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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" !PPWpiW!\u00bbW,!!-P,M\u00bbP\nClothing, Money\nTossed to Flames\n*  Destruction of Sorokin Banners\nTouches Off 20-Minute Riot of\nfe      Sons of Freedom at Shoreacres\n.(  \u25a0 -. \u2022    \u2022 *\u25a0 ..     \u25a0\u2022     - -.*\n\u25a0: .   .\nBanners proclaiming S.-S. Sorokin as Soi}s of Freedom\nleader were torn to shreds and money and clothing, went up\nin Sanies Sunday afternoon, a jarring note to annual Easter\ncelebrations at Shoreacres.\ni'- The banners were destroyed by angry Doukhobor bystanders who declared that Christ only would be.their \"guide\n\\wtt about 20 nude rioters took over,-tossing clothes and\n-jttoney into a bonfire.\n-Later, at a dinner attended by\nthree CPR officials, Hugh Herbison\nof the Doukhobar Consultative\nCommittee, a .Nelson photographer\nand Dally News reporter, 15 young\npeople, nude, appeared uninvited\nand sang throughout the'meal to\nthe: discomfiture of the guests.\nI '-Why are the Sons of. Freedom\nbldrned for the track blastings of\nMarch 31?\" Andy Makortoff asked\nof the visitors,- who had been, invited to the Easter celebration attended by almost 1000 Sons and He-\nformed Sons from Slocan Valley to\nGilpin.\nJ'*OMr. Makortoff recalled the arrest of a Kaslo miner who was\nfound in a Nelson industrial section\nladen with dynamite, fuses and\nblasting caps. \"They Jtound a man\nWith dynamite and Uiey let him go.\"\nHe Implored the public not to\nthrow the blame'of tlie'dynamiting;\non the Sons of Freedom. March 31,\nCPR tracks were blasted at Grand\nForks, Shoreacres and five miles\nWest of Castlegar. .\nThe   afternoon   meeting' com-\n-  menced with prayers and choral\nselections. Sons of Freedom dressed in gaily embroidered silks presented a colorful spectacle, massed\n| on the flat land at Shoreacres.\nJohn Perepelkln, chairman of\nChristiin Community 'and Brotherhood of Reformed Doukhobors told\nthe gi oup the significance of this\n\"Great Day\" when Christ rose into\nHeaven. He told of great Joy in the\nhearts of those who follow the teachings of Christ and outlined the\nlife of Christ and the meaning of\nChristianity.\nI Shifting talk to the present day\nsituation, Perepelkin said that the\nSons prophesy foretold that a third\nleader would come from Russia and\n\u25a0that his name' would be \"Yastre-\n*J\u00bbw.\"\nSOROKIN CHRI8T\n. Some still expect him, Perepelkin said, \"we have found ln our\nleader, (Sorokin) all the Qualities\nof \"Vastrebow\" and so we are flo\nlonger looking.\" Sorokln is currently in South America. \";\nAt the finale of the address four\nteen-aged youths unfurled two giant\nbanners on which were D9intsJ)i<5s\n^^^^p^o#:OTP*ERWSrd-\nSflHiecf him \"Tasterbow. One ban-\nBiggest Drop in Ten\nMonths in Living Index\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A cut In ciga-\nret and food prices during February\nchopped 7\/10 of a point from the\nnew consumer price index\u2014 the\nbfggest drop in living costs in 10\nmonths.\nFor the fourth month in a. row\nthe prices yardstick, based on 1949\nprices equalling 100, receded\u2014this\ntime to 114.8 from 115.5.\nThe decline, more than triple the\nJanuary drop of one-fifth of a\npoint, was the biggest since the do\nner  was -written  in English,  tbe\nother lq Russian.'.\nThe banners stated, \"In Him was\nlife and the life was light of man\nand the light shineth in darkness\nand the darkness comprehended it\nnot. God bless our spiritual leader,\nS. S. Sorokin.\" '\nAngry Doukhobor bystanders who\ncharged that the Heavenly Christ\nwould be their only guide, leaped\nat the flag bearers and tore'the\nbanners. to shreds. Oyer half the\ncrowd engaged in a riotous 20.\nminute scramble. '\u2022>\nThe rioters took .over and about\n20 of them, In the ejude, began\nchanting and singing psalms. In\nthe centre they kindled. a fire.\nThey burned bread and salt and\nthe table upon  which'  It stood.\nWomen,  declaring  their clothes\nluxury, tossed- them, dramatically\nInto the flames. A woman's purse,\ncontaining a sum of money followed and another demonstrating\nFreedorhlte . Ignited   a   $5   bill,\nwaved tl Ip the air until It was\nburned  beyond  salvage.. Money,\nthey announced was an evil.\nAbout 3 p.m., ^four hours after\nthe opening prayers were said, the\nmeeting  broke  lip.  A   crowd  pt\nyoung people remained ai the meeting scene while scores of cars filed\nin a long procession along the flats\nand to their homes. RCMP officers\nat the railway crossing leading to\nthe flats checked autos and _drivers.\nA traditional feast was prepared\nand invited guests sat to dine with\nhost, Mr. Makortoff, and his brother\nFred, who acted as interpreter. After the-usual prayer session before\nthe meal, fifteen young\" people in\ntheir teens and early.20s entered tbe\nroom   in   the   nude.   They   stood\naround the table and sang tno'rugh-\nout the meal Their renditions included a variety of numbers rang-\nfrom the harmonic \"Lord's Prayer,\"\nto.rousing marches. The symbolism\nof tbe nudes was to display their\npurity and the fact that they \"had\nnothing tor hide.\". The five- guests\nwere  bade welcome and a short\nconversation,   denouncing   governments,, wars, ..demonstrations..and\nmodem -waya^of  life  enoed\" the\nsession,\ncrease of nine-tenths of a point in\nApril last year.  v\nBut the total four-month decline\nof 1.3 points was only a little more\nthan half the.'2.3-point plunge in\nthe last-quadruple drop in January-\nApril, 1952.\nHowever, it hauled down the\nprices yardstick by 3.4 points from\nits peak of 118.2 in December, 1951,\nand pushed back living costs to\nabout -where 'they were in June,\n1951, when the index stood at 114.6.\n'tfh^\n\u2022ROVINClAt-'i\nLIBRARY\n%\n^iM*\nVol. SI\n\u25a0\nMIJ1JJJ_^I_||,I upWH^k*tl. Jl \u2014\n^atta\n^\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Variable cloudiness\nColder. Light winds. Low-high at\nCranbrook 20 and 48; Crescent Valley* 25 and 48.\nNELSON, B. G., CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 6, 1953\nNo. 263\noiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimih.   .. -\u2022 I\nTALK ABOUT\nMEAN^THIEVESl \u2022 '\nHAYS, Kas. (AP) - The first\nannual  Easter   egg hunt here ;.\nproved to be a big disappoint-:\nment for hundreds of little chil- ,\n-ran. ....    ...\u25a0\u25a0'\".\nThe Junior Chamber of Commerce colored 130 dozen eggs\nand hid them in the City park\nSaturday morning. Children tin-,\nder 12 years of age were Invited to start the hunt at 2 p.m.   '\nBut in the afternoon the hunt\nwas called off.\n\u2022iffe. Had - to tell the'little-\n\u2022 children' to go home,\" said Jim   ,\nAyres, Jaycee president: \"That's\nall we could do. I feel terrible\nabout it.\"   .\nAdults and bigger -children\nhad swarmed over the park at   <\nnoon and swiped all the eggs.\nilllllllllimillllllilil.in.ill.i.   mil\nRolston lo Speak\nAt Teachers' Meet\n\u2022 * \u25a0\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Provincial\nand federal education finance, curriculum changes, salaries, pensions\nand many other problems will be\ndiscussed at the B.C. Teachers'\nFederation 34th annual convention\nopening in Vancouver Monday.\nMore than 80 resolutions will be\ndealt with at tbe four-day meeting,\nexpected to be attended by more\nthan 700 teachers from all parts of\nthe, province-\nEducation Minister Tilly Rolston\nis scheduled to address the opening\nsession..\nBeer Wallers\nViolate Permit\nVANCOUVER*. (CP) \u2014Vancouver beer parlor waiters are in\ntrouble with the police. ,\n. The dry- squad seized 24 bottles\nof liquor and I tour bottles of beer\nFriday night at the waiters' annual\nparty.      ;,.       -.\nThe. reason: The party was held\none night earlier than their liquor\npermit allowed. ..-\u25a0'\"       ,\n\"We will make every effort to lay\nas .'many charges as < possible,\"\nPolice Chief Walter Mulligan said\ntoday.' ...'  .'\u25a0,:,. .\u2022    J~'.--j*^yJ\nThe permit' was issueoV to. th?\nInternational Bartenders of America, Beverage Dispensers Local 676\nAFL. \"'   ,\nChief Mulligan called the party\n\"a most serious\" violation of the\n_day itself.-\u2014.Good Friday \u2014 as well\nas a violation of the Liquor Act.\n\"Good' Friday is one day in thf\nyear which has more religious significance, almost, than any other,\nwith the possible exception of\nChristmas,\" said the chief.\nPermits are never issued for religious holidays.\nPROP-JET AIRLINER\n. LONDON (Reuters)'\u2014 Britain's\nlatest prop-jet airliner, the Vlckers\nViscount 700, arrived her? Sunday\nafter six weeks of winter service\ntrials in Canada. Trans-Canada Air\nLines has ordered 15 Viscounts and\nen airline official in Canada said\nTCA was \"very pleased\" with the\nplane's performance. %.\nThomsands Attend Sunrise\nService in South Korea\n,   By Reuters News Agency\nChrist's 'resurrection was celebrated Sunday by millions of Christians throughout the world, on both\ntides of the Iron Curtain. -\nOne of the most impressive Easter\nSunday services was held in war-\ntorn South Korea, where thousands\nof United Nations troops and civilians attended a sunrise service on\nmountain top near Seoul.\nHundreds of services were, con\nducted throughout the country and\nat the battle front by UN chaplains and Korean churchmen.\nNearly 1000 Canadian, British,\nNew Zealand and American troops\nattended a* service in the dawn mist\nat the headquarters of the United\nStates 2nd division. Other Commonwealth troops celebrated quietly,\nwith no special rations.\nIn the Holy Land, the Jordan-\nIsraeli frontier was opened again\nto allow pilgrims Into the old city\not Jerusalem. Thousands of Christians j- Roman Catholics, Protestants, Copts and Greek Orthodox \u2014\nattended services in the city's\nmyriad churches.\nA solemn procession of diplomats\nin full regalia crossed the no-man's*\nland between the two countries'and\npassed through the Jaffa gate oh\ntheir way to mass' at the Church of\nthe Holy Sepulchre.<'\nYOUNG DWIGHT DAVID EISENHOWER 2ND, grandson ofPres-\nIdent and Mrs. Elsenhower, submits, .but-under duress to the ministrations of his slater, Barbara Ann, before they,posed for photographers In their Easter finery on the south grounds of the White\nHouse In Washington, The children of Major John Elsenhower, who\nIs stationed: with U.S. army In Korea; are staying with their grandparents and their mother at the executive mansion, \u25a0''\u25a0.-\u2022\n\u2014Oentral Press Canadian.\nBishop of Cmi^\nNotes C^m^\nNo Hope Held for 81\nIn Rammed Submarine\nPerdue Predicts\n31 Socred Seals\nCANTERBURY, Eng.- (Reuters)\u2014\nMost Rev. Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, says there are\ngleams of light in the darkness of\n\"this bitter phase of human history.\"\nIn an Easter address at Canterbury Cathedral, he spoke of evil\nthat took \"devilish and. ghastly\nforms, producing criminals who violate: all human decencies, driving\nmen into the terrible atrocities of\nthe Kikuyu or the long-drawn-out\nmiseries of Korea.\"   \u25a0\u2022.\nBut amid.all this, \"Moscow adds\nto words of peace some signs of\nwillingness to co-operate. China\nspeaks the simple word about prl-\nsoners-of-war which India asked\nfor and'tailed to get and for which\nthe vjorld has been waiting..\n\u2022 \u25a0 \"In t|iis brighter air the chief\npowers have .agreed, upon a new\nsecretary-general of the United-Nations organisation. * \u25a0 | ('.\n\"We can measure how deep la the\ndarkness brooding over u^by the\nfact that these few rushlights of\n.hope   have - seemed: to shine like\nmm. .:\u25a0:'.\u25a0>\" \u25a0 ' *_o.v.,';-o''\nCjnUOWACK, B.C;\\(GP) ;'-\u25a0*- The\nSocial Credit party's platfojm for\nthe June 9 election will be outlined\nby Premier Bennett about May'l.\nJohn Perdue, \u25a0 president of the\nB.C. Social Credit Association, said\nhere today the platform will be based . on legislation already brought\nbefore the house and' legislation\nthat would have been i introduced\nhad the Social Credit government\nnot been defeated. t    \"' .'*\u00a7\u2022\u25a0\/\nThis is taken as an indication that\nthe Social Credit \"manifesto\" dn\nwhich the. party will' contest the\nnew liquor act and amendments to\nprovincial labor laws.;'-' \".' ' 1 I\nelection will highlight a proposed\nThe Association president said]\nthere will be no Alberta or Federal\nSocial Credit political talent* used\nin the campaign.'      \u25a0   ,   ,..\n\"Thia ;is\\'oiir 'battle;\"' he said.\n\"There will be no outside influence.\n:We are running our own government, and if we can't win 09 our\nown showing wa don't deserve to\nwin.\"\"\"' '\"- '\nHecredited help* of Alberta mem*\nbers in last year's campaign with'\nwinning the election for Social Credit and said thi$.\"without it B.C.\nwould be socialist governed.\"\nMr, Perdue predicted that 88\nseats will be won by Social Credit\n!\u00ab\u00bb; June, 'basing 'his estimate '.'on\nparty, membership figures.\"\nHe said'all ridings will be con*\ntested.\nMohammedan Prayer, Farewell Words\n.To Relatives Last Heard From Sub\nISTANBUL (AP) \u2014 AU hope -was abandoned Sunday\nnight tor 81..Turkish sailors Who went down in the rammed\nsubmarine Dumlupinar in the Dardanelles Saturday. The defence .Ministry issued<a communique detailing fee loss of life\n-i-eeven officers, 35 petty officers, 39 ratings. . .\n::; \u2022 .'Upvuntil the last moment this Easter Sunday, rescue-\nteams labored oh the slim qhance that, some life might still be'\nfoundaboard, even though the vessel lay 2'28 feet down.\n.The:; submarine, formerly the Bumper of the United\nStated\/Navy, collided in pre-dawn darkness Saturday with\nthe 4;000-tpn Swedish freighter Nabol'and. The crash occurred\nthrefe .miles- north of Canakkale, a fortress town near the\nsouthern end of the Dardanelles. .*\nw'mttiim'\nMOSCOW (AP) - An. obscure\nformer deputy minister of Soviet\nstate security was singled out today\naa the culprit who' faked-evidence\nin.the now-discredited \"doctors\"\nplot\" :     t\";\nThe Communist party newspaper\nPravda identified him only ab Ryu-\nmin and said he is under arrest\nAt the same time Pravda lambasted Ryumin's superior, the former\nminister of state security, S. Ignat-\niev, \"for having shown political\nblindness and gullibility\" in the\ncase. ; .. .'....\u25a0\nThe 15 doctors were ordered freed\nSaturday in a communique from the\nnew internal affairs ministry headed by L. P. Beria, first deputy premier- in tbe new Soviet state of\nPrime Minister Malenkov.\nSWAN laSEBC -\u25a0\u2022\nufejUWAGK,' B.C. (CP): \u2014 Agriculture Minister Kenneth Kiar-\nnan'wlll' seek re-election InCHiili-\nwack\"if nominated\" tor the-VHrae 9\njprovin'cial election, he said, here.\nHe said milk price controls will\nbe dropped I as planned' May 1 and\nthat \"on.new legislation is^needed\"\n\u2022for the'move,\"; \u25a0\"\"'.\u25a0\nMr. Kiernan forecast Social Credit wiU -he- returned, to' office wilh\n\"nt least 30 seats.\" .   . \"      \u25a0   ,   '\nCubs Hurt in\nTraffic Mishap\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Cub-\nmaster and six Wolf Cubs were in\njured today when a station wagon\nin which' they were riding collided\nWith another car here.-       ' \u2022-j\nCubmaster John Lidstone, -who\nwas driving* the station wagon, and\nthe six boys, ranging - in age from\neight to nine, were not\/seriously\ninjured. All required hospital treatment .however, as did Max Hermes, driver of the other car, and a\npassenger. '    -\nThe Cubs, members of the 20th\nVancouver Cub Pack, were returning from a Good Friday. holiday.\ntrip to Mount Seymour.\/ ,\/',''\u2022\n6 of Gov't Staff\nArrested as\nMau Mau Members\nNAIROBI, Kenya .(Reuters)\u2014Six\nmembers \u2022 of the staff of Government House were arrested Sunday\nas members ql the Mau Mau terrorist .organisation, it was reported.\nXbey. were .arrested; after police\nscreened the. staff at the home of\nGovernor Sir Slvelyn Baring\nShortly before, Baring announced\na new plan designed to let government forces .'take the Initiative in\nthe fight'against Mau Mau.\nSkiing Ends in\nDouble Tragedy\nCHAMONDC,' France (Renters) -\u25a0\nA, Scottish girl skier was killed Saturday-night when she fell down a\ncrevasse high on Morit Blanc in the\nFrench Alps. Her fiance, .overcome\nwith grief, threw himself off a rock\nto.his death.. The, couple was skiing\n.near. the Glacier of the Giant on\n15,'781-Ioot Mont BJanc\". highest\npeak in Europe.\nCCF Fears Socreds\nIn Next Election\n.. -TORQN$Q..,(CP)- Sbip? ,<~.e-\ngates and^speakers to the Ontario\n.CCF^cbhvehtibh expressed fear,the\nfSS^-Credit psirtyrwili become a\npotent political force' in the next\nfederal election.\n' The convention, held'' hereJ during the.' weekend,1 'received, a report ifron^'th'e party's -national executive outlining the 10 major campaign' planks'wnicr. the'CCF will\nemphasize in the next federal election. The program underscored'provincial lesder E. B.. Jblliffe's. contention that the time has come for\nthe. CCF to shift its: main emphasis\naway, from purely welfare legislation to \"a mastery of the whole economy\" and international problems.\nj   \u2014-J.\u2014;   '-\nExplosion, Fire\nL^ave Five Dead\nCAtiGARY '(CP) \u2014Four persons\ndied in a Bassano \u25a0 hospital Sunday\nmprning, bringing to five the death\ntoll in a violent explosion-fire at\non Indian reserve home near Cluny\nwhere a bottle of gasbline, hurled\nthrough a window at a stove, rocked the home and set it flaming Saturday night. ' \"\n\"Alex ' Sttindihg-at-the-door, be-\nlieved- about 35,. whose wife and\nchild are among the dead, is being\nheld by\/police.       ;' , .\n3 Killed in Level\nCrossing Collision\npTE. ROSE, Que; (GP) \u2014 Three\nmembers of a family were killed\nSaturday night when the car in\nwhich they were riding waa. struck\nby a Canadian Pacific train at a\nlevel crossing in this town 10 miles\nnortheast of Montreal. Dead are An-\ngelbert Lafontaine, * 36, his '\u25a0 wife,\nBeatrice, 32, and their son, Alain, 7,\nTheir- four-year-bid daughter, Mi-\ncheije, 3sin fair conditions. ?   .\n! The *armed services information\noffice Saturday listed 96\u00b0 officers\nand men aboard. But the defence\nministry, communique in Ankara\nlater - gave the figure' as 86. Five\nmen, -Including the Dumlupinar's\nskipper, were saved! These' five\nwere on the ..conning tower at the\ntime 'the 1528-ton Dumlupinar, a\nmodern ship equipped with a snorkel under-water breathing device,\nwas rammed while cruising on the\nsurface, Reports said two bodies\ncrushed by pressure had been re\ncovered on the surface.\n', tbe Naboland suffered a gaping\nhole in her bow, but remained seaworthy. She is anchored at Canakkale pending completion of an official investigation.\nDiveTs fulled in repeated attempts\nto attach a rescue bell or escape\nchamber to the Dumlupinar as she\ntilted at a 15-degree angle on. the\nbottom in 38 fathoms.\nBecause of the depth, diving\nteams, could stay on the bottom tor\nonly four minutes at a time; and\nthen had to bo- taken aboard the\nrescue ship for treatment in a pressure chamber. ,' .\".\nDRAMATIC ACC0UNT8\nDramatic accounts - cam* front\nCanakkale of the sub's last minutes*\nTurkish newspapers - reported\nioitio'. of\/the. trapped, men recited\nA Canadian Abroacl *\nWhe fatter*$ WhedStittTwns While Y^^h Graves Progrm\nlng to newspaper accounts, panicked and broke'down in the darkened\nsub.\nOne account related that one of\nthe sailors crept through the escape,\nhatch \u2014 but without the necessary-,\npressure-chamber attachments \u2014\nand was immediately crushed to\ndeath by the ,J?eayy pressure at\nwater. 1 :.:'.'\u25a0 ' '.\n-. Tbe reports ssid a petty officer,\nidentified only as- Selami, wag\namong those who talked to the rescue workers on the surface through\nan emergency telephone lino tha\nsub released on a deck buoy.\nGENERATOR EXPLODED\nSelami was described as relating\nhow the sub's generator exploded\nshortly after the collision,, plunging\nthe Dumlupinar into darkness.\nSelami was said to have passed\non information that 22 were alive\non Saturday afternoon: in the tall\nsection, that they were .awaiting\nrescue, that there was no information on those trapped in the bow\nand that the oxygen supply was\ngoing down. :  '\nFinally Selami was said to have\ntelephoned .that all in the sub wanted to say goodbye to their families\nanil that they were dying for their\ncountry.\nn\nthe muossirfs call to prayer taken'\nfrom the Koraro* ''Allah is .great,\nthere is no god but Allah and Mohammed is his prophet. Come to\nprater.\".\nBut some of the victims, accord-\nPope Expresses\nHopes for Peace\nBy FRANK BRUTTO\nVATICAN CITY (AP)-the Pope\nbeseeched a' massive Easter throng\nin St. Peter's Square Sunday to\ndraw fresh inspiration from the\nResurrection, and overcome discouragements in ihe prolonged and\nrepetitious struggles for peace ahd\ngood.\n\u25a0 To. the, audience of perhaps 500,-\n000\u2014people of many lands packed\nshoulder *to shoiilder in the vast\nsquare\u2014the Pope' did not speak\ndirectly of-tile recent moves from\nMoscow* that-have kept the world\nguessing but three times In his six-\nminute speech he uttered hopes.for\npeace.    *\nU.S. to Ask Release\nOf Dr. Walter Linse \u2022\n- - BONN (AP)^Unlted States authorities here are reported contemplating testing the Russians' new\nconciliatory \u2022 attitude by asking\nthem Once again to free Dr. Walter\nLlnse, Berlin \"ana-Communist leader who .Was kidnapped last July\nand-dragged into the Soviet f?one.\nWEATHER DIDN'T MATTER\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Snow and rain\nmarred Easter Sunday in Britain,\nbut transport officials said there\nwaa practically \"nobody at home\nanyway \u2014 BO.OOOpersons had crossed the channel to spend the day. in\nFrance.\nEX-KINO. CAROL\n... of Roumanla- died Friday\nof a heart attack at the age of 69.\nCarol won fame as the monarch\nwho gave up his throne for love.\nThe first time he left his throne\nwas In 1926 a year after he met\nand fell In love with Mrs. Helen\nLupescu, beautiful wife of one of\nhis army officers. In 1930 he reclaimed the throne only to leave\nIt again In 1940 when his private\naffairs weakened his posltoln In\nhis country. \u25a0\nHe will be burled beside the\nkings bf Portugal at the'St, Vincent National Pantheon.   -.        '\nin\nporrter ,\u25a0> . .\nBy BRUCE HUTCHISON\n'DUNSTER, Somerset: In a\narrow street, directly below\nihe walls of Dunster Castle, is\ntiny shop. At the window\nits' a grizzled man with a red\njeret, a face to match, and a\niuinorous eye. His name is\nloader and his; work is more\niiterestihg, in'the end more\nlighificant,* too, than all the\niehturifes' of labor that built\nshe castle. Mr. Loader is mak-\nBg pottery by hand.\"\nHundreds of stone masons, car-\nsnters and villains were conscrip-\n\u2022A by de Mohun to erect his dank\n'ortress. After his family failed, in-\nixcusably, to produce' a male heir\nind.the property was sold to Sir\nlugh Luttrell ln 1404, every gen-\niration of owners labored. tb''. im-\nirove it until the structure crawled.\nIyer the entire'ihill. ... '.. . ',,1 '\u2022{, '\u2022'\nAnd then in. 1645, when the Rojr-\nlists . occupied 'the ..castle, Cronl-\n>_L\nwell's Roundheads besieged it tor\n160 days, took it and employed 300\nmen to tear down all its fortifications. Cromwell \"slighted\" many\ncastles, in the old phrase, leaving\nthem in ruins, but he 'spared most\nof Dunster.* It is still occupied by\nthe family? which purchased it 549\nyears ago. ,*, 'J.\nUiey,' have .'Been making pottery\nof sorts in' Punster for sonie 800\nyears, Mr. Loader believes. From\nthe time of the Norman Conquest,\nwhen William- de Mohun one of\nthe Conqueror's robber'barons, built\nhis castle on a high hill to dominate\nthe Bristol Channel, the monks used\nto work the local clay. Bslt in Mr.\nLoader's... res\u00a3edtful opinion, the\nmonks were etude workmen. They\nmade .drain tiles, and waterpipes.\nThey never turned out the exquisite little bowl6,* jugs and plates*that\ncanoe from Mr.\" leader's primitive\n.whefel'to'be colorfe'd and glazed by\n;huj *wjfe.i -,,\u25a0,* ''\u2022'\n,, All this time,;,**hile the gentry\nwere,, pasting tneir.'imoney and often; their lives .'in the construction\nof ^raughty haUB'.and clammy.don\njons, the people of Dunster went\nabout their business, careless of\nwar, murders and ruin. Mr. Loader's revolving wheel and the lovely\nvessels growing under his fingers\nare a 'token of England's perpetual\ntoil and skill. The potter is a composite, ot the common Englishman,\nwhom Goldsmith called, \"the county's . pride\" that \"once destroyed\ndan never be supplied.\" *\nCivil War\nIt took more than Cromwell's\nCivil War to destroy the workmen\nof Dunster. It will take more than\nthe present civil war of the world\nto destroy workmen like Mr. Loader, the foundations of civilization\nmay be cracking but' the potter's\nwheel still turns- (except when he\nrushes from his shop, every hour\nor so, to guide some,lorry, around\nthe narrow Corner by the church,\nlest it smash half the buildings of\nthe* town.)\n. In a field at the end of the afreet\nother .workmen of still older tradi\ntion were busy with'the labors of\nspring. A young. man. spading the\nsteep-hillside kept a shot gun close\nbeside him,,propped against a stump\nto protect his newly-sprouting peas\nfrom the birds.: He said: the birds\nwere a certain kind of nuisance and\npaused to shy a stone at a; saucy\npigeon.'       . , ' O.   .'\u25a0 *\u25a0:'\u2022'- ' \u25a0'..''.:-\nAn ancient, bearded man digging\nnearby informed. me, with native\npride, that King.Charles had once\nhidden in the castle and escaped,\nby an underground passage to-a\ntower on a neighboring hill, I did:\nnot point out that the tower had\nbeen built in the late- 1700s, long\nafter, Charles had-his facts wrong\nbut he knew what he meant and,\nin a way, it was tive,\nThis part of the country, he said,\nwas very old and he hoped (with\na sidelong glance of disapproval at\nthe young digger) .that lt. would\nnever change.\nApparently,he had raised a delicate subject * in; Dunster, for the\nyoung digger, replied, rather env\nphatically, that the tpwn needed a:\nfactory, and the city fathers had*\nbeen very wrong to prohibit' its er-\nleotion.to the icteresU et tetiajjA\nbeauty and 'the tourjst trade. There\nwas nothing, he said, .for a young\nman to do, except dig He had been\nin.the. wtt, of course, he had seen\nthe-world and*e hhd; never in'ttnd^\ned to return to Dunster,\nHe'-Jftetw-Ttied':..\"\/.':{.:'.\nAh, yes; said, the .ancient, - but he\ndid-return. .Sheepishly-the.young-'\nster admitted it He*couldn't-stay\naway from his .village even if there\nwas. nothing to do-but'.dig.-. \u25a0 ..\n, '\u25a0Mind,-'! tte -ahefent, grated,: \"Us'\nthe, finest poll in. Zomerzet.. What:\ndo we \"want with aJactor^?' Twpuld\nspoil*it:ei)t(r*ly.\"-, .\u2022\u25a0\u2022'\u2022 .'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 1'\n. I left them. digging, somewhat\ngrumpily and, after .consuming at\nthe Luttrell Arms two, full pints of\nrough, cider, whjch.' felt smoother\n'than silk, I. drove ovej the Wild'up|\nland moor , to Dunkery * Beacon,\nlooked.out over half of England and\n'dropped * down to the memorable\n'town of-PoHock.\nMemorable mostly because it was\ni\"\u00bbi person from P6rlocK*.-who in-,\nterrupted Coleridge's mighty dream\nand ended \"Kublai Khan\" before\nit wm wall-begun.. A iuclg. asoident\nI always think, since even Coleridge\ncould not have maintainedthe glories of the first verses ,.'\nSheUey*\u00bb ;Lai.|i:     \"\nAnyVay; .^top^the. moor, while:\nShelley's personal skylark poured\nout his profuse strains of unpremeditated, art, I peered for a moment into Coleridge's dream. Surely, I thought,'he had been walking:\nhere before he sat down to write,\nand out of his subconscious memory\ncame- a recollection of this scene\n'with perhaps the finest lines' of\nBhglish'^id-tiy. '\nFor below me,-'dark-shadowed by\nthe westering sun, loomed' a cav-;\nern of foliage 'and-rock as holy and\nenchanted as e're by waning moon;\nwaa haunted: by woman wailing:\nior her demon lover.\"' Hert,' iun-;\ndoUbtedly,: she wailed.*:Hsippily tte:\npersonfrpm Porlock did not. arrive\nuntil that* vision was put on paper\/\nThe only'person from Porlock I was\nable to question\u2014a florid fellow\nselling fish\u2014could add. nothing to\nthe story. He had'never heard of\nColeridge but - he -could- guarantee\n-J-\u00bb.:_\u00a3Mlu'*ao_t,\n' LONDON (AP) - The higher councils of British nudism have put\nout a,few cautious peace feelers to determine If Englands public\nbeaohea wllKhe safe.for bare bathers next summer.    .\n.leaden' of Britain's 16,000 nudists said they plan some \"peaceful\npenetration\" tests on at least three publlo beaches to determine If the\ntime-has come to bring nudlsni out Into the open. '\n\"When we get the first spell of mild spring weather, small reconnaissance parties will go to the beaches and begin bathing without\nclothes,\" T. Ivan Pyle, an official of the British Sun Bathing Association, told reporters.- '\u25a0\nThe nudists, who nbw'bask behind the'high fences of some 60 clubs\nthroughout Britain, will make their tests cautiously, Pyle explained \u2014\n\"they will.naturally choose secluded spots, If other people come along\ntq use the beach, one of our members will, ask them politely If they ob-\n;. leet to nude bathing!\"      O ,        .      *.\n\"If there Is any objection, eat members will clothe themselves.\nThere Is nothing militant ali'out oUr attitude.\" , \u2022'-.*\nHANOI, Indo^dhina (CP) \u2014 An elephant embroidered on a table\nclbfti was the source of some amusement when Adlai Stevenson, un-\naUcoesstul-Democratlc candidate for the United States presidency, vis-\nitedhere. -   \u25a0     '   ' > ;.--.' \u25a0\u25a0-\nStevenson's host was quick to explain that the elephant was embroidered on the cloth because it is an animal greatly esteemed in\nIndo-China, not because it is Uie' symbol of the U.S. Republican party.\nO. VIENNA (Reuters) \u2014 The first Vienna school of roulette, will\nopen Wednesday. A former croupier with many years, experience will\nbe the teacher.' '-': .\nThe fees will be stiff but the Instructor promises to teach a number, of systems which, though not guaranteed to break the bank, are\nsaid to be sure \"bread and butter\" winners If scientifically followed. *\nDetermined efforts have been made by Vienna police, the ministries of education, justice, finance and. Interior, and the Austrian constitutional court to prevent this school, from, opening. But after long\nstudy It waB found that there are no legal grounds on which the school\n.oan.be banned.\n -\u2014-\n\u2014\u2014~\nm\n-\u2014r\u2014\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1953\nI\nI\nU\nComing; Tuesday ' and' Wednesday\n\"Daughter of Rett O'Grady\"\n\u00ab  MILES  EA3T  OP  NELSON\nI\nCranbrook\nREX\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nTODAY\nTUES.-WED.\nni .iniiV In hrii.....\nThe (jrttttit ff\ntie PASSION P1HYS\nnn imiu riNiit mn tu ir.\nShows 7:15 and 9:30\nNewsreel,  Cartoon,  Shorts\nk\nFINED FOR SPEEDING\nFrank Spier Of Nelson was fined\n|30 in City Court for speeding. He\nentered a plea of guilty before\nMagistrate William Brown. In Saturday's paper, the name was given\nas*. Spear.\n*L\nJ.A.|togers\nDies al 83\nJames Arthur Rogers, Nelson\nresident tor the past five years, died\nsuddenly at'his home at 623 Fifth\nStreet Friday evening. -\n.Born In the United ..Statei he\ncame to Canada as a young hoy to\nlive at Marehalltown, N.S., where\nhe attended school before golng'to\nsea for a number of years, He later\nmoved to Bear River, N.S., then to\nNokomis, Sask., where he operated\na dairy form for a time before'com-\ning to Nelson, He was 83.\nBesides his wife,- he Is survived\nby two sons, Archibald in Toronto\nand Frank in Nelson; fodr daughters, Mrs. Ezra Potter in Annapolis\nRoyal, Nova Scotia, and Mrs: R. W.\nMiddleton, Mrs, N. H. Nelson and\nMrs. P. CannelL.all of Nelson: two\nsisters, Mrs. Samuel Wright in Milford, Nova Scotia and Mrs. Corey\nPotter in Nokomis, Sask.; three\nbrothers, Frank, Walter and Win-draft Gehue, all of Nova Scotia; 18\ngrandchildren and 19 great grandchildren.   '\nFuneral services will be held ln\nNelson. on Tuesday.\nWORK\nBOOTS\nOil Tan \u2014 Waterproof\nLECKIE'S\nSkookum'\n6\" ....\t\nSkookum\n8\" ....\n\u25a0 Raw-Cord\n' 8\"\t\n$|3.50\n$21-50\n$|\u00a3_95\nPARIS\nSuper Service $1^.50\n6\"-.\u2014__      10\nSuper Service $ni.50\n'   8\" ___.__,       im\\\n.   B. C. CruiW fj (J .00\nCorked     J _?\nGREB\nWate\n. , Moccasin, 6\"\nWaterproof     flA-SO\nGODFREYS'\nPhone \u2014 270 \u2014 Box\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nThursday \u2014 April 9\nCiific\nlOOOChlldren\nEasier Egg Hunt\nChildren from two to eight years\nswarmed over Lakeside Park Sunday afternoon poking under shrubs,\nstirring leaves and combing tbe\ngrounds in search, ot Easier tggi.\nClose to 1000 children, took part\nin the Easter egg' bunt, chairman\nAdam Doyle estimated. It was the\nfirst ot its kind to be sponsored by\nNelaon Junior Chamber of Com*\nmerce. .\nSome BOO bagi of candy and SOO\nIce cream bars were unearthed by\nthe enthusiastic small fry and 12\nchocolate bunnies were awarded' to\ntbe lucky youngsters finding tbe\nchicks.\nPC Federal\nNominee io Be\nChosen May 2\nA Progressive Conservative candidate for Kootenay West in the\ncoming federal election, will be\nnamed ln Nelson May 3.\nTbe date and place for the nominating convention were set Sturday\nat a meeting ot the West Kootenay\nProgressive' Conservative Association ln the Hume, under the chairmanship of M. C. Donaldson of\nSalmo, president,    . '..      . ,*\u25a0\nDelegates from all parts of the\nconstituency are expected to attend tbe nominating convention,\ncoming from points between the\nhead of the Arrow Lakes and the\nborder, and from West Creston to\nthe Fruitvale, Trail, Rossiand area.\nExecutive members from Trail,\nCastlegar, Nelson, Edgewood, Salmo,' and Ymir attended Saturday's\nmeeting.\nFind Way to\nCombat1 Napalm\nSTOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Swedish scientists have found a means\nof protection against napalm (Jellied gasoline) bombs, a defence\nstaff spokesman said Sunday. He\ndid not disclose-how the protection\nworked but said it had enabled the\ncrew of a coastal artillery gun to remain ln the firing tower while it\nwas wrapped in flames caused by 34\n\"normal napalm bombs.\" The crew\nwe're able to continue firing their\ngun throughout the test, he added.\nIWA Names 7-Man\nBargaining Group\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The International Woodworkers of America\n(CIO) has named the seven-man\nnegotiating committee to lead the\n1093 battle for wage increases and\nimproved working conditions.\nNew demands for a lS-cent-an*\nhour pay increase are scheduled to\ngo out to coast lumber. operators\ntoday. The 1052 agreement expires\nJune 14 and negotiations tor a new\nmast contract are; expected to get\nstarted about April 15,     'My\nSABRES ARRIVE IN SCOTLAND\nFRESTWICK, Scotland (Reuters)\n\u2014 An 11-plane vanguard of 91 Canadian-built Sabre jet fighters landed here Sunday after a month's delay by deep snow ln Greenland.\nThe planes will be handed over to\nthe United States Air Force and the\nRAF.\nAsia, Including Asiatic portions\nof Russia, covers nearly one-third\nthe land Surface of the globe.\n<3oast Ba(tointoti Stars\nSingles,^ P^\n0$00^O0l in Cancer\nThe 1053 local Conquer Cancer by the Foundation to defray final\nSeeded player* took home mot'\n,'of tha silverware Sunday as the\nWest Kootenay Open Badminton\ntournament earn* te a close at\ntho Clvlo Contre. ,    -\nBert Fergus and Lois Reid of\nVancouver wero brilliant In taking both single, events as well as\nthe   mixed   doubles   and   they\nthrilled | largo crowd with their\nbadminton form.\n(See detailed results on (port\npage;) : ','.'\nThe tournament, revived two\nyears ago after being idle since\nbefore the war, was a huge'success\nand drew about 250 entries from \u00bbU\nover-th* country.',      ~    ,   .\nPlay throughout wai ot the nigh'\nest caliber and In tbe three days\nof play some ot ib* best games seen\nln Nelion for aom* Ume were played,' .-.\" *.';\u25a0'\nNelion players were not left but\not 'tiie picture -ntlrely, Murray\nCrelghton and ES Hearn won tha\nmen's doubles, but only after a\nrazile dazjlo display.\nThe men's single* event was\nsomewhat ot an upsot ii Bert Fergus, a former Klmberley boy now\nattending University. oi Brltlih\nColumbia in Vancouver, oame up\nwith - a performance thit won htm\nan ovation with almost every ihot\nas ho dumped last year's title holder\nJack Harvey of Spokan* lfl-7.- 17-tB\nfor the Nelion Club trophy. It was\nsweet revenge for Fergus, whd wu\nrunnerup to Harvey in thi* event\nlast year,   \/   \"'\nIt was tlie second tlm* Fergus\nhad upiet the dopsten, for earlier\nbe had dropped a first gam* to\nNell Anderson of Vancouver by.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nscore of 15-10, but with the uie of\na itrong backhand he ran Anderson\ninto the'floor 15-8, 18-U.\nCLOSE 8CORES\nAlthough H*rv*y failed to llv* up\nto expectations he played well, and\nto gainnlg '\u2022 final berth had trouble\nwith only one man, Mike Horcoff\nof Castlegar, who, if h* had been\nbitting the sidelines, might have\nknocked Harvey out in the \"nt\nround. Ai lt wai Harvey won by\nclose tcores, , \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nLois Reid, Canada's lacond ranking player, captured' the ladiei'\nsingles and the Central Club Trophy\nas expected\/In the final ihe downed Role McGregor of Crawford Bay\nU-l, 11-J. ..O, \"\u2022\nIn the wcend game.'however, the\nleu experienced Rosa McGregor\ngave Her one of the belt gamei thit\nsh* had ln tha tournament, and for\na short *peU it looked Uke the\nsouthpaw from the coast would\nsuffer her tirst defeat in tbe event.\nMiu Reid had little trouble in\ndisposing oi! her other three op*\nponents. In all she piled up 80\npoints to 10 in winning eight\nstraight games. .     ' '\nIn tbe ladiei' doublei Bonnie\nChlopan of Cranbrook teamed up\nwith Rose McGregor to capture the\nNelson Transfer Trophy by downing Pat Russell and Arlene Simms\nbf Klmberley. The Kimberley team\nfought tooth and nail to force both\ngames into overtime with icorei of\n18-15, 18-14. >     ,. .       j\nTbe left handed slam shota and\nthe backhand shots of Lois Held\nand Bert Fergus were too mueh for\nEd apd Mary Hearn of Salmo \u00bb\u00bb\nthe Vancouv^rites capturtd the\nWragge Trophy to the mixed\ndoubles by scprei qf 15-4; 15-8.\nin one of the best played.niatchei\nat the day Murray. Crelghton and\nEd Hearn downed Frank Gaylord\nand Avery Peyton bf Spokane 18-15,\n15-13,16-7.\nThe Btellar playing of Crelghton\ndecided the match as he never quit\ndriving. Ever on the alert he placed\nshots that were literally too hot to\nhandle. .His. partner, although otl\nhit usual game, backed him up to\ngood advantage on many occasions\nwhen the going got reaUy rough.\nCR.OWD ON EDGE\nIn another slam bang affair that\nhad the crowd sitting on the edge of\ntheir seats, Bob Showacre and\nMerle Corin - ot Spokane bested\nNed Rhode! and Id Haley of Trail\nand Rossiand 17-18, 15-12,15-12.\nIt waa anybody's' game right up\nto the end as both teams after splitting the first two matches were\neven at 12-12, but a Ion gshot and\na mils by the narrowest of margins\nat the side court gave the Spokane\ncrew the break they needed and\nttiatwas'tha game1.... .\n, Play in* the \"B\" flights produced\na good many district champions as\nNelson failed to cop any ot the\nevents.\nMike Horcoff of Castlegar attar\ngiving Jack Harvey a terrific battle\nto the first round of the A flight\nwent all the way to take 'the B\nsingles. He had to really settle down\nand play in the final game as he\nfound stiff opposition in Ned\nRhodes. Horcoff seemed to regain\nhis control at hitting the sidelines\nwith terrific smashes that had\nRhodes reeling.\nJoyce Swlhart ot Kinnaird had\nlittle trouble in winning tbe ladles!\nsingles againet Miss Turton ot Kelowna, sweeping both* gamea 11-S,\n11:2. .The hardest games she had\nwere against 'Helen Wilson of Nelson for after taking the first game\n11-8 she dropped a close 11-10 game,\nbut then came back to take the final 11-7. '.* \u2022..'..-  ' '\u25a0   I,\nThe ladies' doubles Went to X\nJ. Yerex and P. Buckley of Trail as\nthey beat M. Stubbs and D. Turton\not. Kelowna 11-5; 12-11. .\nIn.the men's doublet Grant McGregor and Erik Bodln of Kimberley hid a close match with Gordon\ncampaign, in aid of the Canadian\nCancer Society, opens'today.\nUnder the chairmanship of H.\nLupton, and with headquarters at\nB02 Baker Street, the local -drive\nhas a goal pf $3500.''\nA residential canvass of (he city'\nwill be conducted the afternoon and\nevening of April 18 by volunteers\nfrom 111 women'i organizations',.Any\nwomen who have not been contacted ond would l|ke to offer their\nservices tor the residential -alii,\nhave been asked to contact, the\nchairman. ,\nMembers of Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis, Kinsmen and Gyro Clubs will\ncover the business dtsttffct*.'\nIn British Columbia, tHecflsijfjg'h\nhas an objective ;pf $200,000, end is\nl Joint drive of' the\u2022\u00bb'\u00a3'* Cancer\nSociety and the B. C. Cancer .Foundation. A total of $50,000 ls required\nBert PeroUi, lift, and Jack Harvey, right, shake hands Just before Bart wen tb* men's ilngla title from Jack. ZThe tables wer*\nturned this yoar fer lait year Harvey wai th* winner and Fergus th*\nrunnsrup.\u2014Art Stevens photos. ,\nQUICK\nRELIEF\nDon't wheeze, ga.p, cough, fight fer\nbreath. Take Templeton's RAZ-MAH\nCapsules, specially made to help asthma\nsufferers breathe more easily and comfortably, so they work regularly and enjoy\nlona restful night- of sleep, 65c, tl ..IS. R-53\nLois Reid,. Canada's second\nranking badminton player In the\nwomen's division, on Sunday won\nthe tingles In the Wert Kootenay\nOpen Badminton Tournament by\nbeating out last year's winner,\n' Rote McGregor of Crawford Bay,\nLaurie and Gordon Walmsley ot\nCranbrook before they were declared the winners.\nEric Bodln then teamed up with\nPat Russell ot Kimberley to. take\nthe mixed event in three games\nfrom Ew Hedley of Creston and\nRose McGregor' 15-18, 11-15, 15-8.\nFor both teams this was the second\ntime to the event that they, had to\nplay three games to a match as both\nof them were taken to the full extent to tbe semi-finals before winning out \u25a0\"\u2022\nOnly two events saw a \"-\"flight\nwith Ron and Eleanor Rutherglen\nof Pentlcton taking the measure ot\nAI and Helen Wilson ot Nelson ln\nstraight games 15-7, 18-14.\nJack Newstead defeated Stan McLure of Spokane to the single event\n15-5,18-13.\nLola Reid, Merle Corin and Dave\nWaddell presented the prizes at the\nend.of the tournament,\nAngle Parking\nFor Vernon Street\nAngle parking on the south side\nof the 500 block on Vernon Street is\nplanned in Nelson and the possibility of extending it to the 600\nblock will be considered later.\nDecision to begin angle parking\ncame after it was suggested by Aid.\nT. H. Bourque before City Council.\nMORE PAKISTAN POOD\nKARACHI (CP) - Land which\nformerly produced' jute now will\nbe used to grow moire food for the\npopulous area of East Pakistani Decision followed a government'order\nto reduce jute acreage owing to a\ncarry-over of jute production. Officials expressed hope- East Pakistan might wipe out its food deficit\nin about two years. :\nRed Gross\nDrive\nTops Quota\nNelson District Red Cross\nSociety campaign is expected\nto go over the $8000 mark, or\n$1000 over the quota of $7000.\nFund collected to date total\n$7525, it was learned Sunday.\nCompletion of the canvass is\nexpected to send the final total \"well over\" $8000.\n43-YearErle\nResident Dies\nCharles Johnson, resident ot Erie\nsince ,1810, died at hit home there\nSaturday. . '\u25a0: .   .'.\t\nMr. Johnson, .born In Sweden,\nwas 83 years old. He came to Erie\nstraight from Sweden in 1910 and\nhas farmed there ever since.\nHe is survived by one brother,\nOlat August Haglund of Erie.\nFuneral services will be held to\nSalmo Thursday.\nThe Weather\nNelson  \t\nSaturday\t\nSt. John's \t\nHalifax .\n..... 30 52\n...... 30 51\n..._ 87 30\n...- 35 57\nMontreal  _ _ 31 54\nOttawa   32 31\nToronto    35 44\nNorth Bay __  32 37\nKenora \u2022.'. _,___.__ 25 38\nWinnipeg .,  22 45\nBrandon r  28 40\nThe Pas .... _.._ 13 41\nRegina    . 28 49\nSaskatoon    29 47\nPrince Albert  _ 19 41\nNorth Battleford   22 39\nSvflft Current .  28 46\nMedicine' Hat  i._., 39 49\nLethbrldge _ 39 45\nCalgary   34 44\nEdmonton   34 48\nKamloops     35 57\nVancouver    ._ 42 50\nVictoria ...._.. __  40 51\nKimberley    .'.  27 \u2022 54\nCrescent Valley   32 55 .\nPrince Rupert    38, 46\nPrince George   24 42\nSeattle  ....; .*.  40 50\nPortland      42, 53\nSpokane    41 55\nChicago   32 60-\nSan Francisco    47 58\nLot Angeles _i  55 61\nNew York \u201e......_..  49. 60\nWhitehorse    :...;... 32 40   \u2014\nFOLKESTONE, England (CP)-\nCapt. H. S. Allen has retired after\n39 years in the Englis) \\ Channel\nService. He skippered tbe steamer\nStrathaird for many years, and\nalwayS flashed' a message to his\nwife on; the coast as he started out*'\nbound trips.\nbuilding posts of the $750,000 .Cancer Institute in Vancouver, which\ncontains all treatment facilities for\ncancer, Including the latest in X-\nray and radium equipment and tha\nnew cobalt 60-beam therapy unit\nSeveral research projects are also\nUnder way ln the -quest tor an\neventual cure for cancer.\n, The B. C. Cancer Society needs,\nthe balance of tbe objective to continue jts edutation, research 'and\nwelfare projects. Great strides are\nbeing made in education, as is\nshown by the number of cases discovered in early stages and cured.\nThe Nelson unit, campaign organizers point out, makes more use of\nthe welfare program than any other,\nunit in B. C. Last year 23 patients\nwere assisted with transportation,\nboarding home and nursing home\ncare while at the treatment centre.\nArena Work Not Yet Approved\nPublic Health\nStaff to\nTraining Institute\nMiss Mary Lottimer, Miss Jean\nMcVlcar, Mis* Nancy Lee, Mrs. C.\nW, A. Barwls, and A, G. Boas have\nleft to attend the annual Institute\nfor provincial, public health workers being held in Vancouver, B.C.\nfrom April 7 to 10.\nAmong .the 31)0 people in expected attendance will be members\not ths Provincial Health Department in Victoria and Vancouver,\nand field staff members from all\nhealth units in the province. An\nannual occurrence, tbe Institute Is\ndesigned as a part ot tba in-service\ntraining program for these per.\nlonnetr\nFollowing an address of welcome\nto be delivered by tbe Honourable\nEric Martin, Minister of Health and\nWelfare, the program will officially\nbegin with the opening address by\nthe Deputy Minister of Health, Dr.\nG, F. Amyot.\nHeading a group of some 12\nspeakers while the Institute is in\nsession will be Dr. Hugh Leavell,\nProfessor ot Public Health at Harvard University. Dr. Leavell will\noccupy the main guest speaker's\nchair this year and will share guest\nhonors with Dr. Donald Galagan\nwho is the Regional Dental Consultant of the U,S, Public Health\nService to San. Francisco.\nIncluded1 to' the Intensive, tour*\nday agenda of the Institute are\ntalks on public relations, child care\nIn British Columbia, and fluoridation; sectional meetings; field reports; a film showing; a panel discussion on prenatal care; and a\nsymposium bn polio.    ';'*\nMarch Weather\nTemperamental\nAs Tradltian\nThe'sun, peeping between torn\npatches of cloud, managed to shine\n122.6 hours in March-'\n' Noted as the stormy month and\nnot too sunny, March- did allow a\nnumber of spring days but spent\nmost of her time hanging storm\nclouds over Nelson District\nUsual March rates were felt, too,\nwith 2.26 Inches in 14 dayS.\nThe month came to like a lion\nwith two inches of snow, only day\nof the month it snowed.        \u2022\nTotal precipitation Was 2,48 inches.\nMarking the boundary between\nwinter and summer, March, with a\nhigh of 60 degrees, coaxed spring\nenthusiasts to shed their coats then\ndropped to a chilly 21 degrees to\nwarn \"don't be too hasty, I'm a\ntemperamental month.\"    .\nKIWANIANS HEAR\nNELSON SINGER\nColin Baker, Nelson Civic Choir\ntenor, entertained Kiwanis Club at\nIts meeting Thursday night.\nThe popular' singer' rendered\nthree selections, an Indian love song\n\"Kasmiri\" by Ami Wo6dford-Fln\u00ab\nden; a popular nuipber \"Duna\" by\nJosephine McGill and'\"Give Me the\nOpen Road\" by Victor Embrolse.-\nGuest at the meeting was i Lieut-\nGovernor William Cox from Chew-\nelah, Wash.   \u2022.'\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0;i? s'*\"\nCivic Centre- Commission's 1953\nbudget is still being studied by\nCity \"Council. It was Incorrectly reported ln Saturday's paper that\ncouncil had approved the budget\nat a special budget meeting Wednesday.\nThe budget was first submitted te\ncouncil at its regular Monday\nmeeting list week, and referred to\nthe flnanpe committee for study,\nMayor Joseph Kary explained\nSaturday that the Clvlo Centre budget was revised in the meantime;\nand the new version wat studied\nat the special Wednesday muting- '\nAs ls the practice of most newspapers, a Dally News reported.attended the Monday meeting, prepared a story to be held readr for\npublication as soon at approval was\ngiven the estimates. This story was\ninadvertently released ln Saturday's paper.\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nHEAR\nTheRtJO\nMinister of Trade and Commerce   '\nMinister bf Defence Prc__-tiohv\n\"Nation's Business\"\nTomorrow Nigbt\nCKLN 8:00 .\u25a0$&$$..\n' and Tans-Canada Network   f\nPublished by National Liberal Federation of Canada    ;\nA. MATHISEN\nPAINTING AND\nDECORATING\n607 Kokanee Street\nPHONE 1036-L\nSiMvniii\nSki ^ps\nNorwegian;. Style\nOlive Drill\n. Faded Denin\nTaupe Drill\nSiiej6'A-7'\/a '\n$1.00\nWADES'\nfPIP VOU HAVE ANY   ^\nI PARTICULAR FIR\/A IN\n4 MINP TD.MOVE VOUR  i\nJa__winuRE, m.jpvnA\n1_W*M\nTHMIJM1\nW iH^H\u00b0\nVOU BET-NORTH\nAMEMCAM-THE\nMOST PARTIWmJ\n.F.RMOFAU..':\nPlanning to move? Call US'\nfirst, Our- modern vans and\nskilled movers assure a SAFB\nmove wherever you go. Wt\nare' agents for North American Van Lines, America's\nleading long distance moving I\norganization. It costs no more {\nto enjoy this finer servicol  '\nWest\n\/19 Baker St.   Nelion, I.I\nMont 33\nteit*'.* 'muftrMee*\n_____\n\u25a0\u25a0\n 'ipppgpp^^ \u2014in\nJfyy\nJ&man\nShoes\n.,;  \u25a0 \u25a0< 1 *.; \u25a0   *;.-,*\u25a0   : \"... \u25a0\nfor Men\nBuilt for Service,\/ \"\n\"-,- Designed for Appearance\nSee the latest: casual'\nand Isfiort styles\n..;     5Q.95\nUp-\nat\nTHE SHOE\nGE1STTRE\nB33 Baker St.\nPhotic 106\nArrow Lakes. .%\nPower\n^Situation\nPrpmsin^\nNAKUSP\u2014 Tbe B. C^ Power\nCommission Is aware ot the Arrow\nLakes Power, situation, 8. R. Wet-\n- ten, chairman of the commission,\nInformed the Arrow Lakes power committee.by wire. * >\n\"Plans are,\" the wire contln-\n, ued, ','to consider at part of Its\n* < program, the construction Pf _a\ntransmission line from Whatshan\nto Nakutp which: will piake It\nphysically   possible   to   deliver\n- power  In  Burton,  Arrow. Park\n\u2022 and Nakusp areas.\" ';\u25a0\u25a0.\"\nR.  Harding,  MLA  for  Katie-\n. Slocan, In a letter to the group\nStated,\".:, .' in  my discussion\n'. with the power commission, Mr.\nWeston assured m ethat a high\ntension line would be built from\nNeedles to Nakutp and: that a tub-\nstation will probably be built near\n. Arrow Park area.\"\nNew Denver Man,\nT. Erido, Passes\n'.*'. NEW DENVER\u2014T.Endo of Ike\n. Orchard at New Denver died ln\nSlocan Community Hospital. here\nThursday. Funeral services will be\nheld this week. .\n. The recorded maximum shade\ntemperature Is 136 degrees in\nTripoli in North Africito 1021.\nCranbrook Postpones\nDecision on Housing\n,' GSXNSitdok \u2014 Being only-fiv^ short pf the ^'qi^red,\nminimum 50 applications for homes ona rental basis has\ncaused the city to postpone a decision on the pjojecti Under\nthe scheme lipmes would rerit\nAgain Cany\nCCFBanner\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Leo Nimsick,\nMember of the Legislature for Cranbrook since 1040, was unanimously\nnominated at a district CCF convention at Kimberley Saturday as\ncandidate for the June 0 election.'\nPrior to nomination, he reported\non the 1053 session, scoring Social\nCredit evasion of legislative action\non matters they had promised prior\nto the last election, including the\nLiquor Act,.labor legislation and\nWorkmen's Compensation, revision.\nHe will report on the Rolston , Formula at a later meeting.\nHe is the first candidate for the\nprovincial election to be nominated;\nin Cranbrook riding.\nHie Bast Kootenay CCF organization will make Its nomination for\nthe federal election at a convention\nin Cranbrook April 26.\nCranbrook Social Credit Association has set April 30 as nominating\nday for ita candidate in the provincial election, and East Kootenay'\nSocial Credit meeting will nominate a federal candidate April 18.\nNeither' Liberal nor Progressive\nConservatives of Cranbrook riding\nhave set. the dates for their provincial conventions yet..,.\nCranbrook Customs\nReceipts Doubled\nCHANJMlbdk \u2014 Collection of\ncustoms.and inland revenue for tbe\nport of Cranbrook and its outports\nin - March totaled $68,597.38 more\nthan doubling the tptal for February, which was $29,827.18. Cranbrook. port, collected {88,4*16.37, and\nRoosville $111.01. Other outport of\nFlathead remained closed all month,\nfollowing withdrawal of the oil ex*\nploration crew in Southeastern British Columbia and will not reopen\nuntil some time In May.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\ni BEST -j\n\u2022    fan     \u2022\n: COOKlMfr i\nat about $65 per month,\nThe project for. 80 homes with oil\nheat,' full basement and three bedrooms would be under a Dominion-\nProvincial-Municipal plan available through the provincial housing, commission,. Alternative* plan\nfor'a 20-hous'e project fpr long-term\npurchase of less costly homes proposed by the Chamber of Commerce\nis being held in abeyance until\nfinal decision is reached on tee\nrental project.    .: ,...':\nAt its Wednesday' meeting the\nPity council gave first reading,to\nthe bylaw setting the 1853, elty tax\nrate' at 67.3 mills, fractionally Up\nfrom last year's tl mill rate due to\nincreased school costs. y..\nCity tourist camp haa been cleared of its tenants who occupied bungalows over the winter;on,a monthly basis, and camp repairs, and\nmaintenance work, is Underway in\npreparation for opening of the camp\nfor the tourist season Miy 1.    '\nThe $48,000 artificial, ice bylaw\nwill be Voted on by ratepayers April 11, Another bylaw for extension\nof city limits in the Southwest corner to include the heavier built up\nSelkirk . subdivision will* not be\nready, for vote at that time. City\nWorks Superintendent Emil Erickson is compiling the basic facta of\ntopography, area and utility needs\nof the section for submission to a\ncoast engineering firm to determine\ncosts Of extending city utilities if\nit is* Included, and estimates of\nreyehUe it would return are being\ndrawn up.\n\u201e Marking meters on Baker Street\nand Tenth Avenue and other portions of the business section went\ninto operation for the season April 1,\nLouis Gensick\nHonored on\nRetirement\n\u2014L\nLouis Gensick, who has been associated' with the Arrow Lakes\nHospital since 1941 as caretaker,\nwas honored at a farewell party\nin the hospital recreation room, on\nthe eve of his retirement.\nMember's of the hospital staff\njoined in presenting him with an\neasy chair and matching hassock:\nThe presentation was made by Miss\nM. E. Molloy, matron of the. hospital, who expressed the best wishes of.bit fellow'employees.  . ; *\nThe Board of Directors of the hospital presented Mr. Gensick with\nan electric toaster. V. C. Smith,\nwho made the presentation, refer*\nred to the wonderful capacity for\nservice shown by Mr. Gensick\nwhich was always coupled by a\ncheerful and gracious disposition\n.Amongst those present were Dr.\nand Mrs. F. B.'Maxfield, who also\npresented him with a gift. Follow,\ning an evening of bridge and\nrumoli, dinner was served-by the\nhospital staff assisted by Mrs. N.\nBrown, Mrs. M. Kawahara, and our\ngood friend (on all such occasions)\nMrs. Hilda Wiles,    i\nPacific Milk adds extra\n, flavor tnd nourishment to\n'\u25a0'.;'-* -      rcclpct.\nBUY B.C. PRODUCTS  <\n\" t\nNEEDLES WOMAN\nTtfCORONATION\nWITH AIR FORCE\nNEEDLES \u2014 A Needles airwoman, Cpl. Lassie Volansky, bas\nbeen chosen to attend the coronation along with a contingent of RCAF- women representing Canada.\nShe is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nSteve Volansky of Needles.\nCpl. Volansky leaves April 22 for\nRockcliffe, Ont, where she will begin training preparations along\nwith' other Canadian airwomen,\nchosen to attend the coronation. After the Rockcliffe training she will\nembark on the SS Atlantic from\nQuebec City.\nNakusp Socreds   \u2022\nWind Up Whist\nNAkUSP \u2014 Nakusp Social Credit\ngroup held its wind-up whist drive\nto the KP hall. Many enjoyed the\ngame., Ladies winners were.Mrs. M.\nBrown, and' Mrs. H. M. iiaird and\nmen's prize was captured by Mrs.\nW. Evarts and A.,E. Fowler. Win*\nners Pf the season play were Mrs.\nH. M. Baird and Fred Mamchur.\nOver 60 players took part throughout the season.       .\nREGINA (CP) - Police Chief\nDuncan McDougall of Regina re*\ntires March 1 * after 45 years as a\npoliceman, including eight years\nas chief of the Regina police force.\nDeputy chief Richard Anderson\nwill succeed him.\n_o\u00b0\u00ab :\"\n\u2022mi'!\nfor HOME OR\nBUSINESS\nNEEDS\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA\nmi'HONE   COMPANY\nNew Furnishings\nfor the old. bathroom . * .\n\u2022 DESIGN    - \u2022 COLOR       \u2022 SMART LINES\nThese are available to the home owner\n.   at a very moderate coif.\nWith complete fixture change or perhaps a\njudicious use of accessories, the bathroom can\nbe rrt^de like fiew. v\n' Bring your requirements to us.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& SEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST. PHONE 666\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nMONDAY, APRIL 6,1953 \u2014\nSlocan Golfers\nElect Art Ham\nNEW : DENVER-Art 'Ham  *\u00bb\u00ab*?\nelected,president   of  the  Slocan:\nLake golf: club at the, 'organization's .\nannual: meeting here, attended by\n19 followers of the game.   '\nMr.' Hani gave 'a full report of\ntbe Club's activities during 1952, ond\noutlined proposed improvements tor\nthis year. The financial statement',\nshowed tbe club ba(J a fairly good\nyear., |. ' '\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 ':.-' ..'-\u25a0:' \u25a0 ';\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0} >\"\u25a0\n. Members also named Neil;Tattrie',\nvice-president, and J. W. Butlin was,'\nreelected   secretary.   Chairman   of\nthe various copimittees <were also,\nappointed,; ',.       ,'...       ,\" . ,\n.- .FIRST WARMING UP.o,f soil en reclaimed land*en the Creston,\nflits,' In preparation for planting of 250 acres of seed peas, was carried\nout recently by Ivan Staples. According to Mr. Staples, most farmers\non the low^lylng land disc, arid harrow I In the 8prlng, as plowing Is\ndone In the Fall. On thethlgh land farmers have to ploy each Spring.\nLambart Klrtainger Is.on the disc, and Mr. Staples Is on the 35-foot\nspread of harrow.\u2014H.,M..Buckna photo.     V    :     v      , '-*  : \u25a0-\u25a0'\nTf affile Via Nelwtiy Sfeowis\nBig ^c\u00abiIlil^^^i^K^^\nA $30,000 medical research and\nteaching grant has been Swarded\ntd \"the University of Alberta en\nbehalf of one of Its graduates,\nDr. Robert Stewart Traserf Kootenay Bay and Nelson man. The\ngrant,:from the* John and. Mary\nR. Morkle foundation of New\nYork, will be made, at the rate\nof $6000 annually for five years.\nDr. Fraser, .who. \u2022 It eempletlng\nresearch work at the University\nof Minnesota, will begin teach-\n* lng at the University of Alberta\nthis year.,: * . v \u2022*....;\u25a0    .\nNELWAY - -More people ,thiin-\never crossed \"the international\nboundary; at the customs port of\nNelway during the fiscal year just\nended..''     -\u25a0'*.,.'*\u25a0\u25a0,       \u25a0''\u25a0-' 4X;.'.*\nBoth automobile and passenger\ntraffic through this port, gaihpd\nconsiderably in the 1052-53 fiscal\nyear which endedMarch 31, over\ntraffic in the 1951-52 fiscal year.\nFigures show that a total of 85,746\npassengers entered Canada, com*\npared with 28,035 in the ^previous\nfiscal year, and that a total of 35,134\npassengers passed through en route\nto the United States,, compared\nwith 27,588 in 1051iS2,':,,.,-''. '\n, In Canadian automobile' traffic,\nthe number ot Canada-bound cars\nrose from 4751 to 6758, and U.S..\nbound ears increased from 4822 to\n7375,   .\nSmaller gains were made ih the\nnumber bf foreign cars checking in,\nalthough even here the gain was\nsizeable! The number of foreign\nautomobiles . entering Canada\nthrough this port was up from 5220\nto 5802, and the number of U.S.-\nbound foreign cara was\", up from! MISS JOHANNA KUIT    '\n4921 to;5231. ....'\u25a0    ,' \u2022 \"\u2022   ';. ..'who \"left* recently for St.\nThe increase :continuec_f in March.) Johns, Que., where she will train\nTraffic, with the March, 1053, figure, I with the RCAF. Miss Kult'is-ft\nshown*first 'aid the' March, ;}852,   resident of Sunshine Bay.    '\nTrail Liberals\nNominate April 16\nTRAltfr- Further evidence bt\npreparations for a hotly-1 contested\nprovincial election was given when\nthe executive' of the Jtossland-Trail\nLiberal Association set a date for a\nnominating convention and named\na committee to select a nintat'eryet\nstrbhg candidates for the * convention to consider. *\n- The nominating .convention will\nbe held April'18 in Trail.       '\nIn addition to appointing a nominating committee,, the' executive\nchose an interim campaign committee. Each committee, will be\nrepresentative of the 'entire constituency ><\"'    .       .,;-\u25a0\nCranbrook; Curling    -;;\nClub Forms Society\nNotice that the Cranbrook Curling Club, has been incorporated1\nunder the Societies Act is given in\nthe current issue of the . B.C.\nGazette. ;. . '   '\u25a0*,.'. -       V!,;'.:.\nWHEN PAIN STRIKES\nAt the first twinge of rheumatic pain-\ntake Templeton's T-R-C's. Over a mil-.\nlion .T-R-C's used every month, tat-\nspeedy relief from pain caused by theo-'\nmatiam.arthrltis,* neuralgia, lumbago and*\nsciatic-. Why suffer needlessly? Keep.\nT-R-C'\u00ab on hand, slid use them promptly. '\nOnly 65c, tl.35 at drog counters.    T-S4J:\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOTjR FORTR-SSOF\n..HEALTH'\n'\u2022PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS    '\n'\u2022'SUNDRIES   O\nPhone 1S0?    -     Res. 394-L\n433 Josephine St.\nFREE BOOK ON ARTHRITIS\nAND RHEUMATISM\nfigure, second, was: Canadian .auto*\nmobiles entering Canada 413, 244;\nCanadian automobiles headed for\nthe United States 438, 253; foreign\nautomobiles entering Canada 332,\n195; foreign, automobiles en route to\ntbe United States' 282, 186; passengers entering Canada 2033, 1028;.\npassengers going to the United\nStatea 1978, 1018.\t\nCommittees Set\n* ,*-. -.. * *  : *\nKASLO \u2014 A.special meeting ot\nthe Victorian Hospital'Board of\nDirectors was held Monday, when,\ncommittees were appointed: for, the\nensuing year, building and grounds\ncommittee consists of G. ''Monty\"\nArmstrong, N, S. Miller and Ralph\nPatterson;. finante, Rev. P. T. Bal-\nmer and W. J. D.,Walker; purchasing, Mrs. G. A. Browell, Mrs. J. R.\nHunter and Mr. Armstrong; personnel committee, Mrs.; Hunter and\nRev. 3almer.   ' .   .\nMiss H. Burfell of Manitoba took\nover, the duties ot matron April 1.\nMiss Afia and 'Miss Payne, both\nfrom England,'have been appointed\nto the nursing staff.\n43 TREATED BY\nTRAIL SOCIETY   f\nTRAIL ''rr- A total of 43 patients\nWere treated during the month at\nTrail, Castlegar and Rossiand by\nthe Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society. Treatments during the month numbered*182.\nA breakdown of the'March,report shows, the greatest number of\ntreatments at Trail with two pan\ntients. receiving 18 treatments in\nhospital, four patients receiving .21\ntreatments by mobile clinic,, and 30\npatients receiving 112 treatments\nat the clinic . *\nAt Rossiand three patients were\ntreated 12 times in the mobile\nclinic and one patient received\nnine treatments at the clinic.\nOfficers Installed\nFERNIE \u2014 A colorful ceremony\nmarked the installation of officers\nof file Royal Purple auxiliary of\nthe BPO Elks. District Deputy Supreme, Dora MacDonald installed\nofficers. An outstanding, drill display and lodge work were presented by-Hon: Royal Lady Chabillion\nof the Coleman order.      '*'      ^\nOfficers Installed were: honored\nroyal lady, Mrs. L. McLaren; associate royal lady, Mrs. B. Drew;\nloyal' lady, Mrs. M. Servello; lecturing lady, Mrs. D. Uphill; secre\ntary, Mrs. M. Lassalle; treasurer,\nMra. M. Bolomark, chaplain, Mrs.\nH.,Baker; conductress, Mrs. E. Gig-\nllotti; inner guard, Mrs. M Waugh;\nouter guard, Mrs. S. Worthington;\ntrustees elected were Mrs. I. Harrad; Mrs. V. Colgur, and Mrs. V,\nKasmar. Mrs. I. Hughes ls historian\nand Mra. A. Smolik, pianist..\n\"Denver Demon?\"\nHonored at Dinner\nNEW DENVJJR \u2014 :The New Den:\nver Social Credit, group entertained\nat a dinner party in honor of the\nDenver 'Demons, Wednesday.* Die\n\"Demons\" have Just completed a\nfive-engagement tour ' of \"The\nAdorable Imp.\" In a short address,\nJ. A; Roberts outlined the importance of a peace-time civil defence.\nAn interesting social hour, featuring amusing novelty, games,\nfollowed..  '.    .\nCoronation Planned\nFor Natal-Michel .\nNATAL \u2014 Organizations of Natal\nand Michel are combining efforts in\npreparation of a coronation day\nprogram. At a joint meeting on\nWednesday, plans for the day will\nbe set up. The Natal-Michel band\nwhich has been inactive for some\ntime, is expected to be on hand.for\nthe June p celebration; .\nAttlee Picks Bevan\nFor Paris Mooting\nLONDON (Reuters. \u2014 Clement\nAttlee has surprised some of his Labor party supporters by picking\nAneurin Bevan, leader of a leftist\nrevolt within the party, to lead\nparty delegation to an international\nconference.\n, Bevan will represent Attlee, who\nis recovering from an appendicitis\noperation, at the Paris session of\nthe general coUhcil of the Socialist\nInternational, opening a week* today.\nMany political commentators\nthought Attlee would nominate\nsomeone from his \"moderate\" leadership group, rather than the leftist Welshman. But others contended\nthat as a member of the party's international sub-committee, Bevan\nwas the logical choice.    -\n-^-Stevens photo.\nFernie Pioneer\nMrSaMiscisco\nDies\nFERNIE \u2014 A resident of Fernie\nfor the past.52 years, Mrs. Rose\nMiscisco, 69, died suddenly Thursday. She was stricken seriously ill\nat her home and was rushed to the\nFernie Memorial Hospital where\nshe died about an hour later.',   ~\nMrs; Miscisco was bom in Betro-\nna, Italy, on May,13,1884. She came\nto Fernie with her. parents in 1901.\nShe married Nick Miscisco in\nAugust, 1903,: and plans were al*\nready being formulated for a family\ngathering this summer to celebrate\nthe golden wedding anniversary.\nShe is survived by her .husband,\nNick Miscisco of Fernie, sevensons,\nFelix, Gary, William and Charles,\nall of Vancouver,* Arthur of Trail,\nFred and John of Fernie; five\ndaughters, Mrs. Virginia Tarsella of\nVancouver, Mrs. Mary GigUotti of\nFernie, Mrs. Helen Lippa and Mrs.\nViolet Bossa of Osoyoos,, and Mrs,\nJosephine Connah of-Fernie; five\nbrothers, Jini and Joe Costanio of\nVancouver, Charles Costanzo.\" of\nLethbrldge,. Felix and Ross Costanzo of Fernie, one sister, Mrs. Paul\nGuzzi of Fernie and.' 19 grandchildren.'\n: \u25a0 Funeral Services will be. held\nfrom Holy . Family Church next\nweek.   .*'\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022': \u201e'\nWl Collects $62\nIn March of Dimes\n, INVERMERE\u2014Women's Institute\nfbr the Windermere District _\u00bb!\u2022\nlected $02 for the annual March of\nDimes for the crippled children at\nQueen Alexander' Solarium. Collections were made and the response of the public was generous,\nProceeds have been forwarded to\nthe.Splarium, ,' ;\nTh\u00bb blood donor clinic ls expect\ned to visit Invermere MaV 11, it\nwas announced.- ;,\nDon Revier Stanley McNeil Purchase\nKimberley-Cranbrook Bus Franchise\nCRANBROOK, \u2014 IMn Revie,\nfounder,in 1924 of the first.Cran-\nbrook-Kimberley schedule bus service, and Stanley. McNeil, both\nwell-known Cranbrook men, have\nentered partnership in purchase of\nStar Stages wheih holds a franchise\nfor the daily Cranbrook-Kimberley\nrun.-' *\nMr. Revie continued 'operation of\nhis original service and \"expanded\nit-in partnership with Fred Griucci\nuntil 1941, when I Walter Millar purchased his sha-e in the partnership.\nThe' Gnucci and Millar partnership\nhaVe operated it since then, until\npurchase effective April 1 by the\nnew paitrierj.   ., *'     '\u25a0\nPurchase includes two 29-passen:\nger buses and a 20-passenger \u2022 vehicle. Operating headquarters will\nbe in the fonper Oilbertson machine shop on Eighth Avenue.     :\nBoth new. operators will take on\ndriving seyrices.      ,       -\/.\nThe Millar and Gnucci. partner*\nship sold the: Kimberley bus j depot\noh Walltoger Avenue td-ZBlaiU\nBrothers of Kimberley,\nExcelsior Springs.-Mc, So\nsuccessful' has a specialized system\nproven for 'treating, rheumatism\nand arthritis that an amazing new\nbook -will be sent free to. any reader\nof this paper who will writo for it.\nFor those who auffer with aches,'\npains, stiff or sore joints, nervousness, over acidity, systemic tox-\ncolitis, or other rheumatic\nima,; tMa book entitled,\nleumatiBm,\" fully explains why\ndrugs anil, medicines give only\ntemporary relief and fail to remove the causes of the trouble.\nThe: Ball Clinic, Excelsior\nSprings,; Missouri, has perfected a\nspecialized system of treatment for\nrheumatism and iarthritia combined\nwith the 'world; famous mineral\nwstera and bathi. This system of\ntreatment is fully described-in .the\nbook snd ;teHa - how it may, be\npossible for you to find freedom\nfrom rheumatism.\nSatisfied patients proclaim the\nmodern methods\noutlined in thia\nBook:\n\u2022 \"For over B\nyears 1 suffered\n\"suoh interna pain\nit teemed unbearable. Was becoming deformed.\nHorn 1 em practically ttraight ahd normal, toys\nMontana man:\ni \"Bedridden for Seven years, now\nwalks\" says Texas woman.\nt Wisconsin man\nstates, \"I had\narthritis fe^r\nyeart; used\ncrutches and was\ntartly ab.lt te\nwalk \u2014 now can\nclimb ladder and\npaint..\ne ui:-M*t$ps)fS$tb.'\nfor. chronio arth\\ ;\nrits'a in 183S\u2014:.,\nnow after It\"\nyears I am still in\ngood health and,\ncan go 16 tours\na day without tiring,\" says Frank-\nBogart from\n<   Pittsburgh, Pa,\noNthratka\nfarmer reportf,\"!\nsuffered  with\narthritis for ten\nyeart. 1 got very ,\ngood rpeults from\nmy treetmentt:\nand recommend\nthem \u00abAol\u00ab_wart-\nedly.\nTen incur no obligation in sending for 'this instructive book. It\nmay be the means of saving you\nyeara of untold misery. For writing\npromptly, the Clinic will send their j\nnewly enlarged, book entitled,\n\"Rheumatism\". Address your litter\nto The Ball Clinic, Dept. 5244\nExcelsior Springs, Missouri, but be\nsure to write today.\nWhy bury\" it, when they could have\nsaved it and sot good interest too, at\n\u25a0i -   '<\u25a0  \u25a0     t ''\u25a0 ' .     ,' \u25a0   '-\\ 9)\ntltfiUtktliot sewtcetolfr\nYou am b$ sure of fast, courteous service at\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nH\n \u25a0\u2014!\u2014. '-:\u25a0\" '\" . 1 - ?\u25a0 -*\t\n  ,     ,  MSI, .,,\u201e .\u201e,,,,,,..\n-  .-'    -\u2014^\u2014-*\u25a0\nA\\i\nHit lam Batig JNf ros\nEstablished AprU 22, 1002\nBrifto-t CoJumbia'd\nMost Interesting Newspaper    .' \u25a0}\n: Published every morning eicept Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\nm Baker Street,  Nelson,  British Columbia,\nAuthorized as Seoond Class Mall,     O\nPost Office Department Ottawa,\nI MEMBER QF TH- CANADIAN PR8.SS AND\nI THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\n, \u25a0  i ii       *'   i,i \u25a0 i     i     iii,ii i ,\u2022\nMonday, April 6, 1B53    :? %\npV'j'ii. '   i \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\"   .<'* *  '\u25a0      J;  iii)'t\nA Pension Problem v\n; One of-ife's little ironies: Workers'\npension plans and similar benefits,\nhighly prized and, long-sought features\nof a broad social security program, are\nbecoming the biggest obstacle to the\nemployment._6f older job-seekers.,\n;.-.-. Sherbrooke Record reports on a sur-\n** vey of placement agencies undertaken\n\"by tfortlnwefitern National Life'Jpsur\u00ab,\nance Company, it was found that pen->\nsion systems discourage employment\n.'of oldsters because the'plans are cost-\nlier for both workers and, companies\nwhen the former are fairly .close to retirement age,-    ,.,'. v'o O\nFdr instance, if a man starts'With\na firm at BO it takes four times as large\na contribution each year by both employer and employe to build the same '\nsize pension fund as if he'd begun at\n25. And insurance losses are heavier on\nolder people, so costs go up unless average employe age .levels,are; held\n\/down. '-.-.--\u25a0\u25a0'\n- To a small point, an old problem has\nbeen traded lor an old. However, it is\nhardly' doubted that. the benefits of\n' pensions outweigh' the disadvantages.\n*\u2022 The object now should be a survey on\nmethods to overcome the obstacle\nuncovered. O \u2022 ' ;\u25a0*    \\\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\n> Letters to ihe editor, on any toplo pi\ngenuine Interest are wtieoma .If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No latter will ba\n\u25a0\u25a0 Inserted In who|e, or In port, except over .\ntha signature and'address of tha writer.\nUniollolted -correspondence cannot ba re- .\nturned. r ,'\\ ':, .\/\u25a0\nRefprmed Sohs% A$k \u2022\n.\".Nbt'toBQ'Uihked:-\"\u25a0:,-.'\n*.: 'Wi.th'Bomhing$,;Ar'son-\n. TO-thoKdltOw' i   '-\u25a0 O\/'O  : -,\" \"\u2022*\u25a0'.\nSir-With bur loader Bi S, Sorokln we ar*\nthe Brotherly Counoil ot tho Reformed Doukhobors. Wo ask the authorities-and general\npublie not to stigmatise tha name of our group\nby saying that wa havo committed iho recent\nacts ot violence like the railroad bombing and\nincendiarism. \"'\u2022 >.\nWe oppose all sort pf violent acts, and believe that bur menibers hkva not taken any\n5art in the recent work of provocation, either\nirectlypr indlreotly.\n'\u25a0' \\ Chairman of 'Committee\n',,,\u25a0-\"-\u25a0' \"<Bfot)\u00bb\u00ably CounoU)   '\n\u25a0   '*.-.   'JOHN. J. jPERKPELKIN *\nSecretary -.\nN. K. NtVONSHONOFF\nPost Glories Not Enough ;\n- When one' hears of the depopulation\nin Scotland!, one thinks of the High-'\nlahdg where that trend has been most\ncontinuous. It also is occurring in the\n-Border counties, hoWev-r,- Slid an ip.-\nvestigation has been rtade as to.the\ncauses and ptfBsible remedies..\nThe population .of Scotland as, a\nwhole has Increased by more than five\nper cent durjng the past 20;years. In\n'the same period the population of the\nBorder counties draped by 7% per\ncent. One of the* reasons given is lack\nof electricity and other facilities fOy in-,\ndiistries and for an enjoyable way of\nlife. O,' t> '\n- The Border Counties compose a\nmost historic part of Scotland, famed\"\nin prose and poem and noted for raid\nSnd battle.. But in this modern world a\ndistrict cannot live on its past glories.\nIf it ceases to keep abreast of progress,\nIt starts to decline, This applies anywhere, not just in Scotland.\nOf Royofty and Music\nTo the'-dtCor: -r O;.- \\'J ,     ., .....\nSir\u2014Perhaps, soma or your readers may\nbe interested in on incident arising out of the\nbroadcast of St, Paul's Boys' Choir on their\nlast program In \"Questing Time\",\n.On dialing CKLN for this program, Mr...\n.and Mrs. Ashby, residents of Willow Point,\nheard our boys sing the 23rd Pallm to the tune\nCrlmond arranged with descant THitiy recog-\nnlspd it Immediately, and forthwith sent me\nan interesting letter from Mr. ABhby's sister,\nwho is a missionary in Hong Kong! Sho had\nbeen entertaining a Bishop from England, who\n\u2022 told her the following stores .'   ' O\nWhen the order came from Buckingham\nPalace for the 23rd Psalm to be sung at the\nPrincess' wedding, it was stipulated that the\ntune 'Crlmond with desc&nf be- used. The\nchurch authorities' found the tune, but nowhere could they find the descant.        .. . \u25a0\u25a0\n- Finally tho Dean, the precentor and several others went to the Palace to say It could\nnpt be found. A lady-in-waitlng invited them\nto; come in and tell their difficulty to the\nRoyal \"Family, then assembled at an informal\n.family^.gathering, ,.-\" \u2022\u2022'*\u2022'.\u25a0\u2022\u2022 t   \u25a0'.      .\n, Tho Whole matter was discussed by them,\nand thon the.King sold,'\"Where did you hoar\nit, Bllsabetht\",   v.O * '   \u25a0\u25a0  ;\u25a0\u25a0,.:,\n*'.;. And EHrabeth said, \"We heard it In Scotland, Margaret ond i were-crazy about it, and\nwe sang it allthe time when we went out in;\nthe car. Margaret sang* the melody and I sang\n< the descant, until Philip got sick of it,\"    \u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022\"'\u25a0 So then arid there ihey decided to sing it\nwhile, someone wrote it down. Margaret sang\ntho soorano, Queen Elizabeth the alto, with\n,King.George singing the melody an octave\nlower, and, Princess Elizabeth the descant.\n\"So,\" the Blshoo continued, \"they-got it\nwritten down satisfactorily, and I heard it\nsung ln Westminster Abbey by those wonderful voices; at \"the marriage ceremony.\" '\nThis letter, Mr. Editor, is postmarked HOlig.\nKong, Deo, 14, 1951. Since its receipt, Mr. and\nMrs, Ashby hod tried in yelp to find tje tune\nCrlmond with the descant, until St. Paul's\nBoys': Chnlr surprised end delighted them by\"\nslneinT it- bij their March 4 Questing Time\nprogram.:-, .\u2022 ''''..\n'.. *' ?\u2022 -: - :mijs.. t. j. s. fbrouson,\n- \u2022 'Nelson,; B.C.* '\u2022   \u2022\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0 ' .'..\"\n5 Million Equal ,\n100-Yard Dask Record\nSee where fivemilllon Russians have lied\nthe world's record for the\" 100 yard dash) That's\nright. According to a Ihissian news dispatch\n5,000,000 Russiaris filed past StalinV bier In\n72 hours. So, calculating that lt works put thus:\n5,000,000 persons, two abreast 3% feet apart, to\nmove past a given point (the biert would have\nto travel at a speed of 22 miles per hour, Twenty-two miles per hour is 0.3 seconds per 'nun-.\n;dred yards\u2014the world's record. \u00ab  '\u25a0'\nGerry Long in Rossiand Miner,\n!'\u2022,      Your Horoscope O     '. '\nJ.     \/The timers good for asking jmportaiit fa-.\nvprs, so bb alert to every opportunity. A happy'\n.and fortunate year seems ahead of yoii. A,'\n,'career In art or music should bring success to\nthe child born under these influences.\n\u25a0;Ao6\u00a5eciqtes Hutchison   v\nTo-the Editor:  ' *  * .\"\u25a0' '; .-.'\u25a0\u25a0\n' Sir\u2014Could I, through the medljim of your\nvery admirable paper, express my deep appre-\nelation bf tbe articles on my homeland,by\nBruce Hutchison? It Is very gratifying to hava\nsomeone write about the real beauty of Eng--\niand with a reverence that is its due. I travelled that same way myself a few short months\na?o, and wished I could describe my reactions .\nos eloquently as Mr, Hutchison, No one oould\nfall to be moved by .the atmosphere injlda\nsuch ageless'places of worship of.the St. Paul's\nCathedral and the Abbey, o* the quaint lime\nvillages around Oxford and Stratfprd-on-\nAvbn. Like Wordsworth's \"Daffodils\", such\nscenes stay with you and-give pleasure to\nmind's eye always. Thank you for printing\nthem.\n;  ,,v MABEL-HUSHB?.\n'   '.13 Carbonate Street, :*..   .'\u25a0'\"':    v...,:'\n,   Nelson. . -,   ,,'\u25a0      \u25a0\"\u25a0\" \u25a0\u25a0*\nIt is better to believe* that a man dbtt pes-.\n. sess gbod qualities than to \"assert that he does\nnbtT-ChMese' Moral Maxims.    ' -' \u25a0\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen.to any reader. Names of persons\nasking MNlIM will not be published.\nThere * lev no charge for thla serviee.\nQueitlons* WUl. NOT Bl ANSWIRID\nBY MAIL except where thor* Is obvious\nnaisislty^'fo'( prlvaoy,\n''\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\"J_,'--'y    ''\u25a0'.'.. '''\nJ.M., Kaile-rPleese give six hsmes of dlatrlbJ\n\u2022 utlng agenoles either \"in Vancouver or\nCalgary..'       -.'.'.\nPlease lot Vs know types of distributing\nagencies in which you sre interested.   \u2022\nCurious, Trail \u2014 Is there anyone iri Nelson\nwhe hs'ndies treplcslflsh?   .\nIn the summer months 'those ean bi obtained through Coventry's, 465 Baker Street,\nThey aro difficult to obtain during winter ai\nthey are suioeptlble lo cold, ..   y\nInterested, Nelson \u2014 To which country does\n\u25a0'-   tho Queen Elisabeth belong ond what Is\nher registered, tonnage?\nThe' Queen Elisabeth Is Brltlsh-nwned,\ntonnage 83,673.\nReader, Trail\u2014Would it ba possible tor you\n..    to give me the figures tor tho daily circulation of the New York Times?\n'\u2022   . 507,397, bssed pn Monday to Friday average; Surfday figures, 1,181,526. '.-,:'\nJ.K.L., Cranbrook\u2014On what day of the week\ndid July 4,' WM fall?'    .   . \u2022    , V\n.    \u2022Satiirdiy..\nStubborn, Klmberley\u2014To settle an argument,\n-\u25a0      wss Columbus a Spaniard?\n. 'Christopher Columbus was born In Genoa,\n\"-liglyj.. .      ,;\u25a0-.-'   -\n:. ^Pbstrtfan 'Walks Into\nAncient History\nWhen retirement ago catches up with men\nthey meet {he new stage of their life In different ways. Some just rest, some stay at home\nand while away their years tn pursuit Pt a neglected hpbby, and some begin to travel. A 70-\n. year-old Portland postman \"followed all three\ninclinations, but his travels took him 10,000,-\n000 years away,\nAlonzo W. Hancock's particular hobby is\npaleontology, a study that allows a leisurely\npace in its pursuit, but which can take ii man\ninto.strange places. In following it, by excavating along an old ssndstpno rlvar bed ot east-\nern Oregon, Mr, Hancock unearthed part of\nI the skull, the upper Jaw and. two whole tulks\nof a mastadon, .  ',\nThis was a browsing animal that lived lh\nthese parts 100,000 centuries ago, a thing much\nlike on elephant, with tusks'and a trunk, but\nlonger and- lower mi apparently more prone\nte travel.\n*' The elephant sticks fairly close to the area\nwhere, he was born and where he knows he can\n. get along happily, Remains ot the mastadon\nhave been found on every continent except\nAustralia and it emigrated tp North and South\nAmerica from Africa, Europe and Asia.\n-  ' \u2014Spokane Spokesman Review.\nVe\nSpri\nrse\nring Storm,      <\u25a0''\nMarch Is the sly deceiver ef the year,   -\nThe Judas of the twelve,' tho lion lamb,\nThat generously makes signs of Spring appear\nArid disappear in puzzling diagram:\nArbutus, pussy willow, mourning cloak,\nFirst robin song along the molting snow,'\nA wedge of geese, a swamp frog's frozen croak,\nSlow snake, swift* brook, deep-rutted road,\nsap flow. -'   r\n'      '.,..   !-\u25a0'\u25a0,, t     '\u25a0    . .    -.-        :';',;'.',;\nWe think we have them, but they're not to\n,.'' keep.   \u25a0\u2022  '. .t   .\u25a0 \u201e -..-,\nOne night thi vagrant wind veers to the Bait,\nAnd in the morning drifted snow lies deep.\nThis will-not bathe last storm, nor the least;\nThe lest will bea storm of songs and flowers,\nImpatiently awaited, finally ours,\n..: MORO\/LN BtJI-KEOlY.\n:\" \u25a0 ,  In Chrlstlsn Science \"Monitor.\nH. Q. aOODSHIP, a diamond mounter of the Goldsmiths and\nSilversmiths Oompany In London, fits the Black Prince's ruby Into\none of the four orossei above the circlet if tHe Imperial Crown of\nState whloh la being remodeled for tha coronation Pf Quean -Ilea-\n,... ,. .s.. ... ,\u2014 ..... .,.....,.,. ... \u00ab|tjW|,M an(j (h, dja-\nali the orewn eontalns\ni and five rubles.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto\nbath II, On ths benoh before Ooodshlp are the arches and tha die\nmend mound whloh surmounts the arohei. In all the orewn eontalni\n2783 diamonds, 277 pearls, 17 sapphires, 11 emeralds and five rubles,\n\u25a0yGapitaiM^Mo,,\u25a0\n.,  ii. ..i.ftbY- JAMES K. NKSilITT'   \"\"\"    ',\nLetter to ther Editor . V.\nLetters to tho editor on any topic Of genuine Interest are welcome\nIf they are brief, aeourate and fair. No letter will be Inserted In\nwhele, or In part, except over the signature and address af the\nwriter. Uniollolted correspondence cannot, be returned.\nClaims Injured Suffer Because\nOf Lag in Setting Up Appeal Board.\nChief Justice Wch has such great'\nurgency, Is not acted on for over\ntwo years. Surely workmen' who\nare injured in Industry and are\nSuffering as a result of wrong*\ndiagnosis or differences between\ndoctors should receive the most et-\n. VICTORIA \u2014 As a relief from ell the excitement of the\nsession', apd to rest a little before the excitements of the election, I went browsing the other day In the Provincial Archives. \u25a0.'!\u25a0$*\nFor:some reason} can't explain I found myself Interested\nin the beginnings of our great lumber industry. The story of\nlumber is quite as romantic as the story of ships and sailor\nmen, but so far it hasn't been\nglamorized.. .\nI ihihk I found the start of 8. C.'s\nexport trade ln lumber, in the following three notes in Tha Victoria Oazette in tha summer ot\nw\u00abJt   ' \".-:\n. \"Clone\u2014the ship Thames City,\nGlover, master, has gone to Sooke,\nabout 80 miles to the southwest\ntrom here to load spars for England.\" * .\n\"For England\u2014the British bark\nEuphrates, haa cleared for Sooke to\nload with spars for England.\"    -\n\"For Australla-the Bhip Alice\nThorndike, Thorridike, master, has\ncleared ter Melbourne, Australia,\nWith 11 passengers fer thit port\nand a cargo pf lumber valued at\ntim.\"-\nIn an I860 edition nt The Victoria\nColonist, I found tha flowing.intriguing note, showing one of the\npopular pastimes of the'day) \"Ratting Match\u2014at 'Round the Corner'\nsaloon last evening Shlrpser's Joe\nwai occupied one minute ond ip\nseconds ln killing eight rati, while\nEden's Jack did the same service\nfor the community in 65 seconds.\n'Jack' is therefore the champion of\nthe heavyweights.\" \\ \u25a0\n. It sounds a horrible pasttlme,\ndoesn't it; but the mystery is this;\nwho wirp Shlrpser's Joe end Eden's\nJack. Could they have beeh assistants tp bartenders Shlrsper and\nEden? We'll never knew.\n\/>..  \u00bb' ,\u25a0- -.,\u201e '\nTo get away from politics I laid?\nIs that why I went te the Archives?\nI sawthe name George Pearkes in\nthe JO'S. To me there Is only oni\nGeorge Pearkes\u2014the dynamic gpi*\nertl turned MP for Nanaimo. I was\nso astonished I looked into that\nearly-Georgei Pearkes, tp find he\nwai a leading lawyer of Victoria\nIn the early days. Tho Colonist,\nwriting. his obituaryVaald: \"Death\ncomes to all\u2014'that ceaseless dun,\nwho waits op all, yet waits ter\nnene.' .\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022 '\u25a0\u25a0 *'\nAs far as is known George Pearkes, '. lawyer, wai nb relatien tp\nGeorge Pearkes, politician,\n'       CHINESE INTELLECTUALS\nThe: ward \"Intellectual\" may net ht ln\ngood standing ln the United Statei today, but\nln much ot the world Intellectuals are lppkld\non as the natural.leaders pf society. This is\nespecially true ln China, where Confucianism\nplus mass illiteracy hai made scholarship the\ntraditional requisite for Government service.\nIt wis the large-scale defection of the intellectuals from Chiang Kai-shek in the '40s that\nmarked thp beginning of the end. tor the\nNationalist regime on the mainland,\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\n[ TheyTl Do It Every Time\n-\"-  'a.-'-\nB4B_L HAD 8\u00abCKUyERB'\ntoday's Bible Thought\nMake eternal things your first\nconcern* H>eh ybu cannot bi disappointed.    *.; i;\nSet your affection  on things\nabove, net on things of the earth.\n,   -COIIPillanl !i2.\nQxwLdbL\nleast I ivaa looking back Into history, So, whllo I was about it, I\nlooked back once-mare into a political career that never ceases to\namaze me\u2014the 11-year-old political\ncareer of W.A.C. Bennett.      ,.\nPerhaps you know, it and per\/\nhaps you don't\u2014but it's fascinating\nI'm sure you'U agree,; '   '- >.*...\nHere goes: Bennett! once a very\npillar of the Conservative party-\nthere are those who insist he helped\nto scuttle that party, Ho was first\nelected to tbe Legislature as a Conservative in 1941, only to find thit\nUie Coalition Government had to be\nformed because neither Liberals nor\nConservatives had enough seats to\nform a late majority. He ran again\nin lgtS, again as a Coalitionist, He\nshowed his-driving ambition and\ndetermination ln 1040-when he contested the Conservative leadership\nwith Herbert Anseomb'. Mr. Anseomb won., , '-.\u25a0\u00bb\u2022;,*\u25a0\nTRIED FOR OTTAWA\n. Pepling throtled ln B. C, Bennett\n.resigned his B. C. >eat in 1848 and\ncontested the Yale Federal byelec-\nHon.- .    '\u25a0\"\u25a0     \" ' .   r\"\nl?he Conservative Prime Minister-\nihlp of Canada appealed to him, But\nhe lost that byeleetlon to Owen\nJones of the CCF. He was, at that\npoint, 'entirely out; he had nothing.\nHe was not downhearted, In 1049 ho\nwis again eleeted as a. Coalitionist\nto the B.C, House, late that year\nbecame io open (threat to Ani*\ncomb that a Conservative convention was called. Anseomb resigned\nand ran for the leadership again,\nagainst Bennett, Anseomb won, but\nhe did not beat down Bennett's determination ond ambition. Bennett\nthen,proceeded to embarrass Anseomb every chance he got. In 1981\nhe brought matters to a head by\nquitting* Coalition, crossing the\nfloor of the House to sit as an independent. He watched his chances,\nwith that\/uncanny political Sense of\nhis, and Just before the 19S2 session\nhe Want Social Credit, thought, to\nbe fair, he didn't know it Was going\nto be a bandwagon, But that's What\nit turned-nut; *.''\u25a0.\nTo tho Editor:\nsir\u2014There are many workmen\nwho have been injured ln Industry\nwho are net recelvng proper treatment for. their Injurle*. They are\nthe victims of some doctor's mistake and have no means at present\nto-have \u00bb proper diagnosis of thalr\ninjury.   '      ' ':-'\u25a0': \u25a0\nThere era many workman injured in industry who have been\ndenied compensation became the\nCompensation Board'tnd lti medical advisors, have mado wrpng\ndiagnoses and they ere denlid com-\npematlon tor theirlnjury.'1'\nThat lueh a situation should exist\nIn British Columbia Is an outrage.\nThe-Legislature has Just adjourned\nand: hii token no action on the\nrecommendation by the Chief Justice who was tha Raytl Commissioner Investigating the Compensation Act and the administration of that Act. Thi Chief Justice\nrecommended that a Medical Appeal Board be established because\nhe had numerous oases before him.\nThe Compensation Board and its\nmedical advisors-appeared before\nthe Chief Justice. and they could\nnot .deny 'that sueh cases existed itt\nB.C., and while they failed to put\nUp a case before the Chief Justice,\nthey 'have nevertheless continued\nto. lobby against. the establishment\nof this Appeal Board. The members\npf the,Legislature and -the. govern*\nments, both present, and Liberal\nwhich received- the report, are\nguilty of neglect, to say the least.\nIt ls a most amatlng situation.\nThe Mlno-MIll and Smelter Workers' Union Which brought evldanci\nbefore tha Royal Commission prov-\ned th* need tor a Medical Appeal\nBeard beyond a doufit. That Chief\nJustioe Sloan, who had ln the Compensation Inquiry in 10U rejected\nUie proposal fpr a Medical Appeal\nBpatd, now* states on pig* 149 of\nUi* present report: \"The evidence\nfective  treatment of their  claim*\nind. tha   recommendation   of  the\nChief Justice for the establishment\nof a Medical Appeal Beard would\nbe the democratic solution and we -\nurge on behalf of these men,, every -\ncitiron that wants fair play to get:\nan  explanation from  members  of\nthe legislature and particularly government members > as tn why. this\nrecommendation   from   the  most\ncompetent- authority,   tbe   Royal\nCommission, goes gathering dust in\nthe archives while two subcessive\ngovernments play poliUcal. football <\nWi>h it. .       I\nK. A. SMITH\nDistrict President,\nB.C. District Union\nIUMM&8W\nViews\n' . '   from the\nNews Front\nBy,WILLIAM L. RYAN\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe. fantastic Soviet about-face-\nin Uie case of th* \"doctors' plot'' i\nraises a serious question whether\nStalin died a natural death.\nBy fitting plecei et the Kremlin\nJigsaw Jussle together, lt ii possible\ntb discern what appears to have.\nbeen a careful laying of the groundwork for announcing the death of\nStalin. .. '7\nThere Is a madness ln this new\n,-- .development thst defies all .logic,\nbefore me at* this present inquiry*- After,'slx weeks of the moit violent\n,..\u201e   1..1    _._.    _m    _,_,M_t1\u201e_l_>    .!._,.    fits,*....    *_     \u00ab ..._....    ._,   ,\u00ab .......J\nAt this point, I wai rlght'baek\nInto politics, and so I gave up. The\nArohlves will have to wilt until\nafter the elietlen,\nI started oountlng up our premiers since B, O. Joined Confederation In 1871. Before that wa\nhad Royal Governors, responsible\nto London. I found that W.A.O.\nBennett Is tho 26th premier. I\nalso learned that In the 32 years,\nfrom 1871 to 1003, there wero 15\npremiers, but In the SO yean since\n1903, there havo been but 10\npremiers. Party politics came In\n1003, so that proves that party\npontics, despite what seme people say, does add stability to gov.-'\nernment Last year's election, ft\noourse, did upset the applecart,\nbut perhaps on Juno 0 the situation ma\u00bb ba sorted out..\nYes, I was into, politics, but at\n.\"Transit Y.M\u00bb for\nFrench Red Leader\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014Maurice\/ Thor-\ner, French Communist leider under\nmedical treatment here since 1080,\nll believed to have left Moscow by\ntrain on his return to France.\nTbe French embassy \u25a0supplied\npassports for Thore. and three\nmembers of his party Who wire\nbelieved to have left on, Saturday's\ntrain for Warsaw and Berlin.\nThorez recently asked the British\nembassy in Moscow fpr a transit\nvisa for himself and his party to\ntravel across West Germany on\ntheir ho'mewlrd journey.\nThe transit visas were Issued by\nthe British embassy three-days ago.\nhis led me to condud* thet th*\nbasic factual reasons for my rejection of th* Medical Appeal Board\nin 1042 art no longer valid. In consequence I have reviewed jny previous recommendation In th* light\nof present clroumstances,\"   '\nThere aro those who lay that if a\nMedical Appeal Board li established, l great deluge of contentlcus\nclimls would result in continued,\nprolonged concurrent sessions, This\nargument li bast answered in the\nCChimiiilonef's nwn wdrdi on page\n134 of hii report: \"M.,ther* ar* io\nmany complaints against tho\nBoard's medical decisions that a\ndeluge would descend upon the\nMedical. Appeal ..Board; then- the\nsltuatlpn would seem ttt.m'a ta.ba'a\ncogent reason.why, inch an appeal\ntrlbunalihOUId b* setup.'-'; \u2022\nOf particular regard to wprkmen\nin the mstil mining industry, is\nslllcoiti. We hove a situation\nwhere there ire very f*W doctors\ncompetent tb decide when a min\nii disabled by silicosis. Evidence at\nthe vhearingi, however, ' rivealed\nthat where these competent-dob-\ntort could net agree,'the final deel'\nilciiwpuld be mad* by the, Wofk:\nrian't' Compensation 'Board; ltiait\nand to quote.the Chief Justjci'. \"It\nhow appears that the'Board itself,\ncomposed of three laymen, would\nresolve a conflict between the two\nsilicosis specialists, With deference,\nI still think that i Medcal Appeal\nBoard should* be better equipped\ntay'the.medlcal training of its mem.\nbers to decide such an Issue than\nthe Board itself. Especially would\nthis be so if at least two members\nof Uie Medical Appeal: Board should\nbe specialists ln diseases of.the\nlung,\"  '\nThe big mystery ln the province\nis why this recommendation of the\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBuy, 8sl|, Trade the Classified Way\nU. K. Miners T\u00abit\nNew Safety Lamp\nNOTTINGHAM - (Reuteri. -\u2022 A\nnew safety lamp for miners will be\ntested by the British government.\nThe oil lamp' hot only shPWi red\nwhen gas is in the pit bUt also\nsounds an alarm bell when plugged\ninto the pit alarm unit. Older models have flashed a red light indicating danger of gas, but t miner\nintent oh his work was unlikely to\nnoUce it. . ' \u2022.   ' v\nFirst training for librarians was\ngiven in a Summer course established at McGill University in 1004.\nI don't blame Wdmeh fer smpkln*.\nThe only way to protect yourself if\nyour hiisbanu eats onions is tb eat\nsome yourself.\n'-. .::j,~-i\u2014:,.  \u25a0\u25a0;:\", \u201ei i;,; \u25a0..',.,\/,'\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nA STEEL HEllMET and shes lit on the ground\n<lpwer right) beside a twisted mass of metal that\n-Was one* an airplane before It crashed and burned\nfield, 20 mriei South of\" Oaklatfd; killing it JAfi'i\nias It made Its approach to land ,at tha Oakland,'\n^Callf., airport. The plyne'.smashed Into\t\nj*tkt*na,\nplowed\nForce personnel and a civilian\nlng two women. The servlen men'\nserviee overseas,\n\u2014Central Press'Canadian\nerew of five, inelud-;\nleh'weri headetrw\npress denunciation ot th* arrested\ndoctors, they disappeared trom th*\npress at the time of Stalin's death.-\nNow they are proclaimed innocent.\nIn; attempting to find explanations for such a giddy rlgtag \u2014\nWhich, incidentally, must leave the'\nRussian public sorely puzzled'\u2014 it\nis necessary to go back over old\nground. Having done this, one\ncomes up with the startling bus- |\npicion of.intrigue in the Kremlin\ninvolving the cold, calculating Mai- ,\nenkpf, Stalin's successor, and bis\nrat-Jess, c oId - blooded; sidekick,\npolice osir Lavrinty ft Beria,   '\nThe \"doctors' plot\"' burst into >\nprint with griat fury in mli}-Janu-'\nary.-.  . ' .  \u25a0'.    \u2022\nClearly detectable at this time g\nWas. a hint that Stalin already had\nlost his control of the government\napd.had become nothing mor* than j\na.symbol and figurehead. The spy\nplot, with its overtones ot violent\nantl-Zlonlsm- and  anti-Semitism,\nwas strong and dangerous medicine\nfbr the Kremlin'to play with, and\"*\nmust have been dictated by the *\nmost urgent of considerations,\nThen curiously, tha. Soviet press\ndeparted from custom Feb. 14, teh\nthe deith of Ley Z. Mekhlis, a Jewr\nand an old Bolshevik, who once had\nheaded the ministry of state control\nWhere ho answered to Beria.\nin repotting on his death, the\npress publlihed a long and detailed\ncommunique ;0h how the death occurred, What' doctprs were in attendance, and the -step-by-step\ntreatment. This Was something\npew.. But It wil repeated, in much .\nir>Ore detail, when Stalin's illness\nand death were announced three;\nWeeks later. It wa? as if the Mekhlis\ncase was a trial run for what was\nto come later,       -\nIf  Malenkov,  with  the  aid  of*\nBeria, actually plotted,th* death pf ';\u2022\nStalin \u2014 or at least, if they plotted\nto'' hasten  the  Soviet   dictator's\ndeath \u2014 the arrested doctors would I\nhave constituted a handy safeguard\nfor' them. If something were to go\nwrong,   If  something   accidentally\nWere discovered, If tho plans went*\nawry lh any way, the aoctpra wpuld *,\nhave been ready as the scapegoats.\nThe dpolors already had been\ngiven a tremendous build-up as the\nfoulest criminals of all time. They\nhad, according to the flat assertions\nof the entire party press, caused\nthe death of Andrei Zhdanov,\nJialenkov's one-time' rtvil; fer;\nppwer, In 1048, add the deaths of\nothers. ' If something ' had gone\nwrong with the way Stalin died,\nit would hive boon a simple matter\nto blame them for that, too.\nMalenkov, according to the most\nreliable reports frAm inside Russia,\nshe'd no tears. over > the death of\nStalin, his mentor and master for a\nQuarter of a century. Neither did\nBeria. ''.''\u2022 '\nI All of this addid up to grave'.\nSuspicion.   ;\n| By. clearing the doctors Saturday\nln so fantastic a manner, the Kremlin now gives .weighty support ta'\nthe charge that the blood-purge\naccusations were trumped up.\n.By the sam ereasonliig, it now\ncan be assumed* that Zhadanov and,\nthe others mentioned in the plot\nwire npt poisoned by them or treated wrongly. But then, did they die\na.natural death? The Kremlin itself\nhas cast doubt en that.     . '-.*.'\nStalin was the last obstacle in the\nway of Malenkov's succession, Perhaps Malenkov became impatienti\nat Stalin's ruggedness. , Stalin's\nvisitors constantly were reporting\nhim in robust health.\n. It seems lnllkely that the release\nof the doctors is involved in a current struggle for Kremlin power, It\nappears more likely that the\nstruggle is over and that Malenkov\nand Beria are the hands-down winners \u2014it leait for the time being;\nthe: doctors are no' longer needed):\n *mm\u00bb**F\u2122z\n:\nmwwmum^swmwmvm* ^mm m\nWffi\n\"It Pays To L\\ktf Quality'*-\nScoti'McHale\nAstoria\nRich Brown Calf\nTriple Sale\nBalmoral Stylo\nSixer 6 to 11\nC ond E Width!\n$18.95\nR: ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\n' Established 1902\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Mr, and Mrs,\nCharles Parker and family left\nTuesday for a two weeks holiday\nln Vancouver.\nMrs. J. H. McDonaugh spent the\nweekend in Nelson witb'her\nmother, Mrs, C. Trozzo, and two\nsisters, Mr. and Mrs. C. DeFerro\nand Mr. and Mrs, J, Fuklo.\nMiss Jocnn Tonin of Nelson\n\u2022pent several days with ber parents, Mr. and Mra. T, Tonin and\nfamily. \\\n* Mr, and Mrs, George Parsons ot\nFontrllas, Sask., who spent the\nWinter in New Denver with their\ndaughter Miss Agnes Parsons; who\nis on the teachers' staff left tot to\nvisit relatives ln Vancouver and\nSeattle before returning to their\nborne, They were accompanied by\ntheir daughter, who will spend the\nEaster holidays with them at the\ncoast.\nDennis Clarke of Nelson is spending the Easter holidays with his\nparents, Mr, and Mn. T. W. Clarke,\nNelson Social\n: ^  ,',\u201e;,,,tet  ,\/', .,.,\u201e\/ ' \/ X^i - PHONR 'A 44.\";\nEaster-time travel is continuing this week, bringing\nfriends: 'arid relatives to ':< and\ntrom N*lso\/>. \u25a0   O\nEASTERN TRIP ... .Mrs. J. E.\nYoung and young son Murray, and\nher parents, Mr, and Mrs, Carl Ann\nderson, left Friday fot Spokane and\nfrom, there they travelled by train\nfor, a holiday in Chicago, Mr. Young\nwill fly to-Winnipeg for a business\ntrip and then go on to Oshawa and\nToronto before going to Chicago\nto join his family. After holidaying\nIn Chicago they will motor home,\n' . * '\u2022.\u2022\u25a0\u2022,.\u25a0:\u25a0'.*\u25a0','\u25a0\nJEXTENPED TRIP'-.\".'. Most Rev.\nMartin\u25a0 M, Johnson, Bishop of Nelson, left yesterday tor an extended\ntrip In Eastern Canada, In Ottawa\nBishop Johnson will attend tbe\nfuneral ot Archbishop Vachon.\n'.._ .'\u2022'\u2022\u2022\nFOR HOLIDAYS ... Raymond\nPoulin, Joe'Sturgeon and Bob\nNicholson, who attend Gonzaga\nUniversity in Spokane, are home\nfor the Baster holidays,\n\u25a0',\u2666.. \u2022   \u2022'\u25a0\nHOME AGAIN ... A. Wallach,\nLatimer Street, returned home on\nFriday morning'a train after several months at coast cities. He was\naccompanied home by his daughter,\nMrs, Hubert Farber ot Vancouver,\n\u2022' *  \u2022..'\nFAMILY VISIT ... .Mr. and Mrs.\nC, L. Larson and sons Kenneth and\nAllah ot Kelowna, are here for tbe\nEaster holidays with Mrs. Larson's\nparents, Mr, and Mrs, W. K. Gunn,\nSilica Street.\n\u2022'- \u2022 \u2022\nNORMAL SCHOOL . . . Miss\nPaulette Davis, who attends Normal\nSchbol at Victoria is home for the\nholidays with her mother, Mrs. A,\nW. Davis, Silica Street.\n..,-.:\u2022* \u2022 \u2022'\nFOR TOURNAMENT ... Russell\nMartin and Fred Stevens of Kelowna, who were here to play,lit the\nKootenay open badminton tourna-\niGuard those\nyon love\nEDUCATION\nRESEARCH\nWELFARE fy\nTREATMENT FACILITIES\nCHAIRMAN\nMR. HAROLD LUPTON\n503 Baker Sh\nNelson, B. C.\nCONQUER CANCER CAMPAIGN\nBC. DIVISION CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY\nB.C. CANCER FOUNDATION\n686 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver 9, B.C.      ci\nResidential Canvass\nAfternoon and Evening\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 15\nment, were guests of Mr.-and Mrs.\nW, K.  Gunn, Silica Street. *\n'.     '..\u25a0.,*.*'\u25a0*.:\nFRpM CALGARY':'..\/, Mts. John\nHaryctt, of Calgary, is visiting her\nparents, Mr and Mra. T. Bell, Government Road. OO-\n\u25a0.\u2022*',\u2022\nRETURNS . . . Miss Dorothy Bay\nhas returned after -spending the\nEaster weekend with, her parents in\nGrand Forks.\n.;*     a     *     .\nCALI^ORNJA^ VISIT..-. Mr. and\nMrs. C. h. Parrish, North Shore,\nreturned Thursday from a two-\nmonth holiday in Texas and California. :' .'\u2022\u2022\".\n''\u25a0'-*'.*   \u2022 .        ------*v\nVlfelTS .NIECE .-.. Dave Man-*\nning of Balfour has returned from\na three-month visit to Las Vegas,\nNevada, where he Visited his piece,\nMrs, John Misner.\n.:.\u25a0.*:.* *-*'\u2022  \u2022\nARROW PARK VISITORS . . .\nMr. and Mra,* John James of Arrow\nPark were weekend guests Ot* their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr, and\nMrs. R. E, Pickering, Granite Road.\nWINNIPEG VISIT ... Mrs.\nGeorge Robertson, 301 Union Street,\nhas returned trom Winnipeg where\nshe haB been visiting friends the\n(fast 10 days,        >..\nEngagements\nThe engagement is announced ef\nFrances Margaret (Peggy), daughter of Mrs, Duncan Smith and the\nlate Mr. Smith,' to Ralph JSivln\nJohnson of Seattle, Wash., ion of\nMr, an- Mrs. E. Creed Johnson ot\nBonnlngton, B.C. The wedding will\ntake place April 29th at 2:30 pjn,\nIn St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral,\nCanon W. J. Silverwood officiating.\nEAGLES LA WHIST\nUPS CANCER FUND\nNATAL - The. Ladiei Aijxlliiry,\nMichel Aerie No. 1864, Fraternal\nOrder . ot Eagles, sponsored a\nsuccessful whist-drlve and bingo at\nthe St. Paul's church hall at\nMichel. Winners in whist .were Mrs.\nAgnes Phillips and Mra. Mark Gas-\nkali of Michel. The consolation\nprize waa won by Mrs. S. Kordo-\nkowskl of Natal. The entire proceeds from the whist and bingo\nwill go towards the Conquer Cancer fund and the FOE' Memorial\nFoundation, Both drives will take\nplace during April. The Ladles\nAuxiliary will also aid the Michel\nEagles in the annual 'Conquer\nCanoer Campaign' throughout\nNatal-Michel and district\nLONDON (CP) r- A survey\namong London families claims that\nonly three of every 100 housewives\nprepare a real rib-sticking breakfast\u2014 porridge and a main course.\nRationing ond costs were laid the\nmain factors.\nDIURETIC MAY\nBE YOUR NEED\nwhen you're slightly\n\"OFF YOUR FEED\"\nlistless, sluggish feelings often indicate\nyour body needs aid in letting rid ot\nwaste matter. Minions of people find\nKrusohen Salts give them happy rebel\nin such cases. Then are tiro reasons\nwhy Kruschen does thia. . lint,\nKrusohen is a gentle yet effective\nj laxative.     Seeond,  Kruschen  it\ndiuretic; it promotes healthy action of\nthe kidneys.   Thus, Kruschen Salts\nwork quickly snd thorouohlp, to help\n\u25a0 you enjoy the pep and zest (hat come\nwith oomplete cleanliness \"inside.\" Try\na tittle Kruschen in year mem\nbeverage when' needed... aea how it\nj helpe to brighten the dayl   '\nKRUSCHEN\n\u00ab AU DRUB STOMS\nRecipes\nNELSON pAlLY N\u00a3W3, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1953 \u2014 V\nMAKING THEIR HOME at Fruitvale ar- Mr. and\nMrs. J. Kriz, who were principals ih a wedding ceremony\nheld recently at Goeur d'Alene, Idtho. This bride is the\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Bell of Okanagan Falls, and\nthe groom is the son of A. Kriz of Creston.\n.'.  \u25a0. :      \u25a0      ' .'' .'* \u25a0\u25a0',,',\u25a0   :'  r-H. M. Buckna jihoto.'\nFruiJvale Teacher Honored, Shower\nntUITVALB - Miss Evelyn D\u00abt-\nchack, April bride-elect, was honored at a shower in the Parish Hall\nhjre.. Over 30 guests attended. A\ncorsage of tiny, rosebuds was presented to the honoree by Mrs, W.\nGeiger who was in charge ot the\nevening's arrangements\nA hovel idea, tha presentation of\ngifts ln a miniature school house,\nadded to the gaiety ot the evening.\nTwo boys, Walter Geiger and Bun-\nnie Gordon hauled a wagon on\nwhich the school house .tood bulging .', with gifts- Miss Dutchak\nteaches tt the Fruitvale school.\nGaily decorated cakes representing\n\"mountains\" for good luck and an\ninscribed bride's cake, wort represented to the honoree.\nOut-of-town guests included Mra,\nE. Kelly ot Trail and Miss Irene\nIrwin of Rossiand.\nRenata Wl Holds\nEaster Bake Salt\nRENATA \u2014 4 tempting display\nof hot cross buns and other home\nbaked goods at the local; store\nbrought Iri $10 to, help boost\nWomen's Institute funds,' Convener\nwas Mrs. William Hale.'   '    \"\nBuy, Sail, Trade tho Classified Way\nNqw$of\\the Day\nRATES: 90o line, 40o line black faoe type; larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount tor prompt payment.\nHear H. G, Simms over CKLN tonight at 7:30 speaking oh the CCF.\nMore smart handbags have Just\narrived. ADRIAN'81 MILLINERY.\nHot Peanuts and Hot Buttered\nPopcorn anytime at WAIT'S.\nEagles meet, tonight at 8 p.m.\nElection of officers.\nKootenay Pecoraton\nPhone bing. Distance, Shoreacres.\nTine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\nMolr's Chocolates at WAITS.\nLadies fast ball meeting Wed.\nApril 8th, 7 p.m. Room A Hume Hotel. All interested please attend.\nPlastic Lino Binding In 4 colors,\n0c per foot.\nBURN8 LUMBER COMPANY-\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nFounder Chimney Service\n> Phone 1541-L.\nWanted \u2014 Housekeeper; middle-\naged woman. Apply 124 Chatham St.\nor phone 599-X-3 after 5 p.m.\nGOOD 8ELECTION  NEW ANQ\nUSED BICYCLES AY\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP.\nWHIST DRIVE TONIGHT\nBlessed Sacrament Church Hall,\nFairview, 8 p.m. Refreshments\nThe. annual Nurses'.Easter Ball\non Easter Monday (tonight) ln Silver Boom. Tickets still available\nfrom any. nurse.\nCorsages, tor the Nurses' Bali,\nOrder early.*\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 910.\nBicycle accessories! Bells, Homs,\nkick-stands, delivery baskets, lighting sets, padlocks, tires and tubes.\netc-HlPPERSONS,\nH  BUTTERPIELD  cant fix  lt\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed, at\nreasonable prices.\nQUICK, CLEAN, REASONABLE\npainting and papering. Phone Castlegar, 2852, or Box 242, Castlegar.\nFree estimates.\nIT YOU HAVE SCRAP METAL\nTO SELL, COLUMBIA TRAD*\nING CO. IS THE PLACE. -\n902 FRONT STREET.\nNo End to Variatipris\nOn Basic Mix Themes\nBy  MARGARET CARR\nDo you ever wonder what ln the\nworld you would Ad without those\ntime-saving mixes, both commercial and; home-made that make life\nin the' kitchen so hucb simpler\nthese days? A good iany Of you, I\nknow, prefer your own mixes ahd\nI have bhe 1 think may ba hew to\nyou. It's a dessert mix which combines marga.'lne, l**lng sugar and\neggs. I have tried to give ' variety\nof recipes using this mix and I am\nsure once you have tried them\nthere'll be no end to ypur own\nvariations.\nBASIC DE88ERT MIX\n.   1 cup (V, pound) margarine\n2 eggs, unbeaten\n8 cups icing sugar  \u25a0\nLet margarine stand ln a bowl until soft, then cream thoroughly. Add\n3  blips  sugar  gradually,  beating\nsmooth after each addition.   Add\negg and beat well. Add remaining\nsugar gradually and continue beating  until   mixture   is   light   and\nfluffy. Mr.kes 1 quart. Keep in refrigerator.\nPINEAPPLE  REFIQERATOR\nDE88ERT\n% cup margarine\n6 tablespoons brown sugar\n2 cups zwieback crumbs\n* 2 cups dessert mix\n% cup finely chopped nuts\n1 cup drained crushed pineapple\nMalt margarine in saucepan, add\nbrown sugar and zwieback crumbs\nand brown lightly, stirring constantly. Lin* \u00ab deep loot pah with waxed\npaper. Place about 1-3 ot the crumb\nmixture on the bottom; pack down\nevenly, with  the back ot spoon,\nBlend dessert mix, nuts and pineapple. Spread over bottom layer,\nrepeat another layer of crumbs and\nremaining   pineapple.   Top   with\ncrumbs. Pack down and let Jand\nabout 3 hours in refrlgortor. Just\nbefore serving turn out on an oblong serving dish,   Garnish with\npineapple halyes and maraschino\ncherries. Serves 8. To serve 4, divide recipe in bait. Use the same\nmethod, but chill individual serv\nings In cuptard  cups  or  sherbet\nglasses,\nFILLING FOR BAKED APPLE8\n1 cup dessert mix\n2 teaspoons orange juice       '\n2 teaipoohl orange rind ;, *\n1-8 cup chopped walnuts *\n6 baked apples\nMix ingredients together well.\nFill centres of baked apples with\nmixture Immediately after removing from oven, using 2 to 3 tablespoons for each apple. Serve at\nohce. '\u2022'\u25a0\nCHpCpLATB MINT SAUCE,\n1 cup dessert mix '.',-.\n3 squares melted chocolate\n2 tablespoons milk-\nDash of peppermint extract\nMelt chocolate ln top of a double\nboiler, Stir in dessert mix and\nmilk,* Stir until mixture is smooth\nand Weil blended, Add peppermint\nextract Serve hot Delicious Over\nlee cream.\nCREAMY BANANA TOPPING\n1 cup dessert mix\n2 to 4 tablespoons milk\n;\u25a0 Vt teaspoon lemon juice\n2 medium bananas, sliced\nAdd mllk'to dessert mix, beat\nSnfll fluffy. Add lemon juice.\npread. between layers of gingerbread, top with sliced bananas.\nCover top layer of gingerbread\nwith topping and mora sliced bananas. Enough tilling and frosting\nfor an 8-inch layer cake.\nCRI8P ALMOND COOKIES\nC'-l cup dessert mix\ni teaspoons almond extract\n-   H4 cups sifted enriched flour\n% teaspoon soda ,\nVt <rup milk\nAdd almond extract to dessert\nmix, beating in well. Sift together\nflour and soda. Add alternately\nwith milk to mix. Blend thoroughly. Pinch oft small balls ot dough,\nshape into ball. Press down each\nball with tines of a fork on a\ngreased cookie sheet. Bake in a\nmoderate even (376 degrees F.) 10\nto 12 minutes... For easy decoration,\ndip fork in melted chocolate, drain\n(lightly, then press down on\ncookies. . 0:   '. -     '\n5 PIECE CHROME SUITE\nFREE\nWith tho purchase of a naw\n10,8   eu.   ft,   Ca.lerotor\nRefrigerator. ;\nmmmt\u2014eeemm\ntm\nOFFICERS NAMED\nBY EAGLES'LA    .,'\"'*\nA new slate of officers has been\nelected by the Ladies' Auxiliary to\nNelson aerie, Fraternal Order of\nEagleji.    j\nMrs. Barbara Ktdwell !\u25a0 the new\npresident, succeeding Mrs. Sarah\nMannings*.\nOther officers are Mrs. Emmie\nKirkham, vice-president; Mrs, Beverly Blight chaplain; Mrs. Mabel\nCartwrlght, secretary; Mra. Edith'\nSmith, treasurer; Mrs. Anne Johnson, conductress; Mrs. Doreen Wilson, inside guard, and Mrs, Winnl-\nfred Fraser, outside guwd.   O\nOfficers Elected\nGranbtook LA's Work\nNotable for First Year\nCRANBIiOOK - Ladiei* Auxiliary to Crdnbrook aerie Fraternal\nOrder of Eagles, chartered here a\nyear ago,' reported a large volume\nof public service during its first\nHida bed' upholstered in beautiful wool, frieze air foam cushions.\nSee this today at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nJeans, all the better brands including Caribou tor girls and boys.\nYou save at\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nWash your car, windows, outside\nfurniture, etc., with a Dixon Auto\nWasher. Screws on garden hose,\ncleans quickly and easily.\n'.    '    . '  HIPPERSON'S\nAPPLICATORS\nWe are prepared to take on any\nbuilt-up  or  asphalt  roofing  Job.*\nSide wall shingles and shakes. Ail\nInquiries promptly attended to^\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co, Trail\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts Incurred by Joyce Goodwin\nbefore Dec. 20, 1952, and any debts\nfrom this date Incurred by Mrs.\nRonMusfelt\nRON MUSFELT.\nATTENTION B.C.\nGOVERNMENT, EMPLOYEES\nMonthly meeting of Nelson\nbranch of B.C, Government Employees will be held in Canadian\nLegipn Hall, Tues. April 7th, 8 p.m.\nFilm and refreshments,\nVENTILATORS\nAluminum ventilators for gable\nand eave ventilation. Four sizes and\ntwo  styles  to choose from. Also\naluminum eave sheeting at\nT. H.WATJ.R8 A CO. LTD.\nPhone 158\u2014101 Hall St-Nelion\n<% etatVuL U)hmlsUL\nTbwtiecAatfL\nyear at its annual meeting.\nIt included money contribution!\nto tbe Canadian National Institute\nof the Blind, Tha Tuberculosis Society, Milk for Korea, \"Help the\nChildren\" fund, Muscular Dystrophy fund lad its own Memorial\nFoundation,\nIta practical services included\npurchase of a wheel chair for a\nlocal child, dispatching of parcels,\nletters and books regularly to eight\nservicemen in Korea, parcels and\nbooks to a patient at Tranquille,\ncookies and prism glasses for a\npatient at Mount St. Francis, a\nlayette for the Salvation Army,\nclothing to the Unitarian Services,'\nand aid for establishment ot a\nHobby School tor youngsters from\neight to 14 years, being currently\norganized by Captain Auitin Millar\nof the Salvation Army.\nThe meeting named. Mrs, Shirley\nCloarec new president, Mrs. Belinda\nDi Cecco, vice-president; Mrs. Jean\nWhltlock, secretary; Mrs. Nancy\nVan Guilder, treasurer; Mrt. Cora\nSalonski, conductor; Mri. Anna\nWarden chaplain; Mn. Helen Shu-\nbert Inner guard; Mrs. Laura Pin-\nchak, outer guard, and Mrs. Marie\nBailey, Mrs. Evelyn Tlppe and Mrs.\nGertrude Lees, trustees.\nMen's and Ladies'\nSUITS __ $1.25\nDRESSES\n1-pce., plain $1,25\nPANfSand\nSKIRTS ._..._ 60c\nFREE PICK UP\n' and\nDELIVERY\nSERVICE\njust\nPHONE288\nEmpire\nDry\nCleaners\nNelson and District Boy Scout\nAssociation appreciates the support\ngiven by Nelson and district real-\ndents to their Boy Scout Apple Day\nSaturday. Also to B, B, Crawford,\ngeneral chairman and other members of the school staff and others\nwho assisted in making it a success,\n\"Taj-Mahal\" Oriental Rugs-All\nsizes, luxurious quality.\nMaytag Washers, standard and\nfully automatic.\nQuic - Frez   Refrigerators,   trom\n$230 up. 8-year guarantee. v      .\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.        PHONE 1560\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCOLUMBUS \u2014 Requiem Mass for-\nthe late1 Peter Columbus will be\nsung from the Church of the Blessed Sacrament at Fairview Monday\n(today) at 9 a.m. Interment wUl be\nin Nelson Memorial Park.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nROGERS \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late: James Arthur Rogers will\nba held from the Thompson Funeral Home Tuesday at 2 p.m. Rev,\nAllah Dlxoh will officiate and interment will be in Nelson Memorial\nPark.   >\u25a0\nOwn one bf the great masterpieces, of all tlmel It Is \"The Last\nSupper\" by Leonardo Da Vinci, in\neasy embroidery. Makes a lovely\npanel, a cherished heirloom. -\nEmbroider this most beloved of\nall paintings. Pattern 784; transfer\n14x10 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNewa, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyour NAME and ADDRESS. >\nExciting value! Ten, yes ten popular, new designs to crochet, sew,\nembroider, knit\u2014printed in the new\n1053 Laura * Wheeler Needlecraft\nBook. Plus many more patterns to\nsend for\u2014ideas for gifts, bazaar\nmoney-makers,, fashions! Send 25\ncents for your cbpyl   :    ;     !\n. FUNERAL NOTICE\nJOHNSON \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Charles Johnson of\nErie, B.C. will be held from the\nKnights of Pythias. Hall at Salmo\nWednesday at 2 p.m. Interment will\nbe in the-Snlmo Cemetery, Arrangements are under the direction of the\nThompson Funeval Home at Nelson.\nIra switched to Borden's\nETi^ayated Mk! jVly fegoQajr*\nteflawr!\n \u25a0\"   \u00bb1|!PWIPWIWWW\nEnd in Slates\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The two ma.\njbr strikes in the United States that\nhad-made idle some 85,000 workers\n\"in steel and rubber plants were\n: .-,- settled Saturday,\n'., Agreements  to  end  tbe strikes\ni were reached within two hours of\n'each other early this morning.\n;' - The first settlement was announced in the two-day strike by some\n85,000    United   -Rubber    Workers\n(CIO)   against   the   U.S.  Rubber\n..Company in 19 plants across the\n. l-_ountry.\n'-'   - Union and company officials ln\n'    New York signed a new two-year\nwork contract A company spokes\n- man said work at all plants would\nresume Monday or \"as soon as production can be scheduled.\"\nTwo hours later, an agreement\nwaa. reached in Pittsburgh ending a\n-.-five-day strike of 1500 Brotherhood\n. of Railroad Trainmen against the\n\u201e Union Railroad. The walkout on the\n. '- connecting line had virtually halted\nall operations of U. S. Stee Corp.\n- In the Pittsburgh district and had\n.' made idle some 50,000 workers.\nr \\ Tht Union Railroad, which is a\n;'wholly owned subsidiary of U.S.\nj Steel, was expected to resume oper-\n. ations immediately. It was expected\n, that U.S. Steel plants would be\n- back to full production within 48\n.   to 72 hours.\nWages were not the issue In either\nI strikes.\" ,,.,.\u201e,.,\nFirst Flood Victims\nLeave for Winnipeg\nCANVEY ISLAND,,. Eng. (CP)-\nFrederlck Pace, his wife and two\nchildren sail from Liverpool next\nTuesday tor Canada, first Canvey\nIsland flood victims to emigrate under the Canadian government flood\nvictim scheme.\nThe  38-year-old  crane  operator\n. ft+r-NE. SON DAILY NBWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1953_\nYukon Paradise\nfor Sportsmen\n\";-    .' i\nBy JIM   PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\ns ; To hear the Whitehorse Board of\n'-' Trade tell it, the Yukon is one of\nNorth America's finest hunting and\nfishing lands. The record 70%-inch\nhorn spread of the moose head destined for the Historical Society Museum at the Yukon capital \u2022 lends\nemphasis to this claim,\n\u25a0 Tbe fact is the Yukon ls brimful\nof almost virgin hunting grounds.\nits  forested,  mountainous  terrain\noffers a wide selection of big game\nand lt is believed its laws allow a\ngreater take than any other part of\n* Canada,\nThe Yukon ls noted for its dall,\nstone and fannln sheep, caribou,\n- mountain goat, moose, grizzly and\nblack and brown bear. Non-resident\nCanadian hunters are allowed one\neach of mountain sheep, mountain\ngoaf, caribou and moose and one\ngrizzly, all on a $100 licence tor,the\nbig game season irom Aug. 1 to\n. NoV. 30.   .'\u25a0-..\n- SPECIAL SEASON\nBesides, a special bear-hunting\n\u25a0 season from May 1 to June 30 al-\n; lows a non-resident-Canadian two\ngrizzlies and two black pr brown\nbears on a $25 licence, Licence fees\nto lion-resident aliens are $150 and\n\u266650.\"'\n3S No trophy tax is charged, but Yu\nSon gome. regulations state a big\nlame hunter from  the  \"outside\"\nmust hire a recognized guide. One\napparent reason for this is the fact\nthe. average hunter wouldn't likely\n.know what to do lt he sighted a\n\u25a0herd of'100,000 caribou,\nNIMROD'S PARADI8E\ni Sport fishermen will find the Yukon's   unnumbered   streams   and\nlakes* all but running over with\nrainbow trout, Arctic grayling,\n, northern pike* and other fish. Like\n\" big game ,the Yukon offers a large\nvariety, and ita angling laws allow\nI big catch.\nStandard gear is ample to take\nthe.possession quota ot 20 fish. Seasons are long, for instance that on\n. Take trout from Dec. 1 to Sept. 14\ninclusive..Summer temperatures in\nthe 60-to-70 range are warm, enough\nfor. tent camping beside the angler's\n\u25a0favorite hole.\nV'-.' And Yukon fishing licences cost\nonly $2 for the non-resident, Canadian or alien,\nwill settle In Winnipeg, his future\nunplanned. *\n\"But,\" said his wife, Oliver, \"we\nhave always worked hard,\"   .\nTbe Paces will take along all the\npossessions left them by the floods\u2014\nin a cabin trunk. Fifty-eight of their\nhegihbors died on the bungalow, island in the Thames estuary when\nwind and sea battered dawn the Island defences Jan. 31-Fcb. 1: Tliey\nwill dock at Quebec aboard Uie Cunard Uner Samaria.\nGraved on Sione\n.LONDON (CP) rr: N^xt-bf-kin of\nmore thon 20,000 Commonwealth\nairmen who died in the Second\nWorld War without a :kboW,i)*,gray\u00ab,\nwill be' invlted.to attend the'dedication of a shrine being erected to\ntheir memory at famous Runny-\nmede on the banks et .the river\nThames. .'*',-        '.:'..,. , I *.\nThe memorial will be unveiled\nby the Queen Oct \\\"t.-:\nSpokesmen for the Imperial War\nGraves Commission said Invitations\nare going out to the immediate\nrelatives.of oil those commemorated at Runnymede, Including some,\n,300q \" Canadians, \u25a0 The Invitation,\nhowever, does not rroyide for'any\nfinancial assistance towards travelling costs although reduced fares\nwill be available en British railways. .,\u25a0\ni Designed by 69-year-old Edward\nMaufe, one of England's; leading1\narchitects, the memorial stands on\nthe* edge of a wooded hill overlooking the Thames aboya the meadow of Runnymede, where Britain's\ncharter bf rights, the Magna Carta,\nwas granted by King John in 1215.\nSTONE OF REMEMBRANCE  '\nThe monument consists of. a\nshrine, enclosed by curving cloisters with the names of the missing\nairmen inscribed on the sione casings of a series ot narrow windows,\nIn the centre of the cloister rests\nthe Stone of Remembrance.' Above\ntbe arched entrance is. a stone\neagle with the RAF motto and the\nInscription: \"In this cloister are\nrecorded the names pi 20458 airmen who hove no known grave.',\nThoy died for freedom, in. raid\nand sortie over the British Isles\nand the.lands.and seaa-.M^Northern and, ,WAtisrn Europe.\",\nAbove the arched opening, to* the\nBhrlne are sculptured figures representing Justice, victory.and courage. Surmounting the shrine's\nturret Is an air force crown with a\nstar above, and in* the stained glass\nof the great window of the mem-!\norlol, two angels are pictured holding a scroll with verses from the\npsalms ln the Book of Common\nJPrayer.   \u25a0  .-\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.'\u25a0'. ' \u25a0'\u2022'\nLoughborough Inlet on the Brit\nlsh Columbia' coast was so namec\nby Captain-Vancouver in 1792.\nCITY DRUG GO:\n' Nelson's Dispensing Gh0mists,\t\nYOUR REXALL STORI\nBOX 460 PHQNt 34\nNelson, B.C.  \u2022\nSALE - APRIL 8 - 9 - 10 and 11\nREXALL HYDROGEN PEROXIDE, 16or,.. 2*\".76\nLOME FRENCH lALM, K.V ...\\..... 2*?r.76\nSQUARE FLOOR WAX; 1 lb. .......... 2*\" .76\nWED., THOR:, FRL, SAL-$*LE DBIIS\nREXALL   REMEDIES   and   PURETEST   PRODUCTS\n..2\/W.31\n. BANFF, Alta.*,(CP) --. A motflr-\nk equipped toboggan \"which TwiH vir-\n* ftialjy climb up the side: of a moun-\n.  tain' and go safely, down the other\n\u2022\u2022 side has been developed by a park\n, \u25a0  warden at Banff -National Park.\ni * -William Biack, formerly, a Cal-\n\u2022jarjK- mechanic,  worked  for  five\nyears to make a machine to save\niajiiajjegs when he .covers his park\n'-jest.of 500 square miles of moun-\n.jfti&Vand valleys,-. ..;\n\":'fii:We' thinks he has come close to\n%e \"answer with  his mechanized\n-^toboggan.   But   the 'machine  still\n'gnejiifs certain modifications before\nm \u00ab<U be fully saUsfactpry.\nO Mr. Black says it is not an original? idea. Motor-driven toboggans\n- aiei'common in Ontario and Quebec and are used also by trappers\n\u201e*in northern SaskatchewanABut the\n\u25a0-eastern toboggans are almost useless in the light, fluffy mountain\nsnow.     \u2022**\n\u2022 DESIGN PROBLEM\nThe problem has been to design\n;   a machine that will give the required traction for this area. It is\n\u2022ir (Quipped with a 25-horsepower mo*\n.'torcycle engine and propelled by\n\"it set of metal tracks.\nO; The first step in adapting the\n^toboggan to western conditions was\n' f jta- add two feet to the over-all\n'.length of the sleigh, bringing it to\n. '\"A IA, feet. Mr. Black then strength-.\n;;\u25a0 ened the motor mounts and almost\n^.\u2022doubled the length of-the track. He\n\u2022 \u2022also' covered   the   bottom  of  the\n-.. sleigh with a sheeting of brass, so\n;.'.Ihe;.-surface will clean itself'with-\n. \u25a0 rati frosting up.\n-    One planned change is to cut the\n.,''.'iboggan into two parts, six feet\n'rom the front, and Join them with\n. *) hinge arrangement. The purpose\n\"'..is., to make the 14-fdot unit easier\n~ifo,iurn and to pass through wood-\n\u25a0ed .areas.\n51.50 bot. Rexall Aga-flex Compound; 10os..: 2\/0\u00ab-*1.51-\nM.Mbot.Al-tr-Gel.i     ,, \u201e-\nMos....'...-...2\/~\u00bblJ86\n11.25 Box REXALL\nANAESTHETIC\n\u25a0  HEMORRHOID -\nSUPPOSITORIES\n,-:,12>\"-- -\u25a0-\u25a0\n; 2\/\u00bb>126.:_\n75e tube Analgesic _ .   _-\nBaku\/lMbs 2\/>\u00bb.78\n$1.25 tin Asthma        *. \u201e --\nPowder,4os... 2\/i\u00bb I,_tt\n$1.25 bot. Rexall Blood       \"f,\nPurj&r.lOos.. 2\/o'\u00bb1.26\nMcW-Mx-ll-Core\u25a0'\u25a0_;.il' ZU\nSolvent, Ltauid.:. 2fer.\\\\ti\n75ebot,I-__-lEyelo ' - \u2022\/- _fl\n(with eye-cup)... 4\/W.70\n30c bot. Rexall\nPeroxide, 4 os.\n$1.25 Bot.\nREXALL\nIRON) LIVER\nand\nBONE MARROW\nTONIC, 8 os.\n2\/0r\u00bb1.26\n75c pkg. Rexall L.P.C. Athlete's\nFoot. Powder, 3 os. 2\/o',76\nHe tube Rexall lip   - ,   _,\n\u2022     Aid Salve, Ko\u00bb..  2\/o'.31\n78e Inklings Correspondence\nCards, Vellum \u00ab\u2022_: -e\nFinish ' *V*r.tv-\n65c Regent Papetcrio Vellum\nfinish, 24 sheeta _ . \u201e-\nind 24 envelopes.. AJet.Wt\n-fit Swani~DoWn~Pai!eterle,\n. Spiral Laid Vellum Finish;   ,\n\u2022:808Bb\u00abU,80 \u00bb.-\u00bb\nEnvelopes....... Af.ttt\nTie .Regal > Social Notes.: 24\nsheets, 24 envelopes,, Ribbon\n. h*j8eptlo -     _-\nLiniment, 4 oi...'.  iter,Ito\n95c Bot. REXALL\nISOPROPYL\nALCOHOL\nRUBBING\nCOMPOUND\n16 oi.\n2*\" .96\n$1.39 bot. Lin-A-Septic,\nLiniment, 10ot.2for*\\,40\n$1.50 bot. Rexall.Nerve Tonic\nwith Vitamin , \u201e._., ei \u25a0\n. Bi,16os....,.2\/\u00bb*1.5I\nSOc bot. Optine, 1 os. 2\/\" .51\n85c bot. RcxollPenetrating\nLiniment, 6o\u00ab.,. 2\/\"'.86\n$1,25tot. RexdlPeptons\n\u25a0.. Tonfe JO osi'j. \u2022 2\/<\"-*1.26\niSftbot. Sweet N'Srf.\"*, -.\n'. Kgr.,100's..'....Z*'.36\n$1.10 bot. Sweet N'Ets,\nJigr., 600's... ,2*>r\u00bbl.H\n40c bot. Sweet N'Ete,.,,    .,\nMgr.,100's 2A\u00bbA1\n$1.25 bot. Sweet N'Ets,\nHgr-,500' 2\/<\"\u00bb1.26\n75c bot. Rexall White X\nLiniment, 8o\u00bb... 2\/W-.76\nWc'U.EIUy'e.'Motk killer\n'and  Moth  Control  Liquid\nwithD.D.T.16os. 2a>'.86\n79c bot. Elkay's'Wick-Style *'.'\nDeodorant, 6 oa .. 2\/or,g0\n$1,15 bot. Puniest, Cod Liver\nOil,8'os. 2\/*\u00bb.*1.1.6.\n$1.00 Bot.\nPURETEST\nCOD LIVER OIL\nFORTIFIED.\n10 A and D\n4 os.\n2\/0'l.Ol\n$1,25 bot. Puretest Cod Liver\nOil Compound \u201e..\u00ab'.\u00bb\u00bb\nTableta, 60's... 2A\"'1.26\n$2.00 bot. Puretest Cod Liver\nOil Compound j , a .,.\nTablets, 100'a.. 2f\u00b0>2.0\\\n$1.25 bot. Puretest Pcrco-Cod,\n100 A and D, \u201e, M .-\n12.5 e*;.:....2*\u00bb*1.26\n95eBottle\nPURETEST\nVITAMIN \"C\"\nTABLETS\n26mgm. - 100's\n2\/<\".96\n70e bot. Puretest Vitsmm Bi,'\nTsblets, 1 mgm:, _ _-\n100s .Aiy.tt\n$2.75 bot. Puretest Vitamin B\ngSS^ov,2M*2.76;\n$ta$bot. Puretest Vitamin\n. Tonic with        _     -J -_:\nMinerals, 18 os. 2 Av*2.26\n$1_\u00bb box Puretest Halibut\nLiver Oil Capsules\nPlain, 50's...,2fi\u00bb\u00bbL21\n$1.90 Box\nPuretest\nHalibut\nLiver Oil\n100's\n2 ^'1.91\n$2.35 box Puretest Multiple\n.Vitamin Capsules - *\u00ab.\u00ab\n(improved) 50's.. 2\/<\"*Z.36\n$4.25 box Puretest Multiple\nVitamin Capsules- . , .. \u201e-\n. Ompmyed) 100's 2\/*'4.26\n$1.25 box Puretest Wheat    .\nGerm-Od     '  *.    *. Arf.\n' CapRlles\/SOy. 2a\u00bb\u00bb1.26\n$1.98 box Puretest Vitamins\naadMideials   .-.\" a, nn\nCapsules,60's.. 2\/0''1.99\n$3.49 box Puretest Vitamins \u25a0\nand Minerals ....\u00ab\u00ab --\nCapsules, 100'} 2fw'3.S0\n75e tube Ansjsthetio Hemerr-\nhoidOintmuit,loB.2\/or.76\nIJe tin Boracio .,    ,,\n. Ointment, IH \u2022\u2022- \u2022'\"'\u2022\"O\nBum Ointment... 2\/K.76\n65e lar Rexall Ecsema\nOintment, 2 os.... 2\/or .66\ntie tin SexaU Heal- JO, ,a'\ning Balve, % os. 2M.3B\n35c tin Rexall Zino _    . _-\nObtttnsit, lHos. 2A-.3B\n$LM tube L.P.C. Athlete's Foot\nOintment, 1K\u00b0\u00bb2A\",1.01\n91* Bot.\nREXALL Ml 31\nSOLUTION\n. 16 oi.\n2\/ro .99\nMt bot. Memo\nLiquid Antiseptic,\n. 8 0S... 2\/W.61\n79c bot Toxol Anti-- .\n- septic, 8 pi.;,:-.:: ;Z\/*\".HO'\n25epitg. Puretest A-Sa-Rex\nTablets, 24's 2\/W.26\n.   -65C Bot.\nPURETEST\n* A-SA-REX\n.'     TABLETS\n-,..-'v-o6's*-\n.   2*f.66\n50c bot. Tiny-Tot A^Sa-Rcx\nTabieft,60>..... 2\/w.Sl\nMe box Rexall Asthma snd Hay\nFeverTablets, 24's 2f*\u00bb .66\nlie pkg. Rexall Blsma-Rex\nMites,24's...... 2\/o'.36\n$1.00 bot. Chlorophyll Compound Tablets, *.,, A1\n120V>...- 2M1.0I\n15c One Minute Headache\nPowders (tablet     \u201e,   _-\nftmn) 24'S..;... 2f*M\n$1.00 One Minute Headache\nIMBet.\nREXALL\nKIDNEY and\nBLADDER\nPIUS\n50's\n2\/0'.61\nMe box Mi 11\nAntiseptic Throat -.   _-\nTablets, Wt 2MJB\n49c.bot. Milk of Magnesia\nTablets,Minted, ...   _-\n85's......:.  2A\u00bb.50\n$W5 bot. Milj. of Magnesia\n-\u2122t&25(y...2\/*\u00bb-.2*\n45* box Rexall 0j.   .-\nOrderlies,24's.... 2A>r.46\n75*box Rexall ...    _.\nOrderUee,60's.... 2*\".70\nISebexResisllWoim..    .,\n\u25a0 Tablets, 18's 2*\u00bb.61\nBelot.dpeko Artificial V\u00ab.!lla\nFlavouring, 3H \u00bb\u2022\u25a0 2\/OT.36\n\"SS?:.^.0!!. 2*..66\n\u2022fflR:..'; 2a\u00bb.26\n85*.Bottle\nPURETEST\nMINERAL\nOIL\n16 os.\nHeavy American\n2\/o'.86\nMo tube Toilet        .     \u201e.\nLanolin,2os  Z\/o'.ot>\n35* bot. Tincture\n(no rod), 2 os  2\/\u00bb'.36\nSOc bot. Witch Haiti .      --,\n4os  2\/o'.61\n$1.00 Bot.       \u25a0\nREXALL    ,\nCHERROSOTE\nCOUGH SYRUP\n80s.\n2**1.01\nSL2S bot, Rexall Cod liver\nCompound with _ - ,. _.\nCreo\u00abote,16os.2A\u00bb,l.Z6\nSTATI0NCRV\nBRUSHES\nC&MBS\nSUNDRIES\n20 sheets, 20 envelopes,\nLong Laid Vellum Finish\n2\/or .86\n$1.00 Ferndale Papeterie 24\nsheets, 24 envelopes, Decide\nEdge 2*r\u00bb1.0_\n$1.00BudriePapeterie,30sheets,\n28 envelopes, Decorated with\nbudgies... 2\/o''1.01\n15c Pussywillow Note\n\u2022Peds,Ruled...... 2\/of.l6\nMeWaterTreadNote-.^ ,,\nPads, Linen Finish ai**.*!\n25* Berkley Foldover Pads,\n, Vellum Finish.... 2\/o'.26\n.'Me:   '\u25a0\nWater Tread\nFoldover\nFADS\nLinen Finsb\n2\/o'.36\n40c Water Tread Letter 8i\u00bb\n.. Pads, Linen Finish 2\/o'.41\n45* Lord Baltimore   _,    .\u201e\nPads,Linen FJnish 2\/\u00bbr.46\nlie pte; Blue tine-'.     ..\nEnvelopes        :. mfsrfttt\n15* pig. Berkley Velliim Finish\n.  En*aopes.;..'...'2A>'.16\nWePkg. .\nREXALL\nLinen   Finish\n: Envelopes\n\u2022'-.  2\/or.16\n\u25a0 20* pkg. Lord Baltimoro\nEnvelopes,   '       _      _f\n. Linen Finish  *\/o'.^l\n$1.00 box Everyday Greeting\n' (.?ih'box)....2\/o'\u00bb1.01\nMe bet. Old Colony _ \u2022   __\nFountain Fen Ink. Zfe'.sil\nttt bet. Old Colony ...   .1\nMucilage. \u00a3tar.i\\\n6* Rexall Lead .      -_\nPeneils ...,2A\u00bbr.07\n75* Eclipse ^all-Point Pens:\nAssorted Colors... 2\/or .76\n$1.00 Eclipse Fountain-Pens,\n- Assorted Colors 2\/o''1.01\n-W -U-i.C-U-'s,.^,,'\nTooth Brushes.... iff.tt\\'.\nMe Rexall Nylon , ,.\n. TdothBrushes... Z\/-1.*\u00a9\n35c Rexall Tooth Brushes\nNylon bristles.... 2\/b'.36\n75* Rexall Klento    * ,    \"\nDental Plate Brush2\/0'.76\n50* Rexall Tooth Brushes, Nylon\nBristles, (in plastic ... -_\ntube) 2 shapes.,.. &><\" .01\n\u2014\u25a0 \u25a0 |jg\nREXALL\nKLENZO\nTOOTH\nBRUSHES\nNylon Bristles\n3 Shapes\n2\/or .61\n^ST..V..2V\u00bb2.01\n50* Rexall Nail Brushes,\nNylon-BrlsUee.,... 2ibr.51\n65* Rexall.Nail Bruehcs, *\n:Nylon Bristles....'2\/o'.66\n$l;50Hoir Brush, Cryatalux, Nylon'Bristles,     _     .,-\u00ab\nIndividual Box 2\/o''1.51\n40*DentalFloss(vial) 2\/o'.41\n75*  Defender  Latex Rubber\n. Gloves, tmall, medi-- * -   _.\nurn or large *'P',.70\n59* roll Rexall Pro-Cop Zino\nOxide Plaster l\"x_.   , *.-\n5yd*.;Kai_..^.. *f\".90\nISeRollREXALL\nPRO-CAP\nZINC OXIDE\nPLASTER\nM\"x8yds\nWATERPROOF\n2\/or .36\n20* roll Rexall Pro-Cap Zine .\nOxide Plaster 1\" x .. : *.,.\n1 yd.. Plain...... 2\/or,21\n45* pkg.'Firstaid Giuse Band-\nageTy'xlOyd... 2\/o'.46\nTSt Aratald Quielc Z,  'Zl\nActing Plaster.... 2je*rJ\u00a7\n$1.50\nMONOGRAM\nCLINICAL\nTHERMOMETER\n' In Cue\n2f**lM\ntie pr. Rexall Baby Pants,.\naylite Plastic,   ' _.   ..\nMedium or large.. \u2014\/O'.DO\n10* Stork Double-Tab Nipples\n(Packed3toaCarton)2\/o'.ll\n6 Nipples tor 31\n28e pkg. Klento       - *    .-\nRasor Blades, 5'e.. 2\/o'.26\n69* pkg. Permedgo Blades\n20 sin Dispenser..' 2\/o'.70\nMeRexaUlSbby'   *mi'\u00bb\nCombs, 8\"..,..\n2A-.11\nlie Rexall Gent's\nDrcssingCombs.\n15* Rexall Dressing\nassorted colors..\n15* Rexall Dressim\nGents or Ladies, j\n2a-.11\nombs,7H\".\n\u25a02f\u00bb.l6\nCombs,\n'2A-.16\n15* Rexall Curl Combs,\nPlasUo.8\"  2\/o'.16\n15* Rexall Fine       ' .   ,\"\nCombs.'Wlilte 2.A\u00bb16\n25* Rexall Rubber    \u201e,   \u00ab-\nPocket Combe.... 2\/0'.26\n11* Rexall Pocket Combs\nip case 2Aw.11\n\u2022\"\u25a0 ;'    25*\nREXALL\nHANDLE\ni    COMBS\n'lee Tone Colors\n2\/0'.26\n35* Rexall Ladies'\nCombs, Blaok, V\n2\/o',36\n$1.25 bot. Rexall Tastelesa Extract Coa Liver Compound,\nFortified witb Vitamin D,\n\u00bb*\u00ab, \u25a0\u25a02*\u00bb,_.26\n85* bot. Rexall Cherry Bark\nCapsules,25'o.... 2\/o'.76\nHe box Rexall Cold .,   _-\nTabbts, 24's 2*\u00bb.30\n$1.00 bot. Rexall HistB-Rex\nCompound with \u201e    ., - ,\na:p.&,20's.... 2*',1.01\n40* bot. iodised _ ._\nThroat Gargle, 8os.-*\",\u00abI\n45* jar Mustex Rub. 2\/or .46\nMe bot. Rexall Nose and Throat\nRelief with Ephe- \u00ab . \u00bb.\ndrine (Aqueous)    AfrJA 1\n40* box, Rexall Quinine Bromide Corop. (Laxative)\nTablet*jfi;.... 2*\u00bbAl\n65*Bottlo\nREXAIL\n.     REXILLANA\nCOUGH SYRUP\n4 os. 2for.66\nSO* bot. Rexall Tiny-Tot\nCoughSyiup,3os. 2\/0' .51\n45c bot. Rexall Tiny-Tot Nose\n.Drops, MS.os.... 2\/or.46\nSSebot.Bei_-lI_P.G.0. ...\nNc*Drops,los..  -WoO\n10c pkg. Bob Fins, Blaok or .\nBrown, 36 pins on _ .    , ,\nCard.........:..2'\u00ab'.H\n75* Doubbeided, Round, Make-\n^S2__r.:.-*?i-je\n75* Sun Glasses Assorted     .\n8hap\u00ab tor Men ,^_.\nand Women  Af.fO\n$1.25 Fancy Porcelain Ivy\nFlower Pots (Donkey and\nCart Design)... 2\/o'*1.26\n98c bot. ^Square Cor Polish\nond Cleaner....... 2\/o'.99\n.    MeBot.\n4-SQUARE\nFURNITURE\nPOLISH\n80s.\n2\/o'.61\nC0SMEIICS\nDENTAL   and   SHAVIHG   NEEDS\n2\/o'.86\n85c box Gardenia\nFace Powder\t\n$1.00 Box\n\u25a0LUE\nHYACINTHS\nFACE POWDER\n2\/o'\u00bb1.01\n$1.00 box My Night\nFace Powder. ..2\/or*1.61\n$1.25\nn PURSE VIALS\nIffijj Blue Hyacinthe,\nIBB Carnation, lilac,\n|H English Garden\nOSS    GardenisorCamelia\n2\/o'$1.26\n65* Puree Vial, Carnation, Blue\nHyacinthe, Gardenia, English\nGarden, Camelis, My Night,\n-&\u25a0  2A-.66.\n60c tin Dainty Deodorant\nPowder  2\/o'.61\n55* jar Silque Anti-Perspirant\nand Deodorant \u201e. -.\nCream............2A\u00bb.56\n.61\n60c Gardenia of Southern\nFrance \u2022 4 \u25a0\nlipsticks........ Hf\nSle Gardenia of Southern\nFrance'Rouge.... 2\/w.96\n75c bot. Langlois Lavender\nSmelling Salts.... 2\/o'.76\n55e Bottle\nSILQUE\nNAIL POLISH\nREMOVER\nOily, Perfumed\n2\/o'.56\n75* bot. Lorie Almond Bloom\nCream with Honey. 2\/or .76\n85c jar Gardenia of Southern\nFiance\/Cold, Liquefying    ,\n.Cleansing ori_      nOoa\nVanishing Cream. \u00abJ\u00bbfJJO,\nm    '        85e Bottle    '\u25a0'.'\ncjb GARDENIA\n33      of Southern France\nP LIQUID SKIN\n!l SOFTENER\nSB* 2\/o'.86\n55* bot. Langlois Cream of\nAlmonds 2\/\u00b0'.S6\n65* jar Rex-Erne,    a <__ _>_>\n'les:.....:... Z\/w.OD\n$1,25 pkg. Langlois Lavender,\nBath Crystals.. 2\/o'*l,26\n$1.75: Package\n.'2*r*1.76'r(\"*h''PuB;\n$1.35 pkg. Blue Hyacinthe\n:   or My Night : -    .J \u00ab'.\nBath-Crj\u00abil\u00ab.. 2A-\u00bb1.36\n$1.10 pkg. Lorio Bath Bulbs,: .\nPino Fragrance   .' \"M.\u00ab'.\nnpn<ily!:.....2\/b',l.ll\nStSSBox\"\nLANGLOIS\nLAVENDER\nBATH POWDER\n*  tlvlth Puff)     .\n2\/o'\u00bb1.51\n\u2022\n45* bot. Lorie Emulsified\nCoconut Oil . _'\nShampoo . ttf\"\n.46\n50* bot. Lorie Liquid -      _,_\nBrilliantino 2\/o'.51\nSS*Tube. ,',\nGLOS.KREME\nH\u00bbiR\ndressing\n.' 2a>' .56\n50*.bot. Lorio Hair\noa..;.....(.-...\n2m.51\n85c bot. Klento Coconut Oil\nShampoo with - \u201e. oa\nOlive Oil........ *\/\u00bb'*.tW>\nSS* tube Langlois Lavonder\nHair Cream -      \u00bb\u00ab\nDressing......... Af\".Wi\n85c bot. Silque\nShampoo\t\n2\/\" .86\nSSeBottlo\n\"365\"\nRHUMand\nQUININE\nHAIR TONIC\n2\/o'.86\n'.: 85* Box\nADRIENNE\nGUEST SOAP\n4 Cakes in Box\n2 A-.86\n15* cake Rexall Klento Germicidal Soap.. 2\/o'.36\n39* cake Klento Tar -      ,-\nSo\u00abp.....> 2*\u00bb.40\n27ecake Lorie TineBough,\nLavender Soap.. 2\/\u00b0'.28\n$1.00 box Gardenia Toilet Soap\n4cakesmbox.2\/or*1.0l\nMe tin Gardenia of SouMiern\nFrance Talcum.,. 2\/or.61\n10-Tin .\nLANGLOIS\nLAVENDER\nTALCUM\nWhite or Genta*\n1\n2 m .61\n$1.25 Package'\nGARDENIA\nCOLOGNE\n(Solid)        .\nPuns Site\n2a-%26\n85* bot. Lorie Old English\n.  Lavender, or Eau _      aa\nde-Cologne....... -\/o'.OO\n85* bot. Jasmine of Southern\nTrance, Eau de      -.    on\nCologne,Small... 2\/or.^6\n$1.35 bot;-Jasmine of Southern\nFrance Eau do - ., _.\n', Cologne, large 2A\u00bb'1.36\nM.85,Bottlo\nMY NIGHT\nerBLUE\nHYACINTHE\nEAU DE *\nCOLOGNE\n2\/o^l.86\n$1.00 bot. Apple Blossom or\nHoneysuckle Eau de Cologne,\n\u00abos.    ..2\/b'M.Ol\n$1.50 jar Blue Hyacintho or\nMy Night Cologne\n(Solidified).... 2\/or'l.Sl\nMe bot. \"365\" Bay Rhum or Old\nEnglish Lavender - - -\nBath Cologne...  2\/o'.86\n39* tube Klento       _,    .-\nDental Creme.... 2\/o'.40\n59* tube Klento Dental\n. Creme...........2\/or.60\nIteTu-\nREXADENT\nTOOTH '\nPOWDER\nPluorinsltd .\n2\/o'.60\nSS* tin Rexall\nDental Fix, 3 os.\n41* Brifen Tooth\nPowder........\n55* tin- Mi 31 Tooth Powder\nwith Sodium Per- \u201e      B.\nborate  Af.Oti\n2\/c .44\n2\/o'.56\nM22BBE3SM\n95e bot. Gardenia After.\nShaving Lotion.    2\/~-96\n$1.35 bot. Gardenia After\nShaving Lotion 2\/o'*1.36\n55c tube Klento \u25a0\nShaving Cream..\nSSeTub.'\nSTAG\nSHAVING\nCREAM\no'2\/\u00bb>36-\"\n59* tube Langlois,La-L\nvender Mentholated!\nShaviiig_CreMa Regular orBrusbleSs. .'.. 2\/\" .60\n53* bot. Rexall n,   e.A\n8ha\\ing!Lotion... *\/\u00b0'.84\n95c bot. Langlois Lavender\n%^..:,2f\u00bbM?\n$1.25 Langiois Lavender   \" \u25a0\n?phSiebow_)..2\/o'\u00bbi.26\n$1.00 Bot..'\n,     STAO\nAfter Stain  *\nLOTION\nPlastic Squeet*\n..Bpttle'.\n(plastic bo\ni\n1367   ^\u00a32\u00a3ii   Drug   Stores   Im   Casiadu\n m*.\n\u2014\nMalan1! Policy\nBy ARTHUR L.(_AV8HON\nJOHANNESBURG (AP) - White\nrulers are tightening their grip on\n'the key British African territories\nSouth of the Sahara In the face of\nchallenges by IjTegro millions.\n'Fear, suspicion and often death\nstalk Southi Central .and' East\njifrlca.Tory the whiter voters of\nthese regions;-grave hew decisions\nart imminent. ::\nj  South Africans vote April 15 In\n\u2022 general election to settle whether\nprime Minister Daniel Malan's government wlU get a new five-year\nmandate to carry on a bold but\nirtem poUcy(if:;race- separation.\n\u25a0-IMaian pictures the choice for the\nwhite South i Africana as this: continued dominance pf non-whites, or\nextinction.' ,;*.'    .'\n.SouthernRhodeslans decide AprU\n_. In a referendum whether to jpln\nf project, ior' a Central African\nfederation * with the colony ot\nNorthern Rhodesia and the protectorate of Nyasaland,\n' Rhodesian Spokesinen say privately that CAiW-sporisbred by the\nBritish gbvernnient-^in, time would\nbecome, a pn>Brltlsh bastion in\nAfrica \u25a0 blocking any ambitions\nSouth Africa hiay have NortbwardB.\nJlast African whites soon must\nchoose between using piirely mUi-\n[tary. or mUitary 'plus economic\nVhbahs to restore peace to the fer-\nlUe Kenyan WrmlandB where Mau\nWjaii tribesmen are terrorizing the\nboleiilsta,.\u25a0 '.'\u2022--., , i; \u25a0\u25a0. ,',.'\"\n^Governments in some of these\nregions have taljen on wide new\npowers to crush Any show of political defiance or physical resistance.\nDANGER SIGNS\n,: The Malan government supported\nty. the main opposition iparty got\nSscrliainentary authority to suspend\nIjtiest South .African laws whenever\n\"public safety\" demands it It now\nhas-the right to proclaim a state\nSf emergency, withdraw cIVU rights,\nban newspapers, set up concentration camps, corifi&aie property and\nfeg and JaUpassive resistors and\n\u25a0their supporters. * * '! * \u2022;'. \u25a0\n;\u25a0'; Since 1851,' Justice Minister C. R.\n_Swart has more than doubled the\njjumber of secret members bf the\nSbuth.Afclcan poUce force. An esti-\nrnated 200-strong group has the Job\nof hunting down elements considered subversive under broad tej-ms\nbf an act outlawing Communism.\ni'\u25a0'\u25a0 In the Rhodesia, end Nyasaland,\neivU authorities are standing by\nfa deal with any demonstrations\nagainst CAF that may come from\nthe 6,000,000 Negroes.\n.Disorder and instabilitj in Africa\nSouth of the Sahara undoubtedly\niMaken Western interests in the\nSMd war against Communism. For\nthose vast tracts of Jungles, swarrms,\nbushlsnds, giountains and .desent,\n(there 3,06O,<)00\" whites -rule there,\nhan 160,000,000 blacks, form more\nhan a niahpower -reservoir,\nifliey give forth such minerals\nis. manganese, diamonds, copper,\n(Old, thorium, vanadium and uran-\num. \u25a0;\u201e\u201e.,\n* What's more, should the AUIes\night a global war, South Africa\nrould be an essential refuelling\ntotlon and workshop.\nChancellor lists\nlew Aj\u00a7 Bangers\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014Dr. E. P. Scar-\nett, chancellor bf the University of\niiberta. says \"the! age of the com-\naon man'' has brought many perils\nthe moral and cultured values of\nlyUizatibn. \u2022'.*;\u25a0'\nIn an address here, Dr. Scarlett\naid educationists now have to com-\nlete with radio, television, movies,\nracket books and organized sports,\ntie old principles of morality, aes-\nhetics and culture were in a state\nf .flux and new ideas of. taste and\norality were dictated by persons\nfho,_ through no fault of their, own,\nad-been cut off from the traditions\nnd standards of civilized society of\niepast     ,'.\n'A new type of culture Is arls-\n$\" said Dr.'Scarlett. \"And it may\ne one' that is not familiar to us.\n\"pur Anglo-Saxon culture has\neen mainly a literary one. built\nround the library. The hew\"- cul-\nire .may be of a; different kind.\" ;\nIFFERENT MEDIA\nThe chancellor said universities'\nre trying to use and develop all\nIt different media, with this\njbught in mind. Never before, was\n1'ere such a ferment in education\ni officials sought to meet and cope\n:1th the trend of the times.\nEducation was in many woys\n.erely a reflection of the modes\nad ideals of society. The idea that\nJucation was becoming mere vo-\nitlonal training to fit the student\n*r a Job was the result of certain\nleals developed by contemporary\n(clety.\nDr. Scarlett said the product ot\nIs type of education is an aimless,\nrooted people who, lack a sense\nresponsibility. '\nAcK Stability\n\"In time'df crisis these people will\nlien to any demagogue' who\nimes along,\" he said; - '\nThere was ho time now to fuss\nioiit the contents of curricula bi-\n.it need for new buildings. Rather,\nwas imperative, within this gen-\nation, to generate new and con-\nructive moral principles ln-aoclety\nhich are in harmony with tba\nleds of the time.'\n\"If we do not counteract the\nngerous elements ln the situation,\nrflization, as we know it is doom-\n.\" Dr.-Scarlett.said.;!.i. .\nThe most Important steps would\nve to be made in the homes, since\nwas there that .moral standards\nire implanted in children and the\nII to team was formed.\nLost Paintings\nFound Good Friday\nCHICAGO (CP1\u2014Two men were\narrested' Friday' In\" connection with\nthe theft of nine oil paintings including three old masterpieces from\nSt' Joseph's Cathedral In Bards-\ntown, Ky, last November. Authorities picked up Norton I. Kretske, 47,\na lawyer, arid Gus Manotelli, 52, a\nship. Stewart os they were carrying\nfour paintings, on-busy Michigan\navenuerMve \"other-paintings were\nrecovered from a dealer, Rt Rev.\nJames H. Willett, pastor of St. Joseph's said the recovery wat. a\n\"wonderful EosteV gift.\"   *\n\"\u25a0\"\u25a0   Neither Natives Nor Wild Animals\nAs Dangerods as S. African Roads\nm\n\/ By,BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)'4 The biggest danger to movie' makers In\ndarkest Africa is neither!the natives nor tlie wUd animals. It's the\nroads.\nThat's the report from Robert\nSurtees, first of the Hollywood crew\nto return from shooting the Ava\nGardner-Clark Gable;  epic,   \"Mo-\ngarabo.\" The* ace cameraman arrived here in time to collect an Oscar\nfor bis filming of \"The Bad and\nthe Beautiful\"\n.\"The toughest things we faced ih\nAfrica were, In this order: Roads,\nweather, natives and animals.       '.,\n\".The roads in Africa are unbe-\nUevably bad. You- just can't pick\nup one day, travel 100 miles arid\nstatf shooting the pext dy, as you\ncompany were killed in road acci-\ndo In this country .. .three of our\ndents.\"\nThe \"Mogambo\" company worked In British East Africa, scene of\nterrorism by the Mau Maus. Surtees\nsdid that murders were reported in\nthe vicinity, but no violence was\nseen\",.'\n\"There was a rumor that the\nMau Maus were going to takon shot\nat Gable, in order to attract attention to their movement,\" he remarked.\nFord,; the director, moved the location because of It\n'..fXtrte .day'-the police ,ceme and\ntook al lour native drivers Into custody. All but two of them were' returned later. Apparently the two\nwere Mau Maus.\"\nTlie namlals were the least of\ntheir problems, the cornerman added. There'were a lot of lions across\nthe river from.one of their camps\nand .they'd raise a ruckus t night\nAVA NOT TOO;HAPI\u00bbY\nSurtees said Gable took to Africa*\nlike a great' white hunter. Miss\nGordner was less enthusiastic*about\nlife in the wilds. She had her food\nflown in, but the crew claimed' they\nate better than she did.\nAva's hubby, Frank Sinatra, visited the location tljree times, ber\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1953 \u2014 7\nGrant licenses\nFer Private TV\nOTTAWA, (CP)-The cabinet has\ngranted applications for'seven prl-\ntween engagements ln the U.S. Surtees said he was a great help for.\nmorale! * organizing a < Christmas\nshow .and keeping up the spirits of\nthe home-sick fUm makers.   < .    .\nvately-owned television .stations-;\nCanada's first, and one private radio\nstation, Transport Minister Chevrier\nannounced Saturday.\nThe TV stotions are to'be at Sydney, N.S., St John, N.B., Quebec\nCity, Windsor,. London, Hamilton\nand Sudbury, Ont The radio station\nwill be at Villo St. Georges, Beauce\ncounty, Que.\nThi. CBC board of governors rec- >\nommended approval of thd TV applications March SO, and the technical division of the transport department also endorsed them.\nHone 144 for classified\nWHAT\n\/ \u25a0,'-\u25a0','\u25a0 \\    o \u25a0  \" -.\u2022_\nMAKES A\nLEADER ?\nSTY Lc,n. &.v.t Noticeably\nsuperior quality...esp. in regard\nio... fashion distinction.\n-THE CONCISE OXFORD DICTIONARY\nIT'S SO NOTICEABLE\nTHIS YEAR-tke hxymg\ntrend is following me     \"<,'\nstyle trend. -More; ana shore\npeople are swinging to v    .\nFord of Canada's style-    >;\nI \"setting,cars. Distinction\nmakes style leadership...\nH-%. public prerere_ri.ce\nconfirms it\nX\nFORD OF CAN ADA\n m*r\ni. :,.W:.:i|:p.n. in.im., ii.flllli..\n1  !\t\n^53\n8 \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1953\nGETTING IN S H A P E\u2014Joyce McClung, second baseman for the Tomboys, one of the nation's better women's Softball\nteams, leaps high after a' line drive during spring training at\nAtlanta, Ga. The team will make a nationwide tour this summer.\nTRAFFIC'S   AT  A   S T A N D $ T I L L \u2014 Police attach towline to one of two cars that\nwere stopped dead by earth slides resulting from rainstorm en Cross Island Parkway, New York City.\nHELP   W A N T E D \u2014 Sultana II tries to lead her three-months-old cub out of moat Into which\ntiny polar bear tell at Milwaukee's Washington Park -Zoo. Ramp waa built to get bears out.,\nANGLER'S  AIDE-\nActress Shlrlej Tegge puts together a trout fly in Hollywood.\nShe's made trout flies a paying\nhobby since high school days tn\nIron River, Mich.\nJF*'** n^B\nK*T\nW\\W   '                      H\nF^'S\n__fe l\n\u25a0HI                   \\ V\n\" - * - \u25a0 . .- 'H\n:\":'.                    ' \u25a0?0':.-::::0^:,\nvwH|\ntiitftfc\n\u201eo\u00bb\n:^:0^0'^y: '.-\u25a0\u25a0\n&W_lj__m\n1M!__8H\nm!^_*amm\nWELL-BALANCED TOT- Teresa Ann Mascio, W\nweeks old, may have trouble sitting up but none standing aa sho\nbalances herself on her mother's palm In their Philadelphia horn*.\nROOM FOREVERYBOD Y-. Airman 2\/e Richard K.\nMackey, Miami. Fla., who is i ttt1.1 Inches tall and ls believed\nte be the smallest man in Air Force, chats with Airman Z\/c Floyd\nO. HunnicuU, ef Fort Worth, at Carswell Air Force Base, Texa\u00a3.\nLEISURE TIME PAYS 0FF_ Lt. Chris Ceorgeff.\nformer Toledo art student now with V. S. Air Force, paints religious sceno in Frankfurt, Germany, billet. HU work cella well\nIN   NEW FIELD-Mrs.\n8, 3. Gall, the Betty Compson of\nsilent screen days.shows a cigarette-snuffing ash tray she and\nher   husband1 manufacture   in\nGlendale, Cal.\nNEW   CHURCH   S H A RE \u2014 Men attend a mission In new Blessed Sacrament R. C. Church\nla Holyolsc, Man, which departs trom traditional church architecture by being octagonal in shape.\n__________________\nWELCOMED  TO  FASHION'S  H 0 M E-Alice\nCorr, center, 19-year-old Queen ot Cotton Irom Seima, Ala,, waves\nupon her arrival at Orly Field, Paris. On hand to greet her are\ncotton dress-garbed Paris mannequins, Sylvana, left and Yvonne.\nB E A UTY   KN OWS   N 0   AG E_ Mrs. Fannie Simp-\n. son, 99, of Vergennes, Vt\u201e inspects her first haircut and permanent.\nHolding mirror Is beautician Butb Merrill who did hair-styling.\nNOMINATED -William\nHoward Taft III, Gaelic-speak- '\nlng sen of Senate Republican\nleader Taft, has been nominated\nby President Elsenhower as U.S.\nAmbassador to Ireland.\nSWEET  STYLE-candy-\nstriped hat, gloves and blouse in\npink and white are the eye-\ncatchers as worn with a gray\ncoat dress by model in a London\napring fashion show.\nSAFE AIRY PERCH\u2014 These London babies plag In \u00bb\nmetal cage outside a window of their second-story home. Cage\nprovides for sate airing of children who live far from parks.'\n pp^iwlp^^\n ,\u2014__ _\u2014\n-*rr-m\nii,,\\mmwtwwm,mv.uwmmmmmm*^mm**\n'^3-S\n(hound, the.\nKOOTENAY:* Sp&ti-\nBy  LEN WALKER\nTwo questions ot relative importance to the future hockey picture\nIn Nelson, and the causa* of an\nabundance of controversy , among\npuck tans all up and down sports\nalley, will likely be answered thit\ncoming'weekend, If rumors are true\nthat the hockey club will be holding their annual meeting. It would\nmark the first time In many a moon\nthat the meeting was, held thlt\nearly. I gather the reaton for. thlt\nit because ot pressure by the fans,\nwho support the club, ond rightly\nso, for Uiey have the right to know\nin which direction we are headed.\nLikely, tha flrtt question, and by\nfar the most controversial will deal\nwith the poaching chorea ot the\nLeafs for the.coming year. Thlt will,\nif my. guess is right, be debated at\ngreat length before a decision ia\nmade.   ... V\nWith JSddle Wares' contract having expired, many fans feel that a\n.time for a change has arrived, while\nothers would like to see Eddie back\nin for another term. ' '\nI.believe that:many changes \\yill\nbe made this yoar, including bringing in an executive that will go bll\nout to.bring Nelton that much\nneeded league championship. Already it is Said that threo.men,\nArchie * Burnie, - manager of tiie\nBank of Montreal,'. George A.\nHoover, former Civic Centre Commissioner, and Dr. Ross M. McCullough,* have stated their' willingness\nto run for the three vacancies on\nthe executive.\nOn the coaching subject, I believe\nthat Nelson Is due for a change, fpr\nany time a coach remains in one\nplace too long, things seem to get\nln a rut. Then thoro is a lack of\ndiscipline that is needed to have a\nwinning club. Many fans feel that\nthis, was so in th'e final game against\nthe,Flyers, Many olso claim that\nour boys never did learn how to\ndump that puck out of their own\nend, yet Wares himself ls a master\nat this, -\nAlthough Wares has ln the past\nproved that.he is a good coach I\nalong Hvlth many more can see the\nwriting on the wall, If only for the\nreason of.using the same money for\na playing coach who will be'playing\nin all or almost oil the Leafs games,\nor for the securing of other players,\nThis would appear, to:be sound\nreasoning, for It is.the tans and ihe\nsupporters of tho booster club who\nhelp' the' team by' their donations\nof cash, and they want to have it\nspent in the best possible way.\nHere and there .... ,See Bobby\nMcNabb' back*in town after spending the' winter months playing in\nthe nets for the Noranda hpckoy\nclub which was defeated by Tlm-\nmina. Bobby, a couple of years ago,\nwob up. With the Leafs ior a speil-r\nBob , Gilhooly spent the Easter\nweekend in Calgary \u2014 Jimmy\nMalacko, we understand, made the\ntrip over to Lethbrldge to do a little\nvisiting, and if rumors become fact\nthen expect to see Jimmy marching\nto.the altar very shortly \u2014 Lea\nHyssop, tells me that he along with\n'teyeral other, hockey Players will\nbe,turning but on,one of the fastball, elubs^I hear that Jhnmy\nLowe will be trying out for the\nTigers on the baseball diamond \u2014\nThe* three busiest men at the badminton tournament on Friday were\nFred Thompson, Bruce Latremouille\nand, Al Wilson who kept events\nrolling along Smoothly.       ,\nCanadiens in Series\nCHICAGO (CP) - 'Rookie\nJacques Plante, who . took oyer\nnetmlndlna duties after, veteran\n. Gorry McNeil asked to. bo relieved, earned a shutout with a steady\nperformance Saturday night at\nMontreal Canadiens defeated Chicago Black Hawke 3-0 to avert\nelimination from the Stanley Cup\nplayoffs, '  '\nA crowd ot 15,894 saw the Canadians bottle up the Chicago attack\nwhile scoring a goal in.the first\nperiod and two in the second. The\nwin Ued the best-of-seven semifinal at 3-3 and sent the teams back\nto Montreal for the seventh and\ndeciding game Tuesday; night' -\nCoach Dick' Irvln announced before-the game that McNeil had ask-\n\u25a0,ii to be relieved \"tor the gbod of\nthe team.\" Friends said McNeil felt\nlargely responsible, for Montreal's\nthree straight defeats after winning\nthe first two games of the series.\nPlante, 24, called up from Buffalo\nafter the American Hockey League\nseason, played a steady game although he had considerably less\nheavy work than Chicago goalie Al\nRollins.., *\nPlante had 23 saves to.'38 for\nRollins but he operated well under\npressure on two occasions when\nCanadiens were .a,man short.ond\nChicago turned.on a power play.\nBernle (Boom Boom) Geoffrlon\nscored in the first.period as the\nCanadiens took* a 1-6 lead. Maurice\n(Rocket) Richard got an unassisted\ngoal early in the second period and\nKenny Mosdell wound up the scoring later in the same frame; ' :\nGeoffrion's goal came off a pass\nfrom Dickie Moore, who picked up,\nthe loose puck when Bill Mosienko\nof the Hawks missed a pass. Geoffrlon fired bis hot one at Rollins!\nfrom 15 feet .ont then skated in to\nslap the1 rebound Into the, corner.\nRichard's goal, his' second of the\nseries,'came,at 3:23. He lofted the\npuck against the back boards, then\nraced lh to pick it up and poke it\nin off iftolltos!' skate.\nCalum Mackay and Loren Davis,\nup from the minors along) with\nKenny Mazur of' Victoria, carried\nthe puck ln and Mosdell tipped it\npast Rollins for the third goal, at\n16:50.     \u2022    ,   . .\u2022.-.;.\u2022\nThe'game was cleanly played.\nOnly thtee minor penalties were\ncalled, \u2014 two against Mackay of\nthe Cqnadlens and one against Jim\nPeters', of: the Hawks \u2014 compared\nwith the 18 called in the. game in\nMontreal last Thursday when, the\nHawk*, won 4-20 ..'-VV-'-M ;\n.Iryin announce- after the game\nthat, he would stick with'Plante, in\ngoal for the final contest.\nPlante played like a veteran although he admitted he was nervous\nfor a few minutes early in the first\nperiod. That was all changed, however, when Jim McFadden swept ln\non the Montreal goal and let go a\nhot one that Plante picked neaUy\noff'the Corner.\n'fl-relaxed after that,\" Plante said\nlater, \"I jiist happened to. pick the\nright corner to cover when the shot\ncame in, and I stooped it,\nIrvin . also thought that save\nmight have been, the turning point.\n\"Plante might have saved tl)e\ngame with that first save,\" he said.\n\"We picked up confidence.\"\nSummary:    '\nFirst period \u2014 Montreal, Geoffrlon   (Moore)  5:59.\n,. penalty \u2014.Mackay.\nSecond period \u2014 Montreal, Richard 3:23; Montreal, Mosdell (Mackay, Davis) 16:50.\nPenalty.\u2014 Mackay.\nThird periods No scoring.\nPenalty \u2014 Peters,\nI\nNAKUSP \u2014 The annual tournament of the Arrow Lakes-Slocan\nDistrict Badminton Association\nheld in Nakusp saw players in action from Slocan City, New Denver,\nBurton, Needles-Edgewood, Nakusp and Brouse.\nCup for the ladies' single champ-\ni.Sl-4\nThis advertisement is not published\ndisplayed by The Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nionship was awarded to Miss Peggy\nAdams of the Burton Club, men's\nsingles* cup went to Ian McLeod\nof Slocan City; June Orchard and\nMarlon Smith,playing tor Nakusp\nwon ladies' doubles; men's doubles\nwas won by Ian McLeod and Bob\nSmedbol for Slocan City; mixed\ndoubles for Slocan City by Ian\nMcLeod and Lorlne Life.\nAt the,annual meeting officers\nelected were president Mrs. R.\nCrellin, vice-president, Don Godfrey; secretary-treasiirer Mrs. T,\nHarrop. Next year the tournament\nwill be held in New Denver.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nCleveland 12, New York. N 14.\nWashington 3, Cincinnati A 2.\nSyracuse 1, Cincinnati B 5.\n. St.  Louis A 3, Brooke Medical\nCentre X\nSt Louis N 13; Houston 6.\nPhilidelphla A 12, Columbus 0.\nPhlladelphiu.N 4, Memphis 2.\nNew York A 8, Atlanta 2.\nPittsburgh  15, Jacksonville  2.\nBoston fl,1 Birmingham 3,\nSt. Louis A 5, Chicago N 7.\nMAY PURCHASE* BROWNS   .\nST. LOOjS.fAISr'V: A .group of\nbusiness!;, men.'pact Saturday and\norganized tb make plans for a possible purchase,of St. Louis Browns\nto assure that tiie club remains in\nSt Louis,:'?'-,.!.-'..-!,-.', .\"\nJ. Herndort kirkland, head of a\ntravel agency, was named chairman of the group and Willis E\nJohnson, travelling secretary of the\nBrowns for pearly 25 years, was\nnamed secretary.\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\n8th Game iForeed,\nVs Decide Crown\n| EDMONTON (CP) - !Ponoka\nStampeders drew a 5-5 overtime tie\nwith Trail Smoke Eaters here Saturday night to force their best-of-\nthree Western intermediate hockey\nsemi-final in a fourth game.\nThe winner of tonight's game\nhere will meet Kenora Thistles, who\ncleaned up their best of five series\nin Brandon with a .5-4 win over\nDauphin,       .\nTrail defenceman. Ed Rohatynskl\nsaved the game for ihe Smoke Eaters. He forced a 4-4 tie in the last\nminutes of the third period, and\nnotched the tying counter In the 10-\nmlriute overtime.\nAl Shantz and Bing Merluk each\nscored twice for Ponoka, with Dave\nShantz adding the single.\nKwasney, Sission and, Stanton accounted for the other Trail goals..\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Results of soccer\nmatches Saturday in the United\nKingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I *\nArsenal 5, Liverpool 3.\nAston Villa 2, Burnley 0.\nBlackpool 2, W. Bromwlch 0.,\nBolton W 2, Tottenham H 3.\nCharlton A 1, Manchester C 2.\nChelsea 1,, Newcastle U 2.\nDerby C 3,. Middlesbrough 3.\nManchester U* 1, Cardiff C '4.\nPortsmouth 5, Sheffield W 2.\nSunderland 2,*Preston NE 2.\nWolverhampton, W 3, Stoke C 0. '\nDlvltlon II\nBarnsley 0, Southampton 1.\nBlackburn R 1, LutohTl.\nBrentford 1, Rotherham U 1.\nEverton 2, Plymouth A 0.\nHuddersfield T1, Lelcester.C, 0.\nHull City 2, Birmingham C 0.\nLincoln City 4, Bury 0.   '\nNottingham F 2, Leeds U 1,\nSheffield U 2, Notts County 1.\nSwansea T 4, West Ham 1.\nDivision III (Southern)\nBournemouth 1, Millwall 1.\nBrighton 1, Coventry C 1.\nBristol C 0, Aldershot 0.\nIpswich T 5,* Walsall 0.\nCrystal P 3, Colchester U 1.\nLeytoii'O 0,,Shrewsbury T 0.\nNewport CI, Norwich C 1...\n,NorUiam\u00bbtoB*T4filQueen's*PR 2,\nReading* 3, Gilllngham 2. \u2022\nSouthend U 2, Bristol R 1.\ni Torquay u 3^ Swindon T 1,\nWatford 3, Exeter C 1.\nDlvltlon III (Northern)\nBradford C 4, Workington 0.\nCarlisle U 0, Barrow 0.\nChester 2, Mansfield T 2,\nCrewe Alex 2r* Bradford 3.\nDarlington 1, Tranmere R 2.\nGateshead 1, York City 1.\nHartlepools U 2, Grimsby Town 0,\nPort Vale 1, Oldham A 1.\nRochdale 0, Chesterfield 2.\nScunthorpe U 1, Halifax T 1.'\nSouthport 1, Wrexham 0.\nStockport C 2, Accrlngton S 1.\nScottish Cup Seml-Flnalt\nAberdeen 1, Third Lanark 1.\nHearts 1, Rangers! 2.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDlvltlon A\nDundee 4, Celtic 0.\nEast Fife 7, St. Mirren 0.   >\nFalkirk 2, Motherwell 1.\nHibernians 1, Partick T 1.   ,\nQueen of S 1, Ralth R 1.\nDlvltlon B\nDumbarton 4, Stirling A 1.\nDunfermline A 0, Ayr U 1.\nForfar A 1, Dundee U 3.   -.\nHamilton A 2, Stenhousemulr 1.\nKilmarnock 4, Arbroath 0.\nMorton 4, Alloa 1.\nSt. Johnstone 1, Cowdenbeath 2,\nIRISH LEAGUE\nBallymena U 4, Distillery 0.   -\nBangor 0, Crusaders 3.\nGlentoran 7, Cliftonvllle 1.\nLinfleld 2, Ards 0.\nPortadown 1, Coleraine 1.\nLONDON   (Reuters)\u2014Results of\nGood Friday soccer matches in the\nUnited Kingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE (Division I)\nBlackpool 2, Derby County 1\nBolton W. 5, Sunderland 0\nBurnley 2,'Preston North End 2\nCharlton A. 2, Manchester United\n2 (two)\nChelsea 1, Arsenal 1\nLiverpool 2, Cardiff City 1\nManchester City 3, Sheffield W. 1\nNewcastle U. 1, Middlesbrough 0\nPortsmouth 2, Wolverhamton 2\nTottenham H, 1, Stoke City 0\n(Division II)\nBlackburn Rovers 2, Barnsley 01\nBrentford 0, Swansea Town 0\nBury 1, Luton Town 0\nDoncaster R. 1, Birmingham C. 0\n. Lincoln City 2, Hull City 1\n' Notts County 0, Plymouth Argyle 4\nWest Ham United 1, Fulham 2,\n(Division III Southern)\nAldershot 1, Exeter City 1\nBrighton 4, Walsall 2\nBristol C. 1,.Bournemouth 1\nColchester U. 0, Coventry C. 1   ',\nGilllngham 4, Shrewsbury Town.2\nLeyton Orient 3, Norwich City 1\nMilwall 2, Queen's P.R. 1\nNewport C. 1, Watford 1.\nReading 4, Torquay United 1\nSouthend U. 2, Crystal Palace 2\nSwindon T. 1, Bristol 'Rovers, 3\n(Division III Northern)\nCarlisle U. 4, Bradford C. 4\nCrewe Alex. 2, Scunthorpe U, 0\nDarlington 1, Gateshead 0\nGrimsby T. 2\u201eYork*C. 1\nHartlepools United 2, Rochdale 1\nOldham A. 3, Accrlngton S, 0\nPort Vale 1, Chester 1\nSouthport 3, Stockport C. 0\nTranmere R, 2, Barrow 0\nWorkington 2, Bradford 2\nWrexham 2, Chesterfield 2.\nKELOWNA,  B.C.  (CP)  - An\neighth game will be played Monday night to deoldo tho winner of\ntho\">'8avago Cup of British Columbia senior amateur hookey\"\u2014\nSpokane Flyers or Pentlcton V't,\nAn additional game id what originally was scheduled as a best-of-\nseven |erles became necessary Saturday, night whon Flyera'took'n 4;3\nWin' oVe'r V's here,' Bie vijitory'Ml\nthe. series  even  at  three  gdmes\naplece.with one .game, tied.\"   \"\nPentlcton will bo the site of the\nnext gome. - Both teanis have seven\nof the eight points required, to win\nthe. cup.taken, last 'year by Trail\nSmoke. Eaters.\",:    <_-\u25a0'\u25a0\/\u25a0*.\nWeakened by injuries.but playing\nthb finest; game of the series, Flyers\nwere\" headed only\\ bate. Twice .they\nwcnt'aheadonly to hnvc.V's squaro\nthecotintv *. \",.,   ,;.\nPenalties, i something both * teams\nshied'from all the way, pr6Ved the\nundoing of * Vs. While .two* men\nshort in tile final minutes of tho\ngome, Flyers' Hughlo Scott;:.used\nonly sparingly in his first outing\nsince he was injured 'earlier in' the\nseries; fired home a* high shot Into\nthe right hahd corrier of IV*n> Me-\nL'ellarid's :cage' i(or .the.wlnnitr.! ,\nI%ers,\nTonight\nDick Butler and Tom Hodges\ntallied for Spokane in the first\nwhile .Grant Warwick and Jack Mclntyre retaliated for Pentlcton to\nknot the period nt two-all, Playlng-\ncoech Scoop Bentley made lt 3-2\nearly in the seeond only to. have\n{Grant Warwick zoom ln five\nminutes later for his second goal\nlot the night With Bernle Grebinsky and Jack Miller out for the\nrest of tho series, Flyers.will take\nto the lea in the eighth game with\nthe samo 12 men they used Saturday night: '.'* -,   :, ,    '\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nSummary: ;,\nU Wrst period '\u2014 1, Pentlcton, G.\nWarwick, (D. Warwick,. Mclntyre)\n3:34; 2, Spokane, Butler\" (Tilson,\nReeves) 3:53; 3, Spokane', Hodges\nj(Tdoie,. McNalley).10:14;-4, Pentlcton1 .Mclntyre (Berry) 19:45.\nPenalties \u2014 Johnston, McAvoy,\nSeeves, Butler.\n!  Second, period  \u2014 3;  Spokane,\nBentley   (Tilson, Rozzini) .4:18; 6,\nPentlfctort. G,- l^arwclk (D. War-\n\u2022wick) 9:40.    \u25a0     \"-.'\u25a0     '\u2022',-';\n*  Penalties \u2014 B. Warwick, Berry.\n;  Third' period \u2014 7, Spokane; Scott\n';17:SQ.;.. -..'\u25a0 -       '\u25a0,.--.\n; '.Penalties  \u2014  BuUer,   Luke,  B.\nWarwick (minor and major), Berry.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1953 \u2014 9'\nBruins Oust\nFrom Stanley Cup Flay\nBOSTON (CP) \u2014 Eddie Sandford\nsparked the grand bid men of Boston Sunday night with' a goal and\ntwo assists as the. Bruins knocked\nthe mighty Detroit Red Wings out\nof Stanley Clip competition'with a\n4-2 semi-final series by the ..tame\nmargin.,', , ,'!\nSandford got*the first goal and\nset up the'Bruins' next two tallies\nat the under-rated Boston crew got\ntheir fourth triumph in six playoff\nstarts against the National Hockey\nLeague champions' and Stanley Cup\ndefenders*.' ',..' ,''*.* !\u25a0','.\"\u25a0!'': !-\u2022; i    '\nSandford started the Red Wings'\ndownfall during the fourth minute\nof blistering'aqtion.when he slapped\nin Johnny Pelrson's set-up from the\nedge of the crease. At 11:38-in the\nsecond. session, 'Sandford lashed a\n20-f opt .drive, that Petirabri ticked in,\nand about midway through the finale, Fleming Mackell rifled n 50-foot\nshot over \u2022 Terry ' SaWchUk's'1-ft\n*bijlder'tfn a Sandford:pasa,   \u25a0\n.The Red\u2022 -Wings, who' had won\nfive consecutive' league titles, Wore\nblanked by goalie! Sugar Jim Henry\nuntil 18:05 ' of the second session,\nWhen. John Wilson polished. off- -a\nfive-man drive by setting up Reg\nSinclair in front of the net\n* Trailing by a-3-1 margin late in\nthe final period, the \"Red Wings\nbattled' furiously and their hopes\nsoared, when captain Ted Lindsay\nslapped in a six-footer with Gordie\nHowe ahd Red Kelly assisting.\nWhile the Red Wings were gath*\nerlng themselves for their closing\ndrive,- rookie Leo Lablne stole the\npuck out ot a scrimmage and doom*\ned the Wings by blasting Sawchuk\nfor. an unassisted goal trom 10 feet\nout.\nThe   Wings,   who had a 42-\nshooting edge, pulled Sawchuk out\not the goal with 90 seconds to go,\nbut the Bruins kept their cageiclear\nuntil the final bell.\nThe Bi'uins, in the Stanley Cup\nfinal round for the first time since\n1946, now mark time' until Montreal\nCanadiens and Chicago Black\nHawks, now tied at three games\neach, end their best-of-seven semi\nfinal series in Montreal Tuesday\nnifcht.\nSummary: :\u25a0:. \u25a0\nFirst period: Boston, Sandford\n(Pelrson, Mackell) 3:41.   .\nPenalties: Leswlck 2:43, Sandford\n7:36, Godfrey 18:56.'   f,\nSecond period: .Boston, Pelrson\n(Sandford) li:36; Detroit, Sinclair\n(Wilson) 18:05.., . '\n^*enalty:*Pav\u00abHch 12:0*.\nThird period: Boston, Mackell\nSandford) 11:19; Detroit, Lindsay\n(Howe, Kelly) 13:27; Boston, La-\nbine 17:36.\nPenalties: Schh^dt, PryBtai 13:82,\nBritish Ri*\u00a3tyy\n. London Irish 14, North Ireland-11,\nBarnstaple 3, Clifton 10.\"\"\nBath 16,. London Scottish 3.        .\nBedford 17, Percy Park 11. :\u2022\nBirkenhead P 3, oRsslyh P 6.   \u2022\nBradford 16, Waterloo 3.    ' -.-\nBridgend '3, Cross Keys 0.\nBristol 6, Leicester 0. .\nCamborne 3, St. Thomas Hosp. 13.\nCardiff 14, Barbarians 0;'\"   \"',\nCheltenham'3, Sale 8.     '     '   .\nDolphin* Cork 20, Headlngly 0.\nEbbw Vale 6,'Univ. tAhletlc 5.\nExeter. 18,. Cranleighans 16.     -\nGloucester 3, London Welsh 3.\nLlannolly 17, Nuneaton 9.\nMaesteg 8, Devonport 3..\nNeath 14, Newbridge 8.    .\nNewport S, Aberavon 8. ,\n. Penzance 0, Wasps 8.\nPlymouth A 3, Merchant Taylor 3,\nPontypopl 3, \u25a0 Northampton 9.,\nSaint Ives 21, Old Paulines 0.\nStroudd, Notts3.\nSwansea 12, Harlequins 8,      .   -\nTaunton 9, Saracens 8.\nTorquay A 6, Mlllhilllans IL-   \u2022'\nPortsmouth 11, Blackheath 11.\nWeston 8, Moseley 17\nGlasgow'HIgh 3, Coventry 16\/\n,\u00bb' *''\u25a0\nn spares\nBob MacDonald led all bowlers\nMonday night when he rolled' a\n709 aggregate. Bob- had singles: of\n223,289. and '307: Bob Bennett took\nthe singles with a ,320. HIS aggregate was 7.59. Others bowling'in the\n700s were George Lano 788,\" and\nClyde Mills with a 704. Bowling\n600s were Jack' Koenig 660, Stan\nGrill 656,. Charlie Burdett 630,\nNorm Hamson 655, - Larry MpMatlj\n603, Len Woods 614, George Belyk\n617, Les.Hood 611 and' BUI Cart*\nwrlght.609.. I     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0' O.\nTeam honors went to* the-Royals\nwith on aggregate ot 3182\" and thi\nJacks with a tingles of 1125,   '   ,\nKay Zabawa and Betty Maloney\ntook* the honors in the Wonien's\nsenior league Tuesday night with\nKay capturing the singles with 313\nand: Betty, taking the., aggregate\nwlUr a 797; Team honors lyent tq\nthe Watson team with a single of\n1063: and ah aggregate of 2846.\nBowling in the 600s were O. Kelley 671,, Jean Buttier 660, babe]\nLocatelll 651, Kay Zabawa 660,\nRose Browne 620 and Lena Koehle\n602\/: \u25a0-\u25a0'\u25a0 .\nTop place In the league standing\nwith 18. points ls shared by Wateret\nand MacDougall,. Browne follows\nwith, 16. In thirjl'place with 15\npoints.,'are. Maloney, Spiers .and\nWaitson..'     ' '*''    .\".'-\",'\u25a0'\nGREENWOOD PUYERS\nTO OLIY-R.TOVI-NEY\nGREENWOOD \u2014 Somo 13 players from the Greenwood badminton\nclubs journeyed,to Oliver to take\npart in the southern Okanagan badminton, tournament. The' clubs\nfailed to bring any trophies back,\nbut members all spent an enjoyable time.' '..-\u2022\nPROGRAM OF FUN\nFOR NAKUSP\nSHUTTLE CLUB\niNAKUSP, - Badminton for the\nybung people wound up at the\nBrouse Hall in* the form of a party.\nIn- the junior group Myrna Steen*\nhbtf and Billie Henket tied for\nfirst place. In the tie breaker Billie\nwon a canary for first place apd\nMyrna was awarded second prize.\nIn.the older'group Helen Fldek\nahd David Urban each won a\" Canary, flaying for the adults, Robert\nHamllng defeated Gordon -Haines.\nFollowing the badminton contest\ngames and an amateur program\nwore enjoyed. Winners for the boys\nwere Richard Pakula and Lawrei\nRbrlCk, Toshi' Uchiyama and Jim\nAnderson. Girls prizes went to\nNorma Henke, Joan Leverlr\/gtim\nand Janet Fidek, Gay Leverington\nand Yvonne Steenhoff. '\nAt supper' four birthday cakes,\nmade by Mrs. Noran, iri- honor of\nfour young, people 'who celebrated\nbirthdays .this week, Robert Hani-\nling, Philip Harry, Alan Hascarl\nand Billie Henke, were enjoyed.\nDancing completed the evening's\nentertainment\nNesterenko to\nBe Disc Jockey\n.'- TORONTO (CP) -Eric Nestef*\nenko, 10, rookie right-winger with\nToronto Maple Leafs of the-National Hockey League, ls to become\nan ear.y-morhlng disk jockey.\nBeginning Monday, the native ot\nIllh Flon, Man., will be on; the air\nfor 2ft hours Monday through Saturday-over CKFH; Toronto radio\nstation owned by hockey broadcas*\nter Foster Hewitt\nKAMLOOPS MERCHANTS\nTAKE7-PQINT LEAD\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - Kamloops\nMerchants came. from behind Frl*\nday to beat Cloverdale 66-59 to\ntake a seven-point lead in the two*\ngame, total-point B. C, men's senior \"B\" basketball semi-finals. Tho\nMerchants trailed 36-31 at half'time.\nIn the senior \"C\" series Kamloops Hub City Wheelers defeated\nBralorne Pioneer Mines 62-58 in\nthe two-game, total-point series.\nThe Wheelers led all the way.\nMARBLE CHAMP- ,\n! CRAWLEY,, England, (AP) -: A\n20-year-old American sailor, froth\nthe hills, of Kentucky is the hew\nBritish marbles champion. .\n! George Wilson Smith ,of West\nPoint, Ky\u201e won, the title by upsetting the long-time British cham*\npion, 82-year-old ' Fop Marynard,\nbefore 3000 spectators.\nThe' Britons managed to, solve\n.their prldo by winning the team\nprize, 38 to 1, over a United States\nNavy team.\nVelocity of a.-giyen point of the\nearth's surface at .the equator ex*\nceeds 1000 mllee;>ah\" hour.\"'\nBadminton Results\nMEN'S SINGLES (A Plight)\nThird Round\nEd Hearn. Nelson, beat Chet Larson, Kelowna, 13-8, 15-12; Grant\nMcGregor, Klmberley, beat Gordon\nLaurie, Cranbrook,, 15-0,, 8-15, 15-12,\nFourth Round *\nJack Harvey,' Spokano,..beat Stan\nDonaldson, Nelson, 15-8,. 15-8; Dave\nWaddell, Summerland, beat \/ pd\nHearn 18-11, .ll:-l$,;15-9; Nle]s Andersen, Vancouver, beat-Avery Peyton,' Spokane, 13-5, 17-14; Bert Fergus, Vancouver, beat Grant McGregor. 16:2, 15-8. \\ ,\nSoml-flnal           .' '\t\nJack Harvey beat Dave Waddell\n15-9, ,15-6; Bert Fergus beat Niels\nAndersen  10-15,-15-3,  10-11.\/      |\nPinal' ..    \u25a0*,. ,     ;.'\nBert Fergus beat jack Harvey.\n16-7, 17-18.' -.* '*! ;!\u25a0\".' j':  ..',;:-'   I *\nLADIES' SINGLES (A Flight)\nThird,Round  \u25a0 i ,\nDorothy McLeod,. Summerland,\nbeat Donna Muirhead, Kinnaird,\nil-8, 12-10; Bonnie \"Chlopan, Gran-\nbrook, beat Ethel-Templeton, Cranbrook, 11-9,. 2-11, 11-7.: :\nSemi-final   .       , * *\nLois Reid, Vancouver, beat Dorothy MqLeod\u25a0' 11-7,, 11-2;, Rose Mc(\nGregor, Crawford Bay, beat Bonnie\nChlopan* 11-10, 11-4.\nFinal\nLois Reid beat Rose McGregor\nl-l-i\/.-ll-O.. ,-,-\nMEN'8 DOUBLES (A Flight)\nSeeond, Round;'    ,;\nFred Thompson and Bruce Latremouille, Nelson\/beat E, Neilson and\nNiels Andersen, Vancouver, 15-5,\n12-15, 16-11; Dave Waddell and Ron\nRutherglen, Okanagan, beat Doug\nMale and Al WUson, Nelson, 15-19,\n15-4; Jack. Harvey and Bob Show,\nacre, Spokane, beat Jim Ball and\nBob Colllnson, Nelson, 9-15, 15-8,\n15-13; Bett Fergus, Vancouver, and\nJim Richardson, TraU,, beat Ed Hedley, Cranbrook, and Percy McGregor, Crawford Bay 15-5, 2-15, 16-4.\nThird Round,\nFrank Gaylord and Avery Peyton,\nSpokane, beet Stan Donaldson\/Nelson and-Jack Newstead, Vancouver,\n15-5, 18-13; Dave Waddell and Ron\nRutherglen beat Fred .Thompson\nand Bruce LatremouUle 15-5; 16-9;\nBert Fergus and Jim Richardson\nbeat Jack Harvey and Bob Show J\nacre 14-17, 18-12, 15-10; Murray\nCrelghton and Ed Hearn, Nelson,\nbeat Ned Rhodes and Bob Inkpen,\nTraU, 15-6, 18-14.\n8eml-flnal .       \"\u25a0' .'.'-.\nFrank Gaylord and Avery Peyton\nbeat Dave Waddell and* Ron\nRutherglen 8-15, 15-9, 15-6; Murray\nCrelghton and Ed Hearn beat Bert\nFergus and Jim Richardson 17-16,\n15-6. - '. v\nFinal\n'*! Murray Crelghton and Ed Hearn\n-NSaV Frank Gaylord'and; Avery\nPeyton 13-15, 15-13, and 15-7.-'\nLADIES' DOUBLES .A Flight)\nThird Rbupd ,\nRose McGregor, Crawford Bay)\nand Bonnie 'Chlopan, Cranbrook,\nbeat Lois' Reid and M. McGregor,\nVancouver, 15-13, > 15-9; Kay Fergle\nand Marge Blakemore, Spokane,\nbeat Doreen and Helen Wilson,\nNelson, 17-16, 9-15, 15-9; Dorothy\nMcLeod and Eleanor Rutherglen,\nOkanagan, bedt Mary Jean Levirs\nand Ethel Templeton; Cranbrook,\n15-10, 15-8; Pat RusseU and Arler>e\nSimms,'Ktoberley, beat Joyce Swi-\nhart and Donna Muirhead, Kinnaird, 15-6,'16-7,\n\u2022Sdinl-final\n\u25a0Rose McGregor and Bonnie Chlo*\npan beat iKay Fergle and Marge\nBlakemore 18-12, 15-5; Pat RusseU\nand Arlene Simms beat Dorothy\nMcLeod and Eleanor Rutherglen\n11-16, 15-12, 15-11.\nFinal    \u25a0\u25a0'\nBonnie Chloppn and Rose McGregor beat Pat RusseU and* Arlene\nSimms 18-15,' 18-14.      *\nMIXED DOUBLES (A Flight) !\nThird Round .\u2022 ;\nBert Fergus and Lois Reid, Vancouver, beat Jim Richardson, Trail,\nand Betty Jo.Masoh, Spokane,' 15.5,\n15_B;- Dave*.Waddell and Dorothy\nMcLeod,',Summerlan,d,:;bey A*ery\nPeyton and Marge Blakemore, Spokane, * 15-8;' 15-10; Ned Rhodes and\nPhyllis.Buckley, TraU, beat Fred\nStevens and D. Turton, Kelowna,\n15-io, 11-15, 15-J1; Gordon Laurie\nand Bonnie Chlopan, Cranbrook,\nbeat Stan Carling, Golden, ahd R.\nStlell, Kelowna, 15-6, 15-2; Kay\ntfergie and.Bob Showaore, Spokane,\nbeat Niels Andersen, Vancouver,\nand Joan Schaffer, Spokane, i8?14,\n15-7J Chet Larson and M. Stubbs,\nKelowna, beat Merle Corrin and\nMary, Holt Spokane,. 15-12, 15-14;\nStan Donaldson and Kay. Thompson, Nelson,!: beat'. Bruce Latremouille and .Sylvia- Shorthouse,\nNelson; Ed and; Mary Hearn, 'Nelson^ beat Fred and Tlprothy Thbmp-\nson, Nelso'n, 15-7, 16-5.\nFourth Round\n. BertTergus and Lois Held beat\nDave Waddelland Dorothy McLeod\n15-10, 16-*;,*Ned Rhodes and Phyllis Buckley beat Gordon Laurie ahd\nBonnie Chlopan 15-12, 11-15,, 15-11;\nKay Fergle and Bob Showacre beat\nChet Larson* and' M. Stubbs; 17-14,\n16-17,* 15-12; Ed- ahd Mary Hearn\nbeat. Stan   Donaldson   and   Kay\nThompson-19-3,:15-i0.  .....:\n8eml-Flnal j- -,\n' Bert Fergus and Lois Reid bent\nNed Rhodes and Phyllis Buckley\n15-1; 15-8; Ed and Mary* Heain\nbeat Kay Fergle and Bob Showacre\n15-10, 15-8. '.   ,      . , !     -\u25a0'- ,'-.\u25a0\nFinal ,-.*\u25a0!\nLois Reid and Bert Fergus*beat\nMary Hearn and Ed Hearn 15-4,\n15-6. - :l    * !    *\nVETERANS'. DOUBLES (A flight)\nSenil-Flnal . \u2022\u2022 \u25a0 !\nI Ned Rhodes and Ed Haley, Trail,\nbeat Bob Thompson and Al Jeff-\ncry,'Nelson, 15-8,-15-7.\nFinal   '\u25a0',;\u25a0 '.*. ..,'*'\nBob Showacre and Merle Corin\nbeat Ned Rhodes and Ed Haley 17-\n18, 13-12, 15-12.    :>'\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\nMEN'8 8INGLES (B flight)    .\nFlrtt Round    '\nI Chris dalin, Cellsta, beat, Jack\nStiver,  TraU,   16-8,  16-7;  Gordon\nWalmsley,   Cranbrook,' beat   Bill\nPowell, Rossiand, 18-11, 10-1..\nSecond Round\nMike Horcoff, Castlegar, beat\nJack Newstead, Vancouver, 15-12,\n18-12; Fred Waldie, Castlegar, beat\nBrian Soles, Golden, 10-15, 15-11,\n15-0; Cub Soles, Golden, beat Geoff\nMeneice, Nelson, 15-9, 15-13; Chris\nDalin,beat Gordon Walmsley 15-12,\n0-16, 15:13;.Bob Inkpen, Trail,*won\nby default oyer Murray Crelghton,\nNelson; Bob Keenleyside, Golden,\nbeat Stan Carling, Golden 15-6, 15-\n8; Ned Rhodes', Trail, beat Stan Mc-\nClure, Spokane 15-3, 15-4; Russell\nMartin, Kelowna, beat Jim Richardson, Trail, 16-17, 15-13, 15-10. . ?\nThird Round?\nMike Horcoff beat Fred Waldie\n18-13,* 15-9; Chris Dalin beat Cub\nSoles 15-11, 15-6; Bob Inkpen beat\nBob Keenleyside 15-16, 5-13, 18-7;\nNed . Rhodes beat RusseU Martin\n15-8, 15-2. .\n8eml-Flnal\nMike - Horcoff beat Chris Dalin\n15-12,. 15-1; Ned Rhodes beat Bob\nInkpen* 15-5,-15-4. *   .\nFinal    ,\n, Mike Horcoff beat Ne'd Rhodes\n18-13, 15-11. : '    .     \u25a0 . \u25a0,\nLADIES SINGLES (B, flight) -\nFlrtt round \u25a0\nJoan' Caiilderwood, Goldeh, beat\nBetty JoMosbn, Spokne, 11-3, 11-0;\nD, Turton; Kelowna, 'beat Ann Par-\nsell, Spokane, 11-5, 11-2; Helen Wilson,' Nelson,'beat Joan. Schaffer,\nSpokone, 11-3,11-2, Dorothy Thompson, Nelson, beat Marvel Palmatler,\nSpokane, 11-1,; 11-1, ,\nSecond round\nBarbara Beemans, Spokane, heat\nMaxine Gibbons, Spokane, 11-1, 11-\n7; D. Turton beat Joan. Caulderwood 11-8, 11-3; Helen Wilson beat\nDorothy, Thompson 11-8, 11-10;\nJoyce Swlhart, Kinnaird, beat Kay\nThompson; Nelson 11-6, 11-2.\n8eml-Flna!       ,\nD. Turton beat Barbara Beemans\n11-6, 10-11,11-3; Joyce Swlhart beat\nHelen Wilson 11-9, 10-11, 11-7.\nFinal        '\n', Joyce Swlhart beat D. Turton 11-\n8,'11-J. *\u2022.'.\", \"-,.\nMEN'8 DOUBLES (B Flight)\nFirst Round\"\nGrant\/McGregor and Eric Bodln,\nklmberley, beat Chris Dalin, Cellsta, and Geoff Meneice, Nelson, 15-\n12, 15-8; Cub, and Brian Soles, .Golden, beat Stan McClure, Spokane,'\nand Roy Stephenson, Vancouver\n18-7, 15-6; Mike Horcoff and Fred\nWaldie, Castlegar, beat Stan Carl*\nlng and Bob Keenleyside, Golden,\n15-12,15-10; Ed Haley and Bill Powell, Rossiand, beat Bob Thompson\nand Laurie Lefeaux, Nelson, 15-5,\n15-5; John Dunnett Winnipeg, and\nRussell Martin, Kelowna, beat F.\nWilliams, Grand Forks arid Jack\nStiver, Trail,' 18-8, 15-3; Gordon\nLaurie and Gordon Walmsley, Cran\nhrookV'be'at Bob Magaw,- Vancou-\nver, and Norman HugheB, Nelson,\n15-8, 10-15, 18rl7.\nSecond Round\nGraht McGregor and Eric Bodln\nbeat Chet Larson and Fred Stevens,\nKeiowna;M8-16, 12-15, 16-8; Mike\nHorcoff>nd Fred Waldie beat Cub\nand Brian Soles 15-12, 15-10; John\nDunnett arid Russell Martin beat Ed\nHaley and Bill PoweU 17-14, 18-14;\nGordon' Laurie and Gordon Walmsley beat Merle Corrin and Mel\nBlakemore, Spokane, 15-10.15-11.\nSoml-Flnal   : \/\nGrant McGregor and Eric Rodin-\nbeat-Mike Horcoff and Fred Waldie 15-8, 15-8; Gordon Laurie and\nGordon Walmsley beat John Dunnett and RusseU Martin 15-10, 15-8.\nFln'al.', ...'\u2022'.' *.'**..-.\u25a0.\n\u2022 Grant McGregor and Eric Bodln\nbeat Gordon Laurie   and   Gordon\nWalmsley 18-17, 15-10,\nLADIES' DOUBLES (B flight)\nI'lrat 'Round ,   \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022     ,\nM. Richards and E. Bourne, Kelowna, beat Betty Jo Mason and\nMarvel\" Palmatler, Spokane; 15-3;\n15-12; M. Stubbs and D. Turton, Kelowna, heat Barbara Beemans and\nJoan Schaffer; Spokane, 15-10, 15-2;\nJoy Mefewen- arid, .Sylvia Short-\nhouse, Nelson, beat Ann Parsell and\nMaxine' Gibbons, Spokane,* 15.1,\n,1W.[ .-'...'\"\u25a0'.'\u2022., *.-\u25a0\u25a0,'-'.\nSecond Round\n. Fi Locock arid B. StieU, Kelowna,\nbeat Mary Holt and In* Pearson,\nSpokane, 15-1, 15-4; M; Stubbs and\nD. T\\irton beat M. Richards and &\nBoure 15-6, 15-6; Jennie Yerex and\nPhyllis Buckley, Trail, beat Joy McEwen-and Sylvia Shorthouse 15-3,\n11-15, IS-11; Joan Caulderwood, Golden, and J. Jenkinson, Castlegar,\nwon by default over Ann Bennett\nand Jean Robinson, Nelson.\nSoml-Flnal\nM. Stubbs and D. Turton beat F.\nLocock and R. StieU 15-6,15-4; Jennie Yerex arid Phyllis Buckley best\nJoan Caulderwood and J. Jenkln-i\nson 15-2,15-10. > :\u25a0'\u25a0'\nFinal*' * '   ,.V\n, Jennie Yerex and PhyUis Buck-\nlny beat M. Stubbs and D. Turton\n15-5,15-12;   ;     ,: '\nMIXED DOUBLES (B flight)\nFlnt Round\nFjced Waldie and J, Jenkinson,\nCastlegar, beat RusseU Martin and\nF. Locock, Kelowna, .15-12, 17-14;\nPercy McGregor, 'Crawford Bay,\n,and E. Bourne, Kelowna, beat Chris\nDalin, Cellsta, and Barbara Beemans, Spokane, 10-15, 18-2, 15-5.\nSecond Round      '\u25a0'..'\u25a0     ' < \u2022\nBob Inkpen and Jennie Yerex,\nTrail\/beat Brian Soles, Golden, and\nMarvel Palmatler, Spokane, 15-5,\n15-5: Eric. Bodln and Pat RusseU,\nKimberley, beat Ron and Eleanor\nRutherglen, Ponticton, 18-15, 15-13;\nGordon Walsley and Mary Jean Levirs, Cranbrook, beat Geoff Meneice\nand Jean'Robinson, Nelson, 15-5,\n15-4; Percy. McGregor and E,\nBourne beat Fred Waldie and J-\nJenkinson 15^7, 15-8; Bob Magaw,\nVancouver, and,. Maxine Gibbons,\nSpokane, beat Roy Stephenson and\nIlia Pearson, Spokane, 15-12, 18-13;\nJack Newstead, Vancouver, nnd Joy\nMcEwen, Nelson, beat E. Neilson,\nVancouver; apd Ann Parsell, Spokane, 15-5, 15-10; Bob Keenleyside,\nGolden, and M. Richards, Kelowna,\nbeat Al ahd Helen Wilson, Nelson,\n15-7, 15-6; Ed Hedlely, Cranbrook,\nand Rose McGregor, Crawford Bay,\nbeat Bob Thompson and A, Ron-\nmark, Nelson, 18-5,16-8. ,\nThird Rdund    '\nEric Bodln and Pat RusseU beat\nBob Inkpen and Jennie Yerex 18-18,\n16-12; Gordon Walmsley and Mary\nJean Levirs beat .Percy McGregor\nand E. Bourne, 15-11, 15-10; Jack\nNewstead and Joy McEwen beat'\nBob Magaw and Maxine Gibbons\n15-8,15-12; Ed Hedley and Rose Mc-.\nGregor beat Bob Keenleyside and\nM. Richards, 15-6, \"16* ,'\"'\u25a0-\nSenil-Flnal\"\nEric Bodln and Pijt RusseU beat\nGordon Walmsley and Mafy Jean ,\nLevirs 15-8, 13-16, 15-11; \u00a3d Hedley\nand Rose McGregor beat Jack Newstead and Joy McEwen 8-16, 15-4,\n15-10.\nFinal   .\nEric Bodln and Fat Russell beat\nEd   Hedley   and Rose McGregor\n15-13, 11-15, 15-6,\nMgN'8 81NGL7E8 (C flight)\nSeoond Round\nJack Newstead,, Vancouver, beat\nBrian Soles, Golden, 15-6, 15-8;\nGeoff Meneice, Nelson, ..beat Jack\nSilver, Trail, 15-8, 16-3; Stan Carling, Golden, won by default over\nBill Powell,' Rossiand; St|m McClure, Spokane,' Won by ;default'\nover Jim Richardjson, Trail,-\n8eml-Flnal\nJack Newstead beat Geoff Meneice 15-10, 12-151 15-7; Stan McClure beat Stan Carling 17-15,15-12,\n16-12i'\nFinal\nJack   Newstead   beat Stan McClure 15-5, 18-13.    -:.'\u25a0'     *\"\u2022\u25a0\/.\"\nMIXED DOUBLE8 (C flight)   .      ',\nFlrtt Round\n' Chris Dalin, Cellsta, and Barbara\nBeemans,   Spokane,   beat   RusseU\nMartin and   F. Locock,   Kelowna,\n15-9, 11-15, 15-9.\nSecond Round\nRon and Eleanor Rutherglen,\nPentlcton, beat.Brian Soles, Golden, and Marvel Palmatler, Spokane, 15-8, 15-4; Geoff Meneice ahd\nJean Robinson, Nelson, won by default over Chris Dalin and Barbara\nBeemans; E. Neiispn, Vancouver,\nand Ann Parsell, Spokane, won by-\ndefault over Roy Stephenson, Vancouver, and Ina Pearson, Spokane;\nAl and Helen Wilson, Nelson, beat -\nBob Thompson and A. Ronmark,\nNelson) 15-2, 15-7. ;\n8eml'-Flnal :\u2022    \" \u25a0\nRon and Eleanor Rutherglen beat\nGeoff Meneice and Jean Robinson\n15-3,15-4; Al and Helen Wilson won\nby default over E. Neilson and Ann\nFinal\nParseU.\nRon and Eleanor Rutherglen beat\nAl and Helen Wilson 15-7, 18-14.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nSaturday v , '\nMaritime Major'  ,...>-Si!\nCharlottetown 4, Glace Bay *3\n.Charlottetown wins best of three\nsemi-finl 2-0,\nQuebec 8enlor\nQuebec 5, Montreal 3.     , .       <\nQuebec wins best of nine semifinals 5-4.   .\nALLAN CUP\nSudbury 1, Kitchener 3\nKitchener   leads  best   of * seven\nEastern seml-finol 3-2, one tie.\nRegina 0, Fort William 4.\nBest ot seven Western semi-final\ntied 2-2.\nSpokane -4, Pentlcton 3,\nMEMORIAL CUP\nBarrle 4, St. Michael's 6.\nBest of nine Eastern' semi-final\ntied 2-2.\nSt Boniface 9, Ft, William 4.\nSt. Boniface wins best of seven\nWestern semi-flhals, 4-1.\nLethbrldge 7, Flln Flop 3..\nLethbrldge* wins best of seven\nWestern semi-final 4-0.-\nWestorn Intermediate\nPonoka 5, Trail 5.\nBest of,three semi ftaal tied 1-1,\none tie.        * -.':.*.\nKenora 5, Dauphin 4. .\nKenora- wins best of five semifinal 3-0.\nU. 8. AMATEUR\n' Cincinnati 4, Sault 2.\nCincinnati  leads  best  of  seven\nsemi-final 2-0,\nCALDER CUP O',\nPittsburgh 0, Cleveland 2.\nCleveland leads best of seven final 1-0,.   * i''\"-; -t\nEastern League Finals'\nJohnston 3, Springfield 2.\nJohnston leads best of ^even series 1-6.   .-\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nEdmontoif 3, Vancouver 2\nEdmonton leads best of five semifinal 1-0.\nSaskatoon 3, New Westminster 4.\nNew, Westminster leads best of\nseven semi-finals 3-2.\nWheelchair Wonders\nTo Stage Games\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Montreal's\nWheelchair Wonders, a! group of\nparaplegic veterans who formed\ntheir own basketball team, have\nbeen Invited to participate In the\n\"Olympic games for the disabled,\"\nln Britain July 25.\nThe veterans, whq formed their\nteam just one year ago and have\ntaken on all, comers providing their\nopponents also use wheelchairs,\nhavp been asked to meet other starring paraplegic teams ln the\n\"Olympics\" at Stoke Mandevllle\nrehabiUtatlon hospital, Aylesbury,\nEngland.      .\nThey are coached by \"Niggy\"\nRabin, weU-known in district cage\nranks here, who has -beeri instrumental in their becoming*one of the\nbest-rated paraplegic teams on the\ncontinent.  .\nTom Sommerville, their captain,\nsaid the trip is a dream all tho boys\nhope wiU come true,.but the Wonders have first to raise $5000 to\npay the expenses of the trip.\nFt. GAIN\n* TAXIDERMIST\nFirst Class Work\nPhone or Send\nPHONE 476-L-3\n1114 Beatty Ave. \u2014 Nelson, EtC.\n - \"- ^w iroyw^\n.\nT\nA\nP\nN\n. E\nI NI\u00bbAMq*MAI_.H*MMERI(>N\nagm-TOt-SiMnpr- --\nRiNapprrNER\n-BUT-sW-TMCCNL-.\nNORMAL (JOW- IN ALi\n1MKX.UIU5 nVMlj\nJJII *  liJ.IIUI.\ni'HV II '\u25a0Tff^^^MMUL\u00bb'.-^yiff.\u00ab_\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1953\nHi AIIS\nPERSQh \\ WANT ADS\nFOk       - WSULTSf\nPhone 144\nDeadline fer CloMlfled Adj\u20145 p.m.\n'  :'\u2022 *..  '\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nVAIflN -To Mr- and Mrt..Niek\nVattln of Hotebery, at the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital, New Denver,\non AprU 1, a daughter.,' ,\nI,  W, I nil    \"il\u00bbi rti.j.'i:\nHELP WANTED\nsc\nYoung :$lmm.\nDo You Desire a Career In\nAdvertising?\nAt we are expanding our. Advertising Department, we have an\nopening for a young man who is\nwilling to learn the newspaper\nadvertising business. He must\npossess tbe usual attributes of\nneatness gad honesty and alio\nthe. .ability to meet and work\nwith-the,publle. Ihe opportunlts\nin advertising is unlimited lor a\nyoung man with a pleasing, personality and a high school education. All applications wlU be kept\nin strict confidence.\n-   Apply To the '. .;\nADVERTISING MANAGER\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nHiGH SCHOOL\nI STUDENTS'.\n\u25a0\"' AND'GRADUATES\nYoung men who left high school\nwithin the past two yearsiwith a\ngrade eleven standing ar better or\nwUl attain such standing by June\nof thia year are Invited to investigate the opportunities for permanent employment with ehances\nfdr advancement provided by\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nEnquiries may be made by or on\nbehalf ot applicants at your local\nbranch of The Canadian Bank of\nCommerce or by letter to:\nThe Staff Officer,\n' The Canadian Bank of Comrnerce,\n688 West Hastings Street,   '\nVancouver X B.C.; -.\nWANTED \u2014 DRIVER SALESMAN\nfor city milk delivery. .UphUl\nroute. Steady, job. Married man\nbetween 25 and 30. Give driving\nexperience and salary expected.\nApply Box 928 Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWA1WHPPaSV-Wm4 mj^Sst\nPensioner preferred. Phone 398.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPARTY WISHES TO CONTRACT\nlogging, pole making, or sawmlU.\nWould take separately or all,\nAble to start immediately. Apply\nBox 935 DaUy News.\nFIREPLACES, CHIMNEYS, BRICK\n. work and block work. A-l workmanship, Box 461. DdUy NeWa.\n'GAnfttirlS: lA!r__ Tm SmAll,\nplowed or disked. Phone 462-L-2,\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERV\nTOR SALB - TOP SOIL. PHONE\n476-R-li -: -\u25a0\nAGENTS WANTED\nCAN Y0U S*Y ,\"NO\" TO- ALL\nthis?, Wo offer' you free goods,\nmono preparations, lower'prices\nor..larger quantities and the\n.chance ot establishing yourself\nin a business of your own. Interested? Part or fuU time? Write\nto fAWLjpt, 1600 Delorlmler,\nDept. ti, Montreal. '\n' \" \u00bb*\u25a0   'a_si.,'.,,ii'\u00bbi'is\u00abir,ii,al_is\u00bbc\nPERSONAL\nWAWAWMA MUTUAL r_UC IN-\neurance Co* D: U Kerf. Agent.\nDepot Clean; room* and reason*\nable rates. Vancouver. B.C.\nufliRt?'-U_ -f-k-Ae.\nquaintance of lady ln her sixties\nfor friendship and correspondence. Bex1853, Daily News,\nAlano Club meets Tues. and Fri,\n435 Salter St., Nelson. Write P.O.\nBox 388.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKflT PRICE8 PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading* Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd, 250 Prior St, Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nSHIH U_'V(JBR SCftAP HMAL\nor iron Any quantity. Top price\n' paid. Active Trading Company.\n918 PoweU St, Vancouver, BC\nCtXlAtX Pb-lB--'AIX, CLASSES\nand lengths, Kootenay Forest\nProducts Ltd,  :- - ' -  \u25a0    -.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nTOR SALE-RADIO APPLIANCE\nsales and serviee) Good stock\ntubes and parts. Complete modern equipment Including sedan\ndeUvery. Apply Box 364, Nelson\nDally News.\nSoAABiNS-flOUW BP-C^CS?\nfor sale, because of sudden UI\nhealth. Can easily be made into\n3 or 4 suites. Apply Bather's\nboarding house, -Nakusp, B.C. \u2014\nPhone, 56-R.\n2 stokmb\" to mn. ueAsm\n18 feet by 46 feet, or as a complete unit Glass show counters\nand wall cases ln one; Kerr's\nStore, Caatlegar, B.C. .  ,' ,.S.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nEXTENSION LADDER, WATER-\npower dishwasher; antique: mahogany love-seat antique mirror,\nbedside tables, occasional chair,\nleather suitcase. Phone 27.        '\nwi, --;-\u00abww-i - ttJBWi-\nSpedal low prices. Active Trading Co., 935 13. Cordova St, Van*\ncouver.\naim B-CTBM SALVE - m\namazing   reUot   Your   druggist\nsells CRESS.\nIW. iNCH\"fiI-A&t\u25a0*!(__-\"TOft\nsale. 16c per ft. Write Pox\nNelson Dally News.\nMOFFATT ELECTRIC.RANGE,\ncottage style; Duo-Therm heater\nwith blower. Phone 890-L.\nMcCLARY KITCHEN STOVE, OIL\nheater, small electric stove. \u2014\nPhonel497-Y,\nFOR SALE-BOYS' BIKE, BABY\nbuggy. PSone 'iHfl-IX':,- ,\nMICRONIC HEARING A1DS.-\n|    Write P.O. Box SI. Nelson. B.C.\nUVtSTOCK.POUt.TRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n+*t+*9+*+*m*m>mT~**m~'*~***m ********\n\u25a0 \"THE CHICKS\nWHICH GIVE\nRE5UUTS\"   :\nNOW Is thstlnw to*ord-r\nytsur.^hlekJ,' ...*\nOver 80 years' experience in pro-\nducing Mod poultry Is your guar-\nante* bi\nTen Pure and _\nselect from. White\n\"    iplhfee*,. B\nSteeds to\nlofts, New\n.     ar red Plymouth\n.locks, Rhode Island Reds, Leghorn  Hampshire Cross, Austra-\nWhite, Cross.  Rock-Hampshire\nin, Black Av\nRocks, Light Sutsex.\nCross, Black Auatralorps. Whit*\nRocks, Light Sussex...\nWrite for particulars and prices,\nand remember, \"Itt Results That\n.Cwnt.\"\nRump & Sendall Ltd.\nBox N, Langley Prairie, B.C.,\n; and Verndn, B-C.-\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\n' year trom' the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. We Hava\nover 7000 extremely healthy, and\nproperly'conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm, pur baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock In- White Leghorns, White\nBooks, New Hampshlres and\nCrosses. Catalogue pn request\nfOft SALE - c6W- WSSJ WnStX-\neneil, first calf. Apply J. Lebedoff,\nGlade, B.C.\nWi SAL*. 6& TOAM.'.'OR\ncalVes, 1600 lb; horse. T. J. McColm, Syrlnga Creek, B.C.\ntm gtw.ua w tiflfl- smu\neggs wanted Immediately. Phone\n088-R-3.\nTOIF\n_?___Mw;'-TJTOn_!S---\nened; 3rd calf. Apply Fred FUU-\npott Shoreacres, B.C.\ntbi mW^eWm H6MI. J_\u00bb-\nply Peter G. Konkln, Slocan City.\ntbk sale-j mm' com-, m\nApply S. Konkln, Tarrys.\ncalf,,\nfiASV  (MAW  IW  MA-J-\n'  Phone 1685-R-l.    .\nfloofi J6At__) PS RJS flAUS-\nApply P. J. Posnihoff. Appledale.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8 AND MINfe\nREPRESENTATIVES   .\n* w. wBcofsdij is w; X6-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nft S,1 BUBS, faoas-ANb, 'fl.1 e.\nAssay er, Chemist, Mine Rap.\nAUTOMOTlVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAULING\n_-L_fi6__\u00ab_, -\u00bbucit_ kAtuma,\nsand' and gravel Day, hour or\ncontract H. Harrop, Phone 117.\nENGINEERS AND* SURVEYORS\nfe6\u00a5bC JMMX-MSim-Vt,\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer.\n\u25a0 MACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED \"\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 898.. 324 Vernon St.\nHKjNRY^J's\nDROP IN .\noo'Y FOR A\nDEMONSTRATJON\n\u2022 1950 Chevrolet Sedon\n1949 Chevrolet AeroMdon\n1947 Mercury Tudor\n1946 Dodge Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1951 Ford Prefect    t\n1949 Ford Prefect\n1950 Morris Oxford\n1940 Studebaker Sedan\n1937 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1936 Chevrolet Sedan\n1934 Chevrolet Coup?\n1934 Ford Sedan\n1934 podge Sedan.\n. 1937 Pontiac Sedan\n-.1951 Mercury Plekup\n1950 International Pickup\n1950 Austin Plekup       .\n4946 Chevrolet Pickup\n1946 GMC Panel\n1950 Austin Panel\n1939 Ford Sedan Dely.,   .\ni. - .'.\"'\u2022'\u25a0\n. WE DEAL FOR CASH\nTERMS AND TRADES\nVernon\nStreet\n.RJotors\n518 Vernon. St\u201e Phone 1661\n1 >HEI_SON,^C\nITS tJXBJti\nThe New Matchless Super Clubman. I\nDrop in and see this British Beauty I\nkt'The Shop of Friendly Serviee\"!\n'* KOOTENAY MOTORCYCLK\nSALES AND SERVICE \u2022)\nBox 350 \u2014 Phono 2661 \u2014 CastieMurl\nWILLYS JEEP, WITH $1000.001\nworth of firm equipment to. fit I\nFuU price $1595. Very easy terms. |\nH. D. Bnrgery, Nakusp, B.C.,\n(Continued In Next Column)\nDAILY CHOSSWOKD\nACBOSS\n1. Vettetr\n&. Rueelan\n3. Perform\n4. Hebrew\nletter\n1 Ruined\n(slang)\ne. Greedy\n19. Little\n-quarrel\nHQuanUtyl\nof paper\n.XTofloat\n2-Eject\n7,Maleadults 2S.Theaha\u00bbk\n8. Spheres\n(eiwt');.\nof action\n2a.Uckedup\nIL Mght\n2T. Chimney\nbedsteads\ndirt:\nW. Not hard\n28. Birds\n13. Urge\netprer\nvolume\n29. Ostrich-Dke\nIS. Look\nNrt\naskance\n3L Sharpens,\n18. Suppose\naaaraxor\najLIUIi   !j.-.i-Il1\nniiH i *:i\u00bbi::i:>i\nMQIl-   * !-1 ;ll-J.-i.;i\nLtiuaauHPi    aa\naaH   H.']!llJmi*il:]\naaaiia aaarara\nanranaiaa aaa\naa    aamaaaH\nHnac-O :t ciHraia\n3aiaa 3iin:-i\n5\u00bblord_r's Auwcr\nM. Ascend\n35.Ar\u00ablatlVe\n37. Beam i\n--.Beverage\n40.Depart\n9. Contest\nofHieea\nmAOrm\n11. Penny\n12,Kindof\n- piano,\n14.Stnnge.\nl\u00bb.No-\u00bby\nllNeeattve\ni .-reply-\nIT. Mask MU\n;i\u00ab.8kU_i-\n|1\u00bb. Kind \u2022( cap\n20. Road\n22. Secacio\u00abss\ni2S.Kver(peet)\n23. Edible,\nnolluak\n21. Feel pain\n30.1bUes_eep\nU. Greet\nnumber\nofthlngs\nSI tenia-,\nmatlon\nM. Aloft\nSCSource\nSS. Mature\n3S. Race at\nfuUspeed\n38. City in\n..     Russia.\n89. COmfort\n40.FacWr\n41. Colors,\nasctoth\n42. Cereal\ngrains\n. ,BOWTf,\nt Ape's foot\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's b\u00abw to work It;\nAXYDLBAAX*\ntaLONOFELLOW\nOne letter limply stands for another- In this example A Is used\nlar the three L's; X for the two O's. etc Single, lettera, apos-\ntrophie-. the length and formation of the ward* are sdl htoU.\nEach day the code letters are different ' '\nm        t*r\n, A Cryptefrem i\nIt J A  TJLTTCH ;'\"\u25a0*  H 3 W_K  SKTliP.   R3 JO*\nH X R \u2022 ft '  K A K'K'D.    t -X\u00abTK -K8TCK*\nrxTtiit. \u25a0\n\u25a0eMNpy** Crypteqaetet THE PWB-IC \u25a0 AN OLD WOMAN,\nMAUHDJCR AND BJUMBLE-CARLYLE.\ndwm tr \u00bb** r**tts*t t   -\nONTHE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAlvIS ;.. i2\u00ab on tho. dial\n'.*\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0-. (Pacific Standard Time)\nMONDAY, APRIL6,1953 .       .\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Breakfast With Boates\n7:1S\u2014Sports News\n7:20-Breakfast With Boates\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Breakfast With Boates   -\n7;45-Rise *N' Shine,\n8:00\u2014Naws '\n8:10\u2014Sports News ,\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45-;Towler Serenade   -.,\n8:55\u2014Sports News\n9:00\u2014Morning Devotions ,   .    .\n8:15\u2014Western Fred i '\n10:00\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n10:15\u2014Newa .\n10:20-Coffee TIm\u00bb *\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Shut-In Show ..      \u2022\nIMS\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Consumers Corner\n12:00\u2014Liberty Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News   \\\n12:20\u2014News  * O\n12:30\u2014Farad Broadcast '\n12:55\u2014Behind tha Naws\n1:00\u2014Around the Town Part 1\n1:45\u2014Voices of the \"Pesslon\"\n2:00\u2014Melody Matinee\n2:30\u2014Sentimental Recollections\n3:00\u2014Here's Harmony\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n4:15\u2014Hoad Show \u2022\n4:30\u2014Pebble From Pluto\n4:45r-Paclfio News\n4:55\u2014Report from Parliament\n5:00\u2014UN. Commentary\n5:05\u2014Rawhide\n5:30\u2014Spotlight on a Star.\n5:45\u2014Sports NewS'\n5:50\u2014Newa\n6:00\u2014Musical Program\n6:30\u2014A Man and His Magic\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:0O\u2014Newa\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-CCF Talk\n7:45\u2014Romance of Famous'Jr\n8:00\u2014Red Cross Show   ,\n8:15\u2014Symphony Orch.\n9:00\u2014Farm Forum\n9:30\u2014The: Shadow\n10:00\u2014News '   '\n10:15-^Provincial Affairs\n10:30-Hawait Calls\n10:35\u2014Starlight Ballroom ,\n10:45\u2014Sports Roundup,\n11:00\u2014Around the Town Part t\n12:00-NEWS Night Cap\nPBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nTUESDAY* APRIL *#.-\u00bb53-\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's \u25a0 Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7^0\u2014News   '\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\ni;45\u2014Morning' Devotions,\n7:55-March Past\n7:55\u2014March Past'   \u25a0',' , :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nSiOOrHaws\nB:10-Here's Bill Good   ,\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited        \u25a0\nOlOO^-BB&NaWI\n9:15\u2014Aiutt'Lucy1 '\"\u2022    'i\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\nI0j00--M\u00abnii>g Visit \u25a0\u2022-\u25a0\u2022\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang     .\n10:45-Muslcal Kitchep\nll:0O-Kindergarten of the Air ,\n11:15\u2014A Man and'His'Music\n12:15-News, -X \u25a0'\u25a0;\n12:25\u2014Showcase      . \u25a0 \"-    .\n1230\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014The: Concert Hour\n1:45\u2014The Passion.\" ..   \u2022\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n\u2014\t\n2:30-Presanting        .\n2:45\u2014Playgirl\n3KI0\u2014Brave Voyage '\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlne*\n4:15-Road Show \u25a0\u25a0\/.\n4:30\u2014Benny Boxcar\n\u00abJ4IH\u00abe*a_   ;\u25a0';:\u2022\u2022'.\n4:55-Spotlight\n5:00\u2014UN Co-mmentary\n8:05-RoU Back the Yean\n9:30\u2014Design for Listening\n6:00\u2014Here's a Holiday\n,'8:80\u2014Kenya'\n'.-7i06\u2014News \u25a0\n7:15\u2014Newa Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014The Nation's Business\n8:15-Trappers Festival\n8:80\u201430 Questions\n9:00\u2014Cafo Continental\n9:30\u2014Mr. Showbuslncss\nW:0O-News\n10:15\u2014Jewish Passover\n0:30\u2014For Your Approval'\n \u25a0    \u25a0 ,''\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\nPPfPSP^\nWw^M^^\n~~~\n^5;\n1 PfRmJO-PEMONWAHTAtf.\n\\    FOR QUICK'RESULTS7\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Claitltlod Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)      -\nNEW 19,53\nAUSTIN A-30\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nNEW 1953\nAUSTIN A-70\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n1951\n1950\n1949\n1947\n1946\n1941\n1937\n1937\n1936\n1952\n1951,\n1950\n1949\n1951\n1949\nStudebaker Sedan\nPontiac Sedan\nDodge Sedan\nDeSoto Sedan\nFord Fordor\nOldsmobile Sedan\nPlymouth Sedan\nFord Tudor\nPontiac Sedan'\nAustin Somerset\nAustin Devon -\nAustin Devon\nAustin Devon..\nFord Prefect\nFord Prefect\nCOMMERCIALS\nNEW\nAUSTIN COUNTRYMAN\n1951 Studebaker Pickup\n'   1951  Ford Pickup\n1951 Austin Panel\n1950 Austin Pickup\n1950 Austin Countryman\n1950 International Pickup\n1949 Ford Panel\n1947 G.M.C. 3 Ton\nFlat Deck.\n1947 Mercury 3 Ton\nHoist and Box.\nSPOT CASH\nfor\nlATE MODEL CLEAN CARS\nTERMS and TRADES\nEMPIRE\nPhone 1135   803 Baker St.\nNELSON, B.C.\nin\nGood Used\nTRUCKS\n'51\n5-Ton Ford\nNew motor\n$3500\n'51  International\nVi-ton $1475\n'51 Chevrolet\nVi-Ton $1350\n'50 International\nLF-192 Tandem $7500\n.'49 Mercury 1-Ton\nwith von body .. $1350\n'49 Dodge 1-Ton\nExpress   .:  $1175\n'48 Dodge 3-Ton   .\nH.D. __. _ $1100\n'47 International\nKBR-11, air brakes,\n162-H.P. motor,\n[.       logger tires  $4500\n'47 Mercury 3-Ton\n' New motor,\nlogger tires .._.. $1200\nSEE THESE UNITS AT\nCENTRAL\n& Equipment Co.\n102 FRONT 8T      PHONB 1400\nNELSON  B.C\nAUTOMOTlVI\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued!\nImmediate\nDelivery-\non\nNew 1953 Ford 3-Ton\nNew 1953 Ford\nTractor\nEnroute Carload of\nNew Ford Pickups\nUsed Cars\nPRICED RIGHT!\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1951 Austin Sedan\n1951 Consul Sedan\n1951  Prefect Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Ford Sedan    .\n.1950 Dodge Sedan\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1949 Ford Coach\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1947 Monarch Sedan\n1946 Ford Sedan\n1946 Mercury Sedan\n1942 Mercury Sedan\n1941  Pontiac 5-Rassenger\nCoupe\n1940 Dodge Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan\nClearance Sale\non the Following\n1938 Chrysler Sedan\n1938 Pontiac Sedan\n1937 Ford Pickup\n1937 Studebaker Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Pontiac Sedan\n1936 Terraplane Coupe\n1936 Ford Pickup\n1935 Ford Qoaeh <\nFarmer's Special\n1949 Pony Tractor and Plow\n1947 Ford Tractor\nUsed Truck Bargains\n1952 Thames Pickup    '\n1950 Chevrolet Pickup\n1949 Thames Panel\n1949 Mercury Pickup\n1946 Mercury 3-Ton\n1946 Ford Pickup\n1935 Ford Pickup\nMel Biierge\notors\nLTD.   y'\n1847 CHEV. FLEETLINE 4-DOOR\nsedan. Near perfect condition\n36,000 original .miles. $1175.00. -\nPhone 1472-Y after 8 p.m,\nJ9B1   CHEV.   2-DOOR   SEDAN  -\nLow mileage. Phone 1338-Y.\nI BOY'S BIKE FOR SALE-PHONE\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE   .\nFOR SALE-A NICE FARM HOME\n, S miles West of Nelson it Berley,\non highway. 11 acres mostly cleared about 600 feot on each tide of\nhighway, Lots of fruit and water;\n2 1st water rights garden. Reason\ntor selling, old age, $5000 cash.\nNo terms. Richard Llvcsey, Beasley, B.C.\nmn 6ALt'-\"a\u00bba-Bftv wttm\non highway outside Kelowna with\nliving accommodation above the\nstore. Price: $6900. Plus stock and\nequipment. Would exchange\nproperty for small house in Nelson district. Box 920, Nelton Daily\nNews,\nMr SSiara R-6M5 AHfi'BMH,\ngarage, on' level lot In Fairview.\nNeeds some outside repairs, inside newly decorated; $6600. \u2014\nRhone 1265-X mornings,\nFOR SALE, EIGHT MILES WEST\nof Nelson on Highway\u201420 acres:\ntwo-room dwelling: excellent location ior roadside business. \u2014\nPhone 2847 or write A. A. Lambert, Kinnaird, B.Q.\nRESIDENTIAL LOTS FOR SALE\nIn Salmo, all high, dry. and level\nClose to store and school. Cash\nor terms. Clear titles Issued Immediately R B Street, \u2022 Salmo,\nBC\nFOR SALE-tt MILE FROM KOO\ntenay Bay: 64.4 acres of land on\nmain highway. Lake frontage; 10\nacres cleared; fruit trees. L. De*\nmore, 1159 Plrie Avenue, TraU.\nFULLY MODERN FOUR ROOM*\ned house, Vt acre land. 15 miles\nfrom Nelson. Some terms. Write\nDallv News Box No. 938,\n2-HpUiU HOUSE FOR SALE AT\nSalmo. Vt mile past new achool\nPrice $1350 Cash $400 plus terms.\nE. Hirmer, Salmo, B.C,\n3-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE AT\nSalmo. Vt mile past new school.\n$1330. Cash $400 plus terms. A.\n'Fisher, Salmo.\nUNFINISHED HOUSE FOR SALE,\n24 x 32; three bedrooms. Upper\nFairview, $2700. Apply Box 567,\nDally News.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - IN WQOLWORTHS, WAL-\nlet containing sum of money, per*\nsonal papers. Finder please loavo\nat Dally News, $10 reward.     \/\nlast; V6WdMibHditoapAh-\nlei, Black face, body mostly white,\nName, pete, Phone 148,\nL6S5P-.LW.: _u___s' \u25a0\u00abiw_;\"\u00bb\nvlolnlty of Morgan St, Ph, 1492-Y\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 1 (Fernie)\n. ' FERNIE, B.C.\nSEALED TENDERS, plainly\nmarked as to content and addressed\nto J, F. Bennett, Secretary-Treasurer, School District No, 1, Fernie,\nB.C., \u2022 will be received until noon,\nMay 15th, 1953, for the construction\not the following:\n(1) Junior-Senior High School at\nSparwodd, Natal, B.C.\n(2) Addition to Fernie High\nSchool, Fernie, B.C.\n(8) One one-room Elementary\nSchool, Elko, B.C.\n(4) One one-room Elementary\nSchool, Newgate, B.C,\nPlans, specifications and form ot\nlender may be obtained at the address shown below,      ,\nA deposit cheque of $160.00 is\nrequired for plans of the four Jobs,\nNewgate $25.00, Fernie $50,00, Elko\n$25.00, Sparwood $50,00,\n5 Contractors are asked to submit\ntenders for Individual schools and,\nln addition, each is asked to submit\na tender covering two or more\nschools.\nTenders must be \"lump sum\", tenders containing an escalator clause,\ncost plus or any variation thereof\nwill not be considered. The lowest\nor any tender will not necessarily\nbe accepted. i\nS. COLLINS, Architect,\n245 East Broadway,\nVancouver 10, B.C,\nFOR SALE - 20 ACRES. SOME\ngood timber. Apply H. Richardson. Port Crawford, B.C.\nMRS. E. R. JONES' PROPERTY\nfor sale on the North Shore. Particulars: phone 105-L,\n2 ORCHARD BUILDING LOTS,\nGyro Park district. Phone 1472-Y\nafter S p.m,\n243-L.\n(Continued In next column)\n$1150.00 CREDIT N0TE F\u00b0R SALE\nat $50.00 discount. Can be applied\nto new or used car at Empire\nMotors. Phone 712-R,\n1948 2 TON CHEV, TRUCK. FLAT\ndeck, overhauled motor, good\nShape. Price $700.00, Mike Pictin,\nWinlaw, B C.\nMODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME\nhome for tale Apply Box 6867.\nDally News.\nLOT FOR SALE - GOOD LOCA-\nt'\u00abn   Anolv 1019 Latimer St\nI       '\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT\nOFFICE SPACE\nOR STORE\nWrite S. Maco, 554-B Stanley\nSt., Nelton, B.C., Or phona 429-L\nbetween 6 and 7 p.m,\nWANTED TO RENT\nHouse with one or two bad-\nrooms by couple without children. Please Phohe Ut. Lome\nKennedy, 144 or 1390-X.     -.\nI \u2022'....\nFOR SALE - '46 FORD COUPE.\nExcellent condition. 24,600 miles;\nradio, heater, spotlight. Ph. 850-R.\nMACHINERY\nFOUR-WHEELED RUBBER-TIH-\ned home-made tractor, complete\nwith starter, electric fuel pump,\nPierce velocity governor, pulley\npower take-off, Scaper blade with\n- cable lift, fqur cylinder Plymouth\nmotor completely overhauled. \u2014\n$350. A. Maclean, R.R. 1, Nelson,\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR*  MINING.\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouvei 1, B.C\n6-CYL. DIESEL CAT. REBUILT\nenglnel belt pulley drive. Low\ndown payment or cheap for cash\nDouble drum winch, 95% new:\nhalf price. Bayes Equipment Co.\nCranbrook. B.C\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE-ONE SIX H.P. AIR*\ncooled motor, very Slightly used.\nPropellor shaft complete * with\ncouplings, bearings, bearing\nmounts, stuffing box and propellor; all brats Sel lcomplete for\n$225, A. Maclean, R.R. 1, Nelson\nSNAP: 22.5 H.P; EVINRUDE. FAST,\nperfect shapV. New rings, Used 8\nseasons. Contact Jim Harvey, c\/o\nGllkers' Men's Wear, Nelson. \u2014\nPhone 1288-L after 6 p.m.\nFOR SALE-CAR-TOP BOAT\nwith car top carriers and oars. $75\nPhone 1477-X.\nWANTED TO RENT - LARGE,\nmodern Summer cottage equipped\nwith electricity' and water; Bal-\n- four or Windermere vicinity;\nmust be on beach and not in\ncrowded area. Reliable tenants\nrequire occupation by* July 1st'\nPlease advise full details an*?\nrental rate to P.O. Box 445, Edmonton, Alberta\n1 NOTICE OF SALE\nUnder and by virtue of a Warrant\ndirected to me by National Trust\nCompany Limited as Executor of\nthe Estate of Gordon Kenneth\nSutherland, Deceased, pursuant to\nthe terms of a certain Chattel\nMortgage bearing date the 2nd November 1948 and made between\nCharles Lawrence Richardson, trading under the flrni name of Katlo\nHardware and Gordon K. Sutherland, I have seized and will offer\nfor tale by tender the fixtures and\nstock-in-trade of the said Charles\nLawrence Richardson and the Kaslo\nHardware. 1       .    ,\nWritten offers should be made to\nthe undersigned on on before Saturday the 11th day of April 1953.\nFurther 'particulars may be obtained from the undersigned,\n- The highest or any offer not necessarily accepted.\nTHOMAS G. C, FOX'\nCourthouse, Nelspn, B.C.,\nBailiff for National Trust Company Limited as Executor of\nthe Estate of Gordon Kenneth\nSutherland, Deceased.\nSLEEPING ROOM, HOT AND\ncold water, weekly or monthly\nrate. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker St.\nPhOne 383,\nFOR RE NT-HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms with general heat Phone\nNorth Shore Motel   Phona 1864.\nWANTED-2 OR 3-ROOM SUITE\nfor couple with 1 child. Ph, 791-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM FOR.\nrent. Phono 300-Y after 5 p.m,\nCleucUled Advertising Rates:\n15c per line tlrtt insertion 'and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nHe line per consecutive insertion after first insertion\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions\n$1.56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.   ,\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc.\u2014SOc per line,\ntirst Insertion. 16c per line-\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(fot More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, (er w*\u00bbk,\nln advance   * .30\nBy carrier, per yehr    -    $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month       $ 1.25\nThree'months ..;. , ,....   3.75\nSix months    7.50\nOne year    . ...     15.00\nMai) in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month  ......   .   1.00\nThree months  ,     2-lt\nSix months  :.'...   5.50\nOne year ',..           10.00\nWhore extra pottage Is required,\nabove rates plus pottage.\nU.S.Io Probe\nShutdowns of\nLead, Zinc Nines\nNBW YORK (AP)-A large measure of order was restored, to the\ncopper pricing situation last week\n?s all three major domestic pro-\nucers began selling the metal at\na uniform 30 centt sf pound.\nLead and zinc demand ' quieted\nand tin dropped sharply on the Korean peace reports.\nThef newt that a Korean peace\nlooked more likely was felt in the\nlead market. Sales were good until\nlower London quotations slowed\nthe buying movement here. How*\never, not much foreign metal ,was\nOffered here and 'producers lielrl\ntheir quotations on the basis ot 13VS\ncents, New York. *.''-.\nZinc was weaker In London, too,\nbut domestic producers did not disturb their 11-cent-a-pmind price for\nprime western line, which they feel\nit low enough. Trade sources tald\nbuslnes was satisfactory in special\nhigh-grade zinc and fair In prime\nwestern,\nIn Washington, the house small\nbusiness committee let It be known\nit will investigate reports of. economic hardship among domestic\nlead wd zinc producers. It will hold\nfield hearings this month to study\nmine shutdown! caused by heavy\nimports.\nCopper \u2014 30-34.5 cents a pound,\ndelivered. Foreign; 36.5 cents, New\nYork.\nLead\u201413.5 cents a pound, ffew\nYork; 13.3 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc\u201411 cents a pound, East. St\nLouis; 11,88 cents, New York.\nSilver\u201485.25 cents an ounce, New\nYork; 74 pence, London.\nBritain Attacks\nBovine IB\nLONDON (CP)-rBrltain has announced details of a large-scale\nattack on bovine tuberculosis, part\nof the eradication plan announced\nin 1048 and which may take another 16 yeara to complete,\nFour areas\u2014two ln Scotland and\none each |n England and Wales \u2014\nhave been declared tuberculosis\neradication zones in which .farmers\nwill be supplied free tuberculin\ntests. After March 1, 1955, the testir\nwill' bo  compulsory   and   Infected\nNELSON SCHOOL DlfJTRTCT.NO, 7\nReceipts for year ending Dec. 31, 1052.'\nCity if Nelton '.:...' ;   ..... ........-, I........... $158,315.00\nRural, Area,...', , ,*. ,-,i   ;  103,644,59\nSpecial Aid .,' ....,.\u201e !. -., , .. 78,309,41\nBasic Granta ,...,.\u201e\u201e.,...'.. :.  119,252,10\nBuilding Granta , ..,.- , ,....-.., ;  41.163,36\nEquipment Grants    \u201e.\u201e...-.  8lft*,M\nTransportation Granta -.,.. ._.._..._.-.,.\u201e: _.__;.\u201e.. 24,033.98\nDormitory and BOardlng Grants \u201e\u201e.,_............\u201e....\u201e.\u201e.\u201e,.-.\u201e.. ... 70,00\nNight School Granta   \u201e    \u201e..,..-. u._..\u201e.,.\u201e, , .  112.20\nVocational Grants    .... .'.....'.\u201e\u201e..\u201e., ;,.... 688.20\nSchool Ouarda Grants        .* \u00ab, .\u201e _,    9,031,81\nTransfer of Funds From Garage Account  _  600.00\nTuition Feet ,  ..;,.\u201e...;. ,...\u201e., ; 1,395.00\nRentals    \u25a0',,.. , \/ _.i\u00bb..\u00bb '    170,00\nSale of Aetata .       ;\u201e.'.,,,. ;..i \u201e.\u201e.. 80,00\nEducation Supplies Recovered                       ..\u201e\u201e_\u201e._ 117.18\nCollodions for Piano Harold Lakes School     ,\u201e  ' 275.00\nTransfer of Funds From Capital Reserve Account  24,806,00\nText Book Rental Collections                    _____  3,61X89\nTranlPortatlan Feet Other School Boards , ,.\u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 417,28\nMitcellaneoui Receipts .,... ;\u201e\u201e.\u201e._..,..\u201e 897,79\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1933 \u2014 11\nExpenditures for year ending Deo. 31, 1988.\nA Admlnittration Account:\n1. Salaries Administration Staff\t\n2. Office Expense * ,\t\n3. Trustees Expense ,\t\n4. .Others ,  *i~M.\ni. $ 7,140.00\n  1,236,64\n...<\u201e... 1,118.82\n........ 6,788,78\nB. Instruction Account:\n1, Teachers' Salaries  ....\u201e__._._._. 304,619.29\n2, School Clerical Salaries ,.. __._...,     4,483.81\n8. Teaching Supplies  .\".\u25a0. ,.; \u00bb;,\u201e   11,668.35\n4. Other Instructional Expenie       767,00\nC. Operation Account:\n1. Janitor and Engineer's Salaries  _...... - 24,800.15\n2.'Janitor Supplies  3,997.88\n8. Light, Power, Fuel, Water  20,297.63\n4. Insurance, Rentals, etc.  _-..,.. 4,748.79\nD. Repairs and Maintenance Account:\n\u2022 1. Grounds\u2014Wages and Supplies ,.,.__.\n2. Buildings\u2014Wnges and Supplies\t\n3. Eoulpment\u2014Wagea and Supplies\t\n- .4, Other \u25a0\u201e.. _._.\nE. Auxiliary .Servicei:-\n1. Health Services  \u2022  ...;\u201e;\u201e\u201e_\n2. Fees Except to Other Boards ..........\n3. Dormitory and Boarding Expense ....\n4. Other\u2014Hot Drinke, \u00abto .......,:...\u201e.\nF. Non-Operating Account:\n1, Payments Other Boards   ..   _.\n3. Capital Expenditure Reserve\t\n4. Investments, other ;\t\n5. Transfer to Triyt Account No. 3005 .\nG. Debt Services Account:\n1. Sinking Fund .-. &_,  ...\n4.  Bank Charges ._\t\n2,368.90\n7,708,21\n7,093.34\n847.27\n4,149.41\n192.00\n160,00\n608.38\n, 28.00\n18,891,01\n13,046.12\n1,800.00\n1,085.20\n171.41\nH. Conveyance of Pupils Account:\n1. Eoulpment  \t\n2. Bus Operating Expense .....\n3. Contract Expense  .....\n,   4. Other    ... ...-Z.Z~.ZZ\n3, Capital Account;\n1. Sites ....         .\n2. New Buildings    .  \"\"\"\n3. Reon. Addn. Exist. Bldgs\t\n4. Equipment  \t\n9,701.86\n14,008.34\n15,088.20\n25.00\n,141.76\n63,333.21\n10.785,07\n8,326.32\n$869,168,81\n\u2022*\n$ 15,210.19\n321,738,33\n53,844.58\n18,907.72\n8,109.78\n27,762,13\nIf. \u25a0\u25a0-.:\u25a0 \u25a0\n1,356.81\n38,773.40\n82,586.36\n564,298.08\nTRUST ACCOUNTS\n-Receipts and Payments for year ending Dec. 31, 1952\n_\u25a0\u25a0   , , Royal Bank\u2014Trust Account No. 3005\nReceipts:\nDec. 31,' 1951 Balance in Bank    .;\u201e., ;\u201e_<\u201e_\u201e-\nTransfers from Current Account:\n\u00a3.?' JI _&5 Spmnt Account ..,\u201e-.....,.__...-..,.\u201e.-.\u201e O 100,\u00bb\nJtlly 10, 1952 Current Account :   13.391.01\nDec. 31,1953 Current Account _      1,300.00\nDec 31,1952 Interest earned         83.30\nPayments:\nDec. 31,1652 transfet to Current Account    24.31)6.00\nDec. 31,1952 Building and Construction    -5,274.18\n' Balance In bank \t\nKspte Sugar Big\nSpring Industry\nIn Quebec\nBy KEN STEWART      ,\nCanadian .Press Staff Writer\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 Spring on Quebec tams Is the time tor thousands\nof farmers throughout the province\nto busy themselves turning the sap\nfrom 20,000,000 maple trees Into\nsugar and syrup, for sale at Easter.\nQuebec, tho country's Iod maple\nsugar and syrup producer, has built\n'up a tremendous business from Its\nmany maple groves, scattered\nthrough every eounty\u2014excent Abitlbi and Saguenay\u2014from the Ottawa valley to Gaspe. *\nLett year their yield wat more\nthan 2,750,000 gallons, valued at\nmore than $10,000,000. . ..\nThis year, however, experts are\nnot sure that the crop will be as\ngood. They lay the Winter's scanty\nsnowfall and'poor tapping weather\nare signs the crop may be poor,\nWarmer days and colder nights are\nneeded to bring about a goad run\nof sap.\nSome trees in the Western port of\nQuebec have already atarted pro*\nduolng\u2014but in small amount! \u2014\nand officials are hoping that a late\nsnowfall, tuch as the one In April\n1947, might occur and provide ideal\ntapping conditions.\nTlie  1947 crop yielded 8.187,000\ngallons of ayrup valued at more\nthan $11,000,000,\nSUGARING PARTIES!\n. With Spring and maple teason\ncomes tomothing which hat bean\na tradition for almost 800 years-\nsugaring parties\u2014when whole families go into the woods to the sugar\ncamps to stuff themselves with\nsweet, sticky sugar and taffy.\nBut unlike past years, sugar partial now are considerably harder\non the pocketbook. Farmers charge\nfrom $2 to $3,80 a head to elty\ndwellers who want to go to a party.\nBesides the 20,000,000 producing\nmaple trees there are another 20,-\n000,000 trees which have remained\nuntapped, ln the province,\n40 MILLION TREES\nTapping of all 40,000,000 trees\nmight have a strong effect on the\nlocal market, knocking prices\ndown to almost rock-bottom, but\nmore maple products could probably be exported.\nBiggest sap-producing area is in\nBeauce county, on the St-. Lawrence River South shore, where\nmore than 2,500,000 trees are tapped\neachyeer.  .\nToday, with the help of modern\nequipment, the maple sugar industry in Quebec has become big\nbusiness,\nGuardian Queries\nWheat Prices\nLONDON (CP) - Canadian anil\nAmerican wheat surpluses maket\nthe '[demand for higher prices seen...\nabsurd,\" the Manchester Guardlon\ncomments today on tho Washington,\nInternational wheat agreement prlct')\ntalks.\nIn Its financial column, the Liberal newspaper says higher produc-:;\ntion recently, by the laws of economics, should, make the price come\ndown\u2014not Increase.  The  U.S.  to*,\nseeking a higher price\u2014reported to\":\nbe $2.15 a bushel to the existing.'\n$1,86\u2014to save Its farm price support ',*\nsystem from difficulties, It contends,\nCanada It reported seeking $2.10\na bushel. '      H\nCanada and the U.S. have wheat\nreserves to supply the sterling area I\ncountries for SH yean, says tht\"\nnewspaper,  which  refera to '-'the\ntender way in which wheat grow- I\nere have bert theltered tfom the vl\u00ab ?\nclssltudes of the real world.\"  '\n8IMPLI EXAMPLE\nAhy reductions possible in wheat\npurchases by the sterling area\n\"would be ar reachlpg.\"\n\"To take the extreme possibility,\nIf perhaps, through the restoration\nof a free market, the wheat price\nwat to fall by about 80 centt to a\nlittle more than $1 a bushel, the\nsterling area would save mora than 1\n$220,000,000 a year.\n'Alia is more than twot-hlrdt of\nthe defence aid received by thla\ncountry In 1052 and about a fifth\nof the sterling area's dollar gap last\nyear.\" .*-',*\u2022\n23,194.64\n14,874.31\n38,068.98\n29,580.18\n8,488.77\n_   ...;,'   ,. Bank of Montreal Trust Account\nReceipts:\nDec. 31,1951 Cash In Bank  ;._.\u25a0.;'-\u25a0\nDec. 31 195? Sale of Equipment         180.00\n,    Rentals  ..: .-. ,       ioo.OO\nPayments: s                                     ' ,\nDec. 31, 1952 Transfer to Current Account .\nDec. 81, 1952 Purchase of Salmo Houses\t\nBuilding and Construction , ;\t\nB.C. Affleck\t\nLegal _  \u2022  .,\n300.00\n6,500.00\n448,50\n20.00\n64.07\nBalance In Bank \t\n13,470.00:\n250.00.\n18,720,00\n7,530.57 \u25a0\n6,189.43\n\"Corridor\" Tuiks ^ ^\nTo Start Soon\nBERLIN (Reuters)\u2014Four-pwr*\ner talks to Improve safety In the\nBerlin \"air corridors\" over East\nGermany probably will start late*\nnext weak, a United States tpokei\nman said today. This week France\nand-the U. S. accepted a Soviet\nInvitation to Join Anglo-Soviet air\nsafety talks. Rutala hat net set a\ndate for the opening.\nDim View ol\nEconomic Plans\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Economic planning In the dplnion of Brltaln'a\ncolonial secretary, Oliver Lyttelton, -\nto Just a great big bit of baloney. ;\nClosely-llnked with the industrial,.\nfabric Of the country as wartime\npresident of tho board of trade, the I\nmlnslter brought murmure of \"hear,J\nhear,\" with his blunt definition before the Conservative Society of tht\nLondon School of Economics.\n\"To talk about economic planning >\nand discard direction of labor to a\ngreat hypocrisy,\" Mr. Lyttelton\nsaid, \"Economic planning haa bttn\nshown to be, in tht sense In which\nthe words are used, a great big bit\nof baloney. Yoii connot, in fact,\nhave economic planning and Individual freedom \u2014 you havt to\nchoose between the two,\"\nBETTER PAY' MORE\nIt waa better, he aald, to ensure\nthat the lowest-paid workers had\nenough money to buy a reasonable .\nstandard of life and a fair supply\nof the necessities and amenltlee of\nlife, than to give them much lesa\nmoney. and. sell, the necessities at\nah artificial or subsidized price.\nOne of the chief merits of trying\nto regulate economic trehds by use\nof financial rather than the physical instrument, Mr. Lyttelton continued, was that the financial could\nbe' regulated by a handful of men.\nHe added: \"It does not require\na horde of officials, myriad forma,\ntons of paper, snoopers, questionnaires and intrusion into the kitchens and the bedroom of every house\nin England, to carry out tht poliey.\"\n, Bank Reconciliation for y\u00bbar ending Dec. 31,1952\nBank Bn'ance 1952  ;    12,041,81\nOutstanding Cheques 1952 i \u201e\u201e\u201e.. .   28,643,97\nDeposit 1953 for 1952 , \u25a0    7,926.17\nDebit 1952 ,     5,676.49\n1)      ' ' '   '..    \"   25,643.97      25,643.97.\nNELSON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 7\nDebit 1951 _    10,337.32\nReceipts 1952  569,158.91\nDisbursements 1952  \u201e  364.298.08       rr.\nDebit   :.. ,  ' 8,676.49\n$574,835.40   $574,835,40\nWANTED: Used Furniture\nWa Buy or Trod. Uied Furniture\nOr What Hovt Yon\nat\nNelson, B.C.\nMarch 28, 1983.\nThe Board of School Trustees,\nNelson School District No. 7.\nNelson, B.C.\nGentlemen:\nI have audited the books and accounts of the Nelson School\nDistrict No. 7, for the year ending December St, 1952, and tubmlt\nherewith the following described exhibits:\nReceipts and Expenditures General Account for year ending Dec, 81,1982.       ', .     .\nAnalysts of. Bank Balnnce Current Account and Bank\nReconciliation Statement as at December 31, 1032.\nAnalysis of Bank Trust Accounts aB at December 31,1932.\nUnpaid Claims:\n\u2022 It ls estimated that the claims receivable amount to $7,278.49.\nThe books aqd records have been well kept\n*  In   my   opinion   the   Receloto; nnd   Expenditures   Statement!  of  General  Account  and  the  Trust r Accounts i exhibits,\ncorrectly present the financial transactions of the Board for the\n' 'ndlr\nyear ending December 31st, 1932.\nYours faithfully,\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, C.G.A.. F.A.C.S.\n-    Auditor.\nJ. P. MORGAN'S\nNEW AND USED FURNITURE STORE\n306 BAKER ST. PHONE #\nControl of Feed   Sfuffs fo End\nLONpON (CPlr-Dates for the\ndecontrol of animal feeding stuffs\nhave been announced by Britain's\n(food thlnlstfr.     ,\nRationing and price control of\nfeeding stuffs end Aug,, 1. On the\nsame date, United Kingdom wheat\ngrowers will be- free to dispose of\ncattle will be slaughtered. Compensation w|U be paid cooperating\nfarmers,   \u25a0'\nAn estimated 826,000 cattle are\nInvoived; \u25a0 -\n{The ministry of agriculture estimates that only 39.8 per cent., of\nthe nation's cattle have been inspected fof TB so far.\ntheir crops-for human consumption\nOr seed.\nAnnouncement of the decontrol\nrlates follows the original announcement im January that freeing of\ncbntrolsf watin prospect for grain,\ncereals and feeding stuffs.\nIt had not been announced yet\nwhen tho grain trade will be\nhanded back to private enterprise,\nbut it is expected to be thla Fall.\nShedding of grain controls may\nslightly Increase Canadian. wheat\nsales to Britain, as the Brltith government intends to use dollar wheat\nas a kind of bargaining counter to\navoid paying premium prices for\nnon-dollar wheat.  \u2022.\nfor MINING\nCOMPANIES\nWc? are equipped to\ngive you service\non any kind of mining\nforms* '\", I''\nPayrolls, cheques, time,\ncards,  assay  sheets,  mill\nrecpras\", letterheads, envelopes, vouchers, etc\nWe will gladly giva yaii op estimate\not youi printing needs.\nNelson Daily News\nPRINIINGPE'PARIMENI\nNelson  B C.\n_____s_s^\nemm\n\t\nm\n iy:-m-^^m^H,mvm-.m\nf,\u00bbfflif^pPfl3SP^ ; \u25a0\u2014^~wm\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL fl, 1953\nAnd\nWhen\nYour\nDoctor\nWrites\nYour\nPrescription\n. Let Your Fint thought Bt\nMANN'S\nCLINIC\nPHARMACY\nor\nMANN'S\nDRUG\nSTORE\nWest Said Ready to Meet\nRussia's Offer Half-Way\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Foreign\nBeoretary Eden said Saturday the\nWelt will go half-way to meet any\n.genuine peace offer from Russia.\nHe emphasized,-however, that\ntiiere must be no slackening of the\ndefence program.\n. Broadcasting to Britain on the\niburth' anniversary ot the signing\nef the North Atlantic Treaty, Eden\n\u25a0sidd the 14-natioh organization \"offers tho best prospect bf a settled\nand prosperous future.\"\n\"Today we see signs that some\nlessening of tension between East\nand West may become possible. We\ndevoutly hope so. We have worked\nearnestly for just this.\n\"Volt can be sure that we shall\nmeet, half-way any genuine attempt\nto reach a settlement.\"\n&ANNOT RELAX\n'But, he added, \"we must not\nmake the mistake of thinking that\nwe can relax our effort to build an\neffective defence. \u25a0\u25a0'.-,\n'.'Still less must wa allow ourselves to be divided, from our'\nfriends. *That would be to lose all\nthat we have gained.\n\"And so we must continue the\nwork of the North Atlantic Treaty\nin every sphere. Our own safety and\nthe peace of the world depend upon\nit\"      * .\n\"When we signed the North, Atlantic Treaty. we declared that it\nwas purely defensive. So it; has\nproved. It threatens no one.\"\n\"This community of the North\nAtlantic is the key to future relations between the countries of Western Europe and of North America,\"\nEden added\n\"Our cooperation there \u2014 with\nCanada, with the United States and\nwith our European partners\u2014offers\nthe best prospect, of a settled and\nprosperous future.\"\nSoviet Peace Gestures Bring Hope\nand Comfort lo War-Weary Britain\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Britons this\nEaster were rejoicing over the latest' Soviet moves towards friendship with the West Millions prayed\nthat the Russian moves signalled an\nend to the cold war and a rebirth\nof genuine peace in the world.\nPrime Minister Churchill was\nUpending the Easter holidays at his\ncountry home of Chartwell in Kent\nbut kept in touch with latest world\ndevelopments. Before leaving for\nChartwell the prime minister conferred with ailing Foreign Secretary Eden on Russian policy.\nThe royal family is spending East-.\nRADIATORS\n*   CLEANED'& REPAIRED\nRECORINQ    ..,\nJim's Radiator Shop\n61S FRONT ST. PHONE \u00abS\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service*   .\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nBIB Kootenay St       Phone 361\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC. - BUICK\n'\u25a0  -;..    G.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n;-,' '\u25a0!?: at the -\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 140\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\nOO       & (MRIE\n-Chartered Accountants\nAuditors\n67$ Baker St Phone 23B\ner quietly at Windsor castle. The\ncourt will be in mourning until\nAgrll 25 because of the death of\nQueen Mary. \u25a0\nCROWDS SEE WREATHS\nHuge. crowds visited the castle\ngrounds td see the 1500 wreaths for\nQueen Mary on view there. More\nthan 6000 were lined up at one time\nFriday waiting for a chance to enter the gates. At night, floodlights\nwere turned on so as not to disappoint the waiting thousands.\nSaturday there were fierce rain\nsqualls, thunderstorms and galelike winds in many parts of Britain. A blizzard along Scotland's\nwest-coast forced trawlers into port\nand cut visibility to only a few\nyards at times,\n.The bulk of the. Easter holidayers\nreached their destinations safely In*\nGood Friday's beautiful weather.\nThose planning.to leave later were\ndelayed by the treacherous storms\nand many cancelled their week-end\nplans, <\nPEACE IN EUROPE,\nThroughout Western Europe,\nChristian: worshippers combined\ntheir Easter devotions with prayers\nfor world peace.\nDespite damp weather, Paris'\nfamed boulevards were . thronged\nwith people on promenade with\ntheir new Easter bonnets. Sidewalk\ncafes reported booming business,   .\nThe Viennese Woods, benefitting\nfrom an early spring, boasted a record number of Wild violets. Thousands of Austrians and foreign tourists strolled through the woods.\nRuss WiMraw\nRemoval Order\nTo Allied Envoys\nMOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet ministry of foreign affairs has-inform-,\ned the, British and American embassies that contrary to previous requests, neither embassy need move\nfrom their present sites to hew\nbuildings unless they want to move,\nIt was learned, today.!.\nIn other words they can, if they\nwish, stay where they are in sites\nnear .the Kremlin. \\.v\nDIPLOMATS' THEORIES\nWestern diplomat* who know\nabout these steps by the Russians,\nassociated them with a series et\nconciliatory measures being taken\nby the Soviets at tha present time.\nIt is understood that, it was the\nSoviet Initiative to make their proposals to the British and Americans.\n. British .embassy officials have\nbeen house-hunting since the Russians notified them last December\nthat their site on the bank of the\nMoscow riyer across from. the\nKremlin was wanted for a museUm\nand a park. British diplomats had\noccupied the building for SB.years,\nThe Russians, notified the Americans last July that their site, on\nHunter's Square overlooking the\nKremlin was needed for expansion\nof Moscow University.\nO&0\nStarts Argument\nGREENWICH, Conn. (AP)\u2014Canadian and Connecticut game officials were at odds Saturday over a\ncrippled Canada goose, down in the\nwaters off nearby Point Byram in\nLong Island Sound. Both claim the\nfamous bird.  . \" ' .. '\" '', \u2022,-\u25a0 .\nThe Canada, goose* now* Is in'a\ngame bird refuge maintained In\nGreenwich by the Wildlife Restoration Foundation..\nAbout two weeks ago, Capt: Amos\nL.* Horst, executive secretary of the\nfoundation, said he saw two flight\nmates try to lift the cripple' and.fly\nit tp northern Canadian breeding\ngrounds. ' -..'=.-'\nCanadian interest has- been aroused and one Canadian newspaper\n(the Montreal Gazette) reported receiving funds from Canadians eager\nto help the bird join its mate, in\nnorthern Canada.\nEven a Canadian airline was reported to have offered to fly the\ncripple north in time for Canada's\nNational.Wildlife Restoration Week\nwhich begins April 12.\nHorst said he had received permission from the U.S. fish and\nwildlife service to trap the famous\ncripple and fly it north. Oh. the way\nto the refuge with the trap, he called on the Connecticut state board;\nof fisheries and game officials informing 'them of his intentions.\nWHERE IT STARTED   \",\nThat's where the trouble started.\nDr. Russeli P. Hunter, superintendent of the Connecticut board,\nsaid the Canada goose belongs to\nConecticut and it should stay there\nuntil it flies away' of its own choice.\nThomas Rose, chief game warden, agreed. He insisted the bird is\none of a flock of Canada geese that\nwinter off Point Byram and migrate\nonly 50 miles north-northeast of\nGreenwich to Bantam lake for the\nsummer. v'-'':\nHorst and Canadian officials then\nCalled up Ray Lawson, Canadian\nconsul-general in New York. Law-\nson got nowhere.. He then appealed\nto an aide to Governor John Davis\nLodge, but the aide said he* was\npowerless to interfere. Lodge himself was on a holiday.\nBut the consul-general sent a telegram to the governor urging Special\nauthorization for the project. Law-\nson also planned to call' Lodge personally Monday. \u25a0\nUNCONCERNED SOOSE\nThe great 15-pound Canada goose\nhimself (or herself) was; reported\nto be in excellent shape, except that\nhe (or she) .cannot make it oft the\nwater,\nGame Warden Rose reported that\nit suffered from a healed gunshot\nwound that had destroyed its rudder feathers. He said the fowl was\nperfectly all right and insisted that\nit was happier in.Greenwich than\nit .would be in Canada.\n3 KILLED IN COLLISION\nHAMILTON (CP) - Three persons were killed Saturday night\nwhen the motor car in which they\nwere riding swung wide on a curve\nand collided head-on with an oil\ntruck. Only one of the dead has\nbeen identified. He was the driver\nof the auto, George Nlkula, 28, of\nHamilton. '\u2022 ,\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL. TRAINING '\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nREXALL\n1CSALE\nWed. m Thurs. \u2022 Fri. \u2022 Sat.\nSEE OUR AD IN THIS PAPER\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34, day \u2014 807-R, Night\nBox 460\nD.RIN KING-A TOAST to -freedom after landing: In the British\nzone capital at Graz, Austria, are'three Czech1 filers who escaped\ntheir Cqmmunltt.dominated oountryTby'flylng .their military plane,\nunder cover of darkness, to seek asylum In the West zone. At a\npress conference, the flien said Ciecb.alr force pilots, have orders\nto \"shoot to kill\" at foreign aircraft over Czech territory. They also\naald that conditions In Czechoslovakia today are \"worse than under\nthe Nazis,\".and that a laroe majority of tho Czech population was\n\"rejoicing\" ov<)r Stalin's death. Left to right, the\" Czech airmen\nare! Lieut: Vladimir Krmah,. 23;, Warrant Officer Gustav' Molnar,\n20, and Warrent Officer Josef Flelsehocker, 22.\n\"- -\u25a0\u25a0'.\"'-  \"'  v \u25a0      | \u25a0'   ;;.-,,_central Press.Canadian.\nLONDON (AP)'-.'.One oi'.the\ngreatest concentrations <o't warships\nIn modem peacetime will file* past\nthe Queen at Spithead June IS in\nthe Coronation* naval review. *\nBesides a multitude of British and\nCommonwealth ships, many countries having -diplomatic relations\nwith Great Britiin will send -ropre-\\\nsentative vessels. ..Russia.'bas announced acceptance of an invitation1\nto;send a ship, but;has-.not deslg'-,\nna'ted the vessel,\nAt Ottawa naval headquarters\nhaa announced'that Canada is sending six vessels, headed by this aircraft carrier Magnificent.\nOthers will Include the cruisers\nOntario and Quebec, the Korean-\nexperienced destroyers Sldux: and\nthe frigates Swansea and La Hull-\noise.       '.,,'\u25a0'    \u25a0\u2022\u2022 S . . .'\nAll but the frigates will sail from\nHalifax May 7. The frigates will remain behind-until May 13 to take\naboard contingents of university\nnaval cadets.\nDeath and Taxes\nHaunt Red China\nHONG KONG (AP) - .In Red\nChina, as everywhere, nothing is\nso sure as death and taxes. But\nCommunist officialdom is worried\nbecause there's too much of the former because of the latter.\nCopies received here of the Peiping People's Dally, official newspaper -t the Chinese. Red party's\ncentral committee, told of concern\nbecause, tax-bounded peasants were\ncommitting suicid.     ,\nThe newspaper said \"the ministry\nof finance should make penetrating self-examination and take to\nheart these.tragic lessons.\"\n1 KILLED, 9 HURT\nIN COAST MISHAPS\n\u2022 VANCOUVER-- (CP) - One per\nson died and nine' others were in*\njured in Greater Vancouver traffic\naccidents during the Good .Friday\nholiday. .-.\nDead-is Mrs. Gladys Barlow, 35,\nwho died in hospital Friday, nine\nhours, after the car she was driving\nwas involved in a crash on Lions\nGate bridge.\nAmbulance driver Fred Peters,\n\u202221, - escaped with only a cut Up\nwhen*-his vehicle and a fire truck\ncollided in downtown Vancouver-.\nFiremen escaped injury.\nTwo -policemen * were Injured\nwben a police car collided with a\nstolen truck. A 14-year,-old boy,\ndriver of the truck,' suffered head\nwounds. . -. ' \u25a0-  *   '\nGascoigno to Fly\nBock to Moscow\nLONDON (Reutert)\u2022\"\u2014 Sir Al-\n..-vary Gascoigno, British anibaisa*\n1 dor to Rus.li, will fly back to Mos\n.cow early next week, a foreign:of>\n' floe spokesman has announced, He\n; was recalled to London - in mld-\n\u201e week for urgent.consultations on\nRussia's new peaoe >p$lloy.'.',',\nTo Compete in\nAUWptfc ISfb Play, Tough\nOn Canada^ 27th Brigade\nBill Boss, Canadian Press staff\ncorrespondent with the Canadian'\nforces In Korea since 1050, has\nspent three weeks In Germany\nwith' the 21t!i. Canadian'. Infanti-y\nbrigade, In 'this BtO.\u00bb,;.on'e' qf-.a'.'-\nsorles, ho describes the' brigade's\nposition In the over-all' scheme\nof western defence, and Us. train;\ning program,'. \"   ,\n\u25a0.\u25a0       '\"'   1   ;   \u25a0\n,.,\",', By \"(JIM. BOSS\n\u25a0 Canadian. Press .Staff Writer\nHANNOVER,, GirSnjr \u00abT) -,\nBrig. John Potigmart'of Toronto.\ncommander of the.27th Canadian\nbrigade here, says his unit's only\ntarget Is to be ready to fight on a\nmoment's notice,\n\"That must always be our first\nconsideration,\" he said. \"Because\nwe're close to the border, we're always \"conscious of. oUr responsibility.\".-      .\nCommunist troops  are  only  40\nmiles east ot the brigade position in\nthis part of lower Saxony, adjacent\nto the'Iron Curtain,\nUNIQUE ASSIGNMENT\nHis troops are part of the North\nAtlantic Treaty Organisation force\nin Western Europe. Their assignment is unique in Canadian military\nhistory. . .','. >:',.- ',',',.-\u25a0\nH Never before' has Canada had: a\ngarrison, brigade in, peacetime, either at home or abijiad. Never before\nGUESTS ESCAPE\nHOTEL FIRE\nFORT FRANCES, Ont. (CP) -\nQuick action by the owners got all\noccupants: of the 41-room Emperor\nHotel to safety Sundayy before fire\nburned out the interior of tbe old\nthree-storey brick building.\nA passerby noticed flames on the\ntop floor and ran into the.lobby to\ngive the alarm. Partners William\nKalichuk arid Henry Kliner dashed\nfrom room to room, awakening tbe\nguests.' They smashed the doors of\nsome rooms to arouse sound sleepers.\nSubmarine Disasters\nBy The Associated Press\nThe death of 99 seamen .aboard\nthe British submarine Thetis, which\nsank in Liverpool Bay June 1,1939,\nwas the worst underwater disaster\nrecorded in peacetime.\nMajor submarine disasters since\nthe end of the Second World' War:\nDec. 7, 1946\u2014French submarine\nNo. 2326, listed as missing with 23\nmen aboard after being overdue at\nToulon   - -..-*\u00bb,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\nAug. 26, 1B49\u2014American Cochino\nexploded and burned in Arctic waiters; seven dead, 8^ rescued.\nJan. 12, 1950\u2014British Truculent\nsunk in Thames estuary after collision with Swedish tanker Divina,\n:i dead.\nApril 16,1951\u2014British Affray failed to come up after submerging 30\nmiles southwest of Isle of Wight, 75\ndead.\nSept. - 24, 1952\u2014-French Sybylle\ndisappeared during manoeuvres in\nthe Mediterranean off Riviera, 48\naboard.\nMILITARY. FAMILY,\nSUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP)\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. John Perry have the distinction ..of having seven sons' iri\nthe armed forces. Charles, John;\nJoseph and Earl are in the army,\nFrancis and Henry in the navy and\nLawrence'in the! air force. '\nTORONTO (GP) - Eight theatre\ngroups from six provinces, bave\nbeen named to.compete in the Dominion Drama Festival. for a $1000\naward arid several trophies. The\nfestival will'- be held May* 4-9 at\nVictoria.      \u2022 -\nRichard MacDonald, executive\nsecretary-treasurer of the festival,\nannounced the following groups arid\nthe plays they will present, been\nchosen by the executive and its adjudicator,. John Allen of London:\nBritish Columbia: The Players\nClub Alumni of the University of\nBritish ; Columbia, ' \"Volporie\" by\nBen Jentoh.'\nAlberta: tdmonton Studio Theatre, \"Othello\" by Shakespeare.\nSaskatchewan: Regina Little Theatre, \"Burning Bright\" by John\nSteinbeck.  \"'\"\nWestern Ontario: London Little\nTheatre, \"Dark of the Moori\" by\nRichardson and Berney.\nCentral Ontario: University of Toronto Alumnae Dramatic Club, \"Family 'Reunion\", by T. S. Eliot\nEastern Ontario: Saturday Players of tbe Ottawa. Little Theatre,\n\"The Jjadwoman of Chaillot\" by\nGiraudoux.\n\u25a0 Western Quebec: Le Jeune Scene\nMontreal, \"Zone\" by Dube.\nNew Brunswick: Les Etudiants\nde TUniverslfe Saint- Joseph, \"Le\nBourgoies Gentllhotoime\" by Mol-\nler'e.. .*\nMr. Allen, a script writer with\nthe BBC who since January has\ntoured Canada adjudicating 54 full-\nlength plays put on-by groups competing in the regional festivals,\nchose \u25a0 performances \u2022 of the eight\ngroups as the best in the country's\n13 drama districts.\nMr. Allen said:\nCANADA DOING WELL\n\"This festival shows* the tremendous job Canada is doing ln theatre work. For a small group to\nput on a play like Shakespeare's\nOthello and do it so well ls ar; outstanding achievement.\"\nMr. MacDonald said the annual\nprize of $100, fpr the author of the\nbest play written by' a Canadian\nwill go to Marcel Dube of.Montreal\nfor \"Zone.\" It is the only play writ\ntenby a Canadian that.will be done\nin the fiomlnion finals.\nGovernor-General Massey will\npresent the winning awards at a\nluncheon May 10.\nVETERAN CURLERS\nRED DEER LAKE, Alta. (CP)-\nRobert Gillespie and Charles Dowl*\ning, Calgarians who were members\nof. the original four rinks of the\nRed Deer Lake Curling Club, attended a reunion here. The* local\nclub, was organized in -1900.\nOTTAWA (CP)-Prime, Minister\nSt., Laurent Saturday asked Cana\ndlans to do all they oan, particularly\nduring the observance of National\nWildlife-, Week April 5-11, to con*\nserve-wildlife resources,\n\u25a0Mr. * St. Laurent,, at, present visit*\ning Bermuda, issued, a statement\nthrough his. office.  ....\n\"The value of our wild- animals\narid birds is well known to all of\nus,\" .the'-prime minister's message\nsaid, *Tliey kept the early exnlorers'\nalive, beckoned tbe .traders farther\nand farther into* the Interior'and\nfor yeprs -provided, our, ancestors\nwho settled infills j>ar.t of the world\nwith food and clothing for themselves ind.their families.\nToday, our wildlife serve a different purpose. Our wild friends\nadd considerably not only to the\nattractiveness and. life of our. greet\noutdoors but also to our enjoyment\nas from time to time we seek rest\nand recreation,..'\n\"That is why, particularly during\nNational Wildlife Week, we* should\npledge ourselves again to doing all\nwe can to help conserve our wildlife resources.\"\nOF THE THOUSANDS of 8ovlet zone refugees who are pouring\nInto West Berlin, the Winkler brothers, Karl and Gustav, provided\none of the moot colorful escape stories, With their wives, the\nWinklers dashed; to freedom aboard their 560-person passenger\nship \"Oeutsehland,\" the biggest vessel for Inland water traffic In the\nSoviet zone. They steelplated the cabin from which the boat wat\nsteered and reached the West sector of Berlin safely despite a range\nof warning shots fired \u00abln: ah: attempt to stop them. Above the\nWlnkiers'are Been leaving the Ooutachlnnd after safely reaching\nWest Berlin.\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nShare Tragedy\nBAIfEAUX, France (Reuters) -\nA farmer's daughter, rejected by\nher fiance on her Wedding eve because ' of an old Norman. family\nfeud,'killed herself with a vial of\npoison as she stood weeping beneath his window, police revealed\ntoday.   -\\   .      '\nThe \"Juliet\" of this tragedy,\nMarie-Ernestine Lemonnier,' 23,\nwaited for' an hour until his shadow\nappeared at.the window.\nThen, crying \"Goodbye Georges.\nI am going to die,\" she broke the\nvial and swallowed its contents.\nGeorges raced down, clasped her in\nhis arms: and kissed her is she died.\nWhen the young couple became\nengaged the feud seemed to have.1\nbeen forgotten..       -,.\nBUt-this week when Marie-Ernes-\ntlne-invited. Georges -to. visit, her\nparents, the old bitterness Was revived and Georges Leboulanger\nsaid: \"My parents do not want me.\nto marry' you now.\" j ,\nThe girl left a farewell note and\na photograph on the kitchen table\nand'walked five miles to the Leboulanger farm to say her last goodbye.\nNationalist Ban\n\"E II fc Signs\"\nEDINBURGH (CP),\u2014A strong-,\nminded Scottish, nationalist group\ntoday took action to'prohibit publi-\ncattoh of aiiy proclamation hrScot-\n.lapd bearirig \"E II R\"\u2014the* designation .of Elizabeth It!' ..-\" '...'   '\nThe Scottish Covenant. Association, which .shares the contention-\n6t many Scots that ;ihe'Queen is\n\u25a0Eliiabetii'T not II of Scotlandi took\nthe case to the court of sessions.\n,The British, .government is asked\ntoaper by April 30 to give reasons\nwhy it. calls' the Qi^ee.). \"Elizabeth\nII.\" It was not' known whether the'\ngovernment would^; send' a. representative. In any case, the association wants the \"E II It\" designation\nprohibited throughout Scotland after Ap'ril-30..* - *-\nPOINTS TO TREATY\n, Hie vassociatiori pointed out the\nfirst article of the treaty of Union\nbetween Scotland arid England stipulates: \"The two: kingdoms'oi-Scotland arid Eflglattd shell- be united\ninto one kingdom by the name of\nGreat Britain.\" '  '    \u25a0',.''\nFurthermore, the association\nclaims, \"ho ruling sovereign of the\nUnited Kingdom of Great Britain\nhas borne the name: of Elizabeth\nprior to Her' Majesty. And' there-\ntore, to enumerate her titles as. Elizabeth II is a contradiction' of fact\nand a breach of the first article of\nthe'treaty.\". .. \u2022*.''-.'\u2022\u25a0\u2022'\nhave so many Canadian mops beeri\nconcentrated so long under peacetime conditions near a big city. \u2022'\u25a0\nEven when he's off\u201eduty, tbe Canadian soldier here is' on '.'parade.\nUnless he has rank of,sergeant or\nhigher, he must always -webt- uniform and live In an artificial, atmosphere of military urgency.\nAlone among NATO troops, the\nCanadian brigade is geared to the\nidea that \"the balloon may go up\ntomorrow.,\"-'; \"'.\"O\" ',\"\" 1\nWITH BRITI8H TROW* & -,   . _\n(grouped with the flth,'. 7th' ted\n11th British.armored divisions and\nthe 1st British corps, they chafe un,\nder restrictions, imposed by Canada,\nwhich do not apply to their' British\ncomrades. , \"'.\nDuring my three weeks with the\nbrigade, I. heard the same refrain\npossibly 100 times from officers,and\nother ranks. There ls reason to believe Brig. Pangman shares the feeling. Within the limitations .of- policy directives from . Ottawa he is\neasing the.restrictive regulations he\ninherited with the command last\nDecember.     \u25a0\nEssentially the Cnadlans! ;jbb Is\nto train against the day when they\nmay have to fight. Unlike the other\ntroops in their corps, they* have no\noccupation' duties.\n-The Canadians are. in. an otherwise all-British corps, comthanded\nby Lt.-Gen. Sir James Cassels, former commander of the 1st Commonwealth division in Korea and\na f&pilliar figure'-to the. 25th-Canadian brigade thore. His corps, is part\nof the northern army group commanded by Gen. Sir Rlcrird Gale.\nGale can use the Canadians as he\nsees fit   '\u25a0 **' . * \u25a0 '\nREADY TO FIGHT :\n1 They are reputed in good fighting\nshape. Every commanding officer\nsays he would have no hesitation in\ntaking his men into battle. British\ndivisional commanders compete to\nhave the brigade exercise with their\nformations, -\n. \"They are as good as any other\nbrigades In this tone,\" said Pang*\nman.\nBut the forced pace at which the\nbrigade has functioned, compared\nwith other formations with which\nit is grouped, is reflected.in its attitude toward its work.\nOne battalion commander said:\n\"What are w^ doing here? If it's\noperational duty, the soldier should\nbe free to do as he wants-between\n5 p.m., and reveille.\"\nThe brigade's winter training program has ended. It saw the formation absorb 1800 replacements, and\nbrush up on basic drills and small-\nscale exercises.\nCOUNTRY ATM08PHERE\nCol. H. A. Phillips of Halifax,\ncommander of Canadin base units\nin Europe who is responsible for\nthe project said:\n\"Ono advntage of these camp\nsites is they're In the country, away\nfrom the city atmosphere; When\nmen are near a city like Hannover\nall year round, they think in terms\nof the Immediate area only, We\nhave men who don't even go away\non leave. In the Soest area, to get\naway from camp they'll have to go\nsome place.\"\nPhillips- said h\u00ab thinks that in\nSoest the men will spread among\nhundreds of villages and make\nfriends as the Canadians did in England during the Second World\nWar after they got out of Aldershot.\n, On Lake 'Mohne, Phillips is try*\ning to provide 'a Canadian club\nwhere soldiers can relax1 near their\nunits: He sriid possibility ;of inviting the Canadian Red Cross to help\nis in the \"thinking stage.\"\nBoxes\nLadies, we have a\nlot of empty ,hat\nboxes for you to\nkeep your new\nEaster Bonnet in.\nDrop in toddy and\nask for one.'\n\u2022        LIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nLondon \u2014George Burchett, 80,\nself-styled king of the tatooists.\nMontreal\u2014George XB'uster) Hor-\nwood, 49,.president- of tbe Quebec\nJunior Amateur Hookey Association.   .. ,\nCincinnati \u2014 Larry Benton, M,\none-time pitching' star for Hew\nYork Giants. \u25a0 - '',\nDrummondvllle, Que.\u2014Col Thomas Jacques de Montarville Taschereau,. 83, who retired from active\nservice in the Royal Canadian army\nin 1922 after 31 years service.\nEdmonton\u2014Dr. Edwin T. Mitchell, 66, professor emeritus of Philosophy of the University: of Texas.\nToronto\u2014Jack Forbes, 64, referee\nfor more than 7000 wrestling bout*,\nand, undefeated world light heavyweight wrestling champion.\nHaigh\nTw-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 827\n676 Baker St\nHave tht Job Dene Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 81S\nFLEURY'S  Pharmacy\n876 Baker 8t\nMed. Arts Bile\nPHONE 25\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrwetlpHoni\nYour Own Home Made; Bread\n. Is Tastier Made Fronts.\nEllison's U-Bake\nBread Mix\nAsk Vour Grocer or Call 238\nELUSQN   MJUING\n& ELEVATOR CO, LTD.\nCAPETOWN, South:Africa (CP)\n\u2014Guests at a seaside': bo^rding-\nnouse near here may not smoke,\ndrink, play Cards. or wear scanty\nclothes. The proprietors,- Mr. and\nMrs; H. V. Rhaeder, say that since\nthey Instituted these rules 15 .years\nago their business has prospered.\nWhen lit Trouble \u2022..\nA FULLY  EXPERIENCED o :\nWRECKER CREW WILL BE\nON THE WAY WITHIN\nAjFEW MINUTES.\n24 HOUR SER VICE\n.\" \u25a0\u25a0    :\u25a0;-':'-\u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0 {:   -#'-\"     o. \u2022;\nijfAT   \"\u25a0\"\nNEilt TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped garage\nin tho Interior ot British Columbia.\n323 Vernon St. Nelion, B. C.\n___________\u25a0\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_1953_04_06","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\/1.0427471","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":"1953-04-06 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":"1953-04-06 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":""}]}