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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":" y\nDeficit Fihdricing... \u201e\u2022 \" ;\n15 Budget Cut\nto $65,57 Billion\nNational Security Takes Over Half\nOf 7.5 P.C. Cut; Budget Still\nOitt df Balance by $3 Billion\nBy DO&6LA8 B. CORNELL\n. WASHINGTON '(AP)-Preisldent Eisenhower hanfled\nCongress a $65,570,000,000 budget Thursday that'puts heavy\nreliance on airpower and an atomic arsenal.\nThis l?tidget-_ot the 1955 fiscal year beginning next\nJuly 1^ stil^is-nearly $3,000,000,000 Out of balance.\nBut it does call for a reduction of more than $5,000,-\n000,000 to spending. As. compared with the present fiscal\nyew, this is a cut of 7.5 percent.\n. Nearly three>-fburths of the cut is in national security\nitefns. Yet more than two out of every three dollars the\ngovernment proposes-to spend will be for national security.\nThe budget proposes the highest expenditures, in history on atomic development, continental defence aid military aid to allies, plus the biggest outlay fbr airpower since\nthe Second World War.\n60 Die in\nTrain Crash\nKARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters)\u2014\nUnofficial estimates said at least 60\nperson* wire killed Thursday when\na crack Pakistan express train\nhurtled into a derailed oil tank car\n' and burst into flames on the main\nline between Lahore to Karachi.\nMany ot the passengers aboard\nthe six-car \"Pakistan Mail\" were\nburned alive ss the gasoline-tilled\ntank car exploded and sent flames\n.\u2022hooting half th* length ot the express.\nThe crash occurred as the express, drawn by two diesel locomotives, was nearing the end of its\n34-hour run from Lahore.\nThe wreckage of the express was\nstill burning eight hours after the\ncrash, hampering rescue teams and\ndelaying an accurate list of the vic-\n' tuns. Officials said that in addition\nto the dead 49 persons were Injured,\nand 11 are in \"serious\" condition.\nUnconflrihed reports put the\ndeath toll as high a* 200. The num.\nber of persons aboard the train is\nunknown and it may be some days\nbefore the exact number dead can\nbe determined.\nTeachers Get\n: ft-Wn(3TON, &.<!. <CP)-Settle.\nment of the teacher.' salary dispute\n; in the Penticton area was reached\nWednesday night when an arbitration board made sweeping revisions\nIn the present schedule.\n.'. Under the settlement, the overall\nsalary increase, will be about four\nper cent, with teachers in lower\npaid classifications in both elementary and high schools receiving\nhigher percentage increase* than\nteachers in higher income brackets.\nTeachers in the lower paid categories will be boosted up to nine\nper cent, while higher paid teachers\n.will receive increases of about two\n,per cent\njs Earlier in thi week, school trus-\n1 tees recommended a 10 per cent\ndecrease for all teachers earning\nthe maximum salary, under the\npresent scale.\nThe military budget,. Eisenhower\nsaid; alms at \"full exploitation of\nmodern airpower\" and of atomic\nand other modern Weapons. It is\nthis shift in emphasis he said, which\npermits lower military expenditures\nand less of a drain'on manpower\nand equipment.\nAs the striking power of our\ncombat forces rises, he said, manpower will come down from the\npresent 3,400,000 to 3,000,000 on June\n30 1955.\nGREATER MOBILITY\nThe entire national security bud-\nget for the year ahead was put at\n$44,480,000,000 a $3,860,000,000 cut\nfrom this year,, The biggest reduction and only the air force would\nreceive'more money.\nThe number of army divisions\nmay be lowered Eisenhower said,\nbut increased,' mobility and modern\nweapons will give each division! increasingly greater combat power.\n.The stress on airpower, he said,\nis reflected in an intention to in\ncrease the number of active planes\nfrom 33,000 Ho 40,000 in the next\nthree years.\nIncluded in the security budget\nare $2,425,000,000 for atomic energy,\n$4,275,000,000 for military aid to allies and $585,000,000' for stockpiling\nstrategic and critical material*.\nEisenhower recommended again\nthat Congress let the administration\ngive Allied nations secret inform,\nation on how to use atomic Weapons\nfor combat. He aaid It was \"essential'' to get action in this session,\n,He proposed, too, the transfer of\nfissionable material to friendly, nation* to help them develop atomic\npower for peaceful uses.\nThrough the 40,000-word message\nrun* a theme that the administration is at least on the way toward\nlower'taxes, more cuts in spending,\nand a balanced budget. But Eisenhower' didh't .ay when It will reach\nthose goals.    :\nPROV NCrA't-l\n: UBWARY\nVICTCk\n\/'<tt;'0\nailai 8fctt>*\nl?3\nWEATHER FORECAST\n-.ootpipiy: Cloudy with a few',\nsnowflurries, Little change in temperature, Wind' light. Low-high at\nCranbrook'10 below and '. Crescent Valley -ero aijHipi \u25a0 -i\nOf\/t. ff ...\n:^^_\nVol 52 \/ . - :*c ,\/ TfrfWof^  I i ^NELSON, B.C., CANAPA-PiUDAYMORNINa; JANUARY %% 195*: ;Mfo. 229 \u25a0\n-\u2014'  .4 -y^^**^mmf.\u2014Wm-\u2014\u2014~f~~~~~\u2014rr\u2014r~~\u2014' \u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0\u2022.!.>'\u25a0...\"..'\"'\u25a0\u2022\u2014:\u2014...  '\u25a0-\"\u25a0'>\u2014^~~-;\nGov't t^osts Housing loin Ceiling\nHas Refal Cre^ Bisy\nIf  motorist* were  thawing out tweeh 2 and'8 am. and one crew\ntheir cars Wednesday,' they were worked all night.' .hit most crew*\npushing them out of snow drifts\nThursday as fickle weather cast off\nthe cold in favor of snow. In 12\nhours 11 inches of snow fell .at\nNelson.\nPublic Works crews were out all\nnight keeping highway* clear. Cdn-\nitnuous1 drifting all day Thursday\nand through the night made travelling difficult. All highways were\nopen at 10:30 Thursday evening.\nMost Nelson streets were open\nby this morning and the bus route\nwas clear all night. City Public\nWorks crews began  clearing be-\nwaited until the snow had stopped\nbefore goingpufc\nLowest the temperature dropped\nwas early Thursday morning when\nthe thermometer registered four\nabove. Highest during the day was\n15 degrees above.!\nIn the East Kootenay the mercury\ndropped to 29 below at Cranbrook\nThursday nibrning and six. inches\nof snow piled-up to'bring total fall\nto 14 inches at Cranbrook.'Buses\nwere running and transportation\nmoving Thursday evening.\nCold in Grand Forks had also\nchanged to show by Thursday.\nCENTRAL MORTGAGE TO BUILD,\nGo-Ahead Given to\nKimberley Subdivision\nSupervision Said\nLack at Whatshan\nDOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Cana\ndian dollar was 1\/32 cent lower at\na premium of 2 27\/32. per cent in\nterms of U. S. funds. Pound sterling\nunchanged at $2.81%.\nMONTREAL. (CP) - The U.\ndollar closed at a discount of\n2 Wii-ist' gjjnt in terms of Canadian fun.*,' unchanged. It took 07-\n7\/32 cents Canadian to buy $1 American. Pound sterling $2.73%, unchanged.      ' \u2022\u2022\nVANCOUVER\u2014The B.C. Power\nCommissioners have been accused\nby government counsel C. W. Tysoe\nof \"lack of interest\" and over-\ndependence on their subordinates.\nMr. Tysoe, at the royal commission headng into the landslide\nwhich virtually wiped out the\nWhatshan hydro development generator station last summer, criticized the actions of the commissioner*\nprior to the. disastrous slide. He\nwas summing up evidence before\nthe commissioner, Mr. Justice J. V.\nClyne. - \u2022 \u00a7 \"\u25a0\u25a0.  rf\n. 'It,la i_yr;\u00abu--ii\u00bbsi-#-ftat\u2014th*-\ncommissioner* were Jdjt aa guilty\nas anyone else for this disaster,\"\nhe said, adding that they took the\nposition that they were entitled to\nrely on their engineering staff.\n\"While they must have regard\nfrom time to time to the advice\nof their staff,\" the counsel said,\n\"they must be in a position to\nscrutinize this advice. One of the\nresponsibilities ot the power commission is to see that every member of the staff is doing his job. It\ncannot shed that responsibility by\nhiding behind its staff.\"\nHartley Twins Loved by\nParents, Three Sisters\nBy CAROLYN WORKMAN\nPETERSBURG, Ind. (AP)-What\nwould you do if you had a two-\nheaded baby?\n'   Quietly answering this question\n\u2022 Wednesday were the' parents of\n;*uch a child\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Cecil\nHartley of Petersburg, Ind.\n\u2022 : \"We'll keep him at home as long\nas possible,\" said the parents, whose\n.feelings have been especially deep\nin the fact that this baby is their\nfirst son. The baby is five weeks\nold.\n\u25a0 Because of the two heads and\ntwo sets of arms, the parents have\ngiven the baby two names, Donald\n.toy and Daniel Kaye.\n\u25a0 Ana Mrs. Hartley calls the infant\n-'\"the boys.\"\n' \"I consider it two,\" she said, although when speaking of the baby\nline often uses \"it\" or \"him.\"\n\"To the Hartleys' _ three little\n'girls, the baby that entered their\nhousehold just three days ago has\nbeen nicknamed \"Baby Buoby.\"\n. No new baby brother waa loved\nmore than' \"Baby Bubby\" by hla\n.sisters, Shirley 2, Connie 4 and\nMary Lou 6, are perfectly'at home\n\u2022With the strangeness of the child\nand simply pat two little head*\nof blonde fuzzy hair Instead of\none.' \\\nKIMBERLEY - Kimberley City\nCouncil has received word that the\nfederal government has passed an\norder-in-council authorizing. Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation to proceed with opening of\nthe new subdivision above Blarch-\nmont. Halt of the 52 building lot*\navailable have already been spoken for and construction Is expected\nto start in the Spring.\nUnder preparation for presentation to the ratepayers is a bylaw\nwhich would extend the boundaries\nto include some 50 acres of land\nii .the Black Bear area. It is not anticipated that this district will be\nsubdivided in the near, future.. It\n1* here that a local business man\nwill erect a 12-unit auto.court.and\nhome, complete with swimming\npool, playground and trailer camp\non land previously purchased, front^\nInterest Rates To Be\nKept Below 6 Per Cent\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Works Minister, Winters htate4\nThursday that the $10,000 ceiling on government housing^\nloans may be boosted by as much as $2500'or $3000 under\nproposed new legislation;\n\u2022 .. ' Interest rates, on National Housing Act loan_t currentlyi\n5% per cent, also may be increased, but he said %ey will\nbe held below six per cent.\nELEVEN-YEAR-OLD PRINCESS IRENE; youngest daughter ef\nKing Paul ahd Queen .Fredrlka of Qr.ec~eyv*mlles proudly as she\nholds a Hon cub In. her arm* during':* vi*|15r\"baok stage\" of the\nApollo Circus In Athens. Her lister; 16-year-old Prlncesa Sophie,\nli In the background.\u2014Central Preat Canadian.\n\"Daddy\" Hartley showed ' his\n.feelings towards his son by the\nway he came home from work.\nWith him were two of hi* working buddies. They had been told to\ntome oh In and see his new boy.\n\"I sang all the way home,\" the\nproud father related. \"I feel so good\nHow that the baby is finally home.\"\nB The Hartleys are happy that their\nbaby is to live with them.\nMAY NEVER SIT\nv':\"We feel 106 per cent better about\nit now, than we did when the baby\nfirst came,\" confided Mrs. Hartley.\n' There is much the Hartleys,have\naccepted in determining to rear\ntheir son.\n1 :They have been told that the\nbaby  can never  be expected  to\nwalk. It is not even certain that tt\nwill be able to sit. The baby cannot roll from Side to side nor slip\nto its tummy or lie on his back to\nsleep.\nInstead, it must be turned periodically and is necessarily limited to\nlying on one side or the other.\nThe little blond heads with.deep\nblue eyes face one another and the\ntiny fingers of the four arms often\ncling to each other.\n\"Danny\" is the weaker of toe\ntwo. He takes less nourishment and\ncries very faintly.\nOne tiny head sometimes cries as\nthe other sleeps.\nSometimes Danny is hungry\nwhen Donald is content, so the infants are occasionally fed at different times. This, too, involves a\nproblem for their mother\u2014how to\nget a nursing bottle into one boy's\nmouth without having it annoy the\nother. She has mastered this by\nfeeding them cross-handed with\nthe heads resting on her knees.\nLOT8 OF CRITICISM\nParents in various parts of the\nU. S. sent advice, to the Hartleys on\nwhat they should do about their\nunusual son.\n\"I received lots of criticism in letters mailed to me at the hospital,'\nthe new mother said.\n\"Some'told me they thought I\nshould leave the baby in a hospital\nOthers said it should be placed in\na home.\"\nThe sleepy litUe town of Petersburg has just welcomed the Hartleys. Until a week ago, they lived\noutside the city limits, but moved\nInto town to be closer to things be.\ncause of the baby.\nHome for this baby boy comprises\nthree rooms and-a kitchen. The living room also serves as the .master\nbedroom and, there the baby rests,\nWUERZBURG, Germany CAP)\u2014\nDoctors said Thursday a three-\nmonth-old two-headed . boy \u2014 or\nwhat'they prefer to-call two\u00bbboys\nwith a joint abdomen.and legs-\nis making good progress in a clinic\nhere.\n28,U.S. MARINES\nFEARED DEAD IN\nSHIP DISASTER\nBy JIM BECKER\nINCHON, Korea (AP)\u2014Twenty-\neight United States Marines are\ndead or missing after a troopship\nloaded with Chinese war pflsoners\ncollided; with and capsized a small'\nlanding craft Thursday.\nThe toll was surpassed by that\nof only;- one other naval disaster\nin the Korean theatre.\nMaj.-Gen. William S. Lawton,\ncommanding general of the Korean\ncommunication zqne, said 22 survivors, marines and crew members, were rescued from the chill\nwaters of Inchon harbor minutes\nafter the: collision between a big\nFormosa-bound LST (landing ship,\ntank) and an LCM \"(landing craft,\nmedium). They were not seriously\nhurt. The, marines were weighted\ndown with heavy equipment.\nSix bodies were recovered and\n22 others were presumed dead\nwhen the .search was called off at\ndusk. The! small ship had carried\n50 men, Lawton said.\n'illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAdvice To Those\nWho'd Write...\n^Q^AWA (OP) -Don't wait\nfor inspiration; just sit 'down\nand write. That's the way to\nwrite a book, author Nicholas\nMon'sarrat says.\n. \u201e'l* 'jsir: M-hs*rrat,-Hnited king-\n<\u00bbmtt_.:-Cle.rl\u00ab'\u00a3Jor \u00ab^\nIs\" already;under way.   \" '     \" .. 1 snd \u00bbuthor of \"The'Cruel Sea,\"\ntold   ,a .meeting   Wednesday\nnight at' Garletoh .'Coll-g* to\n''write what you know ahd tell\nthe truth about It..Write within\n1%     SfsX   n I <!#' your \u00b0wn experience-Otherwise\nKV Jafmllf Al Ih what you write'will be false.\"\n\u25a0'f ,\u2122IW VI Sytt, to   addition, to VJThe, Cruel\nCRANBROOK \u2014' Vote pn terms     Sea,\" Mr. Monsarrat has written.\nto end the 81 day old lumber strike     11 other noveh and a play.\nCranbro^S \"of toe%t\u00b1. ^l.lllHnillirillllMilllllHIIUrilllHIIHI*\ntional Woodworkers of America\nwhich covers the area, announced\nthat voting 'on the proposals had\nbeen delayed pending clarification\nof the status of 26 striking'Creston.\nIWA members. The local union\ndeclared that Creston Sawmill*\nLimited had notified these employees by letter to report for work\nat 8 a.m. last.-Decemtjer 28 or wo\nwill understand that you are not\ncoming back.\n\"In view of the hon-discrlmina-\ntion clause contained in the memorandum of agreement, it is imperative,\" said J. Clayton Walls,\nIWA staff representative, \u2022\u25a0that the\nstatus of these 26 strikers be clarified before Local 1-40.5 can recommend acceptance of the plan to end\nthe strike.\" :,'!\nIoOujIIWA\nKURT M.EYER, German general convicted of war crimes\nagainst 18 captured Canadian soldiers In France, hai had his Ufa\nsentenced commuted to 14 years\nImprisonment, Hon, Brooke Claxton, minister of national defence,\ntold the Common* recently. Similar, treatment alto has been accorded Johann Neltz, another\nGerman serving a long-term sentence In Wei prison, Germany,\nfor attempting to shoot a Canadian airman. Both men are now\neligible for release. The Canadian\ngovernment bated its decision on\nthe unanimous recommendation\nof a British review board.\nMINE, MILL URGES\nMORATORIUMS\nFOR UNEMPLOYED\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A reso-\nlutlon urging the federal government to declare a moratorium on\nall mortgages and Instalment payment! for unemployed workers\nwat patted here Thursday at the\nannual convention of the B, C,\nDlttrict, Union of Mine, Mill and\nSmelter Workers (Ind.)\nDelegatei tald mounting unenv\nployment, especially In tha bate\nmetal Industry I* causing thousands of workers to face foreclosure and eviction from hornet and\nloss of articles purchated.\nAnother resolution atked that a\ncustom smelter be buitt In B. C.\nto \"break the bottleneck and monopoly control over small. Independent mines,\"\nWants Meyer\nDocuments Aired\n'OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Opposition\nleader Drew wants the government\nto make public all documents in its\npossession relating to former Nazi\nMaj.-Gen. Kurt Meyer;\nMr. Drew made the request\nThursday In a motion on the Commons order paper following Defence Minister Claxton'* announcement that MeyeT will be a free man\n\"In a matter of,months.\" Meyer's\nrelease from the\" British-Werl military prison In the Western sector\noi Germany has been protested by\nmany veterans organization-.\nMeyer was sentenced to be shot\nfor.his part in th* death ox 18 Canadian prisoners of war during the\nNormandy fighting. Tho sentence\nwa* commuted to life imprisonment\nand then to 14 years.\nWith time off for good behavior,\nit is expected that Meyer will be\nKELOWNA, B.C. fCP) - Two\nB.C. interior lumber operations\nhave voted to throv\/ out the International Woodworkers of America\n(CIO-CCL) as bargaining agents.\nNicola Valley Sawmills at Mer.\nritt voted 40-20 for decertification\nof the IWA in a government-super,\nvised vote. Wednesday. Thompson\nValley Lumber,Company at Kariv\nloops voted 10-7 for decertification\nof the nrMi,\nBoth operations opposed the\nsouthern interior strike in a government-supervised vote last fall.\nThe plants were closed by :IWA\npickets but operations wens resumed after, an . injunction^jforbade\npicketing.\nKamloops Lumber Company employees,' who voted for the strike,\nsubmitted a petition bearing the\nnames of 90 of the 65 men employed\nseeking a similar decertification\nvote.\nAt Creston, department of labor\nofficials are checking signatures on\na petition requesting AFL certification.\nOTTAWA ((?P) - A Bra-iiian\nhousing plan used in the depression\nyears: w thi jt9_ds was-suggested\nTKutpday \u2022WgW by1; Spjdal'.Cmdit\nhieinbef of Pa'rl^ni-ntYas e possible\ncur*[ f<-f -SnldS's'noifs'ing prbblem.\n; .GpoWe, H*nhi;. member, tor; New\nWestminster, spoke ih the Commons\nduring second r-eding\u2014approval in\nprinc.inix ~.of new.government\nhousing, legislation.     '\nEveryone concerned, bankers,\nand, builders made money on the\nplan, he added. It resulted in 70 to\n75 per; cent of the people, owning\ntheir homes.    ,       \u2022\nIt worked this way:\nThe Brazilian treasury issued deposit certificates to the chartered\nbanks for the value of materials\nand labor going'into a homo.\nThe banks loaned the certificates\nat two-per-cent interest to builders.\nThe builder's Used the certificates\nto pay for the construction of new\nhomes which they sold at reasonable mark-up. ' :\n: The home owners repaid the\nchartered banks for the certificates\n\u2014the value of the house\u2014plus the\ntwo-per-cent interest rate.. There\nwas no down payment.\nMr. Hahn said the plan put the\nunemployed to work < and solved\nBrazil's housing shortage and excess materials problem.\nIn 10 to IS years, the certificates\nwere redeemed: The banks sent\nthem back to the treasury which\ndestroyed them. \u25a0   .\nWai&h. dtevsik.\nKootenay Lake water level\nThursday, 4.65 feet above Zero.\nCreston Man On\nB.C. Fruir Board\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP)\u2014Arthur\nGarrish of Penticton was re-elected\npresident of the, B.C. Fruit Growers\nAssociation at the group's annual'\nconvention today. The association\nalso named J. C. Campbell of\nSalmon Arm as president of the\nB.C. Fruit Board, replacing G. A.\nBarrat who is retiring after serving\n12 years. Others elected to the\nboard were A.; G.1 Desbrlsay of\nPenticton and W, A. Kemp of\nCreston.\nIn a 6500-word' statement in the\nCommon*, he. outlined further details of proposed NHA amendments\nand urged members to give the legislation speedy approval so it can\nbe. put, into. operation next spring.\nThe measure .met' some critjcism\nas it came up for second reading-\napproval in principle.\nDonald Fleming (PC-Toronto Eg-\nllnton), speaking for the official\nOpposition, said his party will not\noppose the measure, but he described some of its features as inadequate. -\nBANK8 INVOLVED\n. The measure would admit banks\nInto the mortgage lending field.and\nthis was a \"fundamental, departure\" from existing banking legislation., He assumed banks will coi\noperate, but he hoped there will be\nno pressure put on them to get depositors, money into long-term\nhousing loans.       ,\nJoseph W. Noseworthy. (CCF-\nYork, South), said the. legislation\nwill not solve Canada's housing\nshortage. It would not reduce the\ncost of, home building but the government could reduce costs by making money available to buildprs at\na rate of not more than two-percent interest.\n.' Mr. Winters' said, the legislation\nwill op'en'the mortgage-lending\nfield to chartered,'banks'under' a\nloan-insurance scheme ' aimed' at\nmaintaining residential' housing\nconstruction in Canada jit or near\nthe . 1858 peak of VHfm ' housing\nstart*.. ,i-.,_-  r_-4.~_jwi.\n\"ft' wl)l;; cut; r3nwn payments, ex-\niendf the! \u00bb&_\u25a0\u2022'$' day [Mm provide\nmaximum 18.ye_r loan* to'-ehcbur-\nag-'c-riv&sibns;6f-large,,old homes\ninto d_plexes:.ahd.,:apartments. A\nThe government's r-.Oentral Mortgage and Housing Corporation will\nbelarni-d-with power to linsure, a\nmaximum of $2,000,000,000 in loans\nwithout further :parllament_ry approval.' Cost of insurance, two per\ncent in the case of houses for owner occupancy, will.be paid, by the\nhome owner.\nREDUCE DOWN PAYMENT\nDown payments will be cut to 10\nper cent from 20 < on the first $8000\nof the house lending value, but increased' to 30 per cent on the remaining portions up' to an unspecified, maximum. The common life\nof a mortgage will be boosted to 25\nyears from 20.\n'Mr. Winters said the mortgage\nceiling and' interest rates will be\nfixed by the cabinet later. But he\nsaid the impact will be that on a\nhouse with a lending value of $16,-\n000 the ratio of loan to lending\nvalue will be \"greater than 80 per\ncent, with corresponding lesser\namounts of equity or down payment requirements.\"\nExperts outside the tSommons\nsaid that on that basis, a builder\ncould get a rnlximum loan of perhaps $12,800, making fhe down payment about $3200 on a $16,000 house.\nCurrently the down payment is\n$6000.\nMr. Winters also said that building costs have risen about 25 per\ncent since the $10,000 ceiling wa.\nestablished. That must be taken\nInto consideration, in setting the\nnew limit.\nAs for interest rates, he said that\na five-per-cent rate would be too\nlow to attract mortgage money, but\nthat ,a six-per-cent charge would\nbe excessive In view of the insurance guarantees.\n81\/4 PER CENT RATE\nThe government currently sijbsl-\ndlzes rates on joint loans with mortgage-lenders. CMHC agrees to take\n3% per cent on its portion of the,   .\nloan, allowing the commercial bor-:\nrowers'to take. 5% per .cent. That-\nmakes the fate fbr the 'mortgagee ,\n5% per cent. \u25a0 ':!    \/:,\n\"It should be borne in mind that\nthe proposed changes in the NHA :\nwill provide a very different kind;'\nof investment from the type of\nhousing mortgage which was current in the twenties and early,\nthirties.\"\n\"The Insurance feature, eliminates\nany possibility of substantial losses\nbeing taken by the chartered banks'\non their mortgage portldlio. There.\nis the added safety, not. present 20\nyears ago, of principal, interest and\ntaxes being paid by the borrower,\non a monthly basis.\"\nThe banks will be able to lend-\nonly on residential1 housing. They^\nwill be able to remain \"liquid\" by?\nselling the mortgages ;trom lender*,'\nand in addition the banks will be\nable' to use this financial paper;\nto obtain loans from the Bank of\nCanada.\nThese are important provisions',\nin.that they meet the main objections often' pressed to the banks\nbeing in the mortgage business\/The'\nInsurance protects the banks.and.\nother, lenders against substantial\nlosses on their mortgage account,\nand there are provisions for liquid-.' ,\nity.- and 'marketability.\"'.\nDEFAULTED MORTGAGES\nUnder the iosjirance arrangement,\nCMHC  v\/Si  nSf fove?\/ defaulted\nmortgages,  paying  toe  mortgage .\nhoiff_f':-a\\caShr;*:-   y^^:~...... \u25a0\n1,98 per cent of the outstanding\nprincipal and, if owing, up to six\nmonths of interest at the full rate.\nOn, additional outstanding interest\n\u2014up to a maximum of 12 months\u2014\nCMHC will pay toe.mortgage rate,-\nless two per cent. '    ; '\n2. CMHC also will pay for such\nborrower's charges as. fire insurance and taxes, advanced by the\nlender; acquisition fee of $12\", snd\nother approved taxable legal disbursements.  \u25a0        ,    , .\nAs the new system, gets into operation, CMHC will gradually withdraw ^from the joint, lending\nschemes under wh^ch it. combines\n\u25a0With such organization* as life insurance ' companies to make, NHA\nloans. \\\nBut it will still remain in parts\nof the lending field. It still will\nprovide loans for slum clearance,\nlow-cost and subsidized' rental projects and loans to primary, nro-\nducers, such as farmers, lumbermen and fishermen.\nFree Bread Is Aim of Soviet\nBy BILL BOM\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMOSCOW (CP) \u2014 From the look\nof their shopping bags Russians\nare great bread apd fish eaters.\nNo, bag seems complete without\nat least two or three large loaves\nbulging between Its. strings. Bread,\nis sold by weight, the kilo (2 1\/5\npounds), the half-kilo, the quarter\nand even in smaller ..weights if you\nwant. There* are two large loaves to\na kilo.\nIn a.city in which a public-school\nteacher earns 850 ruble*, a month, a\nhigh school teacher 800 and a principal 1900, bread averages two rubles eight kopeks a.kilo.. .-.'-'\nFREE BREAD 18 AIM\nThere have been successive reductions tn the price ot bread and\nother foods since the war and I am\ntold toe goal is to provide bread\nfree to the public, as are heat and\nwater.. ' .\nTh* ruble (100 kopeks) la worth\n25 cents at Russia'* exchange rate*\nbut in terms of what it can buy Its\nvalue is no more than' five to eight\n\u2014Central Prejt Canadian,  released fipm prl_on to,S-pt*n*bes. cent*. Tt-_!.i-iepur<-.as--g value of\nthe high school teacher's 800 rubles\n($200) is from $40. to $60.\nHere are some other prices. The\nRussians use the metric weight system ahd toe Canadian equivalents\nare approximate.\nButter, two rubles 55 kopeks for\nVt pound; margarine one ruble, 48\nkopeks; cheese from two ruble* to\nthree rubles 50 kopeks,\nTea, three rubles 80 kopeks a\npound; coffee, five rubles, 50 kopeks\nto nine rubles 70 kopeks for tt\npound.\nFISH PRICES\nHerring 20 rubles Jor first quality\nbig fish; salted salmon six rubles\n10 kopeks Vt pound.\nCooked meats - and 'sausages such'\nas liverwurst and bologna, one rib\nble 65 kopeks to four ruble* five\nkopeks for Vt pound;: bacon,'two\nrubles, 35 kopeks Vt pound.\nEgg*, one ruble each; macaroni,\nthree rubles, 25'kopeks a pound.\n. Ihe best roasts and steaks are 15\nrubles for 2 1-5 pounds of beef, pork\nor lamb while other cuts-vary from\nnine rubles 50 kopeks to 14 rubles.\nHamburger is U rubles 40 kopeks\nfor 2 1-5 pounds.\nBeer, sold at the soft drink counter, costs from two rubles 45 kopeks\nt\u00ab three rubles 55 kopeks. Fruit\nsquashes cost one ruble 28 kopeks a\nbottle.\nChocolate bars come in a number\nof sizes, the most common being\ntwo and four ounces. They are six\nrubles 50 kopeks and 14 rubles 90\nkopeks respectively and are comparable in quality to ours.\nPotatoes cost 40 kopek* tor 2 1-5\npounds, cabbages one ruble- 80 kopeks and <apple* five rubles 50 kopeks to seven rubles 50 kopek). Ap-\n\u2022pies are smaller than ours and not\nrosy. \u25a0 .\u2022'\nU.S. Nationalism\nBy GEORGE W. CORNELL\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014One of the\nprominent tenets being preached\nfrom pulpits in the United States\ntoday is this: That a nation, like a\nman, should not always do as tt\npleases.\nAround this view revolves a\nbasic issue of toe times. It has\nstirred wide discussion, usually\nJmder the labels of \"international-\n^\u25a0m\" versus \"nationalism.\"\nHundreds of religious leader*\nhave entered the fray, asserting\nthat a fundamental law of Go<j is\ninvolved.\nMost of them hold\/ithat a nation's .\ndecisions should be: guided by the\ninterests of all peoples everywhqrfe.\nBut they grant many Americans\nsee   national   self-interest   as   the -,\ngoverning rule.\nWHAT BIBLE 8AY8 ) '\nThey   back   their   stand   withy\nChristian doctrine, which  can be\nsummarized as follows:\n1. God is the supreme sovereign\nof all nations, and has set forth\nuniversal laws applicable to all.\n2. Among these laws is the equal\nworth of all men under God. He\nplays no favorites.\n3. A nation, to abide by this universal law, must give considers?\ntion to the welfare of all lands and\npeoples. Otherwise, it \"falls .short\nof toe ethical demands of the.\nChristian faith.\"\nThese factors, as church leaders\nsee it. mean a nation's policies\nshould be \"broad enough to. include\nthV-rights, needs and interests of\nother nations and peoples, including those, we now count as hostile.\"\"\nAnd in This Corner ...\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A $300 reward wat offered today for the tafe\nreturn of two \"kidnapped\" CBC television \"ttars\"\u2014Uncle Chlchlmut\nand Hollyhock, The two puppets were taken Tuesday night from\nthe auto of their owner, John Conway, who It offering the reward.\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The English sparrow, poor chap, is unappreciated\nin his* homeland. A House of Commons committee voted 10 to 6 not\nto place him on the list of birds which in England enjoy the protection of the law. ' f-\nwi \\\n\u25a0'.,\" \u25a0..' .'\u25a0 - .- -   - \u2014J ----. \u25a0_\u2014-_-\u2014\n\t\n:\u25a0'.. ,    \u25a0\u25a0   '\u25a0.\n.,   '        .\"\u25a0 -\n_-1\n I-|'.\"'V. K('5f\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY KEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,1934\nTONIGHT - SATURDAY \u2014 Complete Show* at 7:00-9:00\nYou'll Fall In Love With \"LIU\"\nin thii romanco-with-musie that'* ai happy-hearted\nand carefree os its hit long \"Hi-Lili Hi-Lo\"\nTECHNICOLOR\nMM-0-MPktur.ilonino\nM\u00bb __M.-<A\u00ab*_*_*\u00bb\nLateit World New* \"Land of Diamonds\"\nCartoon: \"TV OF TOMORROW\"\nCiifisc\nFeilMzer Mont Rehires ^ommco\nLayoffs; CPR Work To Id by Crump\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Canadian Pacific Railway-Vice-President N. R.\nCrump and Cominco Superintendent of Kimberley operation B. M.\nHurdle outlined Thursday night to\nthe largest annual meeting on\nrecord for the Cranbrook Chamber\nof Commerce, the general situation\nof their respective fields of operation. ,\nMr. Crump said that since 1881\nCanada has been wolded together\nby its transportation. Starting with\nits railway and now including its\nInland waterway, highways, airways and pipelines. He said, \"CPR\ncapitalization is $4 billion and Its\nannual salaries . and wages are\n$650,000,000.\" Of the five transportation methods the railway alone\nhas to provide all its own facilities\nat its own expense.\" Using Dominion Bureau of Statistics index, he\nsaid, \"Freight rates in Canada since\nMUSICLAND\nTHEATRE\nKASLO, B.C.\nShowing Friday, 7:30 p.m.\nSaturday, 6:00 p.m. and 8:S0 p.m.\n\"SPLIT SECOND\"\nSTEPHEN McNALLY\nJAN STERLINQ - ALEXIS SMITH\nMRS. M. M. SMITH\nLAID AT REST\nFuneral services for Mrs. Margaret Maud Smith were held Thursday afternoon with Rev. Allan\nDixon   officiating.   Services   were\nSinducted et th,e Thompson Funeral\nome.\nTwo hymns sung were \"Rock of\n^gej\" and \"Abide With Me.\" Mrs.\nW. A. Manson was organist\nJohn Dingwall, W. S. Jackson,\nJohn Teague, E. Jones, F. Jones and\nT. Sevinkoff were pallbearers, and\nInterment waa In Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nBLIND SWIMMERS\nRBtHNA (CP)\u2014Onee each week\ntit .-tad or physically-handicapped\npersons take swimming lessons at\nthe RCMP pool here. Instructor Al-\nwyn Barp-* says about 40 such pupils have learned to swim in the\nweekly course. ,\nV\u00ab_'\u2014 good\nIndoor ptctvne*\nem *o cosy\n\u2022AeojKMKjddo\nKMART\nSU-PER\nSPEtO\nfLASH\\\n$12.90\nMitnwtoNt\nJOOT t\u00bbIW bllmtms\nfeet tigjd gootdi a-\ngoto* ficefc fcfewcs.    **\u2022* s**-\nCOfBtt H OM W IM OOlMfMNM\n\u00ab ganoioe SKtAart on your \u2022*\u2022\n40W-ML  Gol  yOMS\"  ICM  copy of\n\u25a0fclpfcl Hurts on rtosti PnotoQ*\nRAMSAY'S\nCAMERA STORE\nm Baker 8t.     \u2014     Phone 106\nMcGill Speaker ar Trail Chamber....\nWisdom, Energy of Canadian Will\nDetermine Extent oi Recession\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail Chamber of Commerce elected and Installed a new\nslate ot officers at Its dinner meeting attended by over 200 members\nand wives Thursday night. Installation ceremony was conducted by\nMayor E. G. Fletcher of Trail.\nPresident 1* Gordon C. Campbell,\nfirst vice-president, pon Sutherland\nsecond vice-president, W. A. Forrest, and councillors A. H. W. Busby, R. K. Charlton, W. K. Gwyer,\nJ. D. McMynn, F. E. Nichols, J. C.\nVlpond, A. C. Jenkins.\nRetiring President E. Gautschl tn\nhi* annual report said that while\n\"we never had lt to good as in 1968\nunfortunately toe basic Industries\non which the prosperity of this district is largely dependent did not\nfare so well. In spite of this retail\nsales have continued to climb and\ntha continued confidence of business men in the. district has been\nshown by their investment of capital in the city of Trail.\nHe made three recommendations:\n\"A concentrated drive for Increased\nmembership In the chamber. With\ntha retail merchants now a part of\nthe chamber I recommend greater\nservice by retail business to encourage more local spending. A prosperous expanding business district\nwould help to solve many city\nproblems. Thirdly an increased effort to stimulate the establishment\nof additional Industry and business\nin this area.\"\nD. Pocente, president of the Junior Chamber reported for that organization. An active year had been\nexperienced.\nOut-of-town guests included two\nCominco officials, R. Woodford,\nvice-president of toe Calgary\nChamber of Commerce, and W. S.\nKlrkpatrick of Montreal, chairman\nof the Canadian Executive Council\nof the Chamber of Commerce, W. T.\nOglow, president of ' Castlegar\nChamber of Commerce and G. German, president of Rossland Chamber of Commerce.\nGuest speaker was Dr. Cyril F.\nJames, principal and vice chancel\nlor of McGill University of Montreal, who declared, \"If Canada con-\ntinues to exercise the wisdom\nshown in the part IS year* we have\nho occasion to be pessimistic about\nour ability to conquer a recession,\n\"The cause of Canada'* phenomenal prosperity which ha* attracted the attention of the whole world\nwas not due entirely to natural resource*.\n\"Resources, men and market. Canada's boom was dependent upon\nthe use of basic materials by men\nwith technical knowledge and skill\nand steadily growing export mar-\nke'i which we had up to 12 months\nago.\n\"People ask how far recession\nwill go. There is no theory of any\nkind which can say how serious the\nvalley Is, how bad the depression\ncan be. It depends on the wisdom,\ndetermination and energy of the\npeople responsible in the field of\ngovernment and the field of business.\nPOPULATION,\nPAYROLLS HIGHER\n\"Canada is a high cost country\nand the central problem is one of\nhigh costs. We have had steadily\nexpanding markets partly because\nthe population of Canada has In.\ncreased from 12 million to 15 mil\nlion, partly because that population has had a larger number of\ndollars ln its pocket,-from the fact\nthat most part* of. the world were\nalmost destitute at the end of the\nwar and needed Canadian products\nand the Korean war enlarged the\nneed for our raw materials,\n\"In 1937 the national income ot\nCanada was slightly more than five\nbillion dollars in the whole country.\nBy 1946 it had more than doubled\nto 12 billion. Last year's estimates\nshows that lt has doubled again.\nExternal trade' rose from' $1.5 bU\nlion in 1939 to 84.5*billlon In 1946\nand (8.6 billion in 1953. Canada has\nthree factors of strength, economic\nIntegration, an extraordinary financial conservatism of Canada as a\nwhole and the resilience of an ex.\npanding economy.\"\nDOMINION\nRubber\nFootwear\nFOR MEN\nPULLOVERS - OVERSHOES -WORK\nRUBBERS - SHOW BOOTS\nPlain or Cleated. Your Choice of a Dozen Kinds!\nSPECIAL - CASHMERE OVERSHOES\nVs PRICE'\n\u00ab\n\u2022ii\nOne, Two, Four'Buckle and Some Zippers.\nGODFREYS'\nPHONE \u2014 270 \u2014 BOX\ni     ^\nROTARY\nICE CAPERS   54\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY     8:00 p.m.\nCIVIC CENTRE ARENA\nMATINEE TODAY 2:30 p.m.\nAdmission: Adult* \u2014 Reserved $1.00, Rush 75c\nChildren \u2014 Reserved $1.00, Rush 50e, Matinee 25e\nReserved Seat Plan at City Drug 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Today and Saturday.\nTlcktts on Sals a. Butterfield'., Coventry!', Gllkeri', Qodfreys', Hlaperson's, H.B. Co,\nLiberty,  Bank  of  Commerce,  Bank of  Montreal,  Ramnay's and  Any  Rotarlan.\n9 have risen 64 per cent.\nSeventy-nine per cent in the United\nStates and 130 per cent in toe United Kingdom and CPR labor costs\nhave' risen 132 per cent ln that\nperiod.\"\n\"General wholesale prices are up\n126 per cent and farm prices 106.6\nper cent. In. 1952,\" he said, \"the\nCPR received 1.3 cents a ton per\nmile as an average.'\nDealing with a district angle,\nhe said \"the CPR ha* 64 million\nrailway ties of which 200,800,000\nare renewed annually, ahd price\nof ties ha* risen 282 per oent from\nthe 1939 level, They are a stable\nEast Kootenay wood* product.\nHe commented on dieseli-atlon ot\nthe railways at cost of $240,000 per\nunit, additional luxury day coaches\nln Eastern Canada at $90,000, Western day. coaches at $170,000, reefer\n(refrigerator)  cars at $17,500 and\nbox car* at $7000 per unit. Inventory ot these is at 88,000 units for\nthe CPR, He described briefly the\nforthcoming   stainless   steel   dome\ncar passenger trains which will go\ninto   trans-continental   main   line\nservice next year, a new 22,650 ton\nocean liner,  and  plans  for early\nconversion of Canadian Pacific Airline* planned ocean service from\nDC-8s to Mark II'Comets.\n* He also told of CPR communications branch development in 1953\nof micro-wave relays for domestic\nand trans-atlantlc television which\nare,operating successfully.\nLARGEST OPERATION\nDealing with East Koptenay's\nlargest single industrial operation,\nCominco production in Kimberley\nand District, Mr. Hurdle commented\non the decline ot baie metal prices\nsince 1950, which, he said, resulted\nfrom an artificial wartime scarcity\nwhich forced a high price, resulting in huge production and stock\npiling and consequent lowering of\nthe price when the emergency was\nRotary Daredevils\nHave a Place\nIn Ice Carnival\nSixty skater* will whirl on Civic\nCentre Ice this afternoon and evening and Saturday evening in the\nRotary Club's 12th,annual .skating\ncarnival.\nThe skaters, under their instructress, Miss Reta David, will portray\neverything from ballet to Waltzes\nand a kick line'. Trail skaters will\nalso take part. \\'.   \"j ';   .\nRotary Club, not willing fo let\nthe bladesters steal the entire,show,\nplan a program for intermission and\nhave dubbed it the \"daredevil attraction at the civic arena.\"\n\"Members of the Nelson Rotary\nClub to present world. premiere tonight and Saturday during their\nannual ice revue,\" says their own\nballyhoo meeting. \"For ten hilarious minutes these reckless men will\ndefy the laws of gravity to give\nyou the laugh, of '54.\nr\"This hand-picked team of equi-\ntants, after weeks of training unger\ntheir leader. Gene Leveque, are\nready to give the greatest show\nSouth of Horsethlef Creek.\n\"Those taking part in this sidesplitting show include Inspector\nHap Harris riding Jail Bird, Alderman Jack Coventry on Flora, the,\nhorse Mayor Kary could not manage, Sheriff Tom Fox on Zeizure.\nTommy Miard on Bridge-et, Bill\nRamsay on Nagative, Hector Mackenzie on Shingles, Reeve Harper\non Bond issue, Dick Neill riding\nCropper, Jack Laughton on )3I-.oca]\nand Ron Grlmstead on Nil Returns.\"\nover. Mr. Hurdle said that though\n22  base  metal   producers  in   B.C.\ndropped out in the past tyro years\nwith falling prices, the 1953 production of base metals on the continent topped any previous year.\nAt Kimberley, he said,'\"Sullivan   Mine  production  continued\nthrough the year at the 10,000\nton dally capacity of Its concentrator and hewed to a principle\nof  mining   low  grade  ore  ai  It\noccurred along with high grade\nore to, prolong production of the\nfabulous Sullivan.\nCominco's faith in indefinite continuation of a base metal market\nwas  shbwn  by  Its  bringing  new\nmines to production including the\nBluebell    at   Riondel,   Tulsequah,\nHB   at  Salmo  and  most  recently\nPine Point on Great Slave Lake.\n#P TIN\nIn 1941 Cominco added tin production to Its lead and zinc and in\n1943 began shipping iron tailing to\nTrail when sulphuric acid is manufactured. Il is also selling rock\nwas(e from the sink-and-float plant\nat Kimberley for ballast or using lt\nfor backfill. Largest recent development locally started In October,\nwith production at the fertilizer\nplant at nearby Marysville'with a\nforecast unlimited, worldwide demand for its products. Shinments\nare already going to Prairie\nprovinces.\nIron and sulphur for its products\nare available in. the immediate area\nfor two additional producing units\nin this plant when conditions war.\nrant. ' \u25a0\nTrail cutback In the 8prlng re-'\nsuited In layoffs of S00 of the 1800\nKimberley   Cominco   employees.\nBut there were all re-hlred when\nthe new plant opened and payrolls were virtually unchanged.\nHe commented  that Trail: with\n2,400,000  tons,  accounted' for four\noer cent of the total annual natlona'\nfreight handled by the CPR and\nthat Kimberley at three-auarters of\na million tons is also an imposing\ncustomer.\nOver 200 guests sat down to\nthe dinner served by the Canadian Daughters League tn Mount\nBaker -ohool Auditorium. Matter\nof ceremonies and the chairman\nwas A. W. Hunter, who was reelected president with other officers J, M, Falklm, vice-president, and directors Gordon Dezall,\nCharles Draper, John Ellis, W, D.\nGllroy, P, M. Irwin, C. J. Little,\nWalter Millar, T. A. Moore, Stanley Moffatt, Joseph Provenzaho,\nD. P. 8hepard, Arron Walde, W.\nH. Wilson and G. T. Wllchester,\nWWI^WpBp^ipppip\nChamber Sets Up Committee, Program ...\nCommunity Role cf HospilalTold\nJaycees; Auxiliary Acf Ivify Widens\nA broad program \"to make the\nhospital the community affair lt\nactually is\" has been undertaken l.n\nconjunction with the effort to\norganize the Kootenay Valley Hospital Improvement District, Nelson\nJunior-Chamber of Commerce was\ntold Thursday night.\n\"A hospital is a public service\u2014a\npublic ulllty, If you like \u2014 and its\nrelations with' the community' and\nthe community's relationship with\nit have a y.ital bearing on the\nservice it can render,\" R. H. Procter,\nco-ordinating chairman of hospital\ndistrict organizing committee, told\nthe large meeting. By the community, it was not just meant Nelson, but the wide area of the West\nKootenay which the present Kootenay Lake General Hospital and\nparticularly the proposed new district hospital would serve. \/\nThough the government and\nHospital Insurance 8ervice had a\nhand In hospitalization matter.,\nhospitals always had been and\nstill were very much community\naffairs. They served tho com.\nmunlty't families In time of slok,\nnets, and were bound closely\nwith many phases of family liv\nIng. Their operation depended on\ncommunity people, and their\nsuccessful administration depend\ned on directors elected from\namong the community's citizens.\n2086 \"YES,\" 150 \"NO\"\nOne of the achievements sought\nin the successful eflort to1 have 70\nper cent or more of the district's\n8000 property owners give approval\nto the hospital district proposal\nwas to win a feeling of good will\nand trust between the people of the\noutlying communities and rural\narea and the people Of Nelson\nproper. This was done by giving\nthe property owners as much in\nfacts and Information as cou|d be\nassembled on the district proposal\nand by assuring them of a voice in\ndecisions on the proposed construction . of a new district hospital.\nSome 2086 persons had by Thursday\nsaid \"yes\" in support to the -proposal that they contribute to a new\ninstitution\": only 150 had said \"no.\"\nThere were others still to be con.\ntacted, and the Jaycees were asked\nto give a hand in reaching rural\nowners who lived in Nelson.\nCITY TO VOTE\nIn signing petitions the district\npeople also gave authority for the\ntrustees they will eventually elect\nto levy a tax within a certain limit\n(or hospital construction purposes.\nWhen the agreement between the\ncity and district was carried\nthrough, property owners of Nel\nson would be called on to pas:\ntheir share of the $600,000 through\nvoting on a bylaw.\nIn furthering its relations with\nthe community, Mr. Procter said,\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nSociety board of directors has proposals concerning broadening of\nIts constitution and membership\nbefore it, the Women's Auxiliary is\nincreasing its membership, seeking\nparticipation in its work from district groups and planning toe\nformation of a younger, women's\nauxiliary. There is, also a move\nunder way to interest various\ngroups to establish, funds to assist\nThe Weather\nMin Max Pre\nNELSON     4 15 11.00\nCalgary        2 9 .14\nEdmonton    -33 -28 .02\nKimberley  -25 -8 .16\nCrescent Valley     5 11 .65\nKamloops           2 9 .14\nPenticton     14 17 .04\nVancouver     28 32 .75\nVictoria    35 39 .83\nPrince Rupert     10 19 \u2014\nPrince* George  -16 -10 .05\nWhltehorse    -40 -14\nSeattle         :   26 33 .96\nPortland           21 32 .30\nSan Francisco  .\u2022   46 53 \u2014\nSpokane          2 17 .59\nthe eventual furnishing and equipping of a new district hospital.\nA committee and a program to\nassist in hospital matters'* was set\nup by toe Jaycees after the address.\n_   i\nATTENTION\nKOOTENAY FOREST PRODUCTS\nSawmill and Green Chain Employees\nDue To Continuing Frost Conditions\nThe SAWMILL WILL REMAIN\nSHUT DOWN\nUNTIL FURTHER NOTICE\nKOOTENAY FOREST PRODUCTS\nLIMITED\n905 Gordon Road       , Nelion, B.C.\nBickerton's\nStore\nCorner of Cedar and Observatory\nStreets   \u2022\nPHONE 1707\nJUST\nARRIVED\nKraft Shipment of\n* Cheese\n* Spreads\n* Parkay\nMargarine\nStock up on your Kraft\nneeds while our stock\nis complete.\nLook For\nEnd-of-the-Month\nSPECIALS\n\"CROJMWOfltf PUZZLf\"\nLONDON (CP) ~ Acivll servant\ntestifying In a court case repeatedly\nused such phrases as \"incremental\ndates\" (when a. pay increase was\ndue) and \"pre-assimilation conditioned ...hours\" (hours previously\nworked). The Judge commented \u2014\n\"Words, words\u2014It all sounds like\na crossword puzzle.\"1' &\u2022 \u25a0,\nBuy Your\nBendix\nEconomat\ni\nFrom la master plumber\nwho is qualified ta hV ,\nstall and service it,\nSPECIAL\nSAVE $75\nOn an\nAdmiral\nRefrigerator\nFRED\nWELSH\n&SON\n321 Baker St.    Phone 1748\nRestock Your Linen Closet!\nSAVE $15 on this\n64 Piece\nSheet &\nDOWN\nBALANCE $5 A MONTH\nFULL PRICE $35\nENSEMBLE CONTAINS:\n\u2022\n4 Large Sheets               . \u2022 4 Large Pillow Cases     \u2022 6 Bath Towels\n\u2022\n4 Guest Towels                 * 8 Face Cloths                    \u2022  Utility Towels\n\u2022\n12 Tea Towels                 \u2022  12 Dish Cloths                 \u2022 6 Pot Holders\nTHIS ENSEMBLE CAN BE VARIED TO SUIT YOUR NEEDS. \u2014 PIECE GOODS, SECOND FLOOR\nSAVE $15-$20\nJ2L Made-to-Measure\nSUITS\nA \"once a year\" offering by this famous\nmanufacturer. Choose from 100% all wool\nfabrics imported from England . . . fine\nworsteds, worsted flannels and gabardines,\nReg. 66.50.\nDon't miss this opportunity to save on these expertly tailored suits. Extra\npants available. Use the\nBay's convenient budget\nplan. Any suit $10 down,\nthe balance in easy\nmonthly payments.\nPerfect fit guaranteed for all body types\n.... regulars, shorts, or tails in the style and\nfabric you wish. Delivery in .4 weeks. Sale\nends February 1st, Reg. $72.\n WARM\nSLIPPERS\nFor These Cold Mornings\nFleece Lined or Felt\nMOCCASINS\n$1.95 -$5.95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n563 Baker St\nPhone i\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDeer in Village\nNEW DENVER - Mrs. A..C.\nPeterson saw several robins in\nher yard January 17 and the\ndeer are walking about New\nDenver any hour of the day. A\nheavy snow storm has brought '\nthem out of tha mountains.,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNucleus of New\nWorld Society\nForming \u2014Nathan\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 J. H. Nathan, a\ntravelling representative , of the\nWatchtower Bible and Tract Society\nof Toronto, speaking before an assembly of 323 people In Kimberley\nhigh school auditorium on the subject \"What is your Destiny\" said\n\"God's original destiny for humankind as found at Genesis 1:26-23\nshows Re intended that man should\nlive in a paradise earth bringing\nforth his own kind in health and\nhappiness with an eternity of life\nbefore him.\"\nHe showed'that this original purpose being Interrupted by Satan,\nwho induced msn to rebel against\nthe Almighty God, has brought\nmankind to its present condition of\nfear, oppression, injustice, corruption in all phases of life, with poverty, starvation and privations the\ndaily lot of two-third of earth's\npopulation. However, through the\nmercies of Jehovah, and the sacrifice of Christ Jesus, the way is opened up for men to grasp the hope\nof life. For some, a life in heaven,\nbut for the majority, life in a perfect earth.\nIn support Mr. Nathan quoted\nfrom the Modern New World Translation of the Christian Greek Scriptures at Matt. S:3 \"Happy are those\nwho are conscious of their spiritual\nneed, since the Kingdom of the\nHeavens belongs to them\", and\nMatt 5:5 \"Happy are the mild-tempered ones, since they will inherit\nKEMGIO\nTRADI MARK RIO'Dl\nthe miracle lustre enamel\nBEAUTIFUL\nSCRUBBABLE\nECONOMICAL\nDrive to Raise $15fi00\nFor Citadel'Payment\nl&mffffyfffi,   . .;:,, y yffyfEfiM\nA DRIVE WILL START next month in outlying\nTrail districts and later in Trail to raise $15,000 necessary\nto complete payment on Trail's new Salvation Army\nCitadel. Here Lieut. Jack Barr is at the altar of the\nnew $52,000 building. In the basement is a youth hall,\nwashroom, kitchen and storage space. Upstairs is divided\ninto an office and living apartments.\n \u2014Louis Fryling photo.\nWINDERMERE BOARD OF TRADE ...\nJumbo Pass \"Would\nIncrease Prosperity\"\nfar kitchens, bathroom*, fines!\nWoodwork \u2014 looks ond washe*\nlike the baked enamel on your\nrefrigerator - needs no primer\nor undercoater.\nMY IT NOW AT\nSherwin\nWilliams\n.\"HOUSE OF COLOR\"\n565 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1713\nINVERMERE - The Windermere District Board of Trade Executive Is firmly of the opinion\nthat whatever may, be the decision on the Trans-Canada Highway route, that the Jumbo Pass\nroute should still be surveyed by\nthe government The executive\naffirms that the survey will show\nthe many advantages of the proposed road link between the\nKootenays and the between the\nhighway systems.\nThe January executive meeting\nwas unanimous In the opinion\nthat opening of Jumbo Pass\nmeans more prosperity for tha\nprovince. The forest wealth Is evident to anyone who traverses the\ncountry and opening of mineral\nwealth  Is extremely  likely be\ncause the Jumbo Pass links the\nrich mining areas of the Lardeau\ncountry and the area on the east.\nem slope In which the Mineral\nKing Is being developed with\nsuch optimism.\nBusiness Interests In both East\nand West Kootenay would ben\neflt to a high degree and the\ntourist Industry would have link\nIn Its extremely profitable business In both East and West Kootenay.\nSurvey Shows More Rooms Needed\nAt Kimberley Marysville Schools\nKIMBERLEY\u2014With seven pew classrooms under con-1sch001 ln central Kimberley have,\nstruction to be available for use probably next morrth, .3m-T^tl\u00b0^\nberley i)i_tirct School Board',* contemplating the need.next iS^^4?SS&'^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,1934 -\nterm for six more classrooms,\nA - recent survey of' population sho ws \u25a0 a pending increase in students.\nNew schools in flha}.stage of construction are four rooms at Lindsay\nPark and three rooms at Chapman\nCamp for elementary pupils. Since\nlast fall a half dozen lower elementary  classes \u25a0 at \u25a0 A., A, Watklns\nBoard of Trade.\nBetter Burton-Ndkusp\nRoad Being Souglit\nEDGE WOOD \u2014 The January\nmeeting of the Lower Arrow Lakes\nBoard of Trade in the Edgewood\nschool suffered ln attendance be-\ncause of the stormy night. Only\neight members were present and ln\n,the absence of the president, Vice-\nPresident J. McLeod took the chair,\nA resolution was passed asking\nthat three danger spots on the road\nbetween Burton and Nakusp be attended to as soon as possible. These\nInclude opening of the blind corner\nat Carroll's Landing wharf; cutting\noL' the top of the hill about half\na mile South of Carroll's, which\nhas been the scene of a number of\ncar accidents as it is a \"blind\nhump\". A third point about eight\nmiles south of Nakusp, near Morton's place, where there is another\n\"blind hump\" should be attended to.\nNone of these jobs should take\nover a few hours each with a good\nbulldozer, but would contribute a\ngreat deal to the safety of the road.\nIn view of the small number\npresent, further business was left\nover to the next meeting which will\nbe at Needles School, February 11.\nDOUGLAS REITH NEW\nNAKUSP LIQUOR VENDOR\nNAKUSP\u2014Douglas Reith has arrived here to take Over duties\npermanent liquor, vendor' for the\nnewly-opened liquor store.\nHe arrived here from Wells, B.C\nwhere he had been for the past six\nyears. Mr. Saperton of Trail, who\nhas been relieving here, has re-\nturned.\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nColumbia\nStill a\nProblem\nVICTORIA \u2014 A united policy by\nthe four Pacific northwest states\nmust be worked out for' hydro,\nelectric development of the Colunv\nbli River before B. C. can present\nits view, Lands and Forests Min-\nister Robert Sommers said today.\nMr. Sommers has just returned\nfrom a meeting In Boise, Idaho,\nwhere he conferred with governors\nof Washington, Oregon, Idaho ahd\nMontana in an attempt to outline\nan international policy for devel.\nopment of the Columbia.\nVirtually every development has\ninternational implications.\nB. C. is particularly interested ln\npayment for' storage within the\nprovince which would benefit pow.\nei'. installations on the United States\nside of the border. In the case of\nthe Kootenay River, a branch of\nthe Columbia which swings down\ninto the U. S., B. C. would benefit\nfrom storage capacity of dams on\nthe United States side of the border.\nIn other cases storage basins lie\nacross the border. A further meet,\ning of the governor's policy committee will be held in Portland Feb.\n10.\nA representative \u2022 of West Kootenay Power & Light Co. will also;\nbe invited.\nI l    i\nably in. February.  Cost is  about\n$128,000,\nSurvey showed Blarchmont'will\nrequire fbur rooms; next term, and\nthe board, is drawing.up -preliminary plahs for doubling the present\nfour-room Blarchmont school and\nadding an activities room-to its facilities. .   ,   \u25a0. , \u2022\nSecpnd need shown, up by the\npopulation survey was for two more\nclassrooihs for the village of Marys\nvilie.'\nWithout requiring arbitration!\nagreement on a new teaoher salary\nschedule has been reached between\nthe board and, the Kimberley Teachers' Association, which gives\nslight increases and also Is very\nsimilar to the schedule recently\nagreed on for Cranbrook district.\nThe Kimberley contract sets starting elementary basic salary at $2350,\nrising to\" $3850-after 10 years. Secondary basic starting salary Is $3000\nrising in 12 years to $4900. -\nThe board has chosen John Noble,\ntrustee for Chapman Camp as its\nnew chairman, succeeding A. A.\nWatklns who becomes. vice-chairman.\nPICTURESQUE  EMBLEM\nA, white horse representing liberty and independence is among\nsymbols on the Venezuelan coat\nof-arms:\nCold Changes\nTo Snow al\nGrandforks\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 There was a\nbreak in the cold spell here Thursday after-three days of sub-zero\ntemperatures. Snow is again falling\nheavily.,'-...\n; Dpuble'Public Works shifts are\nworking to clear the snow from\nhighways. '\nThe official weather record during the cold spell was as follows:\nMonday, highest was 18 above and\nlowest seven below; Tuesday 18\nand 21 below and Wednesday 7\nand 30 below.\nMeanwhile, curling, the most\npopular winter sport here, which\nlooked unlikely a short time ago,\nis being enjoyed to the full.\nA .mixed bonspiel starts Saturday night at 7 o'clock and continues\nthrough Sunday. It follows on the\nheels of the successful Grand\nFork* annual bonspiel.\nThe Montreal Hunt' Club-^prol);\nably the oldest hunt club ln Amer-\nIcn\u2014was founded in 1826.. \u25a0'.':,.\nFormer Nakusp Man\nGets CP Appointment\nNAKUSP\u2014Old timers of the district will remember G. W. Hardy,\nwho left Nakusp in 101? to join the\nCanadian Pacific Railway Company\nat Revelstoke. He has been appointed to the newly created post\nof deputy general auditor with\nheadquarters at Calgary, Alta.\nREAD  THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nNOTICE\nTO\nSALMO and DISTRICT\nAll store* in Salmo will be CLOSED AT 5:30 P.M.\nand SATURDAYS, 6 P.M., effective Monday,\nJanuary 25th.\nSalmo Retail Merchants\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nAre Specialists\nat Their Trade\nElectrical\nContracting\nIN PARTICULAR:\nBoth Commercial\nand\nPrivate Residence\nSmith\nElectric\nPhone 258     645 Baker St.\nthe earth.\" As earth's destiny is fixed in the Creator's purposes, it\ntherefor* remains for each individual to make his choice to serve God !\nand shara in earth's destiny or refuse and meet destruction.\nMr. Nathan further said, \"No nation or government today offers this\nhope to men, nor is any nation serving as God's instrument to bring\nin a world of righteousness. Rather\ntt Is God's Kingdom under Christ\nJesus that will destroy all evil, visible and invisible, and bring in a\nnew world of God's making.\"\nThe attentive audience was told\nthat Christ now reigns as King ln\nthe midst of his enemies. Peoples\nof all nations and tongues who are\nlearning and practicing the Bible's\nChristian principles today form the\nnucleus of a New World Society.\nEverlasting life in a paradisaic\nearth is their destiny.\nC. KERSHAW HEADS\nNAKUSP KNIGHTS\nNAKUSP -. First meeting of the\nnew year for the Knights of Pythias Lodge of Nakusp was held ln\nthe Castle Hall.\nNew officers elected were Chancellor Commander Kershaw; Vice-\nChancellor P. Hurry; Prelate K. P.\nHighland; Master of Works C. Bues-\nnel; Secretary I. F. Morehouse;\nFinancial Secretary A. Stanley;\nMaster-at-Arms F. Kershaw, Grand\nRepresentative I. F. Morehouse.\nInstallation of officers will be\nheld at the next meeting.\nATTENTION:\nMERRY Tiller Owners\nANOTHER FIR8T, THE\n\"Merry\nSno-Fly\"\nThis is an attachment for\nyour Merry Tiller that saves\nyou the backaches and\nheavy labor involved in removing heavy snow.\n\u2022 Will  Not Overload\n\u2022 Handles All Types of Snow\n\u2022 Self-Propelled  Unit\n\u2022 Throws Snow Either\nDirection\nThe \"Sno-Fly\" Is ideal for clearing walks, driveways, parking\nlots;   for   city   homes,   farms,\n:ountry estates, retail stores.\nWherever there Is snow, you\nneed the \"Sno-Fly\".\nPrice $89.50\nF.o.b. Nelson\nTHE\nSELKIRK'S\nEquipment and Supply\nCo. Ltd.\n\"Mort\" Browne, Manager\nPhone 1690 -  P.O. Box 61\n620 LAKE STREET\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n19th. Annual\nPictorial-Industrial Edition\nWILL BE PUBLISHED FEB. 6th\nFeaturing...\nPICTURES!\nir Scenic Splendor\nT_r Outdoor Sport\nit Fishing\nit: Hunting\nThrMail-Away\"\nEdition\nThat\nEveryone Will\nWant To Send To\nTheir Relatives\nOr Friends\n15c a COPY\nPlus 3% S.S. & M.A. Tax\nPlus 6c for\nWrapping\nand\nMailing\nAnywhere in Canada,\nGreat Britain,\nor U.S.A.\nIN THE KOOTENAYS!\nSTORIESI\nir History of the\nKootenays\nJe The Future\nic Things To Come\nORDER EARLY\nFrom Your Agent\nCarrier, Postmaster\nor Direct to the\nCirculation Dept.\nPHONE 144\n15c a COPY\nPlus 3% S.S. & M.A. Tax\nPlus 6c for\nWrapping\nand\ni\nCirculation Department\n\u2022'\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0'..\u25a0 .. -^^^^^^^y -. .f_.. _f_\nAnywhere in Canada,\nGreat Britain,\nor U.S.A.\n\u25a0MM\ni\ny\n'it\n.<\"\nf\n.-.-'. '        \u25a0      -\u25a0     \u25a0   -.\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0 '-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>:\u25a0   \"\u25a0-*\u25a0'\u25a0   \"\u25a0 ' \u25a0'     r-   \u2022'-\u25a0\u25a0',\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-'\u25a0-\u25a0fii-fiil-i\n ippppifplp?\nSWiam Baiij} %me LETTERS TO ? Questions?\nTHE EDITOR ANSWERS\nEstablished April tt 1M-\nBritish Columbia's\nIf.     Moat \/nteresfing Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by th*\nI ronra fobushino company limited,\n\" 2.8 Baker, Street,  Nelson,   British Columbia.\nAuthorised a* Second Class Mail.\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THI CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OT CIRCULATION-.\nFriday, January 22,1954 <\nCastlegar District\nHospital Project\nTribute To Enterprise\nIt is always pleasant to note the\nsuccess of a neighbor community in\nI one of its large undertakings. The success of the Castlegar and District Hos-\n|! pital Society in obtaining the approval\n|*r\/Of over the required 70 per cent of\nits property owners for a hospital im-\n| provement district means that Castle-\ngar-Kinnaird area will soon join those\nKootenay communities with modern\nI centres of medical care.\nThe canvassing of 1900 landowners,\nindustrial- and commercial concerns\nand obtaining their signatures on legal\ndocuments is no small task. The committee after a year of preliminary\nplanning launched its intensive effort\n| last. February. That they have been\nsuccessful within the year is tribute\nto their diligence and leadership, but\nfurther it is a tribute to those who\nmake their homes in the area from\n' Shoreacres to Deer Park, to Castlegar-\nKinnaird who are determined to provide for themselves the modern hospital necessary. There is no doubt \"that\ncommunities once considered the\nsmaller centres are certainly coming\n| of age. Maturity is showing as they\n|; become less and less dependent on\n|f other centres for essential service and\nI utilities.\nWhen a fine new district hospital\nstands at Castlegar, their people may\n;! be the second in the Kootenay to take\nadvantage of the 1951 legislation making hospital improvement districts possible. Creston Valley last month opened a new district hospital after a\npioneer organization effort. The pattern of hospital district is spreading\n. throughout the province as rural and\nurban people join to keep pace with\nadvance in medical care requirements.\nHow To Live\nWith the Winter\nCold weather is uncomfortable, but\nit needn't be fatal if you follow a sensible schedule.\nDON'T overstoke your furnace.\nDON'T leave fire dampers wide\nopen when going to bed or going out\nof the house.\nDON'T use a blowtorch on frozen\npipes. Call a plumber.\nDON'T close dampers on open fireplaces using coal or similar fuel. This\ncauses carbon monoxide.\nDON'T slam on car brakes on slippery streets.\nDON'T try pushing a car up a slippery hill. It can roll back and kill you.\nDON'T count on a car to stop. If\nyou are a pedestrian, remember that\nmotorists have little control of their\nvehicles on ice. You could be dead\nright.\nDON'T overload electric circuits by\nattaching too many heaters.\nDON'T attack snowdrifts with a\nshovel unless you are used to the exer-\nLetters to the editor on any toplo ef\noanuine Interest are welcome If they art\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will ba\nInserted In whole, or Ih part, oxoept over\ntho signature and address ef th* writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence oannot bo returned.\nWho the Next Victim?\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Permit me the space In your valuable\npress to allow my voice to be heard in\nrighteous Indignation\u2014and I know I voice the\npopular sentiment of the majority of our citizens\u2014against the rising tide of regimentation\nand discrimination that'is becoming alarmingly evident ln our social life, and that\nsmacks of the odor of MeCarthyism.\nI refer, of course, to the reeent cases that\nhit the headlines\u2014of Mr. Bruce Woodsworth,\nwho wa* forced to resign from hi* position.a*\nschool principal, and-Miss Beatrice Ferneyhough, who was dismissed from her newly-\nappointed position as provincial director of\nthe Junior Red Cross; and these follow not far\non the dismissal of Mrs. Kay Gardner from\nthe Vancouver Public Library last year; and\nthen we have the case of Nick Evdoklmoff,\nthat has aroused widespread public controversy. These are but some of the recent outstanding provincial cases that could be cited.\nHere we find > diversified set of Individ-\nual victims of political persecution: a CCTer,\nan LPPer, a peace worker and a Doukhobor,\nand all are members of minority groups. Quite\na pattern to establish a precedent on, and one\nthat call*.for deep concern among the thinking people of Canada. It immediately poses the\nquestion: how far and to what extent can this\ndangerous situation be tarried? Who could\neasily become the next victims, and why\nshould such a pattern be created\u2014or, worse\nthan that, allowed to develop?\nBy what trick of fate do these incidents\ncoincide with the opening of parliament and\nthe political struggle to defeat those sections\nof the revised Criminal Code\u2014now known as\nBill No. 7\u2014that would introduce on our statute\nbooks a law that is becoming termed \"the Canadian version of MeCarthyism\". Surely at\nthis time, when the Bill.is in its final reading\nit behooves the preservation of Canadian democratic traditions and civil liberties to have an\nunbiased study of this act before it goes before\na House majority, and not smeared by a wave\nof hysteria to influence public opinion.\nIt is a regrettable decline in public principle and encroaches upon the respect of human dignity that these very grave matters are\nnot given the proper public attention that they\nso necessarily deserve if we are to maintain\nthat high degree of democratic tradition that\nCanada has been so truly proud of. To allow\nourselves to become subservient and dictated\nto by foreign elements of witch hunters and\npolice state control is to forsake our birth-\nright, patriotism and independence.\nAs a citizen who marvels in the heritage\nof Canadians' social and cultural .life, I cannot help becoming vehement in my protestation of the infringement upon our traditions,\nand wherever the threat of those hard-won\nliberties are at stake, it is self-evident that\nwe must voice the alarm and point Out the\ndangers wherever they are wont to appear,\nand to gpard with our highest honors the\ncherished rights that our forefathers made\npossible for us.\nR. MASSE.\nNakusp, B. C.\nPress Comment\nAmericanization of Canadian football\nworries the Kitchener Record. \"Years ago\nwhen Canadian teams met there were fine\nfootball games. Intense rivalry and plenty to\narouse cheering. Now specialized coaches and\nplayers and ballyhoo have made it big business, and,much of the sport has disappeared.\nThere are some signs amongst the governing\nbody that they know from here on they should\ntread more carefully-else the whole football\nstructure may suffer severely.\"\n. Better food for tourists I* badly needed,\nsuggest* the St. John'* Telegram, and cites\nthe case of hunter*. \"On the river or the hunting grounds, the visitors are generally prepared to rough lt and readily partake of the\nfood cooked over the open fire or with what\nother means may.be available. Coming back\nfor a rest, they reasonably expect ordinary\ncomforts\u2014a comfortable chair In which to\nrelax, a bed which is conducive to sleep.\"\ncise. Heart attacks among snow shovellers are a major cause of cold weather\ndeaths every year.\nOpen t\u00bb any reader. Names ef persona\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere I* no eharpe fer thli torvlee.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\n\u25a0Y MAIL except where thero I* obvious\nnec**\u00bblty fer privacy.\nRuder, Nelson\u2014Was the character \"Frankenstein\" founded on * real person?\nVictor Frankenstein, the leading character ln a novel by Mary Shelley (wife of Shelley, the famous poet), wai a young Swiss student who, while attending university, constructed a monster of materials obtained from\ncemeteries and dissecting room* and endowed\nIt with life by means of galvlnlsm. This monitor, not being human, wu soulless. It was\navoided by all who met it, and wa* driven by\nloneliness to commit dreadful crimes, finally\ndestroying Frankenstein himself. The monster,\nplayed by Boris Karloff in the film, ha* no\nname ln the book.\nR. B\u201e Cranbrook\u2014Do you know name and\nlocation of diamond mine ln Africa discovered by a man named Williams, a\nCanadian engineer,\nMwadui Diamond Mine, near Shlnyanga,\nln Tanganyika.\nA. R\u201e Kimberley\u2014I would like to know if it\nis possible for a Canadian to join the\nAmerican Air Force. If so, please tell me\nwhere to inquire for Information as to\nenlistment\nWrite to the U.S. Consul, either Cyrus B.\nFolmer, Toronto General Trust Building, Calgary, Alta., or to Robert L. Smythe, 995 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nP. S. P., Slocan Park\u2014A hen's stoma-h got\nheavy and dragged. When the hen died\nand the stomach was opened there were\nabout two cup* of greenish w*ter. We\nnotice that another hen has the ume\ntrouble. Is there any treatment?\nWe advise you to kill the second hen,\nfreeze it well, wrap it up carefully and send\nit to Dr. John Bankier, Hut O-20, UBC, Vancouver, B. C. A diagnosis and details of treatment for other case* will be sent to you.\nX. Y. Z. Nelson\u2014Could you give me the address of anyone who would give drawing\nlessons to a child of 10?\nMrs. Orbelianl, 904 Latimer Street, gives\nlessons in drawing and painting to pupils of\nall ages, including children. C. N. Bennett, IB\nGyro Park Road, also has classes every Thursday evening from 7:30 to 9:30 tn the basement\nof Eaton's store. Ward Street Phone 1732-1,.\nTaxi Gou&er Cau&ht\nTaxi drivers, by and large, are responsible\ncitizens. They are careful in traffic. Fares\nyoung and old feel secure ln their care. But\nonce in a while a wrong one .turns up. One\ndid in Toronto the other day. and as a result\nhas lost his licence, as he deserved.\nHe went the long way around and charged\na fare $3.79 for a 90-cent ride. He was a\ngouger. one of a breed heard abput from time\nto time. Authorities can't get too tough with\nthem.\nMost cab drivers, It's true, like to run up\nthat extra nickel or dime On their meters. It\nseems to offer some sort of mental competition\nto them. On a familiar run. for instance, the\nmeter may show 89 cents with notable persistence. But another few dozen yards will\nturn up 90 cents, and lt'\u00bb quite a game of skill\nto work that extra nickel out of the meter.\nThis sport, in which the knowing fare can\njoin quietly, is not peculiar tb any city, or any\nside of the border. It I* general practice, and\nquite harmless. What the driver does not always realize is that the observant fare may\nplay his own little game by deducting the\nnickel or dime from his tip.\nThe gouger, however, is not Indulging in\nany modest hobby, Invariably he preys on\nstrangers, and this makes him no better than\na thief. Drivers guilty of gouging should be\nreported to police. The taxi business is well\nrid of them.\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\nYour Horoscope\nYour own Industry and persistence will\nbe your sure guides to success in the next\nyear. Don't be extravagant or over-optimistic,\nhowever. Great spiritual perception and social\nsense of duty is'indicated for today's child,\nwho should win a satisfying career.\nIt's Been Said\nA life spent worthily should be measured\n(by deeds, not years.\u2014Richard Brinsley Sheri\ndan.\nftll I. th*M,Q-_\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nToday's Bible Thought\nNor can you aim, at two targets\nat once; you surely will miss. one.\nNo man un serve two masters.\n\u2014Matt, 6:24,\nCAA Suggests\nBoard Ground\nArthur Godfrey\n.NEW YORK (AP) - The civil\naeronautics administration Wednesday recommended that Arthur\nGodfrey be grounded as a reckless\nflier.\nThe CAA. also uld his medical\nclearance to fly was not in order.\nThe civil aeronautics board ln\nWashington was asked to suspend\nGodfrey's pilot's licence for as long\nas necessary, ln punishment for a\nwild Jan. 7 takeoff from Teterboro,\nN.J, airport.\nGodfrey blamed a crosswlnd tor\nhis near mis* ot the Teterboro control tower ln his private DC-3 airplane. He said he did not deliberately buzz the tower, although he\nwas displeased with his takeoff instructions. His plane sent tower\npersonnel ducking for cover.\nMayors Protest\nLiquor Ruling\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver haa greeted the Social Credit\nGovernment's new liquor regulations with general approval, but *\nstorm of protest has erupted from\nInterior points which claim they\nwere \"left out in the cold\" when\nlicensing areas were named.\nMost persons affected by the rules\nin Vancouver supported the regulations, with the outspoken exception\nof restaurant operators, who charge\ndiscrimination at the regulation\nlimiting licences to the downtown\nareas of licensing districts.\nMayors of Trail, Kelowna, and\nPentlcton said they are \"big enough\nto have the right to support cock-\ntall lounges and other licensed premises.\"\nMayor E. G. Fletcher of Trail\nsaid his city is the' centre of a\npopulation of 22,000. \"I don't see\nhow they can licence Nanaimo and\nnot at least one city in the interior,\" he declared.\nThe government in announcing\nthe regulations Wednesday said additional licensing areas would be\ndesignated in about a month.\nMayor J. J. Ladd of Kelowna,\nPremier Bennett's home town, said\nhe was a little angry at the government's action,\" and Mayor Oscar\nManson of Penticton said he \"can't\nsee the big delay for' the interior-\none part of B. C. is fust as important u ihe other.  \"\nSAYS FOREMEN FIRE\nONT. SQUEALERS\n-TORONTO (CP) - The-Toronto\nTelegram said Thursday that Ontario highways department workers\nwho \"talked too much\" and thus\ntouched off an investigation at the\nFort William division \"have been\nweeded out of work gangs.\"\nIn a dispatch from Fort William,\nby-lined by John Dalrymple, Telegram staff reporter, the paper says\n\"the men have been fired by foremen despite job guarantees given\nthem by auditors last July when the\ninvestigation began.\"\nReports of a \"quiet month-long\npurge of 'squealers' come from all\nOver the division,\" The Telegram\nstory says.\n\"The employees questioned revealed to auditors that a very large\nnumber of the department's 200 employees here (at Fort William) were\nengaged in widespread 'chiselling' of\nvarious kinds.\n\"Most incidents they revealed\ndealt with looting of department\nmaterials.\"\nA GROUP OF 18-YEAR-OLDS registers to\nvote at the Atlanta Division of the University of\nGeorgia where they are students. Deputy registrars\nIn foreground are L. R. Hughes and Thelma\nArdeeaar..\nGeorgia lowered Its voting age to 11 In 1041\nand li the only 'state to open pells to that age\ngroup. Recently President Elsenhower recommended similar action nationally.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nIncreased Rights\nFor Civil Servants\nOTTAWA (CP) - Federal elvil\nservants are given the \"right\" to appeal promotion decision under revised regulations approved by the\ncabinet, the civil service commission announced Thursday.\n\"For Beveral years employees\ncould appeal the results of promotion competitions as a matter ot\nprivilege,\" the commission said.\n\"Under the new regulations they\nare given the 'right of appeal.' \"\nThe regulations also provide that:\n1. No employee is to be dismissed,\nsuspended or demoted without a\nchance to present his side of the\ncase to a senior departmental officer.\n2. An employee can appeal the\nrating in cases where he is asked\nto accept a lower classification as a\nresult of departmental reorganization.\nChess World Has\nNewer Problems\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The world\nof chess Thursday nursed an international hangover from the International Chess Congress tournament\nat Hastings, England, earlier this\nmonth.\nIn Russia, David Bronsteln found\nhimself in hot water for gaining no\nbetter than a tie for first place\nwith his British opponent Charles\nAlexander.\nMeanwhile, British chess officials\nfeebly countered protests of outraged Spanish players, who broke off-\nrelations with the British Chess\nFederation because Spain's champion was excluded from the tourney.\nBurnaby Struggles\nThrough Heavy Snow\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Numerous\ntraffic jams occurred on arterial\nhighways in suburban Burnaby on\nThursday as motorists struggled in\n10 inches of snow. No serious accidents were reported overnight,\nand RCMP said no roads had been\nblocked off yet.\nGREYHOUND'8 LOW FARES FIT ALL BUDGETS. FREQUENT, WELL-TIMED SCHEDULES, CONVENIENT DEPARTURE TIMES AND CHOICE OF ROUTES MAKE GREYHOUND   TRAVEL   THAT   MUCH   MORE   ENJOYABLE.\nNELSON\nDuke Pulls Starter at Race Track..,\nDisappointed Children Weep as\nRoyal Car Whizzes Past Crowds\nCHRISTCHURCHV N.Z. (Reuters)\nThe Duke ot Edinburgh acted as\nstarter Thursday for a harness race\nnamed in his honor when he and\nQueen Elizabeth went to Addington\ntrack here.\nThey attended the royal meeting\nof the New Zealand Metropolitan\nTrotting Club at the wish of the\nQueen, because ln 1927 her father,\nKing George VI, then Duke of York,\nvisited the track and started the\nDuke of York handicap. Wednesday's events were the first trotting\nraces she had seen since her accession to the throne.\nCrowds cheered the royal couple\nalong the five-mile route from the\ncity to the track.\nThe duke started the fifth race,\nthe Duke of Edinburgh stakes, by\npulling a lever in the starter's bo*.\nWinner was the favorite. Rupee,\ndrive by D. J. Townley.\nEarlier   Prime   Minister   Sidney\nTourist Traffic\nReaches Record\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The flow of\nhighway tourist traffic to Canada\nrose to an all-time high ln 1093.\nThe number of foreign vehicles\nentering Canada on a traveller's\npermit reached a record 2,506,011, a\n10-per-cent Jump from the previous\nhigh of 2,278,165 In 1992, the bureau\nof statistics reported Thursday.\nDecember's foreign vehicle en-\ntries totalled 77,289, up 21.4 per cent\nfrom 83,084 in the previous year.\nEntries for 1093 _>y western pro\nvlnces with 1952 figures in brack\nets.\nManitoba, 39,929 (38,040); Sask\natchewan', 21,159 (19,288); Alberta\n44,450 (42.743); British Columbia,\n282,837 (262,590); and Yukon Ter\nrltory 8259 (7293),\nDamage Aircraft\nCarriers' Engines\nLONDON (feeuters)\u2014The admiralty announced Thursday engine\nroom gauges in the 38,000-ton air-\ncraft carrier Eagle, Britain's newest and most powerful carrier, have\nbeen damaged at Devonport on the\nsputh coast.\nIt was the second such incident\nin the \u00a316,000,000 vessel, flagship\nof the heavy squadron of the home\nfleet. Two stokers were sentenced to\nthree months' imprisonment each\nlast October and dismissed from the\nnavy for causing \"malicious\" damage on the Eagle.\nAn admiralty spokesman said today the latest damage to the carrier\nis minor and will not affect the\nEagle's program.\nLast week a stoker was sentenced\nto two years' Imprisonment for wilful damage to the carrier Warrior at\nDevonport Christmas Day.\nHolland announced he ha* gtven\norders for the royal oar* to slow\ndown as much a* possible, ln response to a protest by disappointed\nsight-seers.\nHe explained \"crowds have been\ndistributed over much greater distances than was anticipated\" end\nthe Queen's car could not pas*\nevery group at a walking pace without disrupting the time-table.\nThe protest was mad* to Holland\nin the name of \"many weeping children, disappointed elderly folk and\nthousands of other disappointed\npeople.\" It complained the promised speed of four miles an hour\nwas Increased to 10 or 15, giving\nthe spectators only a fleeting\nglimpse ot the Queen and the duke.\nPILES that\nItch and Burn\nIf you low tuller from tho itching sort-\nrmw end burning pain oi pflet y<m cas be\nhelped.\nJust fit \u25a0 package ol Hetn-Ro-d, aa\nInternal pile treatment, -at any drag Wore\nend use as directed. Yon win be pleased\nat how quickly your pile trouble la relieved.\nOnly |1,59 (or the big 60 tablet package.\nIf you are not 100% pleased after uslnf\nHem-Roid 2 or 1 days, as a teat, ask (or\nyour money back. Refund agreement try\nall drug stores.\n\u25a0        i '  ' MIS83F\nBring the\nChildren \u2022 \u2022.\nOn your visit* to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free With their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\n\u25a0   the Inland Empire . . .\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoorl\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSilver Grill\nTO\nPENTICTON ..... $13.25 Retu\nVANCOUVER\t\nSAN FRANCISCO\t\nLOS ANGELES ...\t\nCALGARY.-.-.\t\nWINNIPEG\nrn\n$22.50 Return\n$42.15 Return\n$49.90 Return\n$21.00 Return\n$52.40 Return\nFor complete travel Information\nand schedules contact your looal\nGreyhound Agent, or write Travel\nBureau, Greyhound Building, Calgary, Alberta.\nG REYHOU\n\/^\/F\/frY^y >i:?r\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of'British Columbia.\n_\n_&, _-....\u25a0..\u25a0 ' :'\u25a0\n . ..fill\nTHI SH0I WITH TH. BEAUTIFUL FIT\nBLACK SUEDE, CALF, BROWN CALF\nPriced at $13.95    \u2022\nR, Andrew & Co*\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nFruitvale\nMrs. James Rothwell and Fred\nWalker were winners while conizations went to Mrs. Fred Walker\nand Edward Oynneson.\nHow Christian Science Heals\n\"Sickness Is Against\nThe Law of God\"\nCKLN, 1-40 kc, Friday, 8:16 p.m,\nCOLD\nWEATHER\nSPECIAL\nDelicious Homemade\nHONEY\nHUMBUGS\nIn Three Popular Flavors \u2014\nPeppermint, Cinnamon\nand Root Beer\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nONLY\n29c the V% lb.\nBARRAT'S\nLIQUORICE ALL-SORTS\nGood for Youna and Old Folks\nAlike.\nFRIDAY AND 8ATURDAY\nONLY\n29c \u2014 Vt LB.\nCandy Is a Delicious Food \u2014\nEnjoy Some Every Day\nRANNIGER'S\nCandles Ltd.\n466 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 237\nI0DE Collecting\nHearing Aids\nFor Deaf Society\nJanuary meeting of the IODE\nwas held in the Women's Institute\nrooms at the Civic Centre with\nMrs. N. C. Stibbs, regent, presiding.\nMrs. H. T. Miard, reporting on\nthe Thrift Shop, said \"there is an\nurgent need for clothing, utensils\nand ether \u25a0 articles,\" and' asked\nmembers and friends for contributions.\nMrs. G. B. Russell and Mrs. A.\nDalgas reported they had visited\nand distributed Christmas presents\nto 13 veterans at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nA request was received from the\nNational Society of the Deaf and\nHard of Hearing for old' discarded\nhearing aids. These are repaired\narid distributed to the needy by the\nSociety. Mrs. C. H. Chatfield offered her services to collect and\nsend on any received and the JODE\nis ready to forward any sent to\nthem by non-members.\nMrs. R. H. Dill reported on her\nvisit to the Hostel for the Aged.\nTwo birthdays were celebrated at\nthe Hostel and gifts distributed at\nChristmas. Mrs. H. Houston and\nMrs. C, H. Chatfield reported having sent two parcels overseas.\nNominations for the annual meeting were taken and will be voted\non In February.\nEagles LA Installs\n4 New Members\nThe Ladles' Auxiliary to the\nFraternal Order of Eagles installed\nfour new members at their meeting\nWednesday evening. A social evening followed with a potluck supper\nfor the women and their husbands.\nPrizes were awarded for a membership drive. A. Silver, who is\nleaving to reside in the Okanagan,\nwas presented with a smoking\nstand from the members of the\nEagles Lodge.\nMrs. Millis won the ,door prize.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nalways insist on...\nfrozen green peas\nYou would do well to buy that fine watch from\nwatch specialists. We can recommend the model\nbeet suited to your needs. Among the fine wetehw\nwe feature, none are more highly recommended\nthan Longines, world-honored for accuracy and\nlong life.   Priced $50.00 upward. v\nLONGINES\nFrank Bacon\nThis rich looking square watch In Ha\nnatural 10-lrt Bold-filled esse hai the IS\njewel Lonainei movement,  It ii a One*\nwatch at a reasonable price. $80,00\nTrail Pythian Sisters who have taken for 1954 are, Mrs. Ross Craig,'most excellent chief; Mrs.-W. E, Orenchuk, excellent senior; Mrs. O. M. Simle\/ excellent junior;\nMrs. F. W. Johnson, manager; Mrs. N. E. Coombs, protector; Mrs. R. H. Clelland;\nguard; Mrs. George Brown, Jr., secretary; Mrs. A. E. Pittaway, treasurer; Mrs. E. W.\nClay, pianist; past chief, Mrs. L. E. Davies.\u2014Louis Fryling photo.\nCollecting I to\nInteresting Hobby\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Mrs. E.\nTracy of Edmonton owns more than,\n2S0 pairs of shoes: But she doesn't\nwear them; they're collectors'\nitems,\nThe chance gift Of a pair of wooden clogs from a Dutch friend 13\nyears' ago sparked the interest of\nMrs. Tracy and her university student daughters Joan and Marion ln\ntheir unusual hobby. Now they have\na cabinet packed with miniature\nand full-sized footwear.\nThe Tracys bought a few shoes\nfor the collection but most are'\ngifts from friends\u2014and strangers-\nall over the globe.\nA Korean sandal was one of a\npair swapped for a bar of chocolate\nby a Canadian soldier. On his way\nhome, the soldier Was told of, the\nTracys' collection by a train conductor and promptly sent one of the\nsandals to them.\nMany of the shoes could be classified as antiques. A baby's glass\nfeeding bottle in the shape of a\nslipper was used by a friend's great\ngrandmother. A baby's felt buttoned shoe was worn 65 years ago and\na Hawaiian embroidered slipper\n)ust five Inches long graced the\ntiny feet of a Japanese woman in\nthe 1870s.\nFrom Ireland, comes a tiny boot\nof green pottery imported in 1905;\nfrom Scotland, a pair of tartan\nboots; from Switzerland, ski boots,\nOne prized Item is a brass shoe\nfrom India, hBnd-carved with the\nmustard-seed motif used in Hindu\ntemples. It was bought at a Canadian handicrafts'exhibition. Miniature Mexican huraches, mukluks\nfrom Eskimo country, a gardenia in\na golden slipper and slippers of\nspun glass from Oregon are other\npieces marked with the dust of travel.\nCigaret? Mrs. Tracy will light it\nfor <you from one of two silver shoe\nclgaijet lighters shaped by craftsmen in Yellowknlfe and Japan.\nThe collection Includes personal\ntreasures\u2014the Tracy girls' first\nhard-soled baby shoes, and a clay\nboot made by a niece at the age\nof 10.\n. Nakusp Notes\nNAKUSP \u2014 Mrs. Marsden Baird\nwas a business visitor Xo Nelson..\nVic Smith is attending the annual convention of B. C. Power\nCommission employees in Victoria.\nA. M. Barrow was taken to the\nArrow Lakes Hospital Sunday.\nWarren Larson Is a business visitor to Lumby.\nArtjFlick of Edgewood' was a visitor to town on Monday. Art was\na recent visitor In Vancouver.\nChildren Love to Put\nCooking Toys tb Test\nBy.MARGARET CARR\nChristmas holidays left me little\ntime for writing, but, oh my, the\ntesting that we did, do. Colds kept\nall of us in the house most days,\nand I found that to prevent from\ngoing completely mad a system of\nkeeping everyone occupied was in\norder. Since colds didn't seem to\nincapacitate appetites, best system\nI found was to kill two birds with\none stone, and utilize the energies\nof my two assistants to keep us well\n(ed. Which they did, and we certainly werel\nFavorite Christmas gifts were toy\naluminum baking sets and of course\na share of the big baking had to be\nbaked in these for use as tea party\nfare. They were so proud the day\nthey made their little Swedish rye\nloaves, although to wait for them\nto rise was almost more than they\ncould bear.\nSwedish Llmpa (Llmpa literally\nmeans \"loaf\") is a heavy, fragrant\nrye bread usually round In shape\nand often made, as in this recipe,\nr-lth dark molasses and orange\nrind. The subtly sweet flavor Is typical of the Swedish who are famous\nfoi their, sweet breads, cakes and\ncookies.\nIn Sweden you would buy Limpa\nln a \"milk and bread\" store, for\nthese two foods are always sold together. The Swedish feature Limpa\nas part of the smorgasbord\u2014a wonderfully enticing array of various\ncheese breads (both flat and raised), cold meats, cold fish and vegetables such as cucumbers and tomatoes. It is served as the  first\ncourse of a meal on special occasions. Swedish families usually arrange the smorgasbord on the dining table before guests are seated.\nIn this country, smorgasbord has\nbeen adapted to buffet-style service.\n8WEDI8H LIMPA\n1\/8 cup sugar\nIV. cups lukewarm water\nVt cup dark molasses\n2    tablespoons shortening,\nmelted\n1 \" tablespoon salt\n2 tablespoons finely grated\norange rind\n2    cakes compress yeast,\ncrumbled\n2    packages active dry yeast\n' 2V4 cups sifted rye flour\n2V4 to 3 cups all-purpose flour\nCombine lukewarm water, sugar,\nmolasses, . shortening, salt and\norange rind in a large bowl. Add\ncrumbled compressed yeast, or dry\nyeast dissolved as-directed on package. (If dry yeast used, water used\nto dissolve it should be subtracted\nfrom water in recipe.) Mix well.\nBlend in rye and all-purpose flour.\nAdd flour in two additions. Dough\nshould be soft but possible to handle Cover with damp cloth and let\nstand for 10 minutes. Knead on well\nfloured board until dough is smooth\nan- elastic, seven <o 10 minutes. (To\nkread, fold the dough over on itself and push it lightly, with the\nMRS. LANGRIDGE\nHEADS HI-LO   \"\nST. PAUL'S CIRCLE\nMrs. H. W. Langridge was elected\npresident of the Hi-Lo Circle of\nSt. Paul's Church at the first meeting of 1954 held at the home of\nMrs. P. Filleal.\nOther officers were vice-president, Mrs. C. Golllng; secretary,\nMrs. A. S. Haveland; treasures, Mrs.\nM. McLaughlin.\nAlthough this club has been\norganized for less than a year, It\nshows an encouraging membership\ngorwth and a substantial financial\nstanding.\nWorld'e Fair LA\nEffective, modem IrnM character!-?\nthi. ehermine. Lonainei ladies' watch In\nIta natural 10-kt. fold filled ->M. De.\npanda.-. 17 jewel Lonainei movement.\n$65.00 LONGINES\n$u&\u00a3 OjiAwsd.\nI    A New Shipment of     *\nEAR-RINGS\nDesigned Especially For You.\nNelson's Diamond Headquarters\nCollinson s Jewellery\n561  Baker St.\nPhone 120\nOur\nQanjLWAy. 1aL\nNOW! lis the Time to Benefit\nfrom Such Reductions os:\nHudson Seals\n(Dyed Muskrat)\nReg. $550\nNOW ONLY\n$449.00\nALSO\n1 10% OFF\n'j On All\n\u00ab*     Choices of Exquisite Neckpieces\n't-^N Suitable for Your Spring Wardrobe\nGreenwood Fiutf\n580 BAKER ST.\nPHONE J72\npalms ot the hands. Repeat this\nprocess rhythmically, turning the\ndough one quarter around on the\nboard each time.) Place In greased\nbowl and cover. Let rise in warm\nplace (85 to 00 deg. F.) until doub.\nled ln bulk, aboutjtwo hours. Punch\ndown dough. Cover, Let rise ln\nwarm place until not quite doubled\nin' bulk, about 49 minutes. Punch\ndown dough. Divide ln half. Shape\ndough Into two round loaves. Place\non lightly greased baking sheet.\nCover. Let rise until doubled in\nbulk, about one hour. Bake in mod\nerate oven (373 deg. F.) 30 to 35\nminutes. Brush with shortening and\ncool on rack,\nWI Fills Out\nSchool Questionaire\nEDGEWOOD\u2014First meeting ln\nthe New Year of the Edgewood and\nInonoaklln Women's Institute was\nheld in the hotel with Mrs. E. Shield\npresiding and 20 members present.\nThe president welcomed Mrs. H.\nPark as a new member.\nA donation of $3 was sent tp the\nQueen Alexandria Solarium.\nA questionnaire sent ont by the\nChief Inspector of Schools was\nfilled in. The topic of the questionnaire was \"Did the Little Old\nRed School House have any advantages over the large consolidated\ndistrict\"?\nPlans were finalized for \"'a social\nevening January 22, when members\nof Needles and Fauquier women's\ninstitutes are to be the guests of the\nlocal women. An apple pie contest\nwill Ije held the same evening, prizes have been donated by the B. C.\nApple Fruits \u201e Association.\nA letter of thanks was received\nfrom Mount St. Francis Infirmary\nfor Christmas gifts sent to Mr. and\nMrs: A. Sampson.\nAn. interesting letter was read\nfrom Mrs. A. Fisher, former member now residing in Wisconsin. She\npraised the work carried out in the\nsmall community, especially the\ndrama and elocution classes conduc-\nted-by Mrs. Daly. She also had a\nword of praiae for. the B. C. school\nsystem, using for an example her\nown small daughter who, in Grade\nV, is doing the, same work she covered in Grade IV in Edgewood. The\nChristmas tree report was given by\nthe president and a vote ot thanks\nwas extended the committee. Five\ndollars Is to be sent the Legion for\nthe use of the hall.\nMrs. A. Borrow\nMothers AuxIIIaiy\nPresident\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Annual meeting\nof the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides\nAuxiliary waa held, la the Pariah\nhall with 18 members present\nAnnual reports revealed a fairly\nsuccessful year financially but efforts to secure a lot for a proposed\nscout building had proved unsuccessful.\n. The following war* elected for\n1054: Mrs. Arthur Borrow as president; Mrs. Robert Milne as vice-\npresident; Mrs. Harold Mason as\nSecretary and Mrs. Hani Fogh-\nDomsmldt as treasurer. Mrs. James\nBurrows was appointed as tea fund\nconvener.\nPlans were made to cater to the\nGuides' mother and daughter banquet, which will be held ln the cafeteria late ln February. Mrs. C. Rogers was appointed as chairman of\nthe committee. ,\nBRITISH WOMEN\nSHORT AND DUMPY\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Measure-\nirients ot 5000 women, taken in\n200,000 different ways, Indicate that\nihe average British woman is shortish and a little dumpy.\nA preliminary reporUof the survey published Tuesday shows that\nthe average adult British female\nstands five feet three and weighs\n133 pounds. .\nOther measurements: bust 36<ri\nInches, waist 27 Inches, and hips\n38% inches.\nThe survey was undertaken by\na now defunct government agency,\nthe clothing industry council, to try\nto improve the sizing systems used\nfor women's garments,\nBy. Aujuui: Whsskh.\nv      QUIOK-TO-KNITI\nQuick-to-knit! Get heavy knitting\nworsted, big needles\u2014see how the\nInches fly by! You'll loye this cosy\nshrug on chill days\u2014lt tops everything!\nKnitting pattern 527: Directions\ntor Misses' sizes 32-34; 30-38 are included.\nSend TWENTY-FIVI CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson,\nB.C. Print plainly PATTERN NUM.\nBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nSEND NOW for our new 1934\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog\n\u2014the best ever! 70 embroidery,\ncrochet, color-transfer, dressmaking\npatterns to send for\u2014plus 4 com-\nplete patterns printed in the book!\nIdeas for gifts, bazaar sellers, fashions. Send 25 cents!\nRNAB Sponsors\nNursing Bursary\nNEW DENVER \u2014 The regular\nmeeting of the Slocan Chapter of\nthe RNABC was held at the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital ln the nurses'\nsitting room. Miss Betty Drunsfield\nPh.N., newly-elected president was\nin the chair.\nMembers voted to hold meetings\nevery two months. It was also decided to request permission from\ntha community elub to place a donation box at the May 24 celebration. These donations would go towards a bursary to assist a local\ngirl ta training. TJiesa bursaries ara\nbeing used each year.\nNew Denver\nMrs. Harry T, Butler la visiting\nher son and daughter-in-law and\nfamily In Nanaimo and will also\nvisit a daughter in Vancouver before returning to her home.\nMiss Maxine Vandtae of the post\noffice staff holidayed in Slocan City\nat the home of her mother, Mn,\nRita Vandlne.\nErnest Jensen enroute from\n.Southern Saskatchewan tp Kelowna was the guest ot Mr, and Mrs.\nJ. H. McDonaugh and family.\nFELT\nBOOTS\nWarmth and Solid Comfort\ni Felt Boot* Aro ths Thing.\nMan's, Woman's\nand Children's\nPRICED\n$2.95 to\n$5.45\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,1934.\nOur Entire Slock of\nREDUCED\n{\u25a0.:.\nV\n:-\n.'\u25a0\nIncluded Art Inlaid, Printed and Plastics\nJ'\/mvnariL\nGay McCusker\nPythian MEC\nNAKUSP - First meeting in 1054\nof the Nakusp Temple, Pythian Sisters, was held ln the Knights of\nPythias Hall when plans were made\nfor installation of officers at the\nnext meeting.\nThe new slate of officers are:\nPast chief Betty McMullen, most\nexcellent chief Gay MeCuBker, excellent senior Jean Robinson, excellent junior Marie Butt, manager\nAndy Kirk, protector, Loverna Ferguson, guard Betty Kershaw, secretary Charlotte Humphries, treasurer Ellen Highland, pianist Delia\nParent, degree staff captain, Marjorie Stanley grand representative,\nGladys Hill, installing officer, Evelyn Morehouse, assistants, past\nchiefs Olive Jansen and Gladys Hill.\nSALARY DISPUTE\nTO ARBITRATION\nLADYSMITH (CP) - A salary\ndispute between District 87 school\nboard at Ladysmith and the Lady-\nsmith District Teachers' Association,\nwill go to arbitration. A \"final\"\noffer by the school board of a flat\nIncrease to all teachers of $125 a\nyear was rejected by the teachers.\nMrs. C. Haigh Heads!\nMichel Ladies'Aid\nThe January meeting of.MIohe\nUnited Church Ladles' Aid was heir\nat the home of Mrs. C. Haigh.\nofficers for the new year were ii\nstalled by acclamation.\nMrs. C. Haigh Is president\nR. Harrison, secretary and Mrs.\nThomson, treasurer.\nFollowing the election of ofiii\nmembers enjoyed a {estiva luncl\nserved by the hostess.\n-i\nNature's guarded secrets\n'.\"';\u25a0\nla then ANY explanation when\nan empty lake refill, after five\nyoora \u2014 and fish return fa days?\n... when a rider's lost fa a flood at\nnight \u2014 and his mare finds tha\nway home? . , . whas a dreaded\nrattler slithers on a baby's lap -4\nand doesn't strike? -j|\nFebruary Reader*- Digest brings\nyou fascinating -tones of the mya\u00bb\nterious wild by a man who has\nspent 50 yean trying to under'\nstand something of nature's ways\nand the ways of her wild children.\nGet February Reader's Digest\ntoday: 87 article- of lasting interest, condensed from leading magazines and current books.\n411   Baker St.\nA DAY\nPAYS FOR YOUR\nNEW GENERAL ELECTRIC\n8.7. CU. FT.\nREGRIGERATOR\nSAVE\n$100\n\u2022  Roto Cold \u2022 Self Defrosting\nk li ww\u2014tin how km your payment, fan be.\nSee m for details today.\nTHIS OFFER IS GOOD\nFOR ONE WEEK ONLY\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\nGENERAL \u00a9ELECTBie\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\n574 Baker St. Phone 260\n'^fc\u2014'\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\"\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- --\u25a0      \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022   '  \u2022' ' *\"\"    ' \u25a0\" :\"\"*wAari\n-d-fl^-aj^^y\n.. \"it \u25a0\u25a0 I\n\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0' ''\u25a0   - \u2022\u25a0 -!\"\n^^\n-\n.' \u25a0'-. \u25a0\n_j\t\n \u25a0;:\u2022:\u25a0';\u25a0 -:;.-:y.. ''.'\", \". \"\u25a0    :\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0:,'\u25a0       \"-\u25a0-.\":\"\u25a0   ' i^:ii\"\"    i       \u25a0\u25a0\"\".'   \"'\nEGYPT'S  FIGHTING  W 0 M E N _ New military\ny&, volunteers are these Egyptian university women, members, of\nnation's national guard, swinging along: fa a drill training period.\nM A RG Al.. E T, H A'S  A - K A N C A R 0-0 \u2014 Here's the Australian twist to'the old nursery rhyme aa Margaret Lucas, 8, entf\nher pet kangaroo,.Hop-long, ran through a field on the way to.school, and meet for breshfast fa her. home near Sale, Victoria.\nRE A D Y   FOR   D E S C EN Y _ Sylvia Gregg, .8,- is\nhelped Into a diving outfit complete with fins as she joins search\nfor a missing boy's body in London's Grand Union Canal waters.\n1\nI\nHA P P Y- M 0 M E N T\u2014 Mrs. Kathryn Go-frey, mother of\nthe radio and TV star, poses with conductor Andre Kostelanet- fa\nToronto after premiere of her composition, 'Marine Boys March.','\nIN  DISCUliE-obser-\nvatldn tower In Oftenburg, Germany, Is fa reality a printing\nplant chimney which was masked\nand decorated to make It attractive fa sightseers\nMAUTIFYINC JTAPID  YJR A N S IT f Workers build what may \u201e\u00bbar to m a\nrarrt farmer's home but is fa reality |(fiii^44wWla7lJffil* dU-tS'^^2t\u00abJB-2\u00ab\n? A B, !J_ A. C U T_' E S-P\"\u00ab,W\"\u00ab5\u00bb1*P\u00ab\u00bb- fa be \"pretty.\ntof up' tht ether as they were befog photographed by Walter ,\nChandoha; Huntington Station, N. Y. far the Oat Calendar of 1951\n3811\n\u25a01\n'\u2022   \u201e\nN EW iENCLAN D8YU LETI D E _ Lighted  tree\nilluminates Center-Congregational Church en New Haveh's historio\ngreen. In right background Is Yale University's Barkness Tower.\nmnleto^hrf^- \u00a3\u00ab\u00ab. .11- W?WL W$WM*$ M\u00ab*^*>\u00ab<>wn \u00bb\u00bb mwrtbei. of a _fayal^'_^.e acrobatfa W,\nare pnotograpnea as they fly upside down at the top of a loop during a maneuver over the Yorkshire coast near Bridlington, England.\nWAX K I NOT HE  ' K I TTE N^v-Ieil. Kerr. J,\ndaughter of Sn animal trainer,,takes \"Nljam,\" a two-year-old\nBengal tiger, for a stroll in Ascot Village, Berkshire, England.\nSCORCHED   DOUGH-- Carter Kensgaard watches $400,000 go up fa smoke ta an tncb-era.\ntor ot the Federal Bcscrvo Bank fa Chicago where wornout paper money is '<\" \" ~\nHAN D Y ARO UNO O V E N - Donald E. Ir-acBonald\nadds Icing fa cake he baked for his wedding to Betty M. Bowse*\nCfaim ta __t___l ol <-m fa Oaj-Ui-a, lie-where taw uwms^i-4.\n**MIi^i^\u00ab lN  ^ ' $'A T U M \u2014 Charles Arqufaet works* fa Paris on wood sculpture ot\n.    Versailles Palaco's \"Ambassador's Staircase,- fa model collection depicting fa-ace'* pwl\n\t\n_____\n\u2014 r__ 1_'. \u25a0\u25a0, .r:i^^mmmmmM\n_ -mniaiittiilttil i i I '\"\u25a0 t -\u2014\u2014a-\u2014-ma\u2014\n 8BP\nm^sw^m^ymm,\nBusiness Spotlight...\nISIM Winters, Leduc Discovery,\nhiich Holes in (cal Industries\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta.TtCP)-\u2014 The\ncoal mining industry in-Alberta,\nwhich works coal reserves esti-\nmated at 48 per cent of Canada's\ntotal known deposits, has fought\nadverse - 'conditions ! and come ' up\nwith ah improved long-term outlook. \u25a0-; \u25a0,\/..\n-. Although the industry slipped\nagain last year, the setbacks were\nnot crippling,-' \u201e\nMany officials of the coal mining\nIndustry now see a better future\nbecause in part, ot the development\nof coal turbine engines. ..;\nThe province's coal production\nlast year amounted to 5,881,419 tons\n\u2014'he smallest output since 183. and\na reduction of almost 3,000,000 tons\nfrom the record year of 1848. The\ndecline ;ot l,31p53 tons from the\n1852 production of 7,184,472 tons was\ntho sharpest annual reduction for\ndecades;'.-, -:'.-. '  ';\"\nEMPLOYMENT PROP8\nI The average number of men employed by Alberta's _oal mining h}-\ndustry dropped from 7084 in 1952\nto 5870 in 1853 and the average\nnumber Of days 'worked declined\nfrom' 190 Ih 1852 to' 145 last year. .:\n. The 1853 pay for Alberta mine\nworkers*'.averaged about. $15 a day\nbut contract miners* got as much\nas $16 to $18 a day and machine\noperators between $25- and $28 a\nday.\nThe Industry's hardest blow was\ntht mild winter last year and the\nearly mildness this winter. Dealers\nstill had last winter's supply this\nyear.\nMARKETING PROBLEMS\nThe Industry has also had marketing problems since the Leduc oil\ndiscovery early in 1847 set off western Canada's crude oil and natural\ngas developments,\nBut officials now feel that displacement of coal by fuel oil, propane and natural gas has gone its\niui: length.\nThe coal market also suffered last\nyear from the lighted movement of\ngrain throughout western Canada,\nreducing the number 'of coal-burning, locomotives.\nSouthern Alberta accounted, for\nmore than a third of the province's\ntotal coal production in 1853 and\nth.-Crow's Nest Pass retained its\nreputation of being western Canada's most productive coal field.\nOutput last year of 1,702,588 tons\nworth about -$9,500,000. The field\nemployed an average, of 1829 men.\nAlberta's .known coal reserves\nhave been estimated at 47,874,800,-\n000 tons\u2014about an eighth of the\nworld's coal deposits.\nCash and Carry\ni\n,     By BILL BOSS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMOSCOW -,{CP) \u2014 Shopping in\nMoscow is a major operation.\nThere is! no rationing, here and\nsales art) made on a first-come first\nserved'.basil.'Prices are the same\nfa the neighborhood stores and in\nthe shops on Gorki Street, Moscow's\nmain shopping centre, although\nthere may. he a greater selection on\nGorki Street earlier ln the day.\nShopping crowds are tremendous\nboth downtown and in the suburbs,.\nOne of the current editorial campaigns is to make customer, and\nclerks more courteous. '--*' -.:+-\nALWAV8 LINE-UP . . \u25a0\u25a0% -\nQueues move slowly, Thr*jB. individual'operations are reftillrcd for\nevery purchase. You join, the first\nline to see what you want, choose it\nstruggle - for the attention of ,a\nclerk and get a cash slip.' '\u25a0;\nThen you go to a cashier's cage,\ntake your turn at paying and get a\nreceipt. Finally you claiih your purchase. It took me 45 minutes to buy\na.ream of paper.\nApart'from large Items such, as\npianosrielevisTonTsetS or' r.trlger--'\ntors, everything is cash and; carry.\nThere are no bread or milk deliveries.\nThere is a drive on to modernize\nand increase production of consumer goods, give them more eye appeal. Styli-_ness,'..eiegance or color\nstill have to be introduced.        ;\nThere, is a sober uniformity to\nmerchandise, both' in quality and\nlooks. Colors are subdued, :or dark.-\nCut is conservative and Standard.\nMen's-suits and. coats ar\u00ab serviceable but dull. Women's frocks''are\nmainly printed cottons or one-color\nor woollen fabrics,, :\\\nDANGEROUS SPORT\nCrocodile hunters in Australia's;\nnorthern territory bag specimens\"\nas,long as 20 feet.\nWork that sore shoulder!\nWe _r_Bt&ctiveiy. fand to rest a\nsore shoulder, whereas we should\nkeep it moving to euro it.\nIn February Reader's Digest,\nPaul do: Kruif, noted science reporter, tolls you about;newly de-'\nveloped tochniq'ues that ease pain\nenoiiAiVfa Wirt aore shoulder\njomta-ptovi-g \u2014 wipe out acute;\npain ^.^peed recovery of disabl-d\ncbTO-rtj^ i;..\nRead how science is beginning\nto find tho remedy for bursitis, an\nailment v' that brings misery to\nmillions! of people.\nGet' jfebruary Reader's Digest\ntoday: '37 articles of lasting interest, , condensed from, leading\nmagazines and current books.\nBritish ETU Walks\nOut at Harwell\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014 Members\nof the Communist-led Electrical\nTrades Union walked out of Britain's top atomic research establishment at Harwell on an Indefinite strike.\nThis Is the fourth atomic research establishment affected by\nstrikes called by the union In Its\nrunning battle with employers\nfor pay Increases.\nGeneral Staff Examines\nCanada's Reserve Atmy\nNo Compensalion\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014 State Secretary\nPlckersgill indicated Thursday Canadian prisoners of war in Korea\nwill not receive compensation from\nthe war claims commission.\nReplying to a question by Walter\nDinsdale (PC\u2014Brandon-Souris) he\nsaid funds of the commission were\navailable for awards to prisoners\nof war ta the Second World Wat\nThe funds are composed of German\nand Japanese assets in Canada that\nwere seized at the outbreiy. of war.\nNO JUSTIFICATION     \"*'-\nMr. Pickersgill said there would\nbe no \"mdral justification\" for using part of these funds to pay\nawards .of any kind to Canada's 32\nKorean;prisoners of wai-^.r,*.,.:-vv\n,,- He said, that 63 per, cent of 9055\nCanadian prisoners in the Second\nWorld\" War had applied for compensation at Deq. 31,1858. The dead\nline^for ;^i|!|jg applications' for\nbene-(Js:5s\u00bbf\u00abiapctended to March 31,\nto al-SS|^i?rij^aining 35 per cent\nto p^t\"fa\";gr^r>eiaim8.\nHe c'OuId not S-y what percentage\nwere entitled to payments.\n-_'._'\u25a0_-;-\u25a0,'\nay\n$A'\u00a9S-^6^^^fteuters)\u2014Brazil's\nsecond 'Wigest 'and fastest-growing\ncity will celebrate its 400th anniversary with three' day Of celebra;\ntiohs, climaxed'by thejeonsecrhtion\nof. a $5,600,000 cathedral Jan. 25.\nThe \"Gothic-style structure was\nbuilt mainly with private subscriptions and the ornamentation of its\nfour altars, two' pulpits and baptismal font has been rated among the\nfinest worlss of .the.-last. 100 years.\nThe foundation stone was laid in\n1913, but the idea of building dates\nback to Nov. 15, 1889, when Brazil\nwas proclaimed, a- republic. Since\n1947 a committee-df -women has\nbeen ;n charge of raising funds for\nthe building.\nNORTH BAY, Ont. (CP) \u2014A crow\nin January's below-zero weather is\na rarity in this district, but,that's\nwhat Mrs. R. Ly Loney believes\nshe saw flapping its wings around\nher home. Some arid-timers said a\nJanuary crow would herald an\nearly spring. _\nI    Start the New Year with new luxuriesl\nI priced for YOU wherever you tee \"\nCANADA'S SIGN OF BEHER LIVING...\nj Better sheets  \u2022  Better blankets  \u2022  Better\nI pillow slips \u2022 At better, stores everywhere I\n\u2022       The most thrilling values and long-wearing luxuries ever   - \u2022\n\u25a0 y\/oveh to beautify your bedroom. They're Tex-made, ,\n\u25a0 of course, mado n'ghl. .hero in Canada. Now featured \u2022\n. In yogr favorite store, these Tox'made wonderful, wash- .\n,       able sheets and blankets show you why .. .\nI     Canada lives better... with TEX-MADEI I\nI I\nBy DAVE MclNT08H\nCanadian Press Staff Writer. S\nOTTAWA' <\u00a3P)\u2014A-reWt-on'the\nreserve army; possibly containing\nsharp' criticism, of \"present reserve\npolicy; now Is. in. ihe'hands of Ltj-\nGen. Guy Simonds,', chief of \\he\narmy general staff, \u25a0\u2022\nThe report has also been- read by\nBrig. A. Wi Beament Of Ottawa,\nchairman of the conference of de\nfence associations which opened Its\nannual^ and secret, three-day meeting here Thursday. -\nThe conference of defence associations comprises some 60 repre\n.entatives of all reserve army unl^s\nin Canada,, Including infantry, ar\nlillery and engineers.\nBrig. Beament, a reserve officer\nand a lawyer -in civilian life, said\nthe rejort.will provide the .ecu's\nof discussion at the meeting. He declined to disclose its contents    \u2022 i\nThe report was prepared by three\nreserve majd^generals, E. J. Re-laud of'Montreal, Howard. Kennedy\nof Ottawa and H.'iVf-v Lefson df\nVancouver The three were appointed by Defence Minister Claxton op\nthe recommendation of Gen'.-Simonds. Their report went to1, the. army\nchief about a week ago, ' \u2022\u25a0',\nATTEND ON PAY DAY    '?\"-'     \\-\nOn paper, the reserve' arniy hoy\nhas a strength of some 47,000. men'\nabout 2000 fe^er thari.'the.,regulat\narmy. However, many never' turn\nout for parades or training-ahd others show up only to.draW their pay.\nPAPER WORK BUGBEAR\nOne army officer said a bugbear\nof the reserve is the vast'amount\nof paper work involved \"at; each\nunit. He added that he'expects the\nreport to suggest _one1,\u00ab^itlbn,' '\nSubject of the -; reseiiye* \"army\nreached front. pages of 'Canadian\nnewspapers last week when, Lt.-Co).\nPOft-VANGELES, Wash,,(AP)\u2014A\nbig JlO-passenger helicopter plunged\nfromd-OP feet intp'rthe' fcjy wafers\nof the-Stralt of Juan de Euca Wednesday, afternoon,, carrying five men\nto their death.,.'\u25a0-\u00ab' ;:i --i-',:..'\nThe plane, haa- been U{>' an hour\non a training flight and'appeared\nto broofning in for a landing, when\nits power failed, Coast dfaard.officials said. ItN plunged straight down\nuntil 100 feet'above the ifater] when\nit nosed up slightly, then^verifito a\nnose dive as.the tall rotor-broke under the strain.'- .'. H' '' \u25a0 i\nCLOSE TO 8H0RE\nThe .craft landed-Only IS'yards\noff shjpre; in 24, feet of water\nTheiCoast -Guard said the bodies\nof the'pilot, Lieut 1. W. Day, 28,\nand'Aviation .Machinist Dale R.\nLittleford, both, of Port. Angeles,\nwere found in the nose of the 'copter when it was lifted from the\nwater early Thursday\/\nSearch continued for the other\nvictims.\nOthers lost in the crash were Aviation Machinists Robert A. Chau-\nbin and Pete Palombini, also of Port\nAngeles, and a.-New * Yorker -whose\nname was withheld pending notification, of next, of kin.\nCanada to Test\nOTTAWA (CP). \u2014 Canada has\nordered 2000 \u25a0 Belgian, automatic\nrifles for tests as a standard infantry weapon fo. the army.\nDefence Minister Claxton said today in the'Commons'that if the rifle\n'is accepted, ItwllJ.be.m.SdeJn Canada linden - licence -from.-\"Belgium.\nMeanwhile, Canadian Arsenals .will\nbe ordered 'to.p-epar. its engineering so as'toldse no turi'eVin .ttrtlrig\nproduction. ''\"\u2022'\u2022_ i *\u25a0\"\nThe rifle, the' ,30-calibr*. 1TN-2,\nwill be t&ted. under Ca'hadtan conditions 'and Mr..' Claxton, 'uvdlcated\nit will be accepted; The Canadian\nArmy now,, usej the ,303-calibre\nLee-Enfleid No. 4;-    \u25a0>.\u25a0:'\u25a0.:\u2022   .;-,' ,'\nGreat Northern Jo\nGet first Licence\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014. First railway in British Columbia to serve\nliquor on its trains under terms of\nthe hew liquor regulations will\nlikely be the Great Northern on its\nSeattle-Vancouver line.\nDining cars Supt. F. W. Albach-\nton said Thursday in Seattle that\nhis company will \"be going after\na licence right away.\"\nThe government can issue licences for steamships and railways now\nbecause they don't come under, the\nlocal option regulation.\nGreat Northern, which already\nhas cocktail lounge facilities in its\ntrains, would require no alterations\nafter obtaining a licence, as would\nother railways. '\n\"We've always had to close our\nbar as we got to the border on\nour northbound trains,\" said Al-\nbachton. \"It's been a pain in the\nneck and we're glad there's been\na change at last.\" '    **\nBoth Canadian Pacific and Canadian National Rilways have plans\nfor providing cocktail facilities on\ntheir trains, but officials would not\ncomment on when they expected\nto have licences.\nMore Jets Built in\nCanadian Factories\nOTTAWA (CP) - For the first\ntime in history, the Canadian aircraft industry in 1853 built more\njet aircraft than piston-type planes.\nThe Air Industries and' Transport\nAssociation said today the industry\ndelivered nearly 1000 military aircraft last year at a price of about\n$300,000,000. Most went to the RCAF\nbut some were exported to the United States and Britain.\nH. W. J. Feck, a reserve officer,\nsaid in a speech at Vancouver that\nthe army is almost non-existent as\na defensive fighting force.      \u2022\nMr. Claxton said later in tho Commons that some of 'Col. Feck's remarks were \"injudicious or unjustified,\" but that the officer's speech\nwas a \"well-intentioned effdrt to\narouse interest in the. reserve\narmy.\" -\nSeguin's Last Letter Discloses\nDetermination lo Take Poison\nn\n.CORNWALL (OP)\u2014Henri Seguin\nconcealed the poison ho swallowed\nto take his own life and escape the\ngallows In his body, perhaps as long\nas nine months, a coroner's inquest\nfSvas. told Wednesday night.v\nI' The five-man-jury absolved jail\nofficials ahd other last-minute vis-\nitors to Seguin's death cell of any\nblame. The jury, who heard testimony from 29 witnesses in the 2U\nhour hearing, took only 20 minutes\nto return a verdict of self-administered death from poisoning.\nSeguin's determination to cheat\nthe hangman was expressed in-the\n32nd and final page of a letter to\nhis sister.' The letter, rambling and\nungrammatical, was completed the\nday of his death and read by police\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. Tt, 1954 \u2014 7\nonly after Seguin was In his death\nthroes.- \u25a0.-' .\nCONDEMNED A- DOG I\nAs written .It.-Wd!:;-Y'':;vf'\"*:''\u25a0''' [\n\"Justice has condemned me os a\ndog, they will try and hang me like\none, but I will try my best not to,\nI will\" cheat them to.the,very last\nend, if I do succeed to cheat them1\nin the end I will only be toclade\n(too glad) to do so, if I don't Cheat\nthem It will not be because I did\nnot tryto do.\"        ' \u2022   '.,\"\nDr. Ward'Smith, director df-.the\nOntario-Medical Legal Laboratory,\nToronto? testified that from the con\ndition of the aluminum container he\nestimated that ii could have beeti-\nsecreted in Seguin's 'body for at\nleast six months.\nOther..' stomach contents made\npossible a reconstruction of the suicide. Seguin pierced-an orange wrth\nthe glass vial, then bit the orange\nseveral times to break the glass and\nrelease the poison. He then consumed the orange in. large gulps.\nOLD CAPITAl- r\nCopenhagen, capital of Denmark,\nwaa founded bjf'Bishop Absolqn' in\nthe 12th centuiy.    \u25a0\u2022 . '\nMow! far the first\niewimproved\nin Canada\nTo, an already fine gasoline, Standard\nof: B.C. scientists have added a\nsafeguard-against rust and eorrosjon,\nthe scourge pf the modern automobile\nengine.\nMotorists throughout Canada and\nthe United States pay more than\n$100,000,000 a year to replace and\nrepair fuel pumps, carburetors, fuel\nlines and other valuable engine parts.\nTHE FUEL SYSTEM QF,YOUR\nENGINE IS POSTIVELY PROTECTED AGAINST RUST AND\nCORROSION WHENYOU DRIVE\nWITH THE NEW IMPROVED\nCHEVRON SUPREME GASOLINE. Here's how it works! There is\nwater cohden-atiijn:WhCTCTta,gasoBhe\nis stored in metal tanks! This rusts\nand ..corrodes', metal. Now With\nStandard of B.C.'s, new antitrust\nadditivj. X-36A* the problem no\nlonger exists beca\/iaser the surfac* of\nthe metal is covered' with a thin\nprotjective film. It automatically seals\noff rust while you drive.\nWhat it means to you: You no longer\nface the prospect of repairs to fuel\npumps, carburetors, fuel lines and\nother engine parts, due to rust.\nYou get a cleaner fuel,, free from\nstorage tank impurities. Yes, improved Chevron Supreme Gasoline\nwith the anti-rust additive is your\nguarantee of better, more economical\nmotoring.-Try a tankful today!\nTOPS    FOR   ALL\nTOP    QUALITIES*\nHijli Anfi-Knock\n-\nBUTALL H\nEconomy Mileage\nOt|\nTOP\nAV]\nIEsH\nFull Power\nRust & Corrosion Protection\nSmooth Acceleration\n\u25a0\u201e\nv -l-l-H .\nQuick Sterling\nFast Warm-Up\nNC\npo'H\nVapor-Lock Prevention\nNC\n>TqNE\nAria Blending'\nWe take better care of your car\nCHEVRON\nGAS STATION\n'    \u25a0\"-*\"    :' - \u2022\u25a0\n_\n-.\u2022 ...     .   \u25a0\u2022\n__i _.\n'    __\n^^'- ;'     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ;';--'- \u25a0\"\u2022\u2022 * \u25a0 \u25a0\"--- i\n 8\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,19S4\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nSiiioke, Fumes of Fertilizer Pldiil\nSaid Bothering Marysville\nMARYSVILLE\u2014Marysville Chamber of Commerce\nis' going to protest the smoke and fumes from Comincb's\nnew fertilizer plant. Chairman of the committee set up\nto investigate the problem has recommended that the\nChamber send a letter to Cominco pointing out the\nsituation. ''      *\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nHIGH POPULATION\nCarthage reached a peak population of 1,000,000 inhabitants more\nthan three centuries before the\nChristian era.\nSHOWING\nAT THE\nSTRAND\nA Famous Players Theatre\nTRAIL, B.C.\n_ ^\nShowing Mon.-TueB.-Wed.\n25 - 26 - 27\n\"Gilbert and\nSullivan\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nROBERT  MORLEY\nMaurice Evans\nAdvanced Prices\nTHURS. - FRI. - SAT.\n28 - 29 \u2022 30\nFarmer Takes\nWife\nAV\nI'\n(COLOR)\nBETTY GRABLE\nDALE   ROBERTSON\nMATINEI EVERY SATURDAY\nShows Continuous From 2 p.m.\nBench Park\nDraws\nControversy\nTRAnv-A committee from the\nShaver's Bench Improvement Association intends to meet with Trail\nCity Council at the next Council\nmeeting to be held in February to\ncontinue discussion on the disposition of the Bench Park. So far two\nmeetings with City Council and\none with the Parks Board have\nbeen held and have not proved\nsatisfactory.\nThe -tve^acre park was bought\nfrom the provincial government by\nthe SBIA before coming into the\ncity of Trail and some assistance\nln its upkeep and beautification is\nbeing sought.\nAt Its annual meeting held this\nweek, members decided to send the\nparks committee chairman, J, C.\nStewart, and committee member\nEd Brown along with president Ken\nPople and secretary-treasurer Fred\nStainton td again approach Cfty\nCouncil.\nAn active year's -work was reported at the annual meeting held\nthis week with a considerable increase in membership. Election of\nofficers returned K. N. Pople as\npresident. Elected by acclamation\nwere vice-president Edwin Wirsch\nand secretary-treasurer Fred Stain-\nton.\nMr. Pople was named as representative to the Trail District Projects Society and Alex Mclnnes will\nact as representative on the Trail\nAthletic Association.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Telephone subscribers here this year will have to\nhandle nine directories instead of\nthe usual four. Five volumes will\nlist \"Outer London\" numbers, and\nfour more will record those in \"Inner London.\"\nJOIN THI TRAIL BUYERS LEAGUE\nVote for VALUES-\nWE GUARANTEE ..\n1.\u2014Only Blue Ribbon Beef, T-B Free (Inspected by government)\nI,\u2014Only Delnor or Name Brand Foods In Your Locker\n3.\u2014Continued Service Through the Life of the Plan.\nPhone 133 For Personal Service er Information\nWHY  NOT  HAVE A \"SUPER MARKET\"\n' RIGHT IN YOUR HOME?\nDEEP  FREEZE  FREEZERS  AND\nINTERNATIONAL   HARVESTER   FREEZERS\nTJZodfiAn. \u00a3IsdJu\u00a3.\n1637 BAY AVENUE\nFrank Johnson\nTRAIL, B.O.\nPHONE 138\nChuck\" Wyatt\nCURRIERS'\nALL RISK\nINSURANCE AGENCIES\nInsurance      Real Estate\nFire Casualty\n.   Inland Marine\nAutomobile\n1460 Boy Ave.   TRAIL, B.C.   Ph. 1589\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 PHONI 3281\nKline's Furniture Store\nBIG REMODELLING\nSALE\nhas started REDUCTIONS\nup to\nOne-Third Off\nRegular Prices\n* ..'. \u25a0 \u2022\nBe Bure to visit this large friendly Btore while\nthese budget-saving bargains last.\nIf You Need Something Fer Your Home\nYou Will Always De Better at KLINE'S\nTrail's new $2 million hospital is getting the support of local organizations in\nfurnishing its wards, Latest donation\" was made by the Knights of Pythias. The $946\ncheque will furnish two semi-private wards. Total contributions stand at $25,000-. Here\nVice-Chairman of the Hospital Board J. IJ. Hargrave accepts the cheque from Elon\nDomeij, KP representative.\u2014Louis Fryling photo.\nKnights of Pythias officers who have taken over their duties in Trail Lodge No. 23\nare> shown \"above. They are: Malcolm I. McKenzie, chancellor commander; G. Ross\nCraig, vice-chancellor; Andrew Crichton, prelate; Thomas Y, Ewirfg, master of works;\nHoward E. Dyer, secretary;'Richard E. Tyson, financial secretary; Andrew Swedish,\ntreasurer; George Brown, master-at-arms; Albert H.Delorie, inner guard; Thomas E,\nAlty, outer guard.\u2014Louis Fryling photo.\nFruitvale Members Told...\nLegion Should Be Ready lo Back\nDominion Command on Veteran Act\nFRUltVALE \u2014 Cecil Pitta of\nRossland, Kootenay Zone Commander, conducted installation services for the officers of both the\nFruitvale Canadian Legion Branch\n186 and its Auxiliary.\nBefore he installed the officers\nIf You\nAre Moving...\nTake Advantage of Our\nMoney-Saving   Experience-\nCartage Work,  Large or Small\nFait Baggage Service\nSpecial Equipment for\nRefrigerators and Pianos\nPhone:\nNelson 1471        Trail 191\nUnited Trucking\nAnd Storage Ltd.\nLocal and Long Distance\nFurniture  Moving\nAll Types of Trucking\n1474 BAY AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nhe spoke briefly on Veterans Affairs, stating that the Legion had\ntwo major projects, before the\nProvincial House and before the\nDominion House of Parliament.\n\"We should,\" he said, \"be ready at\nany moment to back up the Dominion Command ln their efforts to\nsecure better consideration for\nveterans under the War Veterans\nAllowance Act, by sending telegrams and letter to our local member, H. W. Herrldge,\" Mr. Pitts\nrecommended a special officer in\neach Legion Branch study the pensions, especially Section 4 of\nthe W.V.A.\nThe zone commander said. that\nPremier Bennett had at last\nrealized that the Legion is a powerful organization and that their\nwelfare work was not to be taken\nlightly.\nMr. Pitts urged the Branch to\nbring in more of the young veter\nans, many of Whom don't realize\nthe services the Legion can and\ndoes give their problems, whether\nhow or future. He cited several\ncases of injustice suffered by\nveterans at hands of the Pension\nBoard and, of the hardship the present regulation of the BCHIS re-\nVitally Linked\nfor Health!!\nScaled even to a grain, what confidence to know we compound your\nprescriptions with all the cautious\naccuraoy with which your doctor prescribed theml Come In or call at any\ntime, emergency or not,\nHazlewood Drug\nTrail, B.C.\n,     Registered Pharmacist In Attendance at All Times\nGLADYS SWARTHOUT\nr.. well-known American concert\nsinger, will be heard In Trail\nSaturday, In the second celebrity\nconcert series sponsored by the\nWomen's Musical Club cf Trail.\n. Miss Swarthout, mezzo-soprano,\nhas sung grand opera and In concert, radio, motion pictures and\ntelevision. She took the singing\nrole of \"Carmen\" in the first\nopera production to be staged\nexclusively for television.\nCINDER BLOCKS\nConcrete Blocks\nChimney Blocks\nSTEAM CURED\nGovernment tested products. Steam, cured. Production\n4000 units per eight hour shift. We deliver anywhere.\ntf li M F'C c    *     c* KORPAK Cement Products\nIXLJIlt   tj    rUrnitlire    MOre 154 Wellington Street      Trail, B.C.       Phone 991-LI\n154 Wellington Street      Trail, B.C.      Phone 991-L-l\nDistributors  for  Our   Products  In   Nelson\nK. W  DIXON CO.\u2014701 Front St. Nelson. B.C.\ngarding.  W.V.A.   pension   dependents, created.\nMr.-Pitts, assisted by Fred Walker\nas Sergeant-at-Arms, conducted the\ninstallation ceremony and installed\nthe officers. The President-elect of\nthe Branch, Charles Lilydale was\nnot present, as he is still recovering\nfrom injuries received on\" New\nYeai's Eve and will be installed\nlater along with J. J. Hartwick and\nBud Walsh of the Executive.\nThe members of the Branch installed were: first vice-president,\nDouglas Haines; second vice-president, Barry Robinson; executive,\nLarry Davies, Joe Campbell and\nF. M. Smith; padre, Rev. Bryson\nBoyle; Sergeant-at-Arms, Harvey\nHiggins.\nAuxiliary officers installed were:\npresident, Mrs. Henry Barlock; Mrs.\nEarl Greive, first vice-president;\nMrs. George Metcalfe, second vice-\npresident; Mrs. F. M. Peitzsehe,\nsecretary; Mrs. Fred Walker, Sergeant-at-Arms; and on the executive are Mrs. Gordon Grieve Sr.,\n'Mrs. Harvey Higgins, Mrs. Joe\nCampbell and Mrs. Stanley Walsh.\nAs Mrs. Barlock took her place\nto the left of Mr. Pitts, Mrs. Gordon\nStoutenburg, ' retiring president,\npresented her with a corsage from\nthe Auxiliary.\nPresent also were Bert Lamb,\nZone President of Castlegar, and G.\nL\/Smibert, Zone Secretary. Mr.\nLamb spoke briefly, congratulating\nthe new executive and expressing\nthe regrets of all, at the absence of\nPresident Charlie Lilydale.\nA social hour was enjoyed, games\nand contests were arranged by Mrs.\nF. M. Peitzsehe. A buffet style\nsupper was served by the women\nunder the direction of Mrs. Fred\nWalker. Highlight of this was the\nbringing In a lighted birthday\ncake by Mrs. Stoutenburg and placing it before Mrs. Barlock, while\nall sang Happy Birthday. The day\nwas not only the day of Mrs. Bar-\nlock's birthday but also marked the\nseventh anniversary of her initiation into the Auxiliary p\" a member.\nREAD IHE ULASSirlbu DAILY\nTrained to strike hard at any threats to our freedom ... soldiers like those of\nthe airborne Infantry are helping to guard Canada, ready to drop into action\nwherever danger threatens. The young man who joins the Army and has\ncompleted his Infantry training may then volunteer to. start training for the\nproud wings of Canada's \"Soldiers of the Sky.\"\nHow does a man choose a job? He examines the pay; the working conditions;\nthe opportunities for'advancement; the financial security. From every one of\nthese aspects in. Army career is excellent. And more \u2014 no monotony of being\nstuck for years in one place; pension plans after 20 years service; medical and\ndental care whenever needed \u2014 without regard for cost or time. OpportunitieB\nfor training and advancement in the Army today are truly outstanding. For the\nbright young man who is interested in his future \u2014 as well as Canada's \u2014\nthe Canadian Army Active Force has much to offer.\nIN THE'AH-Mw\nSoldiering is e man's life! There are challenges and dangers. Overseas duty\ncarries, with it the excitement of new places and strange customs in distant lands.\nBut wherever you go, in the Army, you know you can rely on your comrades,\ntrained fighting men who share with you the action of military life. If you\nthink an Army career is for you, enquire about the opportunities for service\nwith the Infantry \u2014 the most important men in the Canadian Army.\nYou are eligible \u00abo join the Army if you are 17 to 40 years of age, (skilled\ntradesmen to 45) and able to meet Army test requirements. Applicants should\nbring birth certificates or other proof of age when reporting for interview.\nFor full Information apply right away to:\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot,\n4201 West 3rd Avenue, Voncouver, B.C.\nArmy Recruiting Centre,\nBay Street Armouries, Victoria\nlisten fo \"Voleo of the Army\" - Wednesday ant Friday evening} \u25a0\u25a0-\u2022 the Bominlew tjetwerk\njj_|_S-ite-.rr.-.Vlr..j: J -.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..       .      \u25a0  \u25a0    \u201e '... .:\u25a0.' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0      \u25a0      \u25a0 \u25a0>       ' \u25a0\nmn\nMsM^ii.- :\u25a0\u25a0-..-..\u25a0.    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 -' ' \u2022\u25a0  ..-\u25a0!.-<. 'A2MHfai&te\u00a3\u00b1mi^^*-A >-> \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\t\n mm\nE.K. ZONE PLAYD0WN8-MEN'8\nThe Kimberley \u2022 rinks. of Alex\nCaldwell and Harold Jordan ran\ntheir opponents practically out of\nthe zone playdowns with- second\nand third round victories. Each, of\nthe \"Sun Valley\" skips now have\nthree victories'; Eric MacKinnon's\nrink from Cranbrook has a 2-1 record, and Allan Spiers of Creston a\n1-2; the other two Creston representatives, Hugh Ellard and Lawrence MacKenzle, have each lost\nthree straight.\nMacKinnon's rink will be playing\nJordan and Caldwell at Cranbrook.\nIf the Kimberley rinks, each defeat\nthe Cranbrook representative\u2014the\nCreston boys will not have to play\nthe balance of their games and they,\nJordan and Caldwell, will be the\nE. ,K. representatives tb the B. C.\nPlaydowns. MacKinnon, to place,\nmust win at least one of the two\ngames. It would then be necessary\nfo. the one who lost, to also lose\nto the other Sun Valleyite. Or, if\nMacKinnon were to win both games\nhe would be the winner of the\nCaldwell-Gordon game.\nOn the performance of the games\nplayed to date\u2014this corner calls for,\nthe two Kimberley Clubs to come\nout on top.     ,\nSecond Round Results:\nCaldwell (K) 9, Ellard (Cres) 8;\nMacKenzle (Cres) 6, Jordan <K) 12;\nSpeirs (Cres) 11, MacKinnon\n(Cran) 9.\nThird Round Results:\nMacKenzle (Cres) 8; MacKinnon\n(Cran) 11; Speirs (Cres) T, Caldwell\n(K) 14; Ellard (Cres) 4, Jordan (K)\n16.\nHighlights of second round in the\nCaldwell-Ellard game were four\nbeautiful take-out shots made by\nskips, through a narrow port at the\ntop of the house to a rock between\nthe 4 and 5 o'clock positions. Also,\nEllard's attempt to get 2 and tie\nthe game in the twelfth end, which\njust fell short. The JordanjMac-\nKenzie game, which was tight up\nto the 7th end, fell apart when Jordan made nice take-out shots in\ntricky left outside ice, on the 8th\nand 10th ends. In the final end of\nthis game Jordan got one rock in\nthe house and then through successive misses of MacKenzle's rink\nlined up 4 guards in a straight line\n\u2014halfway up to the hogline.\nThird round games saw Jordan\njump away to a 7-0 start in I ends,\nand then go on to the most decisive\nvictory of the games played. Caldwell also got away to 'a big start,-\nonly to see it evaporate with a nice\neomeback on the 8th, 7th and 8th\nends by Spiers. However, Alex's\ncrew hit their .stride again on the\n8th, 10th and 11th to win going\naway. The MacKenzie-MacKinnon\nNEW AND USED\nSKATES\nFOR SALE AND\nEXCHANGED\nEDEY'S\nSPORT SHOP\n737 Baker 8t Phone 104S\nPHONE 75\nFirestone Tires\n$1 Down, $1 a Week\nFair Allowance On Your\nOld Tires\nSuperior Motors\nDodge \u2022 DeSoto Dealer\nOpp. Post Office, Vernon lb\ngame saw Eric getting a big lead\nas well; the MacKenzle rink scored\nsingles consecutively  on  the ,7th,\n8th, 9th, 10th ends and were only\n2   down   coming, home.   A   run-\nthrough raise just missed taking out\nMacKinnon's rock on the 12th: if\nmade it would have tied the game,\nas MacKenzie had second shot rock\nin the house.\nTO SPLIT ZONE GAMES\nWOMEN'S  E.K. ZONE\nPLAYDOWNS;\nThe Lee Maartman and Mlna\nBlundell rinks split games over the\nweekend, and as a result\u2014the E. K,\nrepresentative to the Vancouver\nBonspiel\u2014to select the B. C. Champion will not be decided until next\nweekend.\nFirst game score\u2014Maartman 9,\nBlundell 8; second game score \u2014\nMaartman 11, Blundell 12.\nHighlights of the first game saw\nBlundell take an early 7-2 lead wjth\nsome fine curling, then start missing badly, and then make a comeback for a grandstand finish on the\n10th end. With Maartman having\nshot rock just behind the button at\nthe 4 o'clock position after her second shot and with long guards 5\nfeet ahead of the house blocking\nthe In-turn shot, Blundell, with her\nlast rock, was slightly heavy and\ncame to her own second shot rock\non the edge of the 4-foot to lose.\nThe second game was close to the\n6th end. Blundell then went 1 up,\nmaking a good raise from outside\nthe hpuse at the 1 o'clock position\n\u2014to Maartman's shot rock just\nahead of the button\u2014and passing\nit through the house. The seventh\nend saw the big break of the game\nwhen Maartman missed the broom,\nchipped an outside rock to Blunders well guarded shot, passed it\nout and counted 4.\nBlundell got 2 back on the 8th\nend after Maartman twice took\nguards off her own shot, leaving an\nopening for Blundell to make a nice\ntake out. Maartman counted a\nsingle on the 9th with well-placed\nguards on her lead's rock, and went\nhome, 2 up.\nIn the 10th end, Blundell was lying three when Maartman tried a\nchop and lie with medium weight\nthrough a port but was slightly\nheavy, and Blundell did not throw\nher la'st rock.\nRUSSIANS EYEING\nBRITISH HORSES\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Four Russian experts scrutinized thoroughbred British race horses Thursday\nwith an eye to buying at least 10\nEnglish stallI69s,!for breeding better Russian; rate horses.\nThe leader of the Moscow purchasing'delegation \u2014 the first to\nvisit British stables since. 1937 \u2014 is\nM. Rogalevitch, foremost Russian\nauthority on thoroughbred horses.\nHe explained; \"The Soviet Union\nhas some very fine horses, but\nnaturally -resh blood is sometimes\nneeded.\" \u00bb'\nLandy Pulls Close\nTo Mile Record\nMELBOURNE (AP)\u2014John Landy. Australia's great miler. ran another brilliant mile Thursday night\nbut an over-enthusiastic record\ncrowd of 25,000 may have cost hini\na chance to break the world record.\nLandy complained that the cheering spectators drowned out the calling of the lap times.\nThe slender, 23-year-old agriculture science student was clocked\nin 4:02.4, fifth fastest time ever\nrecorded for the mile and ,one\nsecond more than Gunder Haegg's\nworld record of 4:01.4.\nLandy has been gunning for Guilder's record for months and already has been timed in' 4:02 and\n4:02.1. Arne Andersson's 4:01.6 is\nthe second fastest mile on record.\nv>\nMM-MS\nSYS  Aristocrat 8 years old\nAnniversary - \u25a0 .5 years old\nViscount 4 years old\nMarchers Special Reserve 3 years old\nGIN  London Club London Dry .\n-\u25a0Me.\nWings Blank Canadiens;\nlins Edge Hawks\nBy Tho Canadian Preu\nMetro Prystai's goal at 6:25 of\nthe last period gave Detroit Red\nWings a 1-0 victory over Montreal\nCanadiens Thursday night and Increased Detroit's lead in the National Hockey League race to five\npoints over the Montrealers.\nIt was goalie Terry Sawchuk's\nseventh shutout of the season, and\na well earned one, for several\ntimes Sawchuk was the man who\nheld Canadiens out.\nThe game was one of the two\nNHL. contests Thursday night, Chicago Black Hawks switched a home\nencounter to Indianapolis but they\ndisappointed 5301 hockey-starved\nfans of that city as they lost a 3-2\ndecision to Boston Bruins.\nThe win left Boston in fourth\nplace and the Black Hawks buried\nin last place without a victory in\ntheir last eight games.\nA Montreal crowd of 14,492 saw\nCanadiens' go down to their second\nloss in 23 games this season. on\nhome ice. They lost an earlier game\nto Chicago Black Hawks and were\ntied by Boston Bruins.\nWIDE OPEN GAME\nPlay largely was wide open but\nthere was also close checking and\nsolid body work.\nThe Red Wings played a sound\ngame and got out of difficulties\nwhen Montreal 'put on a desperate\ndrive in the last few minutes.\nThe lone goal came when Vic\n5:00; Boston, Klukay (Crelghton)\nup. Stasiuk passed from the corner\nto Prystal who whipped a hard\nbackhander past goalie Gerry McNeil.\nA fluke first-period goal by defenceman Ray Gariepy and a third-\nperiod pair by Joe Klukay - gave\nBoston its victory over Chicago.\nTho Black Hawks' goals came\nJust two minutes and 12 seconds'\napart in. the.third period and tied\nthe score. But the deadlock lasted'\nonly 68 seconds.\nGoricpy's goal was scored for\nhim by Chicago defenders who\nbatted-his high shot down ipto the\nnet. Klukay scored on a breakaway early in the third period and\nthen, after Chicago had tied the\nscore, got the winning goal on a\nrebound at 5:58.\nDoc   Couture   scored   Chicago's\nfirst goal on a rebound and Jim\nPeters got the other on a. screen\nshot. <\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: Scoring, none. Penalties: St. Laurent 1:20, Lindsay\n2:42, Johnson.'8:32, Harvey 10:35,\nMosdell 11:53, Fronovost 14:18.\nSecond period; Scoring: None.\nPenalties: Richard 4:11, Wilson 9:51,\nPrystal 19:40.\nThird period: Detroit, Prystal\n(Stasiuk, Wilson) 5:25. Penalty:\nMosdell 2:53.\nStops:\nSawchuk     8    9   11-28\nMcNeil  .'.    11   11   10\u201432\n8UMMARY\nFirst period: Boston, Gariepy\n18:54. Penalties: Hucal 3:05, Klukay 8:06, Godfrey 13:05, Gee 15:33.\n. Second period: Scqrlng, none.\nPenalties: Gardner 5:15, Hucul 9:40,\nKlukay 9:40, Zeidel 16:23,. Gardner\n16:23. \\\nThird   period:   Boston,   Klukay\n(Martin)    1:06;   Chicago,   Couture\n(Gadsby)... -2:48;-   Chicago,    Peters\nStasiuk .and Johnny Wilson teamed\n5:50. No penalties.  ,\nWeinmeister Contract\nStirs Controversy\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Brltish Columbia' Lions, new entry in the\nWestern lnterprovincial Football\nUnion, announced Thursday that\nthey have signed* Arnie Weinmeister, New York Giants all-star\npro tackle, to a two-year contract\nat an undisclosed salary.\nThe announcement by coach An-\nnis Stukus that the 30-year-old\nWeinmeister had become the first\n\"official\" Lion, brought Immediate\nprotest from the United States.\nCommissioner Bert Bell of the\nNational Football League said-that\n\"The war is on\" between Canadian\nand American leagues for players.\nBell said the NFL would attempt\nto sign good Canadian players in\nretaliation, and that he would not\nbe surprised if Giants tbok Weinmeister and the Lions: into: court\nfor breach of contract,\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 New York\nGiants Thursday threatened legal\naction for breach of contract\nagainst Arnie Weinmeister after\nthe star tackle signed to play ln\nCanada next season.\nThe Giants, ln a statement issued\nhere by president John V. Mara,\nsaid they held an option on Weln-\nmelster's services for 1954 and- already had notified him of their\nintention of exercising that option.\nBowling Finals at\nCoast in April\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Finals for\nthe Canadian ten - pin bowling\nchampionship will be held here in\nApril, it was announced here on\nThursday.\nBowling officials said .the western Canada titlist will be selected\nin playoffs between the champions\nof the four western provinces at\nWinnipeg in late March. The winner will meet the eastern Canada\nchampion in a 30-game series\nstarting in Vancouver Aprjf 8.\nFORMER FOOTBALLER DIES\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 John Howard\nKealey, 51-year-old former football\nplayer with Ottawa Hough Riders,\ndied Tuesday night. He was a member of the Rough Riders in 1926\nwhen they won the Grey Cup by\ndefeating the University of Toronto for the Canadian football championship.\nPHONE  144  FOR   CLASSIFIED\nINDIES BEAT\nBRITONS BY\n140 RUNS\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (Router.)\n*-The West Indies beat England\nIn the first test cricket match by\n140 runs after a dramatic collapse\nby England's middle batsmen\nhero Thursday. The score was\nWest Indies 417 and 209 for six\ndeclared and England 170 .and\n316.\nToronto Team Off\nTo Stockholm\nBy WALTER GRAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Toronto's East\nYork Lyndhursts, armed with a\nfighting spirit, and a supply of vitamin pills, leave today for\" Stockholm- and the 1954 world hockey\nchampionships. - -\n\"And we'll be back with it,\" said\nGreg Currie, coach of the Ontario\nHockey Association senior B club,\nin an interview Thursday.\nThe club sails on the Queen Mary\nfrom New York Saturday.\nMathews Signs For\nGood Increase\nMILWAUKEE (AP)\u2014Milwaukee\nBraves owner Lou Perini and .his\nprize young slugger, Eddie Math\news, agreed on salary terms for\n1954 Thursday during a 20-minute\nautomobile ride from their hotel to\nthe Milwaukee airport.\n\"He's getting a substantial ln\ncrease,\" said general manager\nJohn \"Quinn, who presided at the\ntalk between the owner and star\ninfielder as he drove the car on\nthe seven-mile trip. The agreement\nended Mathews' threat of a holdout.\nValdes, Parker\nTo Slug It Out\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A heavyweight bout March 12 matching\nNino Valdes of Cuba, against James\nJ. Parker, a native of Barrle, Ont.,\nfighting out of Paterson, N.J\u201e was\nannounced Thursday by Billy\nBrown, matchmaker of the International Boxing Club. The 10-round\nbout will be held in Madison Square\n.Garden.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\nAVOID COLD WEATHER CAR TROUBLES\nA HARD STARTING\nWILL SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMS\n\/ Battery Cheeked\n\/ Generator Circuit Cheeked\nV Fuel System Checked\nV* Starter Checked\nV Brakes Checked\nDON'T DELAY-Call in at\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\nYOUR TEXACO DEALER\nThe Best Friend Your Car Has Ever Had\nOpposite Post Offiee On Vernon St.\nCoal Kings Take Third Win as\nThey Hand Fernie 14-11 Defeat\nNAjTAL\u2014After losing their opening game in the Alberta-British\nColumbia Hockey League, the\nNatal-Michel Coal Kings won their\nthird straight game as they.handed\nFernie Rangers their first setback\nby a -14-11 score in a free-Scoring\ngame played at the. Natal, arena,\nGame was played before a fair\ncrowd.-\nThe win moved the Coal Kings\ninto first place in the league on\npoints with six. Kimberley Intermediates, who have playedMess\ngames, are still the only undefeated team in the six-team league.\nOnce again centre J. McVeigh led\nthe scoring parade for the Coal\nKings, netting seven, or one-half of\nthe goals scored against the visitors,\nalso assisting on two others for.a\nnine-point effort. McVeigh has now\nscored 13 goals in the last three\ngames for Natal-Michel.\nOther goal-getters were Thewlis\nand T. Fabbro with two, while\nsingle goals went to Serafini, Balint and DePaoll.\nFernie goals were scored by Mill-\nburn, Zuftaand Marasco, with two\napiece, while Lewis, Duthie, P.\nCBravetta, Brewer and J. Bossio\nnetted one each. !\nNatal-Michel led 3-2 at the end\nof the first and 8-6 at the end of\nthe second, outscoring the visitors\nsix goals to four in the final period.\nReferees J. Ewanick of Fernie\narid J. Thomson, of Michel handed\nout ten penalties,- with both teams\ngetting five penalties each.\nThe Coal Kings will endeavor to\npush their winning streak .to four\ngames as they meet Cranbrook at\nNatal on Jan. 23.\nHOWARD KELLY\nTAKES OVER LEAD\nIN DART TOURNEY\nHoward Kelly regained first place\nin the Legion Dart Tournament on\nThursday as he came up with a\nstring of victories that eased hiht\npast former leader Bob Kenzle.'\nKelly with 34 wins and only 11\nlosses still has 21 games to play in\nthe 66-game contest. All told 23\nare entered In the event\nHolding down second p*lace is\nJack Kennedy who likewise found\na winning combination that saw him\ncop many victories to pile up a total of 32 wins and 17 losses. In\nthird place with 31 victories and 14\nlosses is Jack Kenzle.\nThe fight for last spot is being\nwaged by two veteran dart throwers Jack Brinley and Oscar Anderson. Brinley has only 13 wins and\u00ab23\nlosses, while Anderson has won 15\nbut dropped 27.\nBABE QUITS PRO\nASSOCIATION\nTAMPA. Fla. (AP) \u2014 Babe Za-\nharlas quit the Ladies Professional\nGolf Association Thursday with a\nblast at some of her fellow pros\nand declared she may form a rival\ngroup with Fred Corcoran.\nThe Babe, who is entered in the\nTampa women's open golf tournament, said she submitted her resignation as president of the LPGA\ntwo nights ago and the LPGA re\nfused'to accept it.\n\"Now,\" she said, \"I'm washing\nmy hands of the whole mess, both\nas president and as a member.\" \u2022\nShe protested the LPGA's action\nIn failing to keep Corcoran on as\ntournament director, declaring he\nhad built women's golf up to a\nhigh level and the golfers are playing for lots more money than they\never expected-to.\nMusial Signs\nWith Cards\nST. LOUIS (AP)\u2014The signing of\noutfielder Stan Musial, highest\npaid player of the league's hitting\norown six times, was announced\nThursday by the St. Louis Cardinals.\nHis contract is believed to call\nfor about $80,000, the same as for\nthe last three seasons, and possibly\nhighest in the majors.\nBRITONS BET\n$190 MILLION ON\nFOOTBALL POOLS\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The government\nreported today Britons bet a record\n$190,400,000 on football pools during the last soccer season.\nIt bettered the previous mark of\n$163,800,000 wagered during 1952.\nThe government's tax bite on the\nhuge outlay was $57,120,000. The\ngovernment takes 30 per cent of\nthe gross play but the prizes won\nby the bettors are tax-free.\n8LALOM POSTPONED\nKITZBUEHLE, Austria (AP) \u2014\nRain, fog and rising temperatures\nThursday forced postponement of\nthe giant slalom race for women,\nopening event of the third International Ski Festival here. The\nrace wBl be run today \u25a0 and will\nbe followed by the men's giant\nslalom.\nn\nres\nBowlers in the men's' commercial\nleague came up with what proved\nto be the best night's bowling this\nseason as; many hit the 300 single\nmark as well as the .600 aggregate.\nAl Liness with a 353 topped the\nsingle scores with Yo Hamakawa\ncoming a close' second with a'346.\nCarl Locatelli captured the high\naggregate with an 812: lies Hood\ngave him a run for'his money but\nfell five pins short. Clyde Mill*\nproved to be the most consistent\nbowler as he rolled singles of 281,\n262 and 205 for a. 788 aggregate.\nThe Humes swept team honors\nwith 1184 single ahd an aggregate of\n3206. ' '\u2022'','.'\u2022' \" \u25a0'\nBetty Maloney and Dot Waterer\nshared, the honors in- the Senior\nLadles League with Maioney' taking\nthe high 'aggregate with. 7.3, and\nWat.erer the singles with, a 300,\nThe Waterer teak .captured the\naggregate with a 2616 and the May\nquintette the single with a 1044.\nIn the race for total pins of the\nseason, the May quintette moved\nahead, of Morris to,gain top spot\nwith 41,691 which Is 87 pins ahead\nof Morris. \"Jarrett is in third with\n41,393 followed by Speirs 41,023\nStorey 40,974 and Waterer 40,623.\nThe Storey team,.alihbugh taking\nonly one point on the night's play,\nremained.'in first place-with 23 Vt\npoints. W-terer, with 10, Is' ih second, with Porteous next with 18.\nSeniors Capture\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,1934 -i ti\nlights\nBy The Associated Press.\nLos Angeles\u2014Al Cruz, 121, Los\nAngeieS, outpointed Billy Peacock,\n118%, Philadelphia, 10.\nJacksonville, Fla. - Willie Pep,\n128,' ' Hartford, Conn., outpointed\nLittle David, 127, Jacksonville, 10.\n.. Providence, R.I. \u2014 'Denis (Pat)\nBrady, 137%, New York, outpointed Ben Mlloud, 138%, French\nMorocco, 10,\nSan Jose, Calif.-Charles (Chuck)*':\nAdkins, 188, Chicago, stopped Jess-\nUnderwood,. 136, Detroit, 3. \u25a0 ,' \u25a0;.\ni Chicago \u2014 Ron Stribling, 13314,\nCedar Rapids, Iowa, stopped Irish-\nBilly Wagner, 135, Pittsburgh, 7. \u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0'\nNew Britain, Cbnm \u2014 Kenby,\nAdams, 125%, Norwich, Conn.,\nknocked out Young Saint, 126, Holy*\noke, Mass., 4. \u25a0 >   \u25a0 '','\u2022'\nMiami Beach, Ffa.-^Charlle Nor-'\nkus, 197, Jersey City, N. J.; stopped.\nDanny Nardlco, 181%, Tampa; Fla,,\no. : : ; 8\nThe Nelson High School Bombers\nand1 Bomberettes stepped into\nsenior company Wedesday evening\nwhen they played teams from the\nCity League, but their luck failed\nthem. The Senior Ladies captured\nthe first game 20-11 over the\nBomberettes and then the Senior\nPros took the measure of the Bombers 42-33.\nIn the first encounter it looked\nlike'the Bomberettes would upset\nthe seniors; In the first half they\noutplayed and outscored the seniors,\nbut the seniors came to life in the\nthird' quarter to tuck the game\naway.\nIri the first quarter the Bomberettes took a 4-2 lead, advanced it\nto 11-8 by half .time, but. then, failed\nto count In, the last. half, as the\nseniors came through with 10 points\nin the third and two more in the\nfinal.\nBarbara Thorn was the high point\nSetter in the game with eight, followed by Donalda Ure with six. For\nthe Bomberettes Marg Farenholtz\nwas tops with five points^\nLEAD AT HALF\nIn the second contest play was\nmuch closer than the score would,\nIndicate. At the end of the first\nquarter the Bombers held a 11-10\nlead over the Pros.\nThe Pros in the second quarter\ncaught tire as they rapped home\n16 points compared with two for the\nBombers, who came back somewhat\nin the third quarter to outscore the\nPros 12-8.\nWith a seven-point lead to work\non The Pros played the last quarter on almost even terms. They garnered nine points to the Bombers\neight to walk off with the win.\nBill Girrard led the Pros attackers with 12 points followed by Joe\nPostnikoff with nine. Gordon Beaton led the High boys with eight\npoints along with Phillips who also\nhad eight.\nThousands are switching\nto this remarkable new shave\nthat's Medicated...Read why!\nNo mattor how -you shavo now\n\u2014brushloss or larhor-this new\nMedicated WONDER SHAVE gives\nresults you've never experienced\nbefore I\nIf your face feels tender or sore\nafter shading, try this Wonderful\nshave cream that is different be-\ncause it is medicated. Wonderful\nfor whiskers and for skin, tool\nHere's how Noxzema 8-Way\nShave-works:\n1. Proparos whlskors, skin. Softens whiskers. Provides Aim for\nrazor glide. Protects skin.\n2. No mora smarting! Medicated\nformula has built-in pain preventive tosoothe tender skin.\n3. Helps hoal Invisible razor\ndamage you getVith every shave.\nNoxzema is medicated. Grooms\nskin-helps.keep it healthier and\nyounger-looking. ,\nTry a 8-Way Shave!.Use as i\nbrushless - or Wore and after, *\nregular lather. Get your trial jar.\n> ...40f shefor25^'..t\u00abdayl'tfh.i-.\nSct big economy sizes! At drug, \u25a0\nepartment, syndicate stores.    ' ii\ni vsussss\nECONOMY SlZftS\n\\3MyStene\ni\nj IN TUBUS\n!       \u2122*      APro-.tt.lN.-tam-J\nMaintain1 Hopes For\nAll-Canadian Seaway\nBy  JOHN   LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP).\u2014 Canada is going to push for an all-Canadian seaway on. the St. Lawrence river,\ngovernment Informants say, regardless of what the United States\nCongress does about the deep waterway. .   .\nWhile this view clashes with\nU. S. administration thinking, the\ngovernment is understood to be\nprepared to press it as far as it can\nwithout knocking out the whole\nseaway project.\n\"We're going to hold out for a\nseaway built on the Canadian side\nof the river,\" a cabinet source said.\nHe. indicated, though, that if it\ngets to the point where the U. S.\nInsists on the seaway with canals\non the U. S. Side as an absolute requisite to construction, Canada may\nhave to yield.\n\"We would rather do that than\nwreck the project,\" he said.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY   1531.\nENGLI8H EDUCATOR\n' Sir Itoorhas Elyot wrote the first\ntreatise on education in English in\nTHE  MERCURY 18 DOWN\nEnjoy thi Luxurious Cashmere-Finish Fool of\nTONY DAY\nCARDIGANS and\nPULLOVERS\nP.8.: The Girls, Too, Are Wearing Tony Day\nP.P.S.:  Moths Shun  All  Tony  Day's  Moth-Proofed Sweater\nYarn.   ' \" . .'','\nHughes-Stuart Men's Wear\n459 WARD ST. PHONE 425\n3-\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order-Extra Copies of\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER\n\u2022      OR TO THE DAILY NEWS CIRCULATION\nDEPARTMENT\n'    PRINT NAMES AND\"ADDRESSES PLAINLY IN\nBLACK PENCIL\nName\t\nAddress    i\t\nCity _ _   _\nName  _.\nAddress\nCity   .._.\nName _\nAddress\nCity   \t\nName _\nAddress\nCity   _..,\nName _\nAddress\nCity   ....\nName _\nAddress\nCity   __.\nYour Own Name _\nYour Own Address\nCopy jje and Qc Postage\nPlus 3% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 22e per copy coven wrapping and mailing by\nui to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain '\nor tho United States.\nPHONE 144\nJM&m Bath: -SVtmr\n'    Vi-     \u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0-\u25a0    '\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0   ,V: r ; --\u25a0   \u25a0     '\u25a0\u25a0-   -\u25a0\u25a0      i ffl i . ;       \u25a0....\u25a0\u25a0-       \u25a0    .  .     - .- : \u25a0  \u25a0    \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0     \u25a0-      \u25a0\"'    :'     .    -: :\".\n \u00ab\u00abPP!iPPiW\n10 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,1914\n1 PfflON-n-PfflONWANlADS\n\\    FOR QUICK MSULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline (er Classified Ada\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES\n\u2014Canada, United States, Alaska\nand Foreign. How, where, when\nto apply, Send $1.00 for litest\nemployment report listing firms\nhiring. Service Bureau, Department D-44, Box -64, Saint John,\nN.B.\ntmtnsrm and rasps\nappliance man. Apply Bert's\nRadio Service, 8TT Spokane St.,\nTrail, BC,\nCONTRACT- CA* S-.tat.lK WITH\ntractor for small Winter logging\noperation. Contact Stan Kllsby,\nLardo, t)r phone 1200, Nelson,\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE RB-\neelved by the Secretary, No. 1,\n380 Baker St., Nelson, B.C., up to\nFebruary 13th, 1094, for the position of Librarian In the Nelson\nMunicipal Library. Applicants\nwill please state qualifications,\nexperience, and salary expected.\nwcmmms. nmmmx.\nOeod wages and good home, 812\nCarbonate Street ,  '\nAGENTS WANTED\nGET FREE SAMPLE CASE. MAKE\nUP TO $15.00 IN A DAYI You\ntoo can turn full and spare time\ninto cash, many.making,more on\nthe side than in regular Jobs-\ntaking orders tor made-to-measure clothes. Free kit carries huge\nassortment of all wool fabrics-\nnew low prices \u2014 complete instructions and easy way to get a\ndemonstration suit make selling\na cinch. Sample kits limited \u2014\nwrite at once giving your age\nand present occupation. First\ncome\u2014first served. Dept. 3. Doug,\nlas Tailoring Co. P.O. Box 308\nMontreal.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED AUTO BODY AND\nfender man seeking employment;\nalso as mechanic. Can guarantee\nfactory finish. Apply Box 9281,\nDally News.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,    BICYCLES\nUsed\nTRUCKS\nWITH UNUSED MILEAGE\n'47 INTERNATIONAL KBR 11\nLogger Tires, Air Brakes.\nReconditioned.\n'48 INTERNATIONAL KBS 7\nNew Tires.\n'49 INTERNATIONAL KBS 8\nVery Oood Condition.\n'50 INTERNATIONAL LF 192\nTandem Axle Unit, New Logger\nTires, Air Brskes. Reconditioned.\n'51 FORD Vi TON\nLow Mileage, Very Oood.\n'51 G.M.C. V- TON\nVery Good,\n'50 CHEVROLET '\/_ TON\nVery Good.\n'49 DODGE *A-\\ TON\nGood Condition.\nTERMS\nTRADES\n& Equipment Co.\nPHONE 1400      NELSON, B.C\nCOUPLE, FIRS* CLASS COOK\nand waitress; hotel or cafe, anywhere. Write Box 9308, Daily\nNews.\nKNITTING OF ANY KIN6. MRS.\nM A. McLean, Room 3, Strath-\ncona Hotel.\nDRESSMAKING AND ALTERA-\ntlons. Reasonable prices. Phone\n1018-Y. '\nHOUSEWORK WANTED BY THE\nhour. Box 9030, Dally News.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steels, brass, eopper,\nlead, etc, Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron It Metals Ltd., 230 Prior St, Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Pacific 8357.\nWANTED - GOOD USED\/GRO-\ncery and confectionery equipment. Box 9280 Daily News.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST: CANVAS TARP, BETWEEN\nNelson and Rossland on Salmo\nroad. Reward. Finder, please notify Ellison Milling & Elevator\nCo. Ltd., Nelson.\nClassified Advertlilno Rates:\nISn per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive Insertions.\nHo line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line for 8 consecutive Inser.\nions.\n$1.50 Una tor month (28 consecutive Insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc. \u2014 20o per Una.\nfirst Insertion.  18c per line\neach subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSubscription Rates! .\n(Not More Than Listed Hera)\nBy carrier, per week,\nln advance          JH)\nBy carrier, per year ...     $15.80\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month   _.\u201e    $ 1.25\nThree months       S.79\nSix months        7.50\nOne year  _     15.00\nMall ln Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month        S 1.00\nThree months       2.75\nSix Months        8.50\nOne year       10.00\nWhere extra postage Is requ'rod,\nabove rates plus postage.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS        4.B-.0T* IT.Wbeat.\nS.Fr-_t.\net\npalaafpU\n6. Persian\ncoin\nt Mature\n\u00ab. Tents (AM.\nInd.)\nU. Pin for\nroasting\nMeat\n13. Old Ice-\nfloor\n18. Part \"\nef\na\nlock\n2L Glacial\nridged\n23. Food\nleaving\n24. High,\ncraggy\nhlUs\n23. Performs\nYc*t-T-_7*r> *\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\nJO. Plant ovulo\nS3. Small\ndepressions\nIandlc poem   2d. Girl's nanus    34. Flourish\nlS.Sma-1. Z-.CMrlat-M     ST.Vetnof\n-toneless        29.Mo-t aleaf\nslothful 'SS. MtsceBanj\nt Temper\nI. Expletive\n\u2022.Rrrer\n-.Asia\n.-.Setting\nU. Color of a\nmole's coat\n14. hat-Mr\n13. Provided\nwit-abet!\n11 Points\nwhere fluM\nI* taken\n-atoaptpe\ntt. Spread\ngr**stodr*\nJC Canopy\nover* bed\n\u00bbl.Mo\u00abnta_n\n(Greece)\nHNo*ioM\n24. Membrane\nST. Native*\nof Iraq\nSI. angle van\n'\/ IX To tin-art\nout\ntt.Cook._c\nstove*\n38. Malt\nbeverage\nSO. Disdain\nST. Speeded\n39. Jog\n40. Covers\nwith Ink\n41. Stitches\n42. Inner bark\nof the\nlinden\nDOWN\n. La-yto\nWUcasstn\n10-tktw\n(.Firearm \"*\nDAILY CBmOQlfOT-S-Here's how te work it:\nAXTDLBAAXX\nIslOKOFElLOff\nOne letter simply stand* tor another, b this example A 1* used\nlor the three Va, X for the two O**, etc. Single letters. *po\u00bb\ntrophies, the length and formation of the weeds are all hints\nEach day tt* cod* tetter* an different\nA Cryptogram QpotaHoti\nIOCBR    TORN    IT    SA6FCSR    QOKL\nYKNOMA.      TJVC-     RBWgVMSR      FOV\neVWYXR    QOKLTGOCMOYHV-WBCIV.\nYesterday'* Cryptoquote:  BUT THOUGHTLESS FOLLIES'\nLAID HIM WW.jU\u00abD STAINED HJS MAMK-BURMS.\n%\nr-\n1\nr-\nr*\n6\nt\n1\n9\ni\n^A\nII\n%\nr.\n14'\n%\n'^\n<\n10\n17\n18\n%\n**\n.o\n%\nli\n%\nm\n%\n11\nsi\n%\n%\n^\nli\na.\nj*\n^\n>J\nvt'\nn\nlo\nJl\n^\n32.\nM\nM-\n%\n%\n1*\n\u2022to\n%\n39\nl\nM\n1\n'rV\n4\n4\n%\n4.\n%\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDRY WOOD FOR SALE - 18-IN,\n118.00; 12-ln. 117.50 per cord. -\nWrite or phone 2-A. V. J. Kos-\nlanclc, Crescent Valley, B.C,\nLB rouge bXISer inde1.i1.LI;\nLipstick. $.1; Hair On Face Instant\nRemover, $2. Corrective Cosmetics, 211 BlrksBldg. Van,, B.C,\nP-M'-'ftWUaB'- TOSI5 -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova Street,\nVancouver.\nu9ed b6W_,iM3 pflW tt>* 5A1__\n\u2014Solid maple, SOe per pin. Apply\nBowladrome.\n..-IT. ALUMINUM Vkk&M,\ncash, terms or trsde land, or \u2014\nBox 9318, Daily News,\nCRESS WART REMOVBR-Leaves\nno scars. Your Druggist sells\nCRESS,\nHdusfcHC-Lb fuTOTrulE LUte\nnew. Apply 1011 Falls St. after\n2 p.m., or phone 797-R.'\nIi A R 0 E ffSBtAY. AtlfaMAT-C\nbeater. Phone 1622-L.\na_-s,s,e<.RrrsALv!i-*(.it surb\nrelief, Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS -\nWrite P.O. Box S9. Nelson. B.C.\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT, BY RELI-\nable' adults, or will lesss with\noption to buy\u20142 or 3-bedroom\nhouse, city or country, near Nelson. Guarantee maintenance. Immediate occupancy or by Feb. 1,\nPhone 1424. Box 9282, Dally News.\nLAKBSlDtt bUn&ALOWs, . SW\ngle or double room cabins. Comfortable, propane gas, heat and\ncook. Hot water all ths time. See\nlt or phone 884.\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nFOR MORE CHICKS, BETTER\nchicks and higher profits, order\nBurnside Chicks. . Bred right,\nhatched right and carefully selected under government supervision. Order early to ensure desired dates. R.O.P. sired Whit*\nLeghorns, R.O.P. sired New\nHampshires, R.O.P. sired Leghorn-Hampshire and Hampshire-\nLeghorn crossbreeds, approved\nAustralorps and approved Austra*\nwhite crossbreeds, For further Information and prices write to\nBurnside Poultry Farm. A. X.\nPowell, Box 275, Hammond, B.C.\nbuy'Y6ur\"bAbV drttt-WBttl\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. We bav*\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders oa\nour own farm. Our baby chick*\nare produced only from our own\nstock ln White Leghorns, Whit*\nRocks, New , Hampshires and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request.\nbnh \"tkt'vm eow am. r.\nmonth calf. H. Kabatoff, Slocan\nPark, B.C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR RENT-GENERAL REPAIR\nbusiness. 2 stall shop, fully\nequipped. Phone 1279-Y, Trail,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\ns-boom surra: mxnGmsr-\ned. Heated, close ln. J.-H. Ramsden, 354 Baker St or Box 9310,\nDaily News.\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE ROOMS\nfor rent. General heat; electric\nstoves. N. Shore Motel. Ph. 1084.\nAVAILABLE FEB. 1, PARTLY\nfurnished 4-room apartment. Ph\n330-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms by the day, week or\nmonth. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker St.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroom for rent Phone 359-R.\nFOR RENT - WARM HOUSE-\nkeeplng room. Phone 405-L.\nFOR S-1NT-2-R06M ICuRN-SM-\ned suite. Phone 879-Y,\t\nTWO-ROOM SEMI-FURjftSHkD\napartment. Phone 188-L.\nPEftMANENt R-iS-bSN.1 WANTi-\nto rent family home. Ph. 17B0-L\nMACHINERY\nFOR RENT - SHOVELS, BACK-\nhoes, dragline, log loader bulldozers, . compressors, etc. Bayes\nEqulpt Co., Cranbrook, phone\ntUfA JAMMER FOR tuMBER.\nInquire Louie Paparlch, Box 207,\nNorthport, Wash.\nWlNdHES: FOR RlffififcR TIRE\ntractors, cats, trucks, etc, Bayes\nEqulpt Co., Crapbrook, phone 80.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\naurance Co. D. L. Kerr, Agent \u25a0\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and reasonable rates. Vancouver, B.C.\nA8SAVERS AND MINI\nBEPRE8ENTATIVE8\ng. W. WIPBOWBON -.'CO. A8-\nssyera. 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\ntra E_jvies,:iR0S8i-*-ro:\"B,g\nAsssyer, Chemist, Min* Rep,\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBoYiy e. xmsoc OTIS\"\nB.C Land Surveyor. P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St., Nelson. Phono 1333.\nft. K. COATCS, STB, WO.' i. IW\nBaku St. Nelson, Phone HIS.\nB.C. Lands Surveyor.\nsrvrsBKmsrfJS. -tox m\nKimberley, Phone 81\nB.C. Land Surveyor, Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\t\n\u25a0        BENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop. 'Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phono 593, 324 Vernon St\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n1939 PLYMOUTH\nFOUR DOOR SEDAN\nRemanufactured Motor.\nNew Paint\n1953 DODGE SEDAN   .\nColor: Dark Green. Air Conditioner.\nOne Owner. Low Mileage.\nPEEBLES\njiim\n\/CHRYSLER'PLYMO'.n \u25a0\n[FAR&0-^<\u00ab>.(\"l>\/.T'k- \u2022\nTLtliOVO'fc\/.f\nThe picturesque town hall of th*\nHague, capital of The Netherlands,\nwas built in 1583.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... liw ok in dial\n(Paclflo Standard Time\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1954\n7:00-News\n7:05\u2014Warren's 'Wlgwsm.\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Woman's World\n9:00\u2014Earl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Morning Musicale\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Visit\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Shut-in Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Decoratively Speaking\n11:50\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00\u2014Noon Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n1_:55\u2014Oddities In the News\n1:00\u2014Noon Concert\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Falrview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Pacific News\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4:15\u2014Fred Hill Tenor\n4:30\u2014Stories of Ballet\n5:00\u2014Young Man With a Song\n5:10\u2014Behind the News\n5:15\u2014Int Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the News\n5:25\u2014Report from Pari. KM\n5:30\u2014Supper Club\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n0:00\u2014Sports Commentary\n8:15\u2014Christian Science Program\n8:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014The Record Album\n8:00\u2014Mystery Time\n8:80\u2014Here's Jullett*.\n9:00\u2014Sports Page\n9:30\u2014John Fisher.\n9:45\u2014Speakers Choice\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Can. Short Stories\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup '\n10:45\u2014Evening Devotions\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00-NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Paclflo Standard Tim*\nSATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1954\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broaf.ast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical  Mlnutei\n7*0\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:59\u2014Musical  March  Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sport*\nS: 15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n0:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Sau Davis\nlOiOO\u2014Who's Herb Gott\n10:30\u2014World Church News\n10:45\u2014News and Weather\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:00-Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014News\nS:10-Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014This Week\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n8:48\u2014Armdale Chorus\n4:00\u2014Now I Ask You\n4:80\u2014Curtain Melodies\n8:00\u2014Red River Playboys\n5:15\u2014The Rhythm Pals\n5:30\u2014B.C. Profile\n8:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014NHL Hockey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\n8:00\u2014Share the Wealth\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Hit Parade\n9:30\u2014The Music Box\n10:00\u2014News *\n10:15\u2014Dance Time\n10:30\u2014Dixieland Concert\n JMKtmPftiL\" \"\n$\\\nCLASSIFIED\nV      PHONE 144\nDeadline tor Classiri-d Ads\u2014S p.m.    -\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nMUST SELL 2-BEDROOM HOME\nin Rosemont. Extra bedroom upstairs. Oil heat, fruit trees, new\nelectric stove. Furnished or un-\nfurnlshed, $4500, terms. Ph. 827-R.\n6NAPI fOR S3500, 2 APT, HOUSE\non 412 Silica St. Revenue, $100\nper month. Phone 1520-Y.\t\nFOR SaLE-3-BEDROOM, FULLY\nmodern house. Is. Insulated. Call\nat 426 Hamilton Ave. or ph.'.O.-X,\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Trading\nmoved Irregularly with a higher\ntendency throughout\nA mixed tendency was shown by\nCanadian stocks. International\nNickel dropped, Hiram Walker\nslipped and Dome Mines fell Vt.\nMclntyre advanced and Distillers\nSeagram added. Pacific was unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Most groups\nwere lower In light trading toward1,\nthe close.\nUtilities were the only weaker\nIssues in Industrials as all others\nwere higher. Cement was down $1\nin the constructions and Canada\nSteamship dropped $6.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Prices were\nIrregularly higher in moderately\nactive trading.\nOne-point gains were chalked up\nby Canada Cement, Canadian Welters and Foundation. Abttlbl moved\nahead while Simpsons and Canadian Dredge each gained.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Trading got off\nto a slow start Thursdiy. South African gold shares had a dull opening with prices drifting lower but\na late rally developed ln selected\nIssues and the overall trend became\n'b\"-egular.\n\u2022iGovernment securities were generally steady to firm and closed\nwith wide fractional gains.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Trade was\nstrong and active on light receipts\nof 675 cattle and calves on the Calgary livestock market Thursday.\nGood to choice butcher steers and\nheifers were 25 to 50 cents higher\nur.der lenient grading and sorting;\nmedium to good cows were generally steady; bulls 25 to 50 cents\nhigher for the week; good stocker\nand feeder steers and veal calves\nsteady.\nHogs sold 50 cents higher Wednesday at $34; sows were steady at\n$19.25.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n$17.50-$18.50; common to medium\n$14-$17.25; good to choice butcher\nheifers $15-$16.5u; common to medium $10-$14.75; good cows $9.75-\n$10.75; common to medium $8.50-\n$9.50; canners and cutterf J8-$8.50;\ngood bulls $11.50-112.25; common to\nmedium $9-$ll; good stocker'and\nfeeder steers $14-115.50; common to\nmedium 110-113.75; good to choice\nveal calves 120-123; common to\nmedium $14-$19.50.\nNet\" Profit Higher\nMONTREAL (CP) - Net profit\nof Dominion Oilcloth and Linoleum\nCompany Limited Increased ln 1953\nto $1,875,631 from 11.486,248 in 1952,\ntht company's annual report'showed Thursday.\nThe net profit was equal to 12.46\na share compared with $1.90 the\nprevious year. The net workjng\ncapital at the fiscal year-end stood\nat $4,194,701.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)'\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\nAmal Larder    \t\nAmerican Y K\t\nArea        \t\nArmistice\t\nBagamac\t\nBarymln \t\nBase Metals \t\nBevcourt     \t\nBobjo\nBoymar -Gold\n.13\n..15\n.21\n.45\n.21\n.16\n1.55\n.16\n.26\n.28\n.12%.\nBralorne         3.15\nBrewls R L  11V4\nBroulan       2.20\nBuffalo Ank  67\nBuff Can      20\nCaliffan    15\u00ab\nCampbell R L      8.50\nCan Mai        49\nChesterville 30%.\nChlmo G         1.34\nCons M it S    22.50\nConwest *      390\nCons Discovery       2.00\nCroinor       31\nDetta R L 17'..\nDome         14.85\nDonolda  54\nDuvoy  22\nEast Malartic       2.10\nEast Sullivan       4.05\nEastern Melals      1.30\nElder Gold       .49\nEstella -. 21\nEureka 70\nFalconbrldge    14.50\nFed Kirk  !3\nFrobisher  \u2022     4.30\nGiant Yel      8.10\nGod's Lake  90\nGold Eagle     U\nGolden Manitou  _.    1.52\nHaKirock  14\nHeath     \u25a0  .11\nHolllnger        12.50\nHomer Y K 20\nHudson Bay    38.00\nInspiration      2.10\nInt Nickel     34.50\nL\u00b1A'...::.f.    \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'., if \u00b1\nV-JF              _^H>,...-j,':.-.\n, \".-\"\u25a0.-.:.'...-,..-\nittJr    *;\u00ab\nSSI -oflB                          v ?' \u2014KB\nit?' Hii 9 '      \u2022 r fli\nHp^v\n7   \u25a0                  '\n1     ';'      .'--     |H|                                   Mmmm\nJL '.\" ,\ntiHi^iS&L  I\n_\u00ab'\nKjME  .                               iiW\n_e-i-i__l-^*Mr*-l--C'\nRife\u00a7\n.fc_   'via\nBit     <\n111111-\nmmtr- :?\nsSSsl^s\nMIDWIFE SUM8UK 8URWANBUU It weighing a two-week-old baby In a Thai home, using\nsome of the equipment provided from the new\nchild-core kit provided by1 the United Nations\nInternational Child Emergency Fund, Beg In foreground   contains   other   equipment.   More   than\n12,000 mldwlves and Health workers In Asia ar*\nreceiving these kits from UNICEF, enabling them\nto bring modern care to rural families. To receive a kit, the midwife of health workers -must\npass a course In one of the thousands of child-\ncare teaching centres which UNICEF has equipped In 15 oountrles, \u2014 Central Press Canadian.\nDividends\nBy The Canadian Press\nShea's Winnipeg Brewery Ltd. a\n27% cents: B 50 cents, Feb. 15, record Jan. 29.\nUnited Keno Hill Mines Ltd., 10\ncents interim, March 31, record\nMarch 15.\nWinnipeg Grain\n,    WINNIPEG (CP) -Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 71.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 91.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  56\nBralorne         3.10\nCanusa  04\nCariboo Gold       .85\nEstella  20\nGiant Mascot  43\nHighland Bell  32\nRenville  06\nPac Eastern Gold 35\nPioneer Gold            1.40\nPremier Border  05%\nQuatsino       23\nSheep Creek ,       .50\nSilver Ridge      ,i      .07\nSilver Standard  58\nUtica        .01\nVananda          .01\nVan Rol .   04\nWestern Tungsten  50\nYale    ,      -25\n0IL8\nAnglo Can     5.30\nA P ConS   27\nCal St Ed    10.00\nCan Anaconda 13\nJollet Que\" 35V4\nKerr Addison .      17.75\nKirk-Hudson Bay \u2022 .82\nLabrador        8.45\nLake Dufault 70\nLexindin    10\nLlngman (new)   20\nLittle Long Lac - 72\nMacassa        1.70\nMacDonald       62\nMacLeod Cock      1,40\nMalartic G F       1.40\nMcKenzie R L 35\nMining Corp    10.85\nMoneta  45\nNew Alger 11%\nNew Bidlamaque 55\nN'ew Calumet   70\nNew Larder U      1.70\nNew Mylamaque       .25\nNorandj     61.50\nNormetals      2.55\nNorth Inca 12%\nO'Brien        .68\nOsisko        .48\nPioneer      1.50\nPlacer Develop     25.00\nPowell Rouyn  ., 72\nPreston E D  .'.     2.85\nQuebec Lab  14\nQueenston  33\nQuemont      14.85\nRadlore    82\nRoche L L 13%\nSan Antonio       1.50\nSherritt Gordon      4.20\nSllvermiller   93\nSllanco\" 16\nStadacona   31\nSteeloy  ,       .10%\nSteep Rock  ..:     6.85\nSudbury Cont  25\nSurf Inlet         19%\nTeck Hughes . .' _      2.13\nThompson-Lund  17\nTombill    42\nTorbrit           1.45\nUnion Mining  20\nUnited Keno      6.20\nUpper Canada      1.20\nVentures        15.00\nViolamac       1.95 -\nWalte Amulet    9.70\nOILS ,\nAnglo Can      5.40\nA P Cons  28\nB A Oil       20.78\nCal & Ed    10.50\nCentral Leduc      1.80\nCentral Explorers       3.70\nChemical Research       1.74\nDel Rio'      1.70\nFederated Pete       3.90\nHome         8.15\nImperial Oil    29.87\nKroy       1.50\nMacDougal Segur Ex  28\nNat Pete      1.60\nOkalta      1.85\nPacific  Pete   ,     9.00\nRoxana 15\nUnited Oils      85\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbi .     18\nAlgoma Steel _ -    42\nAluminum     42\nArgus      '.    12%\nAtlas St -   liVt\nBell Jelephone    40\nBrazilian       7%\nB C Forest      6%\nB C Power A    18%\nBurns B       39\nBurrard A       7%\nCan Cement .; .'.    97%\nCan Steamships  '.    93\n23\n20%\n20\n23 %\n57\n13%\n23\nMalay Not Ready\nfor Freedom\nREV. MAURICE HARDMAN, 29-year-old Anglican minister,\nspeaks Into a microphone to make a tape recording for his congregation In Stonewall, Man. Stricken with polio, he has been In\nthe Iron lung In a Winnipeg hospital four months. It took 15 minutes\nto record the eight-minute sermon because a lung patient carl\nspeak only when the lung allows him to exhale.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.,\nChurchill's Early\nRetirement Expected\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The New\nYork Times said Thursday ln a London dispatch that the possibility\nthat Prime Minister Churchill will\nretire wltftln the'next six months\n\"is assuming a paramount position\nin British politics.\" The dispatch\nsays a number of \"experienced Conservative politicians\" believe the\nprime minister will retire from office after the Queen returns in May\nfrom her six-month Commonwealth\ntour.\nU X \"Chemists\"\nlike U.S. Store\nBy WARREN WHITE\nKUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) -\nIndependence for Malaya is the\ndream of most Malayans, but only,\noptimists' believe it will come in\nthe near future.\nThis 500-mile peninsula, clad in\nJungle and rubber trees', scarred\nwith the yellow scrapings of tin\nmines, is inhabited by nearly 6,-\n000,000 Malays, Chinese, Indians,\nEurasians and Europeans.\nFEAR CHINESE\nStumbling blocks to self-government Include' the Malays' fear of\n.Chinese commercial domination\nand,  conversely,  Chinese  fear  of\nj Malay military and police suppression.\nI The Chinese own most of the\nbusiness arid control \"most of the\nmoney not In the hands of British-\nfirms. The Malays are generally\nthe laborers.\nA leading Malayan Chinese, Sir\nCheng-lock Tan, 70, whose-ancestors came from China 200 years ago,\nsaid: \"We Chinese like to live under British rule and protection. The\nChinese like secure conditions to\nmake money.\"\nLEADS ALLIANCE\nSir Cheng-lock is president of\nMalaya'* most powerful political\norganization, an alliance of Malays\nand Chinese. '\nLoss Reported\nMONTREAL (CP) - New Calumet Mines Ltd. reported loss tor\nthe year ended Sept. 80 was $157,-\n814 compared with a profit of $274,-\n293 the previous year. i\nWorking capital rose in the year\nto $1,091,801 from $508,956 ln 195..\nBlame Hitler for\nGerman Defeat\nFRANKFURT (AP)\u2014Eleven of\nHitler's former generals and admirals say he was the big reason\nGermany lost the Second World\nWar. I\nA 472-page German book by some\nof the Third Reich's senior military and civilian experts gives Hitler's military talents a rough going\nover.\nHere are some of the collective\nviews in the book, entitled \"Bllanz\ndes Zweiten Weltkriegs\" (\"Balance\nof the Second World War\"):\nHitler started with an under-\nstrength air force, a navy even\nworse prepared, and 90 per cent of\nGermany's business tied up in\npeacetime production.\nHe toyed with an Impossible plan\nfor Invading England but let slip\nan easy chance to seize Africa and\nthe Middle East.\nHe outblundered Napoleon by his\ncampaign In Russia.\nAlthough German\" invention perfected Jet fighters ahead of the\nAllies, Hitler passed them up, although they might have wrecked\nAllied air power.\nDUCE LEFT ALONE\nFormer field marshal Albert Kes-\nselring, who commanded1 German\nforces ln Italy, blames Hitler for\nletting Mussolini run his own show\nin the Mediterranean until it was\ntoo late.\nFormer vice-admiral Kurt As-\nsmann describes Hitler's conception\nof naval warfare as \"extremely\nprimitive,\" with his attention fo-\ncussed \"exclusively on the Continent.\"\nFormer Infantry general Kurt\nVon Ttppelskirch declares that almost on the eve of the Russian\ncampaign Hitler regarded the Soviet army as \"a colossus of clay\nwithout a head.\"\nThe book estimates German war\ncasualties at 6,500,000 service men\nand civilians killed and 2,000,000\npartly or totally disabled.\nNHJON DAItY NIWI, TODAY, MM, tt, W4 \u201411\nBallet Dancer\nTurns Into\nWindow Dresser\nBy MURIEL NARRAWAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer .\nLONDON (CP)-A Canadian who\nhas'won a reputation in an unusual\nJob in Britain Is _2-year-old George\nAnderson of Toronto. He crossed\nthe Atlantic with hopes of becoming a ballet dancer, but wound up\ndressing store windows in fashionable shopping districts.\nHe won first prize for the best\ncoronation shop-window display ln\nall Surrey, and later caught the\neye of, author .Beverley Nichols,\nwho wrote a feature story on the\nyoung Canadian for a British magazine.\ns Anderson says it's easier to get\na reputation dressing windows in\nBritain than ln Canada. He spent\nthree years st the same job ln\nToronto, and says the difference\nis that British companies are not\nso discriminating as their Canadian\ncounterparts.\nMORE RESTRAINED\n\"British retailers arent prepared\nto pay the high cost of the huge,\nmechanized window displays of the\ntype favored in Canada,\" Anderson\nsaid In an Interview. \"They prefer\nthe more discreet dlspla^.\"\nHis current interest. In and out\nof office hours. Is creating intricate\ndisplay figures two or three feet\nhigh. These are developed through\na process he used ln Canada and\nwhich he believes has not been\ndone before in Britain.\nThe figures, often mode of rubber, are swathed In white sheeting\nlater hardened by a special process.\nThe sheeting then becomes a kind\nof canvas for hand painting,- embellished by sequins, Jewels - and\npieces of materials.\nHe studied painting at Toronto's\nart gallery during school days, and\nfinds his work absorbing,\n\"I no longer want to be a. ballet\ndancer,\"  he  said.  \"I  started  too\n1*4* p m t\u00bb the top m. that Md,\nsmntem,n\nBorn in Chungking, China, whew;\nhis father went to open * dental\nsurgery tor. a United Churoh Mission, Anderson earn* to Britain\nfrom Toronto In June, 1988, In\nCanada he had worked with Me\nVolkoff Ballet Company and he\nhoped to Join the Sadler'a Wells\nCompany school horo. 3\nBut ho arrived \"Just too late\" _or|f\na scholarship and became a film I\nextra for pocket money. After two;\nmonths In pantomime, he bought a .\nreturn ticket to Canada, Just ber\nfore the sailing date, he landed a\nwindow-display Job and decided to: J\nstay. Now he  has  no immediate\nplans to go back.\n\"I now think about Canada\nsome Canadians think about New\nYork,\" he said with a laugh. \"The\npaco is much too fast at home.\"\nFOUND VENEZUELA\nVenezuela was discovered by\nChristopher Columbus on his third\nwestern voyage in 1498.\nHis opposite number. Sir Onn\nBin Ja'afar, said: \"It is true to\nsay that everyone here feels that\nthere must eventually be independence; but we do not want a repetition of the mistakes of Burma and\nIndonesia. We have not yet the\nadministrators to run an independent government.\"\nTo Discharge POWs\nAs \"Undesirable\"\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 The 21\nUnited States soldiers who have refused to come home from Communist Korea will be declared \"undesirable\" and discharged Friday.\nThe undesirable-discharge papers\nfor the prlsoners-of-war who de.\n-lined to 'be returned to have been\ncompleted by the United States\nArmy after weeks of consultation\nwith the defence and state departments.\nThe army . chose. .this, middlo\ncourse ln dealing with the 21 to\navoid possible legal difficulties In\nthe way of sterner action, and to\nleave a loophole for the men to\nclear themselves, should any of\nthem come back to.the U. S.\n:  _\n-aflaaa'r-rM\nMr -aiwlura tmlyt\nGet money quickly\nNIAGARA\nAUTO 10AN\nWiU. proof of env lics-elup\nand your signature you can\nget an auto loan in mim-tea.\nup to $1)000*, or more, depending on what you drive.\nLong or short term plan*.\n\u2022Loans to tl,500 Itfe Insured\not no extra cost to you.\nlOWOt RATES ON\nMANY FRIENDLY 10AM\nYou\nOal\nMonthly\nPayment\n\u00abi-_-L\nPayraBnta\n$1250\n$63.60\n24\n900\n69.05\n15\n7J0\n7041\nV\n150\n444$\n\u2014__\n.160 Baker Street\nPhono 1638\nAi MLCmodh. CofM-wr hi Mar-OeK\nhlENDlY LOANS MtJM FBENDIYIOANS) \u00ab\u00ab!\nMetal Prices\nNEW YORK (CP) -\nLead, N.Y., .13.\nZinc, East St. Louis,\nSpot prices:\nCommonwealth\nDalhoulse \t\nHome       \t\nMercury \t\nNational Pete\t\nOkalta Com ....:.\nPacific Pete  \t\nRoyalite\nVanolta\nINDUSTRIALS\nC-Hlal Estates'\n3.75\n.18\n8.00\n.18\n1.50\n1.85\n8.90\n12.00\n.20\n26.00\nInt B:-ew B       4.25\nInt Nickel     3-N4\nInt Pete  21%\nKelvlnator       25y,\nLaura Secord   UVt\nLoblaw A   40\nLoblaw B  42\nMassey Harris  7%\nMoat Loco '.  16W\nMoore Corp   25%\nNat Steel Car   25%\nPage Hershey  70V\u00bb\nPowell River  27\nPower Corp        35W\nRuss Industries   17%\nShawinigan   39%\nSicks Brew   24%\nSimpsons A  - 15%\nSoutham   29%\nSteel of Canada  29%\nStandard Paving   23%\nUnion Gas of Can - 34%\nUnited Steel    12%\nWeston George  85\nWinnipeg Gas  8%\nNOTTINGHAM,  England   (Reuters)\u2014From office boy to $10O0-a-\nweek boss in 42 years\u2014that Is theN\nstory of John Percival Savage.\nNext month he takes over the\nchairmanship of Boots Pure Drug\nCompany, a \u00a329,000,000 concern\nwhich operates 1313 drugstores in\nBritain from its headquarters\nhere.\nBoots pioneered the American-\nstyle drugstore in Britain. Th'e\nchain operates stores in main cities throughout the country where\none can buy toys, books and a\nhost of other things common ln\nAmerican drug stores but completely foreign to'.the sedate British idea of the \"chemist's shop.\"\nSavage left school at 18 and\nstarted at six shillings a week as\nan office boy, working a 60-hour\nweek. That was ln 1911.\nNeat and dapper, Savage is a\nfamily man with three children.\nAway from the world of patent\nmedicines, he plays golf and\nwatches rugby football.\nTEACHERS' OVERTIME\nSAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-A report presented to the New Brunswick Teachers' Association meeting here said most teachers ln the\nprovince average two hours or\nmore each day beyond the prescribed working hours, in pre-.\nparing lessons, marking exercises\nor helping individual pupils. I\nCan .Breweries\nCan Canners\nCan Car & Fdy .\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Oil    \t\nCan Pac Rly .\nCockshutt   10\nCons M it S -  22%\nDist Seagram  .1  29%\nDom Foundries  -  14%\nDom Steel & Coal B  10%\nDom Stores          18%\nDom Tar & Chem   8%\nDom Textiles  .-  6%\nDom Magnesium  12\nFamous Players  .'  20%\nFanny Farmer     22\nFord A  71%\nGatineau  -  21%\nGatineau 8% pfd  104%\nGoodyear   99\nGoodyear pfd  48%\nGreat Lakes  -.  20%\nGypsum Lime  36\nImperial Oil   29%\nImp Tobacco  10\nInt Metals _  31\nIs the Weather Going To Get Colder?\nDON'T TAKE THE RISK\nINSTALL\nTEXACO P.T.\nAOTI-\n\u2022 (PERMANENT TYPE)\n\u25a0\nEthylene Glycol base with added Ingredients to prevent\nrust, and  corrosion,\nBE SAFE; Hove Your Cooling System Chocked NOWII\nCITY TIRE SERVICE\n206 Baker St.\nPhono 1427\nBuying-Selling-Renting\nMAIL\n.Your Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n*\n,\n\u2022\nt\nFIRST UNI\nSECOND UNA\nTHIRD LINH\nFOURTH UMi\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEI6HTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nLINES I TIMES 6 TIMES\n2 .74 .98\n3 1.11 ,1.44\n4 - 1.48 1.92\n5 1.88 2.40\n6 .      2.22 2.88\n7 2.89 3.36\n8 2.98 3.84\n\u2022 Minimum thargo ts two Knee\n\u2022 Add lie for Bo* Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates if payment is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low she time rate\nYOUR NAM!\nADDRESS\nNo. of Days Adh To Run.\nPayment Enclosed ______\nBrH Me '\"      i\t\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B. C.\n_\n'. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0 ''   '.- ..'\u201e j,\n-_\u2014___\u2014\n__-_\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0  \u25a0' - _\u2014 i .\n __...\n m\n\u25a0m\ntl2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22\/1954\nMOTHER: Look at What We Are SelHng at\nPRICE\nBOOKS ... Hundreds of New Titles.\nf AH Approved Illustrations..\nTrTIUL A FEW L_FT -\nREVLON FASHION PUTE \u2014 A Foundation Make-up\nNOW Vi PRICE\nDAGGETT and RAMSDELL CREAMS \u2014 Va. PRICE\nSPORTSMAN SHAVE CREAM \u2014 Vt PRICE\n3vv -\n.\";-' .' .' ''';' Ss&M\nNANN\nIJIttJGS ILTIlfl\nRock Lifts Diesel Engine Off Track\nlYAHCOOVER (CP)-A Canadian\nNational Railway passenger' train\n(rrived in Vancouver.. Wednesday\nJ(ght 12 hours behind schedule due\nto a derailment near Kamloops that\nlifted the diesel engine oft the\ntracks. A rock on the track \u25a0 is believed to have caused the accident.\nWE ARE PLEASED TO\nThat We Havd Been Appointed\nExclusive Agents For the Famous\n4-Way Vacuum Gleaner\nINCLUDING SUCH FEATURES AS \u2014\n1. WIDE ANGLE SUCTION\n&   Full lift\" Wide Area Suction.\n2. PILE-COMBING ACTION\nAutomatic Comb-Valve Picks Up Threads and Hair.\n3. RUG BRUSHING ACTION\nGrooms and Restores Colors.\n4. DEEP-CLEANING SUCTION\nHigh Velocity Suction Gets Out GrOund-In Dirt.\nNO DUST BAG TO EMPTY I\nPAY AS LITTLE AS\n$2.50 a WEEK\nAND APPLIANCES\n446 Word St.\nPhono 1302\nA-Powered Sub\nLaunched By\nMrs. Eisenhower\nBy ELTON C. FAY\nGROTON,  Conh.   (AP)   -\nThe\nworld's first atom-powered vesselr\nthe submarine Nautilus \u2014 \u2022 was Ij\nlaunched Thursday, opening a new;\nera In sea power.        ii    ,.,    ' \\\nMrs.-Dwlght D. Eisenhower, wife]\nof the president, swung a bottle of.\nchampagne across the bow to send\nthe. sleek craft sliding down the\nways-Into the Thames river.\nA crowd of about 12,000 persons\ncheered as the Nautilus entered the\nwater uijder a bright sunlit slty.\nSpeakers hailed the nuclear-driven vessel as not only,a powerful\nnew sea weapon but as a harbinger\nof peaceful use of atomic engines.\nHIT 8QUARELY\nMrs, Eisenhower took a few practice swings and then hit the hull\nsharply. The' bottle' crashed and\nchampagne splashed; The crowd\nroared and whistles blew.\nMrs. Eisenhower stood watching\nsilently and bit her lower lip as the\nNautilus slid to the river.\nCRACK SHOTS THIN\nOUT BUFFALO HERD\nPORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP') - A\nscene reminiscent of the early days\noi; the Canadian west is-being enacted here as expert marksmen\n\"thin, out\" Canada's last remaining\nherd of Buffalo.\nOnce millions strong and monarchs of the plains from ;Texas to\nthe Territories, the . buffalo have\nbeen reduced to about 15,000 roam-\n'ing through the.. 17,000 acres of\nWcod Buffalo park which straddles\nthe Alberta-Northwest Territories\nboundary about 500 miles north of\nEdmonton.\nANNUAL 8LAUGHTER\n\"Thinning but\" the herd, shooting a certain number pf buffalo,\nis carried out annually by the fed-\nera- government. Actually, it benefits the remaining buffalo. because\nthe park can support only a limited number adequately..   .\nTo prevent over-population and\na weakening the animals-are rounded up and a certain number slaughtered. VAbout 300 animals will be\nshot this year.\nALL EXPERT SHOT8\nAnimals selected from the. main,\ncorral for slaughter are led into a\nsmaller enclosure where the riflemen go to work. All are expert\nshots and usually only one' bullet\nis needed. - \", '\nSettlers also benefit. The meat is]\nsold in the district at reduced prices. Last yesr, about 108,000 pounds\nof buffalo steaks were sold- at 55\ncents a pound. ' !\nThis year, however, the price is.\nexpected to be higher.\nThe Wood Buffalo'Park had its\nstart between 1923 and 1928. when\n860C buffalo, about all that regained in Canada, were driven from\nAlberta's buffalo, park, at Wain-\nwrlght, 500 miles to the north to\ntheir new home. s\nFree to roam without the danger\nof reckless hunters, the herd expanded until, it became the last\nlarge nerd in the world.\nUrges Ottawa to Dissolve\nPost Office Savings Sank\nii OTTAWA. (CP)rrA private firm\not efficiency experts has urged the\n' I government'to dissolve an 87-year-old Canadian banking institution.\n\u2022 The>_lrm, J.'D. Wffods and Gordon of Toronto, said he post office\n'savings bank, formed in 1867, Is too\nexpensive to operate and should be\ndiscontinued. It estimated the bank's\npassing will save $977,000 a year.\nNEED NEGLIBIBLE -J\/J     ,'.\n; \u25a0 The report, noting that most; Canadian .communities now are .s^rvr'\n,ed by private banks, said the special\nheed.for, post-office.: savings .bank\nbranches In communities Without\nregular ibanking facilities has; all\nbut disapepared. \u2022 ', \u25a0\" i\nAtfjJERNATIVE, SUGGESTIONS.-\u25a0-.\nIf the recommendation is not acceptable, the report sakj, postal savings hranqKes should, operate only\n-.' THE FIRST ATOMIC SUBMARINE engine contained In the\nland-based submarine hull, shown here, was generating power when\nth'IS picture, first to bo'released, was taken. Thla nuclear power\nplant, known as -the Mark J* Is a near-duplicate of the Mark II,\nwhich will drive the USS Nautilus, the world's first atomic-\npowered submarine, to be launched Jan. 21. Both power plants\nWere built under contract wltH'the Atomic Energy Commission.\nThis picture was taken Inside the main building at the submarine\nreactor test site In Idaho. The large, sea tank Is about 60 feet In\ndiameter and almost 40\u25a0 feet high, The,hull passes through the\ntank so that the-reactor compartment Is' located within the. tank\nand completely submerged In water, to simulate seawater conditions\nwhen the sub would be submerged. The,Mark I power plant has\nbeen assembled In this hull In rhuch.the.same way the JBark II\nengine )s Installed In the Nautilus.\u2014Central Press Canadian.'\nin   communities   without   private\nbanking facilities.       -\nOn March 31... 1052,' total postal\nsavings deposits were, $38,000,000\ncomprising...282,286 accouhts. Of\nthese only 22,690 accounts, were active. -,<: p. - y vi:    I\nThe report said since there were\nless than five transactions In 92 per\ncent of the accounts in'the bank in\n.952, it is apparent the need for\nsuch- a bank \"is not nearly as great\nas it used to be.\"     \" V\n.Of the 1530 post offices providing savings-bank facilities only 461\nwere ln communities not served by\nother banking Institutions.   ,\ntvmem..mivmtwf\nAdmit:? Socreds Aim   fyON TOBE\nAt Monetary Reform\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014Provincial\nagriculture minister Kenneth Kier-\nnan reiterated the Social Credit policy on moentary reform Wednesday\nnight, adding that there iS \"very\nlittle . . .-a provincial government\ncan do to reform the monetary system, but.we.do what we can.\"\nSpeaking to a meeting of the Burrard constituency Social Credit As-\nsocaitipn, Mr. Kiernan said:\n\"The people who ca(l us 'funny\nmoney' people do not realize .that\nthey are preaching Social Credit\nthrough the back, door. They admit\nwhat is wrong with tl_e monetary\nsystem and admit that the federal\n'government.can control it, bulthey\ndon't do anything about it.\" \u25a0\nThey Still Love Him\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Ramon Novarro\n54-year-old swoon-maker of tha silent films, gave a party Wednesday\nnight for 19 steadfast British fans\nwho still acclaim him'as the greatest movie lover. The 19, most of\nttiem Jmiddle-aged spinsters' or\nhousewives, are. members of the\nRamon Novarro League.\nCOLOS8U8 FELL\nThe 105-foot. Colossus of Rhodes,\none, of the original seven wonders\nof the world ,was toppled by an\nearthquake in 222 BC.        \t\n:\nYour Chance To Save Money On Your Paint Job\nALL SHERWIN-WILLIAMS\nPAINT PRODUCTS\nB.C. Censor Turns\nDown Brando Film\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014The British\nColumbia film censor has turned\nthumbs down on \"The Wild, One,\"\nstarring Marlon .Brando.,'        , ;\nIt has also been banned in Alberta and is creating'controversy\nthroughout the.U. S\u201e with'the big\nquestion: \"Is this 'entertainment?\"\n\u2022 Columbia Pictures, in Vancouver\ndistributors for the Stanley Kramer\nproductions,' plan to file an appeal\nwith the B. C. Board of Appeals.\nThe picture is a story of violence,\nof juvenile delinquency and a flagrant disobedience and disrespect of\nlaw and order.\nIt's taken from an incident in\nCalifornia in 1949, when a gang of\nmotorcycle hoodlums rode into a\nsleepy little town and- rip-, lt wide\nopen. .    ,\nThe B.- C-censor said he gives\nno reasons for-baaming a.picture. If\nthere's any comment, 'it must come\nfrom the\" distributor.\nINCORPORATED\n, OTTAWA (CP) - The\" \/Senate\nThursday gave final reading tb a\nbill to Incorporate the Victorian\nOrder'of Nurses. .'.:\u2022\"\nTffe bill; sponsored by, Senator\nN. M. Paterson (L\u2014Ontario); outlines the purposes of the VON and\ndefines Its powers and membership. Itstlll must be approved by\nthe Commons.\nThe Senate.passed the bill after\na committee of the upper chamber\nhad studied'itYin detail.\nSnow Blocks Coast\nFuel Deliveries\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Many\nhouseholders began \u25a0 fee-trig the\npinch of winter Thursday as deep\nshow, crippled deliveries? of coal and\n-li.     .   ' ':'\nHarassed dealers said they. had\nplenty of coal and oil on hand but\nwere unable to keep up. with 'demands. TrUeks were four to. five,\nhours late in starting deliveries as\nsnow blocked yards.\nMeanwhile, only a few large companies were able toocntinue deliveries of Sawdust fuel as. many sawdust miUs were forced to close because of the weather.\ni-Mi>\\ ? Southern Trans-ftovihctal\n\u2014 JOpen.'. ijope'-Kinceton' \u2014 Hive\nInches new.' snow, still snowing,\ngdo'df plowing, carry chains. Prince-\nttm-bsoyoosr-Good, sanding. Oauy-\noos-Cescaxi-: \u2014 Four inches . hew\nsnow,'showing, plowing and sanding. lCascade--Wssland\u2014Fohr to six\ninches'new \"snow, snowing, plowing, carry:'jchalns. RosSland-Trall-\nCastlegar. -7 JJew snow,- plowing.\nCastlegar'- Nelson - Balfour - Kootenay Bay\u2014One to two inches new\nsndW.'pipWlni. Castlegar-Goatfell\u2014\nGood, \u2022 sanding. 60atfelf-Cranbrobk-\nFef qlS'-CrpW's' \"JSTest *f Eight Snow*\nplowliMfand sanding. - \u25a0     '.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nRossi jirid - Paterson - Creston -\u2022\u25a0\nPorthill-T-Pldwing;   ' ,      I . i\n'Wb.>6i,Nelwa^;-Vernon. \u2014 Open.\nNelwliy -Nelson - South Slooan-Na-\nkusp-Needles\u2014INvo to. five Inches\nnew si)SW,v plowing, Needles-Mon-\nashee\u2014New snow, plowing. Mon-\nasheer.Vernon--PloTving.\nNo. -95 \u2014 King-gate - Crahbrook-\nGolden-rOpeni kood.\nNelson-Keslo \u2014 Two Inches hfiW\nsnow, possibility of slides at Kaslo'\nand,.Coffey, Creek.\nKawo-NeW Denver \u2014 New snow,\nplowing,.'some.narrow section*.:,\nWASHINGTON\nSrib.qualmie.Pass: Showing, cdm-\npact' snow stnd \u2022 Ice on road from\n22 miles West 'of summit and beyond td 20 mjles East and beyond,\nchains required* io'inches new snow\nfor total of 112 inches in ski area.\nTemperature 4. '\nStevens Pass:-Snowing, compact:\nsnow on road from 15 miles East\nof summit and beyond to eight\nmiles West and beyond, 18 Inches\nnew'snoW for total of 136 Inches\nin ski area. Temperature 2.\n,. Have the; jab Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n'    MASTER PLUMBER   <    *\nPHONE 815      I\nUnknown Man Batters\nYoung Coast Boy    ,\nVANCOVVEE (CP)-rByron Mar.\nJin; 13, was brutally be.tert by an\nunknown man who fled In th- wake\nof the boy's screams Wednesday\nnight. The'boy, Who described his\nassailant as between 25 and 30 years\nof age, said he was knocked: down\nfroth behind and was beaten\/about\nthe face while lying in\/a lane,    \"\nNews oj[Me Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type-rates on\nrequest, Minimum two .lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nHAIGH\nTRUtART\nBeauty'Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker Street\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the-\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Halt Street\nPhong 146\nJ., A. C.X*UGHtON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAiNlNU ; '\nMedical Arts' Building\nSuite 206 Phono 1*1\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n'\u25a0 TJIstlndtlve Funeral Servlee*\nAMBULANCE 8ERV1CE\n516 Kootenay St -\u25a0'.   Phone 381\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\n\u25a0\n\u25a0m\ns-\n\u25a0 :.^\n-\n\u25a0\n\u25a04\n\u25a0\n\"\nTrousei^ 17.?5\nEmory's\nLimited\nTHE MAN'S STORE\n$71 Bqlcer       Phon. 31\nThe Dominion of Pakistan is the\nlargest Islamic state in the world.\nPONTIAO - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint'Work o Specialty\nMake your own Home-Made Bread\nwith ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on every package,\n\u2022 -'   \"Phone SXt, or Call-\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.    <\nCampbell, shAnkland\n*co.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors      r   -\nSit Baker St Phone, 835\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED a REPAIRED\n. RECORINQ'ifFT1\nJim's Radiotbr Shop\n616 FRONT 8T. PHONE 88\nPLENAMIN SPECIAL\nToday\n.FREE\n25 Days'  Supply'of Plenamlns\n($2.00), With Each Purchase\nof $6.00 -Sire\nSold Only at Your Hexall Store\nCity Drug\n\u25a0  :' \"^phon|'\u25a0<\u2666\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\n\"NeUon's Dispensing Chemists\"\nStevens Okays New\niquor Regulations\nLi1\nENAMELOID\nHIGH GLOSS ENAMEL\nSEMI-LUSTRE\nSATIN FINISH ENAMEL\n-\n(4 PINTS. Regular 50c.\nSALE PRICE\t\nVt PINT8. Regular 90c.\nSALE PRICE      \t\nQUARTS. Regular $2.75.\nSALE PRICE -\t\nGALLONS. Regular $0.50.\nSALE PRICE\t\n37*\n67*\n$2.02\n$7.05\n$.W.P. HOUSE PAINT\n$1-76\n$5.66\nVt PINT8. Regular 80c.\nSALE PRICE\t\nQUARTS. Regular $2.40. ,'..\nSALE PRICE\t\nGALLON8. Regular $7.05.\nSALE PRICE      \t\nQUARTS. Regular $235.\nSALE PRICE      ,.'!\t\nGALLONS. Regular $7.55.\n, SALE PRICE  \t\n60*\n$\\M\n$5.95\nMarnot Floor Enamel\nFOR INSIDE OH OUTSIDE USE\n'\/. PINT8.-Regular 80c.-'-'\nSALE PRICE  , .............\n.QUARTS. Regular $2.55.  .\nSALE PRICE..'.'. \t\nGALLONS. Regular $8.25.\nSALE PRICE .. i ...\n$1.91\n$6.19\nKEM    GLO    fit-OSS ENAMEL FINISH\n(4 PINTS. Reg. $1.05.\nSale Price \t\n79*\nQUARTS. Reg.\n$3.15. Sale Price\n$2.36\nGALLONS. Reg.    CtT-TO\n'$10.25. Sale Price . ^> \/.OS\n(HIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.)\n395 Baiter St. (OWNERS) Phone 497\nVANCOUVER (CP) :\u2014 Rt. Hon.\nH. H. Stevens, -chairman of the liquor! inquiry commission, Thursday\nsaid that the success of the B. C.\ngovernment's new -liquor regulations dep'ends on the type of administration given.\n\"It has \"to be respected and it has\nto be enforced,\" he said in anSnter-\n.View'.     ..........    :.\nHe, said the government's method\nof declaring: licensing areas is\nsound,-md.he.added: \"They're doing all right.\"\nThe inquiry commission was critical of -beer- -parlorS- in some hotels,\nand Mr. Stevens was still critical\ntoday.\n\u25a0 '\"Ifsny\"of\"them' are slum resorts,\"\nhe said. \"A group of rooms callmg\nthemselves hotels.     --'3\n\" ;\"_f *th'e\" beer' parlors; orVpublic\nhouses, are- not to be..confined'to\ntotejs. th.ey, ar,e 4o(ng. sdl-rjlght.\"\n\u25a0 -  -.   .' .        .:\"    .',.        i. ..\nMore Honey Eaten   \u25a0\n; WIN-^IlPEGT (CP)'^-C nvi'\u00abl'l-_Ji.s\narei-'eating 'more ''hbriey than ever\n.before, \"and, a short' crop woflld\nnieah'there would' be Insufficient\ndomestic supply '.to meet demand,\na Winnipeg beekeeping authority\nsaid today.    .      \u25a0 (\nFrank Garland, manager of the\nJlahltoba Go-Operative Honey Pro.\ndiners Ltd., expjeSsed the view at\nth. annual-convention of the Canadian Council of Beekeepers. He said\nannual .per capita, consumption has\nincreased 'from two ydunds to two\n'itod one half \u2022 pounds \" ,\nShe- council apporved more lib\noral use of Imported'-honey\/\n' Dance Tonight,\nAt Salmo K.P. Hall.\nWanted \u2014 Small propane range;\ncheap. \u2014 Phone 1758.-\nSpecial! Bbjiquet Wool, \u25a0. balls'$1.\n,   TOT-N-TEEN\n. St.Paul'S:W; A. Bake Sale Thursday, April 15, Mc and- Mc Store.\nWarm heavy' Woolen . Socks\nJACK BOYCE\nHospital District Office\n371 Baker Street '   \" Phone 1279\nEAGLE8SOCIAL MEM6ERSHIP\n. CLUB MEETS TONIGHT\nTop-flight shoe repairs at\nTQNY'S'iREPAIR SHOP\nDR. BftOpK-(Chiropractor). 32 yrs.\npractical experience. \u2022 Phone' 969.\n' - l?ur_taces'\";arli 'Stoves Cleaned   ,\nPounder :Chimri.y'Service\n:;*\u2022;.       ;Phbne. 15\u00ab-__;:,\n- Max .Kaspar* .\n.\u2022 -.-'.8Hoei'Rep\u00ablrs'i- .:   \"\n350 Baker Street \u2014 Nelson\nSpecial prepared' African Violet\nsoil Also pot.plant; soil.'_ .: :i\nMAC'S FLOWER. 8HOB\nPYTHIAN, SI8TER8 ' MEETING\nAND INSTALLATION.. TONIGHT\nAT7'P.M;-; V ''-'''\nSnow Has Its Uses\n; -VANCptlVER.: <CP),-^B* r,n ar d\nSmith: can thank the snow for, .the\nrr,ejurtt- <4 his wallet'.'containlhg $1,-\n370 in cash and travellers' cheques.\n.'.PnU-e-t-traced Sriifth's steps in the\nsnow for several blocks Wednesday\nand- found the .wallet intact in the\n'dowhtown^dlstrictiv .      '-'-.;,....'';\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2022'-,\u2014 Vahcpu-\n\u00a5\u00ab\u25a0;. -heavy snpwfail provided police wltha well-marked\" trail Wjd-\n' icsday night-when a burglar fled\nwith $650 ih cash from the home\nof Yoshio ftt*l. The thief eluded\npolice after, a chase of several\nblocks.' \"\u25a0)\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 '; i ,,-; ' :.\"\u25a0\u201e:\nIf   BUTTERFIE.LD,' cant;,-fix- it.\nthrow ft-aW-jr* Prompt;watch work,\nguaranteed, 'af reasonable prices.\nTrade yoinvdld'i-\u2122'at .\n8UPERIOR rflbtfOBS. ' .-\n1   .Tire.-Depsit-oent-i'^,-',,\n\u25a0    \u25a0'- ' .r  I  .'r'1  \"V'1 -.f'\"?', -\"':\n\u25a0 li-aster' Padlbcks-ih-seyeral-types\n55c to $2.95. 'Master:-. Hasp 'Locks,\nSaU'W one'unit,-$!!:25.-v-'r.rrH < ''\u25a0'-:-\nBURNS tUM||l\u00bb.rCO.\\.\nYour' best' buy,, (n \u25a0[Skis! vH,ick.ry\nlaminated, with nstee) *dges^ $28:95.\nOther skis, rnaple\u201e $4.00 to iU^O.'\n'.H-PPEHSON'S'\u2022\u25a0,'. '\u2022.\nTRAIL BTJiS-NESS; COLLEGE\nComplete 'S^cretarl-l; Course.\n. -.    .Enrol'Any time.. *'\u00ab'\u00bb'\n625 Victoria.St.; Trail. Telephone 84\nThanking the Spokane; Draw supporters, The Booster Club announces\nthe- January-wihn-r-:as>Mr.>J.;f(_-;\nWatson,-No. 3176.. ;.       \u2022  \\f{ f    ,\n8LABWOOD FOR SALE, LONG\n00RD8 OR CUT to ST OVE\nLJENGTH. \u2014 PHONE 330-L.\nFelt'. Mattresses. \u2014 Clearance'_i\nlayier,.felt .mattresses.', Reg. $29.-0,\nJanuary. Clearartcp,. $24.50,  \u2022\nSTERLlNG.HOME,. FURNISHERS;\nSave $20Q.OO -on-any -car or. truck\nat Wigihton Motors.when you use\n_ $900.00-credit:note.J'll give you\nfor $700,001 Phone - 1386-R. \u25a0.  , *\nfor Sale\u2014\"Modern semi-bungalow. Five rooms' and bath downstairs, twd bedrooms upstairs. Cent\ntrial location. Automatic stoker. \u2014\nPjione Sii.-...   '\nEBERLE'8 MID-WINTER\nCLEARANCE.SALE   CONTINUES\nDrastic reductions storewide, including  sweaters,  housedresses,\nsleepers, etc..'   ,'\nIMMEDIATE\n':-.^i^ERr    \u25a0.\n\u25a0if     on irew\nCHEVROLET\nCARS and\n: 8CRATCH PAD8\u2014AN EVERY-\nDAY NEED FOR BUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL MEN. GOOD,\nCLEAN STOCK; 40c PER LB. \u2014\nNELSON; DAILY NEW8, PRINTING  DEPT,, PHONE 144.\n' Save money; on your paint Job.\nSherwln Williams semi gloss eha-\nm'el. at special prices. Gallons, regular , price- $7.95, now $5t95. Quarts,\nregular price $2.40, now $1.80. Vt\n\u25a0Dints, regularly 80c, now 60c.\n.,:;    , HIPPERSON'S\n',-. 'NOTICE\n. AH invoices and statements\ncharged to..the undersigned must\nbear purchase\/Order number and\nbe mailed .to Nelson Hockey Booster\nClub, 560 Baker Street, i\n,...'.''   Nelson' Hockey Booster Club.\nSpecial\u2014One all-enamel kitchen\nrange; used .two: months. $30.00 off\noriginal price. >\n'Antique, i furniture   repair!   and\nFrench polishing.,.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture. i ' , -\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n, ,7.,41S Hall .Street .\nr     FIjNERAL NOTICB\nMICJDSI-SON '-r Tuneral services\nfor the late Ottd Michelsoh will be\nheld from the Thompson Funeral\nHome at Nelson Saturday at 1:30\np.m. The, Rev. David A. Butterfield\nwill officiate and interment Will be\nin .the - Knights of Pythias plot,\nNelson-Memorial Park. No flowers\nby request\n1\nUSED CARS\n\u2014a\u2014\u00ab-\u2014!\u25a0\u25a0  \u00bb  I \t\n\u2022 ~y,   \u25a0   \u25a0 , .     .       \u2022 .^77- if'.\n1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n.    Hadio^ Heater, - PdwergHde Transmission.\n1952 CHEVR6u\u00a3T SEB^N\nConditlonaire \u2014 Winterized.;''\"''i\n1951 CHEVROLET BUSINESS COUPE\nConditionalre \u2014 Excellent Tires.\n1948 CREVROLET SEDAN\nHeater Wippod Tires!\n1948 PLYMOUTH 5EDAN\n1948 DODGE\nm:'' \u25a0\u25a0\n(\u00bb'   ':-\nI    ..   -'.'\n1953 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN\nOnly 12,000 Mites. I Radio, Conditionalre,\nSeat Covers, WhiteWall Tires and o_-er\nextras, ji       '; \"iii ' ..\u00a3' '... '..ifi.\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. 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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":"1954-01-22 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. 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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. 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