent- Man\nCalmly Takes Loot\nMONTREAL, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014An unobtrusive man wearing a brown hat\nand brown overcoat tbday robbed\na Bank of Toronto Branch in downtown Montreal of $3000 and calmly\nwalked out with the loot.\n. Miss Doris Paris, teller in the\nBank Branch on Beaver Hall Hill,\ntold the police that the man- approached her cage while the Bank\nwas crowded with customers, She\nsaid he handed- her a cheque on\nthe back of which was written:\n\"Hand me\" over all the money in\nthe till or'I'll shoot.\"\nThe startled girl looked up to see\nthe man, about 30, nonchantly pointing a pistol at her. She hurriedly\nobeyed his order and the robber\ncasually walked out with the $3000\nin his pocket and mingled with\npassers-by on the street.\nNo one noticed the robbery until\nMiss Paris gave the alarm.\nWould Reduce Motor\nVehicle Taxes\n' VANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Motor vehicle taxes\u2014which constitute\n$24,000,000 of the British Columbia\nGovernment's $92,000,000 revenue-\nshould be reduced, Clarke Simpkins\nof Vancouver told the opening session of the B.C. Motor Dealers' Association here today, v\nHe said that on every $2000 automobile transaction, more than $300\ngoes in direct taxes; Owners pay 30\nper cent of their fuel costs in direct\ntaxation. He added that he did not\nbelieve motor vehicle taxes should\npay the full cost of highways.\nyou when you see five or six children, all -with tuberculosis, lying on\nthe floor of a shack under a single\ndirty, old blanket in 40-below\nweather,\" said Dr. Falconer.\n\"I remember another time when\n20 out of a band of 10 died of whoop-\ntog cough.\"\nIn 1939, he was able to do more\neffective Work for the Indians when\nhe became medical superintendent\nat the Pas, Man,, for the Indian\nhealth service.\nLARGEST IN.CANADA ~\nIn 1945, he came to Edmonton as\nassistant to the director of the Indian health services to make a report on the buildings for the proposed Camsell Hospital, The new\nhospital will be the largest of its\nkind in Canada, serving 21,000 Indians and.-Eskimos .in Alberta, the\nYukon and Northwest Territories.\n\"Tve wanted this job ever since I\nfirst saw the place. It was everything. The University is nearby for\nresearch work. We \"have good transportation by rail and air to get the\npatients into the hospital. We have\neverything we need here to do a\nreal job.\"\nDr. Falconer succeeds Dr. Herbert Meltzer under whose direction the hospital was already\nmade great strides. Last Summer,\n20,000 chest x-rays were made so\nthat, now a record Is available for\nalmost every Indian and Eskimo\nIn the hospital's territory, something which has never been\nachieved with a similar group in\nthe white population.\nSince 1944, the incidence of tuberculosis in the Indian' population of\nAlberta has been reduced almost 50\nper cent\n'It has been a hard struggle to\nwin the Indians confidence but we\nare making excellent progress nowV'\nsaid Dr. Falconer.\nSeeking U.Sa Tariff Reductions\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP)-Withln\nthe next few days- Canada will\npresent the United States with a\nnew list of goods on which she\nwould like to see U.S. tariffs\nreduced.\nThe list, not expected to betoade\npublic before next April, will form\nthe basis of a new round of tariff\nnegotiations between the two countries -flext September.\nAt that time 33 nations will meet\nto negotiate a third post-war series\nof tariff reductions, Although Canada will negotiate directly with\nmost of these countries, trade officials say she will concentrate on\nthe U.S.    \u25a0';'-\u25a0\u25a0-.''     ' -\u201e,\nBehind   this   concentration   Is\nGovernment   policy   to  Increase\nexports to the U.8, as a means\nof   balancing, trade   with   that\ncountry. The  present trade  deficit, In favor of the U.S., Is about\n$400,000,000 a year.\nOfficials therefore are paying a\ngreat deal of attention to the 1950\ntariff talks and the list of goods on\nwhich these talks will be based is\nexpected to be a long one. It is\nexpected the list will be turned\noyer to the U.S. Government about\nJan. 15.\nSome time in April the U.S. Gov\nernment will publish the list In\naccordance with U.S. tariff law.\nAny manufacturer who believes the\ntariff cut may hurt his business\nmay place his protests before tn.\nGovernment proceeds with negoti.\ntlons.\nWithout disclosing the exact\nitems, officials say the list deals\nmostly with processed or manufactured goods on which there still\nis a prohibitive U.S. tariff.\nDUTY FREE\nMany of Canada's exports to the\nU.S., particularly raw ' materials,\nget into the U.S. duty-free as a\nresult of the first post-war round\nof negotiations in.Geneva in 1947\nand the second round in Annecy,\nFrance, last year.\nShippers, therefore, have little\ndifficulty exporting such items as\nraw aluminum, copper, lead, zinc\nor such forest products as pulp-\nwood and newsprint'-      'J.\nBut they do\/experience trouble\nin getting fine riotepaper into the\nU.S. market and many.manufactured products made of metal.\nIn other.words, as the item is\nturned into'the finished commodity\nfrom thei raw stage; the higher is\nfee U.S. tariff and the more difficulty the Canadian exporter has in\ngetting his product sold to the U.S.\nTo Decide Mine\nWages Dispute\nDean F. M. Clement, J. P. Mackenzie and Harvey'Murphy, all of\nVancouver, appointed as a Board of\nConciliation in order to find terms\nfor a collective agreenient which\nboth the Reeves MacDonald Mine\nmanagement and the Trail and District Smelter Workers Union Local\n480 will accept in a dispute on\nwages and working conditions at\nthe Reeves McDonald Mine, will\nreopen a hearing to uncover facts\non the subject, early Tuesday morning.\nDean Clement, Chairman of the\nBoard, said after the Monday afternoon meeting in the Nelson Court\nHouse that no decision would be\nreached here, and that several\nmeetings would be necessary\namong the three members of the\nBoard, after they returned to the\nCoast, before a decision would be\nreached. The two principals would\nthen be notified.\nManager A. E. Pike of the Reeves\nMine claimed a need for making a\ncut in wages for mine workers until\nthe mine waB working at full capacity, while the Local 480 of the\nUnion wished to \"up\" the mine\nworkers wages.\nBriefs were presented on the\ncase by Mr. Pike for the Reeves\nMacDonald, while J. C. Moffat of\nTrail presented a brief for the\nUnion.    \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022    . -   '     J \u25a0 '\u25a0-   -\n| Two witnesses for the Union\nwere heard, E. G. White and George\nSodja, both workers in the.mine.\nSilverton...\nSILVERTON, . B. C. \u2014 Mrs. R.\nJones left by plane on Monday for\nVancouver, where she was called\nowing to the serious illness of her\nfather. '   ',\nMr. and Mrs. J. ,E. Rawson, who\nhave visited relatives in town for\nVie past two weeks, have left for\ntheir home at Adams Lake.\nMrs. - O. A;' Lindstein and Infant\ndaughter have returned to their\n.home from the Slocan' Community\nHospital, New Denver.     \u25a0'\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Fairhurst and\nfamily, who spent two weeks visiting the'latter's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. G. Graham, and brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. - arid Mrs. T. M.\nLeask, have returned to their home\nin Marysville. .\nAlvin Peterson has returned from\nVancouver where he spent the holidays visiting friends.\nR. Hambly Sr., who has been a\npatient in the Slocan Community\nHospital at New Denver, has returned to his home.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Lancaster entertained a few friends on New Year's\nEve when a social time and refreshments were enjoyed by those present.\nMrs. M. Emerson and Mrs. M.\nMorrison entertained a number of\nfriends at a New Year's party Monday evening, when games, contests\nand music was enjoyed by the\nguests, contest winners being: Mrs.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nIIMIIIIIIIMIilllllllllllltMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nNews of the Day\nRATES; 22o llhe, 27c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nJANUARY SALE AT\nTHE CHILDREN'S 8HOP\nPHONE 1177 AND 1178\nFAIRWAY FOR FRE8H MEATS\nReserve Feb. 14, Valentine Tea,\nFirst Presbyterian Church..\nBINGO TOMORROW NIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\nL.A. TO THE B. OF R.T.\nRegular meeting tonight 8 p.m.\nKINSMEN TONIGHT\nHUME HOTEL\nElectrical contracting \u2014 wiring\nalterations \u2014 hot water heaters.\nMcKAY & 8TRETTON\u2014Phone 644\n10%  discount  on  our  complete\nstock of Stewart-Warner radios.\nMc & Me (NEL80N) LTD.     ,\nRetractable   sleigh   runners   for\nyour baby stroller.\"\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nGYPTEX TEXTURE PAINT\n6 colors\u201410 lb. pkg. $1.70.\nBURN8 LUMBER t\\ COAL CO.\nConvert unused articles to ready\ncash.- Call the NELSON EXCHANGE, 520 Vernon St. Ph. 391.\nH-BUTTERFIELD can't, fix It\nthrow lt away. Prompt service on\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nHave   you   investigated   Floater\nPolicy Insurance? See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY\nFor  artistic  and  original  floral\ndesigns,  be  sure to PHONE  910,\nMAC'8 FLOWER SHOP\nBargain   Days   are  here   again!\nEvery hat prize!\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nColeman lamps, lanterns, hotplates, stoves, generators, mantles\nand repair parts, etc,\nWOOD VALLANCE HDWE. '\nATTENTION\nChild Health ' Centre and Preschool Immunization Clinic, Memorial Hall, today, 2 to 4 p.m.\nCOME TO THE BIG DANCE AT\nPROCTER, JAN, 13th, 10 P.M.\nFREE FERRY. GOOD MUSIC AND\nREFRE8HMENT8.\nWash-day needs. Folding ironing-\nfa o a r d s, shclve-boards, . folding\nclotheshorses, ceiling dryers, wicker\nclothes-baskets, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S\n(nc\nOLD   NEWSPAPERS   10c   A\nBUNDLE. NEL80N DAILY NEW8.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nCowhide mitts for boys, to clear\nat 49c pair. Something new\u2014Pen\nbelts for girls. A real novelty,\ngoing fast\n-:,..! TOT-'N'-TEEN 8HOP\nDon't let the dull weather get you\ndown. Phone 962 for a cheery bouquet of flowers or a pot of Spring\nbulbs. '\nCOVENTRY8' FLOWER SHOP\nP.T.A. meeting tonight Central\nSchool, 8 p.m., Representatives of\nSchool Board will speak, also film\non Banff Summer School of Fine\nArts will be shown.\nWATCH REPAIRING\nIS A JOB FOR EXPERTS\nOur Work assures your Satisfaction\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\n491 Baker Street\nBuy your Portable \"typewriter\nnow. Twelve months to pay. We\nhandle the two most popular makes\non the market \"Corona and Royal.\"\nFive models. Sold for- cash or on\neasy monthly payments. D. W.\nMcDerby \"The Typewriter and\nAdding Machine Man,\" 554 Stanley\nStreet\nNEW LUCKY\nNUMBERS FOR NEW\nYEAR'S DAY\nHOCKEY PRIZES\n368, 1277, 040, 983, 236,\n338, 451, 648, 488\nThese  prizes must be picked up\nbefore 6 p.m. Wednesday at the\nCivic Centre  office.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nRequiem High Mass for the late\nAdolph Raukuc will be sung at\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate\nWednesday at 9 a.m. Rosary will be\nrecited in the Thompson Funeral\nH6me Tuesday, at 7:30. p.m. Interment will be in- Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nFUNERAL NOTICE ...\nFuneral services for the late\nReginald Bllkey will be held Wednesday, Jan, 11, 1950 at 1:30 from\nSt. Andrews Anglican Church,\nTrail, B.C. Rev. John Rogers will\nofficiate. Interment in Mountain\nView Cemetery. Clark's Chapel in\ncharge.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 10, 1950 \u2014 S\nAlia. Coal Mine\nFirebosses to\nTake Strike Vote\n. CALGARY, Jan. 9 (CP)-About\n250 firebosscs to eight bituminous\ncoal mlneB In Alberta will take a\nstrike vote,, jSossIbly this week, T. A.\nMcCloy.of.Calgary; Alberta Regional Director pf the Canadian Congress of Labor, said today.\nMr. McCloy said the fireboxes,\nmembers of the National Union of\nFirebosses (CCL,), will vote in\nfavor of strike action against their\nemployers bacuse of the coal companies' recent rejuection of an arbitration award. ,     '\nThe firebosses, who supervise\nsafety measures to mines, has asked\na welfare fund similar to that of\nminers belonging to District 18,\nUnited Mine Workers of America\n(C.C.L.).\nW. C. Whittaker, Secretary of\nthe Bituminous coal operators\nAssociation, said the companies\nrejected the award because the\nArbitration Board recommended\nthe firebosses be paid on a monthly basis as well as being granted\na welfare fund.\nHe said the companies were will-\ntog to establish a welfare fund provided the firebosses agreed to be\npaid on a day-wage basis in the\nsame way as the miners who benefit\nfrom a non-contrbutory welfare and\nretirement fund.\nThe firehoses currently are paid a\nmonthly salary and are eligible for\nthe company pehsidn plan.\nMines, involved are two as Coleman and Blairmore and one at Can-\nmore, Mountain Park, Luscar and\nNordegg.\nWomen's Institute,\nSilverton,\nElects Officers\nSILVERTON, B. C, Jan. 9 -The\nannual meeting of the Silverton\nWomen's Institute was held in the\nMunicipal Hall. Owing to the inclement weather, only 12 members'\nwere in attendance. After the regular monthly business was dealt\nwith, the Secretary read a report\non the year's activities, and presented the financial report for the\nyear just concluded. Election of\nofficers for 1950 then followed, resulting to Mrs. E. Mathews, President; Mrs. G. Graham, Vice-President; Mrs. R. Hambly, Secretary-\nTreasurer, reelected; Mrs. M. Bur-\nley and Mrs. J. L. Wilson, Directors, and Mrs. E. H. Hall and Mrs.\nM. Morrison, auditors.\nE. H. Hall, Mrs. W. Peterson and R.\nJones. At midnight delicious refreshments were served, bringing\na pleasant evening to a close.\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe House of Furniture Values\nPHONE 115 \u2014 NEL80N, B.C.\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN  !\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nYour $ $ $ Buy More at Freeman's\nNew Denver\nitaw DENVER, B. C\u2014Miss Marguerite Cusson, R.N., of Vancouver,\nfrom U.B.C, is guest of Mr. and\nMrs, J. L, Canty for a month,\nLloyd George, who spent the\nYuletide holidays with his parents,\nMr. and Mrs, William H.. Cleveland brothers and sister, Ernest,\nJimmy and Velma George, returned to Technical School at New'\nWestminster, B. C.\nNEW DENVER K. OF P.\nENTERTAINS KIDDIES\nNEW* DENVER, B. C, Jan. 9;'-i-\nThe Knights of Pythias Lodge Np.\n22, New Denver and the Pythian\nSisters of Lticerrie Temple, No. 17,\nheld their annual Christmas party\nfor the children in the Knights idf\nPythias Castle Hall. In charge were\nMrs, G. H. Croy, Mrs. S. Clough,\nMrs. W. H. Clever, Mrs. Percy Cutler, Mrs. \"H. Clever and Miss Dora\nM. Clever and for 'the Knights,\nHarry Woolley, James Draper and\nLeslie Campbell.\nsTake home\na dozen bulbs today\nSold in Nelson by\nWbod Vallance\nHardware Co.\n593 Baker St.\nOur Beautiful and Productive\nKootenay ^Boundary District\nIndustry\nSports\nCommunity Activities\nSend In your pictures of Kootenoy-Boundary activity NOW, so that they will\nappear in the 1950 Pictorial Industrial Edition of the Nelson Daily News.\nThe district Ih which we'live Is Important to all of us\u2014good publicity will\nhelp build, it better.\nBlack and white prints are best\u2014negatives not required.\nJtomt lathj Nfws\n JMaott Bally 5S>tua . Gems of Thought  ? Questions 1\nprogress .. ^\u00bb,\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper -\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail.\n\u2022     Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS.\nTUESDAY,. JANUARY 10, 1950\n. i \u2014 r* i\n\/    , No \"Last Horizons\"\nMany times in its Mstory Canada\nhas heard that its last habitable horizon in the Northwest had been reached.\nEach time such stalwarts as Stefansson\nwere ready to show that discovery had\nonly begun. Each time achievements\nbore them out. Dr. Hugh L. Keenley-\nside, whose duties include those of\nCommissioner of the Northwest Territories, says that civilized community\nlife with the aid of modern science can\nreach and even cross the Arctic Circle:\nThe use of a map is needed to appreci-\n. ate this, explains the Toronto Globe\napd Mail, since the Circle is just below\nthe Northern extremity of the continent. Much of Canada's North is popularly maligned by being called: Arctic,\nwhereas it is sub-Arctic. The magazine-\nCoronet has also gone to bat for the\nNorthwest Territories, saying they\ncould support a population of several\nmillion with their arable lands, mineral wealth and hydro power. Again\nachievement is bearing out the claim.\nTalk of \"last horizons\" brings to\nmind the nineteenth century when the\nCanadian Pacific Railway was being\nprojected. In'18Bl, the London weekly,\nTruth, saw no future for this \"bubble\".\nTruth likened it to investment in the\n''utilization of icebergs.\" It foreboded\ngrimly that:\n, .\"The .Canadian Pacific Railway;;>\n; will  run,  if it  is ever finished,\nAll that Is human must retrograde if it\ndoes not advance\u2014Gibbon.\nLiterary commercialism is lowering the\nintellectual standard to accommodate the\npurse and to meet a frivolous demand for\namusement instead of for Improvement. Incorrect views lower the'standard'of truth.\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\nI find the great thing to this world is not\nso much where we stand, as In what direction\nwe are moving.\u2014Oliver Wendell Holmes.\nAll growth, that is not toward God is\ngrowing to decay.\u2014George Macdonald.\nIntellectually, as well as politically, the\ndirection of all true progress is toward greater\nfreedom, and along an endless succession of\nideas.\u2014Bovee.\nWhere the Sun\nShines 23 Hours\nHugh L. Keenloyslde, Commissioner of the\nNorthwest Territories, believes that the experience of the modern town of Yellowknife,\nplus recent discoveries in science, have shown\nthat it is quite possible to extend Ordinary\ncivilized community life right up to and perhaps beyond the Arctic Circle.\nAccording to a copyrighted article in Cor-\n. onet, the Northwest Territories have the mineral wealth, the hydro power and farming\nlands to support a population of several million people.\nThe fisheries of Great Slave Lake, af-\nthdugh pnly three years bid, are already producing 4,000,000 pounds of fish annually. Production will soon increase 50 per cent, giving\nthis Northern lake a haul equal to that of Lake\nSuperior. The area around Great Slave Lake\nalone is regarded by American and Canadian\nscientists as capable of supporting a population of 600,000.     -\nTlw-gold mines around Yellowknife have\nalready produced $20,000,000 in gold.\n.-!. New farming wealth may come from the\nvalley of the Laird River, which flows into\nthe MacKenzie River. The Laird has a temperate climate and good soil, and may become\nan agricultural rival to the Peace River Valley,\n300 miles to the South.\nNot all the Northwest Territories is cold.\nrSome parts are as temperate as Winnipeg or\nEdmonton. At Fort Resolution, potato crops\nbring up to 200 bushels per acre, and crab-\napple trees bear fruit Celery is grown sue-\nthrough a country frostbound for \"ssfully at Hay River. At Aklavik, Just below\n, >   no, Mght months in the year.        the coast of ,hc Arc,lc 0cenn-,h0 23-hOT,r EU\u00bb-\n. . . I'.i in 11 I'olumbia is a barren,\ncold, mount tin area that is not\nworth keeping . . .Canada is ono\nof the most over-rated colonies'we '\"'\".\nhave Ontario is pretty certain\nto go over to the (United) States,   -.\ninto which it dovetails. ...\"\n\"-''--.' .\nOf course, Mr. Henry Labouchere,\nthen Editor of Truth, was known as\nthe Voltaire of the Victorian Age, and\nhis experience of this continent was\nhighlighted by six weeks' hunting with\nChief Hole in Heaven of the Chippawa\nIndians in Minnesota. But even The\nTimes thundered a bit at the C.P.R.\nadventure. However, the \"frost-bound\"\nWest paid off, and now the \"barren\"\nNorth is doing the same. As if to scoff\nat false fears, up in Aklavik they grow\ngarden vegetables in Summers which\ngive them 23 hours' sunshine a day.  V\ncoast of the Arctic Ocean, the 23-hour sunshine day of Summer \"produces leafy vegetables, carrots, turnips, beets. Aklavik boasts\na dairy herd which is pastured in Summer and\nstall-fed In Winter, giving the freshest milk in\n?the Arctic.\n\/;\/ Stolen Saucers\nReports that \"flying, saucers\" are .\nactually interplanetary scouting devices used by residents of some unidentified planet \"200 years ahead of*\nthp earth in scientific development\"\ncan mean only one thing, observes the\nWindsor Star. Someone has penetrated\nthe Russian Iron Curtain and stolen\nthe gadget from Russian inventors who\ninvented .it.-at least 100 years ago and\nwere just waiting for another country\nto discover it and produce a. working\nmodel.\nPress Comment\nGONE ASTRAY      ,\n*-   Our gift apples to Great Britain are being\nsold at a profit, which sharply condemns Mr.\nGardiner's  hush-hush  policy  regarding  bur'\nfood deals With the United Kingdom. Regarding the apples:\nThe British Ministry of Food is placing\nthem on the British market for sale at the\nsame price as home-grown apples and imported appleB for which the Ministry paid full\nprice. What is more, the British consumer has\nno way of knowing where the apples came\nfrom or that they were sent over as a free gift\nto the British people. And this hugger-mugger\nis going on at a time when a section of the\nBritish Labor Party is publicly blaming Canada for contributing to Britain's present financial straits. This Ignorance on the part of many\nBritons about what Canada haB done in the\nway of loans, gifts and moderately priced food\nstuffs is.largeiy the fault of the Canadian Government.\u2014 Winnipeg Tribune. '-?\n12,000 Canadians to\nANSWERSpanfc in Holy Year\nSupport Doctor\nOpen to any reader, Names of persona\nasking quentlons will not be published.\n.There il ho charge for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nG. W., Nelson\u2014I aip submitting <an answer\nconcerning the taboo on women entering\na mine. It is taken verbatim from \u00a3 book\n-published by Harper Bros.\n\"Among the more Ignorant class of miners\nin Great Britain, the United States, Canada,\nMexico, and perhaps other countries, there\nused to be a superstition that the presence of a\nwoman to a mine was an evil omen. If a\nwoman entered a mine many of the miners\nwould walk out For this reason many mine\noperators forbid women to enter their mines.\nIn.Northern England lt was a sign of ill-luck\nmerely to meet a woman on the way to work\nin the mines. That this old sex.taboo survives\nto a limited'degree is evidenced by the iect\nftat it was commented on as late as 1040, when\nSecretary of Labor, Frances Perkins visited\nlead and zinc mines in Missouri.\"\nE. C. S.,. Trail\u2014Subject: Two-hand game of\ncrib. \"A\" has two threes, a {our, and a five.\nB has a Queen, one, two, and three. A\nleads a 3 and B a Queen; A a 3 and B\npairs the 3; A leads,a 5<and B an ace; A a\n4 and B a 2. B claims a run of 5 and 2 for\n31 equals 7 points. A claims there is no\nrun of 5\u2014only |2 points for 31, as there\nwas a 5 then an ace played after last 3,\nwhich broke any chance of a run. Will\n' you please enlighten us .on this-mStter?\nIt seems to us a debatable point, but an\nexperienced crib player assures us that B is\nright However, here is what we find in Hoyie;\n\"When three or more cards, all in numerical\nsequence, are played, the player of last card\ncounts one point for each card in,the sequence,\neven though they are-not played in numerical\nrotation. (Thus 6-8-7 is a three-card sequence,\nthe same\" as 8-7-8.) This run of ,3 scores 3\n. points. If a fourth card is in sequence it scores\n4 points in addition to previous 3.- Ace being\nlow, Q-K-A is not a sequence.\" Perhaps another player can help?\nPenance, Action for Peace, Defence of\nHoly Places and Church, Realization\nOf Social Justice, Aid for Needy Aims,\nLooking Backwards\n10 YEARS AQO\nJ From Tho Dally News of Jan. 10, 1940\n' *\u25a0';'\u25a0 Summary of receipts and disbursements\nof the Nelson Civic Centre during 1039, presented to the City Council Tuesday night in\na report by Denis StDenis, Secretary-Manager,\nshowed total receipts of $27,394.55 and disbursements of $27,715. .>.'...,\nTwo fires In December caused a total fire-\nloss for the month of $500, Fire Chief G...A.\nMcDonald reported Monday night.\nMrs.   Albert   Cuthbert-was   installed--as\nPresident' of the Daughters of England.in\/the,\n- Canadian Legion Monday evening.\nAs many as 5,000,000 people are\nexpected to visit Rome during the\nHoly Year for the 26th time in 650\nyearsv '.'Coming at a moment- to history virhen the. nations were never\nmore in need of prayer and penance,\" this Holy Year differs from\nits 24 predecessors mainly in the\nway pilgrims will travel to -the\nEternal City. Many have already\njoujneyed to Roma over 'hundreds\nof miles ^on foot. The majority of\n1650'a pilgrims will travel by boat\nand plane.\nOnce there, they will visit the\nfour j Patriarchal churches,. built\ncenturies ago to honor St Peter,\nPaul and John the Baptist and the\nVirgin Mary., They will make the\nacts of devotion specified by the\nPontiff and,will receive the Holy\nYear Indulgence in return for their\npiety.\nThe   four   principal   purposes\nand   alms   of   the   Holy   Years\nwhich are held every 25 years,\nare \"prayer and penance; action\nfor peace and defense of the holy\nplaces;   defense   of  the  church\nagainst 'renewed attacks for her\nenemies' and  beseeching  ot the\ntrite faith for those wandering In\nerror, Infidels and those without\nGod, and realization of social Justice and assistance for the needy,'\nPope Boniface VIII instituted the\nfirst Christian Jubilee in the year\n1300,' and since then millions of\npeople have visited Rome during\nthe Holy Year sessions.\nA special Holy Year in 1925 was\nproclaimed by Pope Pius1- XI to,\nmark the 1900th anniversary of the\ndeath of the Lord.. The war-tired\nworld assisted at the jubilee which\nhad special significance coming\nsoon after the First World War.\nHis Holiness, Pope Pius XII, will\noilen the Holy Door in'St. Peter's\nBasilica in persont while the three\nPapal Legates named by the Pope\nto open the Holy Doors of the other\nthree basilicas are Eugenia Cardinal Tisseran^t, Clemente Cardinal\nMicara   and   Allesandro   Cardinal\nVerde.\n, The Pope will also try to strengthen the hand of the Roman Catholics in the Communist orbit by extending tho Holy Year Jubilee to\nthe whole world to 1951: In- a report given In the Vatican City,\nCardinal Eugene Tisserant, Secretary of the Oriental congregation,\nhas said the move would give many\nmillions behind the Iron Curtain a\nchance to observe and carry out the\nspiritual decrees, observed In Rome.\nHe described conditions in the Soviet orbit as \"very grave.\"\nIn Eastern Europe, many Catholics are of the Oriental rite, as contrast to the Roman rite. The Oriental order of the Holy Year celebration will hold an exposition high,-\nlighting the past and present\nevents of the rite..\nIt is estimated that 225,000 Americans will, communicate \u25a0 with\nRome during the year while many\nothers will visit other shrines in\nEurope. Some 12,000 Canadians\nwill also take active participation\nin the Jubilee throughout the year.\nAlready a number of tours have\nbeen organized under the sanction\nand guidance of high church\nofficials.\nReginald F. Borroto. (left), of Manchester, N.H., husband of a\n\"mercy victim\", and his daughter, Ellse, 19, have voiced a. sympathetic viewpoint In favor of Dr. Herman N. Sander, who has been\nIndicted for first degree murder of Mrs. Borroto, a cancer patient.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Jan. 10, 1925\nRinks skipped by George Douglas and\nQ. F. McHardy, both of Nelson, in the B. C.\nCurling Association' Bonsplel currently being\nheld in .Trail, went to the finals after S. G.\nBlaylock's rink and that skipped by W. Forrest\nof Trail were done away with' by Nelson\nplayers. \u2022     \u25a0'\n40 YEAR8 AGO   '\u25a0      \"\nFrom The Dally News of Jan, 10, 1910\nW. S. Drewry, Chief Water Commissioner\nfor the Province, arrived in the city from Victoria Sunday to attend the surveyors' convention (which opens here today.     '\nC. W. Busk leaves this morning for a trip\nto Florida and the West Indies. He will be\naway about eight weeks.\nBUYING CIVILIZATION\nOliver Wendell Holmes once chided his\nlaw clerk about the taxes he had to pay, \"Do\nyou like to pay taxes?\" the young man asked\nincredulously. \"Yes, I do, young feller,\" Justice-Holmes'replied. I'With taxes I buy civilization.\"\u2014 Washlngtbn Post.\nTHANKLESS JOB\n,Mr. Trygve Lie, Secretary General of the\nUnited Nations, will not stand for reelection\nwhen his term ends in 1951. Who can blame,\nhim? Can anyone think of a more thankless\njob, or one with more headaches?\u2014Windsor\nDaily Star.\nIt's Been Said\nThe deeds- of charity we have done shall\nstay with us forever. Only the wealth we have\nso bestowed do we keep; the other is not ours,\n\u2014Conyers Middleton,\nYour Horoscope\nThis time should be ideal for sociability\nand entertainment; also for self-improvement\nthrough beauty. Your next year is apt to proceed normally, promising some good fortune.\nA somewhat serious personality is likely to\ndevelop from the child born today, and some\nsuccess seems to be assured. '\u25a0.\nNao-Tze-Tung\nDirects\nFrom Russia\nLONDON, Jan. 0 (AP) - Com\nmuntst China is staking out claims\non the last holdings of Chiang Kai-\nshek's tottering Nationalist Government\u2014Formosa, Hainan, Tibet and\nthe Chinese seat in the United Nations.    -\nRed China's news agency in a\nradio dispatch last night said Foreign Minister Chou En-lal had telegraphed U. N. officials demanding expulsion of the Chinese Nationalist representative from the\nSecurity 'Council.\nPromise of future assaults by\nChinese Reds on the two Nationalist islands of. Formosa and Hainan, and on the mountain fastness of\nTibet, were made by Pravda and\nIzvestia, the two biggest official\nnewspapers in Moscow. The Chinese Communist Government's leader, Mao Tze-tung, is in the Soviet\ncapital conferring with Kremlin\nleaders.\nSimultaneously Izvestia, the Soviet Government newspaper, charged the United States with \"aggressive intentions\" towards Formosa\nand Hainan\/ The Communist Party\norgan, Pravda, said the U. S. was\ncontinuing to give military help to\nChiang Kai-shek and was planning to strengthen Nationalist military bases on the two islands.\nChou's telegram, reported the\nPeiping New China News Agency,\nsaid the Chinese Communist Government \"holds as illegal the presence of the delegates of the Chinese' Kuomintang Reactionary\nClique in the Security Council.'\n\u00bb At Lake Success a spokesman for\nthe, United Nations said the note\nhad not been received yet at U. N.\nheadquarters. The Security Council is scheduled to hold its first' 1050\nmeeting tomorrow with Chinese\nNationalist delegate T. F. Tsiang\nCouncil Chairman ' for the\nmonth.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0'-   \u25a0\u2022\u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n'\u25a0.'\u25a0\n'\u25a0>'-.''\u25a0?:\u25a0<   \u25a0'-\u25a0:;'\u25a0'\nToday's Bible Thought\nAll we have to do Is open the\ndoor, not slam It coldly. By. grace\nare ye sa,ved through laith, and not\nof yourselves, it Is a gift of God.\n\u2014Eph. 2:8.\n\u25a0 \u2022 \u2014Press-Radio Bible Service Inc.\nGwLKsiL\nA big family o', boys is useful.\nYou accumulate such ...a house full\no' junk if you don't have anybo4y\nto keep it busted up.      .\nCANBERRA (CP)\u2014For the first\ntime since the end dl the'war, Japan\ncan now buy top grade Australian\nwool. At the request of U.S. occupation officials, restrictions on the kind\nof wool purchased by Japan are to\nbe lifted.\nNot for dumbbells!\nEach time this newspaper: comes out it pays a compKment to\nyour intelligence. It is not published for dumbbells.     .\nAs are all, Canadian newspapers, this one is published for\npeople like you who are smart enough to run households and\nbusinesses, to hold jobs and elect governments. People, who\n--can separate the wheat from the chaff in the day's news and\ncome up with the right answers.\n\u25a0 i-Vf n.        . *\u25a0'\u25a0: *\\ '.-,*;' .,*\nWe. are able to publish because you find in the newspaper\nthe facts -and opinions on which to base your thinking and\nshape your life.\nThe facts may be good or bad. Taxes may not be reduced.\nRains may reduce the corn crop. How you react depends\non your point of view. What you think is based\non what you know.\nSimilarly, certain-opinions may please. Others\nmay displease. You approve the theories of\none candidate for political office and deplore\nthose of his opponent. You read both sides of a\nquestion and make your choice.\nThis newspaper prints all sorts of facts and\nall shades of opinion. It is our job to do so.\nMixed with the news of weddings and wars and\nall the thousands of things about which you\nwant to know are the views of legislators and\neducators, of labor leaders and businessmen, of conservatives\nand radicals.\nThere are those who oppose this kind of newspaper. To their\nthinking you should read a different kind\u2014one that prints\nonly the facts they want you to know\u2014only the opinions\nthey want' you to believe.\nActing as committees with appealing titles,\nthey are agitating for laws to limit publication of facts- and opinions. They claim you\ncannot be trusted with all the news. What\nthey mean is that, if they can keep' yoti uninformed, they can steal your freedom.\nFIRE  DEPARTMENT\n\u2014 Tom Showers, Los Angeles\nCounty fireman at Pico, Gil.,\nshows the model fire apparatus\nhe built since he started eight\nyears agots, U. S. Army fireman.\nOf course, they do not attack you directly.\nTheir target is the newspaper. Because it is\nyour main source of information they propose\nregulations to govern what the newspaper can\nprint. They dress up their plans in noble-\nsounding sentiments.\nI .But it all cpmes down to the same thing.They know that if\nthey can control what you read, they can control what you know.\nWhen they control your mind, they control you.\nThe real attack is against you. Newspapers are a sort of\nfront line. Their stake in a free press is no greater than>yours\nbecause their right to publish is tied in inseparably with your\nright'to-read. Just as long as you are free to know\u2014you are\nfree. When your sources; of information are gone, your, freedom goes with them.\nYour right to know is the key to all your liberties\n\u2014B\u2014\u2014EHMJ-WUJli> mmi \"iimnn_imnniiw imglMJJMLif \"--'- i\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2014\n \u25a0\"\u25a0\n'\nV \u25a0*^','-'-V,'  \u25a0'\u25a0!\u25a0'[   .;'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nSPORTS\n\u00bb\\\nMoncween Victorious\n| For Princess, Queen\nBy BEN PHLEQAR '\nLONDON, Jan. 9 (AP)-A Cinderella horse may -bring the royal\nfamily its first victory in the\nGrand National Steeplechase to SO\nyears.\nThe horse is Monaveen, who shot\nfrom rags to riches when Princess\nElizabeth and her mother the Queen\nbought him last Fall.\nTwo years ago Monaveen, a nine-\nyear-old brown gelding that looks\na little scrawny for a jumper, ran\nlit a claiming race and failed lo\nfinish. Now he's the Winter book\nfavorite for the big chase at Aintree,\nmode world famous by the Irish\nsweepstakes.\nThe only royal horse ever,to win\nthe race was the Prince of Wales'\nAmbush II to 1900,     i\nA lover of horses since she was\ngiven a Shetland pony at the age\nof four, Princess Elizabeth urged\nthe purchase of Monaveen after\na tip from Tony Grantham, the\n:royal.Jookey.\nAlthough owned in parinershjpi\nMonaveen races in the Princess'\ncolors \u2014 scarlet, purple - hooped\nsleeves and black cap.\nMonaveen already has won almost three times.his reported purchase price of \u00a31000 ($3100). In four\nstarts he's finished first three times\nand second once\u2014quite a change\nfrom his pre-royal career of five\nvictories in 17 starts.\nODDS 10-1\nThe sudden turn-about In form\nhas been hard to figure. Despite the\nimpressive recent record Monaveen\nwas allowed to start his last race\nat odds of 10 to 1. He, won by eight\nlengths.   -\nThe Winter bonk price on Monaveen for the? Grand National* has\ndropped: from * the high 20s*rto;.the\ncurrent favorites role at 10 to 1.\nBecause of the great popularity of\nhis royal owners he's bound to be\nthe sentimental favorite\u2014if.:not;;fhe\nactual betting choice\u2014 con . , po-1\ntime .a   Aintiri',  M.i.tli  ,,ri\nStrikes 'n' Spares\nIn the Men's Bowling League, H.\nJeffrey tipped the pins for a score\nof 304 for high single honors. High\naggregate was bowled by Bruce\nMalcolm ; with 775 points. High\nscoring   team   was   National   with\n,2593.\n[    League  standing  follows:   C.P.R.\n[General   Office,   311;   Si holars,   32;\n-National, 2<t, ('mill  \u2022>., t'l H\nDispatcher::,  SO,   and  G.ivi-nmu-nt,\nIV. \" , ' . '   '     '\nlWKiWA.1, FHUI-J ii Houston\nCSS; J. RM&tm-pi   fliiV; T   Mum-croft\ni 471; J. Slum  MS,  13   Malcolm 7\/'i\nTotal 2DS.I\n;    CUTHBliKT-   Allen _440f Ji-Krey\n700;    N llnuji   407;''StHwiul    521;\nLow .'.iii.i- HM; 'Handlcan 7S. Total\n2710. .      '     \u2022      \" \"        ,.'\".\"\ni OVEIWMKN T- M, Rlnhl.y 134,\nI,,  Frame   451); 'I', ('mil ion .\u00abfl; ''.\nHu'lihy   \u00ab\",  .1    Wall.u-li  SIS.-\"-   pot\n11\/   'mill '\"ll'i       1       '\"\n'\u2022niST'ATCIHMIS :- \"H    (\u2022     Ann\notrnni 'V.V,  W   I -,' o     1.10,   l.,W.\nG,I,..l,.ni'li,il), >'    IrfClml!  (i\/'I,  W\nR   Pint-lm   5311. 'Innl '11311       .   .     -\nGENFHA1     'OFFICE     -   G.,'-P.\nBimpsnu 41)2; C 'Stcvni.on. 401);' M-\nJ. iloyi'S 'HI   1(   K. i,n'M.r'Vl, <i\nO    CllUlv.ui   55(1 (iv  l\"l)   ,'J'nt.ll\n2535 -. , \u2022\u25a0     i*       -       '\nBOWLADROME-l: *;-'.o.-ili', ;:-'tl3;\nCarmlrimM   1,711,   whin    41(1; J   n\nnnd\/'i07; Rmidtili COS). ':'.,...J 216.1\n'iln t nmmeRi.il Mi cl [,. m in '\nl.-ul,r: high single was -rolled li.v\nBetty Hille with 302 and gents high\nsingle.,, by Bern Kelly with 322\npoints while Billy Moore toppled\nthe pins for ladles' high aggregate\n, of 650 and Berne Kelly made high\naggregate of 758. High scoring team\nwas the New Star. --..-\u25a0;\nLeague standing follows:'Van de\nKamp, 4; Sterling 3;- Alt's., 3; New\nStar 3; Liberty 2; National 2; North\nShore 2; Culhbrili 1; Hudson Bay\nNo.' 1, 1; Daily New.-: i; and Hudson\nBay No. 2, 1.\nMarie Ramsderi knocked the pins\ndown for a high\" single of 254 and\nGeorge Gill made the high aggregate of 580 in the Government\nLeague bowling. High scoring team\nwas Gill with 2549.\nCUTHBERT MOTORS\u2014T. Perry\n846; C. Honellen 439; E. Wheeler\n890; E. Macrae 000; TV Macrae 471\nTotal 2650        , \u25a0   '\nHUDSON'S li\/'V Ol IH) ' ii.\nCli.iiolii.i. 4\/9;:B.;'McCulil,iu' 45(1;\n.T. -Page '343; G..Carpenlor\"ril7; .;,\"..\nO\/ry 341; Spol II)''  Tol il 23211\nVAN De KAMPS BAKERY\u2014M,\nStoutenberg 483; F. Beresford 589;\nM. Hood 396; L. Hood 505; C. Beresford 519. Total 2492.\nNATIONAL FRUIT \u2014 B. Kelly\n756; L. Gri 438; M. Potter 385; B.\nMoore 650; Low Score 465; Spot\n1V4. Total 2868.\nNORTH  SHORE  MOTEL \u2014  J.\nWallach 411; B. Hille 564; S. Brown\n651; C. Chapman 606;  S. Bulloch\n481). Total 2721.\n.STERLING    KlJUmi'MiUrt     -   ...\nMcDonald 501; D. Bum: \"0\\ \u00ab\nBurns 385; F, Townsend' 477; -J.\nMcMillan 580; Spot 186. Total 2531.\nHUDSON BAY NO. 1-r-B. Fowles\n436; T, Casemore 491; B. Salo 453;\nJ.'FraSer 442;\u25a0'. T. Skldmore ,519.\nTotal 2341.\nNEW STAR CAFF. F. Wnli 403;\nU Wiili'ItH; I\\ (Ml 551); li. Mao on.'-\n643; A.-Hcichuk 73V Tulnl 2002       \u25a0\nDAILY. NFWK 14. Simpson 400,\nJ. I nliiMii I'll.; \u2022!. 'i'(.wu:,.'ii.l-'3lli,;\n11. Jai-lii-au 520; i:. Towiisuid SIM'\nSpot 4G0. T  2704.\nSAV15WAY - U. Boyd 171;* B\ntt.ii'hi 1,01, A w. if In 122; i'.i.i..,.-\ntrfll Ml,, W. mil... in 65(1; Spot 162\nT'ni'il 2740. '\u2022' ,   \u2022 , ,\nALF'S-K. Forbes 554: H. Forbes\n441,' M- ,Ua|,'i'ail    1117;  ,1.   E.lw.ud.\n111    \u2022   Ed,  i ,1    41,    iii.i  l\".'i'..,,l\n2756   - , -   ,   \u201e \u2022\u2022---,\nI1HKRTY moil -L. whltifoili\n(111), M. White-lock \u2022\"(.; -J..'J ii.il\/\ni.(l,v.ii i num ' 167, u th Ismi (.'(>\n'i    'Alii.   .\n)-U.I7 I. i'i.li . icn .'\"!;,:\u2022 \u2022 \u00ab'iU\n520; B. 'Ram di n 'i(il,\"i. Mon an\n435;'-G. (Jill SHI.'. Total 2,519 ' '\n\u2022 MIKKBLSliN A. Hidhoill 10');\nM. Swum .i 3111); M. Quaiicu 337;'I,,\nChasi   till; I..J'\". j- :illV. Tnlnl I860.\n1'TUiSE iVi Rnm'idcn 838; n\nForii 511; P.Tuinoi -III); w. WiHti-n\n477; :\u25a0. Hohnbi-ui -'00. Total 2251.'\n\u25a0' T.A'VHKMOUIU.K - V. . Blown\n'li, I will l 500 I >wili .\"),\nD. Baker 461;\"B. LatreirioiilU'e 558;\nTotal 2530.\nLARSEN\u2014J.-Watson 474; P. McLeod 438; A; Boyce 544; M. Mckinley 520; Low Score 513. Total 2489.\nPAUL\u2014A. Sien, 374; Y. Varney\n392; F.: Cunningham 542; :M. Paul\n541; Low Score 461. Total 2310.\nCanadians Lose ii\nPerth, Glasgov.\n'GLASGOW, Jan. 9 (CP) -Tour\ning Canadian Curlers'*; split down\nthe middle today for exhibition\nmatches abalnst Scottish rinks in\nPerth and Glasgow; losing in both\nplaces.:'\nThe Canadians'. A Team, led by\nErrick F.\\ Willis of Winnipeg, lost\nby, 16 shots'to Perth, ;,conii|< 119:lo\nPerth's 1.15.\n, In Glawgow, tor I. Team led by\nN i' ttalsti.n of Sainl Joint, N.B.,\nlb'i .1\", nnii In.in 112   if .111,1   t1-1\nLongden's Race With\nWoman Rider Is Off\nAGUA CALIENTE, Mex., Jan. 9\n(AP)\u2014The second match race here\nnext Sunday between Jockey Johnny Longden and Mrs. Wantha Davis\nIs off. The Caliente race.track said\nLongden, who was defeated by Mrs.\nDavis in a race last month, would\nnot be able to come here for the\nscuo.id match hecausi of Santa\nAnita i-,i,.,,u\"-,ni nl -.     ..\n\u25a0-'the goocf-natured whisky\nSeagtaute\nKinqs Plate\nCANADIAN   WHISKY\nThe price is *(xoo<\/'tfatured\" too!\nIWl advorllioimnt h not published or displayed by th\u00ab liquor Control Board or by the\nc-ovornment of Drlllsh Columbia.\n16 Cattfres May Be Represented in\nHizWmkhool Title Curling Here\nHigh   schoj\nfreely here\nCurling Bonj\nNelson Senli\nB. C. Provln]\nIng playdo-\nwill see o'\nfrom centn\nthe famill\nand besom\nNelson,\nincht spot\nwill   fly\nHigh School\n.sored by the\n[chool, and the\nSchopls Curl-\nfeparate events\nitudent curlers\nir B.C. take to\nles with' stane\nand 5.\nbiding a promising map with\nits annual Midsummer Bonspiel,\nhas enhanced its standing as a\npopular 9ports centre with its annual High School bonspiels.\nThis  year  the   Nelson   School\n.will play host to rinks from oyer\n16 B.C. cities, Entry deadline has\nbeen set for Jan. 27. Thirty-one\nHigh School rinks participated In\nthe popular event last year, and\nthis year rinks and players are\nexpected from Trail, Salmo, Kimberley, Cranbrook, Creston, Kelowna, Princeton, Procter, Vancouver, Fernie, Vernon, Pentlcton,\nQuesnel, Rossland, Grand Forks\nand Nelson,\nA Trail team - led by Dick McNaughton captured the honors last\nyear when they carried off tile\nB, C. title. Teammates assisting in\nthe win were John Chesser, Ian\nRlntoul and Laurie Garvin, from\nthe Smokle cily.\nThe winning  team  of the B.C.\nplaydowns this year will represent\nthe Province at the Dominion Stu\ndent Bonspiel, scheduled to start-in\nQuebec Feb) 20. There, the B ,C.\nstudents will compete with top\nhigh school teams from all parts ot\nCanada\nT .A. Wallace and John Thorn,\nrepresentatives of the Dominion\nCurling Association,' and Mrs. T. A.\nWallace, an ardent Nelson curler,-\nand C. R. Mattlce and J. C. Loomer,\nNelson High School teachers, will\nbe in charge.\nNelson High School'ers round\nrobin cornpetition got under way\nMonday to determine representatives for the B. C. playdowns.\nJackie Robinson\nTo Be Unloaded!\nBY GAYLE TALBOT   ,:\n-   BROOKLYN, N.Y., Jan. 9 i(AP)\nIs Branch Rickey -preparing to unload  Jackie   llobinson,  the'sparkplug of two Brooklyn pennant winners?\nThe idea scout; preposterous, and\nperhaps it is, but the icport has\nIn en pupping up pvci sum the Win\n.\u00ab. il,.'('ball iviu lingi, and ben- il\ni.i  li'.iin (ocl.iv\n'Un I.in ,i i-ei ion has r.irkoy, un\n.easy over niniorn that Jackie has\nhis mind set on a ',1)0,000 contract,\n-thinking seriously ' of selling hi?\ngreat negrb'secdnd-basemah; to -Boston,Braves.\nRickey, himself, was not In the\n3 olty today to discuss the matter.\nIn his absence, a Dodger spokesman was Inclined to scoff at the\nsuggestion-He said he was almost\n1111 iln that HI, key li id not talked\nwlrli  Boiton fliili (iiflrl.di    Inn\n.Ili-'WIlllU   lilt.tlllll.      \"\n. \"it . 'pros: confiTcnri la',1 w. i k,\nRickey said  he had  not discussed\n,'ilm y wnli Hiibinson ind (oininrnt\n\u25a0 d, pi ii-idly, ih.il lu li.nl di vu li.ul\n.. n il hnldoul since lie look ovi l\nIln nuioklyn Chtl, mil didn'l m\nli, ip.il, any llus vim.' ; -\nr ll.il.iii'.i.ir-w.l\/p.nil In llie\"*neli;h\nbiiUiu,nl\u00bb nl \u2022'.''(I'tlOII m.i liemi'i thi\ni,in i i iluub'li- pliiy'i r in ,lit- NTatirmal\nJ,e,ii!ni -I.e.. y, ... ik'Mi.i, urn .tntirl\n\"nul.li. ly, ihiUlii waui ' ',11,11111), but\nhi pin ri,,r In' hoc o]Di mi iy. win ii\nii ~'J\\.v ''.u| 11 ,i'rtl, in l.i.a ill it-'ho\nt,rH)likVl<u ive to.ii  ni.lnifii. lllliO\n\"I lu ' \u2022ili,li'insui.''lu-il,i),mif ' , iimu\npossibly owes its refusal to die to\nIhe 'well known' foi i lit il Hi.-key\nui'i i. li.i- 'n.i'nl th,u kinil of ii.in.eY\nin lull .ill.lie.., \"ill ii In' will, sell\nllie'i.iv.llli! . Jj'i in, iibmil 'to thi i.\nn inu .1 pain .*, \" ' <*   '\"\"  \u201e   --   ,\nFORT WORTH, TEX . Jan 1 CAP.\nt;'. newal u.l tin \",i'll lei'l u i.ob'\nin oiiV stiiry ( 1'nluil i fi'rai-ly l.mi li\nmi... Di.ineh Hiokf'y, llrni,lilyit,l liiil\npei  I'll  iilnii' In ,i   mil ij\n\"Kxcu.se me,\" said luekey, \"l.ui\nit's a joki \"\n'I lien ho ileelared ilr.it Brooklyn\nis \"not si Hini; playeia it needs.\"\nW. E. Graham    .,,.',\nHeads Slocan\nHockey Leagu\nNEW nEMVF.n. B C, .Lin 9-\n\u25a0The Slocan District Hockey League\nheld their meetmi it th( borne of\nL. R. Campbell.\n; New)officers for 1950 are!.President, W- E.: Graham,: reelected;\nVice-President, Fred B.; Tessman;\nSecretary, G. Gardener, reelected:\nExecutives, two .from each club\nwere chosen:- L; R. Campbell, New\nDenver; : John\"\"Harding,5 Silverton;\nFrank Russell, Slocan City. To referee .ill ) jino',\/rod Hicks and I1' I!\nTo mm wi n * ippomlod e' i ep!\n.in- Ihosi played - by Moran City.\n;Schedule\"was not arranged until\nNakusp signifies their Intentions of\nrejoining. Residence's to include all\nthose within a radius of 20 miles.\nThe Association may join the Canadian Amateur Association. The\nDistrict League want a record of\nall plays sent in to the Secretary\nafter each game.\nfflucL fioiwiL\nBy CLIVE FLEMING\np'George Barefoot will qgain be out\nof\u25a0 the lineup as the Neison Maple\nLeais hop over to Trail tonight to\nplay Ihe frail Smokies, who are al\npresent on a par with Kimberley\nfor aithirdiplace tie,*2Vir:game be-\nnind the Leals.\nCeoiae aggi.iv.iled in old aim m-\nim-j 11 i mil wuen In icll iJon\nilie. boards, lunilmi' on his elbow. I\nlieai lilt stany deli nccnian s limb\nis still badly swollen.\n\"'Behoitjwilliice. the samel club*as\nhe* used in Spokane, but he hopes\nthe outcome of the game will be better thah the results of the Spokane\ngames.\nWhen the Leafs played, in Spokane Saturday fhey turned in a\nvery good game but Al Galipeau\nkept: putting,'-themijin the penalty\nbos. and as a lesuli, Spokane s lime\ngoals we.r scored Willie ihe l.eal,\nwere bo. ili nidi il Nelson was given\nleu unuoi,'. in bpokune' join, bin\nmull nam\", leieiveu two m,i|oi\u201e\n'r.'u-li. The scoie was ,1-1 foi Flyei ,.\nIn ilie .Sunday game, .he Leaf.,\nplayeil a ,pnoi )..uiie, hut this \"time\nuie pen.lines woic even, two iillilu, .\nand ..' in,urn each. ' - ';\n'M'sei-m lo H ni. nibi . iiiiglne ScuU\nt(lluiK\"nic that ni (.piil.iiie, Ihe\nfjipki ,\" .en ivi si.oiil twice- Iln\nUlililbei in I'len.iliies-iei'elveil by'ihe\nvir.ilinl' team. Mot .n'whui Nelson\ni iic down, on) wijhoul llaicfool,\nxjw, .id'ofilmii'io tin i'lu*' ; i u>'iln'\nnullum; on, the u-. without bein;\nwoiihv' \"I n,i\" nany i). all m na)\nlid, Nel oii'li.T.'ii'i'i'iveil W), and Spokane\" ! 1* M li'iy* in them would bi\nm.ij'oi , 1,1.1*11. \"iln i.in.i.ii.i. ies seiii\nran' major, nunoi . ind misconduct\niiimiliii's.iic mil ..egieg.itul, making\nli 'eei.i is ii .11 wi ii iiunni\n'\"D.inuy May ,\"-ei u.s to li.ivi sue\nn'edinj; in iiiiiviui ing the Spokam\n.els 111 ii honny Baiehjn is ,i vi-\nriiiu.', bail man. \"Bau'hyn, giiaiding-\nihe Mel.'on crease, refused to* let\ngo his grip on Michaluk'a upper arm\nand; when Johnny jerked clear-\nforcibly\u2014Barchyn threw a glancing\nblow and immediately bit the ice\nto the cheers of the crowd.\"\nTrail also lost a pair of weekend games to Klmberley's fighting\nDynamiters, who called back veteran Gordle Wilson. Wilson, by\nv'-.tlie way, bad his bit;to do with a\nf(w of Klmberley's goals, so he\n'must have pulled his share of the\nweight.\n.  Getting back to the game to Trail\ntonight,  Nelson   has  been  unable\nyet to manage a win in the spacious\nnew Cominco Arena, but took a 1-4\ngame from the Smokies In the old\narena when Kneeshaw and Barchyn\nflayed sans glasses.\n:*,Since .both teams need the game\nverymuch; it should-be a:real'con-\nie I, mil ii 'hould be a battle ol ihe\nhn'.ik,   'Jin    lefiiiemg   has   been\n1,00(1   must' oi   the   time'so  far  in\nTrail!        ' '       \"\nPRO TALK\n;.;There is talk again of the Western\nCanada Hockey League turning pro\nnext season, but it seems all but\nthe professionals would prefer that\nthey circuit stay at its \"shairyiteur\"\nbasis.\nThe   chief   reasons   against   the\nmove ere the fear that the caliber\nof play will suffer, just as happened\nin the Pacific Coast League, and\nthat two of the cities, Regina and\nSaskatoon, wouldn't be able to stand\nthe expenses\/Last season, when Regina went right to the Allan Cup\nfinals the club barely ended out of\nthe red. Therefare still rumors, that\nthey, may (lolibw;Lethbridge, ;who\nwere ..-forced to 'drop out - ofi the\nleague and just go for Junior* hockey; Saskatoon Quakers were home\ntoo stable at the'beginning of the\nseason either, but when Bill Hunter\ngot some good players, the crowds\nperked up. Still the Quakers are far\nfrom well above the border line of\nfalling out'.-of the loop.\nThen Calgary and Edmonton\nwould have no choice other than to\nturn pro, arid join the Coast circuit,\nasjwas mentioned; by Don Fleming:\nin il.e Edmonton Journal. This Ivpi\nin i letup would nol hi difficult\n.is 'close hi two decodes ago when\nCalgary and Edmonton were in Iln\npro hookup with Vancouver, Seatth\nand I'oitl.ind, becausi m Iln: li uidy\nair,travel ihe Flyers-and Sfamperl\nera   would, have  nowadays.\ni, ,iii h a thing did li.ipui n, Hi u\nwould -make the'We.tern ml.',n i\nhnnsil mil thi Okanngan Mamlini\nWi-,1, nl ^Manitoba. \u2022 ' '. V\"\nloop ihi\/only \"sli.iin'iiii.\" circiui\nI'.veu. In, Jiinim ' hociu yf* I'ouil\nii ue, in ,( i iu'i be 1.1(1 .- iti.ss'ii\npli nly, oi'j'm eu sum;- \"*'     .,,\nHockey Standings\nNATinriAL  I CAnilC .      '  .\n'     \" W  1, T, F \", MM\nDetroit    \"     **  \u25a0>?>, II) ' 120   111 ill\nMew   Vo.If  *\u2022\"\"- Ili  1? I!'   ',11   1)1 \"ill,\nMontieal.     v   ,   |,|  l'< \u2022). ill, ,'\/!) 37\nHosliii        \u25a0   v\u00bb  J.l'lY II 1(11, U!)\":<1\nToionto -      .        1.1 111 7   '12 112 .1.1\nChlca\u00abn 1118 8 108 116\nF.A.C. BANTAMS\nDEFEAT LIONS\nThe Fairview Athletic Club's bantam hockey team came through with\nanother win, 4-1 over the Lions, to\na League game at the Civic Arena\nMonday, afternoon. The Lions short\nthree players on the suspension list,\nheld the FA.C.s to one goal in the\nopening canto, but from there on\nthe winners moved ahead tallying\ntwo goals in the sandwich session\nand another one in the final chapter.\nHarry Sommerville on a breakaway pass from Olson opened the\nscoring with the Lions only goal\nearly in the first period. Billy Horswill tied it: lip for the F.A.C. on a\ndouble relay from VanSackersand\nStrong. In Ihe second period, Wllf\nMarquis drove ili two goals, the first\nfrom HoBswill and VanSacker and\nthe second also from Horswill and\nVanSacker. In the third Marquis added his third and the last goal of\nthe game unassisted.\nThe game was exceptionally clean\nand Ref Laaurence Ludlow did not\nhave to send any one to the sin bin\nChuck Crosby kept the score and\nJerry Birch the time.\nHogan Returns ToQolf\n50 Students In\nSchool Curling,\nProcter Visitors\nWith Earl Mason as their Club\nChairman, over 50 energetic Nelson\nHigh School student curlers journey to the ice sheets every Monday,\nTuesday and- Friday afternoons\nfrom 4-6 p.m, Again on each Saturday the boys and girls try their\nhand against two visiting Procter\nteams made up of different girls\nand boys each week. Saturday's\ngames are scheduled from 9:30 to\n11:30 a.m,\nOther students on the slate of\nNelson Club officers Include Jean-\nnette Muir, Secretary; Rod Car-\nmichael, Vice-President, and Dorothy Wassick, Treasurer.   -\nHogan Two Shots\nBehind Leader\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 9 (AP)-\nTournament pressure hit dark-house\nTournament pressure hit Dark-\nHorse Jerry Barber, and the Sun\nand Ben Hogan got back on the\nbeam today in the $15,000 Los Angeles open golf tournament, js\nSetting the stage for a hectic fin-\nnaie tomorrow in the 24lh edition\nof the Los Angeles fixture, Barber\nremained on top of the field but\nthe ominous shadow of battling Ben,\nhis*, comeback campaign: to high\ngear, loomed dangerously- close behind.\nBarber, a 33-year-old pro from\nPasadena, went over par for the\nfirst time in the tournament and\nwound up with a one-over 72 for\na third round total, of 209.\nHogan opened his bag of golf magic and popped a sub-par 69 and a\nfoul oi '')], i r nit iwn hots bid\nin  Barber.\nOn the\n10'Pin Alleys\nSpenci'i   Newell led id i learn  to\nvu liny  ovi i   William   Leslie   1124\ntlW i\" tin   Li .;.!.\u00bb bowliilj   Moihl ly\nniglit   Ho ciptuiul  high, aui'li  ,i).\nUU.eiml high 'aggregate of 340.   .','\n\u201e\u00bb'S..-N)''WEtJ\u201e   - I'.   I'l.il.uii, ,210,\nMi    i)   Anili-i .mi   VI, i)   Ami, ,' on\n\"\u00bb; '  'Ciuill .1\"),  ,pni41>    l oi d\n\"H\"1 -            ' '      . -\n- W    LESLIE    I (Driimmotid' 1100,,\nII  i ni    Ml, i.   t , ivi    101, W   i i\nbe \u25a0\u201e;;.\t\nLamotto Will Nof' V\nHeed Boxing Orde\nWis* YORK, Ian II (Ai')-.i,>'l,e\nI iniotta \u2022 iid mil iy be luj'no-m-\ntintions ni heeding thi' New i'oik\nUuxini CommiMon's ordei lo do\nfond his middleweight title ' in\nMarch This was about the same\nthing Jake told Chairman Eddie\nEagan of the Commission recently.\nEgan said he would strip him off.\nhis title and set up a four-man\ntournament if he didn't sign for a\nMarch defence by. Feb. 1. Eagan\nwon's permit Lamotta to have an\nover-the-weight fight to New York\nuntil he signs for a title bout.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 10, 1950 \u2014 7\nPercy Williams Still Has Bone\nTo Pick With S. Africa's Anlhem\nBy VAL 8EARB\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP) -\nPercy Williams, Canada'B former\ncinder king who admits he now\n\"puffs\" when he runs for a streetcar, today looked to his years of\nglory and remembered he had a\nbone to pick with South Africa's\nnational anthem.\nAnd if \"Peerless Percy\" has any\nadvice for Canada's corps of British Empire Games runners, lt might\nwell.be: \"Watch those national anthems, kids.\" For it was the beat\nof the South African song that\nheralded the end of his running career in 1930.\nWilliams, recently named to the\nHelms Foundation of Los Angeles\nHall of Fame and similarly honored\nby Canada's Amateur Athletic Association, told the story in an interview.     -\nAs a kid of 20 Williams astounded the sporting world In\n1928 by winning both the 100 and\n200 metre races at the Olympic\nGames In Amsterdam.\nTwo years later as The world's\nfastest human\" he was the white\nhope of Canada's entry in the British Empire Games at Hamilton,\nOnt.\n\"I was at tne top of my form\nthat day,\" he said. \"I felt if I was\ngoing to break any records this was\nit.\" '   '\nHe warmed up for the 100-yard\ndash, tense and excited.\nThen as he moved over to the\nstarting line the South African national anthem began to play for\ntheir boy who had Just won the\npole vault. .\n\"I   stood   at  attention   In   the\nfreezing   weather   until   It   was\n,   over,\" Williams said.  \"That did\nIt. About 70 yards out from starting   line   I  strained  a  ligament.\nThe cold after the warmup did\nsomething to my muscles.\"\n\"But somehow the old legs ktpt\nflapping and I  won.  But  I  was\nnever the same again. I raced a\ncouple of times more but in my\nheart 1 knew I was finished.\"\nWilliams didn't need to race any\nmore to win the place he now occupies in the memory of the world's\ntrack fraternity.\nHis name now goes on a marble\nslab In the Helms Foundation\nBuilding In Los Angeles. He is the\nonly Canadian to Join the sporting\nworld's greats . in that Hall of\nFame.\nIn Canada, the C.A.A.A.'a Hall\nof Fame picked Williams along,\nwith Barbara Ann Scott, and a\ndozen other Canadians to list on\ntheir scrolls.\nIt doesn't make much difference\nto Percy. i!\u00bbH\n\"I didn't even know about,it till\nI read It In the papers. It's so long\nnow, who really cares what I did?\"\nWilliams, now 41, and an insurance salesman, is happy to his\nbachelor apartment. The automobile they gave him when he came\nhome from the Olympics has long\nsince rusted. A fund set up to\nhonor him has dwindled.\n\"I play my fiye handicap golf\nand do a little shooting. That's\nenough exercise. Why now I even\npuff when I run for a street-car.\"\nWMmiA$?\nFOR KEEPING\nBUILDING? J\nIN WINTE.\nInd cool\n,    -Th , i's   i lifollnu  ,.f eomlorl alioad'\nwhen you Insole,\" your liomo with\n1   til J (In-,   Ami l\"il. iglas -uv     on\nv,v\u2122 f, I bill, ... .I\u00ab. I. .oon p ,y-       |\u00ab]   < MWliU \u25a0 \/ ,;\nFlBERGLAS BUILDING INSULATION\nMADE IK   CANADA\nWON'T ROT   \u2022   WON'T BURN    \u2022   WON'T SETTLE\nWON'T SUSTAIN VERMIN\nNelson Woodworking Co.\nPHONE 1150\n273 BAKER ST.\nMoving Our Way!\nThe BETTER Way\nIf you have a movo coming up\u2014be it local or long distance\u2014there is tip\n-   :d for you to worry ni><-.'   it\u2014just phone or v\/rii   to u      le  om   taf!     '\ncore of the detail. Tlicy are experienced in eveiy branch of the- movement\noi furniture.\nThree top oolfers, whose prospects on golf's\nmoney trail are altered by the return of Ben\nHogan to tournament play, weigh their chances\nas they watch his game on a Los Angeles, Calif.,\ncourse. They are, from left, Bob Hamilton, Cary\nMlddlecoff and Chuck Congdon, watching Bantam\nBen putting on the sixth green during a practice\nround for the $15,000 Los Angeles Open Tournament, Hogan was badly Injured In an automobile\naccident last February. He shot a 67 on this\npractice round.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nEAST \u2022WE!\no\nThe Mighty Care\nVessels of the Road\nSERVICE\noffers Van movement to any point In Canada or the United States.\n. i   expert packing and   iorcij e f cili i\n-X\/'m.'nil. i.mjoi' puiiiii.,    . ,    ',*     . ,_ ',   .\ni\u00ab, really crniproliciisivo\u2014ilowcvoi you vl^Ii\nto move\u2014To wherev :r \u2022\u25a0 m ,.-i ;li \u25a0' i move\u2014\ntake advantage of that service.\nARROW VAN & STORAGE LTD.\nPHONE 1106\n613 WARD ST.\nOffices at Calgary and Vancouver\nSuccessors to Williams Van Lines Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\n Wtru.-ASL.0H3.ASr\nAM GOIW TO STAY IW\nTODAV-I WCW'TGIT\nDKESSED- I'LL DO\nA LITTLE WOBK\nABOUND WERE\/'\nG\nG\nS\nDADPV- PLEASE DON'T SO\nAeajUD THE MOUSE LOOKING\nLIKE THAT\/ I5ET DUESSED.\u00ab'\nM2U KNOW MOTHER DOESN'T\nAPPBOVE OP M3U AS VOU AKE.'\nSOMEONE MA\/\nDEOPIkl *\nI GUESS DAUGHTEE\nIS UISHT- BUT ALL\n,1  DO ABOUND THIS\nHOUSE IS\nWHA+'iS THE IDEA OF\nBEIWS ALL DEESSED\nUP LIKE THAT'DON'T\nTHINK POP A MINUTE\nTHAT MSU ACE SONG\nOUT-TAKE OFF THAT\n\"     SUIT\/\/\nOn the Air\nTUESDAY, JAN. 10, 1950\nCKLN\n.    1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign on. O Canada\n\u2022 7:01\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014CBC News.\n8:10\u2014Bill. Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Cluo\n8:45\u2014For You Madam  .\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Musical Program\n10:00\u2014Train Time and Time Signal\n10:01-Ellen Harris\n10:15\u2014Musical Program\n10:45\u2014Cameras on Canadian!\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\nll:15-Radlo Kitchen\n11:20\u2014Concert Corner\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Sterling News\n12:25\u2014Maple Leaf News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Strikes and Spares\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014CBR Presehts\n1:45\u2014Commentary\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014 Your Little Show\n3:45\u2014Divertimento\n3:00-Odds and Ends .\nSil^Train Time\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n3:30\u2014Commentary\n3:45\u2014Divertimento\n' 4:00\u2014Bernie Braden Story\n4:15-Meet Gizelle\n4:30\u2014Life in the Open\n4:45\u2014Piano\n5:00\u2014Hot Wax\n5:30\u2014CKLN News\n5:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:00\u2014To Be Announced\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody,\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square to Broad-\n-way-\n8:00\u2014Science Reporter       :^\n8:15\u2014Talk About Peter\n8:30\u2014Classic Club\n9:00\u2014Solo Guest\n10:00\u2014Peebles News\n10:15\u2014Miscellany\n10:30\u2014Claremont Hotel Orchestra\n11:00\u2014Sign Oft The King.\nCJAT\n810 ON THE DIAL\n0:30\u2014l-gr-ws\n8:35\u2014Guod Morning Neighbor.\n7:00\u2014News\n. 7:05\u2014Good Morning Neighbor.\n, 7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Good Mouii.i\" Nni-hlim'\n3:00-CBC -Wew,\n,8:10\u2014Spotlight .,\u00bb   i Stm   ,'<\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club        >     **,\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd. '  '    .',,\n11 DO   Coffee Time      \u25a0       .     ,\n') Hi -Lucy Llntor-\n. 0:.'I0 -five Rum , I. idio Kitchfn-\n.9.35 -IlJii'Jjwivi'i.'llii PaiSileC\/.\n111:00- Homeniakei   i'IhIi    -v ;h \u25a0\n10:1.1\u2014Happy Gun; \u2022 '\\\n10:45\u2014Singalong    \u2022    * ' .' -    *-:\u2022\n11:00\u2014New. .     .\nll:05-Music  for, Milady.\"   : -.\n11:45\u2014Western Trails --'',\n12:00-4-uncheon Concert '*' ; - *\n12:30\u2014News ,,*'\n12:41)-Smoke Rings      '    .    _ \u25a0\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Rece-ii     \"' \"\">.\n'5,1:45---A. Grant, Commentary   '. '\n-.2:00\u2014B. C. School .'Broadcasl\n2:30-Waltztime\n2;45-Wife-Saver\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014CJAT Goes Calling\n4:00\u2014Bernie Braden\n4:15\u2014Club Calendar\n4:30\u2014Old Corral  ,\n4:45\u2014Superman . ;\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0,,:--.\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Supper Serenade ;-.-i-.\n5:30\u2014Canadian Cavalcade\n6:00\u2014Bpb Hope\n6:30\u2014Fibber McGee and Molly\n7:00-CBC News\n7:15\u2014CBC News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square to\nBroadway\n8:00\u2014Science Reporter\n8:15\u2014Nation's Business\n8:30\u2014Mystery Theatre\n9:00\u2014Music You Love\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Symphony Pop\nConcert\n9:30\u2014Solo Guest\n9:45\u2014Music by Bavorn    \u2022-\n10:00\u2014News ....\n10:05\u2014Sports Cavalcade\n10:15\u2014Miscellany\n10:30\u2014Family Worship Hour\n10:45\u2014Reverie\n11:00\u2014Dance Orchestra\n11:30\u2014Dance Orchestra\n11:55\u2014CBC News\nWEDNESDAY, JAN. 11, 1950\nCKLN\n1240 ON I'HlS DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign On. O Canada\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madam\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Kate Aitken\n! 10:00\u2014Time Signal and Train Time\n10:01\u2014Ellen Harris\n10:15\u2014Musical Program\n10:45\u2014Music Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Ah\n11:15\u2014Five Rosea Kitchen\n11:20\u2014Concert Corner        -\u25a0 \" -..\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12-15\u2014Sterling News\n12:25\u2014Maple Leaf News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Strikes and Spares\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Concert,\n1:45\u2014Commentary   \u2022    ' .\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014 Your Little Show\n2:45\u2014Melody Matineee\n3:00\u2014Odds and Ends\n3:14\u2014Train- Time\n3:15\u2014Messrs Islanders\n3:30\u2014Commentary\n3:45\u2014Divertimento\n4:00\u2014Bernie Braden\n4:15\u2014Ann  Shelton\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45\u2014Songs;   News\n5:00\u2014Rendezvous Room    ,\n5:30\u2014CKLN. News\n5:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:00\u2014To Be Announced\n6:15\u2014Musical Program\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Don Giovanni\n8:00\u2014Far From the Land\n9:00\u2014Bush Ballads\n10:15\u2014These Five Writers\n10:30\u2014Donna Grescoe\nAY'S News Pictures\nReady for 16,000,000 Cars'a Year\n    '\",  .;\":'\u2014;'**'*...\n, ....   , ,\nNinety-five per cent completed, New York's\n9117-foot Brooklyn-Battery tunnel Is expected to\nopen late next Spring, when the first of an estimated 16,000,000 vehicles annually will begin rolling through; Left Is the huge Instrument board at\nthe Brooklyn end of the tunnel. Instruments here\nIndicate the condition of the air In every part of\nthe Ii>bu,uuu,uuu tunnel. Location of stalled vehicles\ncan also be flashed to the board by tunnel guards.\nRight, workmen nearlng the end of the world's\nlongest tile Job. More than 780,000 square feet of\ntile\u2014enough for 6500 average bathrooms\u2014will be\nused on the completed Job.\n- \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nOld Enough\nFor a Uniform\nWeather Report: Cold, Snow, Rain\nIn Stockholm, Sweden, Prince\nCarl Gustaf, youngest son of\nSweden's Princess Sibylla and the,\nlate Prince Gustaf Adolf and a\ngreat-grandson of King Gustaf, lo\nshown In his first uniform \u2014 the\nlight blue full uniform of the\nKing's Ovdn Regiment of Horse.\nThe little Prince wore It when he\npresented King Gustaf with a\nportrait of himself In the new uniform for Christmas.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nBovine Star\n'\u25a0'\u25a0-\u2022*~--*\u2122&>>nii^^m*M-- > j\nThree trans-Canada buses were stalled on the Hope-Princeton\nHighway as heavy snows blanketed British Columbia, halting transportation apd disrupting communications. Mountain slides contributed to the tieup, which closed many roads In the area. Eastern Canada, at the same time, was experiencing rain, fog and unusually high\ntemperatures.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nyon are regrettingtho waste\nof all that affection on a cow, be\nInformed that \"MW Larry Domino 37th\" Is no ordinary bossy,\nbut a grand champion Hereford\nworth $100,000. Larry Is the property of Milky Way Ranch In\nPhoenix, Ariz. He will be a star\nat the Phoenix Stock 8how next\nmonth.\u2014Central  Press Canadian.\nSuggests New\nDrunken Tests\nVICTORIA, B.C., Jan. 9 (CP)\nMayor Percy George wants City\nCouncil to seek legislation at the\ncoming session of Provincial Legislature enabling police to make\ntests of suspected drunken drivers\nwithout fear of assault charges being laid against them.\nThe Chief Magistrate said today\nthe question of police powers in laying drunken driving charges will\nbe discused fully at a meeting next\nThursday of the City Council.\nThe enabling legislation the Mayor favors probably would take the\nform of an amendment to the B.C.\nMotor Vehicle act.\nMayor George, Chairman of the\nPolice Commision, pointed out the\ndifficulty the police have In' proving drunkenness.\nThe taking of blood tests of suspects had been advocated by some\ndoctors but the individual could\nrefuse to allow a blood sample to\nbe taken from him. And if he did\nallow it the argument could be used\nagainst the person taking the sample\nthat the individual was not respond\nsible in that he was Intoxicated.\nLEAVES FOR EMPIRE GAMES\nTORONTO, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Police\nConstable Gordon Crosby, 22, tomorrow takfcs leave of his pretty\nauburn-haired wife\u2014and his motorcycle\u2014for a five-week jaunt to New\nZealand,\nBy' the time he returns he will\nhave raced against some of the best\nhurdlers in the world at the British Empire games at Auckland Feb.\n4-11.\nHe Is. also down on the book! as\na member of the Canadian Belay\nTeam and possibly for the 100-yard\ndash.\nOrphaned at four years of age,\nthe six-foot-two former rivet tossor\nhas twice been Individual Champion\nof the Toronto Police games and\nthree times Champion at the Do-\ntrlot Police Meet.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n'   I. Asp\n:  6. Marine    \u25a0\nanimal\n10 Eat away\n.\"II. Pilaster\n12 Culture\nmedium .'\n13. Coerces '\n15. Discuss\ncasually\n17 Likely\nIS Guldo's\nlowest\ni,ote\n19. Neat \u25a0\n21 Weakens\n24. Anchored\n28. Anesthetic\n30. Loop with\nrunning\n' knot\n31. Fish nets\n33. Lair\n34. Valley\n36. Pen-name of\nG W Russell\n37 Fuel ''.-.'\n40. Conferences\n43. To speak\nfirst\n45 Prepare for\npublication\n46 .Growl\n47. Projecting\nroof edges\n49. Native of\nSerbia\n60. Restrict\nDOWN\n1. Lead a\npassive\nexistence\n2. Persia\n3. Harbor\n4. Man's'\nnickname   i\nS. Correct\n' 6. Distant :;\n'7. Peruvian^'\/\nIndian\n\u201e   1)111   ol\nni.-.ny\nstans\n9 Second;.*:\"***'*\nper\nsing of\n'\"have\"\n(poet.) -\n12. Entertains\n14. Pungent\nvegetable\n16.Ueuter\npronoun\n20 Cclrstlal\nbody\n22. Greek letter\n23 Dispatch\n25- .Spawn'of\nfish\n.'26 Writer of\nly\n27 Hate    .-'.:\u25a0\n29 Harvests\n32. Lists of\nproposed\ncandidate\n35 Erbium\n(sym.)\n37 Choking\nbits\n38. Skin\ndisorder\n39 Wound\nmark\nHI3E01B   HllBHB\nauKau mumm\nHH      HHISH\nmam hbhhhb\nMHHHiaiil   HHIIH\nHiMMiii    an\na\\mma hwhhh\nhhhmh aamm\nHi-JEiis vmwmi\nhemm maim\nYrsltTtlny's Answer\n41 Son of\nJacob (Blb.l)\n42. Paradise,\"\n44 Sphere '\n48 Close to\nB\ni\n28\n57\n43\n46\n49\n38\n23\n44\nZ\nw\n24\nVZl\nil\n47\n50\nZ?\n35\n48\nm\n33\n36\nl-IO\nDAILY CRYPTOQllOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW \u2022\nOne letter simply stands for another In this example A la use*.\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hlntft\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nLRMANY     VKAZ     RETZF    OWO     AHFA#\nNR     YUAJTAZS    OEXSEU     HZO     MHWZS*\nYWSDFAUHNO.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote:   SO NICM IS GRANDEUR TO OW>\nDUST, SO NEAR IS GOD TO MAN\u2014EMERSON.\nDistributed by King Features 8yndictlt,\n rrr\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 P.M.\nBIRTHS\nMcCRORY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Patrick'J. MOCfory of New Denver,\nB, C, at the SloCan Community\nHospital, New Denver, January 5th,\n1050, a daughter.    *\nHELP WANTED\n\u00bb*\u25a0<\u00ab>\u2022\u00bb *- \u25a0*\nWanted \u2014 Assistant club\nStewart; previous expedience\nnot essential but must be\nex-serviceman. Apply by\nletter only to Sec.-Mgr. Canadian Legion, Nelson, stating age and salary expected. Closing date for receiving applicairons noon January 14.\nHELP WANTED\nCARETAKER FOR JANITOR\nwork and odd jobs. Must be\nunder fifty years of age,\nsteady and reliable. Apply\nto: Box 5882, DailyNews,\nWANTED- \u2014 YOUTH TO WORK\nin daily newspaper advertising\ndept.- Good opportunity for right\nperson. Apply to C. W, ftamsden,\nDaily News.\nWANTED \u2014 MAN AND WIFE AS\ncook and bull-cook for district\njnlne. Apply National, Employ\nment Service.\nWANTED \u25a0*\u25a0 \u2022 WAITRESS~ffife\nmediately. Golden Gate \"Cafe.'\nWANTEIi\u2014EXPERIENCED WAIT^\nresses, New Stat Cafe.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FtBE ill-.\n' surance Cp.,D, L Kerr, Agent'ft\nSpencer   supports   for\nstyle and comfoit. rh. Mru T A\nGibson, ,1436,\n^MATTRESSES,    1 uiV\" m Ji It\nand    chesteifields   .rebuilt,  *ie-\neovoied, etr NpIso 1 Bedding *'\",\n* 550 Stanley.St5aone?1314.;\nALMBH HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.*\nDepot Clean rooms\/andf modern\nrates. $1.50 to $2 00 single   .\/ 50 m\n; $3i00 coubiea. Vancouvf . DC\n10 CENTS!'; BIRTH CONTRO1, IN;\nformation  and'catalogue of \"hy-\nvgienic  supplie',    W.rito  Western\nDlstributois, OIL'ii,,\/  Building,\nVancouver.;\nMEN'S PERSONAL'.; DRUG ;SUN-\ndries, 10 Deluxe assorted $1.00,\nmailed In plain sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain catalogue free Western\nDistributors Box 24RN. Regina\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\n\/\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA\nCIVIL SERVICE REQUIRES:\nA RADIO OPERATOR\u2014(for the\nForest Service, bept. of Lands and\nForests, NELSON, B.C.)-Salary:-\n$105 rising to $223 per ftlortth (including current C.L.B.)\u2014Qualifications\u20142nd Class Operator's Certificate; some experience as ah Operator\u2014Candidates must be British\nSubjects under age of forty-five,\n(except in the Case of ex-service-\nman, who are given preference)\nApplication Forms obtainable from\nthe Government Agency, Nelsoh,\nthe B,Ci Civil Service Commission,\nWeiler Buildirig, Victoria, or 636\nBurrard St., Vancouver\", to be completed and returned to the Chairman, Civil Service Commission,\nVictoria, NOT LATER THAN\nJANUARY 21st, 1050.\nSALE OF CAR NO. 423\n1 iji'ti'linS plainly marked \"Offer for\n. No. 423\" on envelope will\n, !\u2022\u2022 -,       be* received by the under-\ni.il'.ned up to January 20th,\n- , 1050,    on    a    1041    Ford\nf'l'Luxe Sedan, condition\nas is and where Is; licence\ntmd  registration  hot  in\neluded.\nThis vehicle may be seen\n...     at   the   Forest   Service\nWarehouse, Nelson, B.C.\nAll  offers   must   be   accompanied by a certified\ncheque for at least  10%\nof the bid and are sub-\n,   ji'i-l   lo  *!%  S.S. & M.A.\nTan    on    iln-    n m ount,\nti'lilli.'U'd,\n\"    PURCHASING    f'l iMMi!!i.\u00bb ill,\n- ' Parliament Buildinr 3,\n'-  Victoria, B.C.\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT\u20141 OR 5\n.nm.i suite in' house mi i-nunl'\nfwlth 1 child-(V year). Tran I iri-cd\nfrom Winnipeg. Phonu i, (rom\n.6:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., or.\" leave\nmessage room 5, Hume Hotel. \"\"*\nFOR RENT-FULLY-FURNISHED\n\u2022i fully   modern' cottas'i-,   Including'\n-water, -light, gas-'stove. Centrally]\nheated. Windsor 1'nlilu.i, 021 Mol\nson AVe.\nLIVE IN COMFORT THIS WIN\njter. Individual central heated bun'k\n: galows. Fully furnished. Bluetop\n'Bungalow Court, phone 265.\nFOR RENT \u25a0'\u2014 -4 ROOM APART-\nment, reliable middle aged couple\npreferred    i'In   rliUiin-ie.    Phone\n768-Y.\nFOR RENT\u2014MODERN,4,ROOM\ninsulated* furnished 'cottage: approximately Jan. 17.. T. G. Lud\ngate, Willow Point.\nFOR RENT - LIGHT HOUSE-\nkeeplng room. Apply 1007 Front\nSt.\nNELSON   BUSINESS COLLEGE\nDay and  Night Classes.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nCHIROPRACTOR8.\nJ. COLIN McLAREN, D.O, CHIRO-\npractio     X-Ray,     SpihOgraphy,\nStrand theatre Bldg. Trail, Ph. 328,\nA8SAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n,1  W.  WIDDOWSON.& CO.  AS-\nsayers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nH. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B. C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represnt:\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nHAGGEN AND CURRIE, 3. C.\nLand Surveyors, Mining and Civil\nEngineers, Rossland, Kelowna,\nGrand Forks. Ph. Rossland 348.\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAULING,\nsand and gravel. Contract H.\nHarrnrj. Phone. 117..\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY   AGENCIES  LTD.   IN-\ni ;, surance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\"   -\nMachine Shop,, acetylene artd -\nelectric welding, motor rewinding;\nPhone 503 324 Vernon St*\nSTEVENSON'S. MACHINE SHOP-:\nSpecialists*m, mine and mill work,:\nMachine woili, light ,ind heavy**\nMl) vi'iuun fit. ili-lson Phone 085\nSALE8 AGENTS\nFuller Bi'usn bales \u2014 J. C McKtms\nWnti  Box 12.1 - Phoni- '\/')') 1,\nNplsmt SatlH News\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.50 line per  month   i26 consecutive Insertions) Box numbers   lie   extra   Covers   any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\n.    first   insertion,   16c   per   line\neach subsequent Insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n'.0% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle Copy   $    05\nBy Carrier, per week,\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\nOne year        8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne year   i  12.00\nOne monlh    \u201e.,_   1.00\nThree monlhs    3.00\nSix months    '.    6.00\nWhere extra pottage It required!\nAbove rates, oil's oostage.\nFOR RENT \u2014 TWO ROOM FUR-\nnlshed suite suitable for light\nhousekeeping. Phone 351-Y.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM\nfor rent, Quiet gentleman preferred. Phone 351-Y.\nFOR RENT \u2014 16x60 BASEMENT.\nHeated, ideal for workshop. Contact S, Maco or Phone 805-R.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2 ROOM SUITE,\npartly furnished. Apply Ste. 2,\n723 Siilca St. '..'.-.\nSINGLE OR DOUBLE CAEINS\nfor rent. Central heated. All\nfurnished. No dogs. Phone 387-L-4\nWARM ROOM FOR RENT CLOSE\n: in. Phorte 653-ft.\nLOANS\nReorganize Your Finances\nReduce your problems by ex\u00ab\nchanging many creditors for\nonly one . . . one who Is competent to offer sound financial\n, guidance. A Niagara Loan can\npay off your debts, and be repaid systematically by con-\nvenient Instalments. Talk It\nover   with   oUr   Manager.   He\nJ'.ls qualified to advise you. Your\nlife   Is    insured  .foi     unpaid -\nbalance  al no i i Ira \t\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE  COMPANY   LIMITED\n''**.\" ,'il.  1930\"'' -    .   \u2022\n-Suite -Vrmil i',1,..   Si',.Niison.\n,.* , Plume 101)3 \"   -. -       7\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE\u2014NEW HOUSE, 2 BED-\nrooms upstairs. Ground floor:\nliving room, kitchen and bath.\nFull basement with hot-air furnace. Situated on VA lots, Upper\nWarfield, Trail. Price $6500. This\ncan be purchased under C. M. &\nS, C. Housing Loan. Apply Box\n5931, Daily News.\nDAIRY FARM. MODERN BUILD-\nlngs ond farming equipment, excellent dairy herd, enough feed\ngrown on place for all stock.\nMust be seen to realize the fine\nlay out. Post Office Box 16.\nNelson.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nJACK BOYCE GUN EXCHANGE.\nGuns for sale, exchange and for\nrent and expert gun repairing.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES, SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading\nCo., 016 Powell St.. Vancouver.\nFOR SALE -. COAL AND WOOD\nheater. Phone 1017-Y.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALTERATIONS, BUILDING, RE-\npalrs kitchen Cabinets. Workmanship guaranteed. Phone 1262-L.\nWANTED\u2014TYPING   TO   DO   AT\nhome.   Apply   Box   5854   Dally\nNews.\n*\u25a0\u00bb-\u00bb>\u00bb.-f>i*U-\u00bbirf\n\"-\/'\nIPS?\nF\"\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYfetjeS,: IBICYCLES\n1946 BWWIPLET SEDAN\nHeater, Knobbles.and Prestone.\n$1350\n1946 MONARCH SEDAN\nHeater, Knobbles and Prestone.,\n$1300\n1949   Dodge 5 Pass. Coupe\n1948 Ford Coach\n.1947 Ford Lt. Del.\n1938  Dodge Sedan       -.\n1937 Chevrolet Se.l. in   * '  -'\u25a0\n1935 International I,,. Del.\nEmpire Motors\n.   AUstin Sales and Service\nPhone 1135 803 Baker St. \u25a0\nNelson\n--*..#-#-\u2014N-^.\nh\u00bb^\u00bb^jij\n\u00ab^4*tfe*WH\u00bb^*Ui*.i><t\u00ab\nFor Sale\n19**7 3-^-1  1 on Dodge\n, ,   \u2022 -.  )'!-\". iVi i   condition,   '*    ,\nK'~ '\") I ,1- iiK,;i. :-, il\n-, r\u00bb(-t\u00bbiipli-l[ ly- ii'i'oililllloili'tl\n!'  i   i.ii.'l I     !' I\n''Central .Tsnbdk;\n''.  & E^jiiipmeni Co. \" ;\nW Front St.\ni-Yl.,i,n .\n\u00bb>^>*;*-*\nMACHINERY\nSPLIT SECOND\nFIRE\nFire strikes fast\u2014You cah\nget quick' action, against\nfire If you have a\n_P.anHul[jh\n;\"',;;.and Phister-   .- , ,\n'Fi'io E tinguishers\nWe can supply you with these\nCarbon Dioxide Extinguishers\nin sizes from 1 quart to 40 gal'\nIon foam engines. Small silea\nwith trigger-touch action \"Faster than Fira.\"\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 Hall St. Phpne 18\nMining,   Milling   and   Sawmill,\n.Machinery,* Building  and  rim-\n.    Ini-inii' Supplies.^\n\u2022     - Consul!   Us\"\n.-\"11 Ii',.IUni'liiiit'iy Yii'n'W.i.ii  .-:\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nThe Chicks Which dive Results\"\nThousands of pdultrymeh in\nWestern Canada Will again raise\nthese famous chicks during the\ncoming season\nYou also Can get good results by\nraising them. Write now for literature and prices.\nWhite Leghorns, Barred Rocks,\nRhode island, Reds, New Hamp.\nshires, Light Sussex,' Black. Austra-\nlorps, Leghorn-Hamp Cross, Austra-\nWhite Cross and Rock-Hamp.Cross\nto choose from, also Broad Breasted\nBronze Turkey poults, \u2014 and\nremember\u2014\n\"It's results that count.\"\nRUMP & SBNDALL LTD.\nBoit N, Box N,\nLangley Prairie   or   Vernon, B.Vj.\n*Mil^ilWWJtfy\nWANTED,   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity top prices\npaid. Active Trading Cbihpany.\n916 PdWeil St., Vancouver, B  C\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J  V. MCJR-\n\u00abon. Nelson. B  C\nWILL STORE PIANO IN RETURN\nfor Its use, Photic 478-Y.\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE-THE SELKIRK HO-\n.J tel, Sllvertoh, B.C., fully licenced,\n^modern. For details apply to Mrs.\n\"Ruth Barnes. SllVefton. B.C.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nMove Show fA STwith a\nGHAVELYinowFlow\/\nr\nthe powerful 5-HP\nGRAVELY, with 40-inch\nReversible Blade Type\nSnow Plow Attachment,\nmakes    now  ,   moval\nsimple and ;a=yl ,\t\nDooo tho worls of eight\nmon. Samo blutlo al=o\ndoes  light grading.\nle; - n; i> \u25a0.  j -\n.' - \u25a0'    .1.  \u2022',.),. .\nn. i   job ii r      li\\\nwill do for YOUI . . \u201e\nComo   In,   or   wrilo   for\n.'..'-.\u201e<.!.  !'\u25a0\nIISOIH\nCONTRACTORS   - . SA WM11 ,tj. -\n\u25a0 LOGGING  *  MINING\nEQUIPM1   .)\nSEND  YOUR ENQUtRF-.\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nCO   LTD\nGranville Island MA 1251\nVancouver, B.C.\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nwelding Portable welding equipment for field work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop. 708 Vernon St..\nNelson, B  C.\nONE STERLING DOUBLE DRUM\nWinch, 6000 lb. line pdll. Nearly\nnew. Bayes Equipment Company,\nCranbrook, B.C,\nD4 CAT FOH RENT OR CON-\ntract Equipped for exoavoting,\nroad building,, land clearing, etc\nC   RoSS. Phohe 588-R. Nelsen.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC\nMORRHILL KENNELS RE'G AT\nStud Champion Alberta Gunner;\nred and white. Alberta Call Me\nCharlie, black. Puppies: Red and\nwhite, blacks, buff. $26 to (50.\nPercy Morris, owner. Box 518.\nGreenwood. .B C\nFOR SALE\u2014TERRIER PUPPIES.\nReady Jan. 14. Ph. 808-R or call\nDuff, Willow Point.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST-PARKA WITH FUR TRIM,\nbetween Gordon Rd and 6th St,\nPhone 1098.\nLOST IN NELSON \u2014 GREEN AND\nsilver necklace, on Dec. 27th. Reward. Phone 1160.\na good sign\nanytime!\n\u2022..-\u25a0\u2022 \u2022\nthis Um.Ii iiiiJ yellow si(ji) nvm ..sir\ndoor'moanswo liavn mol' atarpillar:.\n\"friii lor Oi.'s liifll) requirements as lo\nbusiness integrity, knowledge of the\nequipment Reld and tho resources lo\noslabllsli and manage the standout\nequipment concern in this territory.\nSelling, servicing and other details of\npur business are handled to mako\nand keep customer*. * \"Caterpillar\"\nowners expect and gel this kind of\nservice.\nTractor.\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\nNELSON CRANBROOK\nAll-Time Record\nFor Air Revenues\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 The\nrevenues of Canadian Air Lines\nreached $4,199,632 in July, an all-\ntime record, the Bureau of Statistics\nreported today,\nRevenues in July, 1948, were\n$477,753 less. Schedules lines had\nrevenues of $3,476,021, compared\nWith $2,925,181 In July, 1948, .\nOperating expenses were $3,194,-\n371, 12.7 per cent higher than in\nJuly, 1048. '.-\u2022\nPHONE  144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nTORONTO STOCKS\nCLOSING  PRICES\nMINE8 - '\nAkaitcho   ,..'....., ,u     .75\nAmal Larder          .IB\nAnglo Huronian     9.65\nArjod 26\nArmistice lo\nAunot         B.4d\nfcagaftiae   - 23\nBarymin    56\nBase Metals      ,29tt\nBelloterre     8,00\nRevcourt     '.Si\nBonetal 46\nBralorne        8.80\nBroulan       ,57\nBuffadison    ,., ......._ 18\nCampbell ft L     8.10\nCan Mai           .68\nCariboo Gold     1.40\nCastle Treth     4.20\nCentral Patricia      1.03\nChesterville   ,\u201e ..._,:   1,70\nChimo G      ...*     .15\nCoast Copper  70\nCochenour ., .......     2.14\nConiairfum   ............................ . 1,05\nCons Beatty ..:.,        .85\nCohs Mining & Smelting... 102.60\nConwest i     1,22\nCrolnor .,.:..,....-.,,....\"     .56\nDelnite ...........'....    .1.70\nDiscovery \u25a0:.       32\nDome   l\u00bb'i\nDonnlda 'ir>\nEast Amphi  ..................,..,.n..,     .14\nEast Mfflbrtld ..: :.   2,30\nEtdona 39\nEast Sull         5.20\nEureka * :.!::.:*j:\u201e^..;;:..:.:....^.^,:f*.:.fi0\nFaIconbnd(,L ' (>0\nFrobisher .   . '       ....     ? 53\nGiant Yel .        ..    ii-'i.',\nGod's  Lakt 115\nGolden Manitou . 2 88-\nHardrock'..................................      X\nHasaga   45\nHeath     . .39\nHollinger    11.15\nHosco     '.       -I4V4\nHudson  Bay   47.00\nInspiration     ,.-,;\u201e.............,,.\u201e       .45\nInt Nickel      32.25\n.Toilet  Que \/*\ntCerr Add, on 19 011\nKlrkland L.iko         . * .      1 34\nKirk Towii',ii. . \".      II\"\nLabrador '      .   \u2022       510\nLake Dufnitll.-      .   ' I l'l\nLakeshorc ' 14 ill)\nLatbaque \u25a0       . 7 2(1\nLelii'h '     '\"....-.     \"    112\nLlncmm \u2022\" \" 'II\nLittle Loni'I in - ' -')\"\nHnciiss.i      \" * '     .      -- \"III!\nMacdohalri      - .        : ,73\nMncLi-od I'in I. . ...: -\u2022\u2022'\u25a0,''.w,\n\\inil'i'ii ii i.\"r '-\", ' JOi\nM i, net       , , ' ; Jd\nwii.uin trr.     \" > .- 'i\u00ab *\nMi-lllHle\"   . \"   \u2022- -\"--       -.IIDIKI\ni\\Ici\\un Ii'-'U !.'   '  *        ' 51 '\nHilllni-   Crail!       ..     \" i'\"il)   .\nMimi'la     \"       \"' ' \" * \\ JOV\nNi'BUS \" -       '  1 l>\n-Irw Caluiiitml \u2022 '...\" *'..- 1.30\n'un Goldvue' ',   -.''0*\nI Ii iv .11 ,iiu      \"\" \u00bb     Ml\nNnliill.iili   '    \"-        ..  -     *\" .1,(1\n.'mill mi.if '\".     .   -...     ' I OH\nNiii.iikIj       \u2022   ' s .'    * '*  ,11111111-\nMnii.ii ill        - '- 2 77-\nNo.ih i an. v . ' \" 15,\nU'llnen      ,' \"       -     \"'HV\n.Opislto ..&l..-:.........;...:.     1.19\nPnmour 1.37   .\n\"aymaster       ....::..*.....-. 33\nVnd Oreille '.     5.90\n?ickle Crow 193\n?loneer       '       3.30\nPore Pen 78:\nPowell Rouyn        1.02\nPreston E D         1.86\nuebec Manitou, .. .01\nuebec Lab. ' .18\nueenston  :      1.08\n^uemont .....:..,,        20.35\nReeves Mac        2.50\nSan Antonio .....;.......i\u201e.    3.80\nSen. Rouyn ...:::;..;...........\u201e..;:.      .31\nSherritt Gordon     2.34\nSigma ....'. ..*...:,\u201e ....'    8.25 -.\nSilvermiller   ....:      ,53\nSiscoe .....................................      .35\nSladon Mai    \u25a0 .70\nStadacona . .        .nil\nStarratt Olson     -  .till\nSleep Rock,...\/ :.:.'. : : -. -2.(15\nSyvonite   , .     1 (10\nI'eck Hughes 101\nTorbit i...*..:\u201e............\u201e:.   1.20\nTrans Cont Res m  .50\nUnited Keno   ;:-.  4.15\nUpper Canada   3.20\nVentures   : 6.70\nYicour     .07\nWaite Amulet  9.35 .\nOILS\nAnglo  Can  4.66\nAtlantic Oil  1.37\nB. A. Oil  37.35\nBritish Dom.  24\nChemical Research... '.. .08\nDalhousie ...:.v.:*::...:..:l...:,:.i.iKi:.42:\nDavies Pete .' .   .32  .\nFoothills             . .1.15:''\nGlobe                 .... 05\nImperial Oil          23 00\nInter Pett 10.25\nNat  Pete        .   *     \"      .' ,15\nOkalta       . .170\nRoyalite                         - * 1)65\nTower Pete               . .41\nUnited Oils \"1\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi                                . 23\nAlgoma  Steel '.... 14%\nAluminum    67\nArgus    ;  7%\nAtlas St i,  8%\nBell Telephone  41\nBrazilian    20 ii\nBrew & Dist. .;.  16%\nB. C. Electric \u25a0 91 Vs\nB. C. Forest !...*  3%\nB. C. Packers A  1114\nB. C. Packers B  6V4\nB, C, Power A   28\nB. C. Power B ...:  3\nB. C. Pulp  83\nBuilding Products  33\nBurl. Steel  :  15\nBurns  A    SO\nBurns B   18%\nBurrard A  i  7H\nCan, Cement  29\nCan. Malting ..'. \u201e... 61\nCan. Packers A  37\nCan. Packers B  2194\nCanadian Bakeries ...,  11\nCanadian Breweries  28\nCanadian Canhers  20\nGypsum time .;  19%\nH R MacMUlah A  9%\nCanadian Car & fdy  12\nCanadian Car & Fdy A ,...\u201e.. WA\nCan. Oil '.  16%\nCanadian Steamships  14%\nCanadian Celahese   30Ti\nCanadian Ind Alcohol  9%\nCanadian Marconi      3Vh\nCanadian Pacific Rly  17%\nCanadian West Lmbr  3%\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMarket Trends\nTOttONtfO (Cft-^Stea'dy demand\nlifted industrials into new high\nground for the fifth successive Session on the Toronto Stock Exchange\ntoday. Gains more than tripled\nlosses, as steel stocks ted the Industrial list higher on advances ranging\nfrom fractions to a full point.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Trends were\nmixed near the final hour of the\nMontreal Stock Exchange and Curb\nMarket today.\nAfter a stronger tone at the open-\nihg, losses began to firm until minus\nand plus signs were generally balanced.\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket kept both feet on the ground\ntoday in another 2,000,000-share-\nplus session.\nPricfe changes were limited mainly to, fractions. Gains and losses\nwere well divided. Ralls made a\nlate bid for favor.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014There was\nsome uneasiness In the London\nStock Exchange today.\nThe .pfo&pect of an early general\nelection was the main topic ol conversation among market men, and\nrestricted active interest. Small selling orders in domestic issues found\nfew buyers, and prices generally\nmoved to lower levels.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, - Price\nchanges were few and'-far between\nas the Vancouver Stock Exchange\nopened the week's trading with a\nlow volume, steady priced, morning\n\u25a0session.\nAltHOUgh some stocks slipped\nslightly, the morning averages for\nthe 59,430 shares traded show golds\nup .11, base metals up .69, and oils\nup ,52.    . '\nvS\nWinnipeg Groin\n-WINNIPEG, Jan.  9   (CP)\u2014Winnipeg grain cash, prices:\n- Oats-No 1 feed, 75Vi\nBarley-No.  I feed, 1.21 if.    ';\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Jan. 0 (CP)\u2014Open\ning trade on the Calgary livestock\nifiiai-ketjthis: morninK:showed, gdbd\n.ii lion   owr, bull,, and better-'\nfinished butcher steers and h.eifeiv\niln: latter hifjii r in spots. Brnndnblc\nbuti-lien, ,wnr particularly active,;\nit iteadv tn strong piii-c-,, on< 1m\nhi sfintlv ihiiiii' liiui-y atcc-i', ...II\nnil    ii   ,'\"lil)    .'        .        ''.-   ,-'-\u2022\nIn\" In iu'i'i'ii l.illi'.', wi ,. -.low,: and.\nnllii'. Vliifcs\u2122 nn\"l)Ptli i than :,ie:uh\nRtopl.Pi :iti..'.:i wi'i-e in .id. demand\nili''aliiilli, steady prices, .'.own tiosnil\n.l,;u\u201ely lower last week; huif, aluiul\nill aily. ....  , . *\nflioimrl (iOII rattle were on nffei\n,h Ihe opening thi'i morning, hulud\nnil; weekend deliveries.\nThe Dominion Livestock Markets;\nService reported,weekend saleable'\niiccipts- 252 cattle, 39 hogs Tins\nnidi mug's saleable receipts: 30 cattle. ' \u2022 ' ' \" -\n'Hogs \"closed last week at $23.75\nfor A's at yards and platitfc; sows,\n$10.75, live weight.\nGood to choice butcher Steers,\n$20.50 to $22; common to medium,\n$17 to $20.\nGood butcher heifers, $18.B0 to\n$19; common to medium, $10 to $18.\nGood cows, $14 to $14.50; common\nto medium, $12.50 to $13.75. Canners\nand cutters, $9.50 to $12.\nGood bulls, $16.50 to $17:25.\nClood stocker and feeder steers,\n$17.50. to $19; common to medium,\n$15 to $17.    ,\nVancouver Stocks\nCLOSING PRICES\nMINES\n** .1.45\nGolconda\nGrandview\nHcrilev Mascot\nHighland Bell\n.. 35\nII\n. 31\n110\n:;    20\n31\n17\n..   5.95\n..   135\nReeves MacDonald \t\nSheep Creek\t\n2.60\n1.25\n..     12\nOILS\n..     10\nCalgary & Edmonton. .\n4.60\n.     23\n2.85\n-     5t>\n-.   - 4?\nFoothills\n-   3.25\n114\n13.25\nMci'Ciu y\n10 Vi\nOkalta Com\n175\nPacific Pel,- -..'..\n\u2022' 71)\n9.115\nINDUSTRIALS        .'  ','\nCoast Breweries\n. -   22\n,     M\n,   8,60\nCockshutt :............\nCoast Copper v..... .....\nCons. Mining St Smelt\t\nSons. Paper ,\t\nDist.  Seagram  :\t\nDom. Stores  ;.\n16%\n9B\n104\n19%\n21\n34%\n27\n16\n15%\n26%\n18%\n7%\n23%\n14%\n28%\n32%\n29\n16%\n32\n31\n24%\n27%\n18%\n21%\n77\n16%\n47%\n43%\n17%\n17%\n25!i\n15\n20\n22%\n38%\n26\nFamoBs Players\t\nFord  A  \t\nH.'R. MacMillan B\t\nPower, Corp.\t\nH. Walker        \t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 10, 1950 \u2014 9\nMAY BATTLE\nU.S. PART IN\nOLYMPIC HOCKEY\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 9 (AP)-\nthe United States Olympic Assoc\nlation may confine its fight With\nthe International Ice Hockey Federation, Richard F. Vaughan said\ntoday,\nVanghan, Princeton University\nHoskey Coach and Chairman of the\nUnited States Ice Hockey Committee, told a reporter that the United\nStates Olympic Organization would\nask the International Olympic Committee next May to give it permission to organize International- competition in the sport on a basis that\nmeets the American definition of\nAmateur.\nCENTRE OP SQUABBLE\nAmerican Olympic members\nblaim the present Governing Body\nfor ice hockey permits; professionalism in the'sport.\nIda hockey was the centre of an\nInternational squabble at the 1946\nOlympic games in St. Moritz, Switzerland. Two American teams showed up. One was made up of Amateur\nAthletio Union players ' and was\nsponsored by the Official American\nOlympic Delegation, the other wore\nthe colors of the AmatSur Hockey\nAssociation which is affiliated with\nthe existing International Governing Body for hockey.\nFor a time the United. States\nthreatened to withdraw all its teams,\nThe Swiss went ahead With.Olympic\nHockey under the . international\nAegis, and at first it was announced\nthat the sport was only on exhibition basis. Later fclympic recognition Was given to the teams, including the A.H.A, squad. The A.H.A.\nsquad sat Out the games on the sidelines.\n(Canada, represented by the Ottawa R.C.A.F. Flyers, Won the competition after tying oh points with\nCzechoslovakia on the basis,of its\nscoring average.)\nThree Veteran\nRinks in Nipiv, ni\nRound Robin\nNIPAWIN, Sask., Jan. I) (CP) -*\nThe No. 2 event of Nipawin's\nfourth jnnual automobile lion: in'1\njo.ir-li.-il the III- tonij lit, md will In\ndown tn the fights by .tomorrow's\nnoon (haw.        _\u2022 '   u. .\u00ab'   .,*_*\nFinn rinks from Iln 'event', and\nioiu ..on. the Un' .1 . vent, will |niii\nill. i|ii,i.!i, minli-i- .in this. No 1\nevent un. the final i-uiiinl-iolim h.i\ntme Wednesday.   '   _...-   _ \"-_\nIn the o,i.Iv evi-niiii dinw^D-ivo\n(Srnity) Mini's Nip.twin crew mug\nUn .' l'l li victory ovi'i Howard\nCleveland ui i'.mtiglii, Ka Ji Clevi\nl.mil wa's i uniier-u], li,l year to\nI'll.i I'lnn'. l'c-ir ilii.ni, who itinvu\non' with Ihe booty. . *   \" ,\n'i'wh 'ti'lici' Wipnwln ilnl'; Les\nll.-iyi ]' mil George I'liilie.iu'\nnmvi'il In'o the 10i o. the No '!\ncontest.-Bonspiel Secretary' Morris\nBeldvitcli of Nipawlir-dropped to\nthe No. S'- event. .\nThe McMurray aggregation from\nPort Radium, N.W-T., were knocked\ndown to the consolation competition when they lost a 14-7 decision\nto the Ballance rink from Glaslyn,\nSask.; the Davidson rink from\nWinnipeg skipped by Ai Derrett,\ntwice figuring in auto spiel wins,\ntook Al Turner of Codette, Sask., to\nadvance to the 16s of the No. 2.\nEarlier three veterans rlhks and\none newcomer to big-time curling\nWetO the first to enter the round-\nrobin.\nThe veterans art Howard Wood\nand Jimmy Welsh of Winnipeg and\nOln Olson tit Edmonton, ahd the\ntypj ill Kills Witherow of NlpaWih.\nThey qualified for the car play-\ndown by Winning berths In the\nsemi-finitl of the No. 1 event. Later\nthey will be joined by semi-finalists from the No. 2 and No. 3\nevents in a 12-rlnk round-robin\nplayoff for the bonsplel's major\nawards.\nDODGERS TIE\nPANTHER BANTS\nThe League-iaading Dodgers minus two pf their top players just managed to eke out a 6-all tie with\nthe Panther s^antams at the Ci\\rlc\nArena Monday afternoon ih a\nLeague game.       i\nThe Dodgers, who were continually behind throughout the contest,\ntied it up in the last five minutes\nOf the final frame to , keep their\nrecord Clean. The Dodgers boosted\ntheir strength with the addition of\na hew player Ecctram, who scored\none goal assisted oh another. Rdsling\nand Gene Gee scored two:goals a-\npiece* to;lead the: Panthersi*while\nAngus DaVis ahd Alec McClelland\nwere the other marksmen. Assists\nwent to Vance with two, Rosling\nand Count ohe each.,For the Dodgers, Garth Lipsack hit the hat trick,\nWith Bill Culley, Bill Richardson,\nand Bob Ecctram scoring a goal\neach for the Dodgers. Culley also\ndrew two assists and Ecctram one.\nLipsack drew the only penalty\nof the game for attempting to start\na fight With Rosling of the Pahthers.\nRon callings and Laurence Ludlow\nwere the Referees. Arnold Sherwood kept the score and Wllf Marquis the time.\nHOCKEY PLAYERS MUST\nSPEED ONLY ON ICE\nBELLINGHAM, Wash., Jan. 9\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Hockey players should confine their speed to the ice, the State\nPatrol advised Dave Downle, 40,-\nand Ron Plckell, 30, of the Seattle ]\nIrohmen professional hockey team\nearly yesterday When they arrested\nthe pair oh a charge of speeding\non the Pacific Highway North of\nhere.\nCal E. Stearns, 23, also of the Seattle team, was booked on a charge\nof destruction of State property. Officers said Stearns let the air out of\none of the tires oh the patrol car\nwhile Downle ahd Plckell were being booked,\nOfficers convinced Stearns he\nshould change tires on the patrol\ncar. He did, and then was released\noh $10 ball. Downle and Plckell nre\nout on $15 bail. They are cited to\nappear in court here Friday,\nHighland Bell\nTops Shippers\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 9 \u2014 Top cui-\ntom shipper to the metallurgical\nplants of The Consolidated Mlnlrig\nand Smelting Company of Canada,\nLtd., Trail, B. C, for the week end-,\ning December 17th, 1949, was Highland Bell, Beaverdell, B. C, who\nshipped 236 Wet tohs of lead ore.\nSecond high lead shipper was Tof-\nbrit, Alice Arm, B, C, with 150 wet\ntons of lead cone, followed by New\nCalumet, Campbell's Bay, Qua,,\nwith 91 wet tops.\nHigh zinc shipper Was, Reeves\nMacDonald, Salmo, B, C, shipping\n224 wet tons of zinc cone. Secodd\nhigh was Base Metals, Field, B. C.,\nwith 119 wet tons zinc cone, followed by Britannia, Britannia\nBeach, B. C, with 68 Wet tohs.\nThree new lead ore shippers this\nweek were Stannite, Lauretta, B.C.,\nwho shipped 65 wet tons, W. Hegan,\nPentlcton, B. C, with 40 wet tons,\nand Pioneer, Woodberry Creek, B.\nC\u201e with seven wet tons.\nLead shipments for the week totalled 1034 wet tons as compared to\n711 wet tons for last Week and the\n1948 weekly average of 378 wet\ntons.\nZinc shipments totalled 531 wet\ntons as against last week's 1549 and\nthe 1948 Weekly average of 776.\nTotal combined shipment was\n1565. wet tons as compared to last\nweek's 2260 and the 1948 weekly\naverage of 1149.\nDetails of the shipments In wet\ntons, follow: \u25a0 \u2022 .\nFor Treatment at the Lead Smelter:\nAnacori, Garneau, Que.;, Cones., 45.\nBlack Diamond, Aihsworth, B. C.,\ncones., 77.\nBosun  (Santiago), New Denver,\nB. C, ore, 6.\nvcJCanadian Exploration,.Salmo, B.\nC, cones., 70.    . .\n.Dundee, Ymir, B. C, ore, 6.\nW. R. Grace, Bolivia\", - cones., 60.\n;, Highland Bell, Beaverdell, B. C,\nore, 230\nW. Hegan,-,Pentlcton, B. C, ore,\n40.\nI iiiiu ii ly II. Hi, \u201ei, r\u201e Creek, D.\nC, on-,-111. -\nMcAllister,'Sllvoi ton, B. C, Ore, -\n0-\n\u2022   Mew ,\" Calumet,.,Campbell's   Bay,-.\nI llli',   11..11    ''II.*'\n*Kui   n, Slii'di < nek, n. (.'.; ore,\n\"-.  -*   \u25a0'\"-''\u25a0.\nI'loni-'or,'Woodhon-y Cre. 1 , li   l'\noie,-7 '     , x- ' \"       '\u2022   '\nHoi l'i\", Mm Tim,, [d, Salmo, IJ, f\\,\ncones.,, 0(1.\n-Silver Standard, IJcw Hazelton,\nH. '', ram, jii\nhtannlte, Lauretta, 11  C, ore, S5.\nVan,Ho!,' Silverton, B. i'., mm,\n7.\nTorlult, Alici Ann, ji .'., colics.,\nJ50.      .     '    ' - \u2022\u2022  --\nViolamac, Sandon, B. \u20ac'!; ore, 31.*\n'Western Exploration,.- Silverton,\nB.C., coni\"\u201e, 51.\nTdtal 1034. \"\"\"\"\"\nPrevious week 711.\nFor Treatment at the Zinc Plaht:\nBase Metals, Field B. C, cones..\n119.\nBritannia, Britannia Beach, B. C,\ncones., 66.\nCanadian Exploration, Salmo, B.\nC, cones., 24.\nParadise, Lake Windermere, B.C.,-.\ncones., 40. \u25a0,'-.\u25a0\nHeeves MacDonald, Salmo, Bi C.,\"'\ncones., 224,\nWestern Exploration, \u25a0 Silverton\nB. C, cones., 58. '.-\u25a0. i '-'.-\nTotal 531.\nPrevious week 1649.    '\nGrand total current week 1865.\nPrevious week 2260.'\nAverage Quotations for Same\nPeriod\nSilver, New York, 73.26c per o&\nLead, New York, 12.00c per lb.\nZinc, St. Louis, 9.75c per lb.\nHockey Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nCAPE BRETON SENIOR      |\nSydney 3, North Sydhey 4,\nMARITIME 8ENI0R\nMoncton 1, Amherst 7.\nTHUNDER  BAY JUNIOR\nFort William Canadiens 10, Port\nArthur Juniors 6.\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nWinnipeg Black Hawks 4, Winnipeg Canadiens 3.\nEA8TERN CANADA SENIOR\nNorth Bay 1, Pembroke 8.\nJUNIOR EXHIBITION\nEdmonton Athletic Club 7, Saskatoon Wesleys 2.\nWESTERN CANADA JUNIOR\nMedicine Hat 4, Moose Jaw 3.\nFRENCH   CHIEF-.\nMajor Gen. Clement Blano\n(above), 52-year-olil veteran of\nboth world wars, has been named\nby France's Cabinet as Chief of\nStaff of French land forces.\nV\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 10,1930\nIf You Can't\nAvoid Them\nat Least You Can\nCure Them\nCoughs and colds, sniffles and head colds disappear\nquickly when you use\nGroves Bromo Quinine Tablets\n,   Take on\u00ab tablet every 3 or 4 hours and two\ntablets at' bedtime with a hot drink.\n35ft and 60*\nItIAMN   S\nDRUG STORE\nBritish Doctor Admits\nThree Mercy Killings\nHerring Seiners\nReturn to Jobs\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP) sr\nBeating through high-running seas\nand a bitter Arctic wind, more than\n100 herring seiners today are back\non the bleak waters of the fishing\ngrounds, .\nWith half the season and n 90,000-\nton catch behind them, the rugged\nlittle wooden ships have another\ntwo months to go. Before the\nseason ends March 10, they hope\nto make it a 200,000-ton catch.\nFor the' hardy crew members of\nthe 80-foot, diesel-driven boats, the\nnext two months will be a succession of long, lonely hours and\nhard worjt. Their only contact with\nthe rest of the world will be their\nradio-telephones\u2014the only break\nin their \"turn*In, turn out and turn\nto\" existence an occasional call at-.a\nNorthern cannery' or a heave-to Tn\na protected cove.\nNerve centre of the. fleet Is the\nradio dispatch office here which,\nthree times n day, beams messages from company headquarters,\nThis Is the command post for the\nscattered ships and keeps them\ndeployed over the richest areas\nof the fishing grounds.\nWorking in advance of the\nseiners are the ever-alert scout\nboats\u2014the sense organ of the fleet.\nEquipped with echo sounders, the\nscouts signal the-control room when\na strike Is mode.\nImmediately, operator! In the\nmap-lined control room snap Into\naction. Strategy is planned and\nreports from the scout boats are coordinated .Orders pour out and.the\nseiners move in on the school of\nfish..\nWhen the school Is surrounded;\nthe purse-string-like lines on the\nbottom of the nets are pulled up and\nthe fish are trapped in a mass the\nshape of an inverted cone.\nThen, the fish are \"brallled\" with\nsmall nets into the holds of the\nseiners. Later, they are transferred\nto the packers, which take them to\nthe processing plants.\nThese up - to-dato ' techniques\nhave built the herring Industry\nInto a $5,000,000 business and\nfishermen' average $4000 to $6000\na year. But many days, they work\n22 hours.\nMost of the B.C.'s herring are\nconverted into oil used in, food\nproducts, paint and linoleum. Some\nare canned. Others make' high-\nprotein, fish meal, used\\ for livestock feed and, fertilizer.\nThe fleet got the full take\nallowed for most of the areas off\nthe East Coast of Vancouver Island\nduring the first part of the season.\nThey will spend the next two\nmonths of the West Coast of, the\nIsland and farther North.\nCouncil Members\nGuests of Rofaiy\nLuncheon\nMembers pf the City Council\nwere guests at the Nelson Rotary\nClub luncheon Monday. L. A. Mc-\nPhail, President of the Club, Introduced Mayor N. C. Stibbs, who in\nturn Introduced the City Council\nAlderman A. G, Ritchie, N. R. Sardich, Joseph Kary, W. S. Smith, T.\nS. Shorthouse, Alex Sutherland and\nCity Clerk^W. A. Gordon.\nA picture entitled \"Holiday at\nSchool\" depleting life nt the Banff\nSummer School pf Fine Arts was\nshown by a member of club. Program Chairman was D. McGregor.\nPresident McPhail expressed the\nopinion that since Nelson was now\nthe centre of the popular Mary\nRose Thacker Summer Figure Skating School, he could see no reason\nwhy Nelson could not have a fine\narts school similar to the one in\nBanff.\nLONDON, Jan, 9 (AP)\u2014A British\ndoctor was quoted in a London\nnewspaper as telling how he performed the \"mercy killing\" of\nthree patients whose cases were\nhopeless.\nHis purported \"frank confession\"\nwas printed in the Empire News,\nLondon Sunday publication of Lord\nKemsley's newspaper group, under\nthe title: \"Why I Let Three People\nDie.\"\nThe article was one of many ex.\namples of Britain's interest in the\nease of Dr. Hermann N. Sander of\nCandia, New Hampshire, accused\nof putting a cancer patient to death\nto end her suffering.\nThe Empire News did not; name\nthe author of its article. The-paper\n\u25a0-said.;it-did .-not necessarily agree\nwnli i\u00bb opinion bill publi lied\nthem ,i\u201e n ,,i liter ui vital publicln-\nteiost.'*    ;     _     s- , \\ -' *v  . *\"\nIlLVEil DOUBTED     * '\"\"\/\nThe writer said he deliberately\nhad taken*three human-'lives.' \"m\nthe \/ordinary; course -of my -profes-\nllonal practice, twice wltbithe,approval.of the nearest relatives!' and\n.once on his own responsibility.,,\n\"I have never for one moment\ndoubted that what I did was right,\"\nho said. He added this Was typical\nof what \"many medical men in this\ncountry\" think about euthanasia, or\nmercy killing.\nThe article concluded: .\n\"The sanctity of human life is an\nideal which no civilization can dis\nregard except at its peril, yet in\ncases spch as these, I maintain lt\nwould have been an affront to civilization to have acted otherwise.\n\"What I did was against the law,\nbut this is surely an instance where\nthe law lags behind public opinion\nr-and.is certainl\/ contrary to our\nideas of kindness, humanity and\nlove.\" I\nHaigh\nfru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nB76 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nFor Dependable\nPAINTING and\nPAPERHANGING\n,   See\nMurphy Brothers\nPhone 65B 745 Baker St.\nInquests Into Deaths\nIn Alta. Train\nWreck to Open Jan. 18\n' CALGARY, Jan. II (('I') -- An\nInquest Into the deaths of three\npersons who died in the smashup\nof ..two Canadian Pacific Railway\ntrains at Southesk, Alta., Dec. 29,\nwill open here Jan. 18, it was announcedtoday.. -\n\u25a0'\u25a0:\u25a0 About ,20 witnesses-have; sbeen\ncalled. More than 60 persons were\ninjured in the accident which took\nthe lives of Reid B; Heffren of\nMoose Jaw, Sask.. George Jacobs\nof Regina and'Violet Cowley of\nArrowWood, Alta. Nineteen of the ]\ninjured still are in hospital here.\nAllies Split On Chinese Question\nNay Mean Great Victory For Stalin\nBy  DEW1TT   MACKENZIE\nAssociated. Press News Analyst\nFailure of Britain and the United\nStates to find ground for common\naction regarding recognition of\nCommunist China has created a\nsituation which many observers regard as unfortunate. It could have\nfar-reaching results.\nMarshal Stalin must be smiling\nbroadly to see these two old Allies,\nwho have been leaders In the cold\nwar against Communism, now split\nover this Chinese issue, with Britain granting Red China full recognition while the U. S. withholds\nrecognition indefinitely.\nMoscow can't be blamed if lt logs' cm\u00b0\"n'   Bri'ai\"'a, inte\u00abs'   ln (saff\nanother victorv guarding   her. vast   Chinese   trade\nsnowier victory. |and her big:colonial Interests,.in-\nHowever, while considerable ciucjing Hong Kong,\nfeeling has been engendered on: Washington Kliiuni-tnlioii lead\nboth sides of the Atlantic, one crs wcre reporteri M bo n ,,,\u201e,\u201e\u201e ,,\nthing is sure: Britain ond tho Uni- p.Ucy aimcri :-at drivinj, \u2022\u201e. wedge\nted States arent going to swap between the, Chinese people and\nCommunist -Russia. This policy\nwould envisage a firm friendship\nThe split is over the question of\nrecognition itself.\nNaturally a lot of folk are asking\njust why Britain should insist on\nrecognition immediately. Was she\nimpelled by principle or expediency?\nVITAL INTERE8T8\nWell, the answer seems to be\nthat she has acted on what she regards as the realistic attitude and\nin order to protect her own vital\ninterests. In this connection Washington, while having strongly maintained that early recognition of the\nChinese Reds wasn't advisable, has\nat the same time taken, into ac\ncount   Britain's   interest   in   safe-\nblows over this Issue.\nThe Washington State Department holds that British recognition\nof the, Chinese Communist Government doesn't mean a split with the\nUnited States over basic aims for a\nChina free of foreign domination.\nfor the Chinese people while leaving the way openJfor eventual recognition* of the Communist regime.\nBritain ought to Ik ,ible to play\nball with that\na 11Mi\u25a0\u2022\u2022M11\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0l 111j r\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0iii11111111\u25a0\u25a0111\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall  St. Phone  148\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n^THOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n818 Kootenay St Phone 881\nFLEURY'f  Pharmacy\n.Prescription!\n.Compounded j\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Bill.\nPHONE 25\nTEMPORARY\nLOCATION\n702 BAKER ST.\nVic Graves (Plumber)\nNew Stock Arriving Daily\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized GE Dealers\nPHONE 260\n18-Year-Old Caught\nAfter Wild Chase\nCALGARY, Jen. 9 (CP)\u2014John\nClifford Turner, 18-year-old soldier\narrested by Calgary Police New\nYear's morning following a Wild,\n75-mile-an-hour chase, today was\nsentenced to 2% years in Prince\nAlbert penitentiary.\nTurner was convicted on charges\nof auto theft, shopbreaking, contributing to juvenile delinquency\nand carrying a concealed weapon.\nHeavy Drop in Sales\nOf New Vehicles\nOTTAWA, Jan, 9 (CP) \u2014 After\nclimbing' to a post-war peak in\nOctober, sales of new motor\nvehicles in November dropped below last year's level, the Bureau of\nStatistics reported today.\nA total of 18,823 vehicles was sold\nduring November for a total of\n$38,873,226. It was a decrease of 16\nper cent in number and 12 per cent\nin 'value from the 22,345 vehicles\nwhich sold for $44,096,531 in\nNovember, 1948.\n' In the 11 months ending November, 254,055 new vehicles were sold\nfor $526,265,680 compared with\n199,836 vehicles valued at $396,186.-\n362 in the corresponding, period oi\n1948.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nPrescription Specialists\nBox 460 Phone 34\n\"Save With Safety'\n>*'  At Your Rexall Store.\"\nJ. A. C LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nMedical Arts Building\nSUITE 206\nSupreme Court Judge\nTakes-Witness Stand\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014A\nSupreme Court of Canada Justice\ntook the witness stand for the\nPlaintiff today ln a suit lnvolvnig\n$186,000.\nMr. Justice C. H. Locke was called to the stand by C. K. Guild,\nCounsel for Safeway Stores Ltd.,\nwhich is using the estate of George\nW. Thompson, William R. Downey,\na merchant, and John L. Trumbull,\nan importer.'\nThe company alleges the dependants were trustees for Safeway of\nshares of the Empress Co., which\nthey bought in 1936 for $175,000 and\nsold three years later to Safeway\nfor $361,840, without accounting\nfor the profits.\nMr. Justice Locke testified he had\ninterviewed the late Mr. Thompson\nand the two other defendants in\n1925, seeking information on whether L. W. Haley, former Canadian\nPresident of Safeway Stores Ltd.,\nheld shares in the Empress Co.\nMr. Raley, he said, later'made a\n$112,000 settlement with  Safeway.\nC.P.R. Official\nDies at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Ernest Officer, 60, assistant passenger\nagent of the Canadian Pacific Railway here, died at his home today.\nBorn in England, he began service\nwith the CIP.R. as a stenographer\nat Winnipeg. He became Chief Clerk\nat Calgary in 1916 and moved here\nin 1948. |\nSurviving are his widow and sonj\nRoy, here, and a daughter Shirley\nat McGill University, Montreal. :\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0'.'!\nCoast Men, Lost\nIn Storm, Safe j\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e Jan. 8 (CP)\u2014\nFrank Whittaker of Dunoon and flire\nother men who last night werie reported missing ln waters off Salt\nSpring Island, turned up at Fulford\nHarbor this morning safe and\nsound.\nFears for* the six, employed1 by\nWhittaker Bros. Logging outfit on\nPender Island, arose when they\nfailed to show up at Ganges Sunday\nnight after setting out from Cowl-\nchan Bay at 2 that afternoon.\nSkipper Earl Lockwood of the B\nC. Police boat at Ganges was preparing a search of his, own this\nmorning when word came through\nthat the missing boat had arrived at\nFulford with all hands aboard.\nAt Fulford, Frank explained that\nthe boat developed engine trouble\nmidway between Cowichan Bay and\nSalt' Springs, and that the six\naboard managed to row the boat into the shelter of a cove while repairs were undertaken' overnight\nSafecracker With\nSense of Humor\nColdwell Advises\nSterling Payments\nBy RENO RINALDI\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 9 (CPJ-M. J.\nColdwell, national CCF. leader, today Said that if Canada wants to\nbolster her falling foreign markets\nshe should accept sterling payments\nfor more of her exports.\nIn a speech prepared for delivery\nto the Winnipeg Canadian Club,\nMr. Coldwell said \"the logical.short-\nterm solution is for us to accept\npayment for a substantial part of\nour exports in sterling.\"\nMr. Coldwell said that under such\nprogram Canadian producers\ncould be paid \"in Canadian dollars\nmade available .from our budgetary surpluses or from the Bank\nof CanadaJi\n\"Such a policy, of course, would\nbe inflationary,\" Mr. Coldwell said.\n\"This policy would' involve the\nreimposition of some controls, and\neven subsidies. None of us like controls, but to my mind intelligent\ncontrols are preferable to unsold\nfarm surpluses, causing ruinously\nlow prices and consequent unemployment in our industrial areas.\"\nSalf-Cb\nSlayer\nPsychia\nDETROIT,\nCraig, 25, of\nmer member\nMedical Cor\ntoday from >\nwhere lie toll,\na 1944 slaying\nPolice said .\nby United Sta\norlties and pro;;\ned to Canada.\nCraig called\njss . his part\nand robbing\nidentified   as\nLille.\nCraig was rep!\nan unidentified\nbed the girl,\nFrench money\n[dead in the dil\npicked the girl\ntween Ghent at\nCraig,, whose\nCarleton Place, , \u201e\u2122 \u201e..\u201e\u201e\u201e\nadmitted spending some months in\nhospital overseas as a pschiatric\npatient His mother reported Arnold\nhad suffered a nervous break-down\noverseas and said \"I am afraid he\nis suffering from too active an im-\nmagination,\"\nMO\nKCP)-AraoId\nl.Ont, a for-\nrtadion Army\nBrought here\n|ntiac, Mich.,\nI his part ln\n1 questioned\nRation auth-\n1 be return-\n(lice to con\nludgeoning\nih girl he\nlagnaia  of\ning he and\nIdler club-\n, $160 in\nI her for\niid he had\nBroad be-\nmother . lives   at\nOnt, near Ottawa\nNo Evidence k\nJustify Belief\nIn Red Collapse\nTORONTO, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014Lt-Gen.\nGuy Slmmonds, Commandant of\nThe National Defence College,\nKingston, Ont, today criticized\n\"wishful thinkers\" who believe the\ncold war with Russia can be won\nby means'other than \"our own efforts.\"\nHe told the Canadian Club he\nsaw no evidence to justify the belief that Russia \"eventually will\ncollapse Internally or through popular revolutions undertaken by her\nsatellites.\"\nBoard Postpones\nHearing Union\nWage-Hour Dispute\nMONTREAL, Jan. 9 (CP)-Open-\ning session of a Federal Conciliation Board hearing into an $84,000.-\n000 a year railway wage-hour dispute was officially postponed until\n'Tuesday when the train bearing\nIsaac Pitblado of Winnipeg was delayed coming in from the West.\nMr. Pitblado represents the Canadian National Railways and- the\nCanadian Pacific Railway and their\nsubsidiaries, Ontario Northland\nRailway and Toronto, Hamilton and\nBuffalo Railway.\nTwo railway union groups rep\nresenting 142,000 employees are\nseeking the 40-hour week in place\nof the present 48j-hour week with\nthe same weekly take-home pay\nplus hourly wage increases.\nThe Union groups are International Brotherhoods Affiliated with\nthe American Federation of Labor,\nrepresenting more than 110,000\nworkers, and the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employees\n(CCL.) with more than 30,000\nmembers.\nHAMILTON, Jam 9 (CP)\u2014Police\nare seeking \"The Acrobat,\" a safecracker.\nHis latest note\u2014 \"Give us the\ntools and we will finish the job\"\u2014\nwas found early today scrawled in\nchalk on a safe in the Robert Simpson Company garage here. He had\nbeen unable to open the safe.\nHe leaves a message signed \"The\nAcrobat\" at the scene of all his\nbreak-ins, police said.\nVerifies Canol\nWorkers Safe\nWHITEHORSE, Y.T., Jan. 9 (CP)\n\u2014William Bosley, one of seven men\nreported overdue in Yukon wilderness, mushed to the -Ross River\ntrading post last night and verified\nthat all was well, R.C.M.P. said\ntoday.\nBosley said the men, dismantling\nequipment along the abandoned\nCanol pipeline, 1000 miles.Northwest of Edmonton,\"Vere suffering\nno hardships and were carrying\nsufficient supplies.\nHalf-Starved Boy \u2022';-',.\nSurrenders to\nBurnaby Police\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Jan. 8\u2014 (CP)\n-Fourteen-year-old Charles Floer,\na long way from home, is held by\nimmigration officials here, who say\nthey' have \"never seen anyone eat\nso much.\"   \u25a0\nHalf starved, the San Francisco\nyoungster surrendered to police in\nsuburban Burnaby Sunday after\nwalking from the Canadian-U. S.\nborder, a distance of more than 30\nmiles. Police say he didn't have a\ncent in his pocket.\nAmerican Immigration men are,\nInvestigating his case, and officials\nsay he will be returned to his California home as soon as \"necessary\narrangements\" are made.\nSlip on Icy Street\nKills Coast Man\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014 A\nfall on icy streets is blamed for the\ndeath in hospital during the weekend of James Porter, 68.   .\nHe was admitted to hospital Jan.\n1 after fracturing his hip ln a fall,\nand died Saturday.\nSeveral other persons have been\ntreated \"at hospital for lesser injuries in falls on slippery streets.\nAlaska Public\nWorks Program\nUp To Congress\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 9 (AP) -\nPresident Truman asked Congress\ntoday for approximately $185,000,-\n000 to spend in Alaska during the\n12 months starting next July 1.\nThe President said in his budget\nmessage to Congress that \"the 1991\nprograms . .. include $23,000,000\nfor development of natural resources. Developmental expenditures ln\nAlaska under other functions\u2014in\nparticular national defence, transportation, and social welfare\u2014will\namount to approximately $162,000,-\nqdo.\nThe President asked $21,000,000\nto carry forward the Alaska Public\nWorks program for which $1,000,000\nwas appropriated last year.\nHe asked for $20,400,000 for construction of roads and $2,800,000 for\nmaintenance and operation for\nroads already constructed.\nBritish to Send\nMore Goods lo\nDollar Countries\nLONDON, Jan. 9 (CP)-Sir Stafford Cripps today made a bid for\nanother meeting with Canadian and\nUnited States Finance Ministers.\nThe Chancellor of the Exchequer\ntold a press conference he hopes\nthat before too long the three\ncountries will arrange another conference to review matters \"set In\ntrain\" at last September's talks ln\nWashington.\nSir Stafford warned Britain's\npound sterling war creditors he is\ngoing slow down paying them off In\nexports in 1950.\nThe reason, he said, Is that Britain must send more goods to dollar countries in order to survive.\nAt the end of the war Britain\nowed \u00a33,200,000,000 to other countries for goods and services during\nthe Second World War:\nSALE\nof Overcoats\nand\nWool SWrts\nCharges Match Cartel\nStifles Competition\nPhone  144  for  Classified  Ads\nOTTAWA, Jan. 9 (CP) \u2014 Exist\nence of-an international cartel controlling the wooden match industry\nin Canada that is stifling all forms\nof competition, is charged in a report made public today by Justice\nMinister Garson.\nThe last report written by F. Ar]\nMcGregor, Combines Investigation\nCommissioner who resigned Jan. 1,\nalleges that a monopoly exists in\nthe manufacture, distribution and\nsale'of wooden matches in Canada.\nIt names the Eddy Match Company Ltd., with head office in Pem-\nThe balance of our Overcoats and Topcoats at a\ngreat saving. Gabardines,\nCoverts, Tweeds and\nFleeces.\nReg. $62.50, now\n$50.00\nReg. $47.80, now\n$38.00\nReg. $42.50\n$34.00\n\"Wool, Plaid and Cheek\nShirts\u2014All at 20% Off\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nC. I.O. Requests\nFederal Action\nOn Unemployment\nNANAIMO, B.C., Jan. 9 (CP)\u2014\nFederal Government action in curbing unemployment is asked in a resolution endorsed by the British Columbia District, International Woodworkers of America (C.I.O.).\n\"The Government should institute\ntheir promised program pf Public\nWorks and Lower Rental Housing\nin order to provide full employment\nand a higher standard of living for\nthe people of Canada,\" the resolution states. .\nDelegates to the District's annual\nthree-day convention,'which concludes today, demanded changes in\nthe Unemployment Insurance Act\nto extend payments to workers who\nhave exhausted benefits.\n\"'\u25a0 Delegates representing 20,000 B.C.\nWoodworkers are attending the convention.\nE L E C T E D-ciaude A. Put-\nnam, Kecne, N. H\u201e machinery\nmanufacturer, was elected president of National Association of\nManufacturers at its board meet*\ning In New York.\nBuckeyes Win on Field Qoal\nTOWING\n24   HOUR\nSERVICE\nDAY OR NIGHT, PHONe 75\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\n'Limited\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nMAKE   YOUR   CLOTHES   LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1176\u2014188 BAKER 8T.\nYour Budget Buys\nMore at\nThe Children's Shop\nWith Dick Wlddoes holding the ball and the\nstadium lights already turned on In the semi-darkness, end Jim Hague (left) swings his leg to send\nOhio State's game-winning field goal (arrow) on\nIts way toward three points and a Rose Bowl vlo-\ntory over California at Pasadena. The kick, from\nthe 18-yard line with fourth down and less than\ntwo minutes to go, gave the Buckeyes n 17 to 14\nwin. Charging Bears Frank Humpert and-Herb\nSchmalenberger (centre) almost blocked the kick.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nbroke, Ont., as the dominant firm\nin the Industry in this country.\nSome of its subsidiary companies are named as parties to the formation and operation of the alleged\nprice-fixing combine.\nThese four companies, all in\nQuebec', are: Commonwealth Match\nCompany of St. John's; Canada\nMatch Company and Federal Match\nboth of Hull, and Valcourt Company of Montreal.\nThe  report  contains  a  specific ,\nrecommendation in regard to the .\nprotection    given    the    Canadian '\nmatch - industry by duties on im- '\u25a0\nported matches. ' .    I\nUNDER CQNTROL J\nThe match report is. being studied\nby the Justice Department and a\ndecision on whether legal action\nwill be taken against the alleged\ncombine will be made later.\nSince 1927 five Independent\nmatch companies, which entered the\nindustry, had all been brought under control.\nIn 1946 when Western Match\nCompany began operating in Victoria, B. C, the report says, \"Eddy\nMatch Immediately took steps to\ndeal with the possible .disturbance\nio.'its- monopoly; position. Arrangements were made for construction\nof a branch plant at Mission, B. C.\n\"Its shipments 'of matches to\nWestern Canada were substantially\nIncreased, even before Western\nMatch actually began production.'\nThe report adds that when Western Match started .operating ln 1946\nIt faced a \"loaded market in the\nWest.\"      '  .   '\u25a0        \\.\n'The system of preferential discounts which Eddy Match had est- j\nablishcd, as well as its program of\nresale, price maintenance in Western Canada, further narrowed the\nopportunities of the new company\n\"Western Match as an Independent company had a very brief existence. It was acquired by Eddy\nMatch in 1949 after the new company continued to experience difficulties in maintaining operations.\"\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C.   TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE -\nChartered Accountant]\nAuditors\n660 Baker St. Phone 235\nSTR0MBERG-CARLS0N  '\nRADIOS\nJeffrey Radio Service\n446 Ward St. Phone 1302\nNelson, B.C. ,,\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   &   REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301  Ward St Phone 63\nLet George Do It\nELECTRICAL WIRING\nAND REPAIRS\nGEO. G. BOYES\nPhdne 768 R\u2014420  Houston  St-\nSatisfaction Guaranteed on\nEllison's Vita B\nAll Purpose Flour\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nJstfuL\nOil Heater\nTruly economical as well as an\nattractive oil burning space\nheater. Automatic damper.\nBrown enamel finish.\n$128.50\nSmith\nElectric\nelectrical Contractor!\nPHONE 268        645 BAKER ST.\n(BsdbtfL (jt)inhJti^inj^ S^\/ivIol\nAT\nNELSON TRANSFER\nBECAUSE\n1.    BETTER  mechanics,  trained and  licensed,  to\n; work on your car.\n2    BETTER equipment, all under one roof for\neconomy.\n3    BETTER value, more for your car maintenancs\ndollar.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped\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_1950_01_10","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\/1.0425584","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":"1950-01-10 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":"1950-01-10 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":""}]}