{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2023-02-15","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1952-02-20","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426413\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" \/   \u25a0 \u2022\n1*8. C Budget May\nBe Up $17 Million\n40 to 50 Recommendations to Be *\nHeard Thursday on B.C.H.I.S.\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. .19 -TCP) -British Columbia's\nJl?52-53 budget may be nearly $135,000,000, of about $17,000,-\n\u25a0000 higher than the present.year, it was reported here today.\n1 \u2022 Revenues, however, are ejcpected to take care of all\nexpenditures and leave a substantial surplus.\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 19 (CP)-The inquiry board\neport oh the Hospital insurance Service will be filed in the\nProvincial Legislature Thursday afternoon.\nPremier Byron Johnson tqade this announcement today in reply to a question by'--\"opposition leader Herbert\nlAnscomb.\nf. He said reports on two other, major piejees of legislation\u2014t_.e Industrial CottciliatiCn and Arbitration Act $nd the\n\u25a0Workmen's.Compensation Act\u2014will be filed as soon as they\nlire ready. i - \u2022 '..-.-,\nV;-\u2022 The hospital insurance report is known to .contain\n150,000 to 60,000 words and 40 to 50 specific recommendations.\nIt was compiled by a special seven-man committee\nof,the legislature after a full year's work.\nCanadian Trade\nSurplus $21000,000\ni OTTAWA, Feb.'!. (CP)\u2014Canada coupled climbing ex-\nIports with shrinking imports to produce.a surplus of almost\nl|21,000,000 in foreign trade during.January, the Bureau of\n\u25a0Statistics reported'today. \"'\u25a0''\u25a0- '.'\u25a0\u2022;\nI This was a, sharp reversal gf the trend in .January a\n\u25a0year ago when imports topped exports by $38,400,000.\ni;F. . The Bureau, in a preliminary statement, estimated\n[January _ exports at i. 328,300,000, a boost of $39,500,000 from\nll&st year's $288,800,000. It was the highest Jariiiary export\n[figure.\nImports eased, however; to $307,-\n1400,000 from $327.2&(.,003. The do*\nI dine was most noticeable In pur-\n\u25a0erases from the United Kingdom\nand other Commonwealth countries Wed to $38,200,000 from ^ $43,000 000,\nBritain s   purchases   from   Can-\n[threatencd by a sterling-exchange\n|crlsls.\nIn January, Canada sold Britain\nI about twice as much as she pur-\nIchased.from, that country. It was\nI almost the same story ln trade with\nlother Commonwealth countries.\nI But. In. trade with, the United\n\u25a0State, the traditional trend still\n[prevailed. The surplus, waa In the\nUnited States' favor. .-\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nSales to the U. S. inched ahead to\n$191,200,000 from $190.300,000,. but\npurchases. declined to. $229,400,000\nfrom $233,300,000. The deficit drop\nada, despite dollar troubles, increased to $43,700,000 from $40,200,-\n000. But imports from the U. K.\nswung downward to $24,300,000\nfrom $33,900,000 a year ago.-\nSales to other Commonwealth\ncountries climbed to $22,500,000\nfrom $16,100,000, but Imports by\nCanada slipped to $14,300,000 from\n$22,000,000, :,.'..)\nlederal Surplus Helped\nlurking\nPTTAWA, Feb. 19 (CP)\u2014France. Minister Abbott\nserted-tonight that his top-heavy'and widely-criticized\nbudgetary surplus has been \"an, important element in bringing inflation under control.\" L\nRather than \"a bad thing,\" the surplus has been \"an\nexcellent thing, not just for the government, but for each\nnd every one of. you,\" he said Over the CBC's free-time\nolitical broadcast \"The Na*\n.ion's Business.\"\nThe surplus, which totalled $721,-\n0,000 at Dec. 31 against last, year's\nhudget forecast that it would total\nbnly $30,000,000 for the whole of\n[1951-52, had enabled the government\n> meet cash disbursements without\n(\"invading the already tight capital\nnarket\" with new bond issues.\n\"It has contributed greatly to the\ngeneral strength and health of the\nCanadian economy.\nTR6NGTHENED CREDIT\n\"It has reduced the burden of the\nnational   debt,   ahd -strengthened\nnada's credit in the eyes of the\nvorld \u2014 has Indeed been.one of the\nn'ajor factors in attracting capital\n!rom abroad for Canadian development and enabling , the Canadian\ndour to rank as one of the strongest\ncurrencies of the world today.\"\nTo date this fiscal year the gov-\nirnment has used $300,000,000 of the\njudgetary surplus to meet non-\n> u d g etary expenditures,' leaving\nIbout $400,000,000 available for pay-\nhg off some of the national debt\nind Increasing the government's\nvorking cash balances.\n\u25a0 Ih the nine months ended Dec. 31,\nhe government paid off or withdrew\n'rom the-market about $260,000,000\nit the naUonal debt and, in addition,\nransferred to the1 Bank of Canada\n170,000,000 in cash to meet bonds and\nnterest coupons which had matured\n>ut had not yet been presented for\n>a__ient.     .' .\n-Only a few days ago. It paid off\nmother $50,000,000 of debt In the\nast instalment of the first war loan,\nasued ih 1940.\niU MILLION MORE \/\n\"The \u00bbet result of all these translations is that on Dgc. 31 we had\n!83,0_0.00_ more in our current tank\njalances than we had at the begln-\nling of the year, and this I can as-\njttre you Is a very modest build-up\nSor the heavy expenditures that He\ninmediately ahead.\"\nNew Ballot System\n{For June Election\n!N VICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 19 (CP)\n* \u2014 The Oew alternative ballot\n' system of voting will be proclaimed .In time for the coming\nelection, It was learned today.\n'The system allows voters to\nselect their candidates In-order\nof preference-^1, 2, 3, etc.\nThe election Is forecast for\nJune and there will not be time\nfor * redistribution of electoral\nboundaries, It was indicated today In legislative circlet.\nWismer Denies\nQuitting Rumors\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 19 (CP) -\nAttorney-General Gordon S. Wis.\nmer today denied that he had any\nintention of resigning during the\ngovernment caucus squabble over\npolicy. t\n(A Vancouver newspaper had re\nported ln a dispatch from Victoria\nan Monday that there was a possibility of Mr. Wismer resigning be\ncause of policy differences with Premier Johnson),\n\"Any differences were conflict of\nideas to be settled by democratic\ndiscussions,\" said Mr. Wismer today.\n\"At no time did I ever suggest that\nif I didn't get my way I would\nresign..\"\nIncome tax Official\nOrdered to Appear\nAt Coast Trial\nVANCOUVER, l*eb.'w.*(CP) -\nThe Regional Director of the Federal Income Tax Department may\nbe brought Into court next week\nto give particulars of returns of\nall 26 dependents In the bookmak\nIng conspiracy trial here.\n. A precedent-making   subpoena\nordering the official to appear has\nalready been Issued.\nThe Income Tax department has\nretained Walter Owen, Q.C., to support the stand that income tax is\nconfidential and .not available to the\ncourt.\nMr, Justice Norman Whittaker,\npresiding at the trial, will be called\nupon'to rule on the Contentious\nquestion. '\u2022'..'\nA   refusal   to allow Income tax\nparticulars to become public in\ncivil case was upheld by the B.C.\nSuoreme'Court in 1950.     '\nHowever,' the prosecution feels the\ncircumstances involved' In an important criminal case may present\na different situation. . ;\nInvestigate Mill\nPossibility\nVANCOUVER, Feb, 19 (CP) \u2014\nThe Aluminum Company of Canada\nand the Powell River Company are\ninvestigating the possibility Of\npulp and paper- plant at Alcan's\nNorthern British Columbia develop\nment\nPho VINCI AL\nLl\u00ab\u00abARY\nFifty Yeats of P&ilyService to the Kootenay-feoundary \u2014 1952\nWIATHER FORWAST\nKOOTENAV-A.few clouds with\nUttle change Is temperature. Winds,\nlight Low end high at Cranbrook,.'\nS and 20; Crescent Valley and Revelstoke, 10 and 25.\nmh i'o't'*i*ov>u\nVol I ***\u00ab>-n t*ToaiAoj\u00abi\n-^ :.. zt n***n Kimr-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u25a0;-\nJiiagg ims Suddei||y\nDuring Bertirarid |_tial\nByi D'ARCY CDONNELL - .    -    .\nCanadian Press Staff Writer '\u25a0'\u2022..-', \u25a0.\nHULL, Que., Feb. 19 (CP)\u2014Av water glass;fell and\nshattered on the bench; a gasp sounded through the crowded,\ntense courtroom and the judge who had been addressing\nthe murder-trial jury suddenly slumped in his chair-in the\nthroes-of'death, '!'.,: -. ZZ  -   '. 'T    ''\nWithin minutes\u2014packed with drama and'cortfiision\u2014\nMi*..Justice ValmoreBien Venue,was dead, the victlia of-4\nheart: attack.        \u25a0\u25a0:'.., \u25a0\u25a0'..\nKELSON, B. C, CANADA'\u2014^lto^MYMpi___l.G; FEBRUABY 20.1952\nimtw\nSTRIKE ENDS\nUnion Wips '-'-.-\".\n\u2022PayyBoos.    \u25a0--:\nWINDSOR, Ont, Feb. 19 (CP)\n\u2014A two-day strike at Ford Motor\nCompany's Windsor plant ended\ntoday;. '.'-\"\"\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u2022\nThe United Automobile Workers (CI.O.-C.C.L.) announced at\n4:40 p.m. \"that 97 per cent of Its\nmember\u00ab of an afternoon meeting voted to end the strike.\nSome 200 workers were to be\nback at their Jobs by midnight.\nIt was expected operations will\nbe normal tomorrow.. .'.'\nA' n(w two-year contract accepted\nby the 9000-membor union local provides pay boosts totalling 21 cents\nan hour by June 1, 1993, and other\nbenefita.;  \u25a0\nGeorge Burt,' Canadian director\nof the union, Issued a typewritten\nstafcnjsnt:,''.'.. .'-. Ford workers are\nhappy thatthe strike at Ford Motor\nCompany of Canada's Windsor plant\nhas beer, ended.\"\nAn immediate 15 - cent - an - hour\npay Increase from the present basic\nrate of $1.35 is provided ln the\nagreement. There will be another\nIncrease of three cents an hour next\nJune 1, and .a further automatic\nIncrease of three cents at June 1,\n1953.,\nAlso Included In the agreement\nare an improved seniority clause,\nan Improved wage scale for semiskilled workers, and compromise\nagreements on afternoon and night-\nshift premium..\nA union demand fpr $1000 worth\nof company-paid life Insurance, for.\nfto'id pensioners was not\" successful.\nHusky Attacks\nLie Girl\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Feb. 19\n(AP)-tA.four-year-old girl who was\nattacked by a huge Alaskan Male-\nmute dog at Gold Creek on the\nAlaska railroad.line had to havo 84\nstitches taken in her face to close\nthe wounds, it was learned here\ntoday.\nThe little girl, Mickey Bofner, was\ncollecting the pans, after her family do? team had been fed last Friday, Early, Smith, manager of the\nCurry Hotel 10 miles South of Gold\nCreek reported. One of the animals\njumped on her and threw her to the\nground, slashing, at her face until\nMrs. Botner could drive off the\nanimal, .\nSmith flew a railroad nurse,\nGladys Slmmonson, to the scene ahd\nthen took the little girl to the Anchorage hospital after first aid had\nbeen given. The stitches were iakeij\nat Anchorage,\n\"Her face was Just a mass of\nblood and wounds when we got\nthere,\" Smith related!-\nThe 57-year-old judge had been\ndelivering his charge to the jury\ntrying Rheal Leo Bertrand of Ottawa on a charge of murder.\n.-' Bertrand. 37-year-old employee ot\na dry-cleaning establishment snd a\npart-time psychologis\\ . wsi^charg-\ned with murdering, bis 52-year-old\nwife- of less than.two months last\nNovember in a lonely hunting, cabin\nat Lac Ste. Marie, Que., about o_\nmtles North of Hull. , \u2022'. ,   i\nNEW TRIAL\nThe spectacular case was. expected\nto end tonight, but the, judge's \"sudden death inay result Iri a new trial,\npossibly in a different:locale. ,\nMr. Justice Bienvenue was telling the jury that if thfete waseny\nreasonable doubt In their minds they\nmust give the. benefit of the doubt\nto the, accused, ..But he counseled\nthem not to rertcer an acquittal out\nof sympathy, sentiment or weakness.\nAt this point.he reached fdr a\nglas sof water. He never got it lo\nhis lips. I .crashed on the bench and\njell to the floor.    ... .,\".'.\u25a0\nCourt attendants and police'ran\nto the judge's side, opened his collar\nand placed cold towels on hU forehead.\n, In the prisoner's box, Bertrand\nblanched and then half rose from his\nseat '.\">'.:-'\nAn attendant ordered the courtroom cleared.\nWhile awaiting a doctor, Re _ Paul\nA. Mondoii of Hull administered tha\nlast rites of the church to tbe judge\nThen, the judge was carried to his\nchambers where.Rev. Georges Laur-\nin gave him absolution. He died\nwithout regaining consciousness.\nPARISETILEMENT\nIN QH CRISIS I\nTEHRAN,. Iran, Feb. 19 (AP) \u2014\nPremier Mohammed Mossadegh - and\nan International bank mission tonight Issued a joint communique\nsaying that partial settlement of the\nIranian oij crisis has been agreed\non. But no details wero-disclosed.\nIn j. last meeting before the\nbank's special mission leaves for.\nWashington tomorrow, the negotiators agreed to continue efforts for\nfull settlement of the. disnute with\nBritain over operation of the nationalized oil refineries. '   *\u25a0';'\nCoast May Charge.'.:'\nCredit Unions $250\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Feb! 19 (CP)\n\u2014Credit' unions here may be\ncharged an annual licence fee of\n$250.. -..,'\u25a0-..\nCity Licence Inspector A. N.\nMoore said it would bring credit\nunions *\"lnto line\" with finance and\nmortgage firms which are doing\n\"the same type, of business.\"      *\nAiderinendid not debate the issue, but laid the proposal over for\ntwo' weeks to give credit, unions\nopportunity- Of protesting the suggestion.. ... .'.-; ,'..--'.,.\",. _   .\n\"This Is something that's going to\nraise an awful TiOwl In Vancouver,\"\nsaid Alderman Birt Showier.\nS Centa a Copy\nNo. 254\nElection Certain, Session\nNot to Deal With Major Bills\niiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBIG BEN STOPS.; ;-\nLONDON, Feb. 19 (Reuters) \u2014\nBig Ben stopped striking today\nfpr. the first time since J036.     .\nFour men climbed the 334 steps\nto the top of the famous clock-\ntower of Westminster's Houses'ef\nParliament to give the. bell a\noverhaul and to replace the.robber buffers pit which ihe giant\nhammers, fall,     '\nThe ball la 94 years .old. Its\nreal name, is \"The Great Clock\"\nbut It derived Its nickname from\nSir Benjamin Hall who Installed\nIt In 1858.'       \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0;.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n2\/ SAVED FROM\nSTRICKEN SHIP\n15 Men of 2 ;,\nVessels Missing\n. CHATHAM, Mast, Feb. 19 (AP)\n\u2014Twenty-one survivors' .of , the\napll.-ll.-tWo tanker. Fort .Mercer\nwere removed by raft and breeches buoy lata today, and 13 others\nstayed.\"aboard to help In salvage\noperations. .\n, Calm seas finally cam. to the aid\nof Coast Guard rescuers after Monday's gale-driven storm which rent\nasunder the Mercer and another\ntanker, the Pendleton.\n-There.Vera 85 men aboard the\ntwo .vessels\u201441 on the Pendleton\nand 44 on. the Mercer.       ,\u2022-,.''\nThirty-two . were rescued '.trom\nthe Pendleton\u2014and 38 from the\nMercer.. \u25a0   .: .\n2 Fifteen members, of ,the , crews\nof the two ships are still, missing\nand presumed dead.-l.ipe were .lost\nfrom the Pendleton- arid six- from\nthe Mercer. .-\u25a0 (        .... -    i\nCaptain Oliver Peterson asked\nthe Mercer's chief en|_ajjj-ii&Shlt.\nIii^_nSi> aboaM\u2014ff-ffc-xfantSB' a\ntow. The engineer _o_fei_ed\";witb\nthe boat's owners and' decided to\nawait a salvage tug due from New\nYork.'     y '\u25a0\nThe Eastwlnd and the cutter Un-\nimak stood by to be sure a tow line\ncan be put on the Mercer by the\ntug.\nJohn' Vuhlc, Coast Guard pilot\nflew over the scene-1*.' miles off\nNantucket\u2014ond Said those aboard\nwere in good spirits and had beat\narid power. -   ' '        * - \"\nUnder'extremely hazardous con\nditipns, the cuttot Yakutat this\nmorning pulled four men 6-Orn the\nbow of the Mercer\u201440 miles from\nthe drifting stern\u2014just before it\nrolled over.       i\nFive of the men lost from the\nMercer, wer.e drowned in jumping\nfrom the bow last night\nCutter Wallowing\nNEW YORK, Feb. 19 (AP)- The\nCoast Guard cutter Dexter today\nreached the side of the disabled\nfreighter Helen Stevenson', wallow*\nlog in heavy seas and reported in\ndanger of breaking. In'two.\n-Latest adVces.'reported*the 7288-\nton ship, with 35 aboard, is about\n200 miles -Northwest of Bermuda\nand heading West apparently- trying to (fide out the storm battering\nhen\nSEE ALLOWANCE\nHIKE FOR VETS\n;; Action, Expected ;'.-.>\u25a0\u2022\nAt, Nle>.t,Session     :\nOTTAWA. Febi'lff.(OP) \u2014^The\nfederal government Is expected to\ntake two steps at the forthcoming\nsession   of   Parliament   to   give\nfinancial help to 'the' 39,000 Canadians  benefitting  directly- from\nwar veterans' allowances.\nVeterans Minister Lapointe , said\nat the last session that a parliamentary committee will be set up soon\nafter the House meets Feb.' 28 and\npromised that' Whatever steps are\ntaken Will be made retroactive\" to\nJan, I, 1952.     .' '. *: '..' \\  '\nThe two main steps are likely to\nbe::'; :.' ' '    '.-;;' :\",} V- ;.-\n1. An Increase In the basic allowance to at least $50 from $40\na month for single recipients, to\nat least $85 from $70 for married\nrecipients. -Chances are, In view\nof husk!- Increases In war pension\nrates at the last session, that the\nboosts will ba even higher.\n2.: An Increase In the'total Income, Including allowance, allowed recipients.\n. The allowances\u2014now costing the\n:_ountry $23,500,000\" a' year \u2014 came\ninto being a couple of decades ago\nas an answer to the problem of so-\ncalled burnt-opt Veterans, men'who\nwere aging prematurely betause of\nfrontline service' In the First World\n-War.\nSixty Is the minimum age for general eligibility but overseas veterans\nwho are Unemployable can'qualify\nregardless.of age. Scores of veterans\niof the Second: World' Wet. already\nIreeelve ithem, So. ,do, nearly -9000\nwidows of overseas i servicemen.\n6ov_ Committee\nSef-Up Criticized\n' VICTORIA, B. C, Feb.-19 (CP)\n\u2014Provincial, C.C.j. leader Harold\nWinch today pleaded with the\nGovernment to '.'cease making a\nfarce of the select standing committees\" of the;provincial- Legls-\n,  lature.      . .\nHe made the statement after.the\nHouse had passed a routine motion\nby Premier ByronMohnsOn: naming\na special committee to pick mem\nbers for the select' standing com\nmittees.: \u2022 : .-..--.,.,:\nThe. eight committees are ' on\nstanding orders ano? private bills,\npublic accounts and printing, mining and railways, agrltultuferniun\nIclpal matters, forestry and fisheries, labor, and social welfare and\neducation,       . \u25a0 \u201e . *' ...\nMr. Winch aald the standing Committees are named every year In\naccordance with law. But, he cbarg.\ned,' members of 'the ^ 'Government'\n* _iaye polhf-biank refused 'to allow\nthe: committees to meet\" '' ' \u25a0 ;.\n-The -House'passed -a motion'by\nMr. Winph calling dn the Premier to\nuse'his influence to see that'terms\nof reference are drawnfOr -all fcom-\nmunlttes' and that' the committees\nare allbw-d' to' meet \u2022    ':\nSHOWN IN BLACK Is most of the British Empire,and Commonwealth of Nations over which tha new- 25-ye\u00abr,old; Queen Elizabeth\nassumes soverelgnty-The Engirt, totalling 13.000.WO aquare mllps,\n600,000,000 population, also Includes a multitude of areas too small to\nbe shown here.,..   '\u25a0:'\u25a0]'\u25a0,     \u25a0*\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'      -'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\/\u2022' '  ..\n.'\"''\u25a0 . ^antral Prafi.Canadian\nSUEZ PROBLEM\nTO BE AIRED %\nTalks on Basis        s\u00bb'\nO. Evacuation\nCA-HO, Egypt Feb; 19 (CP) \u2014\nPremier Aly Maher Pasha tonight\nmade his first solid declaration that\nEgypt will renew negoUattoM'Wlik\nBritain.\nHe, told a university, student del.\negatlon that \"Egypt.will enter,Into\nnegotiations with Britain on a basis\nof evacuation (of tha Suez Canal\nZone) and unity with the Sudan.\"\nThis was a definite change in\nprevious Egyptian policy which had\npursued a course of \"ho rlogotlattoria'\nuntil after British\"evaicitatfoh.\" Thaf,\nbecame effective when the Anglo-\nEgyptian treaty for policing th*\nCanal Zone \"was abrogated last October, by the then ruling Wafdlsl\ngovernment. = (\".\u25a0\u25a0\nMaher's statement followed two\ndays of Important talks in London\nbetween Foreign Secretiarjt Anthony\nEden and the Egyptian ambassador,-\nAbdel Fattah Amr Pasha,    -\nHarofd Winch Challenges Ruling\nOf P.-C.s as Official Opposition\nVTCTORf A, B.C., \"F*. 19 (CP)-A general election^\nsoon for British Columbia-Was forecast today in the.speech\nfrom .the throne 'ripening the fourth session of the 22nd provincial legislature. ' .:\n\u25a0'.'to a. rare* occurrence'for opening day, division bells\nrang when C.C.F. leader Harold Winch Challenged the ruling\nof speaker Nancy Hodges that ths Progressive Conservative?\nbe designated the official op-'\t\nposition. .\/ -j\u25a0\u2022-\nThe speaker was upheld 38-11\nwith Independents W. A. C Bennett\n(South Okanagan) and I' Mrs. Tilly\nHolston (Vancbuver-Polht Grey.,\nand Tom Uphill (Labor-Feraie. siding with the eight CCF. members.\nMr. Winch's cnallenge arose trom\nthe Jan. 18 collapse of the.Coalition\ngovernment of Liberals and Progressive Conservatives, which had\nrilled in JI.C. since 1941.\nHerbert Anscomb, then finance\nminister, co-chief jh Coa'itions and\nleader of the Progressive Conservatives, resigned at the demand of\n.frentier Byron Johnson and announced that the 11 Progressive\nConservatives would sit on tne Opposition side of the House,\nMr, Winch maintained' that the\nspeaker could not designate a political party and that at toe last general election in 1949 no Liberals nor\nProgressive Conservatives were el;\nectea but only Coalition members.\nMr. Winch claimed the CCF. wa_\nactually tbe official Opposition.\nMr. Bennett, supporting Mr.\nWinch, said there was no difference\nof opinion between the Liberals and\nProgressive Conservatives.\n: \"Whera is .the difference? Mr.\nAnscomb was fired and the: others\nslipped across.the floor under his\ncoattaila.\" ,        , ,',:'\nMrs. Hodges-ruled that the largest\nnumber .of members in Opposition\nno matter of what political party,\nare thO official Opposition. .\n, Mr, Winch then asked for a div-\n-ision. When th^ProgressiveKonsei*.\nvatives stood with the Liberals to\nsupport the speaker there were\nshouts from , C.C.F. benches: \"It's\nstill a Coalition\" and \"Where's the\nofficial Opposition now?\"\nNO MAJOR LEGISLATION\nNo major legislation will be undertaken-at the session. ' '\nThe throne speech, read by Lieutenant-Governor Clarence Wallace,\nstldl'; .' i \u25a0}.\"> \u25a0 Mjfc.\\ ' '>\n' 'The only business _to be placed\nbefore you will be Of'a*nature considered to be essential for the maintenance of public service. All other\nmatters will lje_ deferred until the\npeople have. been^auorded an opportunity of clarifying the present\nsituation.\" -    \u25a0.;  -\nThe usual, colorful pageantry of\nthe opening was missing today be\ncause of the death of King George\nVl- -.,,**\u2022\nThere was the customary naval\nhonorguardianda 21-gun salute on\nthe arrival of the Lieutenant-Governor, but receptions and social\nevents -were   cancelled   for   the\nmourning period. The legislative\nbuilding   was   draped   In   royal\npurpljs and black.\n'It: has been'freely forecast that\nthe general election will be held thiS\nSummer, probably1 early June. The\nsession is not expected to last longer\nthan four .weeks.\nLIQUOR PLEBISCITE\nThe thronespeech told of the gov-\nernment's intention' to hold a plebiscite on the question of liquor sales,\npossibly at the same time as the\nelection.'.\n;The voters' w)ll likely have\nchance to express an opinion on sale\nof'spirits by the glass In cpcktail\nUrn'At preseht, liquor must be\npurchased from .government, liquor\nstores and only beer is served in\ntaverns. Some private clubs have\na licence to serve liquor.\n'Spine public works projects will\ncome before the Legislature for approval and the government will also\nseek; ratification of the new Dominion-Provincial taxation agreement\nCominco Projeefs\n' VANCQOVEH, Fe_.i lS\/id.Tri\nAnierioan Federation of LabOn oonr\nstructlon unions have signed i an\nagreement ' covering ; another . ,ol\nB.C's multi-million dollar construction-projects. \\     -     --'-j\t\nBusiness agents for 11 city unions\nsigned the contract In Calgary with\ncontractors Sto^e and Webster Canada Ltd. covej-lng the ^jtpansloa\nwork of Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Compsihy. '\u2022'\u25a0\nWage rates for. the Job will be\nnegotiated later Iwhen \"rt5_. area\nconstruction rates have been settled.\nAgreement gives the A.F.L. unjona\na closed shop with dues checkoff,\nfive-day work week- with' overtime'\nrates. The agreement runs, until\ncompletion of the Jobs' uniet. the\nCM. & S. expansion program..\nWork on the. first .phase .'of the\noroject \u2014 the '$10,000.6-0 fertilizer\nplant at Kimberley^is'.expected t*'\nroll in a few, weeks time.\nUnion officials expect -\"over 1000\"\nworkers will be employed,.\nVancouver business a|ehts whi\nattended the Calgary meeting rep.\"\nresented bricklayers, carpenters,\noperating engineers, electrical\nworkers, Ironworkers, laborers,\npainters, plumbers, 'sheet > melaf\nworkers, teamsters and boilermak-\ners unions. ' ] V ' ' -\n$30 Million Liqudr\nPrpfifs in 18 Months\nVICTORIA, ;B;C, Peb. 19y(APX,\n\u2014In the 18 months ending last\nSept, 30 liquor sales Ih British Cos\nlumbla  amounted  to, $92,214,293\n, and -the provincial flovernment\nmade a gi-osn profit of $30,354,435.\n' These figures were made Known\ntoday In the Legislature when At'.\ntorney.General Gordon Wlsmaf\ntabled the report of the Liquor\nControl Board.       . .     ::'\nAnd in This Corner.,.\naur rl\"'edNE C'TY' \"'0h\" F*b' \" (AP)i-w\" H*rf\/ Tompklna ever,\n. 1T-\"in!Pk,n''\u00bb-mayor.of Boyne City, a community of MOOpoBUlitloii-\nIn ihe'Nbrthwest part of Michigan's lower peninsula. In three suo-'\ncesiive elections he'd been handed that Job without opposition.\n\u2022As. this year's election neared, It seemed Tompkins would be;\nunopposed, again.  .\nSo he went about town circulating nominating petitions for 8am\nArbuckle, proprietor of a feed store. ' >:\u25a0\u25a0;'\nj Yesterday the citizens of Boyne City voted. The result was: Ar'--\n\u25a0. buckle 384, Tompkins \u00a334. '\u25a0','.'- i_\u00a5\n.{Tompkins, manager of a farmers' cooperative, confessed he was;\na bit \"surprised\" at the result Nevertheless, he threw an oyster dinner\n<at a local restaurant last night for Arbuckle. \u2022      . ^\nFor a farewell statement he turned to Arbuckle and said:\n\"Well, brotKer, you're on the spot now.\" '.-\"-\u25a0   ;\u2022'\nArbuckle replied: is\n,   \"Well, brother, you put me there . ,.\" 87\nPHILADELPHIA. Feb. 19 (AP)-Marcus Steele was roused before^\ni dawn today by a clatter outside hla house.\nHe, telephoned the police: \"Somebody's trying to break In her^f\nSend soirie men.\"    ' \".- \u25a0     > .     '\u25a0'; \u2022-\nV The radio dispatcher called the suitable patrol car, operated biv\npolicemen Joseph Miller and Albert Marchesa. -.(j\n.\"That's no burglar, that's us,\" the two cops fired back. \"We're.\n.right there now, trying to deliver a message\" i;\nAn, auto rental agency managed by Steele was robbed last week,*\nTha messaae asked him to aooear at a hearing for two suspects.      -.-,\nI\n L^^HPAIIsYNIWS; WEDNESDAY, FEB. 20. 19521\njfoijT AMES TONIGHT\u2014Show* at 7:06\n'BABH\n9:00\nSgKgn***\u2122*.\nnefilOPU .\n\u25bc    Mr      gum)     j^h\nLM-HH\n#aw\nLatest Newa\nCartoon in Color\nHE n-I\u00bb__TIO_At CI_EM_ QUItD OP CAWADA P..8EN\n__>J_____Bi'*\"^^\"^^.\u2014\n, THURSDAY  ONLY\n\"THE BROWNING VERSION\"\nAll Seats Reserved\u2014Telephone 944'^\n\u25a0   i   li   s     \"\nDouglas Roacf To Get\nBus When Snow Goes\nWhen weather conditions improve, the routing, of city\nbuses in Fairview via Douglas Road will be resumed.\nAid. W. S. Smith, chairman of Council's transportation\ncommittee, gave this assurance at Monday-'night's Council\nmeeting. In the meantime, residents in the Douglas-Road\narea are being, .sked ta \"bear with\" the city in Its bus prob-\nlerns.::. . \u25a0\"\u25a0>\u25a0    '-,-... '  \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 .'-\u25a0\u25a0-'\u25a0'\u25a0       -\u00bb----\u2014\nOffice Houri: .1.00-12:00. 2.00-3:00, 7:00-11:00\nSeek Airways\nlicence For\nCify Waferlronf\n, **   , -..ii.    .-\u25a0-''\u2022\u25a0\"\nProviding  Central  B.C. Airways\nLtd. will agree to install a gasoline\ntank and* pump on.the waterfront,\n.   City of Nelspn will apply for a lie.\n<_ice for-an airport covering the required y\/a'sr prea will be sought.\n.This was decided by Council Monday nlght,__-_u_ the air company in\na1 letter, explained it had made application for. a charter licence out\nat Nelson.. Before an operating certificate co.iild, bo obtained from the\np.epartaoiit of,Transport, the airport\nlicence xvia.$. -required and the Der\np'artn.ent'spr\u00abte\"rre.d'it be held -by.. JCj\ncivic authority!,,. Arrangements .'fori\ntfie licence, copld be made MthiW.\ng., I_awsoh','.'th''e\"o_!par__ent's district\nsuperintendent,.^ Vancouver, i\"\n_VCouricil.t6o_-J}is action updi_ ad-\ny|ce of Wiie^C-ilef G. A. McDonald,\nWho said the; company should be an-\nswerabla ,'jfo'r,..' storage   of gasoline,\nlast Summer- he. had seen asniany\nas 20 to-30 drums of various kinds\nOf gas on the wooden-walks on the\n\u25a0 yrater\/rbn,-- an extremely danger,\nous situatl0n.He.had been trying for.\nyears to \"have a gas tank   Install:\ned,  but  no, one  would   take\nresponsibility.\nNew School Board\nMember May Be\nElected or Appointed\nWhen buses had too much difficulty 'negotiating the steep hospital\nhill en route to Fairview) several\nweeks, ago, -buses were rerouted via\nHigh Street to the loop in Fairview,\nomitting Douglas -Road. They, are\nstill using, this route. :\nRESIDENTS' PLEA\nAid, Smith gave this assurance\nafter a letter had been read front\nGeorge K. Robertson; who stated\nhe represented a number of residents in tho Douglas Road area in\nasking for resumption of service,\nHe offered four'suggestions:\n1. Reversal of the Fairview route,\nwhereby buses would go down instead of up hospital hill. \"We are\nat a loss .to understand why this\nroute is not used,\" he wrote. Danger\nof skidding'on intersection of Ver-\nH a byelectibn is decided up'onlM\u00ab s*feet and Edgewood Avenue\nto fill the School Board vacancy' c0\u201eld\u201e\u201ebe.,f\u201e1imIn.__ \"J* \"m.<Jing\ncreated by resignation' of F. N. Em- *\"\nmott. City Council must act within\n30 days. Notice of the resignation\nwas received from School Board by\nCouncil Monday night.\nIt was, explained that if a by-\nelection was not called, the School\nBoard then had the right to appoint\na member subject to {approval of the I\nCity and the 'Department of Education, i\nthe\npas.\nThank-You Badge\nPresented \u00a71\nTrail Scout Feed\nthe\nYoiitliiWffunded\niont\nOne youth, is In hospital as a re-\nsilt-of a, bullet wound inflicted\nWhen one of several youths fired\nfjohnwl^^^dt Brilliant'\nwaa walking; through* the thicket\nnear Ootischehla' When a shot hit\nJjlnr ln-the leg. He,was 'taken to\"\ntrall-Tadanac Hospital where .hfs,j\ncondition Is reported \"good\".\ni.The youth who fired tha shot\nallegedly told police he was 'aiming\nat a tree and failed to see lebedoff\nin the thicket '\nI R.C___P.   are   Investigating   the\naccident.\nk.     SUGAR-GIANT\nGROUND CHERRY\n, An entirely on? type of\ntbe popular Ground\n-Cherry, but i.jumbo in\naire; richer tnd tweeter.\nGrowl from seed the\nfirtt yeir sad produces\nio abundance of golden J\nyellow fruit, ap to 2 Vi,\nInches' In diameter like\nmedium tomato.i Id\nTake little garden space. Mike\n.reserves and mirmalidfes. Quick,\n__   . ..wprhttt. Be sure to enjoy this\n\u2022fcluble new, fruit in your garden this seaso\ni *C D I? C   0UR Brt> \"31 SEED\n' \" ' If^fefe'AWP  NURSERY  BOOK\nDOMINION    SEEL)    HOUSE\nc r o _1 e i o w i  on\n!___*&.\nTRAIL, 'B.C.-Flfth Trail Scout\nAssociation held Its seventh annual\nfather and son banquet In* Elks Hall\nTuesday night with nearly 200 Cubs,\nScouts' and fathers present, 'A turkey dinner, was prepared and served by ,the*__others' Auxiliary.\nCub Hubbersty proposed a toast\nto the Queen. Toast to the Chief\nScout Was offered t>y ScOut L. Hol-\nlett and* responded to by ScoutmasterS. Saprunoff. Mr. Saprunoff also\ngave an outline ot, the. aims of\nShouting. '\n-Badges and eorda were presented\nby Scoutmaster Qarvln to Scout\nMax Spooner, Gary Johnston, Lloyd\nMeir and Lome Hewlett'All these\nreceived first aid badges.\nEagles patrol won the cup for best\npatrol, under. Patrol,Leader Gary,,\nJohnstof ' -.\"'I ' \u25a0 ''\u25a0\"' '\"\u25a0\".' \"\nA novielty item, never carried out;\nbefore in Trail, was tho presenting\nof thank-you badges to three members of the Mothers' Auxiliary for\nten years' continuous service: Mra.\nSyd Spooner, Mrs. Levlck ahd Mrs.\nBarge, and also to two fathers, W.\nFoisy and C. Hiring,\nA toast to the.ladies was proposed\nby Jack Kemp.\nGuests from the Central Scout\nExecutive, Elks Lodge, Colombo\nLodge and nine Scout leaders attended.\nand \"caution\" signs.. As a down\nhill, the hospital hill would be less\nsteep _than  other, hills  regularly\nused.   .;,..,      I,,-''-.-,-' ' .''\u25a0   :\n2. Reversal of, route to go via\nGyro Park Road, down Silica Street\nand on to Baker Street .' '\u25a0\u25a0\ni, Continuance' of present route\nwith additional service to where.1\nhospital hill meets Douglas Road.,\n' JBoth of these suggestions,would\nbe workable, but would,not be as\nsatisfactory or economical aa the\nfirst the \"writer felt\n4. Resumption of the former route,\nwhich wohld depend on facilities\navailable to handle heavy loads at\nrush hours.\" ' \u25a0-,-.' .'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022 I\n\"Lack of service Is serious enough\nIn Itself, but the consequent drop\nin property values js also a matter\nof deep concern to taxpayers of\nthe district,\"\nAid. Smith had these replies to\nthe writer:- \u25a0 v.\n1. Both A. C. (Les) Hall, transportation superintendent' and drivers'are opposed to reversing the  .._ ____,.. ___,\nroute   to   descend   hospital   hill. I Douglas Road.\n\"They don't' Hke -the Idea of 'approaching Edgewood Avenue on\nthe Vernon Street slope.\"\n2. By going via Gyro Park Road,\nbuses would be travelling beyond\ncity limits, a service the city la not\nlicenced to give. Owing to narrowness of the road,- have to be made\na one-wily ..road, thus blocking\ntraffic in that eresi, :\n:3. By operating a special service\nto the top of the hospital hill,\nbuses would lose Fairview\nsengers.    \u2022    ...\ni Under the present conditions,\nif buses are to proceed up hospital\nhill loads would have to be reduced.\nIn view of these objections and\nof pendmg prospects, * the transportation committee had decided to\nuse its temporary Fairview route\nuntil weather, conditions Improve.\nNEW BUS COMING?\nTwo lower differential gears have\nbeen ordered for buses which would\ngive greater power tor negotiating j\nhills such as the hospital hill Purchase of a new bus will probably\nbe included in the 1952 estimates.\nAid, J, H. .Coventry passed on a\nsuggestion that buses Include Douglas Road in their runs except during rush hours when heavy loading\noccurs, aa a temporary measure,\nMr. Smith, in stating the department had been advised against\nusing hospital, hill until tbe snow\ngoes, mentioned .that the temporary\nrouting via High Street waa meeting with warm \u25a0 approval from\nresidents in that area: \"We can't\nplease everyone,\" he said, \"we can\n'only hope, to please the majority.\".\nThe transportation 'committee\nchairman's remark that High Street\nresidents were taking advantage- of\nthe new route, brought a- suggestion\nfrom Aid. Arthur Foster,that buses\nmight be placed on an alternating\nschedule \u2014 one trip to Fairview\nvia High Street and the next via\nSS\u00a3__ \u00ab\"\u00abpi\u00ab tor\nDented Appeal   \"as Cominco Approval\nVICTORIA, 8,'c.; Feb. 19 .CF> -\nAn investigation into a claim by en-\nappellant .that' he bad previously\nbeen .denied permission to appeal\nhis conviction has' been ordered by\nthe Court of Appeal.\nAlan, Macforlane, Crown counsel,\nwas ordered to check Into a Story of\nEugene Bruch who told the court\nthat Nelson. B.C. prison authorities\nhad .refused. \u25a0 to let hint appeal, ln.\n1850.. ' '\"'-'; ':... \u25a0'\u25a0\n. Bruch la serving .three years for\na series of. convictions lr\nforgery\/' ...._#, \u2022\nIncluding\nHockey Receipts\n$6684 in January\nfor construction of a new'regional\nhospital for Nelson district the Hospital Board -Of Directors was told\nby President George'Turner at the.\nfinal meeting of the Society's fiscal\nyear.,\nR. \u201e W., Diamond, vice-president,\ngeneral manager . and director of\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany, told Walter Hendricks,\nM.LA., Mayor Joseph Katy, E. A,\nj__   \u25a0__   >_:_.\nthe need of the hospital and would\ncooperate with them towards its\nconstruction! '\nC. M. is S. operates power plants\non Kbotenay River and mines in the\nSalmo area and these would be included in territory incorporated into an improvement district for development of a regional hospital.\nThe Boar_ felt a good start had\nThe work that is in need of-being\n__'_.--\u2022-       \u25a0-__\u25a0  .    _ I done jh the Christian, Church can\n__?&* ifcftp_? '. J\u00abnu\u00bbry:*\u00abe be  likened  to  the  dry  cleaning\n**\"\u2022*   Civic Centre Commission | business,   Rev.   D.   Greene.   B.A.,\n$6684.75,     v.....\u00ab  .witimiabiun\nStatement received by City Council\nMonday night showed.\nThe total was made up of $2876\nfrom reserved seats; (1823,29 in adult\nadmissions: $1713 In contract tickets\nand $472.50 in children's, admissions; Cash in the bank at Dec. 31\nwas $3110.19.\nUnder disbursements, hockey\nclub share was shown- as $5077.64;\nCommission's share as $2235.02; provincial tax, $371.67; advertising $215;\nB.C.A.H.A.,. $137.42.' Cash ' In bank\nJan, 31 was $1759.19. '.\nUnder the general account receipts\nwere $480 from the auditorium, $370\nfrom the amusement hall; $887.30\nfrom-general ..arena activities ahd\n$1938.47 from hockey; $723.42 from\nthe curling rink and $251 from the\nlibrary and Women's Institute;\nBank overdraft of. $3003.11 at Dec.\n31 was reduced to $579.19 at Jan. 31.\nDisbursements included $1478.29 tor\nthe arena, $482 for'the curling,rink\nand $365.97 for administration.\nMayor To Fly\nTo Coast Meet\nMayor Joseph Kary,plans to flj\nby C.PA. Wednesday to Vancouver\nwhere he will attend the specia.\nmeeting of the Union of B.C. Municipalities Thursday. He will be a voting delegate for the City of Nelson.\nThe meeting will deal with' thi\nreport of W. E. Hobbs, Winnipeg ex\npert on municipal taxation, who las\nNovember was appointed to dlrec\nan intensive search by the Union fo\na solution to the pressing problem o\nschool costs at the municipal level.\n ____\u201e _\u201e.. ,.\u201e\u201e    Copies of the lengthy report wer\nbeen made and directors expressed received by Council Monday night\n__.___..,, ___jor josepn Kary, E. A. ithe hope that the year would see Purpose of the meeting is to eh|\nMann and Mr. Turner, special'del-' further plans for building, deavor \u00bbto obtain a united front i\n .\u2014_ .__ \u2014i \u25a0\u2014 gjj j \u00a3 municipalities so that a pro.\nposal regarding school costs at thl\nmunicipal level, can be laid beforj\nthe Legislature.\nCity Truck Repair\nWork Behind; To\n\"Catch Up\" Uptown\nWith the City's garage unable -tl\ncope with heavy demand fdr repair}]\nof vehicles, necessary repairs an J\nmaintenance will be carried out al\nNelson garages.\nR. D. Hickey; public works super\nIntendent, was authorized by City\nCouncil Monday night to hav.\ntrucks repaired'elsewhere when hi\nsaid work was piling up. Lubrication jobs were waiting,, brakes\nneeded adjusting and clutch trouble\nexisted.-   .\nCouncil felt equipment could nol\nbe allowed to deteriorate and that\nfurther delay would send cost!\nhigher.\nDeanery Meeting Speaker (alls For\nEffort To Improve Fabric of Church\nSchool Costs\nUp $25,000\nThe city's share of flnanolno\n1952 school costs In tha Nelaon\nSchool District No. 7, has Increased $26,000 over last year.\nEstimates, presented to City\nCouncil at Its Monday night\nmeeting, showed the municipal\nportloi. of proposed expenditures\nai^$168,316, eor^pared with about\n$133,000 In 1981.-    :. \\j\n' Total aohool tax requisition this\nFinal Reading Given\nProperty Bylaw\nFinal reading waa given Bylaw\nNo. 1168 authorizing purchase for\n$1000 of Rosemont property by City\nCouncil Monday night The property\nowned by Joseph Logus, Lardeau\nvalley resident, will be used as _\nsite for a substation, to be built in\nconjunction with the new power\ntransmission, line.\nLate Church Music\nNot Vandalism   ,     ,\nStartled residents of the Trinity\nChurch area who wondered If ,\n-.,\u2014..... ..... unurcn area who wondered If van-\nyear Is $340,169, of whloh the rural dais had entered the .church Mon-\naree'a share Is 63.46 per oent Or day night worried needlessly.\n$181,884. -is.-.- sa -       ...\n':\u2022' -A'Treat, :v;\n' For You' ah .^.Vour Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n\u00ab4 Front St. Nelson\nEstimates  this  year  are  for\n$497,590, astlmates last year were\n$424,439 and actual expenditures\nlast year, $435,069.\nThe Increase In this year's es-\n, tlmntei Is principally In teachers'\nsalaries, which'have been estimated at $307,849. Last year salaries\n< east the school board $247,180,\nThe difference between the tax\nrequisition total and the estimated\n..expenditures Is accounted for In\nother monies the school board re-\ngrants from the' yvarnment\nAbout 11 p.m., the loudspeakers\nIn the church spire gave out with\nsome choir music for a few minutes. Tuesday the Daily News was\nasked if some unwelcome visitors\nbad been in the church,\nA call to the home of Rev, and\nMrs. A. R. T. Dixon cleared the air.\nIt seemed there were visitors, but\nthey were welcome. The Doukhobor choir had been practising for\nseveral hours In readiness for their\ncoming tour to the Coast and In\nexplaining the sound system to the\n-Executive\nMeets Here Today\nSixteen boarda of trade end\nchambers of commerce in the district will be represented today at a\nmeeting of the executive of the\nAssociated Boards ot Trade of Eastern B.C. ln Nelson.\nThe session, to be held ln morning and afternoon, will begin at\n10 o'clock. I\nThis will be the last executive\nmeeting prior to the annual meeting'In Creston March 10 and 11.\nThe executive consists of the president Dr.t!. H. Wright of Trail; two\nvice-presidents,' presidents of all\nmember organizations,-and two permanent members, Guy Constable of\nCreston and M. C Donaldson of\nSalmo.\nrector of Grand Forks Holy Trinity\nChurch, told the. meeting of the\nWest \u25a0 KOotenay Deanery' af the\nAnglican Church of the Redeemer\nTuesday- evening\n' In  exp{anatlon.  he  said,  there\nwere so many spota and wrinkled\nand blemishes Ip the fabric ot the\nChristian Church, such as Indian\nschools  without. sufficient staff, a\nthinning of the ranks of the clergy,\nand Sunday Schools with too few\nor untrained teachers. As in cleaning 'spots from garments \"we use\nsolvent, so we must use' the Love\nof God in our hearts to clean the\nspots   from   the   fabric, of   the\nChurch,\"   he  continued.   A  good\nscrubbing with a brush was often\nneeded to remove stubborn spots\nwhich   suggested   expenditure   of\nenergy   to  remove  some  of  the\nblemishes; for wrinkles, he said, a\ngood Ironing does .wonders for a\ngarment, \"so the heat, of our zeal\nand   enthusiasm,'  the  steam,   our\nperspiration -and  our ; inspiration,\nand the pressure, our willingness to\nbring our weight to bear on the\nproblems of the day, with these we\ncan i improve   the  fabric, of  our\nChurch.\"\nChristians are \"heirs of the past\nand custodians of the Church which\nChrist gave us, and which we must\nhand down to future generations\nunimpaired,\" Mr. Greene said.\nThe text \"Christ also loved his\nChurch and gaVe himself for It,\"\npoints to. the \"way of sacrifice of\nthe time and energy to cleanse, preserve, sanctify, Improve and extend\nthis Church which we have Inherited,'' he said, \"We must take\nunto ourselves the commandments\nChrist gave to his disciples \u2014 'Go,\n|-Teach, Preach, Do.'\"\nThe service was opened by Canon\nW. J. Silverwood of the Church of\nRedeemer, while the lessons were\nread by Rev.- T. Mitchell of Nakusp\nand Rev., J. Snowden of Kaslo.\nSpecial prayers were given lor the\nnew Queeh, and for the meetings to\nfollow after this opening- session.\nArchdeacon B. A, Resker Closed the\nservice with prayer.\n80CIAL HOUR\nAfter the service the {fathering\nrepaired to the parish hal) for a\nsocial hour during which a musical\nprogram Was'enjoyed and refreshments were served. Taking part in\nthe-program Were Miss Audtiy\nNorgrovd who gave as a piano solo\nChopin's \"Military Polonaise\"; Miss\nBarbara Le\"a singing \"Solvelg's\nSong\" by Greig, and the \"Second\nMinuet\" by Besley, Ross DykS and\nMichael Fraser played two clarinet\nsolos as the Adagio movement from\nBeethoven's \"Vathetique Sonata\"\nand an \"Arioso\" by Bach. Mrs.\nJames Fraser was accompanist tot.\nboth the clarinet numbers and Miss\nLea's solos.\nRefreshment, were served by the\nladies of the Redeemer Service\nClub.\nRATE REVISION ASKED\nA request from W. H. Anderson\n819 Carbonate Street tor a revision,\nln his water rates! for 1948 to 1951\nMondsy night was referred by Cltj)\nCouncil to J. A. Maber, waterwork\nsuperintendent tor a report\niiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiri\nlierte'ti t%\nValuable Stand of Timber in City\ncalves such, as $122,000 In  bails, ___-___i\"\"_*__.\"_ J\"\"\"\"4 \u00bb-rorem io mi\n ___ _._    '..  \u25a0f.'SfrW 'n nano interested district .btoud  Mr  niv li-*  \" T~_r_\u2014: ,,\u00ab\".._\u00abmen-\nCilyr Employees\ntalks Under Way\nNegotiations are uncer way between members of Nelson Civic Employees' Federal Unton local 339 and\nthe city on the 1952 wage agreement\nCity Council, at a committee meet-\nLEENBURN IS LOWER IN ASH\nLEENBURN CONTAINS NO WASTE\nLEENBURN DOES NOT CLINKER\nLEENBURN IS EASILY FIRED\nKLEENBURN GOAL\n\"The Housewife's. Delight\"\nCharges of Bus Drivers Denied\nBy Mayor; Received No Warning\nFirst Intimation he had that city [plained   lower\nFor IMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nPHONE 889\n<\u25a0\n, .. ___.au w_> ciiyipiained   lower   differential   gears\nbus drivers were walking off the which would provide more power\n*-*\u2022     '     \" \u2022U1 'had been ordered);     r  \u25a0\nMayor Kary denied the drivers'\nstatement that, city garage mechanics had said all but one of the\nbuses were unfit for the road. The\nmechanics, he said, were wprklng\nconscientiously to keep the buses in\noperation. Lack of cooperation from\nthe three'drivers was cited.\nWork waa certainly needed, bjtt\n , \u2014 .__.   ... _\u2122 the buses were hot in the condition\nnot appear for work Monday. Hla claimed.\n\"--* \"-     waa In seeing    Mr. Hall waa' doing hi* \"level\nfor  the best\" and working hard to keep\nthe buses In operation.\n,  , , _- ... \u00bb.,. (l*s)     He Invited the trio to provis the\nHall, transportation superintendent charge that Council -members were\nwaa unjustified. \"\u25a0 '       . *,       i__.-*--\u2022\t\nJob came at 10:30 Sunday night\nMayor Joseph Kary said Tuesday.\nHis Worship was commenting on a\nstatement by'the three drivers in\nTuesday's paper.\nMayor Kary said he. had not received an invitation to a Sunday\nnight meeting at which a Walkout,\nvote was taken, However, he received a telephone call late that\nnight advising him the men would\nnot appear for wor\"\nfirst concern then\t\nthat the buses operated\npublic; .\nHe^felt criticism of A. t.\n... _,\u2014_ on amendments to the 1951 agreement they\nare asking.\nA committee recommendation that\nL. S. Gansner be asked to negotiate\non behalf of the city was approved\nat Monday night's regular Council\nmeeting. , -. J\nThe. Labor Relations Board Is\nbeing asked to nullify local 943 as\nbargaining agent for the Nelson\nFire Department, now on Its new\npartial volunteer basis, Purchase of\n10 new chairs for the Council chamber, and two stand ash trays and a\ncoat' stand' for the Mayor's office,\nwere approved, and the public\nworks department '-\/as Instructed to\nremove a gas retort at the gas works\nplant\n. .... ...-\u201ei_>-_- were\n .  ,i      I Interfering with the drivers. Some\nThe former drivers' description members used the buses as citizens\nbf the buses as irt \"(Usgracefuj and Is\"\"1 A'-* m \" \"  \"\"\nTOWLER\nFUEL & TRANSFER\nPHONE     889     NELSON\nv 5_6 STANLEY STREET\n  ...   _,._,0iu-eim ana\ndangerous condition\", drew response\nfrom toe mayor that they were \"definitely safe\", had passed Inspection\nand had met all specifications.\nThe bus motors were not up to\npar, he admitted, but every effort\nto repair them was being expended.\n(Council' Monday night approved\nordering of $1110 ln parts on,hand\nat'the Coast-_*\u00abs *\u2666 \u2022\u2014- -'--'\n  ...\u00bb _0 -lu-.ns\nand Aid. W. S. Smith, transportation\nchairman, who had always used the\nbuses for normal travel, sometimes\nrode them in his capacity of chairman for Informative purposes. This\nwould be expected of an alderman\nIn performing his duty- as transportation chairman.\nHe felt that given a little more\n_....,_ .,. fjnu in parts on,handI time, the city would have\nthe Coast and lt was also* ex- the\"wrinkles\" Ironed out\nHospital Deficit\n$ _-... in Monlh\nFinancial'report of January for\nthe Kootenay Lake General Hospital showed a deficit of $4000, it was\nreported at the Board of Directors\nmeeting Tuesday evening.\nHarry Burns, in giving the report,\naccorded the deficit to $2000 increase\nIn wages and $1500 payment to the\nWorkmen's Compensation Board,    i\nSeduction- ln Society membership\nfees will be considered, it was de-\n_____  .*'-'- \u2022-<\u25a0*\u2022\u25a0     -   (jje\nApproximately 220,000 board feet.\nof commercial timber stands in Nel-1\nson Memorial Park, all disease free,\nCity Council has been advised by\nthe B.C. Forest Service. - v  '\nAdvice of forest officials was\nsought when the City received offers to cut the timber, describing\nthem aa badly diseased.\nSurvey by R. A, Waldie, silvicul-\nturtst and assistant forester, reveal-\ned that only the white pine showed\ndisease and 75 per cent of this species was healthy or had only minor\ninfection. Potential saw lumber Included 1.3,000 f.b.m. of white pine;\n47,000 f.b.m. of Douglas fir; 24,000\nf.b.m. of lodgepole pine; 500 of hemlock and 3000 of larch. There were\nalso about 100 cedar poles and an\nundetermined number of cords of\npoplar cordwood.\nCouncil deci_._ Monday night to\nfollow advice of the forest officials,\nwho felt the main body of timber\nshould be kept intact as long as possible unless the burial grounds had\nto be expanded or some forest plague visited the area, '\nDOUBLE VOLUME\nI General age class of the larger\ntrees was 60 to. 70 years and it was\nsuggested they should be held for\nat least 40 years, ft was recognized\nthat local forests should be harvested In rotation of not less than 100\nyear, and if the stand remained until the end of this rotation period;\nthe volume realized at the final harvest would be i. ore than double the\noresent volume.\nPresence of disease waa not considered sufficient argument to dispose of trie entire stand at present,\nIf Interest was expressed In legging the 20,000 f.b.m. of diseased\npine, the Forest Service Would oe\nwilling-to mark trees to be cut\nThe extreme accessibility ot the\nstand would enable the City to demand top prices for any products]\ncut o nthe area. It was reasonable\nto expect this lumber, if offered .for\niaU 40 years henCe, by virtue of the\nincreased volume and its ready accessibility a. greater monetary return would be provided than It\nwould If sold now.        , ' .\nJhe timber, cruise Included all\ntrees over eight inches In diameter.\nAges of trees of merchantable size\n(over 12 inches in diameter at a\npoint 4_i feet off the ground) varied\nbetween 50 and 7. years with-many\nbetween 60 and 65. They were adding IVi to 2 inches in diameter every\n10 years.\nLOGY, LISTLESS,\nOUT OF LOVE\nWITH LIFE?\n. i__ _-_\u00ab__ in.        \u25a0\nU__ __uup jour liter bib...\njump wit ol bed min' te jn\nnotflowing\nLife not worth Ihrliu? It may bo tho liver!\nIff _ factt.If your IIver bile li not flowing\nftwdy your food may not digest . . . gas\nblMUS up your etomach . . . you feel con-\natilmted and all the fun and sparkle to out\nof lit-. That'b when you need mild, gentle\nn_r,___M TJ..1- *\u2022\u2014 *-\t\nui mo.   .nai _ when you need* mild, gentle\nCarter) Little Liver PMa. Yon see Carters\n\u2014_ _-_,j\u2014 _.__>_,vo -root. '-Hla should\nOx you right up, make you feel that happy\ndays ar* hero again. So don't stay sunk, got-\nCartars Little Liver Pills. Always have them\nen bond. Only 36o from any druggist.\nHousehold moving ratae ar.\nabout the same with all firms.\nBut the service tells thk atofyl\nWe offer' fine equipment, expert personnel, thorough do- .\npendability \u2014 to make your\nnext move safe and carefree.\niPbone for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\nPhono 33\n719 Joker St.  Nelson, B.C ]\n(NorWpierican)\n\\ptfck\/\nIsssJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUHHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIII\nThe Weathei\nCLA88IFIED ADS GET RESULT^\nB.C.'s Best Feminine Curlers\nfc-i-t'\u2014 . SS\\Si\u00bb-\"**\u00ab~\nTwelve top ladles' rlnk8' representing the best In the province,\nwill open play here Friday in the\nsecond annual B.C. Ladles' Curling\nChampionship. \u2022\nVancouver-will send the largest\ncontingent, four rink's, to defend the\ntitle won last year by Mrs. V. Lytle\nat the Coast event.   ',  -   -'\nNelson and Trail! will have two\nquartettes each while single entries\nwill come from Kimberley. Cranbrook, Prince George and Beaverdell.       '       *\nThe two-day event will also Include two open or bonspiel events\nIn Which,at least four-Other Nelson\nrinks will comoete Opening draws\nwill ftp announced\" Thursday. '\nHere Friday\nSkips In the championships are as\nfollows: .''-.'\nVANCOUVER: Mrs. M. Porter,\nMrs; C. Pitman, Mrs. V,. Brown and\nMiss-M-. Brunn,   V\nKIMBERLEY: Mrs. L. Maartman;\nCRANBROOK: Mrs. K. Sherling.\nliTRAlU! Mrs. J. 'Pattullo Mrs. C.\nGraham.\nBEAVERDELL: Mrs. E. donas.\nPRINCE GEORGE: Mrs. F. Oils-\ntafSon, '' - -\u25a0 \u25a0\nNELSON: Mrs. L. Wallace,\nV. Mannings.\nMrs,\nSIDEWALK PLEA\nCONSIDERED\nRequest for a sidewalk on Second\nStreet was referred by City Council\nMonday night to Public Works department . .'\u25a0\u2022'.;\nAttaching copy of a -similar appeal he made last year, J, G. Ben:\nnett, MB Second Street, said it was\nimpossible to finish the grounds\nuntil a sidewalk was built. .  . .- \u25a0\nHe saw Second Street as next In\nimportance to Nelson Avenue end\nvehicles often travelling at exeesr\nelve speeds made it dangerous for\nadults and children who had to\ntake to the road in that area.\nIt was explained to Council that\ndelay last yea\/ bad been because\nwater mams Had to be Installed In\nthe 700 block. Estimates had .been I\n__,.#__. ;.-,. *       \u25a0\nNELSON      ^ 25\nEdmonton ...ZZZ.. - i\nKamloops .... ...Z1Z.\" 15\nPenticton ., ;.\u201e  ig\nVancouver . i, \"' 26\nVictoria            *\"~ no\nKimberley\nCrescent Valley\nKasjiA \t\nSpokane  \"Z\nChicago .-,...\u201e.__\nLoa Angelaa-.'.\t\nSPECIAL\nLUMBER SALE\nPrior to, starting our new sawmill, we must tell\nour. present inventory of lumber. We offer some\ngrades of studding, sheathing, ete. at a price at\nlow as $30 PER 1000 \u2014 TERMS CASH\nIf planning new building or a repair job, it will\npay to see us and stock up now.\n\u25a0   *\u2022 .'\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0'.\nGlacier Lumber Co. Ltd.\nmmL\"\"\" Phone 1200\nAdditlonil Nelson entries |n*'the S'*-'01 8\u2122dm\u00ab mi *Vb*m\u00bb at\nopen evehts are Mrs. E. Little\/Mrs. that, time. \u25a0\nA. Nuyens, Mrs. M. Craig ind Miss   PHONE  144  FOR  CLAS8I. IED\nV. Stan. > - Buy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n<%Wl...\nPAUL ROBE JON\nSINGING AND SPEAK TO THE CANADIAN PEOPLE\nQy\u00ab\u00bb CJAT TRAtt\nFRIDAT, Feb. 22nd, 5:15 p.m.\n:_    Special Mine Mill Broadcast\n For Spring\nIt'sRed\nBright.;. Gay..,.\n. and Heart-Warming.\nAs Illustrated\n$Q!\n95'\nTHE SHOE\n\"CENTRE\nPhone 191 663 Baker St\nfllllllllllllllHIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIII.IIIIIIIII\n[iiiiiiiiiiiii .minium\nRevelstoke \u2014 All roads open.\nBanding In progress. Small slides\n_ ee Valley Lake. Temperature 12.\nColumbia \u2014\"AH roads open. Icy.\nSanding in progress.   Temperature\n\u25a0IB.\nHope-Princeton Highway \u2014 Good\nondition. Weather clear. Temperature two above.\nOkanagan Valley \u2014 All main\nbroads open, good condition.\nRossland-Costlegor \u2014 Good condition.\nCastlegar-Nelson-Kootenay Bay \u2014\n|Two Inches fresh snow. Sanded.\n.Sbawell-Goatfell \u2014Fair.-\nCranbrook \u2014 .Mostly bare.\nFernie \u2014 Good condition, some\n(toy spots.\n\u25a0Nelson-Nelway \u2014 Open. Two inches fresh snow.\nRosslahd-Paterson \u2014 Good condition.   Temperature:   Rossland   20,\neston IB, Cranbrook 10) Fernie 6.\nFatal Injuries In\n[Staircase Fall\n_a__6_J____Y, B.C. - Fatally injured in a tall down a staircase at\nIhome, Marie Joseph Edmond Gar-\nIneau, age 54, died at McDougall Hospital, He had been a machinist in\n|Sullivan mine operations for the\npast seven years, and an employee\nof the mining company since he\n|came to Kimberley tn 1920.\nHe waa bom and grew up ln Perce\nSaspe, Quebec, and served in the\nCanadian Army during tha First\nWorld War as gunner with the 87th\nbattalioii for four yean overseas, He\nettled here after his discharge. In\n0 he Joined the B.C.O.R. Regl-\nnt in Cranbrook, receiving his\nhorable discharge ln 1945. He was\nI member of the Kimberley Branch\njf the Canadian Legion which took\n>art in the funeral services'Monday\nit McPhorson Funeral Home. '\"\nHit *\u00ab(ile, tho termer Margaret\nfalkley who grew up In Cranbrook,\nind three daughters, Corinne, Marie\nmd Eileen survive him at their\nCimberley . home, and two. sisters\nind five brothers ln Montreal.\nSLOCAN SCHOOLS\nTO RECEIVE\nTAPE RECORDER;,\nSLOGAN -'CITY, B,SC, - Slocan\n'arent-Teacher Association i plans\nhe purchase of a tape recording\nMachine for use In the. City's\nichools.\nAt tbe February meeting of tha\n?.-T.A., the motion was carried by\nhe 35 members present. The machine will be used in child guid-\ninee and other activities.*'\u2022;-,,\nA film,'\"Radiant Rockies\" show-\nng many scenes, from tbe Rocky\nMountains, was .shown.\nClinic Includes\nGolden, Invermere\nThe East Kootenay Health Clinic\nhaa been expanded to Include\nSchool Districts Nos. 4 and 18. This\nnewly enlarged district'will Include\nthe district of Invermere and Golden. Dr. W. G. Watts, the Unit Director, will continue to have his office at Cranbrook.\nKelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF\nHEALTH\"\nPrescriptions\nDrug' Patents   -\nand Sundries\nPHONE\n1203\nRES.\n394-L\n433 Josephine St.\nBfc\nKootenay-Boundary Liquor\nSales Top $1 Million Mark\nP-C District Head\n, (Speolal to the. Daily News)\nVICTORIA, B.C. - The Liquor\nControl Board sold ?60,575,714vworth\nof liquor to British Columbians during tha 1990-51 fiscal year, according\nto an annual report filed ln the Legislature today by Attorney-General\nGordon Wlsmer.-\n- Profit from these sales was .18,-\n773,138.\nHere Is a list of the net profits bf\nindividual liquor stores in the Kootenay-Boundary: ' Golden, $49,581:\nCranbrook $198,351; Kimberley\n$132,354; Fernie $101,308; Michel\n188,714; Grand Forks $58,577; Greenwood'$30,614; Kaslo $24,795; New\nDenver $59,917; Creston $63,097, and\nNelson .267,889.\nAccident Accounts Flood In . . .\nDriving Caution Urged to Overcome\nFreak Conditions; 300 Cars Held Up\n\"Freak ldng conditions\" caused\na number of accidents over the\nweekend, and a aecond traffic tie-\nup of more than 300 cars on the\nGranite Road and Taghum hills\nMonday. R.C.M.P. controlled traffic most of Monday afternoon and\nevening, when cars found if Impossible to traverse the hills either\nway.      \u2022 ,\nDepartment of Public Works sanding-trucks were on the'job continuously ln an effort to relieve icing\nconditions. ' \u25a0':     -   . \u25a0'\nThe North Shore road was similarly hazardous.\nPolloa warned motorists to use\nextreme caution In driving on all\nhighways and roads In the district Nelson Detachment, R.C.M.\ntrlct Nelson Detachment,\nR.C.M.P., waa flooded with reports\nof weekend accidents, mostly miner Ip nature, end causing over\n$1000 damage to vehloles.\nSome. $150 damage waa caused ,to\nan English car when the rear end\nof a panel   truck   swung 'Into the\nstopped vehicle on the Grpnite Road\nhill. While turning, a car slid into\na loaded school bus on the same hill\nMonday afternoon. Damage Was not\nextensive. <  ,\nFour accidents .Were reported on\nthe Blewett Road. A car driven by\nClement Price of' Bonnington was\nin collision with another '49 sedan,\ncausing approximately $275 damage\nto both vehicles. W. A. Hill of Blewett was driver of the sedan.\n'Some $450 damage was caused, in\na'second collision on Blewett road.\nDrivers of the vehicles Were Robert\nIrving of Nelsoh and Albert C. Ap-\npel of Bonnington.\n, Details of two. more accidents,\nboth reported to be of a minor nature with less than $100 damage,\nwere not available.    .\nNelson City Police had a comparatively quiet weekend.'Only two\naccidents Were reported here,\nA three-ear accident on Nelson\nAvenue Saturday morning' caused\nsome $75 damage to each vehicle.\nDamage in a second mishap was\nestimated at $100.   .\nUphill Calls For Assembly Action On\n3 Bills; 26 Interested in New Parly\nVANCOUVER, B.C. -Fernie\nLabor M.L.A. Tom Uphill declared\nhere revision of .three major B.C.\nstatutes Should be dealt with at Oils\nweek's legislative session,\nTbe veteran M.L.A. aald \"there Is\nno excuse for delay ln amendments\nto the Workmen's Compensation\nAct, Hospital Act and Industrial\nCranbrook Dogs\nRale High IQ\nCRANBROOK, B.C, \u2014 Though\ndozens of people daily are still\nabsent-mindedly trying the locked\npost, office doors in the centra of\ntown, transfer to the temporary\nquarters ih the uphill residetnial\narea near the Eastern city limits\nhaa been smoothly effected. Mew\nstop signs on 13th Avenue at'First\nStreet at the Western approach\nwere Installed in the interests of\nsimplifying.a new traffic tangle.\nCranbrook dogs have caught on\nquicker than Cranbrook people to\nthis dislocation. The downtown\nbuilding has been the traditional\ncanine social centre for years, and\na sort of Intelligence test. With two\nentrances on Tenth Avenue 2nd one\naround the corner on Baker Street\nand dogs - excluded, many dog-\nowners made'the lobby a short cut,\nin on Tenth and out on Baker,\nWhich left the less Intelligent dogs\nwaiting Indefinitely at the Tenth\nAvenue entrance. Dogs 'Who took\nup a position on the corrter and\ncarefully watched all three doors\nrate superior intelligence;   *   '\nAfter the first day of the transfer\nwhile people still were vigorously\ntrying the locked doors, there wasn't\na dog to be seen, while up at the\nnew location they are. convening\nregularly and light-heartedly where\nthere is no nonsense about multiple\nentrances.\nPrepare Bridge\nSummer Traffic\nFor!\nGOLDEN, B.C.\u2014 Completion of\nconstruction' of a steel span over the\nNorth channel of the Kicking Horse\nRiver here this month' on the designated Trans-Canada Highway route\nmarks an advance. Work is continuing on the extension over the South\nchannel which Is expected to be\ncompleted and the entire bridge\nready for Summer traffic.\nConstruction work on this controversial section of the Number 1 national route between Field ahd Gol*\nden, one of the most spectacular\nroads on the continent, continued\nlast Summer on several miles, of\nwidening, rerouting or rebuilding in\nthe upper reaches. . ,_\u2022 \u2022 \u00b0\nConciliation Act so strongly desired\nby a large section of the electorate.\"\nMr. .Uphill has called a .onfer-\nence of trade unions for March 7\nin Vancouver to discuss possible\nentry of labor candidates in the\n.next B.C. election.\nHe aald that 26 unions and locals\nIn the province have Indicated\nthey'll be represented at the meet\nT.B. SEAL SALES\nMOUNT 200 PC.\nThe last tuberculosis seals sales\ndrive exceeded all previous efforts,\nJ. R. Fleming, member of the committee told Rotarians at their luncheon meeting Monday.\nSince Rotary undertook the drive\nfbr Nelson and district, sales have\nmounted 200 per .cent above pre.\nvious totals. More than $2000 was\ncollected during the last drive, Mr.\nFleming said.\nBUILDING CODE\nMAY BE ADOPTED\nCity Council at its committee\nmeeting'Monday night will discuss\nadoption of the National'Building\nCode, in place of its building bylaws. ,\nThe recommendation has come\nfrom both fire chief G. A. McDonald, and A. G. Boas, city sanitary\ninspector. -\nCouncil will also discuss a bylaw which is being prepared to control rooming houses. j.\nFruitvale Church\nReorganizes Cnoir\nFRUITVALE, B.C. - The St.\nPaul's United'Church Choir has\nheld a reorganization meeting and\nis now headed by Joe,Morrison as\npresident and choir leader. .-..*.    '\nMrs. Thomas Quarto, former leader, is the secretary-treasi|rer and\nalso takes charge of the music.\nAssistant choir leader is Mrs. Alex\nGraham,' Miss Shirley Campbell\nwas elected, to be gown stewardess.\nOrganist is still. Mrs. Fred Peitzsche,\nwith Mrs. Donald Lewis as her\nassistant.   ' \u25a0.' ' ' '\nCity Sells Lots\nCouncil Monday night decided to\nsell two lots in the 100 block of\nNelson \"Avenue to Mr. and Mrs.\nBruce Latremouille at their assessed value of $420. :.'-,<\"'.\"\nAsks Property Access\nA request from H\". W. Cooper, upper High.Street, for road access to\nhis property early i_.._952, Monday\nnight wa? referred by City Council\nto its Public Works Department for\na recommendation.\nJACK M. FALKINS\n'.'.of Cranbrook who has been\nnamed president of Cranbrook-\nKimberley Provincial Progressive-\nConservative* Association.\nFaith Foundation\nOn Which Cure for\nNeurotics Built\n\"Strange things occurring within\nour conscious, subconscious and unconscious minds reaching a state of\nmental erosion, require, more than\npsychological treatment for cure,\nRev. A. L. Anderson told Rotarians\nat their weekly luncheon meeting at\nthe Hume Monday. \u25a0','\u2022\u25a0\nThe Only\" thing that can be offered to people in a psychic state\nis belief to a faith.\"\nMr. Anderson related the discoveries of Sigmund Freud, founder ot\npsychoanalysis, who replaced hypnotism' as a means of resuscitating\nburled memories by the method of\n\"free association,\" which is the kernel of the psycho-analytic method.\nHe made important discoveries\nconcerning the structure of and\nnature of the- various psychoneuro-\nses and extended these discoveries\nto the normal mind. The three most\nfundamental of these were:\n1, the existence Of the unconscious\nand tbe dynamic influence of this\non the conscious.\n2, the fact that the splitting of the\nmind into layers is due to an, in-\ntrapsychial conflict between various sets of forces, (to one-of which\nFreud' gave the name of \"repressions\") and-\n3, the existence, and importance\nof existence of infantile sexuality.\nIn reference to the latter Mr.\nAnderson. told of the unconscious\nconflicts in the young child's sexual\nattitude toward its parents, which\ntogether with, accompanying jealousy and hostility was not only the\ncentral-factor in a neurosis, but a\nfundamental contribution to the\nformation of character in general.\nHow far can we go back in mem-\nory? \"We remember things that\nhurt us,\" Mr. Anderson said.\nHypnosis, used to, bring experiences responsible for a conflicting\nmind to the conscious level, was\neventually dropped, because, although the 'psychiatrist was aware\nof the subconscious battle, the conscious mind, when, awakened, refused to recall what hypnosis had\nbrought out, he .'said.\nDr. Leslie Weatherhead, Minis,\nter of City Temple, London and\nfamed clinical psychiatrist, built,\nhis Ideals on the concept that\nclinical analysis was not sufficient but that belief In a faith, a\nGod, was all powerful In cure of\na neurotic, mind,\n\"People have to remebiber,\" the\nfamed Doctor said, \"that they are\nnot God.\" '        .    :\n0T Seagrams^\/^Sure\n\u2022      'Scftgntfs \"V.O:       Seagram. \"83\" \u2022\nSeagram-* Crown Royal\nSeagram's King's Plate '  Seagrams Special Old\n\u2022tW$ idvertisement is not published or displayed bythe Uouo. Control Boardpr by the Government of British Columbia\nY\nUphill Property    \u25a0\nFlooding Studied\nConsideration of a flooding proh\nlem at an uphill home will be given\nduring preparation of the. 1952 estimates. This was decided, by City\nCouncil after reading of a letter\nfrom Constable James 'H. Crozier,\n213 Beasley Street,\nThe property is flooded* every\nyear, receiving the full, brunt of\nSpring runoffs, the letter said:\nHeavy rainfall also created aisim.\nilar situation. Last year,a number\nof houses across the road had in\nstalled septic tanks and this raised\na new problem in time of water\nrunoff.    - \u2022\u25a0 \u2022 .   . \u25a0\"   .\nR. D. |Hickey, public works sup*\nerintendent. said the situation had\nbeen studied, and that it would\ncost $1500 to Install a storm sewer,\nwhich had. been suggested as a\nmeaiis of curing the problem.\nOption on Power\nLine'Bonds Given    '\nOption on the $260,000 -bonds In\nTransmission' Line Bylaw No. 1153\nIs being given to McMahon & Burns\nCo. Ltd., Vancouver, for 30 days at\n\u00ab98. 'ZZZZ:\nAuthorization for the action was\ngiven W, A. Gordon as City Treasurer by City Council Monday night\nupon recommendation of the; finance committee.\nRecommendations that the treasurer invest $5000 held in the sinking fund to the best advantage and\nthat N. Szicka be paid $3.50 per trip\nto the City Five-Mile water intake\ncommencing Feb. 15' were also\nadopted. \/\nNEW MANAGEMENT FOR\nNEW DENVER BUSINESS!.\nNEW DENVER, B. C\u2014D.- Fowler.\nM. W. Hosford, J. T. Harding and\nG. T. King have purchased the Den.\nver Coffee Shop from Mr. and Mrs.\nIner Eric (Slim). Kraft. Mr- Hosford.\nis managing the Coffee Shop for\n-the above.\nHunters To\nipe Out\nHeads Lake Farmers\nd-1%\nRange Horses\nCRANBROOK, B.C. \u2014Roundup of\nEast Kootenay valley wild Horses is\nunder way with the opening Monday of'the eighth annual Winter:\nSpring hunting season on free-roaming mustangs,'\nThe last' big' herd of wild horses\nln Western Canada appeared doomed as posses armed with rifles'fanned out over the volley trom Golden\nto the Montana border.\nBritish Columbia Forest Service\nplaced the 1945 mustang [population\not the Columbia valley sit about 5000\nHead, but six years of extermination\nhunts have cut the herd to a tew\nhundred. \u25a0 ' I' \u25a0 \u25a0 .\n\u25a0Record  show  3834- horses  have\nbeen killed in the annual hunts since\n1045 by posses and licensed agents.\nOPPOSITION '\n* The horses are destroyed because\nof the claims of cattlemen that they\ndamage the range, Protests of cruelty to the shootings of earlier years\nhave.brought about revisions in\nmethods employed in the roundup\nand stricter supervision of hunters.\nMany horses succumb to Winter\nstarvation or are weakened to the\npoint where they falTviotlm of ticks,\nthe East Kootenay Livestock Association has pointed out Nevertheless the hunts have met vigorous\nopposition.   . .;,)'\u25a0 .\nB. C. Forest Service manages the\nhunts ond roundup.\nMost of the horses rounded up or\nshot are sold to canneries, at prices\nwhich have climbed with the price\nof beet in post war years. \",\nIn 1948, horse meat sold at a cent\na pound, or $10 to $15 per! head.\nThis year, the price Is around five\ncents a pound, or over $50 a'head\ndelivered in Spokane,- Wash., for\nslaughter.   .\nThe actual roundup this year will\nextend to May 1, a month later than\nusual, in the hope of wiping out the\nherds.  *\nKinnaird Bylaw\nVoting Postponed\nKINNAIRD, B.C. .\u2014 Kinnaird\nratepayers will vote February .29 on\na $73,000 money bylaw under which\nthe village.would buy two of the\ncommunity's three water systems\nand improve and Integrate them.\nThe. voting date, originally set for\nTuesday, was changed owing to a\ntechnicality in procedure,\nA public forum meeting will be\nheld tonight in the Improvement\nSociety's hall at which the proposed\npurchases will be discussed;  '\u2022\nThe village Would buy .water aye-\nterns owned by Kinnaird Water\nCompany and N. Kuryluk. Commissioners are dickering, with a\nthird water company which serves\n80 families In the lower subdivision.\nPole Deal Signed\n' Signing of an agreement between\nthe city and B.C. Telephone Company whereby the company will\nbuy a half Interest in 15 city electric\nlight poles, was authorized Monday\nnight by Council.\nThe poles are on Vancouver, Slo*\ncan and Stanley Streets. Up to now\nthe; company has paid a contact fee\nof 50 cents a pole for use of city\npoles.. \u25a0 '    . :.; ':-\u201e','\n,    W. F. TYERS\n... of Kaslo who haa been elected\npresident of the Kootenay Lake\nFarmers Institute for 1952.-\nWalson Tells\nGyros of Trip\nTo England\nJack tt Watson, CPU.'city tjeket\nagent, recounted for Nelson Gyro\nClub members Monday night his\ntrip to England ln April.\nMr. Watson gave an insight Into\nthe British Labor Government then\nin power, telling how they took over\nbusinesses and made assessments.\nHe also, told of finding many television, sets in use in England and\nother luxuries and recounted many\nof his experiences while away.1\nMr. Watson visited many of the\nhistoric points, he said, Including\nCambridge and the birth place of\nShakespeare.. ... ;\nThe Nelsonlte began his journey\nApril 5 and crossed the ocean on\nthe Empress of Canada, returning\non tbe Empress of Scotland to reach\nhome May 15,\n1 Business of the meeting included\nplans for the visit of International\nGyro First Vice-President Russ Carter of Edmonton on March 10 and\nreports on the forthcoming Gyro\nfashion show by A. C; Emory, in\ncharge, of fasholns and models ind\nF. H. Smith, chairman of the show.\nCITY HALL MAY\nGET NEW FLAG\nPurchase of a \"new flag for the\ncity hall was suggested by G.1 A.\nMcDonald, fire chief, at Monday\nnigh.s Council meeting.\nHe recommended that the flag-be\nused only for special occasions.. A\n$36 flag i to \"generally reduced- to\ntetters within a few mofithS. if\nflown, daily, he pointed out.\nHuge Cougar Bagged\nAt Box Lake\nNAKUSP, B.C. - A big cougar\nwas bagged at Box Lake, near Nakusp by Game Warden Ted Ruther-\nglen and Game Warden Pete Ewart\nThey were accompanied by trappers\nChris' Hamling and son, Robert\nHamling., Nakusp people Who saw\nthe cougar being shipped said it was\nthe biggest they had seen.   .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 20, 1952 \u2014 3\nCanadian Exploration Boosts Pay,\nPlans Benevolent Program for Men\nCanadian Exploration Ltd; at\nSalmo and Nelson and District\nMine and Mill Workers Union Local\n901 'by' mutual agreement have concluded a new contract tour months\nprior to the expiration of the present agreement.\nThe new agreement will be effective from Feb. 1 with the new wage\nscale going Into effect from Feb. 16.\nThe new wage scale at Canadian\nExploration calls' for an average increase. of approximately 17% cents\nper hour, making laborers' starting\nrate $10.94 per- eight-hour shift arid\nbringing miner's rate to $12.66 per\neight-hour shift \u25a0     ,;\nOther contract, Improvements\nprovide a joint management-union\nstatement said,; for eight statutory\nholidays at double time if worked\nand straight time''if not worked,\nwith the restrictioh that an employee must have been scheduled\nto work had the day not been declared a holiday removed.\nA man will not lose his holiday\npay if he is on his days off, or vacation, authorized leave, or compensation, if he returns on the first\ntl\nday he is scheduled to return\nwork.  \u25a0-\u25a0 .   .\nVACATION PLAN , ;.;\nVacation with pay clauses. call\nfor one week after one year, two\nweeks'after two years, ond three\nweeks after 15 yeara. .'\"., \u25a0\nThe new agreement will cover\nair employees of the company's\ntungsten and lead-aino ntlne properties as well as the mills.\nThe union conducted a referendum on acceptance or rejection\nof the new eonfraofc The return-\n-  Ing officer's results showed the\nmajority of membership In favor\nof acceptance. - -       \u25a0.]\u25a0\u25a0'?\u2022    \u25a0 '*;\nThe hew union contract will also:\ncatty tha Sloan Formula of union\nsecurity as well as other contract\n\"Improvements.\" *\n' The company agreed to Institute,\na benevolent plan which will give'\nworkers coverage for off-the-job\nsickness and accident, half of the\ncost bf this plan to be borne by the\ncompany. \u25a0<\u25a0.'\u25a0\nThis contract was finalized late\nMonday night and was reported. _y\nR. Douglas, company manager, and\nW. C. Muir, local 901 representative.\nC. R. Ward, Respected Citizen and\nMagistrate, Dies in Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C. \u2014 Charles\nReginald Ward, one of this city's\nmost' respected citizens, and city\nmagistrate for the past six years,\ndied at the hospital, Feb. 18.\nHe was born 71 years ago In Ontario, graduated in civil engineering\nfrom McGill University and came\nhere ln 1902 ln connection with railway construction. Maintaining his\nhome in Cranbrook,'he engaged in\nengineering work in East Kootenay\nGas Output Gains\nGas manufactured at the city gas\nplant in January increased 80 million cubic feet over production In\nDecember,\nThe plant turned out 1,635,000,000\ncubic feet averaging 589 b.tu.s. in\nJanuary, compared with 1,575,000,-\n000 in the previous month, reports\npresented at Monday night's Council\nmeeting1 showed. Output was about\nthe same.\nA total of 15,890 gallons of propane were purchased in January, an\nincrease over tbe month before. The\nplant' used 9810 gallons, sold 4078\nand kept 7742 gallons in stock.' A\ntotal of 2398 gallons of tar are ln\nstock.\nEight services were cut on, 12\nwere out off, 18 repaired, and nine\nappliances connected and six disconnected.\nand the Okanagan - as well until-\nabout 10_ when he opened a real\nestate and insurance business which\nhe operated continuously until the\nday he waa suddenly taken ill. He\nwas appointed police magistrate fbr\nthis district succeeding John Leask\nlnl948. -'     \u25a0\u25a0].-        tc.\nHe waa a former member of the\ncity council, and also a former\nmember of the Rotary Club. He wail\na longtime member of Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 34, A.F. and A.M.,\nwho were in charge of funeral arrangements at tbe Masonic Hall.   \",\nHe is survived by Ms wife' 1$\nCranbrook, two sons, Joseph Ward\nof Vernon and George Ward of Ed-.\nmonton, a daughter, Miss Phyllis'\nWard of Toronto, ahd three grand*\nchildren. Also surviving are a brc?\ntheir, 3. V. Ward 8f New York, and\ntwo sisters, Miss M. A. Ward of NejV\nYork and Miss Gladys Ward of Vi-\nbane, 111. Burial was in the Masonic\nsection of Westlawn Centefefy.    '\"\n21\n21\n21\n21\nSenior Hockey 2i\n21\n21\nTONIGHT\nSPOKANE FLYERS\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\n8:00 P.M.\nTickets on sale at Kootenay Stationers\nTODAY, 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 Noon\nCivic Centre 1_s00 Noon to 6:00 p.m.\n882 \u2014 PHONE - 382\n21\nThursday \u2014 Friday *\u2022** Saturday\n300 Cups and Saucers\nMade in England Perfect for special occasions and every\n^ day use. Colors of pastel blue, yellow, pink, green or black\n<_.j   with gold trim. Specially priced at only . ._ *\n66 pc. Dinner Sets\nA dinner service for eight in fine\nEnglish china. \u2014 Gleaming white\ndishes with, a floral design. Complete set  ........._\n39\n21 pc. Tea Sets\nThese sets are of English bone\n'95       china, daintily decorated and de-\n.*'      signed. Sure to make an impression\non your tea guests. Set......... ..:..\n15\n.9$\nPRICED TO CLEAR\nReg. 1.75 ,*\nCups $ Saucers\nBone china from England. \u2014 These \u25a0'.\ncups and-saucers are of fine bone\nc h i n a,' beautifully decorated. \u2014\nTwelve patterns and designs to\nchoose from. Specially j-am.\npriced at      *99\nReg. to 29.95\nDinner Sets\n3 Only\u2014Dinner services for eight.\nComplete sets of English china in\nwhite with gold trim or cream with\nfloral design. \u2014\nPriced to clear fl \u00a3f A\u00a3\nat only  **'.\\af**r'29\nReg. to 17.95\u2014ODDMENTS IN\nTea Sets\nA clearance of incomplete tea sets.\nThese sets; are of English china of\npastel and floral de- '\nsigns. Priced to clear ff Ac\nat:oniy ....... ._.\/,..     _f*>y_P:\nPHONES\nOrygoods ......\nReady-to-wear\nHosiery \u2022 ,\t\n-sroeerlee ..\nMen'a Wear\t\n49\n49\n52\n198\n29\na|r@i_mf8\u00ab!\nwtooopQRAicD .aw m*- tero\n\u2022TORE HOURS\nMon., lues, Thura..\nPrl - 9 aj_t-5 pjn.\nWednesday\n9 a.m.-12 noon\nSat \u2014 9 a.'m.-S p.m.\n \u2022^r*!**m.\nNglSON DAIIY NHW5, WgDfrBSPAY,FBB. aof V.gg\nJob as Labor Attache\nOTTAWA, Poll. 19 (OP) - Os-\nnadlan  dlplomaoy  will  enter a\nnew field shortly whan Pat Conroy, a  rod-heeded  former  ooal\nminer, takes tip his appointment\nai the country's first labor at-\n\u2022 taoha at Its Waihlngton embassy-\nTho Job makes the dynamic Pat\n'the eyes and ears of tha Canadian\nGovernment on the. broad' United\nStates labor scene'. It's a strange\nrole   (or   the   48-year-old   union\nleader, who at 18 was working tn\n \u2014 -.... _-\u00bb _\u00ab._ui_ <u icaqors posted on Canadian\nthe pita ot his native 'Scotland and activities,  both  Government\nonly a few month* \u00bb__ \u00ab\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 *\u00ab\u00ab  --- *\t\nonly a tew months ago .was top\n\u25a0 policy-maker for tha Canadian Congress of Labor.\nIn his Congress office, Mr. Conroy on occasion had the C.C.L. deal\nout severe spankings to his present\n' j employer, J_lkew.se, he. was* a key\nfigure  in  the  Congress'  political\ntie-up with the CCF. party.   _.\nDespite  this, the  Government\nsought him out after he left-the1\naeereUry-treaiurerahlp   of   the\n.. 380,000-momber  O.C.I.,  last Fall\n, during a convention split over\n,   Internal politics,\n'.. In entering his new appointment\nat  Washington  next month,  Mr,\n'Conroy has no precedent to guide\nhim. Ho set rules are being laid\nnow, he's laying the groundwork\nin an offlce-by-offlce study of the\nwork of tha labor:and external\naffairs departments.     .\nl_A_OR TRENDS\nGenerally, hla assignment will ba\nto report to' tbe Government on\nlabor trends in the United States,\nadvising It of developments and appraising their significance. He will\nhava soma responsibility, too, in\nkeeping U.S. authorities and labor\nleaders posted on Canadian labor\n________ ...<-\"-\u2022< - W(l\nnon-govorhment\nClose contacts with U.S. labor\nchiefs Vill be an important requisite, and Mr, Conroy la equipped\n(or that, Ha ia on excellent terms\nwith many of them \u2014 ha recently\nturned down a major job from\nC.I.O. chief Philip Murray \u2014 and\nhla standing has been enhanced is\na member ot the executive of the\n80-country International Confederation ot Free Trade Unions.\n, There la. speculation that he\neventually will become deputy\nminister of labor Deputy Minister\nArthur MacNamara, whom the Government has been reluctant to release, new Is almost two years be*\nyond normal retirement aga of 68\n__._  _..-.__ .*     ...\nLone Negro Tears Crushed Cab\nApart To Rescue Trapped Driver\n-  ... ..._\u00bb __\u00bb_ .-una normal retirement aga of 68.\n. down for the Washington job, and However extension of bis term for\n* it will depend largely on what Mr. another year Is expected to be an-\nt Conroy himself makes of It Right nounced next month.\nI\nUMfL\nMarta Torer. Gives Plain Reasons\n\u2022Why She Prefers to Stay Single\nBy BOB THOMAS\nI. HOLLYWOOD. Feb. 19 '(AP) i-\nthy are there so many Unmarried\ntresses in Hollywood?\nS There are tar more bachelor girls\n-Stan bachelors among the film fam-\noW To name a few: Katharine Hop.\nBurn, tttabeth Scott Mitel Gaynor,\nPiper Laurie, -Jean Peters, Ann\nBlyth,-v_Patri<!l*''i-.e_l,Yvonne _e\n' Carlo.. ,\u201e,_,_...' \u201e\nThe'.list grows greater when you\nconsider tho unattached divorcees:\n. Betty Hutton, Joan Fontaine; Barbara Stanwyck, Ginger Rogers,\nKathryn Grayson, Marilyn Monroe,\nAnn Sheridan, Joan Crawford, Ann\nMiller, Paulefle Goddard, Marilyn\nMaxwell, Rhonda Fleming.        ;\nAsked about this social phenomenon Marts Toren said:\nVwhy haven't I married? Because\nTm old-fashioned. I just want to be\nmarried once,:, not 10 times. Thai's\nwhy: iva waited.\"\n \u201e   _.- _. ...    I *ui   H1-\/.-.L-11,   1   BU11   101\nT_e: Swedish .miss admitted that! should be the provider.\nbeing a movie personality la not too\nconducive to romance.\nDATE8SCARED\n\"Many men hold an actress somewhat in awe,\" she explained. \"They\nare afraid to ask her for a date.\"\nMarte agreed with Joan Fontaine\nthat it is difficult to find, a man\nwho can live happily with a movie\nstar'.\nBut she didn't agree with Miss\nFontaine's statement that ahe won't\nmarry until aha gives tip her career.\n\"Marriage would be very difficult, \" said Marta, \"but not Impossible. I would have to find a man\nwho would be very sympathetic to\nthe kind ot work I do and understand it. Preferably, lt would be\nsomeone in this business, but I don't\nthink I would merry in. actor.\n\"I think another, problem ln an\nactress marrying Is that aha would\noften be making more money-than\nher husband. I think that would be'\na very hard situation for a mah. As\nfbr myself, I still think the man\nw. a, FOSTER\nCarpenter, Helper\nPicket Fire-Hall\nGENERA). VIEW OF NEWARK AIRPORT\nPending'a  U.8,  congressional\nInvestigation, the airport at Newark, N.J., will remain closed. The\naetlon was ta_on at a conference\nat whleh the future of not only\nNewark,  but Lit  Guardia,  Naw\nYork   International   ond   Tetor-\nboro Airports. \u2014. caught hetweon\nthe twin problems jof public'concern over recant air crashes and\nthe need for first class metropolitan air service \u2014 underwent\nIntensive   efflolal   study.   Slnoe\nDee. 16 three planes have erashed\nIn the Vicinity of Elizabeth, N.J.,\nclaiming 116 victims, .Latest tragedy resulted In loss Of 81 Uvea\nwhen a DC-t. piloted by Capt\nW.  D.  Foster of Coral  Gables,\"\nFla., erashed Into an apartment\nbuilding when' motor failed after\ntake-off   from   Newark.   Of   62  '\naboard, 34 escaped alive, Including   Nancy'Taylor,   stewardess,\nwho managed tb Jump clear when\ncraft struck apartment building,\nkilling four tenants, \u25a0 ,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nGerman Visa Abuse\nbrings Dismissal \/\n\u20ac ttTTkVAiiVeb. W (fPlT-A Carta-\n. ;diaij Immigration official. in Ger-\n-   litany ..has been dismissed for ir-\n\"regularl'tle. \"Bf': issuing ' visas- _6r\n_ntry*\"_r C _n_da, the Immigration\n'department said today,\nA spokesman said the official\u2014\n!t the immigration-processing cen-\nre of Karlsruhe\u2014had' been diseoV.\nred taking \"fees\" to sidetrack normal Immigration machinery for\nSoma G_rnj.ens. '\u2022 \u25a0\"{\u25a0 \u2022'\u25a0\". .'::\nMost of, the Gerptans ln the ease,\nj the department spokesman said, got\nonly temporary permits tb visit\npanada,- ,,.*\u2022 \u25a0;. \u25a0\n-.' Name, of the dismissed Karlsruhe\n'Official, -like those in the Italian\nirlng, was not made known. The der\ng' artn_ent,said the names would not\nk made public unless prosecutions\n\u25a0 ipesultqtj;' _':..\u25a0, '\nKnut Hamsun, Noted\nNobel Winner, Dim\nOSLO,-Feb. 19 (Af'l-Knut Hamsun, 82, the noted Norwegian author\nand Nobel Prize winner, died today,\nThe author, who led a vagabond\nexistence during, his early life and\nonce ran a horsecar ln Chicago in\nthe 1880s, was a fisherman, off the\nGrand., Banks of Newfoundland.\nHe won the.Nobel Prize in 1020.\nWhen the Germans invaded Norway\nln1940 he denounced the Norwegian government for organizing resistance. In 1948 he.and his wife\nWere arrested on charges of collaborating with the Germans and the\nQuisling authorities.\nThe treason charge against him\nfinally was dropped because of his\nage.\nVANCOUV.ER, Feb. 19 (CP) - A\nsingle carpenter and his helper are\npicketing a (lra-hall under construction in suburban Burnaby,\nGeroge Bengough; international\nrepresentative of United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners\n(A.F.L.-T.L.C), said the union was\nprotesting the fact that civic workers and not carpenters were employed on the job.\n\"We feel carpentera should work\non construction,and.civic workers\nshould stay on maintenance jobs.\"\n1 Until the civic workers are removed, the picketing will continue,\nhe said.\nHOUSTON, Tex,, Feb. U (AP) -\nA giant Negro walked out of tha\nnight on the highway about 10 miles\nNorthwest ot hers early today, saw\na man, trapped In the cab of his\nsmouldering truck-trailer and rip.\npcil the cab apart to save tha driver,\ni The unconscious driver fell Into\n'the arms ot waiting ond astonished\ndeputy sheriffs, and the Negro disappeared as quietly aa he appeared,\n\"No one knows his name,\" said\nDeputy Sheriff Don Henry, \"but\nhe did a job I couldn't dp with1 six\ntrucks and a wrecker, It was a terrific display of human strength.\"\nThe trapped truck driver was\nRoy Gaby, Jr., 36, Houston,     .,\nHe waa driving a loaded truck to\nHouston whan he ran out of gas\nand telephoned his wife to bring\naome gasoline, , ,\n'\u25a0 She had brought the gas and was\ndriving tha family oar ahead Of\n' bim when, a driver forced her off\nthe road on the right side, Her husband's truck wns'-brced off on tha\nleft,' '\u25a0'.' ; \u2022'-;\u25a0'\nGaby was trapped Inside his tal?\nescoped truck. Flames appeared\nHla wife flagged a passing motorist,\nand he\" notified tha sheriff's office,\nHUMAN STRENGTH '\nOff leers, trucks and a wrecker\ncongregated, But tha man couldn't\nbudge the crushed metal with\ncables. A call went out (or outtln_f\ntorches,'.\n* The giant Negro appeared.\n\"Can I bo of help?\" he asked.\nThen ho. walked up to tho cab,\nplaced his, hands on tha door and\nwrenohed It o((.\nHe climbed Into the cab, planted\nhis feet on the. doer and hll neck\nand shoulders against the top. ,\n\"You ebuld hear tha metal give,\"\nsaid Hanry. \"The top bowed out, tha\nseat buckled down and tha dash\nbroke under the pressure,\n\"I saw the Negro's shirt sleeves\nrip open as his muscles bulged.\"\nIn the excitement of.rescuing the\ndriver, still unconscious, no one\nthought to thank the Negro.\nHe walked off Into the nlghi\nUniversities Aid\nWheal Dryers\n.WINNIPEG, Feb. 18 (CP)\u25a0\u2014 The\nTribune says today ln a newa page\nstory that three Western universities have Joined,the fight to save\n180,000,000 bushels of grain from\ndestructive (arm drying methods.\n\"Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta Universities and Departments\nof Agriculture are issuing Instrucr.\"\u00bb '\u2022\u201e*\"\u2022 \"\u00b0?\u201e\u2122 f\"\ntlons to farmers on three types o( H?race H,al ot Victoria.\nKorte: dryers.\" the newspaper says.\nThe methods are described as\nbatch dryers, Continuous flow dryers, and bulk drying In bins.\nSearch for Coast\nDeckhand Continues\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feh. 19 (CF) -\nSearch (or the body of Robert Heal,\n21-year-old Navy tug deckhand who\nwas lost overboard yesterday in Esquimau harbor, continued today,\nA Navy diver thla morning Joined\nlaunches and R.C.A.F. search craft\nIn combing the harbor.\nHeal, a civilian, deckhand on the\ntug Glendon, fell Into the water\nwhen the tug was moving from\nH.M.C. Dockyard to a fuel jetty.\nHe is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nDean jAcheson\nPresented to Queen\nLONDON; Fab, 1* (AP) - Tha;\n- Quean received State Secretary\n. Dean Acheson of the United Statea\nat her Clarence House heme today before his'departure for At*\nlantlo Pact conferences In Lisbon,\nForeign Secretary Anthony Eden\npresented Aohasoii to tha Queen.;\nLater, the Queen also.gave separate audiences to Foreign Mln-i\nlater Robert Sc'hiiman Cf FrancaJ\n' and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer\nof Wast Germany, '\nONawa Prepares\nFor Tax Refunds\nOTTAWA, Feb. 10 (CP) - Th*\nRevenue Department said today 11\nexpepta this Spring to make 1951]\nIncome tax returns totalling\nproximately $60,000,000 to more turn\n2,000,000 of the estimated 3.300,00\nindividual Canadian taxpayers,\nIt estimated that taxpayers\nMontreal and Toronto likely wili\nclaim refunds totalling $11,000,009*\nin each city,' In Hamilton and Van-]\ncouver, tha rotunda expected to ea\nclaimed will be ln tha neighborhood\nof $4,50o,ooo in each city.\nProspects Fer War-End Bright\nDeer Park Notes\nThe ancient Slnhala race Is believed to have entered Ceylon from\nIndia about 600 B.C.\nL^ews of the Day\n, Don't wait until after the fire,\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0..'\/       f    i    ,\n'\u25a0       ' '  BIN<_6 TONIGHT ...\n\/CATHOLIC HALL     .\n-Hot  peanuts  and  hot  buttered\npopcorn, anytime at Walts.\nJ   Ladies' Auxiliary to F.O.E:\n.. JMeeta Tonight at 8.\nWomen's Institute meeting\nFriday,. Feb. 22nd, at '2:30 p.m.\nLovely New Handbags.\nPopular Prices. \u2014 FINK'S.\n\u25a0PROCTER   DANCE   FEB.  22ND.\nI  GOOD  EATS AND  MUSIC.\n,; New .Beach Cottons In gay tints\nSanforized. At       \"\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nBrand - new\nSpring colors.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nBring' that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nI\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant fix lt,\nthrow it away. Watch work prompt-\n[ly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.    .... '     '.,\nFor Sale\u201412\" Band Saw; Supremacy: 'complete with motor, switch\nand cord. Outfit brand new, $90,00,\n1802 Falls St, 3 to 6 p.m. Ph. 887-X.\nPatients In the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have the Dally\nNevys sent to them every morning.\nPhone 144, Circulation Dept, Dally\nNewt.        .\nDEER PARK, B.C.-^J. F. Killough\nreturned to Castlegar, accompanied\nBy H. C. Coleman and'Roy Coleman.\nMrs! D. Jamieson spent a few days\nIn Trail and Castlegar,\n.. C, Schwartzenhauer, Sr, spent the\nweekend in Rossland and Trail; be-\nfore going on to Halcyon Hot\nSpritigs.\n- J. Haven returned to Castlegar,\naccompanied by R. Brlggeman.\nA Birthday dinner was held at the\nhome Of Mr., and Mrs. A. Law in\nhonor of the birthdays of their\ndaughter, Mrs. Eileen Coleman and\nA. Phelps, on Valentine's Day.\nOther guests were Roy Coleman and\nCraig, Mrs.- A. Phelps, Albert end\nJoan and Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Coleman. '\nMr. and Mrs. P. Romalne, Michael\nand Danny spent the weekend in\nTrail.-\nJames Allan, employed by the\nC.P.R. is home on'leave.\nMrs. Florence Brlggeman, handicraft convener, for the W.I, entertained at a \"quilting bee\".\nBY JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 19 (AP)-\nRrotpeots for an anil to the war\nIn Korea- brightened considerably\ntoday but the chances for a permanent peica there remained, so\ndim at to be almost Invisible,\nThe agreement between' the truce\nnegotiators on holding a Korean\nconference within 90 days after' an\narmistice give's reason for hope that\nthe fighting may be brought to an\nohi-i.4:' -..,\u25a0' : \u25a0 '\u25a0 '..''..\n, But this.' is regarded here Iri its\nlong-range Importance mainly' as a\nI piece of international shadow boxing with little significance for long-\nterm, political developments In the\narea.   ' '.\nThe United States government believes that if there is a -.armistice it\nWill open -a new era of war-less tension and political conflict ln Korea.\nIt is therefore considered ot utmost\nimportance to get the best possible\narmistice arrangements made while\nnegotiations on basic terms are still\nunder Vay.\nNOT PROFITABLE\nThe essential Issue ln the truce\nnegotiations: If both sides agree that\nthe war is no longer profitable, what\nprice is each willing to pay to end\nit? Neither the Communists nor the\nUnited Nsftions appears to havo any\nhope for an all-out victory with the\nforces available. So a negotiated end\nof the fighting becomes a\", least a\npractical possibility.\n, On the broader question-o( peace,\nhowever, the issue is infinitely mora\ncomplex \u2014 who is going to control\nI Korea ultimately, the free democracies led by the United States or\nthe Communists led by tho Kremlin? ' \u2022'\u2022   *\nTha Korean peace conference, If\n[held,' must therefore be concerned'\nwith such mattera as the unification\nof Communist and non-Communist\nKorea iai the kind of government\nwhich would rule over such a country-. '    - \u2022- .'* ..c: .\nThere is present no-basis for belief\nthat either the U.S. or the Russain\nMoo wbuld be jvllling to make-such\nconcessions as would permit Korea\nto ba unified and ruled, by a government on .which \u25a0 both sides oould\nagree;\nDownpour Breaks\nAustralian Draught\nPolio Victim Proud\nMember of Scouts\nWINNIPEG (CP) - % 18-year-\nold .polio victim paralyzed In all\n(our limbs is one of the happiest\n f  ....   patlenta ln a children's  hoipltal\nSYDNEY, Australia, Feb. 19 (AP) b\"!'. '\u00ab . , _.. _ \u00ab, _V\n-Australia has had its most valu- \u25a0 Mike Saadtak-_( The Fas, Man,,\nable rainstorm In .more than a year. r5f1W,._l!__wom i _*\" *_,ro-\"i>b\u00ab.\n??. ^^_;??wnpour,brok. a fS^J^J^SX\nBefore the ceremony,- hospital, nur\nyear-long drought ln Eastern Australia, ended bush fire danger that\nhaa caused $22,p0O,Q0O ln damage in\n'two months and saved vast areas\nof dairying and grazing country.\nBush fires have claimed 17 Uvea\nIn the long drought.\nCalgary Diocese\nTo Elect Bishop\nCALOARY, Feb. 19 (CP) - The\nfourth bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Calgary will be elected at a\nspecial session of the diocesan synod 'Wednesday. The eleotlon was\nmade necessary by tho retirement\nof Rt, Rev, Harry .Richard Ragg\nDecjl..    ,\nAbout 60 members of the clergy\nand 168 lay delegates are expebted\nto attend the synod which will open\nWednesday.\naas  and   Internes  presented - him\nwith a Hoy Scout uniform.\nCan't Search for Oil\nEDMONTON. Feb, 18 (CP)\nImperial Oil Limited brlnga th_u-\u00ab\nBands ot barrels of Alberta oil to its]\nrefinery on Edmonton's East out-l\nSkirts. Rut it cant search for. oll|\nIn Its pwn backyard.\nThe Alberta Government __,\u2022-,,\nannounced it has Issued a special\nlease ot mineral rights underneath\nthe 162-acre refinery site to the oil\ncompany to protect against the possibility of a move to drill or search\nfor oil on the property.\nContained in the lease Is a covenant forbidding the search or pro.\nduction ot minerals on the land\nwithout a further special permit a\nH, H. SonfervlUe, director of mineral rights, said the lease also pro.\ntects the company In that it guarantees mining or drilling by othert\nwill not -Mfpermltted on the property.- .- \u2022   '   \u25a0\n\"If the company did not' have the\nlease any 'Joe Doakes' could cotae\nin ond soy, 'I'm going to drill between these two tanks.'\n\"But if an oil field migrates to\nthe boundaries of the property it\n\u201e.__.._ __-_ .\u2014 .\u25a0- -    -    -     - -\n . _.-_- \u201e__.\u00ab__ me Dounaaries of the property it\nMike has been a patient at tha would then, have to be developed.\"\nhospital slnoe Sept 32 when a'FUn     .. \u25a0 \u25a0*. \u25a0   '..,\u25a0.    ' . \u25a0' '.\u00bb\u25a0'. \u25a0  ;\nFlon aervlca club made arrange'       ^mmtmmtmmmmr-.\nNew Denver\ndresses.   All   sizes,\nWhy not give us a call to increase\nyour fire insurance protection to-\ncSy?-C. W! APPLEYARD.      -\nJLaux Velio\u2014casien palntr-10 pastel Colors\u20145 lb. box $1.40.\n\u2022       BURNS LUMBER CO.        I\nFine quality curling brooms just\n, received. Gets yours today at\nF HIPPERSON'S.\nil        .  ..;.;;\nFurnaces and Stoves cleaned, odd\nJobs. Pounder Chimney Service,\nPhone 1541-L.\nRESERVE' MARCH 26TH FOR\nGYRO  FASHION  SHOW,   <\nTEA   AND  BAKE  SALE.\nCIVIC CENTRE AT 3-P.M, 8 P.M,\n   ADMISSION '76\u201e\nTry. ll__id Red Devil in your\nfuel oil. Whether you use an oil I.*\"\"\nheater, furnace, or cook-stove, you|\u00a3f\u2122\nwill get more heat and less carbon,\nsoot and sludge when you add Red\nDevil to the fuel oil.   '\nHIPPERSON'S.\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. W. Harcus and family of Wells,\nB. C, have taken up. residence in\nNew-Denver. ; .       \u2022\nIvan M Flint of Cranbrook has\nreturned to New Denver, and is\nworking for the Public Works survey.\nMrs. W. R. Cutler returned to her\nhome from Castlegar, where she\nspent a month with her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nBate, and family.\n. Art Grant of Procter and Mr. pnd\nMrs. Sydney Paterson and family,\nLynne and Jimm _, of Slocan City,\nI were weekend visitors of Mr. and\nMrs. \"Harry T, Butler and family.\nMr. and Mra. LeRoi Cote and\nI family of Nelson were visiting Mrs.\nCote's sister and brother-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. William Clever, and family.\nMrs.. Lillian Berggeren returned\nrom Nelson, where she visited\nfriends for the weekend.\nRocky to fry Korean\nTechnique in Canada\nWith The Canadian 25th Brigade\nin Korea,. Feb_ 19 (Reuters)\u2014Brig.\nJohn M. (Rocky) Rockingham today said he woUld bring to his new\njob as director of training for the\nCanadian army \"one or two techniques of fighting in KOrea which\ncan be usefully applied* to the Canadian army.\"\n\/News of* Rockingham's appoint-\nment was - released here Monday\nBrig. M. P. Bogert, preseht director\nof training, will take over as commander of tho 25th'Canadian Brigade in Korea.\nDEATHS\nCamera Fansl Make VALENTINE'S\n, j$ur headqtiarters for quality films\najid expert developing service.\n\u2022 Protect your furniture tops with\nsparkling crystal glass covers. We\ncan cut them to any size or shape\nand polish the edges. Phone 156.\nT.' H, WATER8 A CO. LTD.\nVENETIAN BLINDS CLEARANCE\nBALE \u2014 Odd size blinds which may\nfit your windows.\nWe buy'and sell new and used\nfurnituro. \u2022 '\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall, mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.       PHONE 1660    j\nCARD OF THANKS\nMr. William G. Cook of Nakusp\nwishes to thank tha Sisters, nurses\nand staff of the St. Francis Infirmary for the splendid treatment to\nMrs Cook during her Illness while\nunder their care. From Dad, Mary\nand the girls.\nLister Notes\nLISTER, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. C. Lapointe\nof Huscroft is visiting her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl\nLarsen, In Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Doug McKee and\nchildren of - Kimberley visited the\n___,_\u00bb\u25a0 '\u25a0-_\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab\"*- \u00bb*-* ----- **--\nBy The Canadian Prest\nKITCHENER, Ont.\u2014Charles'Mai-\ncolm (Mac) Lester, 57, president of\nthe   insurance   firm   of   Lester's\nLimited. .'       ::-..   \u2022\nMONTREAL \u2014 Dr. Herman Walter, 89, who retired in 1936 after\nserving for 14 years as head of the\n, department of, Germanic languages\nlat McGill University.\nRICHMOND, Ont. -r Dr. H. Howard MacCordlck, 73, former professor of internal medicine at\nMcGill University.       \u25a0    \u25a0 \u2022'     . \u2022\nDUBLIN ^ Dr. Ernest -H. Alton,\nin his early 70s, provost of Dublin's\nTrinity College,\ntaenia to hava him down (rom The\nPas. \u25a0   \u2022\u2022 \u25a0 ..-,-.\nBoy Scouts began visiting him\nafter tha acute stages of the disease,\nhad passed, At least two Scouts\nwant to see him each day. Instruction they gave him In operating a\nMorse code buzzer haa helped him\nregain th* an et hli fingers.\nRATTLEDEN, England (CP) -\nAfter quantities of lead weri stolen\n(rom the roots o( churches in this\nSuffolk town, authorities decided to\natrip the roofs themselves,  They\n, will sell the lead and re-roof with\nJaUte.\"\nASPIRIN\nCOLDS\nHERE'SHOW\nSTRETCH AD DOLLARS\nWISE BUSINESSMEN KNOW...\n. . .that It pays to advertise! And, whon It cornea to advertising \u2014 local merchants knew that the very belt in art, copy\n. and madam advertising ideas, await tham here at tha Nelspn\nDaily New* Free Advertising Service, pet better results, (ava\nproduction and time costs, avail yourself of distinctive art.\nRemember, there's no charge for this sales-getting extra!\nInvestigate Stories\nWASHINGTON, Feb.,19 (AP) -\nThe Air Force'said ^oday it is look-\nIng into reports from Korea I about\nsome strange-looking orange globes.\nA spokesman said bomber; crew\nmembers reported they saw \"ilobe;\n-\u2014\u2014r-. \u00ab** \u00ab^__-ue-.   v-suea ine \"\"cmuem repo-iea \"icy saw 'globe-\nlormers parents, Mr. arid Mrs. D. 3: shaped objects\" of an orange color\nMcKef.. _-.n fii-vu*.. \u2022..!_.- .\u00ab\u00bb>________.  _.. ._\u25a0 ...\nI'McKee, , \u201e.v.*.,-,..,\nMr. and Mrs, G. Hurry and children of Riondel were weekend visitors at their ranch in Huscroft. *\nMr-, and Mrs. Tj Baker and daugr-\nter. Pat, Mrs. Irene Wellsprlrig and\n| son, Alired, and Miss Violet McKee\nwere weekend visitors to Bonners\nFerry\non flights otter'Korea on the'nights\nof Jan. 29 and 30. *\nThe spokesman said these stories\nwere being \"Investigated only.\" He\nsaid the department had only the\nreported: word of several .crew\nmembers that they had seen the\nobjects.\nThe crew members estimated the\nWISE SHOPPERS KNOW,.  *\n. . . thot it takes awfully-close figuring to get the most for their\nbudget dollars. That's why wise home-makers throughout the community turn to the advertising columns of this paper before they\nshop! Make your advertising pay dividends! Direct your sales\nmassage' to. tha * shopper with carefully-planned, .carefully-\nresearched ads \u2022 . . Point them, up with modern art and copy\nthemes. Come in, or phone in, (144) On experienced salesman will\ncall on you with sales-compelling layouts and suggestions . . .\nDO IT NOW. i\nThis Top-Level Adve\nIs Available _o Y\nrrising Service\nFrle \u2014 Here I\n> 4uc utw mampers estimated the\n, Mr''and Mrs, Vince Adamski 0. oWect. M be abotifr th\u00abe.'!(eet in\nKlttlmst,tB:_.:_are_vismng the lat- P?vF_\ntor's mother, Mrs. R. E\ntamlly.\nBeard and\n1 CLASSIFIED ADS GETiRESULTS I\nPHONE\n144\n &m\nFor This Mild\nSlushy Weather,'., :\nWo hava        .'';-\u2022, '\na Full Range :      ...*\u25a0* ,i\nof sixes ih . '\nLOW\nRUBBERS\no   FOR MEN\n\u2022 FOR WOMEN\n\u2022 FOR CHILDREN\nALSO MOST SIZES'\n.IN OVERSHOES v.\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nKofeanee Chapter, I. O. D. %\nWelfare AVork Oiitstaddiiig\nGuide Novemenl\n13 Years Old\n-This week Is*Boy Scout Week. It.\n\u2022   is also. Girl  Guide'.Week, and  to\n\u25a0 Guides, Brownies and leaders across\nI Canada.'  Z\nj    It holds much the same meaning\n;as'Scout Week\u2014a time for. mem,-\n;-bers to* re-dedicate themselves to\ntheir Work.\n. Guiding began ln \u25a0 1909 when\ngirls appeared at a great Boy Scout\nrally in Crystal Palace ln London\nand petitioned Sir Robert Baden-\nPowell   to  be   their  leader   also.\n* Baden-Powell and his sister Miss\nAgnes Baden-Powell -founded the\n\u25a0 movement In'the following year. In\n, 1910, the first Canadian company\n1 .was registered  in St. \u25a0 Catherines,\nOntario. \u25a0-\u25a0'*'. \u2022\u25a0' '\n! In* 1912 Lady Pellatt was appointed Chief Commissioner for Canada\nand. Toronto was ' made Canadian\n| headquarters, In'1918 the first book\n:of rules was printed arid in 1917 the\na work   was   organized   by   act   of\n.parliament when the Canadian Gov-\n: ernment formally incorporated the\n.Canadian Girl  Guide 'Association,\nAn annual grant (rom the Dominion\nGovernment since 1919 has been a\nmark   of  its   recoghition   of   the\n\u2022 educational values of Guiding.\nThe natrie \"Guides\" was chosen\n,   from an,Indian frontiOr Regiment,\nthe Queen's Own-Corps of Guides,\n1 famous native  soldiers, noted for\n1 ability.and self reliance who .were\n' .called upon in times of emergency\n\u25a0   to repel raids of tribesacrossthe\n, Northwest frontier. The .'system of\nGulding';.is based-oh ^Scouting;\nThrift Shop of Kokanee chapter,\nImperial Order Daughters' of the\nEmpire, has again proved a veteran\nfund-raiser for. the organization.\nReport of another successful year\nwas given at the, chapter's annual\nmeeting. Tuesday In the W. I. room\nat which Mrs. N. C. Stlbbs was reelected regent.\nMany of the executive .were returned'to Office for the new season.\nMrs, H. E. Thain, last year second\nvice-regent was named first vice,\nregent, and Mrs. S. S. Simpson, sec-\nond vice-regent.\nMrs. E. <_.,\u25a0 Wragge. will return to\noffice as secretary with Mrs; A. M.\nNoxbn, assistant Secretary. Mrs.. J.\nA. B. Will, treasurer; Mrs.\" C. *B.\nMutchler, \"Echoes\" convener; .'Mrs.\n\u2022C. G Johnson, educational convener, Mrs. C. H. Chatfleld,* service,\nhome and abroad convener.      '\nStandard bearer is,. Mrs George\nSchupe; home for aged convener,\nMrs. R. H. Dill; immigration, convener, Mrs. Harper; 'child.and family welfare convener, Mrs.'. F. D.\nCummins; Thrift Shop, convener,\nMrs. H. B. Gore; hospital convener,\nMrs., G.\u25a0' B. -Russell and\" Mrs. L.\nCruickshank, post war cohvener,\nMrs. H. Houston and Press and-pub-\nlicity Mrs. W. ...'Ferguson.\nCouncillors;are Mrs. K. H. Gren-\nfell, Mrs. W.-A. Gordon,. Mrs. Roy\nPollard, Mrs.\" W. Gunn and Mrs.\nDm,'.-     .,;      ', -,.\nA past regent of Kokanee'chapter,\nMrs. Alex Lelth, was made honorary regent.\nit. MEMBERS\n( Treasurer's report! given by Mrs.\nJ. B: M. Barnum, listed $346 total\ndisbursements and a batik balance\nof $475. Three new members were\nreceived Into 'the organization during the year to bring the membership to 59.\nDonations   were   given   to   Red\nCross and Canadian National Institute \"for the Blind, and $82 were\nsent to help; furnish a room in the\ngirls' residence room at University\nof British Columbia. Profit from\ncard party of $84 was donated.to the\nQueOn's carpet fund. ;!\n, Special mention of the late Mrs.\nW. O. Rose, honorary vice-regent,\nwas made'by secretary,\nNEEDY A8-I8TEP _\nReporting on welfare Work, Mrs.\nF. D. Cummins said the sum of $628\nwas spent in aiding the,needy;.Some\n$543 alone was used for milk delivery to the homes and the remaining\nfor.clothing, Christmas cheer and\nvarious needs of local families.\n-, \"Echoes'' secretary,- Mrs. C. ,'R\nMRS.\nC. STIBBS\nMjitchler. gave a brief hlstory'ol the\nchapter, founded in 1914 and read\nher report to ia'. _fent ;to .\"Echoes\"\nmagazine.\n\u25a0Pood-parcels aeqt'tO'Great Bifitali\nnumbered 24 during 19511 Miss Mai-\ngaret Arthur Mia. :''\u25a0''\nForty-three new citizens Were\ngiven' greeting Cards during the\nyear ahd five ceremonies arranged\nto the\" Court House, by Mrs. Dill;\nimmigration convener.\nNEW SCHOOL ADOPTED\nThe chapter; haa adopted a new\nschool,'Retallack school, and is having a picture of, Queen Elizabeth II\nand Prince Philip framed fin: either\nRetallack or Lardeau school, also\nunder the group. Education expend*\niture totalled, $25, Mrs., Johnson,\nconvener, reported. Lardeau and Riondel schools received donations of\nChristmas treats and Other. Items.\nMrs. R, B. Brummitt and Mrs. W-.\nA. Gordon reported visiting. Nelson\nHostel for Aged Men and ; buying\nvarious needed items totalling $25\nfor the; Hostel.,Mrs. Russell arranged for veterans gifts with\nKootenay Lake General Hospital. .\nA< hew committee,) Empire and\nworld affairs' committee, formed\nlast \/year and pioneered by Mrs.\nWiU; Mrs. Mutchler and Mrs. Dill,\nreported a beginning in their field\nof work and ' have subscribed to\nthe magazine,. \"External Affairs\" to\nincrease their knowledge of international affairs.  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,.'.\u25a0\u25a0     '\u25a0   ;_-;,*.\nWhile a guest of Nelsbn, Lieutenant-Governor Clarence ' Wallace\nwas entertained at the. home of\nMrs. Stlbbs. Members aided in the\npreparations.   '\nCongratulations . were received\nby Mrs. Robert Thompson, active\nfor many years; in the chapter, on\nher birthday. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.\nTithe System Relics\nRemain, W.M.S. Told\n\u25a0^ MK'W'MOCH! TMfKJ06000I\nL. A. Honors King\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Two minutes' silence for King George VI\nwas observed by Knox Presbyterian\nChurch Ladies' Aid at its' February meeting at the home of Mrs.\nH. T. Butler.    .\nMrs. William Clever took the devotional period.\n\";   Sirdar Notes*\n*SIRDAH, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. Hornseth\nentertained at a small evening party\nrecently. There were three tables of\nbridge.    ' : \u25a0' *   .\ni . Mrs. L. V. Rehmann and Gertrude\nwere weekend guests of Mrs. A.\nStevens in Nelson.      .\nMr. and Mrs. Naso of Cranbrook,\nvisited Mr. and Mrs.. Dom Pas.\ncuzzo recently.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson and\nfamily have returned from a visit\nto Kimberley where they stayed\nwith Mrs. Jack Scott.\nJack Kennedy from NelsOn was\nvisiting here over the weekend. '\/\nMr. and Mrs. Grundy and sons of\nNelson visited their son and daug-\nter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don Grundy recently. ;\n\u25a0taste-\nBetter'cause\nNAKUSP, B. C. \u2014 Barns which\nwere built during the system of\ntithes are still to be* found in England, Miss A. A. Allen, president,\ntold Nakusp United Church Women's Missionary Society at its February meeting at the home of Mrs.\nPeter Hurry, Sr.\nIn her address 6n tithes, Miss\nAllen ^aid many of the old-time\nEnglish barns wen'built during the\nMiddle Ages to store a tenth'of the\nearth's produce claimed as revenue\nfor the church.\nThey were a part of the \"survival\"\nsystem which concerned the entire\nlife if the countryside for centuries.\nMONKS'WORK    .    \u25a0   \"     .     \u25a0\n.Qne of the largest barns for'stor-\ning the tithe stands at Ahbotsbury\non the Dorset coast and was erected\nby monks from a local Benedictine\nmonastery.      \"'       .\nThe idea that a tenth of the crop\nbelonged to the church originates\nin the Bible words: \"Bring we all\nthe tpes into the storehouse, saith\nthe Lord of Hosts\".\nThe temperance question was discussed, and members decided to\ncollect during the month for this\n.cause. Mrs. P. R. Henke and Mrs.\nD. R, Stone were appointed to attend a public library meeting.\nAllocation of $100 for 1952 Was\naccepted. ,\"\u25a0'',;.. *    .-.' \\\n(By, 3ExmhcL GrJAmk\/L\nApricot Bread Top\nLunch-Box Fare\nTry this recipe for apricot ;bread.\nIt's perfect for packing in the lunch-\nbox. ' . ...\nAPRICOT BREAD -.'\"\u25a0\ni- Vt cup shortening \u2022\u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0'..\n% cupsugar .    '\n% cup com syrup\n2    eggs, beaten\nVt cup chopped cooked apricots\n1 teaspoon lemon juice\n2 cups sifted pastry flour\n.3    teaspoons baking powder\n1    teaspoon salt     '\u25a0'\u25a0'.., \u2022\n% cup milk\n.1    cup chopped huta '  ,\nCream together shortening and\nsugar until light and , fluffy; Add\nsyrup. Cream. well. Add eggs to\ncreamed mixture mixing well. Blend\nin apricots and lemon juice. Sift together flour, baking powder, and\nsalt. Add to creamed mixture alternately jvith milk. Ad. nuts! Potit into greased loaf pah, iVixS Inches.\nBake ln moderate oven (350 deg. F.)\nabout 1. hour and 10 minutes. .\nGray Creek\nGRAY CREEIC B.C. \u2014 Mr; and\nMrs. La Plante and family of Kootenay Bay have taken up residence\nin their newly purchased home.\nThe Rev. Father Dwyer was over\nnight guest of. Mr. and Mrs. Fred,\nWilmot. Mass was celebrated at the\nGeorge Oliver home. ,\n0A&&A. Iiifi, Wtih,\nJksLWmlM.4\nAMONG GROUPS of -Canadian'.Girls, in Training\nin :Nelson who participated in recent C.G.I.T. Week activ-\nities were these members of St; Paul's United Church\nSenior group. They are Miss Loretta Sutherland, Miss\nIsabel Stout, Miss June Sutherland, Miss Lorna Craig,'\nMiss Gloria Stewart and their leader, Miss Gwen Caston.\nson Social\n.\"'-. t    \u25a0    :\u2022\u25a0  PHONr.44\n.\"Hostesses-for the;, last of the dances of tho Winter\nseason of the Silver Slipper Club of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathe-\ndr al-tonight are Mrs. E. Rolph, Mrs. R. H. Dill, Mrs; H. Lupton\nand Mrs. L. M, McBride.\t\nFROM. CRANBROOK . . . Mrs.\nLoitis.Deyof Cranbrook is visiting\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand.Mrs.'Hay Metcalf, 119 Morgan\nStreet, for a few days.\n\u25a0 *   *   \u2022\nHOME THOUGHTS ... Mrs, M.\nJ. Vigneux. of Nelson, who is at\npresent Holidaying in Eos Angeles,'\nCalif., has-sent word that she Is\nhaving a \"marvelous time\" and is\nmeeting,- a number of Nelsonites.\nShe* saw -Mrs, __ L. McBride, a\nholidayer in the Golden State, and\ntwo former Nelson residents,. Mrs.\nW. D. .Manuel; the former Miss\nMolly Mosses, and Mrs, I. Kingsley,\nthe former Miss. Margaret, Graham,\nat the home of Miss Satenig Pap-\nazian, herself a former Nelsonlte\nand the daughter of the late Mr.\nand M-S..A.D. Papazian of Nelson.\nElsewhere in Los* Angeles she, met\nMrs.'K. D. Rees who is visiting Los\nAngeles with her husband.\n* .-*'  \u2022 \u25a0   . ,\nHOME AGAIN . . .Mrs. F. S.\nWillis. North Shore, and her daughter, Mrs. James Millar and her son\nMichael have returned after spending '.two months- in' Vancouver.-'\nThey were accompanied to NelSon\nby. Mrs. Willis' son-in-law, L. ;F.\nWright of Vancouver, who has\nsince returned. \u25a0',. ,   \u2022\n\\ * .   .   .     '\nLODGE SOCIAL . ... Members of\nLoyal. Orange Lodge and. Ladies'\nOrange Benevolent Association held\na social eVeping Monday night' in\nI.O.O.F. Hall. Whist was played,\nprizes going to Mrs. A. Empey and\nW. White for firsts, and Mrs. Beck-\nman and Russell Cole, for consolations.\nModelling Glamorous,\n\"Dead End\" Profession\n., . LONDON, Feb. 19 (CP)\u2014Modeling is a.glamorous\nprof essipn but it's a \"dead-end street\" in the belief of a woman\nwho has been one; of Britain's leading mannequins for 20\nyears.''. .   -.\nGoing to be a Godmother? Embroider this for'the baby!'Easy,\nstitches \u2014 tcn-to-*Jhe-inch crosses\nand Other simple embroidery. Frame\nor line this prayer panel! |\nSomething really special for the\nnursery! Prayer-panel Pattern 59B;\ntransfer 16x19 .i inches.v\nSend TWENTY-F1VE CENTS\nin coins (Stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., Nelson.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyour NAME and ADDRESS.\nSuch a colorful roundup of handiwork Ides*! Send twenty-five cents\nnow for our Laura Wheeler Wee'dle-'\ncraft Catalog; Choose you. patterns\nfrom our. gaily Illustrated toys, dolls,\nhousehold and personal accessories.\nA pattern for a handbag is printed\nright  in  the book.\nTHRIFTYI ADORABLEI\nIt's darling! It's' delightful! It's.\nneweBt style for your child! Mother,\nthis as a good investment _f time\nand fabric] She wears jacket and\ndress to school now, dress and sun\nhat all Summer! Country applique\nis gay! Easy -to iron!\nPattern 9061, Children's sizes 2, 4,\n6. 8, 19, Size 6 dress, 1% yards 35-\ninch; jacket, 1 yard; bonnet, .4 yard.\nApplique instructions.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete illustrated sew\nchart shows you every step.\nSend THIR.Y-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\n8TYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, Nelson Daily Newa Pattern Dept., Nelson B.C.\n'Your days at this game are numbered,\" says smooth, Spanish-styled\nDotores, top model 'for royal-designer Nofman Hartnell. \"What\ncomes after that? For myself, I'm\ntoo .scraggy td start modelling\nmiddle-aged styles.. '.\nDolores' is a tall, slender model\nwith an exotic Spanish^ look, although she was born in,prosaically\nBritish Bromley, Kent, and,hain't a\ndrop of Latin blood in her veins.\nAdmittedly a veteran \u2014 she'll' soon\nappear In her 3500th mannequin parade \u2014 she isn't really too worried\nabout the future. '-'.'.      \u25a0.,\nROYAL COMMENf8    .\nShe has a distinctive style and a\nreputation acquired through 18\nyears as Hartnell's chief model. Her\nappearance recently drew favorable\ncomment from Queen Mother Elizabeth. *\nDolores has also modelled clothes\nfor othermembers of the royal family, from Queen Mot(ier Mary to\n15^-year:old Priricess Alexandra,\ndaughter of the Duchess of Kent.\nBefore last Autumn's Canadian\ntour she accompanied Hartnell to\nClarance House to show special designs for the. selection of Princess\nElizabeth, Now Elizabeth Q,\nMODELLING NO SINECURE\nOf' English 'parents, Dolores' real\nname isDorothy Stephenson, Of her\nprofessional name, given her by\nHartnell to point up her dark looks,\nDolores says: \"It's a hard name to\nlive up to. People- expect extra\npolish.\" Arid with 16. to 17 changes\nin a, One-hour show, this is sometimes difficult to keep.\nDolores says.Hartnell Is wonderful to work with, and surprisingly\neven-tempered. Bt)t Hartnell is still\nan artist. Like many famous painters, he has one \"masterpiece\" he\ncan not bring himself to sell.\nThis is a black, two-piece dinner\nsuit composed entirely of .hand-sewn\njet sequins and called \"Blackmail.\"\nDesigned originally in. 1938 and still\nexhibited as.the piece de resistance at certain shows, it has a skintight skirt and three-quarter jacket\nwith flared   peplum,   cummerbund\nwaist and long tight sleeves.'\nThis- once attracted the attention\nof film star Marlene. Dietrich. She\nhowever, had to be satisfied with a\ncopy. Hartnell still refuses to sell\nthe original. ' -\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP, B.C. \u2014 H. W. Herridge,,\nM.P, for Kootenay West has returned from Victoria and Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Amos Burling have\nreturned from a holiday spent in\nVancouver, gUests of their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nLloyd Reilly.\nMr. and Mrs. Robin Hurl of Vancouver arrived recently to'reside in\nNakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. David Johnson Firbank and David Firbank Sr., who\nhave been guests of Mrs, William\nFirbank of Nakusp, left by auto for\ntheir home in Vancouver.\nMrs. George Groenhuijsen of Silverton is visiting th. home of her\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Wesley Gregory.,   '\nMrs. Stanley Roberts of Marysville is the guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. W. Bailey.\nMrs. Donald, Melvln EastOn and\nspy Michael arc guests of Mrs, Eas-\nton's mother, Mrs. C. S. Leary and\nwill attend the marriage of Miss\nSydney^ Leary to Reginald M. Dalzell this 'week.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEB. TO. 1952 \u2014 1\nItinerary of\nL0.b_.E__. Leader\nAnnounced\nVANCOUVER, B. C.-^ Itinerary\nfor'the.forthcoming tour of the\nKootenays by. Mrs. Ei H. Pellant,\nprovincial,president of Imperial\nOrder Daughters of the Empire, has\nbeen announced.\nWeather cohditions and the death\nof the King postponed Mrs. Pellant's\ntrip.-        ',\u25a0;>\u2022.\u25a0>   ,\nShe will leave Vancouver Saturday, and will visit Arthur Chapman\nand James H. Schofield chapters\nto .Trail oh Monday; Killlan Killough chapter at Castlegar Tuesday;\nKokanee chapter in Nelson next\nWednesday; Captain McKeig-Jones\nchapter in Creston' February 28,\nand Kuskanook chapter' In Cranbrook and Sullivan Mine chapter\nin Kimberley on February 29, and\nMarch 1.\nOn her return trip Mrs, Pellant\nwill stop.at Penticton*o visit Diamond Jubilee chapter there.    \u2022    .\nKokanee' chapter at Nelsbn will\nhold a tea in the Round-up Room\nih honor of the' provincial leader.\nShe will stay with Mrs. N. C. Stlbbs\nregent ,i .\nSindoti 'Notes\nSANDON. B. C-Miss Pat Stevens\nwaB a patient over the weekend; at\nthe New Denver Hospital with\"':>.\nsprained arm;\nBrian Stephen has left tor Hed-\nley where he has taken up a post.\ntion with the Kelowna Hedley\nMines Ltd.\nYmir Group Holds\nWHisr, Crib Party\nYMIR, B.C.\u2014 A successful Valentine whist and cribbage party\nwas held in Ymir hall under sponsorship of the Ymir Community\nAssociation.\nHostesses were Mrs. Rosnikoff,\nMrs..Kirinee and Mrs. Rever. Whist\nprizes were awarded to Mrs. G.\nSpiers and H. Dougan, high scores,\nand. Mrs.- Wasney and Mr. Mac-\nDougal, low scores. Cribbage prizes\nwent to Mr. Matchett, high Score,\nand Mrs. Christopherson, low score.\n-.' The Association also sponsored a\nsuccessful, Valentine- dance here.\nDOCTOR ADDRE8SES MEET\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 .Dr; S. C.\nRobinson delivered an interesting\naddress to members of Slocan chapter, Registered Nurses' Association\nof B.C., at their monthly meeting ln\nthe Nurses' home.\nThe egg is packaged in one of the\nmost perfect containers ... the egg\nshell. Man with all his ingenuity\nhas never Invented one any better.\nHowever, like most containers it\ncan be damaged. Should the shell\nbecome cracked and it is desired to\nhard-cook ;the egg, sprinkle salt in\nthe,water jn which the egg is to\nbe cooked and the egg white will\nnot seep out.' ,\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nvat the:\nButcher teria\nPHONE 627\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN, J\n\"Tho Houso ot Furniture Valuea\"\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115- NELSON\nPaisley shawls are a kind of woollen shawl imitating the famous\nCashmere shawl bf India. They-are\nso named because they first war*\nmanufactured at Paisley, Scotland.\nCO*\nL\nTOWLEI\nFuel A Trai\nPhone 889\nNelion, B.C.\n_-'____<\nSimmer 2 Vt lb. smoked shoulder butt Remove to shallow\npan and score surface In diamond shapes. Stud with cloves. .\nIn saucepan mix:\n1 tablespoon salad oil -r\n_2 teaspoons CoIkkssi'\u2022 Mustard ,\nw cup brown sugar '.,.\n3 tablespoons ketchup .       -'*'\n' 3 tablespoons vinegar '..\/...\nSimmer and stir until blended -'\nand pour over ham. Bake at -\n375 \u00b0F. for 23 mins, basting\noccasionally.\nFor free recipe booklet,\nwrite to Reckitt & Colman  '\n(Canada) Ltd, Station T,-'\nMbdtteal.   '. ck_H\nColmatvs\nMUSTARD\nWHIST DRIVE PLANNED\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 Plans for\ntheir annual whist drive were made\nby-members of New Denver Catholic Women's League at their monthly meeting at the home of Mrs.-E.\nDeRosa. Rev. Father James Dwyer\nwas i guest.\nWatch for Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET \u2014 Phone 832\nBEST\nPlg^ COUGH SYRUP\nVlOOStMS STICKY PHUGH\nm. uts baby sum\nGet ihe original in New Blue and White carton.\nMade by the makers of BABY'S OWN TABLETS,\nm Coffee\nPacific Milk* gives\ncoffee a rich\/\ncreamy flavor.\nBuy AC. Products\nOn with your thinking cap I Dream up a\noune fpr this lovely cake and win a fat,\ncash prize! It's an angel-type cake with.\ncoffee frosting, apricot filling, flowers\nof apricot! Just look at it. Read the\nrecipe. Make up a name, and send in\nyour first entry today! Get Swift's Jewel\n\u2014the quicker* creaming, fcmwenixed\nshortening that makes your cakes airy\nand delicious!\n''Name the Cake\" Cortes. Rules\nt On tor sheet of paper print your name\nfor this cake, your own name and address,\nand send with one Jewel carton top* or\nreasonable facsimile, to: Swift. \"Name\ntbe Cake\" Contest, Box 806, Toronto,\nOntario. Enter as often as 70a like; With\nesch a carton top or reasonable facsimile.\n2. \"This contest is open to everyone in\nCanada,'except employees of Swift\nCanadian Co., Limited, its advertising\nagencies and members Of their families.\n3. All entries become the property of\nSwift Canadian Co., Limited. 4. Mail entries\nbefore midnight. March 22,1952.5. Prizes\n- will be awarded for suitability and origi-\nnality. 6. A contestant piay wm only one\nprize; Prize money divided In case of tie.\n7. Decision of judges is final. You accept\nthese rules when you enter the contest,\nBlNo correspondence will be entered ujtot\nKarnes of winners will te published m\nRoad this Roelpo\nM-CupJewol 3dpi.bakingpowdtt '\nShorftnlng       1 cup milk\n1 J_tt.pi sugar       1 cup flitaly-choppod     <\nllip.iolt oprlcoli\nt tip. vanilla J4 cup .[titly-thopp_J\n3 cups itf!__l ealte   .     null\nflew Sags whites\nCream Jewel Shortening. Add sdgar, ealv\nvanilla. Cream till fluffy. Sift together flour,'\nbaking powder, Add alternately with milk.\n.Add nuts, apricots, steamed If needed.\nFold in cu whites, beaten stiff but not\ndry. Blend lighdy. Line bottom of 8*.\nangel cake pan with brawn paper, flour.\nRub tube with Jewel Bake at 325\u00b0?.* one\nhour. C00L 1\nriuiNo\n1 eup tlhely-ehopped        M cup sugar .\napricots I tbip; com \u2022lac.fc :\n2 cups wafer 1 tbip. Ismon In I ta .\nCook everything in double boiler till soft*\nenough to spread.\nrROSTlNO .\"...\n2eggwhUoa V* tip. cr\u00abm ot tartar\nIH cups sugar V* tip. tall\nVi cup strong ceffae 1 tip. rum extract\nMix everything except extract In double\nboiler; Place over .boiling water. Beat.\nthoroughly about 5 minutes. Rentovo from\nbeat, stir well. Add extract Beat one extra\nminute, till frosting stands In peaks.\nDECORATION: Save '\/* cup filling to dot the\nswirls of frosting. Make three apricot\nflowers with scissors\u2014cut apricots to the\ncentre, petal-fashion. Use green cherry\npieces for flower centres.\ntbispaptr.   SWIFT CANADIAN CO., LIMITED.\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nH\n\"v Established April 22. 1902      *\n. British Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper  \u2022...;, *\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker'Street, Nelson, British'Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\n'\"\u2022*\u00ab    Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OP THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nWednesday, February 20,1352\nOutsiders Find\n, ,     Canada a f\n-,.   , \"Safe\" Investment\nMutual Life's President Louis L.\nLang made this appraisal bf Canadians\nin his address at the company's annual\nmeeting:\n\"Modern Canadians are a mod-,\nest people. We have been accused,\nperhaps rightly in some.cases, of\na lack of vision. Let us sincerely\nj?    hope that we have not lost that ..'\n. sensitivity to the great possibilities\nof pioneering enterprise. ... The\neconomic expansion during and\nsince the war has been soberly and\nsolidly accomplished, with little of \u25a0\nthe 'wild' enthusiasm  of earlier,\nbooms. Of this fact! believe we'\ncan (Jibe proud. Yet; if the drama\nbf the opening of the last continental frontier, the Canadian Northland* does not move us, we may\nwell have grown too cautious and\nphlegmatic.\" .\nBecause of the attractiveness of\nCanada as, a land for safe investment,\nI we are getting plenty of outside financial assistance for our pioneering. In\n\\ fact, in some fields the outsiders are\n_ taking-over while Canadians stand by\n\u00a7asith thei. ba-ik books clutched tightly\nin their hands. If outsiders feel.it safe\nto invest their dollars in'Canada, Canadians should not. spend too much\ntime looking about for \"safer\" investment. '  \u25a0,\u2022:.\nTax Men Putting\nGar in Same Class.\nJl . ' With Slot Machine\nBritish Columbia automotive trade\ncertainly has a case in its argument \u25a0\nfor reduced taxation on automobiles.\n. They have found, through investi-\n| gatlon by the Federation of Automobile''Dealers', Associations of Canada,\n;'.ttyrt 92 per cent of all the cars in the.\ncountry are used for work and shopping. Yet despite this proof of necessity, cars are taxed on the same basis\nV as luxuries.\nThe automobile bears a 25 per cent\nexcise tax, a 10 per cent sales tax that\nPresident Dan McLean of the national\nbody figures amounts to 21 per cent of\nthe retail price on a new car. When to\nthis is added social security and .municipal aid tax, gasoline taxes, both\nfederal and' Provincial, licences and\nj registration fees, it can be seen-that\nthe car owner's tax load is\" no small\nisone.. :.'\u25a0\u25a0__\nV The crowning point of the autbmo-\n; bile.,, taxation  injustice  is  that  this\n. proven necessity of mo'dern life is tm\\\n|into the same niche by the. Ottawa\n\u25a0 taxation experts as the mink coat, the\nnipt machine, the juke box and other\nStfch.   \u25a0   j\"\"''\nWe have little doubt that the nation\n.would be better off with fewer juke\ni_boxes and slot machines, but the fact\nthat thousands rdy on the automobile\nand truck for their livelihoods seems\nto have escaped the taxation experts.\n>     He Did His Share \"\n-~Ahcl More  y\nBy A. L. (8ANDY). HARRIS\nAt a time'like this we, to' the Dominion,\nrealize how little we know of the Royal Family, and how little we appreciate the continuous service rendered by them on our behalf.\nThe family ties of the lata King were.\nexceedingly strong, and being of a quiet, retir- >\ntog nature, it required sacrifice for!him to\npartly break those ties'when his duty called\nhim to the throne.\nUnder normal conditions the life and tasks\nof a, King are arduous, but almost all of hla\nreign was spent to bolstering his kingdom'\nagainst the adversities of warTln this he gave\nhimself to the limit of his strength, and after\na strenuous day of kingly duties, he has been\nfaown to take his place to a radio factory,\nclad to coveralls, unknown to his fellow workmen, and to have done his manual share to\nfurther the war effort, '   ':\"...\nHe was greatly Interested In the welfare\nof the rising generation, and to do his bit in\nthis respect he would don the attire of the\nBoy Scouts and live on equal tenna,wit_ them,\non their camping and Scouting expeditions.\n\u2022 . As King, his quiet, gentlemanly personality Won him the love, honor and respect of hla\nsubjects both at home and abroad, and the\nexample he set has been Invaluable in preserving the dignity' of the British Empire\nthroughout the world. . .  i\n, And so, to the man who sacrificed his\ncherished private life, who has given of himself beyond his limit of endurance to make\nthe world a happier, better place for others\nto live in, the end has come.\nMay he rest in peace.\n? Questions?\nDoodlebug Season\nIn North B.C.\nDeep iri the bush around Keg River, 360\nmiles Northwest of Edmonton, the 11 men of\nLloyd Hatlelld's seismograph crew got back\nto work last week after a Christmas and New\nYear's holiday \"up South'.' to civilization. A\nChinook had coaxed up the mercury to a mere\nzero, but the men knew that knifing winds\nand readings of 40 to 50 below would soon be\nback. They found their tractors and bombardier carriers frozen so solidly tha't they had to '\nthaw out engines with blow torches. Then\nthey cranked up their diesel generator, re- '\nestablished radio communication with Edmonton, stoked their bunkhouse stoves, and resumed the nightly cribbage game.\nHatlelld's gang Is one of 60 crews, totalling\n2000 men, who are probing 20,000,000 acres of\nthe Peace River region, of Alberta and British\nColumbia up to the Northwest Territories.\nTheir job is to drill 30-foot holes in the frozen\nmuskeg, plug them with dynamite, then make\nrecords of explosion echo patterns for potential oil-bearing rock formations. Besides the\nseismic teams, 15 wildcat drills are working\nthe region. More than 100 companies.are involved, spurred by a discovery near Fort St.\nJohn, B. G, last November.\n\"Doodlebug\" teams^-ia. term originally applied ta the oldtime divining rod\u2014work the .\nyear around, but Winter is their best season\nIn the North. Frozen'tight, the muskeg makes\nan acceptable roadbed; thawed, it is often an\nimpassable quagmire. Recruited* mainy from\nPrairie farms at $10 a day, the'men operate\nfrom a tractor-drawn train of five or six\nmetal cabins on steel runners. The train includes a. cookhouse, bunkhouses, office (called '\n\"the dog house\"), and a utility cabin fitted\n\u25a0 with a flush toilet, washing machine, and even\na shower bath.\u2014Time.\nDuty of the Press\nIn 1852, a British Cabinet Minister, stung\nby a criticism in the London Times, claimed\nthat \"as in these dajs tho English Press aspires to share the influence of statesmen, so\nalso must it share in the responsibilities of\nstatesmen.\" The Titaes in reply asserted that\n\u2022\u2022'the purposes and duties of the two powers\nare constantly separate, generally Independent, sometimes diametrically opposite. . . .\nTo perform its duties with entire Independence, and cofisequently with the utmost public advantage, the Pres.s can enter into no close\nor binding alliances with the statesmen of the\n\u25a0.day.... We are bound to tell the truth as we :\nfind it, without fear of consequences, to lend '\nno convenient shelter to acts of' injustice or\noppiession, but to.consign them at once io the\njudgment of the'world.\"\nYour Horoscope\nCaution and tact probably will bring you\nrewards in the year ahead, and unexpected\ngains materialize. As the child, born on this\ndate grows toward adulthood, look for a some- .\nwhat original and clever character.\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not ba published,\nThere li no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there la obvious\nnecessity for prlvaoy.\nJ. P., Winlaw\u2014Can you give me the address\nof \u00abB,_, herbalist? .. \"\u2022    .\nBeverly   Herbal   Dispensary,   801  Ellis\nStreet, Penticton.\nJ. P., Slocan Park\u2014Where can I Inquire about\n, an agent who took, an order (or ties?'\nCan you give us the name df the firm for\nwhich the agent worked, or the brand of ties\nhe was selling? ''.'  -  ,\nMrs. R. O, Nelson\u2014What la tie meaning of\nthe word \"dorp\"?\nWe are Indebted to several readera for the\nfollowing information: Dorp Is simply Dutch\nfor village. A Dutch dorp consists usually of a\nchurch, a. school, one or two stores, and a few\nhouses and surrounding farms,\nReader, Nelson\u2014Who wrote the lines, \"The\nCaptains .and the Kinfcs depart\"?\nRudyard Kipling. It occurs to his \"Recessional\".\nAnxious Student, Trail\u2014Who was the Governor of New-YorH State to 1914? .\nCharles S. Whitman,,\nSubscriber,   Nelson\u2014Where   li   the   largest\nknown meteoric crater?\nIn Canada, near Cedar Like,- four miles\nNorth'of Brant, Ontario. It was discovered to\n19S1 to a photograph taken from the air at\n230,000 fee.. The crater la 1% miles across,\nmaking it larger than the big hole to Arizona,\nwhich is one mile across.\nLoolcin& Backward\n10 YEARS A80\nProm Tha Nelson Dally News, Feb. 20, 1942\nMrs. __. J. McGregor of Bonnington left\nyesterday for Vancouver to visit her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Stewart, ex-residents of\nNelson,,... \u25a0\u25a0      ,   _\nMiss Emily Leemlng left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral- Hospital, for her home, 111 Nelson\nAvenue. ,\nKootenay-Boundary has subscribed over\nhalf a million of the $2,650,000 at which it\naims in the Second Victory Loan campaign.\nMineral Rights\n25 YEARS AQO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Feb. 20, 1927\nMiss. Katharine Brodie, who teaches at\nThrums, spent the weekend to Nelson, the\nguest of her.parents, Mr. and Mrs. James\nBrodie, Stanley Street\n\"A Guide Is Useful to Helping Others,\"\nwas the name of the sketch presented at the>\nWomen's Institute meeting by the No. 1 Company, Church of tha Redeemer Girl Guides.\nThose taking part Were May Dlnpey,'Mary\nShardelow, Fern Morris, Edith Ogden, Evelyn\nWeatherhead, Nancy Jarvla and Connie O'Sul-\nllvan. Mrs. 3. Shardelow and Miss M. Thompson were directors of the sketch.\nVANCOUVER,. Feb, 19,(CP)-If\nthe Aluminum Company of Canada\ndiscovers gold at its giant Northern\nB.C. development it -can stake a\nclaim on it\u2014but only dlurlpg.con-\natruction. \u25a0,.,        ,.;\"\u25a0\nMcfyeely Dubose, vice-president\nof the company; told a press confer\nence t6day*of the agreement \"be*\ntween the company and Minister of\nLands E. T. Kenney when (he development was first proposed.*\nHe said mineral rights on the de-\nvelopment, 400 miles North of here,\nwere reserved for the companj' during construction only.\nIf the company should discover\nsome metal during its operations it\nhas first claim on it.\nThe reservations are returned to\nthe Crown at the end of construction, he aald, Some had already\nbeen returned.\nMr, Dubose said rights were necessary tq prevent some person staking a claim on a site needed by the\nAluminum Company and then selling lt back tb the company at \"nuisance value.\"\nHe said this' had happened la\nsome of their other developments.\nThe company la also protected\nagainst the staking of a claim and\nendangering nearby Alcan equipment by dynamite blasting, etc.\nThe whole development had been\nsurveyed by an expert who had\nfound no trace of any metals, he\naald.\nReaders Help ISl^spaper Fiilfill\nIts Service to the Gorruttunity\n50 YEARS AQO\nFrom The Nelson Dally Miner, Feb. 20, 1902\nAdvertisement: Silver King Mike Will pay\nthe highest cash price for all kinds of secondhand goods. Hall Street, Nelson, B. C.\nTenders will be received for the erection\nof a floating boathouse for the Nelson Boat\nClub' till Saturday noon, Feb. 22, 1902.\nVer\u00a7e\n':      On the Passing\nOf King George VI\nHe died beloved on the greatness of God,\nEmbosomed in His tender mercy,\nWith love for every member as his rod  \u25a0\nWhich Illumined his sovereignty.\nA peaceful soul ln sorrow, has embarked\nTo fathomless eternity: ,\nQh, pass from death to truest Life, we hark,\nOur che_i_hed man of monarchy.\nEndow our Queen with health and tactful\nstrength\nWith ftine unfailing Holy Power;\nAnd be her counsel every step not faint,\nIn this her people's storming hour.\n:,  i   '.'..' -W. TURNBULL.\nNATO Rejects\nDefence Cub\nLISBON, Feb. 19 (AP) - Military chiefs of the North Atlantic\nTreaty Organization refused today'\nto approve sharp reductions in 1954\ngoals for the international defence\nforce the West Is raising.\n\u2022The cuts were, recommended by\nN.A.T.O.'s temporary council committee under U.S. mutual security\nadministrator W. Averell Harriman,\nIts job was to recommend how\nmuch force could be supported by\nEurope's hard-up economies..\nN.A.T.O. informants said the committee urged a 15-per-nent cut in\nland-force goals and up to'20-per-\ncent reduction in air force plans.\nN.A.T.O. sources said the final decisions ,between military requests\nand economic resources' now will\nHave to be made by the N.A.T.0\ncouncil of foreign, defence and finance ministers, which.begins meeting tomorrow.\nCanada's chief representatives at\nthe meetings are External. Affairs\nMinister Pearson, _T_efence Minister\nClaxton, L. Dana Wilgress, high\ncommissioner in London, and Lt.-\nGen. Charles Foulkes, chief of the\ngeneral staff.\nBy ELIZABETH REYNOLDS\nIn Christian Science Monitor\n\"There isn't a thing to the paper\ntoday,\" you say aa you lay your\nhome-town newspaper on the floor.\nYou wonder why there Is nothing\nin it about your friend's son, who\nday before yesterday was made vice\npresident of a bank In a metropolis\nmiles away, or about the party the\npeople up the street gave last night'\nIn fact, .you tell yourself that you\ncan think of a half dozen local stories the people down at the newspaper office passed up,\nH\u00bbw,right yau are,. They supjly\npassed up a number of good stories.\nBut the fault was not altogether\ntheirs. You as a member ot the\ncommunity have a responsibility to\nyour newspaper.\nIt can serve local needs only to\nIt's Been Said\nMorality knows nothing of gedgra'phlcal\nboundaries or distinctions of race.\u2014Herbert\nSpencer. ' \u2022 \"\n| TheyTl Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hado |   Today's Bible Thought\n\u25a0     '.      . ' \"\"     \"   \"' Rnvv   \u00bb\\r\\A   ipnlniisv   fn_.r-.i-A   nrMa-\nMYWLKlE-T\/IUOE\nLerSMeccMEfiaee\nB6QWSE rrs ewe-F\nTHERE'S SOMA BE C4MES\nAaoutiD,eiBwai>Tisr\nME OUr EXCEPT OtJ\n\/AU_46K~\nEnvy and jealousy inspire whis*\nperings  and   conspiracies.  If  you'\nhave aught against a man speak to\nhim or else be silent.\nAll that hate me whisper together\nagainst me.\u2014Psalm 41:7.\nThere never was a real atheist to\nour family* but Cousin Jim used to\nsay preachers -wasn't no better than\nanybody else.\nThere were about 180,000 known\ndiabetic sufferers in ' Canada in\n1051, plus an estimated 70,000.unlisted persons, \\\n5-YEAR. HUNT ENDS\nIN FLUKE ARREST\nNEW YORK, Feb. 19 (AP) \u2014\nWillie (The Actor) Sutton, the\nsmoothest bank robber ln the United-States, was arrested on a fluke,\nending a vast, five-year-old manhunt.\nTwo policemen picked him up\nthree blocks from Brooklyn police\nheadquarters. for a' routme check\nbecause they saw him tampering\nwith a parked automobile Ironically, it was Sutton's own car.\nPolice Commissioner Georga Mon-\naghan \u2014 beside himself with ela-\ntlori-called Willie \"the Babe Ruth\nof bank robbers.\"\n\"This ends the greatest manhunt\nln history,\" said Monaghan enthusiastically. \"In my judgment he's the\nworld's number one criminal. It's\nthe best collar (arrest) In a long,\nlong time.\"    ''\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0\nWillie was quoted as saying:\n\"I'm 51 years old and tired of lt\nall.\"\nSutton's career as a master jewel\nthief and cleverly disguised bank\nrobber dates back more than 20\nyears. _    '\nHe twice escaped from prison, the\nlast time in Pennsylvania 'in 1947.\nHe has been widely sought ever\nsince.\nSutton's name often was mentioned in ' connection with the\n$1,500,000 Brinks, Inc., robbery in\nBoston in 1950. He was linked to a\n.84,000 bank robbery in New York\nCity the same year.  \u25a0.';'\nHe gained the name' \"The Actor\"\nbecause of the disguises he used on\nhis bar\/k jobs \u2014 Western Union\nmessenger, .mail carrier, private\nchauffeur. He even dressed as a\npoliceman once to direct a bank\nrobbery..   '\nNew Zealand Meat\nDeal Snubs Peron\nLONDON, Feb. 19 (AP) -Britain's new meat agreement 'with\nNew Zealand \"should take the wind\nout of Senor Peron's sails,\" the Liberal News Chronicle said in an editorial Mbriday.\n. A joint Anglo-New Zealand statement Issued during the weekend,\nsaid.New.Zealand plans to send Britain 380,000 tons of meat In 1952.\nNew Zealand also pledged to expand\nmeat production in' exchange for\nBritain's promise to take all New\nZealand's meat surplus for the next\n15 years.\nTheh News Chronicle said \"It\nlooks as though we shall not have\nless meat in 1952 than wa had in\n1951, though there Is no sign yet\nwe shall have any more.\"\nNoting that the hew .ComnJon-\nwealth meat deal follows quickly on\nPresident Peron's announcement\nthat Argentina would not accept less\nthan \u00a3250 a ton from Britain In future meat deals,,the newspaper commented:   .\n\"In the parlance of the poker\nplayer he has been seeri.\" -,,\n'50-.I Surplus\nAf $7,950,096\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 19 (CP) -\nBritish Columbia had a surplus of\n$7.950,096.at'March 31, 1951, it. was\nshown in the public accounts tabled\ntoday in the Legislature by Premier\nByron Johnson\/\nRevenue for the year ending last\nMarch 31 was $124,029,588 and expenditures amounted to $110,079,471\nRevnue had been estimated at\n$105,831,189 and . expenditure - at\n$105,558,517 for a surplus of $272,672.\nBiggest single item in expenditures in the year ending March 31,\n1951 was $22,319,271 for the health\nand welfare department. Next came\n$21,178,431 for public debt: $16,695,-\n254 for the finance department;\n$16,395,082 for education; $15,275,548\nfor public works; $2,922,786 for the\nprovincial secretary's department;\n$0,408,128 for lands and forests; and\n$5,786,919 for the attorney-general's\ndepartment\nThe Hospital Insurance Service\ntook in $14,557,521 In the year ending last March 31, including $11,438,-\n378 in premiums. It paid out $19,-\n878,219, leaving a deficit of $5,118,-\n697 before another $6,735,000 was\npoured Into it from government\nfunds.' \u2022\nThe scheme, first started ln 1049,\nis reported now to be around\n$12,500,000 in the red.\nBritish Airporis\nFix Landing Tax\nLONDON, Feb. 19 (CP.-Imposi-\ntlon. of a landing tax On all fare-\npaying passengers arriving at British state-owned airports, has been\nannounced by the Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation. ',.\nThe charges, effective May 1, will\nbe five shillings for those arriving\nfrom European destinations and\nseven shillings six pence for each\npassenger from Canada, the United\nStates and other parts of the world.\nNo charge will be made for transit\npassengers who continue their Journey without a break.\nA ministry statement said the tax\nwas being Introduced as a contribution to the mounting cost of providing services and facilities for passengers at airports. During .the last\nfinancial year these operations resulted in a heavy deficit, spokesmen\nsaid.   .\nAt Montreal, Trans-Canada Air\nLines officials said a similar procedure is followed at some Caribbean points.\nSince the British announcement\nwas made only today, Canadian air\ncarrier officials said they could not\nsay how It would work on Canada-\nto-the-U.K. fares. But they noted\nthat in the case of Canadian flights\nto Nassau and Jamaica the passengers, rather than the air carrier,\npay the local Impost for landing and\ntake-off.\nproportion to the cooperation It (eta\nfrom the members of the comma\nnity, National, International and\nniost of the Provincial newa comes\nIn over leased wires. Local-news ia\na different nutter. Part of tbe ta-\nsponsibility for It la yours.\n, ('._  *\/'\u2022'. \"i\nNever get the Idea that the editor\nof your newspaper, Is interested\nonly ln certain people.ln your town.\nOn the contrary, he Is Interested ln\neveryone who Uvea In the community and district. Both the wealthiest woman In town, who lives to the\nlargest house in the swank residential district, and the poorest men,\nwho lives in the smallest house on\na aide street, subscribe for the paper\nand pay the same price for it, In the\neyes of the editor both subscribers\nare Important.\nTELL THE NEWSPAPER\nGetting back to those stories the\nnewspaper passed up\u2014just how did\nyou expect the folks at the office to\nknow about your friend's son? The\nfather was justifiably proud of his\nson, but did he or any of his friends\nthink to tell a reporter so that even\nacquaintances could share the new\nvice president's pleasure in his good\nfortune? No, they fed the grapevine\nand probably criticized the newspaper, too, \u2022'   .\n.   .   . \u2022\nNow about that 'party of your\nneighbor's. How do you' know,that\nthe society editor didn't call tha\nlady? \"Please don't put our party to\nthe paper,\" perhaps she begged\nwhen she was asked. \"We didn't ask\nthree couples we're Indebted to, and\n\u2014well, you understand.\"' You, too,\nrealize the importance 6t self-preservation socially speaking aa well\nas otherwise, And after, all, the\nparty was a private affair. On public affairs newsmen insist on the\npublic's right to be informed.\nMaybe you think to yourself, \"I'\ndon't like the editor and his policies.\" What if you don't alwaya\nagree with him? Have you ever\nthought how little you really agree\nwith your best friends? Yet you\ndon't ignore or criticize them constantly just because you fall to see\neye to eye with them.\n, In many eases tha newspaper\neditor and manager are far more\nconscientious to promoting the\nInterests of the heme town than\nthey are given eredlt for being. If\nthey weren't public spirited' they\nwouldn't be In tha newspaper bus.\nIneii.\n\u2022  \u2022   \u2022\n\"He's running the paper for the\nmoney he can make,\" (you say, Of\ncourse he wants to make money.\nWho doesn't? But he chose the\nnewspaper business because he\nit. And any man or woman who'\ncan make money In the newspaper\nbusiness can make money in some\nother less difficult line, of work in\nwhich he would not have\" to deal\nwith ,\u00abo'many-different personall.\nties, many of\\them eensltlve folks.\nA sense of public spiritedness.is the\nthing that keeps most newsmen on\nthe Job.\n\"I don't like the way he goes\nabout helping the town,\" you con.\nttoue. Maybe you do object to his\nway.. But'his way may be nearer\nright than you think. He knows a\ngreat deal about your town. He\nknows much of the inside workings! of its big and little businesses,\nof its clubs and lodges, of its\nchurches and amusement places and\nof Its people,      ;.'_.\u2022\nHave you aver considered the <\nservices the   newspaper  renders\n, you, the,feeder? Per one thing, It,\nhelps you to save money. When\nyou read the adi, yoii learn where\n\u2022 . eu ean find  bargains without <\nwearing out shea leather or using\nup tires and gasoline, .*\"\u25a0\u25a0.    .\n.'\u2022; \u2022 ;.\nThen in the'classified ads you\nfind an abundance of help and\nsometimes even a'laugh. Remember\nthe time you heeded someone to do,\nchores around the house and found\nJust the Hght.man through the classified ads? Have you forgotten the\ntime someone advertised a room fop\nrent to a business girl with kltcheh\nprivileges?\nINFORMED\nYour newspaper also keeps you\nInformed concerninif happenings in\nyour town. You learn about projects\nof civic clubs. You find out how\nthe schools, are progresing,; You\nread1 news of the1, courthSuse. In\nfact,, you know many things because of your local newspaper.\nIn the society section you are told\nsomething of what goes on among\nthe people who entertain in your\ntown. Remember how you bad a\npleasant chat with friends from out 1\npf town because of a little Item a\nwhich stated that they,_were the\ngueats of some people you know?\nThe hosts couldn't call every one of\nthe visitors' friends, but the news-'\npaper cheerfully spread the word\naround for them.   ,\nThe newspaper gives much publicity to worthy organizations.\n\"Where's; yesterday's paper?\" you g\nask.'\"I want to find out what time\nmy lodge meeting le.\" ;\n\u25a0 You wonder about church services on Sunday morning. From your\nnewspaper you learn not only about'\nSunday  services  but   also-about,\nchurch meetings during the.week.   .\n\"The junior class is presenting itt\nannual play at the High School' auditorium Friday evening,\" the play\ndirector* explains to the reporter.\nAnd another story is born.\nWhen you give a story to tha\npaper, don't forget that there are\nfive things'a reporter must know\n\u2014whe, what, when, where and\nhow..Oheok the material you prepare to be' sure that you have\nanswered all questions.\nA newspaper man works eter.\nnally against time. He oan't call\nether persons to get Information\nyou have,forgotten to Include, Always before bim Is the old deadline that changes not Ahd time la\nalways a-waitlng,\nKeep In mind also that tha <\nnewspaper Is In reality a publla\nUtility, and' must be treated aa\nsuch. Gas has to be lighted before\nIt furnishes heat Electricity musfaf I\nbe'switched on before It gives'\nforth light. Water has te be turner)\non before It flows from the, plpajsi\nNews has to be given to the, newspaper before It can be piit Into\nprint And therein lies your responsibility to \u00ab community en-\nterorlse.\nmiwru\nIMWtf _^   -__\u25a0\u25a0 mW\nsoft*\nTHROAT\near tm~r:       v-.. e.u\u2014 ....\nVOU CANT BEAT\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nSCOTTISH POLICE\nTOEDMONTON\nEDMONTO N, Feb. 19 (CP) \u2014\nTwelve men and qne woman from\nScotland, all trained police pesron-\nnel, will arrive here March 9 to\njoin the Edmonton police force.\nThey have signed on to the Edmonton force for at least a year.\nChief   Constable   Reg   Jennings\nid it is planned to have the\ngroup indoctrinated as a unit. The\nScottish recruits will spend several\nweeks becoming familiar with the\nvarious city, provincial and, Criminal Code statutes as well as Canadian court procedure and rules of\nthe city department.   ,     * \u25a0\nThe chief said that when they\nare ready for assignments they will\nbe distributed through different\nsections of the Edmonton force.\nFive of the 12 men are married\nand their families are expected to\ncome to Edmonton later.\nThe police department went after\nrecruits in the United Kingdom after it found godd Canadian' candidates for police work were hard to\nfind,' . ,   . >\nJMamt latin \u00ae*\u00ae*\n... is the place for:\nCommercial\nMOURNERS DIG GRAVES\nIN GLASGOW CEMETERY\nGLASGOW;, Feb. 19 (Reuters) \u2014\nMourners dug graves at Glasgow\ncemeteries* Monday .because of\nstrike of gravediggert \"We- have no\nobjection to friends and relatives\ndigging graves but we are not going,\nto allow others to do so,\" a spokesman said. The gravediggers went on\nstrike Friday, claiming a seven-\ncents-an-hour raise. *\nSEVEN SOLDIERS KILLED\nKUALA LUMPUR, Malaya, Feb.\n19 (AP) \u2014 Seven British soldiers\npatrolling a* rubber estate were slain\nMonday when they walked Into a\nCommunist ambush In Perak State.\nRUBBER STAMPS\nINVITATIONS  fc\nBOOKLETS\nWEDDING INVITATIONS\nBONDS\nFINANCIAL STATEMENTS\nPUBLICITY MATERIAL\nPROGRAMMES\nENVELOPES\nREPORTS\nLETTERHEADS    \u2022\nMENUS   \u25a0-'*.\".\nRAFFLE TICKETS  .\nCATALOGUES \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\netc.\nPHONE 144\nSWaflii latin Ii\u00abM\n266 Baker St.\nNelson, B, C.\ni.\n (hound, ths.\u2014\u2014\nKOOTENAY it'\nLARRY RAtCLI.FFE\n\u2022 KIMBERLEY, B, 'C-Klmberley Oynamltera suffered 10 wlnlasa\ngames before they could win early thla season. Their first victory was\nover Nelson. Monday night, once more after 10 winless attompts, Kim\nberley roared baok into the victory column, Yei, you guessed Its Kim\nberley had walloped Nelson again.\nThe score triumph, Incidentally, was sparked by the sensational\nreturn of McLay, The Dynamiters were never behind, They caught a\nshaky Boomer Rodctoyak for six fast first period goals before the starry\nLeaf Ian settled down. But by then it* was too late. Each team scored\nthree goals to the last two frames. Jack Yost, to a atarry defensive game.\n..and Sam Calles each acored twice. Nicest goal) were Calles' first and\nHarms'. .\n-.'\u25a0* * \u2022\nSHOTS AND PASSES\u2014Fans tn the Kootenay are watching with\nunusual interest the Canadian Olympic hockey squad, the Edmonton\nMercs, with special emphasis on the membera of that team who played\n: hockey here last Winter, Kimberley haa a special interest, with Sully\nSullivan, rated one of the best centres In the league for years, continually'entering the scoring column. In the Olympic opener Sully scored one\n. goal and earned four assists as Canada roughed Germany 13-1.'\n* * \"!*'\nFROM THIS CORNER we see five squads with fairly good chances\nof coming out os top of the B. C. amateur nookey picture without raising\neyebrows too high.\n, . First, of course, Is Kamloops Elks, With a team loaded with name\nplayers, the Okanagan League leaders must be given* the nod If you\nconsider paper work alone. '\nTrail would naturally rank first Ip the Kootenays, simply because\n. of the name players again, and not because of their showing this\n.   season. Ai we see It, Trail should have taken this League In a run-\n1 *w\u00aby> '*\u25a0\".'\nIn the Okanagan again, Vernon is the only other contender, They\ncould easily score an upset if they are \"hot\" at the right moments,\n\u25a0'.,:',-. ':'\"\u25a0'*   *   .*''.   ','\"'\nFURTHER WE8T,you'll see Nanaimo as the only real contender,\ndespite poor leadership. Hot-headedness could upset Nanaimo even before\nVancouver is pushed aside, but lt isn't likely that soon.\nFifth choice is the one most people would like to see win If the home\ntown outfit couldn't, the Nelson Leafs. ,\nWJto a scoring punch that has always been absent before, a brilliant\ndefensive setup built around Rodzinyak, and hard-working forwards, the\nLeafs may be just the team. Some'll offer you.odds, '   ,\nKimberley, Kelowna, Vancouver and Penticton eiuld show an\nupset to a semi-final round, but we doubt If any plaoe else, though\nwe hate1 Jo admit It\nIt's a bit early yet to size up other B, C, hockey title situations, but\nWa would pick the Kootenays to take over 50 per cent of the silverware\nthla Winter, We'll pick our winners in each group next week.\nBeat Czechs 4-1\nWidens Lead\n#\n1\nOLYMPIC\nSTANDING\nThe standings (based on 10 for\nfirst and 5-4-3-M for the next five\nplaces):     ,, .\nRed Matthews Gels Pro Ball Offer\nKIMBERLEY, Feb. 19 - A Kimberley boy who played senior\nhockey with Nelson Maple. Leafs\nwas recently offered a chance to\nturn professional \u2014 but not at\nhockey.\nGord \"Red\" Matthews, now overseas chasing pucka with Nottingham\nPanthers, haa been contacted by\ntha Seattle professional baseball\naquad, and will likely accept, the\ncoast club's offer.    ,\n\"Red\" played all his ball, and\nhockey, \u2022for1' Kimberley except for\none season under'Eddie Werea in\nNelson, A first baseman, his batting\nand fielding sparked Kimberley\nElks the last three Summers, and\nplayed a big part in tha Elks' victory here to the $100 tourney last\nyear. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. \"Bill\" Matthews of Kimberley.\nKenora Rink to\nRepresent1 N. Ont.\nS,UDBURY. Ont,.Feb. 19 (CP)-\nThe rink skipped by Jimmy Cuy,\n, six-foot-one Canadian Pacific Railway brrfkeman from Kenora, became Northern Ontario's representative in the Dominion-Curling Association finals at Winnipeg next\nmonth when Copper Cliff's Hughie\nI* Munro upset Tom Ramsay of Kirkland Lake 6-5 today.\nRamsay, who won the Canadian\ntitle to 1950, needed a win over\nMunro and. another over Guy to\nforce a tie with the tall Kenora\nskip, but he missed by a whisker\non a last-end take-out try.   ,\nGuy had defeated Ramsay to their\nfirst meeting Monday in an extra\nend which, coupled with two wins\nover Munro, gave him three victories against no defeats. His record\nsince entering club playdown competition at Kenora is 16 wins and\nthree setbacks.\n1 COLOMBO, Ceylon, Feb. 19! (AP)\n\u2014Frank Sedgman of Australia and\nDoris Hart of Jacksonville, Fla.,\nblasted Straight Clark of Los Angeles, and Shirley Fry of Akron,\nOhio, fl-0, 6-1 tb win the mixed\ndoubles championship of the Asian\ntennis tournament today.\nRED MATTHKWS\nTRAIL CURLING\nWednesday draws in the UD.L.\nround robin* at the Trail curling\ndub:\n6:30 p.m.\u2014D. MacDonald vs W. P.\nRobertson; J. A. Montpellier vs R.\nK_ Dunlop, J; D. Hartley vs H.\nCurrie, .J. H. Hargrave vs A. A.\nSImonson, C. Strachan vs A. W.\nMcDonald, T. W. Mathieson vs T.\nN. Nixon.\n8:30 p.m.\u20143. Atwell vs R. McGhie,\nD. J. Minto' vs M. D, Desbrisay, Gr\nK, Falrbaim vs O. H. Gill, W. Rae\nvs R. J. MoKinnon, R. E. Stone vs\nH. Marshall, J. A. Robinson vs P.\nF. Mclntyre.       .\nThe Buffalo, at St, Louis game in\nthe American Hockey League,\nwhich _was postponed on November\n6th, because of the heavy snow\nstorm to SL Louis, will be played\non* February 8th. Buffalo Is also to\nthe Mound City on February 9th.\nOpening Draws West Kootenay\nJunior Bird Tourney Announced\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., Feb. J9 -. At\nleast 130 Junior shuttllsts will compete in the West Kootenay Juiiior\nBadminton tournament which opens\nhere Thursday night, an increase of\n_0..over last year's event staged at\nTadanac. \u2022\nNelson tops the entry list with\n87 while other competitors are from\nCrawford Bay, Salmo, Robson, Kin-\nnjird, Trail, Tadanac, Warfield and\n\u25a0Castlegar.\nPlay will start at 7 p.m. Thursday eyening and continue until\n. 11:30, resuming for the same period\nFriday evening and concluding\nSaturday when matches will start*\nat 9 a.m. and wind up at 11 p.m.\nThe tourney is sponsored by the\nWest Kootenay Badminton Association.\nThursday evening draw:\n7 P.M.\nBoys' singles under 16:,\nB. Irvine vs M. Zlbin; F. Horcoff\n,va D. Brandson.\n\u25a0Boys' doubles under 16:\nB. Bonde and p. Crispin vs C.\nOrtner and D: Hallam.\nTOO P.M.\nBoys' doubles under 14:\nA. Evans and P. Sookachoff vs P.\nHoloboff and G. Walters; W. Eld-\nridge and C. Sookachoff vs J. Balleny and H. Hargrave.   \u2022    .\n..' Girls' singles under 16:\nK. Batchelor vs D. Fife.   \u2022\nj Mixed doubles under 16:\nH. Renzie and N. Hughes vs Ei\n\u25a0 Robertson and N. Newlove; &\nHorthpuse and P. Godfrey vs M.\nScott and F. Horcoff; P. Warren and\nM. Wilson vs P..Harvle and R\nCalder.\n8:30 P.M.\nBoys' singles under 16:\nD. Nutter vs G. Latta.\nBoys' doubles under 16:\nJ. Wagner and W. Wyder vs B\nBrandson and P. Sookachoff.\nBoys' singles under 18:\n'J, Newstead vs L: Kuryluk. .\n9 P.M.\nBoys' doubles under 16:\nR. Rhodes and M, Mi-Bride vs W.\nHoloboff and M. Zlbin.\nBoys' doubles under 16:\nM. Wilson and T. Godfrey vs H.\nInk and D, Ma\"rtta. '\nBoys' stogies under 16:\nN. Hughes vs N. Newlove.  \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0  .\n9:30 P.M.\nGirls' doubles under 18:\nJ. Swihart and D. Muirhead vi\n3. McEwen and M. Kleef.\nGirls' doubles under 16:\nP. Warren and S. Shorthouse vs\nE. Paterson. and A. Gordon.\nBoys' singles under 14:\nC: Sookachoff vs J.* Barron.\nBoys' singles under 14:\nA. Evans vs J. Balleny; P. Sookachoff va R. Rhodes; G. Walters vs\nH. Hargrave.\n10:30 P.M.\nGirls' doubles under 16:\nR. Renzie a_dK. Batchelor vs L\nRyder and'T. Harvey.\nBoys' singles under 16:\nM. Wilson vs K. Waldie; P. Godfrey vs A. Robinson.\n11 P.M. ' '\nBoys' singles under 16:\nE. Nuyens vs D. Creighton.\nMixed doubles under 18:\nJ. McEwen and J. Newstead vs\nC. Sorenson and J. Zlbin.\nMixed doubles under 16:\nD.  Fife   and  E-. Nuyens   vs  D.\nMuirhead and J. Reed.\nNorway \t\nAustria ,_;\nUnited States ....\nFinland , \t\nHolland\t\nItaly   ..\u201e.._.,.,\nGermany .__.\u201e\nSwitzerland\t\nSweden  _.\u201e,\nCanada ......'.._\u201e.,\u201e....\nFrance ..,.'..\u201e\u2022...,\t\nBelgium ................\n. 94\n. 81\n*34H\n.24'\n24\n.'\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\n. 19\n.13\n12_4\n.   3V>\n1\nJapan\nStandings' in the nine-country\nround-robin hockey tournament for\nthe Olympic championship:\n' '     '' . W LF API\nCanada   , :... 4   0 43   5   B\nSweden   ..'.'.  4   0 37  8  8\nUnited States ; 4   0 27  8  8\nCzechoslovakia  3\nSwitzerland  3\nNorway __.......... 0\nGermany *  o\nFinland \u201e\u201e  0\nPoland   0\n1 21 7\n1 27 13 6\n4 '\u00ab 20 0\n4 7 36 0\n4 7 42 0\n4   6 43' 0\nWins Third Event in Successive Days\nSpeedskating Star Hjalmar Andersen ' _\n\u25a0'.'\u2022    By JACK SULLIVAN; '\n,.'.,\u25a0 Canadian Press'Staff Writer\n.'\" OSLO, Feb. 19 (CP)~Norway's fantastic flyer,: Hja.-\nmar Andersen, cut 11.6 seconds from his own 10,000-metre\nworld speed-skating record today and became the first athlete\nin the history of the Winter Olympic Games to win three\nchampionships on consecutive\ndays.\nBefore a wildly-cheering crowd ot\n25,000 ta Bislett Stadium, Andersen\nflashed over the course of _o__q-6V.\nmiles in 16 minutes, 45.8 seconds.\nHe not only beat his own recogniz*\ned world-record time of 18:574 but\nripped 38.4 seconds from tha Olym*\npie mark of 17:24.2 set by a fellow,\ncountryman, Tvar Ballangrud, at the\n1936 Olympics ta Germany.\nSunday Andersen won the 5000.\nmetre title, setting another Olympic\nrecord, and Monday he won. the\n1500-metre race. ,\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCANADIANS IN\nOLYMPICS YESTERDAY\nHockey ,\u2014 Canada defeated\nCzechoslovakia 4-1.  ,\nSpeed skating (10,000 metres,\nabout 66% miles) \u2014 Ralph OHn,\nCalgary, placed 21st; Craig MacKay, Saskatoon, 24th. Field: SO.\nSkiing (slalom, men) \u2014 Bob\nRichardson, Montreal, placed 27th'.\nGeorge Merry, Trail, B.C.. Jack\nGriffin; Vancouver, and Andre\nBertrand, Quebec, eliminated' af-\n' ter .lrst run. Field: 87.\nFigure skating (school figures,\nmen; free-skating phase next\nThursday) \u2014 Peter Flrstbrook.\nToronto, placed 'fourth. Field: 14.\nIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII\nNorwegians jubilantly celebrated\ntheir Idol's triple win. Therd was\nlittle worry that Othmar Schneider\nof Austria stopped Norway's streak\nof championships by winning th'e\nmen's slalom race.\nTwo Norwegians placed behind\nSchneider,   and   Norway's   team\ntotal In the unofficial point standings went rocketing to 94. Austria\nIs second with 61 and, the United\nStates,  shut  out  for  the   third\nstraight day, Is third with 34'\/,,,\nfollowed bv Finland and Holland,\ntied with 24.    .\nAndersen's sensational performance was followed later by another\ncheering display, on a smaller scale.\nMERCS CELEBRATsE\nIn a dressing room in the Jourdal\nAmfl Stadium, a happy band of Canadians celebrated Canada's 4-1\nvictory over Czechoslovakia in a\nfourth-round game of the Olympic\nhockey championship series.\nThe fourth straight victory for\nthe team from Edmonton sent Canada to the top of the nine-country\nstanding on a goals-for-and-agalnst\ncount.\nThe United States defeated Switzerland 8-2,'the first loss for the\nSwiss. Sweden, also with four victories, had a bye today.\nIn toe rugged game against the\nCzechs,  Billy  Gibson  scored  two\ngoals and Bruce Dickson and Gordie Robertson one each.\n,      An almost sure  point winner\nfor Canada made his first appearance today. Peter Flrstbrook, 18-\nyear-old  Toronto   figure   skater,\nwas scored fourth In the compulsory figures the 14 entrants went\nthrough today,\nDick Button, world figure skating\nchampion, ..was far in front on\npoints, as expected, and is practically a certainty to defend successfully the Olympic title he won in\n1948 Helmutt Seibt of Austria was\nsecond and James Grogan of Colorado Springs, Colo., third.      ,\nThe final phase of the champion,\nehip-rthe.free-skating\u2014will be held\nThursday.     \" .\nThere wasn't one North Amer-.\nican ta'the first 10 placings ta the\n10,000-metre speed' race, Where Andersen made a show of the field.\nKees Broekman of Holland, Carl-\nErik Asplund of Sweden and Pentti\nLamio of Finland all broke the\nOlympic record in finishing in that\norder behind Andersen. But their\nclockings were far below his.\nRalph Olin of Calgary placed 21st\nand Craig. Mackay of Saskatoon\n24th. '\nHoop Playoffs\nOpen Tonight\nTRAIL, B.C.-The Trail City Basketball League came to a close last\nweek when the Castlegar Dominoes\ndefeated the Trail Lumbermen 41-\n38. By virtue of this win, Castlegar\nended league play tied for .second\nwith Trail Motormen, both' teams\nhaving records of six wins and four\nlosses. _\n-Semi-final playoffs will get underway Wednesday with Castlegar\nplaying host to the Motormen\nwhile first-place Rossland Royals\nmeet the last-place Trail Lumber*\nmen, Semi-finals will be. decided\nIn a two game series, total points\nto count, '\u2022\nThe Trail Lumbermen, who twice\nbefore this past season, have come\nwithin' a whisker of defeating the\nDominoes made Wednesday no exception as the Lumbermen fought\ngamely all the way, In the.UJit quarter taking the lead three different\ntimes.*\nWith 30 seconds remaining they\nheld a. one point advantage but Bill\n\"Buckets\" Hughes broke through for\ntwo quick baskets to put the game\non ice for the Dominoes.\nRennie Mitchell once .again was\noutstanding fdr the Castlegar men\npicking up 22 points, bringing hit\nseason's total to 170 In 10 games\nfor   a , 17   points   average.\nB.C. Drops 3 Straight.. . .\nT^de Sole Undefeated\nRink After 5 Rounds\nMONCTON, N,l\u201e Kttfc.lHCP-\n\u2014 Saskatchewan's pace .setting\nentry In tha Dominion Schoolboy\nCurling Bonspiel tonight downed\nNorthern Ontario 13,4 to extend\nIts undefeated string to five\ngomes.\nTha Western rink, only foursome\nundefeated after five rounds of\nplay, trounced Prince Edward Is.\nland 14-2 to fourth-round play ear.\nIter today..The bonspiel ends Thursday.' _   ,-.,'..\nOther fifth-round winners ware\nNova Scotia, Quebec, Manitoba and\nNew Brunswick,\nManitoba had won four games apd\nlost one, Ron bray's squad bowing\n16-7 to Alberta to the fourth round.\nQuebec, Alberta, (few Brunswick\nand Nova Scotia each hava. won\nthree and lost two.\ni Ontario fared tha worst, losing all\nfive gomes. British Columbia won\ntwo arid lost three. Prince Edward\nIsland and Northern Ontario bad only one win each, ,\n, Gary Thode's Saskatchewan craw,\ndefending' Dominion champions\nfrom Saskatoon Tech, remained Invincible throughout the first five\nrounds.       ; *\nThe British Columbia entry,\nskipped by Murray Green ef Vernon, dropped all three games\nTuesday*after winning both Monday starts.\nfollowing' are tha standings fol\nlowing five rounds of play:\nSaaitiltchewan  .,_._.._\u201e\nManitoba ,.,.  \u201e.\nQuebec _.. \u201e\u201e,\n' W S,\n....    5   0\n.__.   4   1\nNew, Brunswick _..__\u201e_\nNova Scotia ', : \u201e^.\u201e\nBritish Cplumbla \u201e.\nPrince Edward Island ....._,\nNorthern Ontario \u201e.\n-_.   3   2\n....   2   3\n_.._.   1   4\nHEARNS TAKE\nBIRD TOURNEY\nFINAL EVENTS\nRemaining events in,the kelson\nBadminton Club tournament were\nconcluded this week with Eddie\nand Mary Hearn taking the honors.\nEddie beat. Jim Ball 15-5,. 15-5 to\ntake the men's open singles competition. In semi-final matches Ball\nbeat Stan Donaldson and Hearn\nousted Laurie Lefeaux,\nMr.'and Mra. Hearn teamed up to\nwin the mixed open event by down-\ntag Elsie Hodgson and Jim. Ball\n10-15, 15-8, 15-9 ta the final.\n'\u2022 to semi-final games, the Hearris\nbut Friscilla Cornwall and Bob\nCollinson while Hodgson ond Ball\nturned back Isabel Ramsay and\nGeorge Collettl.,-. . .'\nPHONE  144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nFlyers All But Cinch First Place\nFinish; Red Tilson Nets Winner     *\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 19-Spokane Flyers \u00bbU but clinched\na first-place Western International' Hockey League'finish\nhere tonight by turning back Trail Smoke Eaters 3-2 in their\nlast regular appearance on\nTrail ice this season,\nThe victory gave the Flyers a\n254-game bulge ' on the second\nplace Smokies who have only two\ngames left as against Spokane's\nfour.\nRed Tilson was the hero for the\nAmerican club by scoring the tying goal In the second per|od and\ncoming baok to net the winner In\nthe final period. He also set up\nSpokane's  first goal  scored   by\nHughie Scott .'\nThe Flyers came from behind a\n2-0 Trail lead in the second period\nto get the victory, their only one\non Trail Ice this season.\nGord Sinclair gave the Smokies\na 1-0 first-period lead and Johnny\nRypien increased the margin early\nta the second before the Flyers\nstarted to roll.\nFive penalties, three to Spokane,\nwere handed out in the cleanly-\nplayed contest\nThe Flyers move on to Nelson\nthis evening to make their final\nappearance against the Maple Leafs.\nLINEUP '   ' .\nTrail - Goal, Sofiak; defence, Kotanen; Hamilton, Fischer, Sinclair;\nforwards: Rypien, Staley, Kromm,\nShabaga, Wiest, Ramsden, Turik,\nStanton, Cavanaugh.\nSpokane \u2014 Goal, B, Bentley; defence, Mandryk, Luke, S, Bentley,\nCirullo; forwards, Blackett; Rozaini,\nMcPherson, Tilson,-Scott,,Macauley,\nNadeau, McNally, Toole.\nSUMMARY:\nFirst period\u20141, Trail, Sinclair\n(Kotanen, Turik) 1:17. \u2022\nPenalty\u2014Sinclair.\nSecond Period\u20142, Trail, Rypien\n(Turik, Stanton) 12:38; 3, Spokane,\nScott (Tilson, Bentley) 14:15; 4,\nSpokane, Tilson (Rozzini) ,15:85, .\nPenalties'\u2014Luke, Fischer.\nThird period\u20145, Spokane, Tilson\n(Blackett) 7:19.\nPenalties\u2014Luke, Mandryk,\nLeafs, Rangers\nPlay.. Tie\nTORONTO, Feb. 19 (CP) - New\nYork Rangers came to Toronto tonight and played the Maple Leafs\nto a 3-3 National Hockey League\ntie with a gpal ln the last three\nminutes of play.\nThe split In points lifted Leafs in.,\nto second place, one point ahead of\nMontreal   Canadlena  and  boosted\nRangers into the number .four spot\nby the same margin,.* \\',      > :'\nRangers led 2-1 at the end ef\nthe  .first   period.   The'   second\nframe-^whleh  saw  11  penalties\nIncluding a match sentence\u2014was\njcore(ess.   Leafs struck for two\ngoals  In the final period  but\nRangers tied It up with less than\nthree mlnutos left\nGaye Stewart, whb broke Into the\nNotional Hockey League with Toronto, got New York's two first-\nperiod tallies and Herb Dickenson\nsank the tying goal,    \u2022\nThe Leaf marksmen were Max\nBentley, Harry Watson and Teeder\nKennedy.\nReferee George Gravel eraoked\ndown on rough play to the seoond frame. His big sentence went\nto defenceman  Gus  Mortson  ef\nLeafe\u2014a match penalty\u2014for what\nGravel termed a.deliberate attempt to Injure defenceman Hy\nBuller of Rangers. \"..\nBuller was knocked to the Ice\nduring a New York ganging attack\nand Mortson slashed him across the\nchest with hla stick and then apparently made as If. to kick him.\nMortson* got. an automatic $100\nfine and will be suspended from\nfurther play until his case has been\ndealt with by League President\nClarence Campbell. '    '\n5 Hz\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, KB. JO, 1952 \u2014 7\n28 East Kpotewxy Rinks in\nSelkirk Spiel atfireston\n.CRESTON, B. C\u201e Fab, 19 r'Play\nreached the'semi-final stage to the\nGrand Challenge event of the 28th\nannual .Selkirk Bonspiel here today,\nTwenty-eight  rinks  are  competing In the East Kootenay event\n. Including 24 from Creston, three\nfrom' Cranbrook and  one from\nKimberley. i. *\nRinks reaching toe\/ Grand Challenge 'teml-finals wei-a Vandruff,\nSASKATOON LIKELY SITE   '\nFOR .1983 SCHOOL PLAYDOWNS\nMONCtfON, N, B., .Feb. 19 *(CP>-\nSaskatoon has been recommended\nas the site for the 1953 Canadian\nHigh School Bonspiel, it was learned last night following a meeting\nof committee members. The site\nand time are subject to confirmation by the Dominion Curling Association.     \u25a0   '        : ..\nSpeers, and Reed of Cre.ton and\nJostad of Cranbrook.\nPlay ln the Pascuzzo and Cant\nerpn Cup events, second primary\nand secondary respectively, hod advanced Into the second round Tuesday.\nLabelle and Archibald of Creston\nlead the grand aggregate standing\nwith five wins and one loss each\nwhile Sallken and Speers Of Creston and Jostad of Cranbrook all\nhave 1-1 marks.\nThe 'spiel will wind up Wednesday.        ', '\nGeneral Skating\ntoday\nh 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. \u25a0\nAttention\nSeason Ticket Hdlden\nfor Senior Hockey\nYour Tickets for the 22nd League Gam*\nmay be picked up at the\nKOOTENAY STATIONERS\ny FRIDAY and SATURDAY\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022:,-'%:\u25a0    10:00 a.m; to 5:00 p.m.\nCivic Centre \u2014 7:00 p.m., Saturday\nYou don't have to be an expert critic\nto enjoy Dewar's... only lo fully appreciate its mellowness and the perfection\nof its bouquet. \u25a0 '       .\nBefore you say Scotch ... My DEWAR'S\nenjoyed byv\neveryone   \u25a0..\nbut\nAPPRECIATED\nby those\nwho \u00abknow\nCONTINTt\nMl* OP.\nDISTILLED, BLENDED MD BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND\nDewars\nSpecial\ni\nT>BW.IR'S_-_CU_*\n(   _v\/Wsj|_i___i' I\nJokDeWarS.SbosII'j\nTills advertisement is not nubllshed1 or displayed by the Liquor Control Doard ar by the Government Of Jifttsb Columbia.\nSENIOR HOCKEY\n-vs.  yysp\nSpokane Flyers\n8:00 PM.\nTleketa on Sale ot KOOTENAY STATIONERS TODAY, 10 A.M. to 5 P.M.\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE, 7:00 P.M. ,\nRed Koehle\nNELSON MAPLE LEAPS\nBECAUSE OF THAW CONDITIONS THERE WILL BE NO PARKING POSSIBLE\nIN THE RECREATION GROUNDS.\nFritz Koehle '.'\u25a0;\n' NELSON MAPLE LEAFS\n North American figure skating champion, Dlok, a\ncollege senior from Englewood, N.J., will be out\nto repeat his 194. victory.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n,','. BATTLE FOR THE TOP spot\non the U.S. pole vaulting forces\nappears to be developing between\nthe Rev. Robert Richards, tha\nCalifornia minister, accepted as\nthe best In the U.S., and Don Laz,\nthe Illinois ace. Laz (above) beat\nBob the first time recently when\nhe vaulted 16 feet 3 Inches In tha'\nWashington Star Indoor games lithe capital. Laz twice before cleared 15 feet and twice tied Richards\nbut had iiever beaten him before.\n\u2014Central Prey Canadian.\nLONDOI. (CP)\u2014Inland revenue\nauthorities are scouring the country for foot-loose university graduates interested In becoming income-tax inspectors. The campaign\nmarks the latest move to bolster\nstaff in the battle td combat tax\nevasion.\nThe main drawback In attracting\npromising candidates at present is\nthe low staring salary of \u00a3300 a\nyear against the greater inducements being offered graduates by\nindustry and commerce.\nRevenue officials estimate that\nabout SOO new inspectors will be\nneeded to augment the present\nforce of 1600 if the tax evasion problem is to be tackled effectively. As\ntraining takes years, the authorities\nare after a stiff large enough to\nallow experienced Inspectors to devote their time to tracking down\nevaders, while the less experienced\ndo the routine work.\nInvestigations completed during\nthe last fiscal year resulted in settlements totalling more than $22,-\n000,000. Of these settlements, 250,\namounting to about $7,000,000, were\ndealt with by the special branch\nInvestigating cases Involving fraud.\n\"No one knows better than ourselves where all the evasion is, but\nwe simply haven't got the staff to\ndeal with it,\" an official said. \"If\nwe had 200 more inspectors tomorrow we could give them sufficient\nwork to keep them busy for many\nyears\/!\nLess Shillings Mean More Peanuts,\nMore Peanuts Mean More Margarine\nKANO, Nigeria (Heuters) \u2014 A\nshortage of silver shillings means\none, thing in this African' colony:\nA good peanut crop.\nIt's necessary to fly the silver\ncoins in by the sackful to keep up\nwith the demands of Nigerian farmers, a suspicious lot, who demand\ntheir: money in hard cash. '.'\u25a0,:\nThe farmers have several good\nreasons for prefering silver to pa*\nper. They like to hide their money\nin the bottom bf wells and that can't\nbe done with paper,\n,. For those who hide.their money\nabove ground, coin is good insurance\nagainst a small fortune being wiped\nout by paper-eating white ants.\nAnd so after a series of crop fail*\nures, merchants, shopkeepers and\neveryone who feels it in the pocket*\nbook when poor crops cut farmers'\npurchasing, are looking to the increased demand for silver shillings\nDAfLY CRQSSWttT\nACROSS    47.Cubi_f\n[1. Man's name     meter'\n48. Blower\nDOWN\nJ. Felines\n2. Dull pain\n3. Den\n4. Before\n5. Confounds\n6. Mean\n(mus.)\nT.Poem\n8. Polishes\n9. Measure\nof land\nM.Thlh\n17. An age\n19. Liberates\n20. Emblems\nof peace\n_a.c_t____iv\nashair\n22. Past\n23. Warm color\n25. Edge of the\nmouth\n26. Sheltered\nZr.PuMfe.\nnotices\n2,  One of the\nBritish Isles\n31 Bovine\n33. Cuplike spoon\n34. Expression\nof sorrow\n35. Jargon\n36. Border\n38. Hillside\ndugout\nhuh a_ia\naaaa aHKii\nas    bh_j am\n_r.isu asanas:\n\u25a1aa naa\naapmHf- HEMS;\nh_]_i i_a_i    ise\n_____\u00ab iiaanuH\ns_]_i_i Giraua\nHsa__ HBun\nr.uwrj    MUM\nMS\n__\u00ab___<\u25a0__: __\u2022_\u2022\u00bb\n39. Botch.\n40. Three-spot\ndomino\n42. Ever\n(poet,)\n44. Extinct bird\nO..Z.  \/\n6. Ethical\n11. Brazilian\nfish\n12. Draw\n-forth\n13. Robber\nM. Striped\n. animal\n15. Varying\nweight\n.-   (India.\n' 18. Cap\nI      (Turk)\n18. Coin\n(Jap.)     -\n19. Inundation\n21.Sterile\n24, Wide-\nmouthed\npot\n28. S-shaped\nmoldings\n29. Covered'\n.   wtth ivy\n30. Portend\n31. Crinkled\nfabrics'\n32. Astringent\nfruits\n34. On.-spot\ncard\n37.HoIe-\n!     piercing\nI   'tool\n38. County\n(Den.)\n41. Dipped\nout.\n43. Yellowish,\nvegetable\nresla\n45. Celestial\nbeing\n46. Of the\nancient\nScandinavians\nDAILY CKYFXOQt'OTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXB'\nIsLONGFELLO W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\ntor the-three If a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, spo_>.\ntrophies, the. length and formation of the words we ail hints.\nBach day the code letters are different.\n-'  \u2022 A Cryptogram Quotation ?>-*\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0'\nr_r3 KSFDJ XYSARQ .D|_I D ti Z \u00ab\u25a0\nLSLDRRZE, SE D PDJ KYS QSZX J S Is\nXFSPZ\u2014XLZBZJ XS J.\nYesterday's Cryptoqupte: THOSE TWO AMUSEMENTS FOR\nALL FOOLS OF EMINENCE, POLITICS OR POETRY\u2014STEELE.\nDUtrlbulcd by Kins Features Syndic-It\nas a sign of bumper crop and proa- j\nperous times.'       *\nEvery year, at harvest time _he i\nbanks in Lagos, 500 miles to the i\nSouth, turn out their shillings and I\ntwo-shilling pieces . and dispatch '\nthem to Kano by special train, with\nguards mounted atop the sacks of j\ncoins to make jure that the harvest j\nmoney arrives at its destination, i\nBut an SOS for extra silver .by |\nplane means that* the railways from J\nKano to the coast will have to copa j\nwith oven more traffic this year, in I\nan attempt to get the bumper crop I\nof. peanuts'tb the ports. Prices have f\nrisen too and tha farmers are getting\n$100 a ton this year compared with |\n$58 a ton a year ago.\nIf the peanuts can be moved to I\nLagos, Britain will have more for I\nprocessing into margarine. Average (\nexports of peanuts from Nigeria j\nare aver' 300,000 tons a year.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIA&\nPACIFIC STANDARD _____\nWEDNESDAY,\"\n7:00\u2014News\n7*05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of Morning   .  '\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News   \"\":_ .\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014Western Tune Show\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Devotion\n10:15\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n10:30\u2014Musical Program\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Dorothy Douglas\n11:10\u2014For You Madame\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Forbidden Diary  ..\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12;15V-News  '        \u2022 '\/\u25a0 >\n12:25\u2014Sports News    \u25a0\n1?:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Ogilvie Reminder\n1.00\u2014Churchill Memorial Speech\n1:45\u2014Topical News and Views\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\nFEB. 20, 1952\n2:00r-School Broadcast    -\n2:30\u2014Musical Program\n3:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:15\u2014Pacific Newa\n3:30-Solo Guest\n_:45\u2014Novel Time    ' .\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shields Sings\n4:15\u2014Piano Pops\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins  . ,:\n4:45\u2014Something In Harmony\n4:55\u2014News\n5:00\u2014Rawhide\n5:20-7International Commentary\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:15\u2014Superman,\n5:50\u2014News ,\n6:00\u2014Teen Time *\n6:30\u2014Kenny Baker\n6.45\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital. ;\n, 8:00\u2014Royal Tour Diary\n9:35\u2014String Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News.\n10:15\u2014Supplement '\u2022\nlOtfO-rShowsPiece \"\u2022\u2022\n11:00\u2014News Nite Cap   ;-.'\nCBC PROGRAMS\n' PACIFIC STANDARD _____\nTHURSDAY, FEB. 21, 1.952\n8:00\u2014News\n4:00\u2014Sunshihe Society\n8:i0\u2014Here's1 Bill Good\n4:30\u2014Dead Mali's Island\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n4:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n4:55\u2014News\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n5:00-Bill Isblster Trio\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n5:15\u2014John Fishet                    \\\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n5:20\u2014International Commentary\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n5:30^-Hoy Rogers\n10:16\u2014The Happy Gang\n, 6:00\u2014Johfl and Judy            _    -\n10:45\u2014Down Dairy Lane\n6:30\u2014Wayne and Shuster\n11:00-. Kindergarten of th. Air\n7:00-r-News\n11:15\u2014A Man and His Music\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n12:15\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Eventide                     ,  \u2022\n12:25\u2014Showcase \u2022\n8:00\u2014Citizen's Forum\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n8:40\u2014Citizen's Forum Newa\nl2:55r-Five .To One\n8:45--The M.tre Reader            '\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orchestr*\n1:45\u2014Deeds That Live\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n1:58\u2014Women's Comments\n10:00\u2014News\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n10:15\u2014Through the Lions Gata\n2:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n10:30\u2014Al Bollington\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\nll:00-U.t_ Today\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n11:15\u2014Adventures of P.C. 49 '\n3:30\u2014Solo  Guest\n11:45\u2014Nightcap\n3:45\u2014Novel Time\n11:57\u2014Newa                        \"'\n 1 PFRsommso\/v mrm\n\\    FOR QO\/CK RFSULFS \/\nPhone 144\nDeodline for Cloaaified Ada\u20145 p.m.\nPhone144\nBIRTHS\n'LEBEDOFF r To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Lebedoff, Glade, at Kootenay\ntake General Hospital, Feb. 16, a\npen,   . \u2022\n.KUNTZ - To Mr..and Mrs. Math\n[las Kuntz, 516 Wesson Street, at\niCodtenay Lake General Hospital,\nFeb. 10, a daughter.\nHAMM \u2014 .o Mr. and Mrs,' G,\nHamm, of Montrose, at the Trail\nTadanac Hospital, Feb. 1J, a son.\n* SEAL \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Arnold\nSeal, Fruitvale, at tha Trail-Tadanac\nHospital, Feb. 14, a, daughter.\nBERISOFF'\u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\n\u25a0Sydney Berisoff, Silverton, B.C., at\n\u25a0Slocan Community Hospital, New\niDenver, Feb. 14, a son.\nHELP WANTED\n\u25a0WANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED DIA\n. raond drill operator immediately,\npermanent employment available\nto man willing to adapt himself\nto other types of drilling. Writ,\ngiving qualifications.. Western\nWater Wells Ltd., 1817-9th Ave\nCalgary, Alta.\n. Smart girl for grocery dept.\nPermanent position for right\nparty. Reply giving details\nto Box 8387, Daily Newi.\nI WANTED,\u2014 COMPETENT STEN-\nographer for general office work\nwith local business firm. Shorthand and typing ability essential,\nPermanent employment. Reply\nstating qualifications to Box 8333;\nDaily News.\nISkABT FEMALE CLERK WANT-\ned ,for grocery store. Opportunity\nfor: advancement. Experienced or\nInexperienced; can be, trained.\nMust be willing and honest Apply\nBox 8349, Daily News.\nIV\/ANTED - SECRETARY MAN-\nager With bookkeeping expert\nence. Duties to commence March\n[_*.' 1st'. Apply F. Stevertson, Secretary, Canadian Legion, Nakusp,\nB.C. '.   i  \u25a0\n| WANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED STEN-\nographer. Permanent position to\nsuitable applicant. Rate: $187 per\n: month.   Apply   Superintendent's\noffice, C.P.R.. Nelson.\n[Wanted - girl to work in\ncandy shop\/Preference to one\nwith. manufacturing experience.\nApply Ranniger Candies.\n.WANTED-LADY TO WORK\nmornings ln tobacco and news\natand. Apply Box 8436, Daily\nNews.\n|1_X_ELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR\n\u2022food   mechanic.   Apply   Central\nTruck and Equipment Co.,' .702\n^\u25a0Frohi St., Nelson, ~B,C, Phone 1400'\n|WAITRESS WANTED \u2014FULL OR\nspart time. Apply Bowladrome,\nAGENTS WANTED\nIDO   YOU   ENJOY   HAVING\npMONBYT Then you'll enjoy fully\nJ .the money you can earn as a part\ntime Avon representative. .Pleas-\n. ant, friendly work for good pay.\nWrite Box No. 8027 Dally News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nIrULLY QUALIFIED. PROFES-\njional photo finisher. Six years'\nexperience In managing studio;\nable to take full charge; best of\nreferences. What offers? Box 8460,\nDally News.\n| CHRISTIAN COUPLE, NO CHIL-\n'dsen, desire situation aa caretakers of resort, etc. Mah; carpenter by .trade. Write Box 60,\nLongvlew, Alberta.\ntXPERIENCED RECEPTIONIST\nand switchboard operator desires\nposition. Best of references, Box\n8481, Dally News.\nJack of all trades wants\nwork qf any kind. Experienced\nwith farm machinery, etc. Box\n8454, Dally News,\nFEMALE COOK WANTS JOB IN\ncamp or Construction. Box 3335,\nDaily News.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nBHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver. B C.\nCEDAR POLES. ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles Glacier\nLumber Co.. Box 450. Nelson. 'B.C.'\nBHIP YOUR HIDES TO J, P\nMorgan: Nelson. B.C\nJfelantt iaihj $Vroa\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n16c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive  insertions,\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line tor 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers  lie extra. Covers any\n-   number of Insertions.\n\u25a0PUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion.  16c per line\neach subsequent Insertion,\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n' Subscription Rates!\nSingle copy       $   ,05\nBy carrier, per week,\nIn advance 30\nBy carrier, per year 15.40\n'   United States, United Kingdom: \u2022\nOne month'   .i % 1.25\nThree montha '.'..    3.75\nSix months        7.50\nOne year       15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     1.00\nThree months  _.__ <    2.75\nSix months    ..\u201e.._.\u201e....    5.50\nOne year         10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plua postage.      ,\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nTHE CORPORATION OF'\nTHE CITY OF KIMBERLEY\nApplications' to lease McDougall\nHall Canteen will be received at\nthe City Hall until February 27th,\n1052.\nD. TORGESON.\n1 . City ClerK\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nIn\n\u2022 9\n_ca_.n__\n\u2022 i \u2022\nNEW HOUSES\nJUST FINISHED...\nImmediate Occupancy\nBuilt under architect's supervision to highest standards. Financed under N.HA.' for easy\nmonthly payments. \u2014 These\nhouses, offer exceptional value\nin today's markef. '\nTwo. bedrooms with provision for a third, spoeious\nliving room with picture\nwindow, dining nook, oak\nfloors throughout. Fully\nmodern cabinet kitchen.\nPembroke bath in fully\nmodern bathroom. Kitchen\nand'bathroom hove battle-\n_hlp Ijno\"floors. Full cement\nbasement with space 33x14\navailable for extra living\nspace, plus wash room with\nbuilt-in laundry tubs, thermostatically-controlled . hot\nwater tank, piped'hot air\nfurrjace. Wired for\" range\nservice. Beautifully and conveniently situated on 60x\n120 foot lots.-\nFull Price $9700\n'      ALSO\nQUICK SALE SPECIAL\non Vernon Street\n3-bedroom. house in good\nrepair. ..Garage,-new*fialt1- '\nbasement,   good   grounds.\nFull   price   $6500.   $3000\ncash will handle.\nFOR INSPECTION SEE\nTHE GILOAY\nAGENCIES.\n542'Baker St. Phone 1460\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nAUTOMOTIVE     -\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nThese Must\n45-ACRE RANCH, 1 MILE FROM\nFruitvale on.Sglnio road;'mostly\nin hay, some alfalfa, 2 houses-\none 7-roomed house, hot and cold\nwater; full basement, electricity\nOther 3'roomed house rented*\nYear 'round creek through property. Lots of firewood. Plenty of\n' of hay Necessary farm. buildings\nand garage. Apply C. A. Carlson,\nFruitvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE BY OWNER - NICE\nfamily home; clear title. Stucco\n, serai-bungalow, close in, on Victoria St. 3 bedrooms, hot water\nheating, wired complete for electrical appliances, complete In\nevery respect, no repairs or decorating to do. Phone 892-X.\nFOR SALE - 4 ROOM HOUSE\non 16 lots, in round fence, shed,\npoultry house for ,100 birds, barn,\nfor 2 cows, hay shed. Good land\nfor hay or garden. Close to school.\nClear title. Owner Steve Kosinec,\nYmir P.O.\n17 MILES from nelSon, sotfrtf\nshore \u2014 3 - bedroom house with\nacreage; $6000. Easy terms, Box\n8134, Dally News.\nFOR SALE\u201416 ACRES LAND, 4-\nroomed house.. Reasonable price:\nApply Mrs. P. Chernenkoff, Blewett, B.C.\nFOR SALE - SIX ROOM HOUSE,\ngarage and barn on two acres in\nYmir. Apply Anthony Giza, Ymir,\nBC\nFOR SALE\u2014SMALL BUNGALOW.\n2 bedrooms, near Glacier Lumber\nCo. Phone 161-Y1.\t\nnew home'for sale\u2014Apply\n510 First Street. Nelson.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co., D L Kerr, Agent.\nFOR YOUR FULLER BRUSH\nproducts write R. H. Blackwood,\nGen, Delivery, Nelson, B.C.\nALMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and moderate\nrates $1.50 to $2.00 single, $250 to\n$3.00 doubles   Vancouver.  B   C.\nATTENTION SCHOOL' BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept., Nelson, British Columbia.\nadult_ i  PEkkbUAl ROBOTS\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment $1-\nblll. Tested, guaranteed One\nquality Mailed ' In plain, sealed\npackage, Including free Birth\nControl. Booklet and bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hyeicne\nSupplies Western Distributors,\nBox 1023-PN, Vancouver.\n1929^DeSoto Sedan\n1930 Model A Coach*\n1932 Plymouth Sedan\n, 1935 Ford Coach ^\n1937 Ford Sedan\nGIVE-AWAY PRICES!\n1932 Chevrolet Sedan, $75\n1935 Ford Coach, $350\/\n1940 Dodge Sedan, $300\n1938 Nash Lafayette, $400\n, MANY OTHERS'\n. 1950 Chevrolet Coach  '\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1949 Austin Panel\n1949 Austin Pickup '\n1947 Ford Sedan\n1940 Ford Coupe\nEmpire Motors\nPhone 1135; 803 Baker St.\nNelson, 8. C.\n'    The\nGeneral\nWinter-Cleat\nHusky Cleats Dig-In,\nGrip, Pull Through\nWinter's Worst\nWeather.\nWinter Cleats on your car this\nWinter will save you from the\ninconvenience caused by conventional 11 r e s with single\ntreads. The nuisance of being\nstalled .. . the expense of being\ntowed. See'us for a pair today.\n.      PHONE 18\n:\"nelson' \"\nmachinery\n\"If It's Machinery You Need,'\nConsult Us\"\nFOR'SALE\u20141950 McGINNIS FAC-\ntqry-made house-trailer. Birch\nveneer finish. Lights, propane gas,\nsink and Ice-box. Sleeps four.\nTable for five. Lady's dresser.\nNew tires. Valued at $3500. Will\ntake $2300, D. J. Mclnnls, R.R. 1,\nNelson, B.C. .*'\u25a0.,''\nNEW 1952 DODGE V4-70U\nLIGHT DELIVERY\nComplete with 1052 license, heater, anti-freeze. What offers? \u2014\nPhone 387-L4, North'Shore Motel,\nNelson.\n1947- CHEV SEDAI.;' A-1 SHAPE.\nLovely maroon, new rubber, spotlight, heater; low* mileage. Priced\n- to sell. Apply 125 Silica Street,\n8 a.m. to 3 p.m\".\n'49 JAMES MOTORBIKE 125 FOR\nsale: $160.00. Can be financed.\nPhone 387-L4.\n1946 MERCURY 2-TON 176 WHEEL\nbase truck for sale. Apply F. F.\nPodovelnikoff, Slocan Park, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u20141951 PONTIAC, LOW\nmileage. Air conditioner unit .\u2014\nPhone 886-Y.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire ' rope; pipe and fittings;\nchala steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C Phone Pa*\nc_!c63.7    \u2022\nCOFFEE TABLES, END TABLES,\nchests, desks, dressers, vanities,\nbpds, our specialty, Made by Amoroso and Fazio Woodworking, 518\nSixth Street. Phone J282-L.\n\"Nil-Life\" Stainless Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer- a special trade-In allowance\non your old cookware. Box 333,\nNelson, B.C\nFOR SALE - USED HOTPOINT\nelectric range with automatic\nclock, deep well cooker, etc. Excellent condition. Phorte 1555.\nLOVELY HUSSJAN SQUIRREL\ncoat, new con_ltion and styling.\nLow price for quick sale. Size 14\nto 16. Phone 1378-Y.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE*\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\n935 E Cordova St., Vancouver,\nCRESS CORN SAL VE-FOR SURE\nrelief   Your Druggist Sells Cress\nFOR SALE - SPLENDID OFFICE\ndesk.  Phone 760.\nFOR SALE - PIANO CASE FOR\nstandard upright piano Ph. 1378-Y\nmicron if- HWARrNn Ains-\nWrlte P.O. Box _a. Nelson, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE-DISMANTLED SAW^\nmill plant. We aire dismantling a\nsawmill breakdown plant at\nOcean Falls.  Majority \"of equip-\n- ment'is for disposal Including log\nhaul chain and drive,:log loading\nequipment, 10-foot Clark band\nmill, Jump saw\", 60\" Sumner edger\nwith synchronous' drive, trimmers,\netd. All orpart for sale. For addi-\n. tlonal details \u25a0 write or wire Mr.\nA R. Dyrsmid,' P.O. Box 879,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE - I.H.C. KB8F TAN-\ndem purchased December 1947.\nLong wheelbase. flshplated {feme,\nheavy duty hoist and 16 foot steel\nframed deck, lumber rollers and\nlog bunks. 9:00 tifes with 4, new\nhard rock lugs. Has just been\ncompletedly reconditioned. Guar,\nanteed. Price $8000. Phone 67 or\nwrite Kelowna Fuel Co. Ltd., 318\nBernard' Aye., Kelowna.'\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\n.   LIMITED   \u2022\u2022\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR:  MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\n*   Enquiries Invited.;.-...\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1, B.C.\nTRUCK. TRACTOR AND LOAD-\nlhg winches available' from- stock.\nLeRoi 105 Compressor for rent.\nBayes Equipment Co, Cranbrook,\nBC\nFOR SALE^_i-IN_H SHAFT AND\nreverslblS prop; good as new. Cf\nF  Grant. Procter, B.C..    Z'''\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nR.O.P. SIRED\u2014ORDER YOUR RE-\nquirements how frorft one of the\nmost popular breeds: S.C. White\nLeghorns: New Hampshires,\nRhode Island Reds. Now available\nat the Triangle Chick Hatchery,\nphone 3201, Armstrong, B.C.\nFIRST CLASS RED JERSEY\nShorthorn cow for sale. Just\nfreshened 3 weeks with 3rd calf.\nGives 10 quarts milk. Apply Ell\n\u2022 Podovinikoff, Slocan .Park, B.C.\nIF YOU INTEND BUYING BABY\nchicks or pullets this year, write\nfor catalogue of breeds and prices\nto APPLEBY POULTRY FARM,\nmission .City, b.c.\nFOR SALE - FLEMISH GIANT\nrabbits. Bred does, $5 each, Tom\nTaylor, Kaslo,. B.C\nSEVERAL GOOD MILK COWS,\nalso young pigs, 2-4-6 months old,\nH. Harro_>. Phones 1278 and 117.\n'OR SALE t YOUNG COW,\nfreshened 2 weeks. G. G. Evin,\nBrilliant. B.C.\nCOW FOR SALE-GOOD MILKER.\nApply South Slocan Shoe Shop.\nRENTALS\nDESIRE TO RENT- TWO OR\nmore bedroom unfurnished home\nin Nelson or nearby. First-rate\nreferences. .Nelson businessman\/\nPhone 1537 or 286-X. R. Beattie.\nWANTED TO REN- \u2014 HOUSE\nanywhere in town; two or more\nbedroorris. Phone 720-L.\nWANTED \u2014 GOOD FIVE'-'ROOM\nhouse to rent with option to buy.\nBox 8431, Daily News.\nSEMI 3-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT.\nBus. couple. Apply 705 Robson St.\nWANTED TO RENT-3 OR-4 BED-\nmorn house  Phone 1234.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE AT NELSON\u2014GROC-\nery and confectionery store. New\nbuilding arid equip. Insulated:\nFull drive-in basement. Corner\nlot close to high, schools, Good\nterritory. Room to expand. Modern} living quarters for couple.\nApply 823 Observatory St. C. *W.\nSwan,\nESTABLISHED BUSINESS: GROC-\nery-dry goods and hardware, and\nIf interested, i modern house next\ndoor, and some building lots, adjoining for expansion. Write or'\nphone Cheveldave's. Stores, Cas-\ntlega'r, B.C. Phone Castlegar 3731.\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND-YOUNG BROWN COCK-\ner. Owner pay for ad. Ph. 1890-L.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nLaSALLE  EXTENSION   UNIVER-\n, sity,. 3743 West 10th Ave., Vancouver 0. B.C'\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE\u2014PUREBRED BOSTON\nBull Tefrler puppies. Mrs. D.\nHowe, Fruitvale, B.C. \u25a0\nBUSINESS AND    '\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA89AYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE,   W   WIDDOWSON & CO.  AS-\nsayers 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH.  S   ELMES.   ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist. Mint Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS.\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR   W   HAGGEN   Land  Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nBOYD C AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST\u201e\n. Nelson. B.C.. Surveyor. Engineer\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMCHARDY  AGENCIES   LTD.  IN-\nsurance. Real Estate-  Phone, 136.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H Harrop, Phpne 117\nMACHINISTS?\nBENNETTS  LIMITED\nMachine   Shop   acptvl.n.   and\nelectri*\" welding, motnr rewinding\nPhone 503 '  . 324 Vernon St\nro^NTO STOCKS\nMINES\nAkallcho '-. \t\nAmal Larder    .\u201e\u201e,...\nAmerican? K........\nAnacon  _..._\nAnkeno :.' _.\nArjon \t\nArmistice   .\u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e.,\nAtlas Y K ...'\u201e.,_._..,_.,\nAumaque\t\nAunor,     __._.....__,\nBagamao  \u00bb\t\nBarymln     ZrlZ\nBase Metals  \t\nBevcourt \u201e\nBobjo .  Z\nBoymar Gold .1\t\nBrewls R L\t\nBroulan      ...............\nBuffalo Ank\t\nBuff Can    \u201e..\nCalliman ; ...,\t\nCampbell R L' ..)..:.\nCentral Patricia ....\nChestervllle '\t\nCochenour   ..; .__..\nCoin Lake ......_.\u201e\u201e\nConlaurum  \t\nCons M & S\t\nConwest      _,..\u201e\nGrestaurum ..............\nCroinor    \t\nDetta R L\t\nDiscovery ^_\t\nDome       \t\nDonalda\t\nDuvay\t\nEast Malartfc\t\nEast Sullivan .....\t\nElder Gold \u201e_\nEldona  .\nEstella' ,\t\nEureka_ ...!..__\u201e\nFalconbrldge . \u2122\nFroblsher  ..,..___,,\nGiant Yel  \t\nGod's Lake  __...\nGold Eagle ..........'_....\nGold Arrow .. .\t\nGolden Manitou ....\nHalcrow  !....\nHardrock .......,...\u201e_.._\nHarricana  !\t\nHasaga  __\u201e\t\nHollinger _\u201e..\nHomer Y K  .\nHudson Bay\t\nKayrand .....:..._____,\nKelore \u201e.\u201e.\u00ab.,\nKenville \t\nKerr Addison  _.\nKirk-Hudson Bay .\nKirkland Lake.\t\nLabrador  ._...._\nLake Dufault .-.__\nLakeshore-\nLake Wasa ...._.\nLamaue\t\nLeltch\t\nLittle Long Lao.\nNiplssing\t\nNoranda .......\u201e\u201e.\nNormetals' _....._.\nNorh Can _~\nNorth Inca.\u2122\nNorzone .:..._..\nO'Brien \u2122\nO'Leary' .\";_\u25a0__.\nbsiskO' ._.\nPaymaster\t\nPend Oreille.\nPickle Crow .\nPioneer\nPlacer Develop .\nPreetonrBD .._\u25a0_\nQuebec Lab ......\nQuebec Man .\nQueenston ...........\nQuemont  _._.\nReeves Mae \t\nSan Antonio\t\nSen Rouyn \t\nSherritt Gordon.\nSllvermiller \u2022\t\nSilanco   _.\nSiscoe   ..... ._\nSladon Mai .\nStarratt .Olsen ...\nSteep Rock     -\nSudbury Cont ...\nSurf Inlet\t\nSylvanlte\t\nTeek Hughes \t\nThompson-Lund\nToburn\t\nTomblll\t\nTorbrlt     \t\nTrans Cont Res\nUnion Mining \t\nUnited Keno  ________\nUpper Canada \u2014.,,,...,.\u2014-\nVentures      ,..\u201e,,\u201e\u201e\t\nWaite Amulet .\u201e_> \u25a0 ,.\u201e\nOILS\nAnglo Can ,  -\t\nA P Con  _-.....\nB A Oil  J. :-Zi\t\nCal 4: Ed __.\t\nCalmont\nCentral Ledu_  ...\nChemical Research...\nDalhousle _\nDavies .Pete  ....._..\nDecalta ......\u201e..._\nDel Rio   ..._.__.\nEastcrest\nFederated Pete .\nHighwood ...'......,\nHome\nImperial Oil\t\nInter Pete ......\t\nKroy.\nMacDougal Segur .\nMid Cont .......;\t\nNat Pete    _.\nNew Pacalta .........\nNordon __.\nOkalta        ...a.\t\nPacific Pete _\nRoyalite  \t\nRoxana'\nTower Pete ~.\nUnited Oil\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibi  ..\n2.00\n.17\n.87\n3.30\n.43\n.12\n.11\n... .13H\n.20\n. 2.94v\n.14V*\n.94\n.52\n-.80\n.15*54\n..3\n.19\n1.41\n1.15\n.20\n.SO.\n4.80\n.64\n.40\n1.47\n.13\n.57H\nS6.75\n3.65\n.16\n.33\n\u25a0li\n.59\n16.75\n.45\n.11\n.90\n8.15\n.50\n.20\n2.20\n1:31\n11.85\n4.65\n10.75\n.88\n.13'\n.17.\n6.45\nilfii\n.12%\n.12%\n.30\n14.25\n\u202215H\n60.00\n.11\n.25\n1   .23\n17.S5\n1.67.\n\u25a0.73\n8.25\n1.40\n11.25\n.32\n5.25\n1.08\n.18\n2.40\n79.50\n5.15\n.76\n.10\n.14\n1.16\n__j\n.89\n' .61\n7.60\n1.59\n2.15\n45.75\n1.35-\n.29\n2.80\n.44\n22.00\n5.50\n2.40\n.18H\n4.10\na\n.67\n.39\n.43\n7.10\n.19\n-    .13H\n1.18\n2.22'\n.1!\n-.30 -\n.88\n'   1.94\n.87\n.16\n12.75\n1.68\n16.25 *\n12.85\nS.BB\n.83\n20.68\n16.00\n2.08\n2.76\n1.24\n.40\"\n.49\n.38\n2.09\n.20U\n8.20\n.32\n16.00\n37.3.\n26.65\n2.08\n.30\n.54\n2.80\n.14,\n. .19'\n8.85\n10.65\n16.63'\n.30\n,.89\n1.05\n..   1\u00ab%\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 19,(CP) -\nnlpeg grain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 88Vs.\nBarley, No. l'feed, 1.84_4.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nCariboo Gold.\nGolconda\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nPhone li\n. \u25a0 I   A. >\u25a0\u2022\nSUITE 1      \u25a0   '\n195     560 Bake. St,\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, Feb, 19 (AP) - Unrelieved selling pressure depressed\nprices sharply.\n- Losses ran to more than three\npoints at the outside with a few\nmore volatile issues dropping still'\nmore. Scarcely any section of the\nlist was outside pressure zone, but\nsteels and motors managed to resist\nthe most severe effects of the de\ncllne.\nC a n a dian issues were mostly\nlower. International Nickel fell va.\nMclntyre fell Hi, and Canadian Pacific dropped tt. Both Dome Mines\nand Hiram Walker'-were dotyn 44,\nand Distillers Seagrams fell Vt.\nTORONTO (CP) - Prices de*\ncllned steadily toward the close af*\nter a sharp mid-session drop. '\nIndustrials and Western oils open*\ned lower* and were joined within the\nfirst hour by base metals for a steady\nrecession. Golds jjpened irregulkrly\nbut turned slowly downward.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stock prices\nweakened steadily, extending the\nsharp downturn,; .       '\nFractional declines held a clear\nmajority from the opening, and' as\nthe session progressed losses ranging\nto two points punctuated a number\nof groups.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Commod\nlty shares were again out of favor.\nFresh offerings brought further\nfalls to rubbers and final levels were\naround the lowest despite the stead*\nler tone of the commodity,\nCoppers, tins and oils were lower\nwhere changed on speculative offerings on> an unwilling market.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Share\nprices were mostly lower and trading was moderately active. Industrials and oils .were both down,\n\u2022Win-\nGiant Moscot ..__.___.\u201e_._.\nHighland Bell\t\nInt C & C  \t\nKootenay Bella .._!\t\nPend Oreille  \t\nPioneer Gold  :.. .._\u201e\nPremier Border\t\nQuats|no \u201e \u201e__\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon ....__. _.\nSilver Ridge  \t\nSliver Standard .. ^i_\nVananda  -._.___\nVan Roi  ;\nWellington ..\u201e\nWestern Exploration J_\nWestern Uranium \t\nWestern Mines  Z~\nOILS ,-\nAnglo Canadian _.\t\nA P Consolidated ...i\t\nCalmont  ;\t\nHome ........____________._\nMercury ........._,_______.\nOkalta Com , ._\u201e_,\nRoyalite \u201e\t\nVanalta\nINDUSTRIALS ,\nAlberta Dist.     \t\nAlberta Dist V.T. .......\nCapital Estates ...  ,.\nInternational Brewery\n1.20\n.25\n.1.00\n.82\n\u25a0   .\u00bb8V4\n.92\n8.50\n2.10\n.35\n.61\n1.68\n4.30\n.29\n,2.57\n.23\n.72\n.03%\n1.21\n3.25\n.80 '\n0.00\n.56\n. '2.15\n16.35\n.26\n3.95\n18.00\n.65H\n2.85\n2.70\n18.00\n4.65\nAlgoma Steel ..._...\nAluminum  .___.\nArgus   . , .,_..\nAtlas St .. .  _\nBell. Telephone \u2014\nBrazilian  .\u201e\nB C Forest  _..._\nB C Packers A .\nB C Packers B\t\nB C Power A __..\nBrown Ca  \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u201e\nBrown Cd. pfd ..\u201e\u201e___\nBrack Silk A<..., __\",\nBuilding Produeta _.._\nBurl Steel .___\nBurrard A _\nCan Cement\t\nCan Packers B .\nCan Breweries .\nCan Canners .\nCan Car & Fdy A ._\nCan Oil' ,...._\u201e\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Marconi ......_..\nCan Pac Rly  \t\nCan West Lmbr ...\nCockshtftt _\nCons M & S \u2014\nCons Paper\nDist Seagram\nDom Bridge .\nDom Foundries \t\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nDom Stores ...'.'....'....ii..\nDom .Textiles  ..._.\nEddy Paper \u2014\nFamo.ua Players\t\nFanny Farmer . ......\nFleet Air ..;___\u00bb\nFord A -_\nGatineau 5% pfd\t\nGreat Lakes ,\nGreat Lakes pfd.\nGypsum Lime\nH R MacMillan B .\nImperial Oil _\nImp Tobacco .\nInt Metal ....'.\t\nInt Nickel ___,\nInt Pete ...-'J___,\nLoblaw A ,\nLoblaw B .\nMaple Leaf Milling .\nMassey Harris \t\nM & O Paper\t\nMont Loco ...\nMoore Corp\nMcColl Frontenac .\nNat Steel Car _\nPage Hershey . .\nPowell River; ...._-\u2022\nPower Corp\nRuss Industries\nShawinlgan\nSimpsons A ..\nSimpsons pfd\nSteel of Can\nStandard Paving .\nUnion Gas of Can ....___\nUnited Corp A    -\nUnited Fuel A  \t\nUnited Steel      \t\nWestern Grocers     \t\nWestern \\Grocers A     .\nWinnipeg Electric 'com\n.  B0_i\n. 112\n.   13\n.. 21*\n.   88\n,   10%\n.    7\n.   19\n,   17%\n.32\n.   13H\n. Ill\n_18tt\n.   34U\n.  22\n6(4\n-   72tt\n, 28%\n.   1894\n.   32\n-16..\n.   27\n.   51\n4.50*\n..   33\u00ab\n,.     9%\n.   18(4\n.   S6\u00ab\n.35 T\n.'23\n.   83\n.   1SU\n.   17\u00ab\n.' IH*\n.   11H\n.   28\n.   17.\n.   23V,\n1.70\n.   80\n.   97\u00ab\n.   20\n.50\n29Vs\n23%\n87   .\n10%\n39%\n44%\n26%\n31%\n32%\n7%\n12\n26\n18%\n24\n3B%\n27%\n66%\n27%\n30%\n20%\n43\n34%\n90%\n32%\n14\n24\n41\n56\n11''\n44\n33\n38\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, V. EDNESCAY, FEB., 20, 1952 -- 9\nK. HODGE8\nT. E. CHESTER\n. . ^T?\" \" YEARS as mananer of the Empres* Hotel, Victoria,\nJ. K. Hodjea will retire April 1, to be succeeded by T. E, Chester of\nWinnipeg. Born at Ann Arbor, Mich,, Mr. Hodges has been with the *\nC.P.R, since 1914 and. was assistant manager at the Palllser Hotel In\nCalgary before moving to Victoria. The annual Empress golf tournament and the hotel's Elizabethan Yuletide ceremony are two well-\nknown events which, were, Inaugurate, during his term of office. Mr.\nChester, who at one time was manager of the old Hotel Vancouver,\nleaves the position of assistant general manager for C.P.R. Western\nhotels, which he has held for the past 16 years.    '\nGad\/Why Not\nToss It First?\nOSLO, Feb. 19 (AP)\u2014The International Ice Hockey Federation,\nprobably taking its cue from the\nweird scoring system of the figure-\nskating fraternity, has come up with\na cabalistic conundrum for the\nOlympic hockey roune_,-robin tournament \" , ,\nInstead of the usual goals.or-\ngoals-agalnst method of deolaring\na Winner If two teams or more\n\u25a0 are  equal   In  points  after  the\nchampionship   tournament,   the\nI.I.H.F. has oome, up with this\ntwister:\nIf two teams are tied In points, a\nplayoff will be arranged. H tha\nteams are tied after the regulation\n60 minutes, a 20-mlnute sudden-\ndeath overtime will be played,\nAnd there's where the complications start\nIf the overtime produces no goal.\ntha classification will revert, to the\nfinal tournament standing, the team\nhaving tha widest margin between\ngoals for and goals against taking\nthe title. If the margins are equal,\ngoal average will count.\nIf the goal averages are equal, the\nteam scoring the greatest number\nof goals will be declared the winner. There's ohp mote \"If.\"\nIf the goal totals are equal,, the\ntwo teams will' be declared co-winners by the I.I.H.F., but there's a\nsnag here. The International Olympic Committee' doesnl recognize\nOlympic co-winners.\nThe method then Is to toss a coin.\nWolcott Will Fight\nChorles in June\nNEW YORK, Feb. 19 (AP)-Jer*\naey Joe Walcott, 88-year-old heavy,\nweight champion,- will defend bis\ncrown for the first time ln June and\nhis opponent will be Exsard Charles;\nthe man from whom he won the title\nlast July. '\nWeeks of negotiations ended Saturday-when Jim Norrls, president\nof the International Boxing Club,\nannounced'that Walcott had (greed\nto give Charles the first shot at the\nchampionship at a site to be selected.\nSOUTHWORTH REJOIN8 BRAVE8\nBOSTON, Feb. 17 (AP)-General\nManager Bob Qulnn of Boston\nBraves announced today that Bill\nSouthworth, former manager,' Is returning to the club as liaison scout\nThe 58-year-old Southworth quit\nthe Braves last June 19 because of\nill health. He was succeeded as\nmanager by Thommy Holmes, former Braves outfielder, who was\nbrought up from tha managership\nof the Hartford club ln the Eastern\nleague,\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY^Feb. 19 (CP) - Trade\nwaa active at steady prices on the\nCalgary livestock market today.\nBulk of the 380 cattle and calves received were butcher steers and heifers of brandable quality. A fair\nrun off truck was ln sight.\nGood butcher steers were about\nsteady at Monday's advance, butcher\nheifers ' fully steady. Cows were\nsteady to strong, with the odd,\nchoice, light cow up to (22, and bulls\nand veal calves were fully steady.\nGood stocker and feeder steers were\nscarce and prices steady at the.\nweek's advance.\nHogs closed a shade firmer Monday at $24:65. Sows were unsold, but\nbidding was sharply lower. No sheep\nmarket established. '\nGood to choice butcher steers\n29.50-31.00; common to medium\n24.00-29.00. Good to choice butcher\nheifers 27.00-28.50; common to medium 22.00-28.50. Good cows 19.00-\n21.00; common' fo medium 16.50-18.50,\ncanners and cutters 13.00-18.00. Good\nbulls 24.00-25.00; common to medium 21.00-23.50. Good stocker and\nfeeder steers 27.00-29,00; common to\nmedium 23.00-26.50. Good to choice\nveal calves 34.00-37.80; common to\nmedium 27.00-83.00.\nllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI\nHEY, MAC, GET    ^\nOFFTHE FENCE\nOSLO, Feb. 19 (AP)-_,t.-Gea. -,\nOlaf Helset of the Norwegian \/\n. army was caught by a buck prl?\nvate trying to climb a guard\n, fence at the plymplc 318-klIo-.\nmetre ski race today.\ni \"You've  got. tor: follow  tha '\nrules, even if you are a genera},\"\nsaid the private, who had been -,\ndetailed to help control a crowd !\nof 10,000. ..\nHelset, commandrf-in-chldf ojK\nNorway's Southern military dla- -i\ntrlct, meekly withdrew.        ,.'\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIl\nAltwegg Said\nQreater Than\nScotii ttenie\nLONDON, Feb. 19 (CP) \u2014 Jean-\nnette Altwegg, Britain's chief hope\nIn the Winter Olyrripic games, waa\nacclaimed today as the greatest fig-\nure:s_ater of the century.*\nThe  Dally   Express quoted\nThomas  Richardson  of Britain's\nNational Skating Association aa\nsaying In Oslo hla oomparlion In-\neluded   Canada's   Barbara  Ann\nScott, 'who outskated -Miss Altwegg before turning professional,\nand Norway's 8onJa Henle, perennial Olympio winner until 1938,\nRichardson said the 21-year-old\nBritish star waa the greatest figure-skater of the! -entury\u2014\"man or\nwoman, amateur' or professional\"'\nMiss Altwegg holds a commanding lead in the figure-skating championships at Oslo and is regarded ar\na sure winner. ;\nPaul Hoollhan haa been appointed\npublicity director oi the Buffalo Bison, of the American Hockey League, replacing Charlie Barton who\nhas joined the sports staff of ths\nBuffalo Courier-Express. Hoollhaa\nformerly was tha public address announcer in Buffalo's Memorial\nAuditorium,      \"..:' .',',' 'Zjj. . . \u25a0:-!\u25a0\n[WHEN ONLY\nWILL DO\nNEW HIGH\nOTTAWA, Feb. 19 (CP) - The\naverage weekly pay ln Canadian\nnon-agricultural Industry was $52.34\nat Dcc.'l, the Bureau of Statistics\nestimated today. It was another of\ntbe long series of new highs of the\nlast few years.\nThe Dec. 1 figure compared with\n$46.63 a year earlier and with $52.05\nat Nov. 1.,\nThe bureau's monthly Survey covers about 2.400.000 persons employed\nin the larger Industrial establishments. \u25a0 Thai is around., fla per cenl\nof the countn'*'s tnfpl \"-\"-.inyirtpnt.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\ncmot's fZ.\nHi\nIV^\u00a3Z*Z .1\n.JC\u2014S-\ntfO\nThis advertisement is not published or\nJispl_yed bv the Liquor Control Board dl\n_>y the Government of British Columbia.\n jg,\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WBDNEJSPAY, FEB. 20, 195*\nNEW DELUXE KIT\nRegular Refill -. $1.50\nCreme Waving Lotion\n36 Spin Curlers\n6 Midget Spin Curlers\nPermafix Neutralixer\nCreme Rinse '\n300\nQueers Choice for Poet\nLaureate Marts Quesses\nQueen To Uphold\nFather's Ideals\n_. J-DNDON, Fab. IS (Reuters)\u2014The\nQueen pledged to the House of\nCommons today to uphold the Ideals\nhit\" father set of \"peace arid freedom and the happiness of the great\n\"\"\"Sly of which I am now the\np.\" ' *>\nBe waa replying to a message of\ncondolence, sent to her by the Commons on the death of the King.\n\u2022\u25a0** Her message readi \"I thank you\nfrom tha bottom of my heart, for\n,'. tha loyal and affectionate address\nWhich  the  House of Commpns\npresented to me on the sad loss I\n<   have suffered and on my ascen-\n!  elon to'the throne.\n\"I value highly the warm expressions of your attachment to\nmy person and of your confidence\n\u25a0   In my determination to follow my\n.  dear father's example of devotion\nto  (ha  service  of  hla   peoples\n.   throughout the world.\ni    3,l pray that with the blessing\nbf Almighty God I may ever Justify your trust, and that, aided by\nyour ciunsel and sustained by the\nstrength of the 'affection of my\npeoples, I may uphold the Ideals\nthat my father set before me of\n,  peace, freedom and the happiness\nof the great family or which I\nam now the head.\n\"    \"(Signed) Elltabeth Regina.\nMrs. McCullough\nIn Menial Hosp.\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 19 (CP)-J>oiice\ntoday said 52-year-old'Mrs. Lillian\nMcCullough, charged with murder\nIn connection with the Jan. 25 slaying of her tiny foster daughter,\nMartha Louise, has been committed\nto a mental hospital. ,    .,'\nCrown Prosecutor C. W. Tupper\naald the murder charge against the\nwoman probably would be dropped.\nMrs. McCullough was transferred\nfrom the psychopathic ward of the\nWinnipeg General Hospital . last\nThursday to Selkirk Mental Hospi-\nte'.-        '\"'.:.' (\nHer husband: Gavin, 52, also was:\ncharged with murder in the prayer-\n8laying bf the 7-year-old girl. He\nwaj committed to Jury trial for the\nSummer Assizes following a recent\npreliminary hearing in police court.\nHospital Not\nThe Safest Place. . .\nFORT FRANCES, Ont.. Feb. 18\n(CP)\u2014Hospitals are not the safest\nplaces in the world, especially If a\nperson is allergic to needles.\nJ6|in Bergland, 17, cut hla foot\nbadly while on a camping trip near\nthis Northwestern Ontario town. A\ncompanion \u2022 on the outing \u2014 Jim\nMcQuarrJe \u2014 visited his \u25a0friend ln\nhospital later and watched as he\nreceived an intravenous feeding.\nOn Miia way out, McQuarrle\nfainted and fell, breaking his Jaw\nin two places,\nfeenAge Noises\nFape Recorded\nVANCOUVER, B; C, Feb. 19 (CP)\n\u2014The sound of roaring \"hot rods\"\nand the cursing of rowdy teen-agers\nblSred f _rth in a committee room at\nVancouver's City Hall.\nThe sounds came from a tape recording machine brought ti the\nroom Monday by a group of residents, in: the area of the Sunset\nMemorial Community Centre. They\nbacked.up the claim of the delegates that the noise was \"ruining\nour peace of mind and depressing\nproperty values.\"\nE. F...Arnatt said the recording\nwas made from hla front porch on\nFeb.. 14. when, a square dance was\nbelng.held in the Centre,\nAldermen set up a special committee to study the problem, arid\nwill also study the need for additional street lighting.\nArnatt sajd.the noise from the\nCentre was so bad he had to give\nhis young daughter phenobarbital\n\"three or four times a Week\" ln\norder to get her to Sleep.\nHe said the street outside his\nhouse is constantly littered with\n\"whisky bottles and other evidences\noMun.\"        .. \u2022 .'\u25a0, \u25a0 \u2022\nBy CARTER L. DAVIDSON\nLONDON, Feb, 19 (AP) - The\nQueen has literary lights guessing\non who eventually will' replace\nJohn Masefield as poet laureate ln\nher reign,\nShe has no known favorite among\ncontemporary English poeti'Leading candidates for the Job that pays,\na barrel of wine a year are i two\nplaywrights':\nT. S. Eliot, American.born author\nof \"The Cocktiil Party\" and Christopher Fry who wrote \"The Lady's\nNot for Burning.\"\nBoth go for dialogue In abstract\npoetics but don't carry verse sis far\naa Shakespeare did. ...   --\nPalace circles won't speculate on\nwhether ths Queen has a favorite\npoet But they point out that the\nlaurel traditionally goes as on\naward of merit to the realm's outstanding poet at the time of .he\ndeath of the reigning laureate rath'\ner than as a gift to a monarch's favorite.\nThe historic exception, and a precedent if one is needed; Is the cele\nbrated snub of Rudyard Kipling by\nQueen Victoria* \u2022   .\n\"NOT AMU8ED\"  \u2022\nWhen Laureate Alfred Lord Tennyson died in; 1892, Kipling was unchallenged as the outstanding contemporary poet of Britain an'd probably the world. Victoria waa furious with, him, however, because of\nhls-poem entitled \"The Widow at\nWindsor.\" It was'in the British\nsoldier's aitch-dropping vernacular\nandcantended that while she owned\n\" _lf of creation,\" the cost was\nreckoned in bitter life arid death of\nher soldiers. ..\u25a0\n.-..-Victoria left the post open four\nyears, after Tennyson's death, then\ngave it to the relatively-unknown\nAlfred Austin', author of \"In Veronica's Garden,\", and' other pieces\ninspired by nature study:. .\nThe job is strictly honorary, but\nIts prestige makes it a great plum.\nBeginning with Geoffrey q:hau-\ncer, who wore the laurel from 1328\nto 1400,' it traditionally- has earned\nits holder the barrel of wine and\nsome times a small yearly allow\nance.\nMasefield Is still hearty and\nhealthy. His newest book is an autobiography\u2014\"So Long to Learn\"\u2014to\nbe published March 10;\nWhen Hla.Excellency the Right Honorable Vincent Massey took\nthe oath of Sfflca as Governor-General of Canada at awearlng-ln\nceremonies in Ottawa today; he added two chapters to the chronicle\nof-eurrent history. He became the first native-born Canadian to\nassume the vlce-rega post, and he also became the first overseas\nrepreeentatlve of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. \"\nlivestock Quarantined in Regina\nArea After Infectious Outbreak\nUrge Legislature\nMeets Be Aired\nREGINA, Feb. 19 (CP) - With\nan outbreak of Infectious ttom\natltls apparently reaching serious\nproportions among livestock In\nthe Regina district, a quarantine\nof at least three days today Was\nImposed on livestock receiving\npoints In the city\nInfected rural premises also have\nbeen quarantined. Animal healtlj\nofficials here said the need of a\nquarantine on livestock movements\nin affected municipalities Is being\nstudied. It is believed six Regina\ndistrict mubicipalitlea are affected.\nDr. T. Chllds, veterinary general\nfor the Federal Agriculture Department, and Dr. R. Wells, association\nchief veterlnarian,.arrived from Ottawa yesterday to investigate the\nsituation.\nThey said the true nature of\nthe disease and the extent of the\naffected area have not yet been\ndetermined. .-\u25a0*.\nThe disease la not readily transmitted to humans. Symptoms Include slobbering at the mouth and\ndifficulty In eating.\nQuarantined  are  the  Regina\nStockyards, Burns and Co. Ltd. and\nIntercontinental Packers Ltd. They\ncan receive no stock and no fresh\nmeats can be shipped out Sale of\ncanned meats and fish is unaffected.\nIntercontinental and  Burns are I\nfilling all orders for fresh products\nPrlnqe Albert plants,\nPRECAUTIONS\n, Precautions taken to limit the\nspread of; the'lnfection include the\nstopping of all livestock movement\n\u2022to ahd from affected farms and the\nhalting of unnecessary visiting to\nand from these farms,Farmers have\nbeen asked to keep trielr dogs from,\nroaming.. ''.'_.''\nThe disease may hamper plans of\nthe forthcoming Winter . Fair in\nRegina. Mnflger T, H. McLeod of\nthe Regina Exhibition Association\nsaid fairs could be a means, of\nspreading the disease.*\nHe said the association will be\nguided by directions of the aninlal\nhealth authorities as to whether the\nWinter Fair will be held.\nThe area designated as under\nquarantine takes in nine .municipalities adjacent to Regina and extends roughly in a radius of 35 to\n40 miles around the Saskatchewan\ncapital.\nThe municipalities named ln the\nquarantine order: '\u2022\u25a0'\nSouth Qu'Appelle, No. 157; Eden-\nwold, No. 158: Sherwood, No. 159;\nPense, No. 160; Lumsden, No. 189;\nLajord, No. 128; Bratt's Lake, No.\n129; Redburn, No. 130, and that portion of North Qu'Appelle, Nq. 187,\nwhich Is South of the Qu'Appelle\nRiver.\n\u2022The quarntine Includes all cities,\ntowns   and   villages   within: the\nUS.,\nTo Study Pribilof Seals\nfrom their respective Saskatoon and' boundaries of those municipalities.\n-,A\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nProscriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nJ. A. G. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuito 206 Phone 141\nWIGINTON\ns.MOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nM   6-M.C. TRUCKS\n\u2022jtf'etal and Paint Work Specialty\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\n182 BAKER ST.   PHONE 1175\nAtihe First'Symptoms of a Cold\nTake REXALL\nBronchial Syrup\nIt.Checks the Cough and Further\nAids Relief by Loosening\nPhlegm. ,\n65e BOTTLE\nSold Only at Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day - 807-R Night\nBOX 460\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 18 (CP)\nresolution' asking that part of the\nproceedings of the Manitoba Legislature be broadcast each day was\nintroduced in the Legislature today\nby Lloyd Stinson (C.CF.-Winni\npeg South).\n'Mtv. Stinson, said, this Is being\ndone in Saskatchewan for 80 minutes each day and the cost last year\nwas $6900. Premier T. C. Douglas\nhad informed him the Legislature\nbroadcasts, part from the most popular programs, were near the top in\nlistener appeal.\nThe Winnipeg' member said if\nproceedings were broadcast, members would be Inclined to prepare\ntheir work more carefully, residents of remote areas could keep up\nto date, and hewsoaper editors\nwould be more cateful with what\ntljey. printed. Citizens would get\nother viewpoints than\" those expressed ln newspaper editorials.\nThe House also heard further\ndebate on a bill to lift the ban'on\nthe manufacture in Manitoba of\ncolored margarine W. C. McDonald\n(LP\u2014Dufferln) said that although\nhe came from a rural riding he fav.\nored lifting the ban.\nPlenty of farmers \"use 4heir prof,\nits from the sale of milk to buy\nmargarine,\" he said,\nInquest on Child\nAwaits Autopsy\nDUNCAN,' Feb. 19 (CP) \u2014- A\ncoroner's jury' today viewed the\nbody of 18-month-old Sukhjlt Hour,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs1. Nand\nSingh, Lake Cowlchan. who died\nSaturday when she apparently ate\nsome pills.prescribed for an adult\nin the family.\nThe Inquest was then adjourned\npending receipt of a full autopsy\nrenort.\nCoroner A. E. Green said the\nlittle girl and her sister bed been\nclaying with the pills, which had\nbeen tn the home since last.Summer. ...\nTOKYO, Feb. 19 (Reuters) - Japan\nwill ^tart soon to Tebpen her aircraft manufacturing industry, authoritative sources said today. Manufacture on a small scale is expected\nto begin with government assistance\nlate this year.\nAcquit Times of\nCorrupl Practice.\nLONDON,'Feb. 19 (AP) \u2014 The\nTimes of London was acquitted at\nOld Bailey of corrupt practices\u2014a\ncharge that Stemmed from publication of advertisement criticizing the\nLabor Government during the 1951\nelection campaign,.       '\nThe Tronoh-Ma'layan group of tin\nmining companies, which paid for\nthe advertisement, also was acquitted. Both the newspaper and\nthe tin combine had pleaded innocent.\nThe case did not go to the Jury.\nSaid Justice MacNair: \"I don't think\nthis is a\" case I can properly leave to\na jury. I have reached the conclusion, that no reasonable jury, on the\nevidence, could findMhat the ftd-'\nvertlse'ment ln question was an ad-\nvertisement.presented to the electors of any particular -onstltuency\nfor any particular candidate.\"*\nThe advertisement consisted of a\n4800-word financial renort of the. tin\ngroup. It was put in The (Times six\ndays before the pet. 25 election,\nand contained a sharp criticism of\nthe Labor Government's financial\npolicies.' -.:,,-''.\"\nUK Firm Pays Back\nExcess Charges\nLONDON, Feb. 19 (Reuters) \u2014 A\nBritish firm has given $112,000 back\nto its customers believing it has\nmade* too much money. The company, Hugh Stevenson and Sons,\ncardboard box makers, paid its chief\ncustomers two shillings back for\nevery \u00a3 1 spent during the laSt six\nmonths, Reason is that the company\nfixed high prices ln anticipation of\nhigh raw materials costs, then found\nit could buy them 'cheaper.    '   -\nSolitary Confinement\nFor Snapping Turtle\nVICTORIA, B.C., Feb. 19 (CP)\u2014\nA sentence, of solitary confinement\nfor life has been passed on Rosle,\nthe brutal turtle, after a provincial'\nmuseum killing that stirred an\naquarium to Us depths. .\nRosie, a member of the snapping\nturtle family, was gingerly moved\ninto a; tank by herself after she suddenly snapped at a small alligator\nwhich shared her former tank.\nToday the museum had' a new\nalligator\u2014about 20 feet away from\nRosie's'tank.\nStaff at the museum said the\nsnapper, \"noted for a vicious nature\nand the power of its Jaws,\" would\nlive alone1 from now on.       *\nOTTAWA, Feb. 19'(CP)\u2014For the\nfirst time in more than a decade,1\nJapan Is \"joining Canada and the\nUnited States this year In their perennial studies of the great Pribilof\nseal herds, of the Northern Pacific, j\nJapan's re-entry Into the cohtlnuf\nIh_ seal-research program ranging\nacross the Pacific has given officials\nhere ' expectations that she again\nwill become a- signatory to the\nAlaska\u201efur-seal agreement, which\nshe abrogated in 1941.\nThe agreement imposes rigid controls oh the killing of seals among\nthe 300,000,000 that breed in the,\nU.S.-owned Pribilof Islands North of\nthe Aleutians. Canada and the U. S.\nnow are the only signatories to the\ntreaty, which protects about 80 per\ncent of,the world's fur seals,\n, Japan withdrew from the agreement before she entered the Second\nWorld War. She claimed the herd,\nmigrating along the Japanese coast,\nwas devouring huge quantities of\nfish...\nCANADA'S 8TAKE\nThat is one of the questions which\nthis year's three-way research pro*\ngram Is aimed at settling. One of\ntwo expeditions financed by the\nU.S. will cruise the Western Pacific taking about '3000 seals ahd\nexamining them to see what they\neat.\nCanada has a sizeable stake In the\nSkyscraper For\nCoast Offices\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 19 (CP) - A\nbuilding 16 to '20 storeys high will\nbe erected in downtown Vancouver\nto meet the office-space demand\nbrought on' by British Columbia's\nindustrial boom, city hall sources\nreported Monday.\nThese sources, none of whom\nwould allow their names to be used,\ngave no Indication of when construction might be started.\nIt was reported that blueprints\nhave been prepared and that financing of the project has been completed in New York City.\nBurrard and Georgia Streets were\nnamed as the probable site of what\nwould be the biggest building erected here since the 19-storey Hotel\nVancouver was completed In 1939.\nThe building Is planned primarily\nto meet the need for office space\nby huge industrial concerns which\nhave started projects in B.C's hinterland and along the Pacific coast,\nIt was reported.\nresearch program, since she splits\nthe yearly seal harvest with the\nUnited States. The U.S. gets 80 per\ncent of the controlled kill and Canada the remainder. Last year, Canada got 12,000 pelts worth about\n$660,000.\n\u2022 The Cahadian share In this, year's\nresearch program will be to provide\nscientific workers for the operations starting about now and ending\nto June. The Canadians will be\nF. H.-C. Taylor. J. I. Manzer and\nB. M. Chatwin, all of the Fisheries\nDepartment's Pacific Biological Station at Nanaimo, B. C.\nU.S. To Reopen\nSeaway Hearing\nWashington, Feb. 19 .ap> -\nThe Senate foreign relations committee voted eight to four today to\nopen a hearing Monday, on a bill\nto authorize the St Lawrence Sea'\nway and power ..project.\nIt agreed to end the hearing by\nMarch 1.\nChairman Tom Connally (Dem..\nTex.), an opponent of Ihe $818,000,\n000 project told reporters of tho\ncommittee's action. He explained It\n\"compels the committee to hold\nhearings but lt does not compel it\nto act.\". ,\nCanadai haa announced plans to\nbuild the project alone if the U.S.\ndoes not make It'' a joint undertaking, .\nA seaway bill ln the House of Representatives has been pigeonholed\nin the public works committee since\nlast Fall.\nThe project has been opposed by\nU.S. Eastern railroeda, Atlantic and\nGulf Coast port cities' and private\nutilities.\nAlia. Separates\nNines and Drill.\nTough Tank and Tough Guy.\nNurses to Receive\nEmergency Training\nVANCOUVER. B. C..*Feb. 19 (CP)\n\u2014Nearly 900 graduaje nurses and\nstudent nurses Will receive intensive training here in .nursing procedure during a disaster.\nThe course, to start next week,\nwill1 Include disaster plan organization, aspects of atomic, bacteriological end chemical warfare, and nursing problems to be met In mass disasters.\nSign Documents Twice\nDOUGLAS, Isle of Man, Feb. 10\n(Reuters)\u2014Members of this Island's parliament, oldest legislature.\nIn the Commonwealth, had to sign\ntheir loyalty address to Queen\nElizabeth II a second time. The\nancient quill pens they used last\nweek leaked, making the signatures Illegible. The members sign-\n, ed again today\u2014using their own\nfountain pens.\n\"NO DflnCULTT against any\nRussian-made (ank It has met''\nwas the, report from Korea of\nthe- British Commonwealth Di- -\nvision on the British Centurion\ntank. Pictured above Is the Centurion, also claimed to bo tho\nbest designed tank Britain has\never had. as it went through a\ntough test fh Germany where the\nBritish forces also have it.\nPictured left b Lieut-Col.\nDouglas Drysdale, Commando\nleader ot Britain's Boyal Marine^ who has arrived in ths\nU.S. to be instructor at the U.S.\nMarine Corps Schbol, Quantico,\nVa. Fighting with the British in\nKorea, lie was awarded the U.S.\nSilver Star for \"conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity In action.\"\nEDMONTON, Feb.\/19 (CP)\u2014The\nAlberta Government acted today to\nkeep coal miners and oil drillers\nout of each other's way.'    *\nIt announced planned legislation\nproviding that coal mine workings\nmust not approach within 2000 feet\nof an oil or gas well until a copy\nof the mine plan Is forwarded to\nthe Director o. Mines.\nAfter that no coal may be mined\nWithin 3(H) feet, or such distance as\nthe Mine Director prescribes, of an\nqjl or gas well.\nAlberta has 48 per cent of Can\nada's known coal reserves, as well\nas the country's biggest oil industry.\n- -        \u2022 '\nSeek to End Carlot\nBdrley Competitions\nSASKATOON. Feb. 19 (CP) - A\nSaskatchewan committee is sched\n.led to recommend to the Barley.\nImprovement Institute of Canada at\nits Winnipeg1 meeting this week that\nthe Caflot Barley Competitions be\ndiscontinued.   *\nAgricultural officials here said today the Saskatchewan Malting Bar\nley Competition and Improvement\nCommittee believes the Carlot Barley Competition has served to improve the quality of barley grown\nbn the prairies but no useful purpose Is being served by its continuance. '\n.The contest, sponsored by the\nbrewing and malting .companies,\nwas Initiated in 1946 with the object of improving malting barley\nStandards in Canada. The Institute\nhas sponsored the competition on\nthe prairies on a regional, provincial\nand inter-provincial basts, awarding cash prizes to the winners.\nBroken Mains Flood\nVancouver Homes\nVANCOUVER, Feb.-19 (CP)\u2014A\nscore of homes were flooded, roadways blocked and one man died today as three water mains broke in\ntwo different sections of the city.  .\nAndrew B. Caselman, 40, chief\nforeman for the Waterworks Department collapsed ahd died'while\nclosing a valve.\nThe most serious break in the\nWest-End 6ent. .water roaring\nthrough a four-inch concrete sidewalk and tore a 12-foot hole ln the\nboulevard. '        ''\n. Boulders as big as footballs were\nthrown before the torrent as lt rushed down the street to flood base:\nments with more than four feet of\nwater.\nFailure of regulating valves to\noperate under a high water pressure\nbuilt up during the night was blamed for the breaks. ...\nRecord Budget\nExpected F^r Alfa.\nEDI. Q NT ON, Feb. 19 <6P) -\nThe 11th Alberta , Legislature\nopens Thursday for,Its fifth session, expected to be the last before\nthe next provincial general cleo-\ntion. \u2022 '\nWitli the province still enjoying\nan oil-sparked industrial, boom, Premier Manning, also provincial treasurer, is expected to bring down a\n1052-53 budget calling for arecord\nexpenditure of more than $100,000,-\n000. Last year's budget,. Alberta's\nbiggest to date, estimated expenditures at $84,000,000.*\nNoting the Social Credit Government's record' of having called e\nprovincial general election every\n\/our years since 1840, the Liberal\nand CCF. parties already are nominating candidates for an election\nthey believe will come before the\nend of August.       ... |\nThe last eleetioh was in 1948 when1\nthe Social Credit Party, ln power\ncontinuously since 1935, won its\ngreatest victory. '  '    i\nSince then, the Liberals have Increased their representation in the\n57-seat house to three by winning\nthe 1951 by-election in the Northern\nconstituency of @rouar_,' a gain\nfrom Social Credit In the only other\nby-election since 1948,\" the government retained its seat in the central\nAlberta constituency of Olds, defeating the Liberals ln a two-way fight.\nREPRESENTATIVES\nOther representation In the house\nby parties is Social Credit 50, C.C.F.\n2, Independent Social Credit 1, Independent 1, Ope member elected* as a\nSocial Credit candidate in 1848 sit:\non the Opposition side, haying been\nbarred from government caucus for\nhis repeated cjaims that the government has not lived up to Social\nCredit principles.\nSince 1948 the $1500 sessional Indemnity for the Opposition leader\nhas been split between CCF. leader Elmer Roper and Liberal leader J. Harper; Prowse. The question\nof selecting an- official Opposition\ncould arise now that the Liberals\nhave three members compared with\nthe CCF.'s two.\nDebate on the export of natural\ngas may prove one of the Aost contentious subjects before the session.\nFor two years the province's Petrol\neum and Natural Gas Conservation\nBoard has heard evidence on gas export: Should Its report be completed\nwhile the sessjon Is In progress\nMines Mipister N. E. Tanner is expected to make a recommendation\nto the Legislature on whether general export should be permitted.\nThe only gas so far allowed out of\nthe province Is that going to Mon\ntana as. an emergency defence\nmeasure.\nBecause of the King's death, the\nsession's opening will be without\nformality, as were openings during\nthe two world wars.\nfor spring..*\nA handy .sweater belongs\nIn every wardrobe'.\nThey're very handy time\nand time again when It.\ngrows a wee bit chilly.\nPullovers\nCardigans\nZippers\nSleeveless\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE   '.\nNamed Jo Act In\nPrinting Dispute\nVICTORIA, B. C, Feb. 19 (AP)-\nW. T. McLaughlin has been named,\nby the B. C Labor Relations _loard\nto act as conciliation officer In disputes between four unions and five\nVictoria printing and publishing\nfirms. :.   '\nCompanies Involved are Victoria\nPress Ltd., Diggon Hibben Ltd.,\nAcme Press Ltd., Quality Press and\nJ. Parker Buckle Printing Co., Ltd.\nThe unions are seeking a 50-cent\nhourly wage increase, a shorter\nwork week, changes in annual and\nstatutory holiday provision, increased overtime rates and sick\nleave concessions.\nCanada Nay See\nBi.fishi.lesf\nOTTAWA, Feb. 19 .CP)--Cana<_s\nla expected t* get an invitation..\u00ab\nwatch the first test of a British\natomic weapon ni Australia this\nyear,*the first atomic explosion Ca-\nnadiana have observed In six years.\nThe fact that the British have announced they are ready tof try>_\ncontrolled nuclear explosion underlines the paradox of Canada's position in the Western atomic field.;\nIndirectly, aha haa undoubtedly\nbeen of considerable help to the\nBritish In producing the new _\npon, just as, Indirectly, she has 1\nof help td the American A-h....\n'program, and may soon be of cord\nsiderable help to the U.S. hydrogen\nbomb program.\nHave, the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER    ,\nPHONE 81.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\nft.MRtr      ~\"';.'\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors   -\nbit Baker St 'phone *_1|\nHAVE VOUR FURNITURt3\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 1411\ns**'5 JE*<_,\nMystery Fire Guts\nDefence Base Hut\nCAMP PETAWAWA, Ont, Feb.\n19 (CP)\u2014An unqepupied wartime\nH-hut was destroyed early today\ndespite a four-hour fight by-camp\nfiremen.\nCause of the blaze, latest Iri a\nseries of fires which have beset\ndefence bases across Canada, was\nnot known by authorities in this big\narmy camp on the Ottawa River, 125\nmiles North of the Capital.\nThe hut, not being used at the\ntime of the fire, was slated to be\nturned into a canteen for soldiers.\nAt Ottawa, defence headquarters\nsaid plans to establish a commission to make a' full-scale probe of\nfires in military establishments\nhave not been put into effect,.but\nshould be shortly.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED \u00ab. REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop!\n301 Ward St\nPhono Ml\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME      -i\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service*\n.    _AM_yLAI.CE SERVICE y\n51S\u00bbKoolenay St Phone SSI\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker St.\nOur Vijo Pancake Waffle Mixfl\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR A\nPACKAGE TODAY\nNow  Packaged  In  New Sizes\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCompany, Ltd.\nPhone 23S 823 Front St\nThis advertisement is not published' or displayed by tha Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia\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_1952_02_20","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\/1.0426413","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":"1952-02-20 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":"1952-02-20 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":""}]}