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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":" Molotov Dashes\nustria's Hopes\nContinued Russian Occupation Would\nGive Austria Mock Independence\nBy DANIEL DELVCE\nBERLIN (AP.. \u2014 Soviet Foreign- Minister Molotov\nftpcked out Austrian hopes of independence in the fore-\nenable future with new demands which got a cold reception\nppijxi the West Friday. '.\nft! . A Soviet resolution, proposing completion of an Austrian treaty within three months, insisted:\nff   1. Soviet troops must remain in Austria as long as\nHrmany is divided between East and West.\nT 2. An independence treaty for Austria must depend\nin assuring the key Adriatic seaport of Trieste is never used\nEg Western military base.\nMM#'\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Intermittent snow and\nI      a little milder, Wind light Low-\nhigh Cranbrook 15 and 28, Crescent Valley 29 and 23. Outlook for\nSunday milder.\nV. S. State Secretary Dulles said\nKi Molbtov- proposal \"gives me a\n\u25a0old chill.\" A British spokesman\nailed it ah attempt to perpetuate\niussian occupation after a mock\nalteration ot Austria's independ-\npjee. I \\\nFrench Foreign Minister Bidault,\nho was chairman, said the Rus-\nans were trying to turn the clock\nack in Austria to 1945.\nSignificantly, Dulles then announced he could \"not remain Indefinitely in Berlin,\" but must get\n\u00abck to Washington next week to\n-port,to President Eisenhower and\nJongress before attending the In-\nsr-Amerlcan conference opening\nt Caracas, Venezuela on March 1\nOn the American's suggestion,\niiQ Big Four set up a committee to\nchedula the order ot discussions\nthe few days remaining and to\net a tentative adjournment date.\nOnly a glimmer of hope remained\nlat some ground might be gained\nward settlement of Asian issues,\nlcluding the breaking of the\neadlock on a Korean peace con-\nsrence.\nom Needn't Peep\np Be Convicted\n'OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Things are\nciting tougher for peeping toms,\nsnoopers who peek through'\nrindows at night.\nThe proposed new Criminal Code\nlys peeping toms need not be\nmght peeping to be convicted.\nrhey could be apprehended for\nlitering or prowling at night\nround a private, home... _!,:.> ..\nfiavie ^.J^ton. i-aKJ^TKiSloops)\nsked Friday night in the Commons\n'hy I the proposed law lent more\npacific.     -\njustice Minister Garson explain-\nthat a householder can't always\nlet ont of his house and around to\nia window ln time to catch peep-\nog torn In the act\n\"JWhen you get thin, lie's Just\nmelllng the .chrysanthemums.\"\nGeOrge  Hahn   (SC\u2014New   Westminster) asked how the law against\neing nude and exposed to the pub-\nview enters such a case.\nStanley  Knowles   (CCF\u2014Winni-\neg North Centre) answered:\n\"One law ls against peeping toms.\nhe other is against Lady Godiva\ne.\u00abelf.\" '\n'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii\nHe Did It and No\nDoubt He Was Glad\n\u2022 WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.\n(AP)\u2014A motorist was driving\nthrough the heart of town Friday when a Jaywalker darted\nIn front of him.\n, His ear lurched to a stop\nInches from the careless one and\nthe driver\" Jumped out.  .\nIn full vlrw of a policeman\nand hundreds of spectators, he\nplanted his foot with considerable emphasis on the Jaywalk\ner's posterior.\nocreds in Caucus\nVICTORIA (CP) -8oclal Credit legislature members today met\nIn\" caucus for the second straight\nday to discus* plans for the see-\nelon whieh opens Tuesday. The\n27 government members are expected to meet again Saturday\nand perhaps Monday.\nSubjects up for discussion are\nbelieved to Include the demand\nof Hugh Shantz, MLA for North\nOkanagan, for a plebiscite on hospital Insurance. Mr. Shantz had\nearlier asked for a vote to establish wishes of the people on\nwhether BCHIS should be compulsory or voluntary.\nPremier Bennett has said he\nthinks a plebiscite Is unnecessary.\nThe motorist reentered his\near. The policeman turned his\nhead. Pedestrians gaped. Traffic began to flow again. The\nJaywalker walked away, shaking his head.\nilllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllll|lllllllllllll|i\nUnder Revision\nOTTAWA XCP) \u2014 A Social Cred\nIt member Friday proposed an increase to 10 from four years the\nmaximum sentence for illegal sexual Intercourse with feeble-minded,\ninsane or Imbecllic women.\nThe proposed revision of the law\ndealing with rape removes the\npresent maximum penalty of hang-\ning ahd replaces it with a maximum of life imprisonment or whipping or both.\nHowever, Rev, E. G. Hansell (SC\n\u2014Macleod) urged that tha death\npenalty be retained for rape offences' against children up, to-five\nor; six'years ot.itie.-That wa-'a\ncrime serious enough to be punished by hanging.\" .-'\n' Mr. Garson said rape of children\nwould be a clear indication of mental unbalance In the offender, and\nwould be dealt with under a difference section of the code. -\nWar Not Necessary\nFor Prosperity\nWilson\nSays\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Defence\nSecretary, Charles _-. Wilson said\nFriday night \"there ls no reason\nto fear\" that ttie.hlft by the U.S.\nfrom its Korea!},, war footing tb\npeace will lead to depression.\n\"I have no patience with the\npeople who seem to think that blood\nspilling and Jobs tare synonymous,\"\nhe declared.\nWilson said that war and production of guns and war equipment\nmake \"no contributio to real prosperity.\"\n\"Whatever we put Into defence\nwe take out of our standard of\nliving,\" he said. \"All the energy all\nthe money poured into war goods\nmeans less effort and fewer resources than can be devoted to ci-\nvlllian goods.\"\nWilson said the Communist\nWorld's failure to demobilize after\nthe Second World War had made\nIt essential for the U.S. to \"maintain a major defence program\" \u2014\nand it is doing so.\n_sk Van Fleet's Aid in\nndo-China Struggle\nBy MILO FARNETI\nSEOUL (AP)\u2014South Korea said\n\u2022iday it had responded to \"urgent\nipeals\" from Red-invaded Laos\nid offered to send a full division\nrbout 12,000 meA) to fight in Indo-\nlina against the Communists,\ngovernment statement urged\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPuss Was Out\nFor Excitement\nHALIFAX (CP) - Heckey\nfans are wondering If the Forum cat has a sense of humor.\nDuring a game Thursday\nnight the eat was seen weaving\nsteady course beneath the\nfeet of the paying customers,\nIn Its mouth was a mouse.\nStill on course, the eat entered the room marked \"Ladles\"\u2014and dropped the mouse.\nPandemonium.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nthat Gen. James A. Van Fleet, former U.S. Eighth Army commander\nin Korea, be sent back to \"help us\norganize our own forces and at the\nsame time train and organize the\narmies of Indo-China.\"\nIt was considered likely France\nwould reject the offer. ,\nThe government said its offer of\na division was made in response\nto \"two urgent appeals signed by\nthe cabinet minister of the Laos\ngovernment\"\nCommunist forces now menace\nLuangprabang, the royal capital of\nLabs, one ot the three associated\nstates of Indo-China.\n, France is reported opposed to any\nuse of South Korean troops lest\ntheir appearance draw Red China\nin full force into the fighting.\nPeiping radio said Friday a tug-\nof-war was in progress ln the United States over whether to become\nInvolved in Indo-China and risk\n\"the dangers of another fiasco, similar to the U.S. defeat In Korea,\"\ni7 mm\n'iilf_l\nBlack Market Ring Uncovered\nNELSON. B: C, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 13, 19S4\nNo. 248:\n... Thli-h' tha'W.wilW*'** ywntfSihen ma*'\nW\u00abU bo asking the. little,iril\u00ab,. IjYIthS Valentine's\nDay tomorrow, .young men of all dgea \\.ill be\n1\nian\nExi\nto\nU.S., Doctors, Lawyers Implicated-\nBabies Sold for $3,000 to $10,000\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiin\nFIGURED THE GUN\nWASN'T LOADED\nTORONTO (CP) - Walter\nZazinsky, 40, bet his life Friday\nthat a gun wasn't loaded\u2014and\nwon. ' \/\nWhen a holdup man poked\nthe gun ln his stomach and told\nhim to turn over the $1000 he\nwas carrying, Zazinsky wrested\nthe gun from the bandit's hand\nand hung on to it despite being\nhit in the face and knocked to\nthe ground,\nZazinsky, a messenger for the\nBradshaw Printing Company in\nToronto,' was carrying the\nmoney from the bank to the\ncompany offices.\nPolice said he did \"a very\ncourageous thing.\"\nCommented Zazinsky, who\nsuffered a black eye in the\nscuffle: \"I always figure .that\nin nine out of 10 holdups the\nguns are not loaded.\"\nIt wasn't.\nThe bandit escaped without\ngun or money,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMan Said Dead\ndecorated. With Hearts, laoe. and flowers. And\nwhether the lady be six with blond oi> dark curls\nOr 70 with silver ones, she will probably blush\n.i..i - \u00bb__ i .ii      ......     ..     . \u25a0   \u25a0        i   . prettily because, hir. young mat) has thought of\nBlvlnj, the ladleaoftheir oholee; tender mUslyee      heron this day so special to the femlnlne'heart.\nVICTORIA (CP) - The St.\nLukes Players of Victoria will present Charlotte Hastings' High\nGround Saturday night as the final\nplay of the British Columbia regional drama festival.\nAfter the play, adjudicator Graham Suter will\" name the test of\nthe three plays he has seen in the\nprovince.\nMr. Suter , already has praised\nthe two other groups In the festival. He called the Kelowna Little\nTheatre Group's presentation of\n\"A.h Wilderness\" well done, full of\npromise but a little inclined toward\nburlesque. The Trail Little Theatre's performance of \"For Love or\nMoney\" was \"absolutely first orate.\"\nTo the winner will go the Calvert\nregional trophy and a $100 cash\naward.\nSt. Luke's lost their bid to appear\nln the Dominion festival here last\nyear when the University of British Columbia Alumnae Association\nwon regional honors.\nRCMP Checks for\nInformation Leak\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Assistant commissioner E. C. Rivett-Carnac, officer commanding \"E\" division, RCMP, announces an Investigation has\nbeen launched to determine if there\nhas been a leak of information from\nthe Force's confidential files.\nHis statement followed reports\nthat a member of the RCMP released information here from the\nfiles to civic officials. The Information is reported to have concerned\nthe activities of John M .Marshall,\ndismissed in January from his position with the Victoria public library.\nThe board has given no official\nreason for the dismissal but some\nmembers of the board indicated\nthat they had received information\nindicating Mr. Marshall was formerly associated with Communist-\nfront organizations.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Two men\nwere sentenced in Vancouver police-\ncourt Friday to.five years each and\nanother to two years on a number\nof armed robbery and burglary\ncharges. .\nThe convicted ,youths were Kenneth Allan Floyd, 22, and George\nJackson, 18, sentenced to five years\nln penitentiary each, and Kenneth\nWesley Lowery, 10, sentenced to two\nyears.\nIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nPermission for\nPictures AH that's\nNeeded - Gaglardi\nVANCOUVER (CP)'_-r Works\nMlnliteV P., A. Gaglardi advised, newspaper . men here\n. Thursday, night that If they\nwant to take pictures of the legislature opening, \"all you've got\nto doi Is pick up the phone and\ncall the premier;\"\nCommenting on .Speaker Tom\nIrwin's anhounoemehts restricting the number of photographers at the opening next Tuesday, Mr. Gaglardi said In an Interview \"\"I don't know what\nkind of bunk, this Is,\"   .\n\"If the newspapers think we\nara good looking enough to\nhave our pictures taken then It\nwill be arranged.\"\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIII1III\nPieces of Comet\nJet Brought Up\nFrom Sea Bed\nABOARD WAKEFUL (Reuters)\n\u2014A television camera aboard this\nBritish warship today identified on\nthe seabed pieces of a Comet jet\nairliner which crashed off Elba\nJan. 10.\nThe Royal Navy has been searching for the wreckage of the Comet\nsince it crashed with the lqss of\n35 lives. It is hoped the wreckage\nwill show what caused the plane\nto plunge into the Mediterranean\nshortly after leading Rome airport.\nRoad Through\nWatershed Opposed\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Alderman\nBirt Showier Friday reiterated the\nGreater Vancouver Water District\nBoard's \"unalterable\" opposition to\nWorks Minister. P. A. Gaglardi's\nproposed Squajnish-Vancouver ri^ad\nthrough the North Shore watershed.\nMr. Gaglardi said ln a speech in\nVancouver Thursday night that his\ngovernment had $3,000,000 available\nfor the Squamlsh-North Vancouver\nroad.\nHe   added,   however,   that\nwould not \"foroe\" the road.\nhe\nTWO-YEAR 8ENTENCE\nNANAIMO, BrC; (CP) - Lawrence Shairy, 22, was sentenced here\nFriday to tWo years in penitentiary\nafter he pleaded guilty to five\ncharges of obtaining money with\nfraudulent cheques almost two\nyears ago.\n-w \u25a0 \u25a0-- \u25a0\u2022-\u2014 -\t\nOTTAWA: (CBV-i- Colin Cameron\n(CCF\u2014Nanaimo) said Friday night\nthat the feeeryear sentences given\na group, of Freedomites in a trial\nat Jubilee, ,-B. C, last fall were\n\"savage sentences.\"- '   '\nHe described the Freedomites arrested following a nude parade, as\n\"poor, misguided and obviously\npsychologically unbalanced people.\"\nThe \/chief offence had been\nagainst,'-the \"aesthetic sense\" of\nthe pijblic.\nMr. 'Cjameron raised the question\nduring Commons study of a revision of the Criminal Code.\nHa said the Freedomites had been\ncharged with causing juvenile delinquency by their nude parade. It\nwas a.'\"grave distortion\" fbr the\ncourt tb have tWisted nude parading info a charge of causing juvenile delinquency.\n'\"The magistrate who passed such\nsavage sentences should be subject\ntp some sort of rebuke.\"\nKAMLpbPSY<CF\"   -  Donald\n. Munce of Courtenay, B. C, who was\nreported drowned last summer,-has\nbeen found her. apparently suffering from ' amnesia, RCMP reported Friday. '\nPolice said MuAce had been Identified by hia'wife, who flew here\nfrom Courtenay after a police constable recognized tier husband as a\nman' believed to have drowned at\nCourtenay last June; Police said\nMunce and his wife now are in\nVancouver seeking legal advice to\nuntangle financial complications arising from his reported death.\nMunce was reported drowned\nwhen his car and clothes were\nfound near the Courtenay river\nwhere he had gone for an evening\nswim.\nPolice said Munce was a wounded\nveteran of the Second World War\nand had suffered frequent attacks\nof amnesia.\nYMCA Plans\nNew Buildings\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Young\nMen's Christian Association plans a\n$1,500,000 building campaign for\n1954, John M, Pritchard of Montreal, national president, announced today.\n,Mr. Pritchard spoke at the opening of the annual YMCA national\ncouncil meeting. Delegates, representing 07 YMCAs and YWCAs\nacross the country, gathered for\nthe three-day conference.\n\"The Canadian YMCA is growing and expanding,\" Mr. Pritchard\nsaid. ''Many communities are asking for our services. Last year we\nopened seven new buildings and\nraised almost $1,000,000 for new\nbuildings.\n\"In 1054, we have projected campaigns totalling $1,500,000 for new\nbuildings.\"\nMan's Life Saved\nBy 4 Teen-Agers\nVANCOUVER (CP)-r-Cool action\nof four teen-aged school boys\nThursday night saved the life of\nRichard McLaughlin, 37, overcome\nby domestic gas in his west end\nhome.\nThe boys went Into action after\nMyra McLaughlin, 13, ran out to\nthe street screaming, \"there's gas\nin my house and my dad is upstairs\nsleeping.\"\nAir Baggage To\nBe Inspected\nFor Explosives\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The government plans to tighten its guard\nagainst any time-bombing of aircraft\nThe 1949 disaster near Quebec\nCity when a time bomb aboard a\nCanadian Pacific Airlines plane\nkilled 23 persons cropped up during\nCommons debate on amendments to\nthe. Explosives Act.\nMines Minister Prudham said the\ngovernment plans to have transport department officials at airports\ninspect all express and baggage\nplaced aboard passenger aircraft to\nsee If they contain explosives.\nIf the plan is adopted, the officials would be made special inspectors under the Explosives Act.\nWright Appointed to\nAssessment Board\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Percy\nWright, who resigned his legislature seat to allow a by-election\nfor Finance Minister Einar Gunderson last November, has been\nappointed exeoutlve assistant and\nsecretary of the new assessment\nequalization board,\nMr. Wright was among 80 per-\neons who answered advertise.-\nment. for the position.\nOther appointments were, J. O.\nMoore of Victoria, senior land\nevaluator, and F. A. miller of\nVancouver, senior Improvements\nevaluator.\nASK 8TRIKE VOTE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two nun\ndred and twenty oil workers at\nImperial Oil's IOCO refihery today\nrequested a government-supervised\nstrike vote following rejection of a\nproposed four per cent wage increase.\n4 'MoTe-arreSto' are \"expected -within\nthe next few weeks, he said, and\nthey will include, doctors, lawyers\nand. social service workers. The\nwork of the black market operators\nwas so well worked out, he added,\nthat some doctors and lawyers became innocent dupes In the transactions.\nIn Quebec City Premier Duplessis, who is also Quebec's attorney-\ngeneral, said his attention was\ndrawn to the baby-selling racket\nsome time ago and he had personally sent two crown prosecutors to\nNew York for -an on-the-spot investigation. The premier said he\nhopes to be able to make a fuller\nstatement at \"a later date'.\nIn Toronto, police said more than\n30 babies, reported to have- been\nsmuggled into the United States\nfrom Toronto and Montreal, have\nbeen located by immigration authorities in New York and Brooklyn.\nWENT TO JEWISH COUPLES\nOfficial sources in.Montreal said\nJewish \u25a0couples in New York paid\nanywhere from $3000 to $10,000 for\na child and were under the impression each child had been sworn\nin the Jewish faith and was legally\nadopted.\nIn fact these sources said, the\nbabies were born to Christian mothers, French-Canadian and others.\nGeorge W. Hill, senior crown\nprosecutor in Montreal and representative of the attorney-general's\ndepartment, said the investigations\nIndicate a remodelling of Quebec's\nadoption laws is necessary. \u2022\n\"We have been given instructions\nto end, once and for all, the baby\ntraffic out of Quebec,\" he said.\nU.S. MILITARY\nAID TO PAKISTAN\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Diplomatic officials today said the United States has decided to give\nsubstantial military aid to Pakistan regardless of India's angry\nprotests,\nAn American military survey\nmission, they tald, will go to\nPakistan to look over Its armed\nforces and determine the amount\nand type of-military equipment\nneeded.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Combined police forces of, two\ncountries' Friday bared the operations pf a huge international-black market in babies and took into custody a\n38-year-old Moritreal lawyer. ;'.\n. ; More airrests are expected in what official sources\ndescribed as a $3,000,000 ring of doctors, lawyers, nurses,\nsocial workers and others\u2014a ring with many ramifications\nhi its shipments of more than 1000 illegitimate babies from\nthe Montreal area for illegal adoption in the United States.\nShortly after authorities had told\nof their, investigations they took\nInto custody He'rfnan Buller, 38-\nyear-old Montreal lawyer, at Montreal airport.   :,'\nBbth city police and provincial\npolice were on hand when Buller\nwas arrested as he prepared to\nclaim four seats, reserved several\ndays ago, for a flight to Israel. H_\nwas accompanied by his wife and\nhis parents.\nTWO CHARGES LAID\nBuller was taken before Judge\nGerald Almond ln criminal court\nand arraigned on two charges: having falsified the entries into a birth\ncertificate ahd giving counsel and\nadvice in connection with an indictable offence.\nBall was set at $2000 and preliminary hearing fixed for Feb. 19.\nPolice in the Montreal area were\njoined \"two days ago by Ernest A.\nMitler, assistant district attorney\nin New York, in the latest phases\nof the investigation. He was assisted in his, work here by a woman\ndetective from New York.\nMORE ARRE8TS SOON\nSession Opening\nVICTORIA (CP) - Local 1 of. tha\nVancouver Newspaper Guild (ClOj. \"\nCCL) today described. Speaker\nTom Irwin's restrictions op photographers at the legislature opening\nas \"similar tp a move .by the. Alberta government in 1936 to muzzle the press of that jlrovlnce.\". ;-\nThe local, representing some 400\nemployees of the Vancouver Sun,\nmade th. charge in a wire to Mr.\nIrwin.\nThe Speaker told the Victoria\nTimes today the whole issue was\n\"damn stupid.\"\n\"I'd be the last person, to interfere with the rights of the press,\"\nhe said.\nOriginally Mr. Irwin had decided,\nonly a government photographer\nwould be allowed in the legislative\nchamber, and newspapers could\npick up picture prints from him.\nThen he reversed- this and said two\npress photographers would ^.e allowed. Later Thursday 'this was\nextended to four photographers.\nTwo of the photographers will\nbe limited to press gallery coverage while two will likely be on the\nfloor of the -House.     ;\nReason for the earlier ban on\npress photographers was, Mr. Irwin\nsaid, to maintain the dignity of tho\nBouse. He also expressed-the opinion photographers might impede\nvision of spectators during the colorful opening ceremonies.\nU.K. PREFAB HOMES\nMAY BE TRADED\nFOR B.C. LUMBER\n* VICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Negotiations\nhave been opened here for an $8,-\n000,000 low-cost prefabricated hous-\ning development on the outskirts\nof Victoria.\nA unique aspect of the project is\nthe proposed bartering of B.C.\nlumber for Canadian-designed\nhouses prefabricated in the United\nKingdom and shipped here for erection. Plans also call for furnace oil\nand television shows to be piped\ninto the development's' 500 romes.\nOfficials of Royal Portage Parks\nLtd., a syndicate formed to finance\nthe project, met with United Kingdom trade representatives here to\ndiscuss  the barter  proposal's.\nThe syndicate holds options for\nthe purchase of 400 acres about\nthree miles outside Victoria for the\nproposed  development.\nCharge Withdrawn\nNANAIMO, B.C. (CP)\u2014A charge\nof attempted murder against Peter\nPatll Mihalech Was withdrawn in\nNanaimo police court Friday.\nMihalech was arrested in June,\n1952, after Dr. Larry Giovando, Progressive Conservative member of\nthe legislature for Nanaimo, had\nbeen threatened on the porch of\nhis home by a man wielding two\nknives.\nCounsel for Dr. Giovando. who\nwas not injured in \"the incident,\nsaid he wished no action to be\ntaken against Mihalech and that\nthere was no objection from the\nattorney-general to withdrawal of\nthe charge.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (Reuters) \u2014 Cows In mountain villages of\nLebanon Friday were given hot wine and vegetable soup mixed with\nbrandy on the fourth successive day of bitter cold, The cows appeared\ncontented wlth'the menu,\nLONDON (AP)-*Hollywood film director George Breakston says\nhe recently received a firm offer of 200 cows for his pretty wife, Irene.\nThe d&l was'suggested by a chief of the Masai tribe -while the\nBreakstons were making a. movie in East Africa.\n\"That's a lot of cows, but George was so sweet,\" said Mrs. Breaks-\nton. \"He refused; and gave the chief a wristwatch instead.\"\nMELBOURNE (Reuters)\u2014Fisherman Jack Stewart had no gaff\nor net and It looked as If he might lose the 34-pound murray cod\nhe hooker! at Stanhope, 125 miles north of here. A fellow angler\ndived Into the river and stunned the fish with the crank handle of\nhie ear. Stewart got his fish.\n: __ \u25a0 ' -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0':-'\n M50\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, FEB. 13, 1954\nis   11\nlo\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Shows at 2.00-7.00-9.00\nSUPER-SPECTACUURJICHNICOLQR MUSICAL!\niLLIAMS ISe Keon iRi CIVIC\nbMLTCR      tl-MVID\nir\nSTART? MONDAY \u2014\nDoris Day \u2014 Ray Bolger\n\"APRIL IN PARIS\"\nColor by Technicolor\nMUSICLAND\n\"', THEATRE\n\u2022 -. KASLO, B.C.\n\" SHOWING TONIGHT\n'\"Two Shows, 6:00 p.m, and 8:30 p.m.\n\"NORTHWEST\nK<-\nPASSAGE\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nSPENCER TRACY\nROBERT YOUNQ\njThe Weather\nY  VANCOUVER (CP) - A surge\nji.of. moist Pacific air is beginning, to\npush Into some southern interior\n- valleys from the southern B. C.\ncoast. Mild rainy weather will persist along the southern' coast over\n<<the weekend. Cnowflurrlee are expected for Saturday over the inter-\n-:-ior. Temperatures will bo a little\n_illder'in the Interior ahd over the\nnorth coast Saturday.\n\"jHeleo- _..i __._..-    Ml   10   .60\n\u25a0 *Hal_-K        S  \u00bb   -3\ni  Montreal  \u2014 \u2014 -.4   -I   \u2014\nOttawa  ________\u2014 -16   -t *~\nToronto    -.   M \u2014\nNorth Bay .... -*0   -t \u2014\nPort Arthur   , \u25a0\u25a0-.- -22     5 .01\n\u25a0 Kenora     I\u2014 --*     1 \u2014\nWinnipeg   \u2014 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u25a0 -1\u00ab   T .0.\n- Brandon \u2014    I 6 .09\nThe Paa . _ -S6 \u00ab \u2014\nReginl   _.\u2014-\u00bb    -\u00ab 9 .08\ni  Saskatoon  - -10 \u00ab .04\n\u25a0' Prince Albert   -!1 0 \u2014\nNorth Battleford  -12 0 .02\nSwift Current       \u00bb 13 .10\nMedicine Hat _.__, 10 18 .13\nLethbridge       3 8 .00\nCalgary     -3 8 .00\nEdmonton      -8 1 .07\n> .Kimberley   It* M. 1.00\nCrescent Valley 32 X 1.08\nKaslo    -   33 SO JO\nGrand Forks ' .___    T 39 .16\n; Kamloops  _ IS 33 .14\nPenticton     ,  .38 33 .16\nVancouver  _.____-\u2014   82 44 .67\nVictoria  ,,-_.,-.    8\u00bb 48\nPrinoe Rupert ....___   18 34\nPrince  George _______   -5 6 .98\n\u25a0 Whltehorse  _____ -SO -1 .01\n1  Seattle .\u201e  36 55 1.38\nPortland      84 54 1.58\n'  San Francisco  51 59   _7\nr  Los Angeles  _-  DO 58\n[  Spokane      34 40   .TO\n?  Chioajo  ___  9 28\nNaw York -...._ 14 _0   -\nFLUORIDATION  APPROVED\nI     PRINCE G-EOROE, B.C. (CP) -\n\u25a0 A.proposal to fluoridate the Prince\nGeorge water aupply has been ap-\n\u25a0s proved In principal by city council.\nBANK BRANCH TO OPEN f OR LAKE\nMltlli.6CEilTliDFI.ilDH\nArchie Burnle, Bank of Montreal\nmanager here, Thursday-antibunced\nthe intention of his firm to provide\nbanking facilities to the community\nOf Riondel, beginning March 1.\n' This service is the first ot Its\nkind In the area which covers Kootenay Bay, Crawford Bay, Port\nCrawford and Gray Creek. Banking facilities will be available- Tues\nday and Friday ot each week, ths\nBank of Montreal currently provides'.slinllir. service to New Denver\non Mondays and Thursdays.\n' OTp.,*iil! be' another mark otSpro-\ngress in Riondel which now boasts\nan up-to-date school and.hardware\nstorel Approximate population of\nRiopdel,._6 _. milea, freip K<loteiiay\nLanding, and 'site of Cominco's\nBluebell mine operation, is 700.\nP-TA Hears Health OffiSi-Y.ff.^:'.''\u25a0 -i'\"',\n\"Fluoridation Good; Keeping Well\nBetter Than Repairing Health\"\nArlWallacelo\nTravel East for\nHigh School Spiel\nArt (Pop) Wallace, British Colum\nbla representative for High School\ncurling, leaves next week for Ham\nilton where he will attend the Pro\nvincial High School championships\ngetting under way February 32.\nEnroute to the playdowns Wallace\nalong with other representatives\nwill stop off ln Oshawa next Friday\nwhere they will be the guests of\nthe curling club that evening and\nSaturday. On Sunday they will be\nthe guests of the Hydro Electric\nCompany who will take them to\nNiagara Falls after which' they will\nattend a banquet In Hamilton.\nThe Ron Foster rink from John\n|Gliver High School, Vancouver,\nB.C. representatives will be leevlng\nnext Friday by plane. They won\nthe right to play in the title round\nby winning out over the Kelowna\nentry in the spiel held ln Trail last\nmonth.\nKoolaree's 24f h\nH\nFORD THEATRE\nPresents\nJoan Blondell\n'Two Girls\nOn Broadway\"\nSUNDAY, 9:00 P.M.\nC K b \u25a0\nTRAU_ \u2014 When the snow'is deep\non the ground lt is a good time to\nthink of warmer climatic conditions\nand start planning for the summer's\nactivities, so the Koolaree committee on dates went into a huddle that\nproduced the following schedule for\nthe 1954 season: . I\nSenior-intermediata boys \u2014 June\n28th to July 9th.\nJunior boys \u2014 July 9th to July\n19th.\nIntermediate girls \u2014 July 20th to\nJuly 30th.\nJunior grlk \u2014 July Slat tp Aug.\n9th.\nSenior grils \u2014 Aug. 9th to Aug.\n20th.\nYoung People's weekend Aug, 30,\n21 and 23.\nFamily camp Aug. 38 to Sept. I.\nFraternity camp Sept. 3, 4, 5 and\n6.\nKoolaree is entering ita 24th year\non the present site eight miles east\nof Nelson on Kootenay Lake's West\nArm. The high standard of camping under Christian leadership has\nbeen molntined throughout by the\nWest Kootenay Religious Educatlott\nCouncil which operates the camp\nunder the present leadership of\nCharles Daly of Rossland, president;\nJames Bryden of Trail, secretary;\nArthur Foster of Nelson, treasurer.\nDirectors of the various camps will\nbe named at a later date and at the\nmoment the majority of last yesr's\nleaders are available again and\nready to serve the youth of the\nKootenay.\n\"Greatest need of the Public\nHealth Service is an interested, active public,\" Dr. H. T. Lowe, supervisor of the Selkirk Health Unit,\ninformed assembled members of\nCentral School Parent-Teacher Association, at their February meeting Wednesday ln Central school.\nDefining the alms of tha Public\nHealth Service as maintenance of\nhealth and prevention of' d'sease\nhe said most people did n.t' seem\nto associate the service with the\ngeneral practice of medicine.\nTo many, the matter of keeping\npeople well did not seem as Important as making people better. Sick\npeople, he said, were Interested in\ngetting better, but when well they\nwere unconcerned about keeping\nthat way.\nCredit was due Publlo Health\nworkers that the death rate was\nfalling, in view of the \"appalling\nignorance of the public in public\nhealth.\"\nWhen it eamt to immunization,\nhe said, many were \"conscientious\nobjectors,\" If they only had to see\none child die ot diphtheria or typhoid, it would change their viewpoint quickly.\nMany were against pasteurization\nof milk, ha continued. Fresh, clean,\nraw milk was a good thing, but\nonly a Grade A dairy could sell\nraw milk, and there were so very\nfew Grade A dairies, that there\nhad to be pasteurized milk. Pasteurization did not take anything\naway, or add anything to the milk.\nChlorinatlon of water also was\nharmless. The pollution of water\nsupplies was increasing, and water\nborne epidemics were not yet wiped\nout.\nFAVOR FLUORIDATION\nDr. Lowe was In .favor of fluoridation of the Water. He-tpbke\nof the Vrottlng mouths of our\nchildren\/' saying however that\nthe situation In Nelson was not\ntoo bad. due to the efforts of local\ndentists. Millions ef dollars were\nspent on oandy and soft drinks.\nIf not by fluoridation \"how else\noan we stop the tide of deoay?\"\nhe queried.\nDr. Lovia spoke of what Public\nHealth had done during the past\nhalf cenutry. Fifty years ago, half\nthe women in maternity Wards died\nfrom infection. Now the death rate\nis one per thousand, and there\nwere practically no deaths from Infection. Practically all surgical\ncases once died. Now after nine or\n10-hour operations, patients survive.\nHe spoke ot the lowered death\nrate\nand of disorders of the thyroid\ngland which were now- being corrected, and of the way ACTH and\ncortisone .were helping arthritis\nand rheumatic fever patients.\nVaccines, he said, had practically\nwiped out some diseases. He, himself, had never seen a  smallpox\ncase, yet at one time smallpox was\nquite common.\nDrinking Water and milk were\nsupervised by the Public Health\nauthorities, also sewage and garbage disposal. ,\nLooking Into the future of Pub.\nHe Health, Dr. Lowe noted that\nmental Illness, and problems of social adjustment were on 'the increase.  -\nThere was a resident population\nof 5000 at Essondale, he laid and\nthese were permanent guests, made\nup of a five per cent residue oi\neach year's patients.\nAccidents, alcoholism and cancer\nwere on the Increase, and aa people lived longer there would be\nmore problems ot old age. There\nwas also much to be dona about\nthe physical defects ot children,\n\u2022 \"You can't force a person tb be\nhealthy,\" he said, but If the public Were not satisfied with what\nwas being done they should make\ndemands of the service.\nHEALTH MINDED\nNelson, was a health-minded city,\nhe disclosed.. This, he thought',' was\ndue to the stability of the community. Most of the physicians were\nfamily, doctors and the PTA and\nother voluntary organizations also\nactively helped Public Health Services.\nDr. Lowe was Introduced, and\nafterwards thanked by Mrs. Irwin\nBlack.\nMuch Snowfall\nSlowstiatlic\nNelson citizens Friday wore\nfeeling the effects of a seven-Inch\nsnowfall, which has occurred In\nthe past 36 hours. Hardly anyone\nventured- outside without turned-\nup -collars, mufflers arid) over\nshoe,?. .\n^Motorists were feeling the\nthe greatest Inconvenience from\nFebruary's first; snowfall) Many\nvyere fpreed.to baok'.dewn;hill af\nter seyaral spinning trite up. City\nbuiee war* exparlenolrig difficulties, One Was halted by a broken\naxle on ihe hospital hill, but\ntransportation officials report no\neffeot on, service. Sanders were\nalready busy Friday.\nTemperature., during the past\n24 hours have been In the 28 to 30\ndegree range.\nSnowfall In January measured\n89.75 Inches,\nArtificial ice\nKills Native Guard\nNAIROBI, Kenya, (Reuters) \u2014\nAn unknown assassin fired three\nshots through the ground-floor window of a hospital at Nyeri Thursday\nnight, killing ari African home\nguard.recovering from wounds Inflicted by.Mau Mau terrorists.\njr.-\nSay \"Happy\nValentine's\nDay\"\nWith the Gift He Wants\nand Needs \u2014\nARROW WHITE  SHIRTS\nYou'll find his favorite\nArrow Collar Styles in our\nbig selection.\nEvery shirt carries the famous \"Mitoga\" trade-mark that means\ntrim, tapered fit \u2014 fine sanforized cottons keep that fit\nFor an extra-special-touch, add a handsome\nTIE and HANDKERCHIEF,\nSHIRTS: $4.dS TO $6.95 '\nTIES: $1.00, $1,90, $2.00\nHANDKERCHIEFS: 35$, SOV, 60$\nGO01REYS'\nPHONE \u2014270 \u2014BOX\nBOTTLE\nDRIVE\nTODAT\nDOOR TO DOOR\nHelp Pay For Expenses\nTo Cranbrook\nFor Notro Dome Pupa\nGrowing Auxiliary Plans Fufid\nFor New Hospital Furnishings\nVINCE MOORE\n. . . has taken over official\noourt reporting duties for the\nKootenays. He will serve Nelson,\nTrail, Rossland, Cranbrook, Far.\nnle and Creston. He fills a position left vaoant for tha past\nseveral years. He originally was\ncourt reporter for the High Court\nof England;--Voguo' photo.\nSALMO \u2014 The Salmo Ladles'\nCurling Club has taken over the\nlead from the men in making the\nfirst step towards artificial ice for\nSalmo. Tha club this week purchased a used plant from the McDonald Jam Company In Nelson.\nAlthough it will be a few years\nbefore the goal for artificial Ice ls\nreached this will'be a great achievement for the women who have\nworked hard since the beginning\nof the year to further thla effort.\nThey have taken on the concession\nbooth at the arena, staged a tea, and\nstarted plans tor a cabar.t style\ndance In March ln order to earn\nfundi -I ','.\u25a0 y *\nThe compressor of the plant will\nhandle four sheets of ice. It is planned to lnstal the plant tor the curling rink only with the hope ot\nraising funds from curling to extent the artificial lea to' the skating rink, ln future years.\nP-TA Donates to\nHandicapped Society\nCentral School's Parent-Teacher\nAssociation meeting, held Wednesday at Central school, was opened\nwith a novel twist, as Mrs. M. Mc-\nCosham's Grade 1 pupils beguiled\nparents and teachers with a selection ot verses spoken clearly and\nexpressively.\n. The youngsters ended with the\nquotation beginning, \"I said to the\nman who stood at the gate ot the\nyear \u2014 ,\" and made famous by the\nlate King George Vie They received a well-earned round of applause.\nPresident Mrs. Lloyd Catley reported that $6.45 profit had been\nmade by the combined Parent-\nTeacher Associtaions at the Principals' Dinner. This had been hended\nover to the Kootenay Society for\nHandicapped Children.\n. She read a letter from this society\nInforming the PTA that a branch\nwould be formed in Nelson with\nPeter Melwood as organizer.\nA letter asking for financial help\nin building a new home economics\nin tuberculosis and diabetesj house at UBC, was discussed. It was\ndisclosed that students were at present using a reconditioned hut that\nwas not satisfactory. The home economics course is apparently PTA\nsponsored and so PTA groups in\nB. C. are being canvassed for funds.\nSome members felt it was not up\nto PTA organizations to. provide\nthis money, but after some discussion, on a motion' by Miss Greta\nCurwen and seconded by Mrs. T.\nClem, lt was agreed to donate $5.\nMrs. T. Swendson was Introduced\nas convener ot the Shamrock. Tea,\nwhich will be held in the Hume Silver Room on March IS. It has been\ndecided against having . children\nproviding' entertainment Oils year.\nMiss Carol Proudfoot, on behalf\nof the teachers, thanked the PTA\nfor the hot plate provided, for the\nteachers' ule.\nMtESt^e\nand Besom\nPlay in the Nelson Curling Club's\nPlugs and Colts competition Friday\nwere:\nF. Graves 8, a Bennedetti 9.\nKonkln 4, W. Tickner U,\nP. Stranbe\u00abr?,W. Gold 8.\nA. Barrett 10, H. A; Greenwood 7.\nA. Stephenson IV 3. Rogers 6.\nA trust fund- for equipment or\nfurnishings for the proposed new\nKootenay Valley district hospital\nhas bean established by Women's\nAuxiliary of Kootenay Lake General Hospital,   .\nThe Auxiliary ls the second organization to establish such a fund,\nClan McLeary began with tha new\nyear to build a $1800 account tor\nfurnishings for tha proposed district hospital.\nPlan to establish tha fund was\narranged by the growing auxiliary\nat a Friday afternoon, meeting,\ngathering that welcomed 10 .new\nmembers. The fund has been under\nconsideration since December when\nR. H. Procter, co-ordinating chairman tor the hospital improvement\ndistrict organizing committee, addressed tha Auxiliary on the possibility of lt extending its activities\nto plan for the new hospital. The\nAuxiliary already is active in support of the present Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nTO BUY PUMP\nMrs. M. LeMolgne, Mrs. M. Rob-\nte\u00bbv^**6'.\noris; Mri, B. Morrison, Mrs. It,\nBrummitt, Mrs, H. D. Hsrrjioi\nMrs. F. H. Smith, Mrs. Roy Pollari\nMri, A. G. Pentland, Mrt. F. Ludlo;\nand Mra; Thomas Prima were tt\npew members attending.\nRepresentatives of women's on\nanlzations attended from the QUei\nCity Rebekah Lodge, Beta Sign\nPhi; Friendly Club.Not. of Trtx\nity United Church, St Paul's Ei\ncelslor Club, Soroptlmist dlu\nTrinity Service Club, Catholic W<\nmen's League, delegate from Wi\nlow Point Women's Institute an\nLadles' Auxiliary to the Canadia.\nLegion,., '.      ,,'\/\u25a0;-,' Ss. YY '\nMembers also decided to pwchai\nan aspirating pump.\nWA bridge party, tb be held 1\nthe Canadian Legion Hall Wednei\nday, was planned.\nMembers are collecting old wool\nlens from any wishing, to contri\nbut*. Woollens will be-re-made in\n.to blankets tor the hospital,\nMrs. Ethel McCandllsh was te\nhostess and Mrs. F. M. Erskine we\nbooster prize winner.\nf\nTRAIL\u2014More than 100 boys and passing Into Scouts, and to thre\nCompetition Keen\nFor Esling Basket\nTight competition li already evident in play for the Ealing Basket\nIn the Women's Curling,Club.\nMrs. Rex Little managed to Win\nbv&r the' Mrs. T. A. Wallace rink,\n10-8, in the first game, while both\nMrs. E. N. Mannings and Mrt. M.\nL. Craig just squeezed out one point\nvictories, with Mannings downing\nMrs. A. J. Hesse 9-7 and Craig defeating Mrs. T. McGovern 10-9.\nPlay will resume Monday with\ntwo games on tap. Two more will\nbe played Tuesday, with one on\nThursday and two on Friday completing the week's curling.\nDraw for the week;\nMonday\u2014Mrs. E. N, Mannings vs\nMrs. R. Little and Mrs. T; A. Wallace vs Mrs. M. DeGirolamo.\nTuesday\u2014Mrs. A. J. Hesse vs Mrs.\nM. L. Craig and Mrs. T. A. Wallace\nvs Mrs. T. McGovern.\nThursday\u2014Mrs. E. N. Mannings\nvs Mrs. M. L. Craig.\nFriday\u2014Mrs. M. DeGirolamo vs\nMrs.' T. McGovern and Mrs. A. J.\nHesse vs Mrs. R. Little.\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED AOS GE1   RESULTS\nSalmo Spiel\nFor Junior-Senior\nSchool Students\nSALMO \u2014 Salmo Junior-Senior\nHigh School ls starting something\nunique for students with a mixed\nbonspiel this weekend. Nineteen\nrinks trom Trail, Rossland and Salmo ara entered with three competitions at stake.\nHalt of tha rinks- start curling\nat 8 a.m. Saturday while tha other\nhalf start' at 7:30 a.BL \"tt will continue- until Sunday night\n. Salmo students.hope to make this\nan annual affair to give tbe girls a\nchance' fd enter obtnpetitibn, too.\nRinks entered are;\nRossland \u2014 George Nixon, Dave\nCanettt and Dave Henry;\nTrail \u2014 Kenny Straus, Maudsley,\nGerry Brown and Al Little.\nSalmo \u2014 Pat Stranberg, Lao\nDrugge, Charles Scrlbner, Ron\nAvery, Lawrence .Kraft, Harvey\nMoore, Howie Esche, Bill Scrlbner,\nNick Konkin, Ronny Erickson,\nBobby Dodds and Peter Bepln.\n.'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:\ni****\n*\u2666.*\nCella Franca\nArtistic Director\nThe National Ballet Guild\npresents\nNATIONAL\nBALLET\nCOMPANY   OF  CAN\/IDA\n$50,000 Needed for\nBE Games Have\nRaised $17,500\nTORONTO (CP) - A campaign\nstarted nearly six months ago to\nfinance cost of sending more than\n200 Canadian athletes to the July\n30-Aug. 7 BrltiBh Empire Games\nat Vancouver has netted only $17,-\n.500 to date, lt was announced here\nFriday.\n\"We need between $50,000 snd\n$75,000 to pay all expenses ot the\nathletes trom tha time they leave\ntheir homes until they return from\nthe games, and we are - confident\nwe can get the money,\" Lt.-Col.\nGeorge C. Medium of Montreal\ntold a meeting of sports officials,\nCol. Ma-hum,' chairman of the'\nB.E. Games finance committee, said\nhe expected (30,000 from the Dominion and provincial governments,\n$8000 from civic governments, $31,-\n000 from private individuals and\nbusiness firms in Canada and $8500\nfrom civic governments.\nYOUNG NORRIS ON\nWINGS BOARD\nDETROIT (AP) - Who ls Bruce\nNorris, Detroit Red Wings' new\nrepresentative on the National\nHockey League's board of govern\nors?\nHe is the youngest son of James\nD. Norris, Sr., who died ih 1952\nafter building the Wings into\nhockey powerhouse. Bruce's sister\nls Marguerite Norris, president of\nthe Red Wings.\nThe younger Norris, 29, replaced\nJack Adams Thursday on the NHL\nboard of governors. But Adams,\nDetroit's general manager, remains\nthe key figure In the Red Wings\npicture.\ntheir fathers enjoyed the third an\nnual Fathers and Sons Banquet of\nthe Sunnlngdale Scout group held\nin the Canadian Legion Hall this\nweek. \"\nChester Roberts, second vice-president, acting in the absence of district Scout Council Chairman A. H.\nW. Busby, gave a full outline ot\nCub and Scout operations ln Trail\nand district,\nC. E. Charlton, new district Scout\nCommissioner, spoke on plans ior\nthe coming year, mentioning a leadership training course scheduled\nfor Trail district.\nOf note, were his remarks on\nplans for a Cub camp at Camp\nTweedsmuir near Fruitvale. No\ncamp was held last year. Mayor\nE. G. Fletcher, Scout badge commissioner, spoke on aspects of badges and awards awaiting hardworking Cubs and Scouts.\nBadges were presented six Cubs\nLyndhursrs Win\n7th, Have Lost One\nFUBS8EN, Gerjnany (Reuters)\n\u2014Toronto Eart.Ybrk Lyndhursta,\nwarming up for their role as-Canadian , representatives at the\nworld hockey championships at\nStookholm, defeated the West\nGerman E. V. Fueiien team 7-8\nFriday night\nIt was the Lyndhursta' seventh\nexhibition victory against one\nloss slnoe their,arrival at Europe.\ntenderfoots becoming full Scout\nCeremony Included induction of\nnumber of new Cubs, Jack Sco\nwat Invested as assistant Scoutmai\nter by Jack McFadden, Scout I\nter of Sunnlngdale group.\nA demonstration of first aid, km\nwork and other Scout and Cub ai\ntivitlet, wat given by Scouts an\nCubs.\nA feature of the evening wet\ncolored movie on tha Nation\nScout Jamboree held ln Ottawa 1\nJuly. Sunnlngdale troop boasts on\nQueen Scout, Stan Craig, who a\ntended th\u00abf event. ,!\nJ. C. Hall, president ot Tra\nbranch of the Canadian Leglo\nspoke of his organization's Interei\nin the Scout movement, Sunnini\ndale group Is sponsored by\nLegion..\nSunnlngdale Scout and Cub M<\nthan Auxiliary under Mrt.'X.' U\n'vigne handled banquet details. Jt.l\nGarland Wat chairman r\n'\"   i ' \"\\ '..., i..i.\nPhone\n\u25a0 11 tTi-Tiifl i liTilViTi 1111 g 11111 it \u25a0 g 11 m 7t?ITJ\nWelcome Canadians\n\u25a0MINDLY\nHOWE SEES BRIGHT\nFUTURE F&R WEST\nWINNIPEG <CS) - Trade Min-\nliter Howe Friday; night predicted\na bright future fo. tha West, though\ngrain marketlnf i<had temporarily\nchanged \"for tha worse.\"\n- In tact, if he fikd hit career to\nlive over, he would without hesitation, move wesfe-to the \"land of\nopportunity,\" he-said.\nThe Prairies had great spheres of\ndevelopment int; oil, natural gat,\nchemical plants and discovery of\nnew ore bodies.'\nIn the latt six yean, western oil\noutput had increased from li par\ncent of Canadian consumption to 50\nper cent \"and the end it by so\nmeant in tight.\"\nComing To Nelson\nMarch 22 and March 23\nCIVIC THEATRE\nS Auspices E\n| Nelson  Musical Festival Association _\n; Watch  for Seat Sale Announcement i\nSi g\n'lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllll 11111.\"\nFarouk Treasures\nDraw Dealers\nCAIRO (Reuters) \u2014 The first of\nex-king Farouk't treasures went under the auctioneer's gavel Friday\nas republican Egypt tried to raise\nfunds on the fabulous riches of the\ndeposed monarch.\nThe first day of the six-week\n\"auction of the century\" brought\nalmost $44,000 to the new government ot Gen. Mohammed Naguib.\n, Dealers from all over the world\nhave flocked to Cairo to take part\nin the bidding, conducted by a British auctioneer ln English, French\nand Arabic.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nJ Jul 7ldb\\ofL J-JInt CowvriL\n))wmdL...\nJ. Arthur Rank\nIS CROWNED\"\nBrought to Nelson at a Public Service Feature\nCourtesy TEXACO DEALERS of KELSON.\nSunday Evening, 9 p.m.\nST. SAVIOUR'S HALL\nSee It on th* New Sapphire Jewel Machine\nROME (CP) \u2014 Canada's prime\nminister tald Friday hit visits thli\nweek to France and Germany have\nrevealed \"encouraging signs of Increased confidence.\"\nRooms With lath $3.00 \u2022 $8.80\nWithout Bath $9.00 $3*).;;\nSpokane W. 213 Rlvenldi\n'i'tiiiiiniiliiii|iiiiii|imiiiiiiilHlilil\na treat for you\nand your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. fo 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAIl\nEXCELLENT SPARE TIME\nOPPORTUNITY THIS AREA\nDue to recent expansion, well (mown' national company haa\nimmediate openings for men to manage local business in protected areas. Can be handled at start in spare time few hourt\nweekly.\nHonetty tnd dependability ara mora important than ahy \"pat!\nbusiness experience. This It a steady, dignified, year round operation, With absolutely nd selling, canvassing, or soliciting requln '\nApplicants must have up to $2500 (which is secured), have goo\ncharacter references and car available,\nYou will receive immediate high weekly Income, and, liberal\ncompany financial assistance enables you to expand rapidly. Thit\nis a solid ground floor opportunity. We are only seeking financially\nresponsible individuals who aspire to earnings Immediately in\nthe $10,000 bracket. '     \"\nAPPLIOANT MUST HAVE A  MINIMUM  OF $1260.00\nNo high pressure men, or fritters, please. If you can qualify and\nhave neoess$ry cash, please write, giving name, address, phont\nnumber and particulars, for local Interview, to\nBOX 0020, DAILY NEWS .\nNOTICE\nii      in        i \u25a0    .\nIn Respect tp the Memory of\nMr. George Fleury\nThe Store Will Be^\nCLOSED TODAY\nFROM 12 NOON\nFleu\noyyyu\nMQLs\u00abJ|\nai___^________|j\ni_ll____^__k__--Bi\n Y\n\"THEY\/RE HERE\"\nBeoatifulvNew;\ny::y^in^y:,j,.y\nShoe Styles\nI ' \u00ab     (DI ALL THE, LATEST COLORS)-'..\nv.. ,-w :;-.-:\u25a0\u2022-.'\"\u25a0\"\u25a0   .'By ......     :  .... '\n\u25a0T, CONNIE f\nEXCLUSIVE AT\nThe, SttOE CENTRE\ni-\n593 Baker St.\nPhone 895\nPensions, Welfaretfejor Legion Jobs\n.SLOCAN CITY \u2014 Sixty-three of\n182 branches of the B.C. Command,\n-Canadian Legion contributed $132,-\ni to pensions and welfare service\nin 1953,\nZone Commander C. Pitts speaking to the Slocan Branch ot the\nLegion gave the report which\n.iovers an incomplete survey of\nBranch and Auxiliary Welfare Activities, (63 out ot 182 branches):\n\"Pensions Bureau, provincial office, Vancouver, $10,091.30; scholar-\nShip, $4033.00; hospital comforts and\nequipment $10,325.71; donations to\ncommunity organizations $13,456.05;\ndonations,. to youth organizations\n$13,299.7*9; social service veterans\nfamilies $51,528,04; grants for burials\n$7737,41; food and clothing, overseas\nparcels $4,105,26; miscellaneous $17,-\n101.33; total, $312,868.09,\"\nAlso attending the meeting were\nZone Chairman Mr, Lamb and Zone\nSecretary L. Smlbert.\nCommittees were appointed to\nplan for the Zone Council Meeting\nFebruary 21.\n, INVERMERE\u2014All executive officers of Windermere District\nBranch of the Red Cross were reelected at the annual meeting at\nitovermere. They are Mrs. W. H.\nCleland, president; Mrs. A. A. Burnett, vice-president; Mrs. J. A.\nLaird, secretary, and Mrs. F. W.\nHilller, treasurer.\nMrs. Hilller has been treasurer\nsince re-organization of the brandi\nin 1940. Honorary president is Miss\nE. M. Fisher, also an ardent worker\nsince 1940, and honorary vice-president is Mrs. E. E. Tunnacllffe,\n-rt. R. Wannop of Windermere was\nre-elected campaign chairman and\nMining, Sawmill, Logging\nand Contractors'\nEquipment\nGranville  bland\nVancouver li B.C.\n| tet our trained, courteous, -\nprofessional movers \"take the\nload off your mind!\" Ten\nfinest furniture,' dishes and\nother possessions will bo\nscientifically packed and\nhandled with the utmost care. '\nPhone for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C\nPhono 33\npublicity chairman ls Mrs. T. N.\nWeir.\nDistrict representatives are Edge-\nwater, Mrs. R. W, Beamish and Mrs.\nAdolph Johnson; Wilmer, Mrs.\nHarry Williams and Mrs. Thomas\nSeaton; Radium, Mrs. E. C, Peat-\nfield and Mrs. Chris Madson; Windermere, to be appointed; Athalmer,\nMrs. William ,Pye, Jr., and Mrs.\nJohn Kroepfl; The Benches, Mrs.\nGeorge Annis; Mineral King mine,\nF. R Thompson; Ronacher's Lumber Camp, Ben Weycamp; Splllimachine, to be appointed; Brisco,\nMrs. Kenneth Bryant and Mrs. .0.\nNewfeld.\nMrs. Fred Foyston will be delegate ot Windermere District Branch\nto the provincial council meeting at\nVancouver. Campaign quota for\n1054 is $1000. In 1953' $882 was collected.\nMiss E, M. Fisher was re-appointed work chairman for knitting and\nMrs. Fred Foyston was appointed\ntor sewing.\n;-r-.Icll  Tf,t\nHas Trial Run\nNATAL\u2014 Michel mines, which\nhave been averaging four days a\nweek tor some-time, worked a full\nfive-shift week1 last week.\nThe mines were reported to have\nworked five shifts the previous\nweek but due to shortage of cars\nthe whistles blew for no work. It\nwas expected that because of a two-\nweek cold spell which curtailed\nmine output considerably, miners\nwill work a number of full weeks.\nTrial run of the newly constructed briquette plant at Michel was\nmade the latter part of last month.\nIt Is expected that after minor adjustments the plant will operate at\ncapacity production this month.\n250 Attend!\nHospital Ball\nNAKUSP\u2014Annual Arrow Lakes\nHospital ball was held'at the Canadian Legion Hall with the grand\nmarch led off by Miss Wlnnifred\nKeys, matron, and Vic Smith, chairman of the board.\nInterspersed In the program were\na number of novelty dances. About\n250 attended.\nPrize winners included Mr. and\nMrs. Sirr, spot dance; Hugh Wood\nand Mrs. Cathie Horrey, elimination dance; Chris Halre and Mildred\nBaird, arrow dance; Mrs. Wiles and\nJ. O. Harper, door prize.\nPROCTER WINS VOLLEY\nBALL GAME8\nPROCTER-^Students' Courfcil of\nProcter Superior School were hosts\nto two volley ball teams from Nelson and defeated their guests in\nboth the boys' and the girls' competitions.\nA party followed the games with\nT. Wickstrom, principal, supervising and W. Henke conducting contests and square dancing,\nWishes to announpe he has now taken over\n\"YOUR MIMEOGRAPH\nSERVICE\"\nFrom MR. PHIL ROBINSON\nFor a corrjplete mimeograph) service\nPHONE 378-R-3\n.    v iiY-YHY''1''1   Y ' \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0. - .,    '\n... 'IN 1BAIL THEOLD MAKES WAY for the new as the kudson Bay Gom^atiy\nstore, a part of Trail since 1926 when it was built as a.company store, is torn down to\nmake way for a new, expanded $285,000 building. New building.will be at the corner\nof Cedar and Eldorado and work has .already started. It is expected to open business\nin the early Fall. Roman brick will,face the mddern building. Present basement\nwalls will be utilized and the building will be designed so a third floor can be added.\nAbove is a picture of the old building being torn down.\u2014Louis Fryling photo.\nStreamlined,'modern Hudson's Bay Company building will look like this when\nit opens, ppssjbly this year.\n,. -I.-Or, (TED) COOPER -\nIs president of Grand Forks\nBranch of the Canadian Legion.\nHe has been an executive member for many years. He Is an\nemployee of the Publlo Works\nDepartment\nDISTRICT MEN\nNAMED MOTOR\nDEALER DIRECTORS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - George\nMussallem of Haney was elected\npresident ot the Motor Dealers' Association of B. C, at the organization's annual meeting here Thursday.\nGordon Smith of Kamloops was\nnamed first vice-president and J.\nM. Wood, Victoria, second vice-president.\nDirectors included Harry Glad-\nwell of Victoria; J. A. Ferguson of\nNelson; E. Saivedor of Creston; and\nMax Blunt of Nanaimo,\nMORE PAY FOR\nFORKS COUNCIL\nGRAND FORKS - Grand Forks\nmayor has received a $250 pay\nboost and aldermen $150.\nMayor now gets, $750 and* aldermen  $500.\nThe monthly report from the RCMP showed that lines totalling $430\nwere paid over to the city treasury\nfrom convictions in the city.\nA communication was received\nfrom RCMP headquarters informing\nthe council that the city did not in\nfuture have to pay the telephone\nbill for the RCMP.\n$25 UNEMPLOYMENT FINE\nTRAIL - In Trail Court Wednesday, George Plotnikoff, Trail, pleaded guilty to a charge of falsely endeavoring to obtain Unemployment\nInsurance benefits, and was fined\n$25 and $4 costs, or in default 30\ndays in 'ail before Stipendiary Magistrate Parker Williams.\nThe charge arose out of incorrect\ndeclarations in connection with\navailability for work, contrary to\nthe provisions of the Unemployment\ninsurance Act. 1040,\nCase for the Commission was\npresented by M- T. Creighton, district investigator.\nDeer Park Notes\nDEER PARK\u2014Douglas Male, of\nhe Dominion Department of Public\nWorks, Nelson, spent a few-days In\nDeer Park.. While here he was the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Coleman.'\nVisitors to Nelson, Trail and Castlegar during the week included\nMrs. A. Allen, C. Lindberg, G. A.\nWalker, A. W. Kent and J. Stuckl-\nberger.\nA church service, conducted by\nFriendliness\nTheme of\nWhile Cane Week\nOTTAWA\u2014\"This year the theme\nof White Cane Week is friendliness,\" declared J. A. McNaughton\nNational publicity chairman The\nCanadian Council of the Blind.\n\"The theme may come as a surprise,\" he continued, \"Since Canadians are universally regarded as a\nfriendly people, and nobody knows\nthis better than the blind.\"\nSince the first White Cane Week\neight years ago, assistance to the\ncarriers of the White Cane has\ngrown tremendously. However,\nthere are.still many Canadians who,\nthough friendly by nature, are\noften at a loss to know what to say\nto a blind person or how to.go\nabout offering aid. Blindness is not\nrestricted to any particular walk of\nlife. The sightless person you meet\non the streets may be a scholar, a\nbusiness man or a craftsman. The\nchief, difference between him and\nyou ls that he has lost his sight.\nWhen a person first becomes blind\nhe is depressed and sometimes very\nlonely.\n\"This is where The Canadian National Institute for the Blind and\nThe Canadian Council of the Blind\ncan offer constructive assistance,\"\nMr. McNaughton observed. C.N.I.B.\ncontributes a program of adjustment and training .that not only\nteaches braille, typing, handicrafts,\nand every day household duties,\nbut ln many cases leads the newly\nsightless to gainful employment.\nAcross Canada, forty-eight C.C.B.\nclubs provide social and recreational rehabilitation, and many a\nclose friendship has been formed\nthrough attendance at the club\nmeetings,     i\n'We are proud of our fellow\nCanadians,\" the publicity chairman\nsaid, \"Who, by their friendly guidance have encouraged the sightless\nto undertake a greater variety of\nactivities. -T,o anyone who thinks he\nwould like to help, but Is timid\nabout approaching may we say,\n\"Let the White Cane Introduce Us.\nRemember the blind cannot see\nyou. The first move is up to you.\"\nEarphones Will\nBring Radio\nTo Rotary Member\nNAKUSP\u2014President Don Pye reported at Nakusp Rotary meeting\narrangements had been made for a\nset of earphones attached to a radio\nfor a Rotary member, A. M. Barrow, who is a patient in Arrow\nLakes Hospital,\nA thank-you letter to Nagasaki\nRotary Club in Japan, was written\nby Tak Nashida, through the arrangement of M. Fraitzl. The Nakusp club received a card from the\nJapanese club and replied in Japanese.\nSeven directors will be elected\nat the next meeting.\nH. D. Harrison of Nelson, past district governor, is expected to address the meeting March 15.\nA safety engineer is expected to\naddress the club on either Feb. 22\nor March 1, '\nFinal financial report of a barn\ndance showed a profit. Another\nwill be held.\nQuests were Jack Harris and A. R.\nBedard.\nA film, \"Courtesy Is Contagious\"\nwas shown. It told of a traffic court\nMiss Louise Barker of Renata, was\nheld In the community hall.\nMra. C, S. Phelps, who spent two\nweeks in Trail, has returned to her\nhome with her infant daughter.\n\"-\\'v '\u25a0y:yi'\\'.y-r:,.^:v'' ^ v-.-; \u25a0\/\u25a0 v ' ; mj\n\u25a0      NaSOM PAILY WBWS, SATURDAY, K_r 18,1M4 \u2014 \u00bb\nSTEVELAZARUK PRESIDENT... .\"\nFarmers Institute Backs Proposed   j\nNatal-Michel Pasteurization Plant   i\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji\nNo Rest lor Snow Removal Gear\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii\nNO SURPRISE\nTRAIL\u2014Triplet sons were born\nat Trall-Tadanao hospital Friday\nto Mrs. Hiram Hosford of Robson\nCreek, Increasing the Hosford\nchildren from eight to 11. Both\nmother and sons were described\nas In \"fine condition.\"\nAt present In Incubators, the\nbabies weighed 4 lbs, 5 oi; 6 lbs.,\n9 oz,; and six lbs.\nThe 48-year-old, Maine-born\nfather, a guard at Robson school,\n\u2022aid \"It was not \u2022 surprise. We\nhave known for some time.\"\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllll\nGolden School\nRevenue $1000\nGOLDEN\u2014Golden school district\nrevenue- for 1853- totalled $108,447\nnot Including a balance of .$1732,\ncarried from the previous year.\nSources were $70,013 from rural\ntaxation and, special aid, \"$32,877\nfrom government grants, and the\nremainder from rentals and special donations.\nCash balance of $18,308 was carried after all disbursements which\nincluded $56,140 for instruction;\n$13,785 for conveyance of pupils;\n$7900 for schools operation; $5116.53\nfor administration; $2356 for school\nplant and grounds maintenance;\n$1360 fbr auxiliary services including health, and the rest on debt\nservice and miscellaneous.\nCapital account* showed $66,745\ndisbursed in school buildings, land\nand bylaw expenses; $152,615 in the\nbuilding account; $4117 in the building* account and $628 from sale of\nassets account to tatal $224,106.\nCapital account receipts were\n$218,483, sale of school building\n$1528, and cash balance in the building account $4117, to total $224,106.\nExcess of revenue over expenditure .during \u25a0 the year Was $16,213.\"\nAudit of the financial statement\npresented by school board chairman George Keenleyside and secretary, Mrs. Harriet Dainard, was by\nGeorge A. Touche and Company.\nBalfour WI Donates\nTo Women of India\nBALFOUR \u2014 The Women's Institute met at the home of Mrs. Fred\nR. Thompson with 15 members\npresent.\nTwo dollars was voted for a fund\nto supply the women of India with\njewing machines. A women in India\ncan make 50 cents a day sewing;\nthis amount keeps her family In\nmeals for a day.\nA collection was taken up for \"A\nPennie for Friendship Fund\".\nMrs. McGregor treasurer of the\nAssociated Women of the World, in\nher financial statement at .the\nACWW conference in Toronto, said\n\"Pennies for friendship was the\nbackbone of the ACWW.'.' _\u00bb'\n- Mrs. E. McGuilvery won the\ncontest. \u2022\nin Los Angeles and judgment handed down by the magistrate.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET  RESULTB\nCRANBROOK-Eighteen-hour snowfall her. piled\nup eight inches of new snow Friday to'bring, the five-\nweek total to about 60 inches in Cranbroolt. Heavier fall\ntoward Crow's Nest Pass put the total at well over 1Q0,\nfc.inches. '-.\"'\/\u25a0''\u25a0\n\/-.-,;, Snow clea'rance_equipment which had hardly cooled\nfrom the lastclean-tip was brought back into service this\nmorning an<J\/the Southern Transprovincial and Kings:\ngate-Radium roads remain open though going is heavy.\nCity equipment worked here all Friday clearing\nsnow as it fell, and householders were taking a wary look\nat roofs which were shovelled clear two weeks ago.\nTrain and bus traffic continued, and eastbound\nCanadian Pacific Airlines flight piade the stop here in\nmid-afternoon.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nSlock on Roads\nRossland Target\nROSSLAND, B. C. - Rossland\nChamber of Commerce is going to\ninvestigate further the possibility\nof Incorporating in the Highway\nAct measures prohibiting cattle at\nlarge on public highways,\nThe Chamber Thursday night al\nso decided to further investigate a\n30-mlle-per-hour zone recently established on the road between War-\nfield and Rossland. Committee was\nformed to Investigate with the C. S.\nWilliams clinic the -possibility of\nestablishing a fourth doctor in\nRossland.\nThree members volunteered to be\nJudges at the high school speaking\ncontest which takes place In late\nMarch.\nThe Chamber went on record supporting the water by-law which is\nto be voted on Feb. 23.\nA committee will study the possibility of giving recognition to all\naccident-free car drivers.\nThree members will be sent to\nthe Associated Boards of Trade annual meeting in Cranbrook March\n8 and 9.\nFormer Nelson resident Captain W. A. Mann, CSsR, has\nbeen appointed garrison Catholic Chaplain of Fort Osborne\nbarracks.\nCaptain Mann returned recently from Japan and Korea\nwhere he served as chaplain In\nthe third battalion, Princess\nPatricia's Canadian Light Infantry, For a time he worked\nIn Nelson and district.\nKASLO HOSPITAL\nAUXILIARY PLANS\nEASTER EVENT\n. KASLO \u2014 Thanks was passed to\nthe Kaslo Board of Trade for t\ndonation from the Dr. Shimo Taka-\nhara fund for the purchase ot material for curtains for the Children's\nWard at the February Hospital\nAuxiliary meeting.\nAs the Women's Ward, has been\nrecently repainted, the buying committee suggested new curtains.\nIt was also decided to leave the\nboxes for towel donations in the\nstores for the present.\nThe annual Easter dance planning\nwas left over to the March meeting. The names of new members\nwere reported by several membership canvassers.-\nWOMEN'S CLUB\nPROTESTS\nPOSTAGE HIKE\nBOSWELL - Boswell and -Is\ntrlct Women's Club met at the home\nof Mrs. K. Wallace when the secretary was requested to send a resolution to the Post Master General,\nprotesting the rise in postal rates,\nArrangements were made for a\nValentine's card party, to be held\nin the Memorial Hall on Saturday,\nA birthday gift of flowers will\nbe sent Mrs. R. Doran, who is sick\nat her home at Twin Bays. Birthday gifts were presented to Mrs. G.\nHill and Mrs. K. Wallace.\nHostesses were Mrs. Paul L.\nO'Sullivan, and Mrs. K. Wallace.\nGarageman Charges\nCouncil Actions Secret\nFERNIE\u2014A Fernie garageman's\nbid to have purchase of a $13,000\ntractor with overshot loader by\ncity council rescinded and re-opened\ntor bidding failed.\nTelfer Dicks told the council he\ncould supply the same machine\nas council had bought from Cranbrook for $13,500, a saving of $1500.\nCouncil decided on the purchase\nfrym a Cranbrook firm at an earlier\nmeeting; claimed Mr. Dicks, \"behind locked doors. \"When I enquired for information on the matter, I was to)d minutes of the meeting were not available to the pub-\nlie.\"-Council heard his charge, but\nits plans remained unchanged.\n\"I'LL MEET YDU AT THE CASTLE\nIN THE HEART OF THE CITY\"\nHotel Castle\nMArino8531\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nAl. Black, Manager\n750 Granville Street\nNATAL-^-Annual meeting of the\nElk Valley Farmer's Institute',' heW\nin the Elk Valley Community hall,\nelected Stev. Lazaruki presldeht\nfor a third term. Frank Fairclough\nia secretary, also for the third term.\nDirectors ure Frank LipOvskl,\nFrank Svec, Harold Travis, Amjy\nMarushka and Len Mustl,\nMembership last year was 80, Efforts will be made to reach the 100\nmprk this year. \u2022\u25a0   '\nInstitute achievements last year\nincluded completion of 10 miles pt\ntelephone yllne and purchasing the\nformer Upper Elk Valley schqpl\nwhich waa made into a community\nhall, now being used by the -institute for meetings.\nAssets were at an all-time high\nat the end of 1953. The Institute\nplans to back a proposed pasteurization plant for the Natal-Michel district \"100 per cent.'.;, Effdrts will be\nmade to have the pasteurization\nplant ready sometime this year,\nThe institute, during the past\nfew years has become one of the\nmost active organizations ln tht\ndistrict\nCAR APPREHENDED\nNEAR NEW DENVER\nTwo juveniles, believed from the\nOkanagan, were apprehended; near\nNew Denver Friday In a car allegedly, stolen from Trail earlier In the\nday. The youths were taken to-\nTrail.\nG. H.JONG\nChinese Herb Remedies\nFor All Ailments\n10  YEARS' EXEPEHI-\nENCE IN CANADA\nCorner 8th Ave. and let St. K.\nCalgary  '.\nWEATHER CUTS     \\\nFERRY TRAFFIC\nJanuary's blizzard weather that\ncut sharply Into highway travel also\ntrimmed ferry traffic.\nMV Anscomb on Kootenay Lake\non 188 trips carried 1574 cars, 138\nfewer than in 1953 January. West\nArm ferry carried 18,124 cars, noting a decrease of 1758.\nStatistics follow:\nMV Anscomb Ferry:\n1053   1954\nRound trips       188      188\nAutomobiles      1,712   1,574\nPassengers     4,588   3,607\nTrucks       637     543\nTrailers         45       45\nBuses       194     187\nMotorcycles          9        o\nFreight         815     545\nNelson Ferry!\nHound trips    2,589    2,538\nAutomobiles    17,880   16,124\nPassengers  33,372   29,814\nTrucks     5,116    5,274\nTrailers        43        53\nBuses       435       370\nMotorcycles        14 6\nFreight    2,239     1,608\nHarrop Ferry!\nRound Trips     1,111    1,122\nAutomobiles      1,071    1,124\nPassengers     3,615    3,140\nTrucks       549       504\nTrailers   0 2\nBuses ,,     83 74\nMotorcycles          3 0\nFreight       113 '    132\nLivestock          0 4\nSmallest county In Scotland,\nClackmannanshire is 10 miles long\nand four miles' wide.\nNOW IN STOCK\nThe New\nLAND\nROVER\n4 WHEEL DRIVE\n1-TON\nPICK-UP TRUCK\ne The perfect vehicle for any\nJob,\ne Wheelbase 107 Inches,\n\u2022 Pick-up body 57 Inches wide,\n6 feet long.\n\u2022 Famous Land \u2022 Rover \"F\"\nhead engine. '\n\u2022 Five 700 x 16 lug tires.\ne Auxiliary equipment avail-'\nable.\n\u2022 e   '\nPHONE 18\nPhone 792-Y Evenings\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\n\"if It's Machinery You Need,.\nConsult Us First\"      ',-i\n214 Hall St.     Nelion, B.C.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nfvBL m TRANSFER\nSIZED   \u2022   BLENDfl.\n\"\u25a0 -i\n,    .  ;  '   __.. '      _\u25a0\n\t\n.;,,;.;,\n .\n _9SWW5\nV    4        Established April \u00bb IMS\nBritish Columbia's'\nMost Interesting Newspaper    *\n\"Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n308 Baker Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia.\n-   I    Authorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nMember of-the Canadian press and\nthe audi, bureau of circulations.\nSaturday, February 13, 1SS4 .\nUnited Germany Would\nFace Many Problems\nA. the Great Powers of East and\n'.' t _rgue about the future of Ger-\ni ;\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022', I'.-.s voice of the people most\ni,\"\"\u25a0-.:'.':rtsly conoerned is not heard,\nr\u25a0\u2022, i-', . _y rata, not in any decisive way.\n\\'.'.r. do tha Germans think about this\ngrart dibits? Where do they stand on\nun'.\"catitn?\nThe qiiastipn is not as easy as it\nlooks. Probably, if a public opinion\npoll were taken throughout the Reich,\nthere would be, suggests Toronto Globe\nand Mail, a nearly unanimous \"affirmative answer to the question: Do you\nwant a reunited Germany? A few be-\nflighted inhabitants of the Soviet zone,\nbeguiled or assured of soft jobs by the\n, Red regime, would vote no; but the\nmajority would be. overwhelming.\n\u2022 It may be' assumed that the East\nGermans, except for those entrenched\nin the Communist hierarchy, would\nvote with* enthusiasm for immediate\nunity. They are not happy under a\nGovernment which, in its methods, differs little from the Hitler tyranny. The\nconstant tide of refugees westward\nttcross the Iron Curtain (there is no\nmovement in the other direction) is\none bit of evidence. The June 17 insurrection,'a violent protest by Berlin\nworkmen and their wives against Red\nrule, is another,\nFrom the West German point of\nview, and-particularly from the point\nof view of the .Adenauer Government,\nthe picture is rather different,'Chancellor Adenauer won his great election\nvictory last September on a program\nwhich, in effect, meant postponing unification until the Bonn Republic was\nfirmly attached to the West in economic, military and perhaps political\npartnership.\nThe electors, says the Toronto paper, may indeed have voted for Dr.\nAdenauer because they\" were proud of\nhim as the man who had lifted Germany out of the rubble to a respectable,\nposition in world affairs or because the\nOpposition, the Social Democratic\nParty, did not seem sure where it was\ngoing. The fact remains that the Chancellor's line was: \"Let us press forward\ntoward West European unity and then,\nwhen that is achieved, let us seek the\nnational unity we'all want.\" And this\nwas the program approved by the\nvoters.\nIt is well to be realistic about the\nsituation and recognize these facts.\nFirst, the Soviet Union could only be'\nInduced to set East Germany free if\ngiven a guarantee that the united Reich\nwould stay out of a Western military\nalliance. Second, the East Germans are\nprobably, i_i the main, Social Democrats and might tip th.e balance against\nDr. Adenauer's Christian Democratic\nUnion in a nation-wide election. (The\nSocial Democrats, for the time bejng at\nleast, are against a Western alliance.)\nThird, the acquisition of desperately\nBetty's Weekly .Letter to:\noaf J|ne:\nIt seems td me there can be no better place\ntor the question of the church and peace than\nright out in the open. That Is, If we take in\nhonest all-round look at it while It Is there. '\nI want to thank the Rev. Allan Dixon for\ntaking the time to write more fully (and In !\nsuch t nice way) about \"A peace movement\ncould' be promoted through the church.'.' No\none could be more sure than I that we would\nbe in a very sorry state without the churches,\nand, more specifically, without whpt the\nchurches stand for. No one could over-estimate\nthe good that tha churches have dene., That of\ncourse does not mean' that we hava finished,\nor that we could not be doing more.\nMost ot our denominational churches are\nwell organized, with membership running into\nthe hundreds of thousands; we are well-organ-\nized groups of Christian people spread around\nthe world with the Perfect Example for our'\nguidance, Seems like a wonderful opportunity.\nIt may seem queer, but very natural, that\nwe can all be sincere In wanting to make use\not this opportunity for peace but not agreeing\non the direction we should take. That's why it\nseems to me to be far better to bring these\nquestions right out Into the light, for, believe\nme, my correspondent ls not the only one who\nwonders If the churches are doing all they\ncould. ,\u2022\nMaybe the thing to be concerned with*\nisn't ho* much we in the churches have done,\nbut how much we might do. And I think talking about lt is the best way to find otjt. It we\nare doing all we can for peace,'then we should\nbo perfectly hanpy: It we are not doing all we\ncan, then maybe we should thank our questioners. And maybe we will some day. '\n.   \u2022      *      \u00bb\nI wonder if there is a time cloek system\nin the Parliament Buildings at'Ottawa. In the\npast a member of Parliament could be absent\nfrom the sessions without excuse and without\npenalty only fifteen days. Now that the salaries are being .boated, so are the number of\ndays. Now a member will be allowed to Ibsent\nhimself for twenty-one days without excuse\nor penalty. Twenty-one days out of each Session. What a percentage! Raising, the penalty\ndoesn't seem to me to be getting at the root of\nthe thing at all. What I want when I vote ls to\nelect someone who will be on the Job\u2014not a\ntoird of the time, but all the time. We have\nbeen fortunate in this district in having had\nthe kind of honest men who would do Just\nthat. No doubt a good member is worth more\nthan he was getting ln the past, but just why\nShould it be suggested to anyone that he have\ntwenty-one days off? If men are just little\nboys grown up, it's plain to see where that\nmight lead.\nAnd Ihe time clock. Do they have to punch\nIn and out, come on time and stay to the end,\nin order to be counted present, or can it be\njust a dodge In and out sort of arrangement?\nNever having, been there, I don't know.\nBETTY BLYTHE.\nH^T coPf\n? Questions? Pre-Ss*sion\nANSWERS\nC0\u00a7\nHonk'\ners\nFar be it from any family newspaper to\napprove of Mrs. Jeanie Fasano's assault on\nFrank Mayer, the Chicago taxi driver. But\nif her resort to violence is not excusable, it is\nat least explainable. She was crossing the\nstreet the other day when the light changed;\nand, to hurry her on, Mr. Meyer raucously\nhonked his horn. She stopped ln her tracks,\nand Mr. Mayer sat upon his horn. That was\ntoo much for Mrs. Fasano. With an unerring\nfeminine sense of propriety she pummeled Mr.\nMayer over the head and gave him a place of\nher mind. She had to be taken off to the\ncooler and Mr. Mayer had to take the rest of\nthe day off to recover.\nOne of our heroes Is a man who owned' a\nvery old car that stalled at the top of a hill,\ntying up scores of cars behind him. The honking started at once. The unfortunate driver\ndid everything he could, despite the cacophonous tooting, to restart his car. But the more\nhe \"worked the louder became the honks.\nFinally he could stand it no longer, He took\nhis keys and walked away. History does not\nrecord what happened to his car or how long\nthe impatient honker* lined up behind him\nhad to wait for the street to be cleared.\n \u2014The Washington Post.\nimpoverished East Germany, while it\nwould restore normal food supplies for\nthe West, would present a terrific\nbudgetary problem of rehabilitation\nand relief to the Bonn Republic, which\nalready has ten million expellees and\nrefugees on its hands. Immediate unification would not be an unmixed blessing for Dr. Adenauer.\nOpen to ahy reader. Names, ot persons'\nasking questions will not be published)\nThere Is no oherge for this servlot.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBV MAIL except'where there Is obvious\nnecessity for prlvaoy.\n\"> YY   .   . ;.Y '\"*  \u25a0\nJ. C. H., Cranbrook\u2014Referring to earlier request for addresses, of historical assocla-\n>      tlons, the following will be of interest:\nVancouver Art; Historical and Scientific\nAssociation.; President, Noel Robinson, -\nReader, Nelson\u2014Is there a safe and easy way\nto dye coconut for cookies or decoration?\nPut small quantity of shredded coconut\ninto \u2022 bowl and tn the middle put one drop\n(no more) bf whatever vegetable dye youiare\ntn the habit of using for Jellies, confectionery,\netc. Stir thoroughly, with spoon or fingers\nuntil every shred is colored.\nC. E. T., Trail\u2014Is there a Spirella Foundation\nGarment agent In the district?\nThe local Spirella Corset agent ls Mrs. F.\nR. Johnson, 314 -Mill Street, Nelson, phone\n48-R.\nMlra A, P., Trails-Can you tell me\" where I\ntap obtain information on how to become\n-\"beautician, cosmetlclen, and barber?\nAll these courses can be taken at the\nCanadian   Vocational   Training   School,   422\nRichards Street, Vancouver.\nJ. C. G., Nakusp\u2014When the Calgary livestock\nreport refers to hogs, grade A, is \"price\nquoted live weight or dressed weight after\npig is rail-graded?\n\u2022 Live weight.\nJ. F. C\u201e* Kimberley\u2014In the game of contract\nbridge, when a person gets the bid and\nthen finds the partner has honors, does\nbidder count honors as if he were holding\nthiem himself?\nHonors   ore   shared   by   partners,   not\ncounted by individuals.\nJ. H. C, Kimberley- Where''can information\nregarding immigration to Australia and\nNew Zealand be obtained?\nFrom the High Commissioner for Australia, 100 Sparks Street, Ottawa; the High Com-\nmlssioner for New Zealand, 107 Wurtemburg\nStreet, Ottawa.\nReds or Capitalists\n(Taber Times)     , '\n- John Blackmore, Social Credit member of\nparliament for Lethbridge, does not seem to\nbe very consistent in his party's views of the\nnewspapers and those associated ln its production.\nGoing out on a limb, and we mean a lqng\nway out, Mr. Blackmore stated on Monday\nnight that most jTriite. States and Canadian\nnewspapers are under the control of Communist Influences. Such a statement Is in direct\nopposition to the Social Credit party's accusations^! a few years ago, when the party\ncontended that the newspapers, as a whole,\nwere under capitalistic Influences.\nSurely one of these statements must be\nincorrect, and we are of the opinion that both\nara incorrect. It is true that some, and fortunately a very few, of the newspapers published are controlled by extreme parties of\nvarious types, but It is not' true to say that\n\"most\" newspapers are controlled by Communists, capitalists or sonie other influence.\nNewspapers, both weekly and daily, endeavor to give the news as they see it, without,outside influences coloring the news. This\nis as it should be, a free press must.remain\nfree of all ties, if it is to continue to stand for\nfreedom we all cherish so much.\nWe will be glad to hear from Mr. Bla6k-\nmore, when he has had a chance to stop and\nthink more clearly.\nIt's Been Said\nKeep true to the dreams of thy youth.\nJohann von Schiller.\nYour Horoscope\nProspects seem of the best! business should\nprosper. Look for intelligence and a charming\ndisposition in the child born today.\nFOR SUNDAY, Feb. .14: You may win\npromotion or .expand your business in the new\nyear. Today's child may have a first class\nintellect and superlative memory.\nNo pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage ground of truth.\u2014Fran-\nels Bacon.\nToday's Bible Thought\nWe should be loyal tb our own\nfamily; God is father of all and\nChrist our brother. Treat all men\nas brothers.\nLove one another as I have loved\nyou,\u2014John 15:12,\nOwL dial\nIt It's hard for \u25a0 rich man to get\n\u2022tp Heaven, It must be. harder for\nhis wife. She can't imagine any nicer arrangement than what she's\ngot.\nLetter\nFrom Victoria\nr' \/\u25a0\u25a0\nIn keeping with the custom I\nhave earried out since 1040, I am\nwriting thli letter with the hope\nthat it will give you Borne Information as to what you might expect\ntrom the IBM session of the Legislature, which will open Feb. 10,.\ntwo of the most important Acts\nto be opened up at this session are\nthe Workmen's Compensation and\nthe Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration. ,\nThe Compensation Act is one that\nvHally concerns the workers, especially those who have been industrial casualties ot long standing,\nThose- who have been receiving\ncompensation for accidents that\nhappened prior to' April, 1052, are\nplacing great hopes on the opening\nof this Act. Although the cost of\nliving has consistently gone up, and\nwages for those working on the job\nhave also gone up during the last\nten years, the compensation allowances for those long standing cases\nhave remained the same. This la not\nJustice, and year after year I have\ntaken up the matter with a view to\nhaving the pensions increased in\nline with the increased cost of living. No.w that we are told the Act\nwill be opened, I have great hopes\nthis will be accomplished, along\nwith other Improvements long overdue.\nThis is not the only Act that I\nhope will be opened for the same\nreason. We must not forget that\nthe people who come under the Social Assistance, Mothers' Allowance,\nVeterans' Allowance,, Blind Pensions and Old Age Pensions are\nalso victims of the Increased cost of\nliving. Actually, according to the\npurchasing power of the dollar today, all those who are dependent on\nsome form Ot social assistance receive less today than they did In\n1039. If we believe ln the Christian\nteachings \"at all, we should, correct\nthis injustice without delay.\nSince I have been a member I\nhave taken up numerous cases arising out of these different Acts, and\nit has been very gratifying to be\nable to help many people ln obtaining justice in their various cases,\nbut the limitations set out in the\nActs leave much to be desired.\nREAL WEALTH\nUndoubtedly the question of unemployment will be discussed at\nthis session. Some people do not\nthink it iSjVery serious at the present time, but to the one who is out\nof work lt ls Just as serious as if\nthere was a major depression. The\nonly real wealth ln the country Is\nthat which is produced by the people, and every day a man is idle\nthe country loses \"one man day's\nwealth\". Multiply this by the thousands idle every day, and sum it up\nIn terms of houses, hospitals, roads,\nschools, etc. Then you will realize\nwhat society ls losing without\ncounting the deterioration, and discouragement of the families, who\nare victims of unemployment. We\nmust lose no time in correcting this\nsituation by planning our economic\naffairs to give everyone the right\nto contribute his share to the common welfare of society.\nThe liquor question will also have\nIts say at this session, and I am\nsure the Government will be told\nin no uncertain terms that B. C.\ndoes not consist of just a few localities on the coast,  i\nDuring the session I hope to keep\nyou Informed of the doings ot Parliament by my weekly letter, and I\nwould appreciate it very much if\nanyone who is of the opinion that\nlt contributes to good representation to express their appreciation\nby a letter Of thanks to the Editor\nfor publishing them.\nIn addition, if anyone has any\nproblems that I may help them\nwith while in Victoria, I would be\npleased to do so if they will write\nme at Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B. C.\nLEO T. NIMSICK, MLA.\n(Editor's Note: This space ls\navailable as a public service to\nall MLAs of Kootenay-Boundary constituencies.)\nBelgian Senate\nApproves EDC\nBRUSSELS (AP) - The Belgian\nSenate's joint defence and foreign\naffairs committee approved the European army treaty 87 to 10 Thursday, with two abstentions.\nThe treaty to set up the six-nation European Defence Community\nalready has been approved, by the\nHouse of Representatives and soon\nwHl come before the Senate for\ndebate.\nThe committee vote followed rejection of a socialist motion to wait\nfpr th* end of tha Berlin conference before starting the senate EDC\ndebate.\nOt the other EDC nations, the\nWest German and Dutch parliaments hava completed ratification\nof the treaty, While Ifrance, Italy\nand Luxembourg still must act\non It.\nread the Classified daily\nA SHERLOCK HOLMES STORY\nBy SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE\n(Published by arrangement with\nthe (state of Sir Arthur Conan\nDoyle. World rights reserved. Illustrations copyrighted, .'\"1054, King\nFeatures Syndicate, Inc.)     '\nDr. Watson ls waiting anxiously\nto learn what Holmes has accomplished on his preliminary Investigation ot the alluring Irene Adler\nand her alarming posses-ion \u2014 a\ntell-tale photograph.   -\nIn lt she wai pictured with a\nking who \u2014 desperately retained\nHolmes to recover It. The good Doctor Is describing the details of that\nmission. (Go on with the story):\nOHAPTBR TWO\nAt three p.m., precisely, I was at\nBaker Street, but Holmes had not\nyet returned. The landlady Informed.\nme that he had left the. house\nshortly after eight in the morning.\nI sat dovyn by the fire, however,\nwith the Intention ot waiting for\nhim however long lt might be. I\nwas deeply Interested, ln his inquiry, for, though it was surrounded by none of the grim find strange\nfeatures.which were associated with\nthe two crimes \"wHIch I have already recorded, still, the nature of\nthe case and the exalted station of\nhis client gave it a character ot its\nown.\nIt was close upon four before the\ndoor opened, and a'drunken-looking\ngroom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered, walked into the room. Accustomed as I was to my friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises,\nI had to look three'times before I\nwas certain that.lt Was indeed her.\nWith a nod he vanished into the\nbedroom, whence he emerged in\nfive minutes tweed-suited and respectable, as of old. Putting, his\nhands into his pockets, he stretched\nout his legs in front of the fire and\nlaughed heartily,\n\"It's quite too funny, I am sure\nyou could never guess how I employed my morning, or what I ended by doing.\"\n\"I can't imagine. I suppose that\nyou have been watching the habits,\nand perhaps the house, ot Miss Irene\nAdler.\"\n\"Quite so, but the sequel was rather unusual. I will tell ypu, however. I left this house in the character of a groom out of work.\nThere ls a wonderful sympathy and\nfreemasonry among horsemen. Be\none of them and you will know all\nthat there is to know. I soon found\nBrlony Lodge, It is a bijou villa,\nwith a garden at the .back, but\nbuilt out In front right up. to the\nroad, two stories. Chubb lock to\nthe door. L|rge sitting-room on the\nright, side, well furnished, with\nlong windows almost to the floor,\nand those preposterous English window fasteners which a child could\nopen. Behind there was nothing remarkable, save that the passage\nwindow could be reached from the\ntop of the coach-house.\n\"I then lounged down th* street\nand found a mews in a lane which\nruns down by one wall of the garden. I lent the ostlers a hand in\nrubbing down their horses, and I\nreceived in exchange two-pence, a\nglass of half and half, two frills of\nshag tobacco, and as much information as I could about Miss Adler,\nto say nothing of half a dozen other\npeople in the neighborhood in\nwhom I was not in the least Inter-\nested but whose biographies I was\ncompelled to listen to.\"\n\"And what of Irene Adler?\" I\nasked.\n\"Oh, she has turned all the men's\nheads ln that 'part. She is the daintiest thing under a bonnet on this\nplanet. So say the Serpentine-mews\nto a man. She lives quietly, sings\nat concerts, drives out at five every\nday, and returns at seven for dinner. Seldom goes out at other times,\nexcept when, she sings. His Only\none male visitor, but a good deal\nof hlm.He's dark, handsome, and\ndashing, never calls less than once\na day, and often twice. He is a Mr.\nGodfrey Norton, of the Inner Temple. See the advantages of a cabman as a confident? They had driven him home a dozen times from\nSerpentine-mews and knew all\nabout him,.\n\"This Godfrey Norton was evidently an important factor in the\nmatter. He is a lawyer. That sounded ominous. What was the relation\nbetween them, and what the object ot his repeated visits? Was she\nhis client, friend, or mistress? It\nthe former, she had probably transferred the photograph to his keeping. If the latter, lt was less likely.\nOn the issue of this question depended whether I should continue\nmy work at Brlony Lodge, or turn\nmy attention to the gentleman's\nchambers in the Temple. It was a\ndelicate point, and lt widened the\nfield of my inquiry. I fear that I\nbore you with these details but I\nhave to let you see my little difficulties, if you are to understand\nthe situation.\"\n\"I am following you closely,\" I\nanswered.\n\"I was still balancing the matter\nin my mind when a hansom cab\ndrove up to Brlony Lodge, and a\ngentleman Sprang out. He was a\nremarkably handsome man, dark,\naquiline, and moustaohed\u2014evidently the man of whom I had heard.\nHe appeared to be ln a great hurry, shouted to,the cabman to watt,\ntnd brushed past the maid who\nopened th* door, with th* air of t\nman who wat thoroughly tt home.\n\"He was in the house about half\nan hour, and I could catch glimpses\not him in the sitting room, pacing up\nand down,, talking excitedly, and\nwaving his arms. Of her I could\nsee nothing, Presently he emerged,\nlooking even more flurried than before, As he stepped up to the cab, he'\npulled a gold watch from his pocket\nand looked at lt earnestly. 'Drive\nlike the devil!' he shouted, 'first to\nGross St Hankey's In Regent Street,\nand then to Church of St. Monica\nln the Edgeware Road. Halt a guinea if you do it in twenty minutes.\"\n\"Away they went, and I was just\nwondering whether I should follow\nthem whqn up the lane came a neat\nlittle landau, the coachman with\nhis coat only half-buttoned, and his\ntie under his ear, while all the tags\nof his harness were sticking out of\nthe buckles. It hadn't pulled up before she shot out of the hall and\nInto it I only caught a glimpse of\nher at the moment but she was a\nlovely woman, with a. face that a\nman might die for.\n\" 'The Church of St. Monica,.\nJohn,' she cried, 'and half a sovereign if you reach it in 20 minutes.'\n\"This was quite too good to lose,\nWatson, I was just balancing whether I should run for it, or whether\nI should perch behind her landau\nwhen a cab came through the street.\nThe driver looked twice at such\na shabby fare, but I Jumped |n before he could object. 'The Church\nof St. Monica,' said I, 'and half a\nsovereign if you reach it in 20 minutes.' It was 25 minutes to noon,\nand of course. It was clear enough\nwhat was in the wind.\n,\"My cabby drove fast. I don't\nthink I ever was driven faster, but\nthe others were there before us.\nThe cab and the landau with their\nsteaming horses were in front of\nthe door when I arrived. I paid the\nman and hurried Into the church.\nThere was not a soul there save the\ntwo whom I had followed and a sur-\npllced clergyman who seemed to be\nexpostulating with them. They\nwere standing in a knot before th*\naltar. I strolled up the side aisle\nlike anybody . who drops into a\nchurch.' Suddenly, to my surprise,\nthe three at the altar faced round\nto me, and Godfrey Norton came\nrunning towards me.\n\" \"Thank God!' he cried. 'You'll\ndo. Cornel Cornel'\n\"I was half-dragged to the altar\nand before I knew where I was I\nfound myself mumbling responses\nwhich were whispered In my ear,\nand so assisting in the secure tying up of Irene Adler, spinster, to\nGodfrey Norton, bachelor. 'It was\nsoon done, and there was the\ngentleman thanking me on the one\nside and the lady on the other while\nthe clergyman beamed on me in\nfront. It seems that there had been\nsome informality about their license, that the clergyman absolutely refused to marry them without a\nwitness of some sort My pretence\nsaved- the bridegroom from having\nto sally out Into the streets ln search\nof a best man. The bride gave me\na sovereign, and I mean to wear lt\non my watch-chain In memory of\nthe occasion.\"\n\"This is a very unexpected turn\no. affairs,\" said I; \"and what then?\"\n\"Well, I found my plans very\nseriously menaced. It looked as If\nthe pair might take an immediate\ndeparture, but at the church door\nthey separated, he driving one way,\nand she, to her own house. I shall\ndrive out in the park at five as usual,' she said as she left him. I heard\nno more. Then I went off to make\nmy own arrangements.\"\n\"Which are?\". -\u00ab.\n. \"Some cold beet and a glass of\nbeer,\" he answeredfrihgihg the bell.\n\"I have been too busy to think of\nfood, and I am likely to b,e busier\nstill still this evening. By the way,\nD6ctor, I shall want your cooperation.\"\n\"I shall be delighted.\"\n\"You don't mind breaking the\nlaw?\"\n\"Not In the least.\"\n\"Nor running a chance of arrest?\"\n\"Not ln a good cause. But what\nis lt you wish?\"\n\"When Mrs. Turner has brought\nIn the tray I will make lt clear.\nNow,\" he said as he turned hungrily on. the simple fare that our\nlandlady had provided, \"I must discuss it while I eat, tor I have not\nmuch time. It is nearly five now. In\ntwo hours we must be on the-seen*\nof action. Miss Irene, or Madame,\nrather, returns from her drive at\nseven: We must be at Brlony Lodge\nto meet her.\" ,,\n\"And then what?\"\n\"You must leave that to me,\nhave already arranged what is to\noccur. The\/e is only one point on\nwhich X must insist. You must not\ninterfere, come what may.\"\n\"I am to be neutral?\"      , {\n\"To do nothing whatever. There\nwill probably be some small unpleasantness, Do not join in it It\nwill end ln my being conveyed Into the house. Four or five minutes\nafterwards the sitting - room window will open. You are to station\nyourself close to that open' window\nand watch me, for I will be visible\nto you.\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"And when I raise my hand\u2014so\u2014\nyou will throw Into the room what\nI give you to throw, and will, at\nthe same time, raise the cry of fire.\nYou quite follow me?\"\n\"Entirely.\"    '\n\"It ls nothing very formidable,\"\nhe said, taking a long cigar-shaped\nroll from his pocket \"It's an ordinary plumber's smoke-rocket, fitted with a cap at either end to make\nIt self-lighting. Your task is confined to that When you rtls* your\ncry of fire, lt will be taken up by\nquite a number of people. You miy\nthen walk to the end of the street1\nand I will rejoin you in 10 minutes,\nI hope that I have made myself\nclear?\"\n\"You may entirely rely on me.\"\n\"That ls excellent. And now I\nprepare for the new role I have to\nplay.\"\n(To be continued)\n\"H Polio Keeps\nPace With'53\nVICTORIA (CP)-British Colum-\nbla's 1054- polio Incidence appears to\nbe keeping pace with that ot last\nyear.\nFigures released Thursday by tht\nprovincial health departmenttshqw\na total of 20 cases so tar this year,\nwith one fatality ln Vancouver,\nJan. 12.\nTh\u00abre were 35 cases from Jan. 1\nlast year to June 6, end a total of\n787 cases with 26 deaths for ths:\nyear. This compares with 505 cases\nwith.87 deaths in 1.52,     _--__;__!\nA health department spokesman\nsaid lt was not yet clear \"if tht!\nincidence wis continuing, pointing\nout that the incidence was five\nweeks latt in starting In 1053, and\nthe new cases reported this year\nmay \"just be the slop-over from\nthe late fall.\"\nMeanwhile, health minister Erlsl\nMartin has commended the Kins-1\nmen Club for Its current ?200,0001\n\"Mothers' March for Polio\" drive |\nthroughout the province.\nI\nSays Unemployment\nBehind Crime Wave\nVANCOUVER; (CP) - Polled\nChief Walter Mulligan says season-l\nal unemployment is largely to!\nblame fir the current crime wav*|\nin Vancouver.\nMore than $20,000 ln cish andl\ngoods has been stolen In the Great-I\ner Vancouver area ln the last twtl\nweeks ln a series of robberies, hold-f\nups-and smash-grab raids.\nChief Mulligan .aid lt would btl\nunfair to his force to say that crime!\nwas on the upswing ln Vancouver,!\nalthough January and February al-l\nways showed a comparatively high!\nlevel of crime with other months!\nbecause of peak unemployment con-|\ndltlons.\nEton College ln England was found-]\ned by Henry VI in 1440 but not]\ncompleted until 1523.\nm\n.'\u25a0ss;--r\n:YY\n\\\nssyY\nJOHN D. WARFEL *(\u25a0 Drlfton, Pa, who graduated from th*\nPennsylvania State University, Is pictured with hie four children,\nall boys, as commencement hour neared. The children, ranging In\nage from three weeks to V\/, years, were born since Warfel entered\ncollege to study mineral preparation engineering.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\n ''^mm^^^^.\nmm\n\"It Pays :To Bayv^uaHty\"\n....' dim*jN.n\n: You, Too, May Bsnefit by\nOur'*., ' Y Y .'\u2022-.\/     ' '\u25a0.\nI   Surplus\nSHOE SALE\ni Take full advantage of these\n'\u25a0 .   outstanding low prices\nand savo at\nR ANDREW\n& co.\n! LEADERS'IN FOOTFASHION\nY.        Established 1944\n0*# Father's\nBusiness\nHow many of us tre really anxious to do Our Father's Business? I\noften think: we ore more anxious to\nhave the. Father do our business.\nAt least, it sounds that way when\nwe consider tha form of our prayers and our .demands: It is so easy\nto be completely absorbed ln our\nconsideration ot the world and how\nlt ought to be run that we fall to\nremember that it; ls the creation of\nGod and that He has set some absolute laws. That ls the trouble\nwith men; we do not seem able to\nlook at life, excepting through our\n\u00a9rttttts Jfatoi Qtyttrrfj\nJosephine and Silica Sts.\nMinister: REV. ALLAN DIXON, B.A., B.D.\nOrganist and Music Director: Mrs. C. W. Tyler\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a;m.-\"TH_ SOUL\" (Continued)\n(Broadcast over CKLN)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Books of the Bible\u2014Exodus, Part 2\nft. ftrafour'a ftt--(&at_fri.ral\n(ANGLICAN)\nDean Thomas L. Leadbeater, D.D.\n8EPTUAGES1MA SUNDAY\n8:00 am.\u2014Holy Communion\n9:30 |.m.\u2014Willow Point (Holy Communion)\n9:45 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday Schools\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Prayer\nT:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nAfter the Evening Service, the Film \"A QUEEN IS CROWNED\"\nWill Be Shown.\ngt Paula Xttiirt. QQptrrfr\nSilica and Stanley Streets\nMinister Rev. G. W Payne, .S.T.M.\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson. B.A., A.T.C.M.\nSUNDAY, Feb. 14th:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nSubject-'THE CHURCH PERSECUTED\"\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter\n7:30 p.m.-\"QUESTINO TIME\"\nBroadcast over CKLN\n\"THE HOME'S GREATEST (SIFT\"\nPrwhgtftiatt (Eijurrfj to (Eattafca\nFIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nKootenay and Victoria Streets\nMinister: Rev. L. S. van MosseL B.A.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014SUNDAY SCHOOL,\n11:00 a.m.\u2014MORNING SERVICE      \u2022\n7:30 p.m.\u2014EVENING SERVICE      n\nCOME AND WOR8HIP\nBETHEL TABERNACLE\nPentecostal Assemblies ot Canada   n\n708 Baker 8t \u2014 Woodrow J. Fletcher, Pastor\n9:45  Sunday School\n11:00 Worship Service\n7:30 p.m.\nEVANGELISTIC\nComing \u2014 Feb. 28\nEVANGELIST WATSON ARGUE JR. OF SEATTLE\nBETHEL FIRESIDE HOUR \u2014 4:00 P.M. CKLN\nFull (&a?pt I\n812 Stanley 8t. \u2014 Phone 1710\nSUNDAY SERVICES:\nSunday School and Bible Class\n9:45 a.m.\nWorship Service, 11:00 a.m.\nSubject: The Blood ot Christ\nEvening Service, 7:30 p.m.\nSubject: Baptism of the\nHoly Ghost.\nMID-WEBK SERVICES:\nTues., Prayer Service, 8:00 p.m.\nThurs., Bible Study, 8:00 p.m.\n'   EVERYONE WELCOME\nPastor: Arthur Ashford\nMmwti\n802 Baker St.   .\"\nRev. D. A. Butterfield, B.A.\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n'   t'\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangel Vespers\n(Junior Choir)\nTHURSDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Bible Study and\nPrayer\nlira. Gtyurrfj ri\nGUjrtat #rottttat\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\n,    Scientist, In Boston, Mass.\nSunday School \u2014 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00 a.m.\nSUBJECT \u2014\n\"80 UL\" '<\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily From 3 to 5 p.m.\nAll Cordially Welcome\nfirst laptifit\nMinister: PC. Imayoshi\n716 Stanley St., Phone 965-Y\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Church School;\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"WHO ARE THE\nBAPTIST*?\"\n7:30 p.m.-\"WHO'S YOUR     ....\nGOD?\"\n.  Senior Choir\nSinging. In the\n.  Evening Service.\nTHURSDAY, 8:00. p.m.: ,\nBible Study and Prayer\n\"Seek Ye the Lord While He\nMay Be Found\"\nLove Problems.\u00bb.\n(^W0iSettse^^^^^\nProblem GoiiW Be Hafipy\nown eye. and they'tre generally\ntoo big. The extent of our vision-is\nthe front garden with its neatly\ntrimmed Iawns(not*t;;thJs. lime of\nthe year, unfortunately) tnd its dor.\nlightful flowers\u2014the thjngs .which\nmake for our pleasure;: also,'the\nback yard with its garbage' cans\nwhere we discard the things unwanted or disused. A lite viewed in\nthis way ls pretty shallow, because\nit is an affair governed by, what I\nwant or what I do not want!\nWith everybody wanting this or\nthat, or not wanting thlg or that,\nit is understandable how that nothing can be run iiiv any way. Imagine a shop or factory being run according to the whims and fancies\nof every employee! The owner\nwould have a whale Of a time keeping his head and the business above\nwater. But that ls the way we wish\nto run the world. When every orie\nwants to run something, it does not\nrun at all. We once had one of those\n8-day clocks at home, which one\nday stopped working. We Boon discovered why! Everyone in the family was so fascinated by this new\nthing on the mahtlepiece that we\nwound it up whenever we thought\nfit to do so, The spring could not\nstand the strain! That ls what is\npartly wrong with the world In\nwhich we live. It cannot stand the\nstrain being exerted upon it by all\nthe varying desires ot men and nations, sO every now and again it\nbreaks, ahd then we have trouble.\nAt home, we decided, or at least\nfather decided (and that was lawta\nthose days), that no one would\ntouch the clock except father\u2014that\nwas his business; with the result\nthat it never went back to the watch\nmaker as long as I can remember.\nI am not suggesting for one moment that it is our duty, as far as\nthis world is concerned, that we\nmust sit down and let Father do it\nBut I am suggesting that we recognize authority. When v& do that it\nis remarkable the way things work\nout. When we do things the way we\nwant to, or do hot want to, generally something goes wrong.     ,\nEven a light hearted fellow b_ce\nsaid in a moment of seriousness (not\ntoo frequently his manner), the best\nlaid plans of mice and men ...\nastrayl Sounds familiar\u2014we have\nerred and strayed from Thy ways\nlike lost sheep! But who wants to be\na sheepl No, we would rather, be\na bull. Intent on doing our darn-\ndest, we push through life, \"or\ncharge through it, with very little\nthought for the Father's Business,\ntrying to get done what we, watft\nto 'do. Then the weak comes, and\nwonder what has hit us. We strain\nat a camel and catch a'fly\u2014generally batching it in the mouth and\ngetting it in the neck! Whereas a\nlittle serious thought woul6 soon\nbring us to the obvious conclusion\nthat our business is pretty poor\npickin's and His Business the only\nreal concern in Life.\nThree men get together and each\none has a plan how to do a piece\nof work. Naturally, each one of\nthem is'rightr-men always are, and\nso are women, that is part of our\ntrouble). They decide to try out\neach of the plans in turn to discover which one of them works the\nbest. Sound practice, but when\nnone of them works, they must\nstart all over again, if they are honest So it is with the world. Men\nhave been trying over and over\nagain to make a go of it, but their\nplans keep on breaking down, even\nthough some men are not honest\nenough to admit it This is our business and we are going to -nuv it,\nor else; and that is all we see and\nhear, or else ! I I We all have our\nlittle winders and take a poke at\nkeeping things going.\nOpen the Bible at the first page\nand read\u2014In the beginning God\ncreated . . . Until we get this fact\ninto our thick heads we are pretty\nhelpless, and our efforts pretty futile. Let God have His proper place\nin this world and in our lives anfl\nthis Business of Living will go better. Forget about our business and\nconsider His Business. When God\ngets His rights, we will get ours.\nT. L. LEADBEATER.\nBy JANI ATKINSON\nTOer\u00abr\\tr\u00abi..rW few-people in the\nworld, who are.sensible enough to\nlook ahead tnd consider a possible\nmarriage, Jn,the light of the future,\nthat It comes as something of a\nshock when someone actually,does'\nthta.'; ,Y'Y,Y.-\nThe'.person I have In mind Sat\nthe moment is a.young woman in\nher early twenties who is engaged\ntp a young man of the same age.\nThey do not plan' marriage for\nanother year-or so, ahd this seems\nto me very fortunate lpdeed. For\nshe has a problem, and the com;\nmonsense to recognize It, and, as'I\nsee it, her only chance of ever solving'it, is to take plenty ot time to\nthink It over in .the light of what\nher young man is lkie}y to do about\nIt, it being his problem first and\nhers second.\nHer statement' on the problem Is\nthis:\n'My fiance has lived all of his\nlife at home with, his parents, who\nare' now elderly but in fair health,\nhovering over him. They own their\nown home, have their own'income,\nand have three other children at\nhome who are older than my fiance,\nand two other members of the\nfamily who make their home there.\n'Allot the. family, dote on this\nman, I am engaged to. When anything is to be done,, or any of the\nfamily care to'go anywhere, It Is up\nto him to see that they ara taken\nwhere they want to go and called\nfor at the time they set Nothing\nIS ever said to me as to whether lt\nis convenient tor me or fits ln with\nour plans tor the evening.\nFirst, I would like to ask this\nthoughtful girl who seems able to\nlook at her situation realistically, if\nher fiance has the faintest Inkling\nhimself of the extent to which he is\napparently fled to his family? If he\ndoes have some realization ot this,\nand is at all an open-minded\nyoung man, she has, I would say, a\nfighting chance of working out with\nhim a reasonable plan for dealing\nwith his family after their marriage.\nIf this chap is truly in lbve with\nhis, girl; if he has the ability to\ngrow up; and if she'is diplomatic\nand skillful in making him see what\na mistake it would be for them to\nlive close by his family andfor him\nto continue the! kind of relationship\nwith them that he has always had,\nthe marriage should have a good\nchance of working out successfully.\nBut if, after a'reasonable period of\nconsideration and discussion he\nshows no.signs of changing his attitude, then I feel sure she had\nbetter let hilm go his own way. It\ntakes two reasonable people to\nmake a happy marriage; one cannot do it alone: \u25a0\n\u00a9tutrrtjirf\n%&>totfttu>r\n(Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nCanon W. J. Silverwood\nOrganist Mrs. J, Fraser, L.L.C.M.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Communion\n(All Organizations)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nSouth Slocan, 3:30 p.m.\n\u00a7aluatt0n Atmt-f\n513 Victoria Street\nLieut and Mrs. H. P. ThornhlH\nSUNDAY, Feb. 14th:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Directory and\nSunday School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation Meeting\nSPECIAL 8PEAKER\nSunday Evening\nLIEUTENANT JOHN BARR\nFrom Trail,\nPictured above are Mr .And Mrs. George Kinakin\nof Thrums: Mrs. Kinakin is the former Violet Markin,\ndaughter of Mr. and,Mrs. F. Markin and Mr. Kinakin\nis the son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Kinakin.\nThe wedding took place at Thrums and Glade.  \u25a0\nNot pictured are the bridesmaid, Violet GeVatoff,\nand best man, Fred Hoodicoff.\n(Dasal WfLMitL\nTJtaJricuL Tfoudut.\nRebekah Lodge Has   .\nSuccessful Sale\nKASLO\u2014Sunrise Rebekah Lodge\nNo. 62, held a successful bake sale\nIn charge were Mrs. H. E. Singe],\nMrs. O. McDougall and Mrs., T. H.\nHorner,\nSif, dhuuut (JOtutsdoA,\nIron-on Designs\nin Vibrant Colors\nv\nIRON-ON tiger lilies! No embroidery\u2014no- sewing\u2014no applique.\nEvery delicate petal looks hand-\npainted on linens. Picture the\nexotic color combination -r soft\norange and brown with green\nleaves! Iron on- washable fabric \u2014\ntablecloths, sheets, pillowcases,\napronS, blouses!\nJiffy! Iron on! Washable! Pattern\n883 has 12 color motifs: two, 6x6%;\ntwo 4x3%; four, 2^4x3%, and four\n2x2 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\ntor this pattern to Nelson Dally\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson,\nR C Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, and SIZE; your NAME\nand ADDRESS.\nSEND NOW for qur new 1054\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog\n\u2014the best ever! 79 embroidery, crochet, color-transfer, dressmaking\npatterns io send tor\u2014plus- 4 complete patterns printed in the book!\nIdeas tor gifts, bazaar sellers, fashions. Send,. 25c.\n12-20\nWRAP AND Tl-I\nYour gay wrap-on! It has so many\nuses in your wardrobe! Apron, sundress, housedress. Sew-easy \u2014 two\nmain pieces. Add belt, binding and\npretty applique flowers. Practical,\ntubbable and easy to iron. Make at\nleast two of these\u2014you need 'ein!\nPattern 0220: Misses' sizes 12, 14,\n16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes 3 yards\n35-inch fabric. Transfer included.\nSend THIRTY-JIVE CENTS (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE; NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER^\nSend your order .to MARIAN\nMARTIN, Care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B: C.\nFruitvale\nFRUITVALE\u2014Miss Frances Findlay of Marysville, is a guest of\nMrs. Gordon Grieve, Sr., for a few\ndays.\nMiss M. Jackson of Grand Forks\nhas been a guest of her niece, Mrs.\nFred Haines.\nFRUITVALE\u2014Circle Two of St.\nPaul's United Women's Auxiliary\nlaid plans for their Valentine Tea\nat a meeting at the home of Mrs.\nFrank Halifax.\nDiscussion of their part in the\nCircle's Talent Tea in March was\nheld.\nMore material was distributed for\nthe Spring sale in April.\nAfter the business period members did .bazaar sewing.\nNelson\nSocial\nPHONE 144\nCIRCLE MEETING . . . Falrview\nCircle of St. Paul's United Church\nmet Wednesday evening at the\nhome of Mrs. A. Dingwall, Latimer\nStreet. Mrs. J. A. McDonnell who\nis leaving Nelson to make her home\nin Edmonton was presented with a\nfarewell gift.\n'   *   \u2022   \u2022\nTO GRAND FORKS .. . Miss\nDorothy Bay and Miss Doreen\nColeman are spending the weekend\nwith 'their parents in Grand Forks.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. John Bonderove of\nCanyon, B. C. announce the engagement of their only daughter,\nMarie Jane to Donald. West Strang,\neldest son of Mr. and Mrs. S. K.\nStrang, 1500-17 Ave., N.W., Cal-\ngai-y, Alberta. The wedding will\ntake place on March 6, 1954, at\nCreston B- C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, FEB. 13,1954 \u2014 I\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR\u2014Mr. and Mrs. F. Biddle-\ncombe and Lynda of Kimberley\nwere guests of Mrs. G. S. Wilson.\nMrs. P. A.' Rohde is in Nelson\nfor a few days, guest of Mr. and\nMrs. Earl Wilson.\nPHONE  144  FOR   CLASSIFIED\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Mrs. Glen A.\nEmory is in Vancouver visiting\nrelatives.\nAndrew Schnaebele is at the Mineral King Mines, Windermere.\nMrs. S. D. Dickson is in Vancouver on. business.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. McDonaugh\nwere Nelson visitors at the home\nof the latter's mother, Mrs. C.\nTrozzo.\nMr. and Mrs. K. Ono were Nelson\nvisitors.\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Donaldson\nand son -of Calgary are visiting Mrs.\nDonaldson'? brothers, Eric and\nHarry Olson and sister Mrs. Lillian\nBerggren and family, Eric, Elian,\nEna and Carl.\nMiss Pauline Knert of Nelosn was\na New Denver visitor.\nA. W. Emory who visited his son\nand daughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs.\nGlen A. Emory and family for a\nmonth has left for his home in\nStar City, Sask.\nRobert Wardrobe who visited Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Schnebele and daughter Sharon, has. left for Edmonton\nwhere he will join the RCAF.\nDouglas R. Godfrey was a Nelson\nvisitor.\nMr. and Mrs. I. Thomas Steenhotf\nhave returned from Spokane.\nHarry T. Butler has left for Vancouver and Victoria, where he will\nvisit relatives.    ,\nMr. and Mrs. Andrew Schnaebele\nand daughter were Nakusp visitors\nat the home of their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. W.\nWardrobe.\nMr.' and Mrs. Frank Trozzo of\nNelson were guest of the former's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. J. H. McDonaugh arid family\nand Mrs. Trozzo's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Murto.\nMr., and Mrs. J. A. Clarkson and\ntwo daughters were Nelson visitors\nguests of the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. H. Clarkson and brother Walter Clarkson.\nMr. and Mrs. William E. Rowe,\nDoreen and Terry of Nelson visited\nNew Denver friends, Mr. and Mrs.,\nh. R. Campbell.\n' Ernest Jenstn who visited friends\n'.n New Denver tor two weeks, has\nleft for his home in Kamloops.\nFpr Parents . . ,\nGood Grooming\nWise Discipline\nBy Garry Cleveland Myers, Ph.D.\nRegardless bf the family Income,\nthere ia muck to.be said in favor\nof the mother who requires certain\nstandards ot grooming from her\nfamily' for at least-one mealtime\nduring th'e.day,,., -\nIn a family of several small\ngrowing children, breakfast or an\noccasional lunch eaten at the kitchen table, may be defensible. It Is\nsimpler and may require less labor.\nBut, as a rule, this procedure tends\nto encourage considerattle laxity in\ndecorum and self-discipline, especially If it extends to most mealtimes\u2014and the more so, as,the children grow older and approach or\nenter high school.\nGROOMING REQUIREMENT\nWherever the children eat at\nhome, it ls*desirable that each shall\nappear at the table' with clean\nhands and face and combed hair.\nArid as soon as the child ls old\nenough to do this for himself, he\nshould be held fo pretty high standards. The rest of the family should\nnot have to wait for him-on this\naccount ,\"\nThere shoiild be effective penalties which only the offender will\nhave to pay, such as having to sit\nwithout food at a distance trom the\ntable-for a definite period for each\noffense, ln case lt has become\nchronic. Of course, Dad ean ease\nMother's job If, being a good ex-\nample himself, he supervises the\npreparation of the children: for\nmeals.\nIMPROPER  CLOTHING\nThere may come a time when a\nchild over 8 or 10 will want to appear even at the dining room table,\nin a sweat shirt pr, in hot weather,\nno shirt at all. While this may sometimes be desirable at an outdoor\npicnic, I doubt whether it ever\nshould be tolerated in th* home.\nIt costs nothing but effort to have\nan adequate and proper garment\nfor meals, and it surely contributes\nto the tone and morale of the family\ngroup. ,\nWhen your son says dress worit\nmatter when there's no company,\nrefuse to argue with him. Merely\nremind him ot the family rule sad\nenforce it. '' \u25a0\n1 Of. course, when the family with\nolder children sits down and talks\nthings over in a.kind of family\ncouncil, there usually arises the\nurge and' willingness to conform\nin such matters. Furthermore, older children may readily be led to\nchoose to dress up In their best for\ncertain dinner occasions as when lt\nis the birthday of one of the parents.\nPARENTS' APPEARANCE\nFathers who, on coming home\nfrom work with soiled hands and\nclqthes, groom themselves well before joining the family, and certainly before the evening meal,\ncontribute more than they know to\nthe cultural tone and morale of the\nfamily.\nWith regard to personal appearance, the husband who shaves each\nday. IS wise and considerate. Even\ntiny tots like best to caress their\ndaddy and play with him when he\nis.neat and well groomed.'\nNot for style or being stuck-up,\nbut for the comfort and wel^belng\nof all the family group, we parents\ncan afford to discipline ourselves\nand Our growipg children on proper grooming for meals.\nSpring\nConcert\nNext Fridffdy\nFeb, i^th\nNELSON CIVIC CHOIR\nTfje\nNelion High School\nHome Economics\ni      Class\nROOM PUNNING\nCOMPETITION\nHts Now Started       '\nSee Our Window for the\nFirst Entry   .\nIfV\n\u25a0)'\u25a0&:\n8IMPLE TEST\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Dr. Charles\nJohnson, testifying in a court case,\nsuggested an unorthodox test for\ndrunkenness. He said: \"Pinch the\nheels. Lack of pain is a sign of alcoholism.\" -   ...\nKeep in Trim . .':'.;\nSlim for Easier\/\nWatch Calories\nBy IDA  JEAN  KAIN\nIt's a fascinating tact that you\ncan predict the date at which you\ncan expect to be down to healthy\nnormal weight and be able to slip\ninto your perfect size dress. Start\ncurbing calories at once and you\ncan be 10 pounds lighter before\nthe first day of spring ... and you\ncan reduce 20 pounds by Easter.\nIt's all done with calories subtraction. Even though yon have\nonly a nodding acquaintance with\ncalories, and ara not expert-at\narithmetic, it Isn't difficult to get\nth* score. Calories are not tome-\nthing to eat They are only a measure\u2014the measure of the fuel value\ncontained la food, and a measure\nfor th* amount of energy yon\nspend. A certain nfunber of' dlorles\nar* required to maintain your present weight, depending on your activity. The average woman doing\nsedentary work or light housework\nrequires approximately W00 oal.\nories a day; and MOO a day for\nmoderate physical activity. Then\nIs never any doubt as to whether\nyou are getting enough calories or\ntoo many . . . til* scales are the\nhighest authority. \u2022' -\nONLY ONE WAY\nIf you want to lose exoess.pounds,\nthere Is only one way to do it-hum\nthose stored calories for part of\nyour energy needs. The most effie-\nlent way to do this is to cut calories\n\u2014call it dieting.\nOn a 1000 to 1200 calorie diet you\ncan lose 2 pounds a week. (An overweight man can reduce at a satisfactory rate on 1400 calories.) Figure this way: The fuel value of a\npound of body fat Is 3500 calories\n. . . that number takes water content Into account. So if you normally use 2000 calories a day, and\nyour diet is restricted'to 1000 .\nbody fat will be burned to make\nup that deficit of 1000 calories a\nday, or 7000 a week. 3500 x 2\u20147000,\nwhich amounts to two pounds.\nTurn to the calendar and you'll\nsee that by losing two pounds a\nweek you could be 20 pounds lighter\nby Easter Sunday, which is April\n18. It's really quite exciting to\nknow that there is no guess work\nabout reducing, and that lt ls an\nexact science.\nHowever, even on a specific num.\nber of calories, chances are you\nwiH not lose exactly on schedule.\nThe unpredictable factor Is the\namount of water stored in the\ntissues, and whether your tissuds\ntend to retain water or to release\nit at the start of a diet Regardless\nof Individual variations however,\nin the long run, you will average\nclos* to the two pound a week\nrate of weight loss.\nIt helps to chart your predicted\nweight loss, and parallel this graph\nby plotting in your actual week\nby week loss,. That's tomorrow's\nstory. i\n,:.\u00bb.\n'\u25a0\u25a0' i\n*IC ;\nli,.\n\u25a0Mi\n<r\" _\nAlexander Pushkin, the Russian.,.\npoet published bis first vers* ini **S|\n1814, when he was 15 years old.     !>\"* I\nENGLAND\nFRANCE\nHOUAND\nNIEUW AMSTERDAM\nMighty flagship ol the (Int. will) <\n- acres ol decks for sports int relaxation, swimming-pools, shops,\ncinema, night clubs, gymnasium,\nsolarium, sumptuous salons.\nRegular sailing!! from Raw York to -\nSOUTHAMPTO N.E HAVRE-ROrlERDAM\nby NIEUW AMSTERDAM, MAASDAM\nand RYNDAM ... Orreet to JOTTER-\nDAM J* deluxe on*-ela\u00abs'motor-twlijs\n\"IESTERDAM and N0ORDAM. Monthly\nnOBHj .IRELAND, by tho\nI\nt et* M|li le siaclous lining stoat\nIs attained on Hollarid-Amerlca Lino\nshlps-with their centuries-seasoned -\nheritage of seamanship. Immaculate\nthlpkeeplng, warm hospitality,\nfriendly, courteous service, and\n<ai.it Continental cuisine..\nRYNDAM-MAASDAM\nCelebrated twin thriftllners, completely air-conditioned. Smart, Sleek,\nmodern-featuring virtual run-of-shlp\nprlvllegesfortourlatelasspassengers.\n\u25a0 Speclol Sailing from. MONTREAL\nRYNDAM-JUNE 19\nB91'Burrard Street,-Vancouver 1, B.C., Pacific .431\nOffices also In Montreal, Toronto and Winnipeg.\nTo EUROPE by, Netherlands Government Vessels\nY\n.\nlow fores. Hlglt standards of Dutch seamen-\nFrom Halifax direct te Rotterdam! Waterman\nMar. Hi Groote Beer Apr. 9i Zulder-ruls Apr.\nship, cleanliness and 22. From Quebec td Southampton, and Rot-\ntraditional frlondll- terdami Groote Beer Apr.'SOj zulderkmls May\nness.'Ample room for 13 slops also at Le Havre. From Haw York to\nrecreation and fun. Southampton and Rotterdam. Creole Beer Mar.\nGood, plentiful menu. 17, Waterman Apr. 5.      -\ndirectorate-General of Shipping (Mlnlstrle van Vorkoer en Waterstaat)\nTho Hague, Tho Netherlands. Holland-America Line, Agents.\n . __.  \u25a0\n'\u25a0\u25a0!-..\u25a0\"'\u25a0. .\\,     .   ... -.;   \u2022 ...\n\"\n___&\n ,!.- -    -1.1\"-\"-.\nV6(5M\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, FEB. 13,1954\nATTRACTIVE CRA-.BROOK HOME is this of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Osborne, 517\n11th Avenue, in the fast-growing South section of the growing city.\n  * \u2014Daily News photo.\nSHALLOW SHELF\nBATHROOM AID\np'-rE Storage requirements should be\nconsidered before installing new\nit cupboard space in remodelled bathrooms.\nEveryone who has fumbled ln\n-cluttered recesses will agree that\n-,,-most bathroom cupboards are too\nsmall and two deep. Shallower\nshelving (three inches ls ample)\nbut more of it, would add greatly\nto the convenience of your bath-\nrqom layout.\nWhy not Install a plywood cupboard, right up to the celling over\nthe hand basin, with a recess for\nmirror and lights?\nAt the same time, the space between *the floor and the basin can\nbe efficiently utilized for storage\nof towels, bath mats, bathroom,\nscales, etc.\nBurlington   House   in   London,\nhome of the Royal Academy, was\n.'. completed ln 1.68.\nFor Frlerdly and Efficient\nPlumbing\nAND\nHeating Service\nFRED WELSH & SON LTD.\nPhone 1748 321 Baker 8t\nHome Workshop\nPattern Service\nDOUBLE  DUTY BIRD FEEDER\nAND   WEATHERVANE\nOne of the happiest families I\nknow are the Browns, down the\nroad from my place in the country.\nThey are bird addicts. Their back\nyard, trees and garage are chock-\na-block with bird houses and bird\nbaths. A visitor to their home will\nfind his time being used up with\nlong discussions on the habits of\nthe scarlet tanagers, blue jays,\nsparrows, wood thrush, robins' and\norioles\u2014Just to name a few, Each\nmember of the family from mother\ndown to toddler, Joan, 2 years old,\nhas his or her own pet bird. Each\none feeds his special charge, and\nthey all chip ln to care for the numerous passersby.\nI was surprised to learn recently\nListen To Our Newscast Over CKLN 7:30-7:45 DAILY\nTHE\nK. W. DIXON CO.\n\"It Will Pay You to Obtain Our Prices\"\n701 FRONT ST. 'PHONE 1704\n*-,\n;\u25a0,\nCANADIAN FAIRBANKS MORSE\nAutomatic Electric\nCELLAR\nBe ready for those spring\nthaws, do not have a flooded\ncellar this year. Install a\nfully automatic cellar drainer now. Will pump up to\n4200 gallons bf water per\nhour.\nWE GUARANTEE YOU A DRY\nBASEMENT. SEE US TODAY\nFOR FREE ESTIMATE.\nBennetts Ltd.\n324 Vernon St.\nPhone 593\nthat bird watching and bird attracting, I suppose you'd call it, ls a fast-\ngrowing bobby. The symphony set\nup by hordes of feathered friends\noutside of your kitchen window ls\nhard to beat, according to enthusiasts I've heard. Listening to birds\ncheep-cheep back and forth, each\nwith Its own song, one can almost\nbelieve that they are engaging ln\nconversation.\nOnly recently, for example, I\nread where a couple of scientists\na.t Ohio University, were recording bird conversations by picking\nup their chirping ln reflectors that\nare capable of transmitting ultrasonic sounds to written Impulses\nThe result of their fascinating work\nIs an actual record of bird language, showing gradations of decibels, which are uniform for birds\nOf the same species.\nThis is not an essay on ornithology, however, merely' an introduction to the real project at hand-\nmaking your own combination bird\nfeeder-weathervane, shown here.\nThis,, you will admit, is an attrac\ntlve and unique bird feeder which\nshould lure birds by the scores. It\nlooks artistic, yet lt doesnt require\nany particular talent on your part\nto make lt. Nor does lt require carpentry skill either,\nA Woodworking' Pattern Is now\navailable v^hlch takes the mystery\nout of carpentry and will enable\nyou to make one of these unique\nbird feeders in a few hours, using\nan old grocery box or similar scrap\nwood.\nPatterns are provided which you\ntrace directly on the wood to give\nyou the sfeape for'each piece; Then,\nyou simply cut them with an ordinary coping saw, and assemble, according to the easy-to-understand\nInstructions.\nYou can turn this into a family\nproject One of you trace and cut,\nanother assemble, and a third paint.\nThat way you'll all get a kick out\nof contributing to this back yard\nproject. Woodworking projects such\nas this are fine family welders. And,\nincidentally, If you're really ambitious ahd have the time, you can\nbuild up a neat business selling\nthese.\nThe idea of this double-duty\nfeeder, Is that the wind will turn\nit so as to provide shelter, for the\nbirds.\nOnce you've started the bird\nhouse hobby, you'll probably want\nto expand. Patterns are available\nfor six different types of bird\nhouses from simple wren houses to\nan elaborate 18-room house for\nmartins.\nFor this gateway to a double hobby, send 35c in coin or money order (no stamps please) for Pattern\nNo. 9 to Pattern Dept, Nelson Dally\nNews, Qulnn Lumber & Builders\nSupply Co., 280 Maitland Street,\nLondon, Ont, and 50c additional for\nprofusely illustrated color catalogue\nof over 180 Woodworking Projects.\nj\/tiL Mpi^tL cKofTUL\n\u25a0XPERT ON OHOrPIN | who died In 1018, playyed an Cho-,\nMoris Rosenthal, Polish pianist, | pin's compositions from memory, {;\n.mlm\n875 SQ. FT.\n9486 CU. FT.\nThis charming heme with Ita\ntrellises, planting boxes, and\noverhang roof has a dlstlnotlva\nbeauty all Ita own. Conservation of space la especially evident In this design to keep high\nbuilding coats down. The kitchen haa every possible convenience built Into a step-saving\narrangement The living and\ndining area features a cosy fire-\nplaoe. The two large bedrooms\neaoh have liberal closet space\nand plenty of windows.\nThese plans are published for the Interest and Information value only. The Dally Newa cannot\naupply detailed blueprints or specifications, Those contemplating building homes should consult\na looal architect, designer or builder.\nGive Ihe Old Homestead a New Look\nPRETTYINQ UP\nLONDON (CPX \u2014 The Women's\nVoluntary Services Is asking the\nWomen's Institute to contribute\nplants, shrubs and trees for east\ncoast' gardens that were ruined in\nfloods last winter.\nButte, Mont, produces about one-\nthird of the entire eopper output of\nthe United States.\nIn almost every family the day\nInevitably comes When an age-old\nconflict arises. iTho young folk, always full of new Ideas, went to\nmove along with the times. Mom\nand Dad, with memories the youngsters know nothing bf, and ties they\ndon't want to break, have a love\nfor the old, familiar things.\nIn nothing ls this so evident as ln\nthe home Itself. With communities\nof beautiful, new homes, designated\nln ths modern style, springing up\nln every city ln Canada, It's small\nwonder that tha children begin to\nfind homa pretty old-fashioned. But\nto the older folk, It's the home they\nbought when they were married,\nneighbors hava become old friends\nand It's a kind of nice place to live\nin.\nIt's a tough problem to solve, all\nright But, as in most controversies,\nthere's a compromise that will satisfy most of the wishes of both parties. In this case, why not let the\nold folks enjoy the home they love,\nbut give the youngsters a fresh interest in lt by giving the old house,\na new look.\nSo let's take a look at the old\nhouse. Sure, It's nice, but couldn't\nit ba improved quite a bit with\nsome renovation here and there?\nWhat's more, it is often much more\nfun re-plannlng your own home\nthan going out and buying a new-\nstyle house that somebody else has\nplanned. The kids will get a kick\nout of remodelling their own parte\nof tha house, too.\nTake, for Instance, the space below the stairs. Why, every new\nIjouso carries the tag \"Basement\ncan be finished to make first-class\nrecreation room.\" That's one of the\nthings tha young fry ls really sold\non. A place where they can kick\nup their heels without getting in\neveryone's hair.\nUpstairs, you can go to work on\nthat bric-a-brac with a hatchet. Get\nrid of the oak carving, substitute\nthe old wall-papering for more modern design, use color dynamics to\nachieve the modern look. Out front\nthere's that lovely, roomy old-fashioned veranda. But we dont ait out\nthere on rocking chairs any more.\nSo why not get rid of it substitute\na smart set of masonry steps that\nlook, neat and give you a lot more\ngarden too.\nThe kitchen could probably do\nwith some smartening up as well.\nThis ls where Mom comes Into the\npicture. She won't object to a properly planned kitehen with its neat\nrows of serviceable cupboards, stove\nrefrigerator and washing machine\nhandily loeated and a gleaming new\ndouble sink under the kitchen win.\ndow.\nShe spends so much of her working day at that sink it's worth\nsecond look, Shell probably like\none of the new combination models\nwith a deep tub for laundry and a\nshallow sink for general use. Fitted\nwith a new swivel type tap and a\nretractable rubber-hose spray attachment it can make life a whole\nlot easier for her.\nThen there's the bathroom. Don't\never kid yourself, nothing in the\nhouse dates like the bathroom. And\nIt's one room you want to be proud\nof when friends come to visit. Not\nonly that, but a modern bathroom,\nperhaps with a twin wash-basin set\nup, will make the house that much\nmore convenient and attractive for\nthe family.\nCALL\nUnited Trucking & Storage Ltd.\nSTANLEY ST., NELSON, B. C\nDA1LX FREIGHT SERVICE TO     ,\nFRUITVALE \u25a0 SALMO\nNELSON \u2022 CASTLEGAR . TRAIL .. ROSSLAND\nFINE  HARBOR\nHavana, capital of Cuba, has one\nof the finest natural harbors In the\nWestern Hemisphere.\nGOODBYE   TO  PUMPING\nMS,SOLVES   TREE   ROOTS\nELIMINATES   DIGGING\nDISSOLVES   GREASE\nNO   MORE   ODOR!:\nIT'S MODERN... REVOLUTIONARY \u2022\n4e more Mponilva unhealthy pumping end digging\nup of onpoolrt, upllc lon.i, Hi-pegi poali, grams\nrrapi and dogged line*.\nHera'i the moil rellabls arid krlsil method lo\nliquefy, dlitoUe end aapoalfy granta, sludge, hair,\ncloth and ether organic aolldi.\nThli madam -hamltal guarantee! quiet and \u2022_!- ,\ndeal re-iulri la 12 to 16 ham. NO SHUTDOWN\nol pool ar tank nmiiacy whlls chemical li working.\nS, 10. IS, SS. SO, and lot IS. CONMIN5M\n\u2022lit. Cam*., Sol. OS. I\u00ab. U.I. Pit, OS. hetftnt\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST        T.S. JEMSON PHONE 666\nWHAT YOU CAN\nDO AT HOME WITH\nDOUGLAS\nPLYWOOD\nYoa un eany Mrt tha homo planning Ideal you've\nadmired in your favorite magailnes, make smart\nfurniture, or remodel an unused attic or basement.\nIfs a pleasant spare-time pastime and you'll bo\nproud of tha professional-looking job* you do with\noaiy-to-work real-wood Sylvaply panels.\nDO-IT-YOURSELF or HAVE-IT-DONE you save either way I\nWith Sylvaply, most projectj ara well within tho\naverage man's ability to handle a hammer and bow\nand when you \"do-it-yourself\" you save money.\nWhen you  have-lt-done\" for you, you're still\nahead. Sylvaply's time and money saving qualities\nreduce costs too, when a professional carpenter or\ncontractor does-the job.\nSylvaply Is the real wood of a thousand uses.\nIts advantages are created advantages, engineered\nInto the material during manufacture to make it bettor\nthan wood has ever been before. Sylvaply lasts a\nhousetime, indoors or out!\n\u25a0\nVisit Handymen Headquarters In your neighborhood.\nWhether you're en old hand or e ^eglnner, your dealer\nwill be glad to give you advice mat can sava you money. Your\ndealer has Free How-To-Do-Itt for spare-time projects.\nHandy aires for those small fobs and\nrepairs . ,. Makes \"dolng-lt-ysurself\" eealer\nthan ever. You can now buy 'Take\nHome\" panels In more than 45 different\nsizes and thicknesses, from 12 by 36\nInches up. Carry them home or allp them In\nyour car trunk.  You'll find these handy\nToke Home panels at your dealer's, each\nclearly marked with Its thrifty price.\nOH I UGH.. EASY-TO-USE GENUINE WOOD PANELS\nSYLVAPLY Tr\" PLYWOOD\nSRVUKI UIMSH DIALIM tlOM COAST TO COAST 1\nMacMILUN & BLOEDEL LIMITED\nVANCOUVtt   CALOAST EOMOKTON W1NNIHG LONDON WMOSOI   TORONTO  MONTMAl QUEIEC 011\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\n602 Baker St. Phone 1180\n-  - -   -\n w&m\nBung GartmeU Takes JLead\n1^^ itinlris\ni'.The Standings:\nA Seotion       \u2022 P W L Pt,\n50. H. Om, Trail   5   4   1    4\nH. MacConnaohie, Van. .41\nR. E. Stone, Trail  5   3   3\nGeorge Lunn, Nanaimo 5   3   2\nBt Caldwell, Klmb  5   5!\nW. S. Ross, Trail ,  5   3   3    3\nJ, J, Cameron, Trail... 5   14    1\n;A.'M. ChMser, Trail.... 5   0   5    0\nB Section\n\u25a0SB. Cartmell, Van  5   5   0 ' 5\nlit Ryalls, Nelson   5   4   14\n;W. Hobbs, Kelowna .... 5   4   1    4\n;_. Tinling, Vancouver 5   3   3    2\nH. Jordon, Kimberley 53   33\nR, Ottem, Kamloops .5   14    1\nA, W. Pernor, Duncan 5   14    1\nj,, Valair, Vernon  5   14    1\nTRAIL\u2014Only one rink remained\nunbeaten after five rounds ot play\nIn the featured British Consols\nevent In the 59th annual B.C. Bonspiel Friday.\nBung Cartmell of Vancouver\nstretched his unbeaten streak, to\nfive games ln the fifth round Friday night by downing Lin Valair\nof Vernon 9-5. With five wins in\n-five starts, Cartmell has taken a\none-point lead over Milt Ryalls of\nNelson and Walter Hobbs of Kelowna, who have four wins each.\nRyalls, who entered the main\n\u2022vent Thursday after G. Neely\nMoore of Northern B.C. felled to\nappear, dropped his first game of\nthe seven-game round-robin series\nto Hobbs Friday night, Hobbs edged\nOut Ryalls 11-10 to Svenge a pre-\nJ0HN       v^\nNIAGARA    v\"^\nTalks about:\nEXTRA MONEY-\nwould it help you\nRIGHT NOW?\nThis is the time of the month\nwben bills come In bunches.\nOur own experience is that\nthe postman occasionally\nbrings a few too many . . .\nbut there just ian't enough in\nthe pay envelope to cover\nevery bill. If you are in the\nsame fix, then... how would\nyou like to get yours cleared\naway? Well, you can\u2014with a\nNiagara loan. We've a choice\nof loan plans at Niagara and\nmany people can borrow up\nto (1500. Payment plans,\nup to 24 months, give vou\ntune to get back on your feet.\nYour family is protected because your loan is covered by\na life-insurance policy, that\ncosts you not one penny extra. But that's not tha only\nplus you get at Niagara for.\nif you compare, you'll find\nthat on many amounts our\nrates are lower. .A Niagara\nloan is a dean-cut way of\nlooking after too many bills\ninstead.!just worrying about\nthem. If a Niagara loan would\nhelp you put your budget\nback in shape ... just drop\nin or call.\nIAGARA\n560 Baker Street\nPhone 1638\nvlous morning defeat at ihe hands\not fronti-runnlng Bung Cartmell. -\nFred Tinling of Vancouver and\nHarold Jordon are out of the running with \u25a0 third place position of\ntwo wins and three losses each.\nWhile Cartmell Is leading B Section, Otto QUI of Trail and Harry\nMacConnaohie of Vancouver are\ndeadlocked for the leadership in A\nseotion of the event. The strong\n\u25a0MacConnachle foursome of Vancouver held the leadership going\nInto the fifth round but dropped a\n13-4 game to Gill, who moved back\nInto a tie at MacConnachle's expense.\nGill dropped his first game of\nthe event ln the afternoon to George\nLunn of Nanaimo. Lunn, a former\nFlin Flon curler, stayed in,contention for the A Section title when\nhe defeated Scotty Ross of Trail 5-7\nin a 13-end night game.\nLunn is currently deadlocked\nwith Reg Stone of Trail and Alex\nCaldwell of Kimberley for the\nrunner-up position in A Section and\nwith the final two rounds on tap\ntoday, the possibility of a tie in A\nSection became more evident after\nthe night rounds.\nWhile games ln B Section were\ncompleted In the required 12-ends.\ntwo games were forced to the extra\nend rin the A Section fifth round.\nThese included Lunn's win over\nScotty Ross with Lunn winning that\ngame in the extra end on a roll oft\na Ross rock and coming to res. On\nthe four-foot circle to count one.\nIt was a beautiful shot by Lunn,\nwho displayed experience and a\nsteady set of nerves in defeating\nRoss. a\nThe second 13-end game came in\nthe battle between Johnny Cameron\nof Trail and Alex Caldwell of Kimberley. \u2022 Caldwell won the game\n11-10 over Cameron, who went\ndown to his fourth defeat.\nVeteran Trail skip Chess Chesser\nhas yet to win a game despite some\nclose tries, Including his second\nround game to Otto Gill Thursday\nnight\nPros Upsef Pups\nWith Convincing,\n33-21 Victory\nThe Nelson Pros of the City Basketball League clipped the wings\nof the high-flying Notre Dame\nPups by romping to a convincing\n33-21 victory.\nThe league-leading Pups could\nnot untrack themselves at any time\nthroughout the game due to. constant checking.\nLeading the Pros to their upset\"\nwin was Bruce Gilbert, who consistently penettated the Pupa' loose\ndefence. Gilbert racked up 17\npoints. Also playing an outstanding*1\nrole for the Pros was Dave Butterfield, who supplied the other\n\"half of their one-two punch by\nbucketing 13 points.\nThe Pups' Gene Godderis fell off\nto eight points'\nMeNEIL OUT FOR\nTWO GAMES\nMONTREAL sCCP) - Montreal\nCanadiens announced Friday that\ngoalie Gerry McNeil, Injured ln\n\"Chicago Thursday night, will be\nout of the next two games and will\nbe replaced by Jacques Plante.\nGetting there is half the FUN!\nat \"THRIFT-SEASON\" Rates!\nThin season Is \"Thrift-Season\". . . so\nwhy not now experience the joy of going\nCunardf Whetheryou go to Britalnorthe\nContinent, your days aboard Gurnard's world-famed\nluxury linen will be days of absolute pleasure...\nfilled with the laughter, music, superb food, gracious\ncomfort and enchanted relaxation that have made\nthe name 'CUNARD' a byword in Ocean Travel.\nNext Sailings le Britain and Ihe Continent\nProm Hollta-i    hb._liM_r. .14,19,281 Apr.II\nfnm New YfnkiNfc. 17, I*, UiMw.8, IS, II, 1\u00bb\nSs* Yeer local Travel Ajetit-No One Can Serve Too letter\nI Cunard Line\nHead Offiee: 626 West Pender Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nLamp Lighter\nBill Haldane\nHeads Scoring'\nAlthough big Les Lilley of the\nKimberley Dynamiters had catapulted from sixth place In the scoring\nrace to first with his phenomenal\nperformance ot five goals and three\nassists tn bne game, BUI Haldane\nof the Nelson Maple Leafs has\nagain taken over as leader.\nHaldane by notching two goals\nand three assists In his last two\ngames regained the position and\nnow holds a two and a half point\nlead. His 40 goals standing is high\nin that department. Red Tilson of\nSpokane Flyers has 38 goals to his\ncredit. -\nIn third place ln the race for the\ntitle Is Red Tilson just a scant one\nand a fraction points behind Lilley,\nand almost three points ahead of\nthe Smokies'' Mike Shabaga.\nTilson's 52 assists, is 10 better than\nMike Shabaga of the Trail Smoke\nEaters'. Shabaga is the only Smoke\nEater among the top 12 leaders in\nthe league.\nNelson's Eric Paterson has wrested the goal tending honors away\nfrom the Smoke Eaters Seth Martin.\nPaterson has a goals against record\nof 3.91 while the Flyers Gerry Fodey ls in second j>l_ce with an average of 4.14. Fodey leads in shutouts with four followed by Earl\nBetker of Kimberley with three.\nThe Dynamiters Gordon Andre\ncontinues to hold the distinction of\nbeing the league's bad man with a\ntotal of 107 minutes ln the sin bin.\nBernie Grebinsky of the Flyers has\nserved 00 minutes.\n8CORING LEADERS\nLeaders are listed ln order of\n\"adjusted total points\" based on\n44\/44 points- for Kimberley; 44\/38\npoints for Trail and Nelson; 44\/68\npoints for Sgokane to compensate\nfor the different total games played\nby each club. THese are unofficial\nfigures:\nG A TP ATP\nHaldane, Nelson  40 87 77 60.50\nLilley, Kimberley .... 32 26 58 58.00\nTilson, Spokane  36 92 88 56.94\nShabaga, Trail   27 42 60 54.21\nB. Mellor, Kimberley 10 34 B3VB3.00\nHyssop, Nelson   27 35 62 48.71\nAppleton,  Nelson  .... 28 32 60 47.14\nKavanaugh, Kim  20 27 47 47.00\nRamsden, Spokane .. 33 34 67 43.35\nMcNally, Spokane .. 31 38 67 43.35\nJojinston, Spokane .. 29 36 65 42.06\nScott, Spokane  25,38 63 40.47\nLarson, Kimberley .. 18 22 40 40.00\nMOSCOW (AP) - The Czech\nnational hockey team upset the\nRussian All-Stars 5-8 Friday night\nin a televised match.\nVictories by eastern European\nspotrts teams are rare ln Moscow.\nB.C. Bonspiel Results\nB.C. CHAMPIONSHIP\n\u2022  Second round (A Section)!\nO, H. GUI, Trail, 11, A. M. Chesser,\nTrail, 10 (13 ends);\n.W\/Si'Ross, Trail, lj, J. J, Cameron, Trail, 10 (18 ends);\nR. E. Stone, Trail, 8, G. Lunn,\nNanaimo; 6;\nH. MacConnachle, Vancouver, 11,\nA. R;'Caldwell, Kimberley, 8.\n(B Seotion): \\\nB. Cartmell, Vancouver, 10, R.'\nOttem, Kamloops, 4;\nW. Hobbs, Kelowna, 10, F. Tinling, Vancouver, t;\nH. Jordon, Kimberley, 12, A. W.\nPanzor, \"Duncan, 4;\nM. B. Ryalls, Nelson, 11, L. Valair, Vernon, 4.\nThird round (A Section);\nG. Lunn, Nanaimo, 10, A, R. Caldwell. Kimberley, 8 (13 ends);\nH. MacConachle, Vancouver, 10,\nR. E. Stone, Trail, !;\nO. H. GiU, Trail, 11, J. J. Cameron, Trail, 10 (-3 ends);\nW. S. Ross, Trail, 15, A. M. Chesser, Trail, 14.\n(B Section);\nM. B. Ryalls, Nelson, 9, A. W.\nPanzor, Duncan, 5;\nB. Valair, Vernon, 6, H. Jordon,\nKimberley, 5 (13 ends);,\nB. Cartmell, Vancouver, 7, W.\nHobbs, Kelowna, 5;\nR, Ottem, Kamloops, 10, F. Tinling, Vancouver, 8.\nFourth round (A SeotlJn)!\nH. MacConnachle, Vancouver, S\u00b1\nW. S. Ross, Trail, 8 (13 ends);\nG. Lunn, Nanaimo, 10, O. H. Gill.\nTrail, 9;\nA. R, Caldwell, Kimberley, 8, A.\nM. Chesser, Trail, 7;.\nR. E. Stone, Trail, 11, J. J. Cameron, Trail, 10.\n(B Seotion);\nF. Tinling, Vancouver, 8, L. Valair, Vernon, 6;\nB. Cartmell, Vancouver, 10, A. W.\nPanzor, Duncan, 7;\nR. Ottem, Kamloops, 7, M. B.\nRyalls, Nelson, 11;\nW. Hobbs, Kamloops, 9, H. Jordon, Kimberley, 8.\nRound five (A 8eetlon)i\nR. E. Stone, Trail, 13, A. M. Chesser, Trail, 8;\nG. Lunn, Nanaimo, 8, W. S. Ross,\nTrail, 7 (13 ends);\nA. R. Caldwell, Kimberley, 11,\nJ. J. Cameron, Trail, 10;\nO. H. GUI, Trail, 12, H. MacConnachle, Vancouver, 4.\n(B Section;)\nH. Jordon, Kimberley, .6, R. Ottem.\nKamloops, 4;\nF. Tinling, Vancouver, 10, A. W.\nPanzor, Duncan, 7;\nW. Hobbs, Kelowna, 11, M. B.\nRyalls, Nelson. 10;\nNHL Scoring Leaders\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanding: Detroit, won 30, lost 13,\ntied 10-70 points.\nPoints; Howe, Detroit, 60.\nGosls: Richard, Montreal, 32.\nAssists: Hdwe, Detroit, 37.\nPenaltTes: Harvey, Montreal, 96\nminutes.\nShutouts: Lumley, Toronto, and\nSawchuk, Detroit, nine.\nB. Cartmell, Vancouver, 9, L. Va>\nlair, Vernon, 8. .\nChampionship draws for 8 a.m.\nSaturday: ,'\"\nRound 6 (A Section):\nChesser vs Lunn; Cameron vs\nMacConnachle; Ross vs Stone; Gill\nvs Caldwell.\n(B Seotion).:     . -\nOttem vs Panior; Hobbs vs Valair; Tinling vs Jordon; Cartmell vs\nRyays.\nDONALD MoeDONALD\nTROPHY\nRound 1\nR. Patterson, Taber, 6, R. Bainbridge, Trill, 7;\nJ. D. Rae, Trail, 8, V. killeen.\nNelson, 7;\n$ H. Wright, Trail, 10, A. Crichton, Trail, 8;' '   ,\nJ. Draper, Trail, 9, G. Lemoel,\nTrail, 5;\nJ. H. Morris, Trail, 10, T- W.\nMathleson, Trail, 9.\nRound 2\nH, Farenholtz, Nelson, 13, J. Cushner, Trail, 3;\nR. McGhle, Trail, 10, M. Gojdon,\nTrail, 5;\nS. Gould, Trail, 9, P. F. Mclntyre,\nTrail, 8;\nA. Robb, Trail, 7, L. Landuccl,\nTrail, 8;\nJ. Strachan, Trail, 11, W. Forrest,\nTrail, 7;\nR. K. Dunlop, Trail, 10, G. Ortner,\nTrail, 8;\nD. Meaklns, Nelson, 9\" C. Bell,\nCastlegar, 5;\nT. D'Amour, Trail, 1, C. E. MacKinnon, Cranbrook, 0 (default);\nR. Lyon, Trail, 8, T. A. Rice, Trail,\n6.\nRound 3\nJ. D. Rae, Trail, 8, R. Patterson,\nTaber, 6;\nJ. Draper, Trail, 10, C. H. Wright,\nTrail, 5;\nJ. D. Rae, TraU, 9, R. Lyon,* 8;\nPRESIDENT ALEX B. ROSS\nRound 1\nR: P. Dockerill, Trail, V>, W. Rae,\nTrail, 8;\nE. Todd, TraU, 10, C. D. Stuart,\nTraU, 7;\nA. Albo, Rossland, 9, A. Stevenson, Trail, 8;\nN. S. \"Bentley, Trail, 9, T. H. Yolland, Rossland, 7;\nE. Murdoch, Trail, 8, H. T. Beckett, Trail, 5;\nA. B. Ross, Trail, 10, W. Irvine,\nTrail, 3.\nRound 2\nR. P. DockorlU, Trail, 9, E. A.\nTodd, Trail, 7;\nA. Albo, Rossland, 9, N. S. Bentley, Trail, 6;\nA. B. Ross, Trail, 12, E. Murdoch,\nTrail, 6;\nJ. Cushner, Trail, 11, M. Gordon,\nTrail, 5.\nALL-COMERS CUP\nRound 3\nR. K. Dunlop, Trail, 8, A. B. Roes,\nTraU, 8;\nH. Farenholtz, Nelson, 10, S. Gray,\nTraU, 8; .   *\nD Meakins, Nelson, 9, A. Crichton, Trail, 4;\nT. H. Weldon, TraU, 12, O. S.\nSmithson, -TraU, 6, -\nFrom left to right are the winners of the Trail\nCup In the Kootenay Women's Bonspiel held In\nKimberley.   Mra.  R. Vause, -lead;   Mrs.: S.  Ure,\nsecond! Mra. I. Hanson, skip; Mrs. I. Lelth, third,\nall of Kimberley.\n-\u2022**=*  ^!*^;..:::i>.;::;';\/''            *\u25a0     *\u25a0*\n\u25a0\u25a0.>\u25a0-** $ *$&\u00bb$_      *.--\u25a0\u25a0                       ;\n\u25a0    & :'*    %,v\"t' y-- ']\n*'*   *_____f*^*_^Ilfi   'it^'''\n,*\u25a0      ,.   ,                   'v.'                          .-:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022-.;.<-\n*   __ *''-\u2022'               *      * '\n^s-^^'.'.'^-v ;   \u25a0        *\u25a0\u25a0', .*.\nt\nf\u00bb\n' 'J*'        ,   \u25a0    a-'.i$' :'\u25a0\nY'Y        . <\u25a0'\u25a0 ft-                        *\n\\ *\u25a0*\u2022\n*!> -\n'*, j \u25a0> Is\nf\n\u00a5&\u00a5Jt\nWW?J\nliru^j\n$ Jk-^v *\n'\nk\n'5^\/\u2122.3 WW\ni\n1 ' '*'\/             '\u25a0   r\nj.fj\nl\n||\n%jk.\u25a0'.;    ^ ,\n1 <v. m ^!^iim^IL\nMm\n*-W*\nj\u00a3\nli If\n\u2022 __B    n__p_l\n,       . ..'                 s^.    .\/\nTHlltlil?\nhW^*\u00bbm\u00bbw _, ,\nH__f__\u00a7f \"' i!\nMP*\nzif:.imffiffyif-:fMf\n*\n^>.    *-\nWatching Hugh \"Pop\" Batea, the offlelal referee at the bonspiel In Kimberley are from left\nto right} Mra. M. Macintosh, Mra. I. McLay, Mra.\nKay Hobden and Mra. M. Yaaouk of Kimberley,\nand Mra. M. Craig, Mra. E. Little, Mra. E. Me-\nEachetrn and Mrs. E. Eckmier of Nelaon.\n\u2014J. D. Daniel photoa.\nAL EUERBY\nAlthough Al Euerby has been\naway from the chores of refereelng\nhockey games for some time, it is\ndoubtful whether he has forgotten\nthe rules, Saturday night he can\nprove lt when he lines up with the\nNelson Old Timers to meet Trail\nOld Timers in the first ot a two-\ngame series.\nEuerby ls well known In Nelson\nsport circles having played hockey\nfor the Leafs as well as baseball.\nOn coming up from \"sand lot'\nhockey at Grand Forks Euegby in\nhis first game with the Leafs, made\na name for himself when he scored\nthe hat trick against Trail ln the\nLeague lid-lifter at Nelson on De\ncember 14, 1936.\nThe game will see many faces,\nonce familiar with the Trail Smoke\nEaters and the Nelson Maple Leafs,\nIf the amount of reserves means\nanything, Nelson should have the\nupper hand for they have two more\nplayers, but there mey be a few\nTrail players hiding out until game\ntime.\nNelson will have Jesse Seaby in\nthe nets with Len Bicknell, Leo\nAtwell, Al Euerby -and Ted Hicks\non defence. Making up the forward\nlines will be Stewie, Paterson, Walter Wait, Harold Chapman, Buzz\nAlgar, Buddy Hammond, John\nO'Genski, Frank O'Genski, SJan\nO'Genski, Johnny Arichuk, Johnny\nMarquis, Duke Hyssop and W. Cox,\nFor Trail lt will be Jimmy\nWolfe ln the nets with BUI Wad-\ndell, Jack Kwasnle, Jimmy Haight\nand Wes Walt on the bluellne. Up\nfront will be Gerry Wanless, Deacon\nWait, Curly Wheatley, Mike Buck-\nna, Dutch Singer, Tip Shires, Nick\nAndreashuk and Mickey Brennan.\nThe referees for the game will be\nJohnny Lang and George Crothers,\nMike Hofswtll\nTops Leaders\nWith 283 Marks\nMike HorSwill, with a .mark of\n283, topped the 12 senior boye to\ntake first place in the gymnastic\nleaders tests under the guidance ot\nEd Kelter,' recreational director;\nThe ^ests, which. Included work\non. the bars, rings, tumbling and\ntraiftpoline, called for a mark of\n240 to pass.\nOthers making the grade in order\nof finish were Earl Farenholtz, 278;\nDoug Farenholtz, 267; Richard Bon-\nderud, 259; Morris Donaldson, 258;\nBill Gibbon, 255.5; Fred Goldsbury,\n252.5; Wayne Eckstrom, 250; Ken\nPeerless, 249; Dick Parker, 245.5;\nVic Smith, 243.8, and Ron Busnack,\n241.\nEd Kelter reported the team of\nboxers due to travel to the United\nStates for a bout staged for television fans has been cancelled because of lack of sponsors.\nKelter said that plans were still\nunder way to have a home-and-\nhome boxing card with the Spokane boys. Tie first card wiU be\nheld in the first week of March.\nIt Is felt that much interest would\nbe stirred up if the Spokane and\nNelson boxers get together.\nBantam, Midget\nGames With Trail\nSet for Today\nMinor Hockey League fans will\nhave another chance to watch the\nyoungsters ln Nelson pitted against\nthose of Trail Saturday afternoon.\nA group of business men ln the\nSUver City will be bringing two\nteams over for games.\nThe teams are regular bantams\nand midgets with no reps chosen\nto bolster them. Parents have been\nurged to take this opportunity to\nwatch youngsters who are future\nplayera for senior teams.\nDuring MinSr Hockey Week, Nelson played host to three Trail teams\nin s home-and-home series.\nPILES that\nItch and Burn\nZf you now -suffer from tho Itching soreness ind burning pain of piles you cin b_\nhtlpfd.\nJust get a . package of Hem-Roid, an\nInternal pile treatment, .\u00abt any drug store\nand uh \u2022\u25a0 directed. You will bo pleased\nat how quickly your pile trouble It relieved.\nOnly 11.50 for tha big 60 tablet package.\n.If you 'ara.not 100% pleated after using\nHem-Roid 2 or S daya, at a teat aik for\nyour money back. Refund agreement by\nall drug storej.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, FEB. 13,1934 \u2014 7\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian Proas\nG   A Pts.'\nHowe, Detroit , 23   37 60\nRichard, Montreal   32  20 52\nLindsay, Detroit   18. 28 47\nGeoffrion, Montreal ....   23   21 46\nRelbel, Detroit     15   27 42\nKelly, Detroit...    14   28 42\nMosdell, Montreal    20   20 40\nLeafs Aim lor\nSecond place in\nKimberley\nW L T T A    Pet.\nKimberley 19 19 4 103 167   .072\nTrail      19 21 3 185 207 '..491\nNelson ....   21 23 2 216 214   .490\nSpokane    23 27 7 239 238   .431\nWhen the Nelson Leafs make\nthe long haul to the mining city\nSaturday to do battle with the Dynamiters they will be aiming at second place in the WIH League.       '\nWith heavy traffic in Hockey this\nweekend the Leafs could capture\nthe spot either one of two ways,\nfor Trail plays ln the Spokane Flyers' backyard on Saturday and Sunday.\nShould the Leafs win over Kimberley (and they declare they are\ngoing to) and the Smokies split with\nthe Flyers then the Leafs would\ntake over second with a .percentage of .503 to the Smokies' .499.\nShould tbe Leafs drop their game\nand the Smokies do likewise with\nboth theirs the'Leafs would hold a\ntlve point edge .485 to .480.\nCoach Willie Schmidt will be\ncarrying an almost complete team\nfor this game but it ls doubtful If\nall wUl see action. Jim Low* will\nbe unable to make the trip due to\nhis ankle injury which is expected\nto keep him out of action for a time\nyet.\nBoth Lee Hyssop and Buck Jones\nwill be malting the trip, but wUl\nmost likely sit on the sidelines.\nJones had the cast removed from\nhis ankle Thursday, but will be\nabout k week before seeing action.\nHyssop is still bothered with the\ngroin Injury suffered some time\nago. *\nSchmidt stated he would go along\nwith the seme lineup that dumped\nthe Flyers last Wednesday.\nJaycee, Slocan\nSeries Resume\nHere Sunday\nJaycee hockey dub of the Nelson\nCommercial Hockey League,; with\nan average of .500 so far this season,'\nwill pit their strength against the\nSlocan City team in the fourth\nmeeting, of the two clubs Sunday\nin the Civic Arena.\nTwice in Slocan the Jaycees have\nbeen defeated by narrow margins,\n5-4 and 3-2. The one game played\nln Nelson saw the Jaycees come out\non top 8-4. '\u25a0    ,\nEarlier this week the Jaycees\ntravelled to Salmo, where ttiey upset ths Salmo team 6-5.\nP. Fetterly wttl be between the\npipes for* the Jaycees, with Jack\nMorgan, George Nedelec and Fred\nBoates on defence. Out front the\nJaycees will have B1U Mclvor, Bob\nPickering, Jack Duck, Gordle Pickering, G. Olson, K. McGregor and\nH. Gay,\nThe Slocan City lineup is unknown at this time but the Jaycees\ncen be assured of tough competition.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nSaskatoon 3, Edmonton 4\nWESTERN JUNIOR\nLethbridge 3, Regina t\nMedicine Hat 6, Calgary I\nGENERAL\nSKATING\nTODAY\n10 to 11:45 a.m.\n{\nI\ns\n.\nFor  Ouaranteed\nMarfak Lubrication\nPHONE 75\nMechanical Repilre by\nFactory Trained   Meehanloa\nOpp. Pott Offiee on Vernon\nBudget Plan Available on All\nSales and Service\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nADULT SKATING\nSUNDAY\n3:00 to 5:00\nTONIGHT\nCIVIC CENTRE ARENA\n8:00 p.m.\nTrail Old Timerf\nvs\nNelson Old Timers\nTICKETS ON SALE TODAY\nKootenay Stationers, 10 to 3 p.m. \u2014 Clvlo Centre, 7:13 p.m. On\n'\n1951 Monarch\nExcellent Condition.\nRadio \u2014 Sun Visor\nOverdrive \u2014 New KUbber.\nLOW PIVQE\n1950 DODGE SEDAN\nBeautiful Metallic Green.\n1948 DODGE 4-DOOR\nCompletely Beconditioned.\nj    $1000.00\n1951 AUSTIN SEDAN\n$1025.00\n1952 ANGLIA\nLow Mileage. \u2014 $725.00\n1948 FORD Vi\nPlymouth\nLow Mileage.\nIdeal Family Car.\n1951 DODGE\nBUSINESS COUPE\n1948 DODGE\n5-PASSENGER COUPE\n$950,00\n1938 PONTIAC\n$375,00\n1941 FARGO PANEL\nTON EXPRESS\n8EE THE ABOVE AT\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\n503 Ver.non St. \u2014 Opposite Post Office\nPHONE   75\ny\ny\n.:\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ' \u25a0 .-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022;\u25a0   \u25a0 \u201e -if.\n.   ....., : '\u25a0. ..y .\u2022\u25a0\/;\u25a0; ...:.\u25a0\n' ' \"       \u25a0        \u25a0' ' I ; '\u25a0        \u25a0'     --       *\u25a0 Tr'-fi\n VgZgWW?1'*  mm   -   'j. ^fw-'w,;^\nl&O\n8 \u2014 N-LSON DAILY NtVVS, SAiUKQAY, >W. ,13, 1954\nL\nIthisisthe\\ounq\nFOO\"__f\"MAN\nWHO'LL DO-\nAKNTHINSF\n#10,000.7\n%\n\u00bb*'       \u25a0Jr'(_v_5*(\n^BaOVa\nCr.\nWm\nI\n'am\nm\nTrtniiR READERS: SATURDAY, FEB. 13, IS THE LAST TIM E KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED. WILL APPEAR, THE\nORIGINATING SYNDICATORS OF KING ARE DISCONTINUI NG THE STRIP AFTER THAT DATE. A NEW COMIC STRIP,\n\"GRANDMA\" WILL TAKE ITS PLACE. ',\nwt><wm>moumpt>oitAKf>oi.icvsMSHi\nPERSON JO-PERSON WANT AW\nFOR QU\/CK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline tor Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\n_i ___\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nEWASUJK - To Mr. and Mrs.\nTony Ewasulk of Beaver Foils at\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital, Feb. 3, I\nM_.'^> ' - - \u25a0\nSHELLArD - To Mr. and Mra\nJames Shellard Of Fruitvale at Trail\nTadanac Hospital, Feb. 3, a son.\nALTON\u2014To. Mr. and. Mrs. Gerry\nAlton of Slocan. City,' atf Slocan'\nCommunity Hospital, New Denver,\nFebruary 4, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nSuperintendent\nHydro-Ppwer\nPlaint\nExperienced man to superintend operation, administration* and maintenance\n'of 7000 kilowatt hydro plant\nand assoctated tranmission\nlines and substations in\nNorthern Canada. Apply\nNATIONAL        '   *\nEMPLOYMENT OFFICES\nOrder 363\nAdvertising\nWe - have an opening in our\nadvertising department for a\nneat young man or woman capable of meeting the public. High\nSchool education preferred,\nAPPLY\nMR. KENNEDY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n\u2022Learn Hiairdressing\nWdmen Wanted \u2014 Greater\nOpportunity \u2014 Better Pay \u2014\nPleasant work. Catalogue free.\nWRITE\nMarvel Hairdressing Schools,\n326A 8th Avenue, Calgary.\nBranches: Winnipeg, Regina,\nSaskatoon and Edmonton.,\nCanada's National System.\nAGENTS WANTED\nREAL OPPORTUNITY FQR A\nhustler to sell Rawleigh Products\n_ in Nelson District. Write Raw-\nleighs. B1334, Winnipeg, Man.\nMACHINERY\n.-, RAMP\nBody and Fendei Works\nDistributors For.\nPhi! Wood hydraul-j nmsts\"and\nbodies for truck oi trailer 5\ntypea. 20 models 2 to 40 tons\ncapacity Pumps power take-\noffs.- universale, etc.\nPhone IDS       650 Josephine St\nNelson B.C.\nFOR SALE: 1 ONLY, NEW SQUIR-\n. rel Cage Planer\" Feed Roller for\nIcy Lumber, 8\"xl5\". Price 3150.\nCooke Lumber Co., Ltd. Greenwood. B. C.\nWINCHES: - FOR RUBBER TIRE\n, tractors, cats, trucks, etc Bayes\n' Equipt Co. Cranbrook. phone 00\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nTIRES. RUBBERS WON'T SLIP\non icel New discovery Instantly\nstops tires from skidding, slipping\non snow or icy roads Also fine\nfor rubber soles Gives better\nbrakes. Applied to treads with\nbrush or flysprayer. Harmless to\nrubber. Guaranteed satisfaction.\nOrder Non-Skid ,todayl Trial offer: 1 package $1 or 3 tor $2 Reliable Agency. Box 5-N-51-M. Regina, Sask.'\nOVERSTOCKED\nUsed Vacuum Cleaners \u2014 Elec-\ntrulux, Hoovers, Kirby's and\nothers\u2014as low as $8.95. One-\nyear guarantee. \u2014 .PHONE -1653.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; * new and used\nwire rope; pipes and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes, Atlas Iron & Metals' Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B. C. Phone PA-\nclfic 6357.\nFOR SALE: INTERNATIONAL\nCorrespondence Course, any subject, value $100. Price $50. See\nHarvey Holmes, Kootenay Laundry,\nFOR SALE: 150 YARDS CHICKEN\nwire, slightly used. 3 and 3 feet,\nalso one coal-Oil brooder for 500\nchicks, 3 feed containers. Apply\n4 _p.ni. at 415 Robson St., Nelson.\nD-6 GAT. SERIAL 5RS410. 1046\nModel, equipped with hydraulic\nangle dozer and Hyster logging\nwinch, operator's guard. This machine ls in,top condition. Phohe\n1749_,.\nAPPLICATIONS FOR ASSISTANT\nClub Steward will be received\nby Sec'y. Canadian Legion,\nBranch. 51, Nelson, B. C. Apply\nin own handwriting, stating age,\nmarital status, experience,. apd\nwages expected, i- .\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED ATT\nonce. Apply 612 Carbonate St.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nPOSTAGE STAMP COLL_CTIOftS\nand accumulations wanted. High\nprices paid. Send description. \u2014\nHarry Weiss, 5615 Monkland Ave.,\nMontreal 28.       .\nTOP PRICES PAID. BRING YOUR\nscrap copper, brass, lead, car batteries and radiators to Columbia\nTrading, 902 Front St, Nelson.\n-Y)R SALE: 1 -N__, 4,SI_E\nPlaner, 4-Knife Philbrlck Round\nHeads Complete. Trice $2200.\nCooke Lumber Co., Ltd. Greenwood, B. C.\nFOB RENT - SHOVELS. BACK-\nhoes, dragline, log loader bulldozers, compressors, etc Bayes\nEquipt Co., Cranbrook, phone 80\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOS-\u20141 PAIR BI-FOCAL GLASS,\nea, on Hall St. between Front St.\nand 713 Baker. Phone 759-X or\ncall.313. Baker St-\nLOSE RED SUEDE DBAW-\nstring purse along Ymir Road,\nMonday. Reward. Phone 829-R\noV' mail to 722 Third St.\nLOST: PAIR OF GLASSES IN\n. brown case, between Civic Centre\narid'CPR. Reward. Phone 1094-L.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nESTABLISHED CORNER GROC-\n< ery and confectionery tor sale.\nIndustrial payroll city. Near\nschool. Modern house attached,\nfor rent or sale. Box 8076, Nelson\nDally News.\nDAILY CROSSWQI.D\nACROSS\nL Diminish\nId color\nt. Weakens\n0. Capital of\nViet-Nam\n10. Inscribed\n12. More aged\n13. Helped\n14. Employ\n15. Ancient\n16. Paid -\n(abbr.)\n17. Tranquil\n20. Overseas\npostal,\nsymbol\n(Mil.)     \"\n21. Main male\nCharacter\u25a0\n22. Tiny\n23. Verdant\n26. Pursues.\none's way\nJS.OVgahoi\nhearing\n29.P}tcher\nwith a lid\n31. Simian\n32. Unhappl-\nnws\n,36. Smallest\nstate\n(abbr.)\n37. Pig pea\n88.Witty, .,-'J\nseizing\n49. Lamprey\nfisherman\ntl. A short,\nmoralizing\ntile.;,\"'.'\n43. Serious play\n44.Revokes..\n\"   legacy\n(lav)\n45. Graf\t\n46. Craggy hilla\ndown y,\n1. Not true\n3. Mountains\n<So.Am.),\n3. Female deer\n4.Goddess\nof healing\n(Norse)\n5. Seized and\nconsumed\n\u2022.Dry\n7. Seed vessel\n8. Walked .\n9. Period -\nof time\n11. Edible roots\nofthetaro\n15. Belonging\nto us\n18. Definite i\narticle\n19. Openings\n'to\n;    a\nbone\n(Zool.)\n20. Beard\nof rye\n.23. Equip,\nped\n_Lil-_   _'.*!..J\naisiau uaaaae\n\u2022_!_[_ _j_iaa mi\niJuirr.'S).;! i:i imu\nmaata ansn.\nIr-UULI  _____\n___U   DHQa\na_a_ *______\nm a___ __u\nsii.iiiiniii u:i_i_.\nh___ aaaa\nVtMtrdiy'i Aniwc.\n24. Long swords\n25. Before\n27. Sea eagle\n30. Method\n33. Live coal\n34. Bottoms\nof feet\n35. A stalk\n37. Sown\n(Her.)\n40. Fold over\n41. Obese\n42. Fuss\nVi\n\u00bb\n\u00ab\nm\nIS\nI\nz.\nM\n<z\ni44\n30\nU\n\u00ab\n3.\na\n'6L\n-s\nI\nMl\nDAILY CB-TIOQ-OTE\u2014Here's how tn work itt\nAXYDLBAAXR '\n-.' tt LONG FBI'LOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is use*\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's,; etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the' length and formation of the words its all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different. .\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOFTMC    TXOcVx-'C   TRUKO;    O.TSF\n_ R U 6 _ X    M R R,V T H    P TT I V O - H 2 O X J. .\nYesterday's Cryptoq-ote!   OTHER PEOPLE ARE QUITE\nDREADFUL.  THE ONLY POSSIBLE SOCIETY IS ONESELF\n-wsu-b.; .-.   \t\n\u2022wtMMt.se __t Faetime Irtsietit\n\u25a0   .\u00ab\u2022':     \"' '      \u25a0   ' -*\"'' -   '\u25a0'   '\"   '- \u00ab '   '\nINCU-ATOli (.00 EGGS), ICE\nCream cabinet, Webster paint\nspray outfit. J. P. Kelran, Long-\nbeach.\nWALNUT DRESSER, WINNIPEG\ncouch, good condition. Need space\nAccept reasonable offer. Phone\n1067-Y.\n\u2014\u2014\nFOR $AL\u00a3 MISCELLANEOUS\n' '   '   (Contlntledr~~--~rr^M\nCOMPLETE HOUSEHOLD FURN-\niture, chrome kitchen sets, cafe\ndiah.s, gas grill, Venetian blinds\nlike new, and effects. Ph. 845-L.\n1 BtiOROOM Slil'li., ELECTRIC,\nRangette, Kitchen Suite-,' Dua-\nTflietm Oil Burner- PhS1731-Y.\nPIPE -; FITTINGS - TUBES \u2014*.\nSpecial low prices Active Trading Co., 935 E Cordova Street,\nVancouver\u2022\nC.E M EN T BLOCiK UACjUnZ\nwith numerous attachments. Apply A. Anderson, Balfour, 'JS. C.I\nCariSS-riUNiON SALVE -r-.FOR\namazing relief. Your druggist sells\nCRESS,  v.'.- .-,'.-.    \u25a0.'\u25a0'\u25a0    ,..,.-.\nONE SINGER SEWING K_lCHlN_\",\none lawn mower. Apply Box 81,\nProcter, B, C;\n3'xO'   CAMP   BED MATTRESSES,\n.$2.50-- $4.50. Columbia Trading,'\n902 Ff ont St.    ' ' .   :; \u00bb   :\nM IC R O N 1 C HEARING AIDS \u2014\nWrite PO Box 39. Nelson;-B.C.   |\nONE DARK GREEN _IL_ t\u00bbACR\ncbair. Phone 718-Y. ;\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND:\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC,\nNEW GOOSE FEATHERS FOR\nsale. No wing or tail. Clean body\nfeathers. $2. per pound. P. S\nGross, Pincher Creek, Alta.\n1 PR. 750x20 DUAL TRUCK\nchains, $8.50. Columbia Trading,\n902 Front St., Nelson.\n(Continued ln Next Columni\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS-R.O.P.\nbred Leghorns, also R.O.P. sired\ngrades of Leghorns, New, Hampshires, Leghorn-Hampshire cross.\nBuy our chicks and follow our\ndirections how. to raise them-anp.\nkeep them for complete success.'\n29 years' experience with chicks\nand pou Itry. Apply our agfcrit,S\nNelson Farmers' Feed Supply,\nNelson, or Write direct to. New\nSiberia Farms, N. Balakshin,\nR.R. 3, Chilllwack, B.C.,\nCOW FOR SALE, _UE -6 tRlBSHS\nen in two weeks. Edna Babakalff,\nat Perry Siding, ?\u2022 c-\nCOW FOR SALE-JUST FRESH-'\nened. Good milker. Apply Peter J.\nVerigln, Slocan Park, B. C.   ii   B\nSOW FOR SALE. PHONE 602-Y.\n(Continued on  Next Page)\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON TIIE DIAL\n(Pacific Standard Time\n'    SATURDAY,\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Bob's; Inn\n7-30-News\n7:35\u2014Bob's Inn\n8:00\u2014News''      ' .\n8:10-rSportaNew\u00bb.-. :\n8:15 Hit's and Enuor.S\n8:30\u2014Bob's Inn .,\n9:00\u2014Western, Serenade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club   .\n9:45r-Stu Davis\n10:00\u2014Serenade\n10:30^StOry' Parade;-;'\n10:45-rNewsS ,,..\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club' 1' -.'-,,\n2:30\u2014Trapper's Festival .\n3:00\u2014News -   .\nFEBRUARY 13,1954\n3:10\u2014Old Country Sports\n8:30-^Sports College\n3:45\u2014Armdale Chorus\n4:00\u2014Now 1 Ask You\n4:30\u2014Curtain Melodies -\n5:00\u2014Report 'rom Pari Hill..\nf_05-Facillc News    ' ' \"\n5:15\u2014Al) Aboard .for Adventure\n5:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n6:00\u2014News\n6H>5-NHL Hotkey    \u25a0 -'\u2022   \u2022\n7:30-WIH_ at Klm_erley    \"  *\n9:30\u2014The Music Box\nlOiOO^-News\n10:15\u2014Dance Time\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup    '\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\nI2:0P-!NEWS Night Cap ':\nSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 4,954\n8:00\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n8:30\u2014T_is Is'.My g(ory\n9:00\u2014Overseas News \u25a0\n9:15\u2014News. \u25a0 \" '\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardened,,\n1015\u2014Just ^ry'.\n10:30\u2014Way bf the Spirit '   ,\n11:00\u2014Trinity Church Service\n12:00-N: Y   PhilhafiBbriie\n1:30\u2014Critirally Sneaking ,\n2K)0\u2014Fiddle Jpe's Yarna\n2:30\u2014Jake Slid the Kid\n3:00\u2014News  -'\n3:05\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:12\u2014Weather -\n3:15\u2014The Way of a Parent\n3:30\u2014The People's Church\n,3:45\u2014Musicale\n4KI0\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour i\n4:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n5:00\u2014Sunday Choral\n5:30^-Sunday Serenad.\n5:50\u2014News ..-','..'\n6:00\u2014Stage '54\n7:00-l!lew\u00bb\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review     >\n7:20\u2014Our Spioial Speaker       ',;\n7:30\u2014Questing I-me:\n8:0(K-The P1G.E.. Story\n\u25a08:80\u2014Musicale \u25a0\",. ,\n9:00\u2014Ford Theatre\n10:00^-News    .\n10:15\u2014The Forgotten Revolution-\n\u25a0 -aries'. \".\n10:30\u2014Serenade\n)':b0-\"NEWS\" Night Cap\n8:00\u2014Sunday. Morning Musio\n8.30\u2014Sunday Morning KedtaJ\n9:00\u2014BBC Newa.  '.\n9:15\u2014Question Box\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardnei;    .\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30-Way df the Spirit\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n1J:00\u2014N. Y. Symphony\n1:30\u2014Critically. Speaking\n2:00\u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarns\n2:30\u2014Jake arid ihe Kid\n3:00\u2014News'\n3:05--A     tbe tfeathenran\n3:12\u2014Weather Forecast\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time\nSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1954\n3:HH|-The Way of a Parent\n3:30\u2014Winnipeg Symphony\n4:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n5:00\u2014Sunday Chorale\n5:30\u2014Chamber Music\n6:00\u2014Stage 54\n7:00\u2014News   -\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Little Symphony Orchestra\n8:00-^Sympihony. Orchestra\n9:00\u2014Serenade\nt:30\u2014Vesper Hour\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014The Forgotten Revolution-\naries-,     ..     ' -\n10:30\u2014Metropolitan Opera Aud.\nMONDAY, FEBRUARY, 15, 1954\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014BreiKi-st Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited .\nB:00-BBC News    '\n8: is\u2014Aunt \"Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning  Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen    .\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken    ...-\n11:15\u2014Kindergnrte.i ol the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014Newa    -, ;-;-\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30-B.C   Barm-Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to Una\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:J0\u2014Xrans-Canad.   Matinee-\n3:15\u2014Brave, Voyage\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:15\u2014Maxind Ware Sings\n4:30\u2014The Thunderpirn Curst\n5:00\u2014UN on the ltecprd;\n5:15\u2014International Commentary\n5:2()-r-News   .\n5:30\u2014Rawhide .. '    '\n5:55\u2014Have.You Heard?\n6:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre  .\n7;00\u2014News\n7:15- -News Roundup\nT:30r-Paclfic Pianoforte\n8:00\u2014Presenting\n8:15\u2014CSC Symphony Orch. _\n9:00\u2014Nat Farm Radio Forum\n9:30\u2014Cafe Continental\n10:00\u2014Newa .-     -       . >'\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\" Bob McMullin Show        -\n'\u25a0*-. '\u25a0:;\u25a0'?,**)  r:..;.:   --Or    -\n-mMMmmmmm\n \u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\n Ml\nSS**\n..**'-%\u25a0\u25a0\u2022:,\nPERSON'TO'PERSONWANTAtt\nFOR QUICK RESULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Clotsifled Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\ntt-,.:.. .'.: ' (Contlriuttti\n\u2022THE CHICKS WHICH GIVE RES' suits\" For 1954, raise chicks from\none   of the   oldest   established\nhatcheries and poultry raisers In\n. BC. Since 1920 Western Canada\n| poultrjmen'  have   been   raising\n\u25a0'\u2022 their famous chicks. The follow-\n,, Ing breeds and cross breeds are\nI  available   and  suited  to  every\n;\u25a0:' need: S.C. White Legh,bms, New\nI  Hampshire., Barred Rocks, White\n9 Rocks, Light Sussex. - Rhode Island   Reds,   Black   Australorps.\nAlso, Leghorn-Hampshire Cross,\n' \u25a0 AusWa1 Whites,   Rock-Hampshire\n- Cross and Hampshire-Rock Cross.\n- Broad Breasted Turkey Poults.\nOrder early and remember \"It's\n,- Results That Count\".-Particulars\nand prices sent Immediately upon\nrequest RUMP AND,SENDALL\nLIMITED,   Box   N,   Langley\n- Prairie, B.C., or Vernon,* B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n..   .(ConUwrtr.Y-v\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\n-yesr from the Appleby Poultry\n-.Farm, Mission City, B.C. We have\never 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\n; oar-own farm. Our baby ehicks\nI\" are produced only from our own\n, 'Stock In White Leghorns. White\nI Rocks, New Hampshires and\n'   Crosses. Catalogue on request.\nM INTERESTED  IN   BABY\nChioks send for our free 1854 illustrated catalogue. The Appleby\nPoultry Breeding Farm, Mission\n,   City, B. C. '\nWANTED: 1 ONLY, SANNAN\nGoat, state price. R. V. Wlckwire,\ne\/o- Mi's. A. Anderson, Victoria\n.' Ave, CrestOn, B: C.\n\\GVERNSEY COW JUST FRESH-\n'   ene'dl second calf. Easy milking.\nApply George  Osachoff,  Slocan\nPark, B. CY\n-aeu i ti \u25a0  =&\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurtnco Co. D. L. Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE CPR,\n\u25a0. Depot Clean rooms and reasonable rates  Vancouver, B.C\nTCSAtC- -LtkiNATOR. A SC1-\nentlfic  guaranteed   remedy   for\n- cigarette addiction. Quick \u2014 Sure\n\u2014 PERMANENT. For free book-\n; let, Write C. King Pharmacol\n-Corp. Ltd., Box 303, Walkervllle,\nOntario. \"\nROOM AND BOARD\nTWO WORKING . GIRLS AWANT\n. room.and board..Box 9472, Dally\n. News.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nFOREST  SERVICE    '\nNOTICE\nExaminations for the position of\nAssistant Forest Ranger will be\nheld at the following centres at the\ndates and,times indicated:\nTuesday, March 2\u20149:00 a.m.\u2014Nel-\nIin.\n' Thursday,  March  \u2666\u2014'0:00  ajri.\u2014\nCranbrook. '\nApplication forms and full particulars may be obtained, from tbe\nDistrict 'For ester at Nelson or the\nForest Ranger's office at examination centres. Completed application\nforms should be forwarded to\nreach the District Forester by February 22nd, or failing this must be\npresented to tha examiners at the\ntime of the examination,\n. These examinations are being\nconducted to establish eligible lists\nior 1954 fire season employment.\n'From such lists appointments to\npositions now vacant will bt made\naccording to candidates' standings\n' in the examinations.\nEmployment will be for period oi\nsix (f) months at starting salary of\n$226.00 per month and expenses\naway from Headquarters.\nCandidates must he citizens of\none of the nations of the British\nCommonwealth, and must have re-\n. 'aided ln -rltlsh Columbia tor one\nyear. The candidate must be physically capable of the work.\nCandidates must be 21 years of\nage or over.\nNo examination fee ls charged.\nPROVINCE Or'\n.   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nDEPARTMENT OF\nPUBLICjWORKS\nDIVISION 6\nKaslo-Slocan District\n1 Nelson-Creston   District\n< Rossland-Trall Dlstrlot\nADVANCE WARNING OF LOAD\nAND  SPEED  RESTRICTIONS\nON HIGHWAYS\nDuring the Spring thaw lt will be\nnecessary to impose load tnd spied\nrestrictions oil vehicles using highways and secondary rosds In tills\nDivision. These restrictions may be\nimposed on short notice and trucking and transportation companies\nshould govern themselves accord\nIngly.\nThe restrictions will limit the\naxle loadings of trucks -and buses\nand will restrict the speed of alt\nvehicles. \" Y' :\nVehicles with solid tires will bt\nprohibited from using ths hlghwtyt.\nH. MIARD,\nDivisional Engineer.\nCourt House - ''\u2022 \u25a0 '\n\u2022Nelson, B. C. \u2022'    Y'\nFebrusfy 12th, IMP* ''-\"-'--*.\nIN THE SUPREME SOURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\n>,-'IN PROBATE\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\nESTATE OF KUE WONG SHEE,\nOTHERWISE KNOWN AS\nKUE WONG, DECEASED.\nTAKE NOTICE that letters pro\nbate bf the last' will of Kue Wong\nShee,   otherwise   known   as   Kue\nWong.-late of Nelson, British Columbia, have been Issued to Chow\nShee Wong, as executrix thereof,\nand all  persons claiming to  be\ncreditors of the. said deceased'or to\nbe entitled to the said Estate are,\non or before tht 8th day of March,\n1954, to send by post prepaid or to\ndeliver to the said Executrix or to\nher solicitor a statement ot their\nclaims or accounts' and thereafter\n.the said Estate will be distributed\namong the- parties thereto having\nregtrd only to the claims of which\nsaid executrix have then notice,\nDATED the 1st day of Februsry,\n1953.\nBROWN _ KIRBY\n415 Baker Street\nNelson. B.C.\nSolicitors tor the \u25a0\nExecutrix -\nApproved by\nW. J. Sturgeon v\nDistrict Registrar       ,\nTIMBER SALE X82553\nThere will be offered for sale at\nPublic Aueflon, at 10:80 a.m. (local\ntime) on Monday, March 1st, 1994, ln\nthe of flea of the Forest Ranger,\nNew Denver, B.-C, the Licence\nXfl.553, to out .4,600 cubic feet of\nsawlOgs on an area situated Southeast of Silverton, Kootenay District\nTwo.(2) years, will be allowed tor\nremoval of timber.\nProvided anyone who Is Unable\nto attend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to' be\nopened at the hour of auction \"and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be' obtained from the Deputy Minister of\nForests. Victoria, B. C, ot the Dls-\ntrlct Forester, Nelson. B. C.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES   FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nIMMEDIATE POSSESSION.\nFAMILY HOME IN\nFAIRVIEW*\nLarge Home \u2014 5 bedrooms (2\ndownstairs). Spacious living\nroom and den, each with fir*,\nSince. Bathroom,.. downstair*\ntot wattrV on netting. This\nhouse ls in an Ideal location.\nOlder type IH storey bungalow.\nVery '-easonable terms.\nPrice $12,000\nBEAUTIFUL FAMILY\nRESIDENCE ON CORNER\nLOCATION \u2014 FAIRVIEW\nCdmpletelynmodern, built 1946,\nFull concrete basement. Oil,\nautomatic hot. water heating,.\nGarage ln one corner of basement. Ground floor has mahogany trim, 1st grade oak floors\nand two -.bedrooms and bathroom Upst\u00bblrS has three bed'\nrooms, sewing room and trunk\nroom, and \"bathroom ready tt\nInstall fixtures.\nPric\u00ab $17,500\n, $850006'Will Handle.\nNE\/ttk FERRY,\nON NORTH SHORE\nBungalow''\"With Two Bedroomi. . Oak floors tn living\nroom and one bedroom. Modern kitchen with cupboards;\n\" automatic oil floor furnace;\npert basement. \\ :\nPrice $6750\nTerms \u2014$2500 Down Payment\nROBSON STREET\n2-BedroOm Bungalow. Modern\nand .omfortable.\nPri.ce $5500   \u25a0\nTerms: $1500 Cash and    ,\nBalance at $60.00 Per Month\nTHREE BEDROOM\nBUNGALOW\nOn Six Latt (sidehill). Stent\nfoundstlon and full basement\nImmediate occupancy.\nCan be purchased for\n$1500\nDOWN PAYMENT ,\nAnd Balance Like Rent.\nSUMMER CAMP SITE\n3tt ecrts \u2014 350 ft. beach, South\nShore, 9 mile. Bargain\n$425\nWE HAVE' SOME GOOD\nBUILDING SITES IN\nFAIRVIEW AND\nUP THE HILL    - .\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd. \u2022\nr Real ttstste\nFire, Car and General uisuranco\nEstablished 41 Years\n.392 Baker St' Phone 289\nSACRIFICE: NEW MODERN SIX\nroom bungalow, halt aore let with\nfruit trees, close where Celgtr\npulp mill lt being erected. Box\n78, Kinntlrd, B. C: ' *   '\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued!  .\n12 ACRE\n_, \/BUILDINGSITE   \u25a0\nAbout 3 miles  ease ot city.\nOood tor auto court or silbdlvls-\n^.roT^-^ooo\nYMIR ROAD 2 ACRES\nMILE AND HALF TO P.O.\nOne two-roomed house an<* one\nthree-roomed house with electricity, telephone\/Running water available. Full <9t_l_l-\nprlce, with terms, \u2022- *twoww\nNEAR CRESCENT BEACH\nOne acre, all cleared, gentle\nslope. Good buildlrig C|ni_A\nsite; Price  \u00abP\u00ab\u00abWV\nWA'NTEO\nThree or FourrBedroom Home\nin FAIRVIEW. Must be reasonable.\nMcHARDY\nAgencies Limited\nPhone 133 or Evenings 200-Y\nREVENUE   HOME j FOR   SALE,\nCranbrook.  Stoker - heat  Large\n-apt.-for owner. Rooms bring $223\n,',monthly.. Furniture.   Included.\n. Cash needed $4000. Exceptional\nproposition; Contact R. G. MacDonald, Cranbrook. Phone 832\nCentral location..\ntOK SALE:' .'.VJ.-ROOM HOUSE\nat -Bbnnlngton. Large playroom\nand \"garage In basement Good\nwater Supply, good neighborhood.\nFor particulars' Write\", W. R. Foster. FoVf CrawfSrd.'B.'C,\ntt*.- -at-;   a'666   RBVMU-\nproperty at Castlegar. Suitable for\nsub-dividing. . Write Box 307,\nCastlegar,\" B; C.:\n_H___\" i__b!.&6M H6US_ In\nRosemont, Electrie stove, automatic oil heat. Jnsulated. $4750.\nPhone 827<R:\nfRflOM-'-'A-H,' HOT A'NB C.IP\nWater,  1 Acre Land.  Box 9548,\nDally News.\nm_5ER~xYF_ _HJ__B_ 'HOUSE\nfor sale, Offers taken. Box 9839,\nDaily News: -     . .\n3MA-L HOME WITH A.R-A__\nst Longbeaeh. On highway. Apply V. Alexander, R.R, 1, Nelson.\nren SAL..:. BBsasga bpto\n- low, close tn, -reasonable. Phone\n872-Y.\nBUSINESS AND ,\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nABBAYER8  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nt\\. W '\"WibDoVMoN\"-, CO.. AS\ntiters 801 Josephine St..Kelson\nH._'--M_S    ROSI.1.AND    BC\nA-rrtever rhemiai   Mine Rep\n_______-.__i_-iii 11 ini \u00ab_\u25a0\u2014-\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C AFFLECK. ME.I.C.\nB C Land Surveyor P Eng (CIVU)\n218 Gore St.. Nelson   Phone 1238.\nft ,R-'-5^\u00a5te-^T- WOW\nfaker- Sit\" Nelson, Phone 1118\n\"G'&hS-^fifWor.- \u25a0\n_r.V'rfsHAVlBift-!lp6 ;B.X Bt\nkimberley   Phone 1)4\n' BC Land Surveyor  Engineer\n-     \u2022\u25a0      MACHINISTS   '\n\u25a0\"      BENNETT'- LIMITED '\nMachine -Shop Acetylene and\nelootrlo welding, motor rowind-\nIng. Phone 883. \u25a0 324 V_rnOn St.\nPUBLICATIONS\n~ a_OR----S_V       '\nRepresentative for Dominion Book\nBiblt House--Bible, dictionaries,\ntestaments, health books; biographies, stories, technical books, boys\nand girls \u2014 contact Mr. George\nElsey, Daily News Box 8880.\nPUBLIC  gT-NOQRAEH-R\nPublic Stenographer\nand\n' Mimeographing\nGeneral and Legal Stenographer\nELSIE MACKLEM\n206 Johnson  Block\u2014Phone 1887\nRENTALS\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE ROOMS\nfor rent. General heat; electric\nstoves. N  Shore Motel. Ph. 1884,\nrooms by the day, week or\n< month Allen Hotel, 1T1 Baker Bt\nf 6ft MHt tftkWb, HnWftfflB\n2 rooms ahd bath, Wrlta Box\n9716, Daily Newt.\nCABIN -or RENT BY MONTH\nor week. Ferry Auto Court Ph\n1880.\np_rmAN_i._ r_5h._!n_vwaHM\nto rent family home: Ph. 1750:L.\nFOR RENT - ' 2-HOOM A-AR-1-\nment partly furnished, 125 Silica.\nf OR \"-t-N..1, SBTOroRCTSBEB\napartment Phone 168-L,\nROOM FOR RENT. PH. 957-R.\n\u2022\u00abiA_L\":B6ii--..w:;iAieB m,\nPftone 1478-L..\nm mt-itmttm housb,\npartly furnished. Phone I2.-L.\nHOOJ- .Oft ft_MT-fiflWNT6VWI.\nphone 1047-R.\nfORREMTWEWMOB-RWAPT.\nHeated. Phone 1**18-R.'     ,-\nv6r rS;n_; vmtM mn:tu\nVictoria Street\n(Continued ill Next Column)\n(Continued in Next Column*\nroijHSfr RoowiNfl home\nfor rent. Phone 845-L.\n2' BOOM '-NPURNieH-iD  -..Tl\nfor rent Phone 366-Y.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nY      AUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES\n*MHf_\u00bb\u00abfca\u00bbsP\n.08t    -\nComplete\nUSED\nSelectipn\"\nin the\nKootenay\n1953 Austin\n1952 Plymouth\n1952 Meteor\n1951 Nash .\nWith radio.\n1951 Austin\n1950 Austin\nNew motor.\n1949 Ford\n1949 Austin\n1948 Mercury\n1947 Pontiac\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\nCor Lot Below Cement Wall\non Vernon St., Phone 1661\nBATTERY WEAK? RUNS DOWN?\nDead? Lead aulphate accumula\ntion at bottom ot plates oautes\n80% of all battery trouble. One\npackage of Battery-Reviver instantly remedies this, restores\nauto, light plant rsdto storage,\nbttterles tb full-charge capacity\u2014\nGives easy startln\u2014better lights-\nmore pep\u2014longer Ute to new or\nOld batteries. Tested, recommended Guaranteed Satisfaction\nor Money Back., Keep on band\nv tor winter driving Ordoi\/Battery\nReviver Todayl Trill package\n11,50,, 3 packages -$3.00. (COD.\n$3.36) Reliable Agency, Box\n5-B-51-M, Regina, Sask.\nART'S '\nTIRE SHOP\nTht One. fire Shop in Nelson\nDealing in Tires Only\nVULCANIZING  -   RETREADING\nNEW AND USED TIRES\nWHEEL BALANCING\nPlenty of Parking Spaco\nNear My Door\nTrade ln Your Old Tires\n509 Lake St Phone 1122\nFOR SALE: 1951 CHEV. SEDAN\nDel'y. Reasonable terms. Phone\n1804-L after 5r\nSTOCK QIJQf ATIONS\nThe DsllV Newa dtat not hold Itself responsible in tha ovont\nof an error In the following lists. ,-\u2022\u2022 .\nrORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Oloalno Prleea)\nAcadia Ursnluip ...........\nAkaltdho- .'.'....;'\u25a0 .\u201e.;.,..\u201e._\nAjnerlean Y K'.;v..___._\nAnglo Huronlan .\t\nArmistice ._-.-.\nBagamao , \u201e\u201e\u2022..\u201e...\u201e.__.\nBevcourt  ., _....___.\nBobjp .....,..; ...._\u201e..\u201e._\nBoymar Gold \u201e.^...r*_\nBralorne ! ___^_.\nBrewls R L \t\nBroulan\t\nBulf Can ...r...-.-..'....rf.*.*_\nCallffan\t\nCampbell R L \t\nCentral Patricia .........\nCentral POrc \t\nChestervUle \t\nChimo G\t\nCoehenour , _\nCqns. Golden Arrow ..\nCons Min & Smelt -\nConwest \u201e'\u201e\u25a0\u00bb\u201e.\u00bb;\t\nCons Discovery  \t\nDettaRL _ ;_.\nDome \t\nDbnalda _...__\nDuvay : _.\nEast Malartic \t\nEast Sullvan \t\nEastern Metals  -\nElder Gold.: _\u201e..._.\nEHoi: .- \t\nEstella\t\nFaloonbridge  _    15.28\n\u00ab\n\u2022J0--\n13.00'\n'-.io-:1:\n' ,\u00bb'\u2022\nn<v.\nj$-\n8.60\n.W_\n1,14\nT-tM- (\n'.4.\n8,88\n.84\n.12\n.81  '\n1.28\n.77:\n22.80\n3.05\n2.00\n\u202216H\n15.18\n.85\n.20\n2.00\n4,10\n.08\n.51\n,11\n12\nPed Kirk .\nFrobisher....\t\nGiant Yel _\u2122\t\nGod's Lake.......\t\nOolderest \t\nGolden Mtnltou ......\nHvdroek  \t\nim^'iliiiiiiifZ\nHdlneV Y k ...v.......\nHudson. Bty _\t\nInsplrttion  \t\nInt Nickel .'.\t\nJoliet Out _.\nKirk Townslte \u201e.._..\nLabrador ...: ,.,,.\u201e. ,\nLake Dulault\t\nLskeshore\t\nLittle Long Lao\t\nLouvlcourt \t\nMacassa  ...._...\nMacD'ijnil'd'     \t\nMacLeod Cock\t\nMadsen R L\t\nMalartic  _..\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMoMarmtc  _....\nMeWatter.\t\nMining Corp \t\nMoneta    :\t\nNegut  .,-...'. .'...\nNew Bldlamaque ...\nNew Goldvue\n.12\n4.88\n8.80\n.88\n.18\n1.45\n,20\n..   , .18\n..OK\n14,15\n.20.\n40,25\n2.10\n37.00\n.40\n.17\n8.10\n.72\n6.00\n1.05\n1,87\n.... 1.55\n... 1.80\n...     1.82\n 37\n...      .11\n.... '   .14H\n....   11.35\n .48\n 10\n..-      .57\n 17\nNew Larder U    : _     1.43\nNew Mylsmsqu* 19\nNoranda    61.00\nNormetals  _     2.65\nOslsko _       .49%\nPaymaster _-.  36\nPlacer Devel _    27.00\nPreston J1D _    2.99\nQuebec Lab _ 13\nQuebec Man 66\nQueenston .; : .  31\nQuatnont  _    15.80\nRadiore  _ _ 66\nRoche L L \u2022:.:.. _ :.....:'   .17*4\nSan Antonio    _.-_'\u2022 \u25a0 1.75\nSherritt Gordon ., __'...-_    4.00'\nVancouver Stocks\nMINE8 (Cleatng Prices)\nBeaver Lodge\nSigma M\nSilvermiller\t\nSilanco ____\t\nSiScoe. -.'..-.,'.....,\t\nSteep Rock ;\t\nSudbury^ Cont\t\nSylvanlte.        ,._\t\nTecjt Hugliea , .....\nThprntison-Lund  \t\nTomfcM- \u25a0',,:. .,...,.\u201e.^^..\u201e,....i,.\nTorbrlt\"1.;., ...:,.;..Sr.(\u00ab.ii.\u201ei'j.(,..\nUnited Keno .,',..-.:.'........\t\nUpper Canada _..     1.33\nVentures       _ ,    15.15\nViolamac       _....    1.95\nWaite Amulet     9.60\nOILS\nAnglo Can       5.45\n5.00\n1.00\n.'.161,4\n.36 .\n7.50\n,22\n. 1-14\n8.50   ;\n\u201e .I5V4-\n\u25a0 iife:\n5.90   !\nA P Cons .\nB.A011    \t\nCalgary _ Edm \t\n0*>'Atlan*f(>\t\nCentral Lediic ...\nCentral Explorer. \t\nChemical Research ......\nPel Rio\t\nFederated Pete  \t\nHome   \t\nImperial Oil  ......\nInter Pett ._....\nKroy ,\t\nMacDougall Segur Ex .\nMid Cont.    _\t\nPtcifie Pete  _\t\nRoyalite \t\nRoxtna _\t\nUnited Oils \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi    \t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nAluminum  ...\nBtattle Bros\t\nBoll Telephone '\t\n.33\n22.00\n10.76\n4.90\n2.05\n4.60\n1.08   .\n1.81\n4,40\n0,50\n84.78'\n22.65\n1.63\n.13%\n.85\n9.00\n1S.2S\"\n.14\n1,15\n,18H\n40H\n61H\n7\u00ab\n-    40H\nMmt\nLondon Tobacco\nSlocks Down\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Tobaoco\nshares slumped on the London stock\nexchange Friday after publication\not a medical report linking smok-\nlng-wlth lung cancer.\nStock in the British-American Tobacco Company dropped by 81 cents\nto 87.77, while ^similar 31-cent fall\nstnt shares irt the. Imperial Tobacco\nCompany down to $5.60. But- ipOst\nbrokers expressed confidence that\ntobacco company earnings would\nnot be affected, and predicted tht\nstocks would make an early recovery from Friday's slump.\n.f\nMetal Prices    -\n' N_W YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLelld\u2014New York, .13.\n2_ic\u2014East St. Louis, .9,V4. *\nClassified Advertlsltlo Rates:\nISO par line first insertion tnd\nnon-oonseoutlvo insertions,\nllo tint par oonsecutlvo insertion after first Insertion.\n48s lint tor 6 oomecutivo InSer-\nions.\n$1.66 lint tor month (26 oonsecutlvo Insertions). Box numbers llo>4 extra. Covers any\nnumber ot Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS. \u00abtc \u2014 20o per Uni.\nfirst Insertion. 16o per Uno\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   HATES   LEBS\n10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT..\n. Subsorlptlon RafcttS' -,,,\n(Not Mora Thin Listed Her?)\n\" By-, carrier, per we*- \u2022', \u25a0'\u25a0- \u25a0   ,\nIn advance .:';...,._-,   X\nBy carrier, pet year .      $15.60\nUnited States. United Kingdom\nOne month -\u201e_._ -_. | .1.28\nThree months  i \u201e.,n,S .' -8.75\n8Uf-months ___*.-_-. - 7,80\nOne - yekir.'''.. ,...i\u00a3:.w.'...'.i.>.' \u00a3-.00'\n'Mall In Canado, outside Nelson\nOne month '.._..,..     f 1,00\nThree months       2.75\nSix Months    ,___       6.60\nOne year .,'..       10.00\nWhere extra pontage <s rtqu'red,\n.above rates plus postage.\nBrazilian ....,..-_\u00bb.\n8 C Elootrlo 414s\t\nBi C. Forest _!.__.\t\nB C Packers B ..............\nB C Power A ,_ _-.\nBurns B :... ,'.\u2014_____\nCan Cement _\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Conners  _\nCanadian Car & Fdy ....._\nCanadian Car &Fdy A, _\nCanadian Celanese  ...\nCanadian Dredge .\u201e..__\nCan Oil _\nCanadian Pto Hly\t\nCons.Mining & Smelt....\nDlst Seagram -\nDom Foundries\t\nDom Steel & Coal B ...\nDom Stores \u2122\nDon. Tar & Ohom\t\nDom Textiles  \t\nDom Mag  \t\nFamous Players \u2014_.._..-\nFleet' Air  _ \t\nFord A  _._.\u00bb\u00bb.\nGatineau   ____.\u201e\nGen Steely Wares ._-_._....\nGoodyear N -._.-\nGoodyear pfd  \t\nGreat Lakes  _....,\nGypsum Lime ._..\u201e.__,\u2014\nImp Tobacco \t\nInt Metals ,  .\u201e\t\n|nt Nickel   \t\nInt Pete  \u201e  .\nKelvinttor    \u201e_....\nLaura Secord  \t\nLoblaw A   i\u2122\nLobjaw B  _.._-...-.\nMsssey Hsrrls _.., \t\nMcCdll Front  \t\nMont Loco \u201e\t\nNat Steel Car .._\u201e \t\nPage Hershey ..'___._-._.\nPowell River  ,__\t\nRuss -Industries ... .....\nShawlnlgan    .__.\nSicks Brew  ..._< _.\nSimpsons A   -,\u2014~\nSteel ot Canada .,_\t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Fuel A ............\t\nUnited Steel  r\t\nWestern Grocers\t\nWinnipeg Gas\t\nCons Paper (Tor. curb)\n\u00ab8H\nan\n9%\n\u00bb_\n' 44H\nM\n23\n20\nIT\nUH\n, \u00bb1*\n15\n20%\n12.50\n29%\n14U\n10\n20\n8H\n6%\n13%\n21\n1.50\n78.50\n23.00\n16.26\n1.12%\n49%\n22%\n38\n9%\nS3\n87\n22H\n24%\n14%\n41\n46%\n8%\n80%\n16%\n26%\n74.00\n27.50\n19%\n40.25\n24%\n15%\n80.50\n37%\n88%\n12%\n84 V4\n8\n4SM\n.45\nBralorne     3.55\nEstella\nGiant Mascot ...\nHighland Bell .\nKenvllle\n19\n.42\n.40\n.06\n.47\n3.50\n1.90\n.04%\n.20%\nPac Eastern Gold\t\nPend Oreille   \t\nPioneer Gold   \t\nErenii*r Border \t\nQuatslnor...     \t\nSheep Creek  40\nSherritt Gordon      8.90\nSilver Ridge       i 08\nSilver Standard 60\nVananda      .01%\nVan Rol .'.\u201e      .04\nWesterh Tungsten       .45\nYale           25\n0IL8\nAnglo Canadian  _.    4.45\nA P Cons 38%\nCalgary & Edm  \u25a0 10.25.\nCanadian Anaconda .\nCommftftwealth  \t\nHome Y\t\nMercury\n.12.\n1:25\n.11%\nNational Pete \u201e     1.50\nOkalta Com -\nPacific Pete\nRoyalite .,..,..\u201e;....,\nvanalta :,\t\nVulcan   -.,\u00ab>\u25a0  ...\nINDUSTRIALS\nCamtal Estates...\nInt Brew A  .....\n1.80\n8.80\n12.75\n.18\n-   .86\n'37.5b\n4.10\nGel Rich Quick\ntORONTO (CP)\u2014Three middle-\ntged men, of moderate means a\nyear ago, sre millionaires bteaute\not weekend Jaunts Into Ontario's\nnjorth country in search of base\nmetal deposits.\nThe part-time prospectors, Roy\nBarker, J. B. Forster tnd William\nDowldbwlcb, staked-what may be\none of the richest base-metal finds\nin the country,\nWEEKEND,PROSPECTORS\nAn official ot Geco Mines said\nthe three, all married men with\nfamilies, were students of base\nmetal formations. Weekends they\nused to fly in Fortter's private plane\nto search the surrounding country\nfor strata that might have metal-\nbearing deposits.\nEarly list year, carrying a 20-\nyear-old geological map showing an\nInteresting rock structure, they flew\ninto- an area near Lake Mtnltou-\nwalge, 65 miles southeast Ot Gor-\naldtotv in the Marathon district.\n\u25a0 Early in July they tiled 14 claims\nln an ares ot about two square\nmiles. They told several -lining\nCompanies what thoy'd found.   \u25a0  I\nthe General Engineering Company of Toronto sent a saihinf engineer to exemine tha area, and in\nAugust th* prospaotors turned their\nclslms over to tha company ln return for 450,000 shares ot (took bs a\nsubsidiary firm\u2014fleeo-whlch General Engineering formed to develop\nthe tit*.' S\nEach of'the throa will get a royalty ot llvo.centt a ton on ore taken\nfroijri certain, seotions es? the mine. S\n\\ s.?'\u201e   Y '\"\".\u25a0'* \" [>i \u25a0 -*;\nOdd Sense of Humor\nLONDON (CP) -Three times\nwithin a week police, ruphed out to\nremove sticks of hisjhjy explosive\ngelignite from various parts of London; -''AiW\u00absi*\u00bbv_rlng tht three\nsticks from a mailbox, the floor of a\nbus and the base ot a flower pot,\npolice decided they wen dealing\nwith someone with a misguided\nsense of humor. None of the three\nsticks was equipped with a detonator.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, FEB. 13, .954 - \u00bb\nYankee Dundee\nCub New Vein\ni'i-O\"\nYankee Dundet Mines IM., has\nobtlined a diamond-drill intersection ot eight feet qt obvious ore,\nat a length of 60 feet from the face\nof tht Wild Horse tunnel, tome 4800\nfeet from tht portal. Tho vein Is\nconstrued by tht management to\nbt tht downward'perslstence bf the\nYankee Girl vein which was productive of formidable production tt\nhigher horizons. At now cut,, tht\nvein- ls it least 800 feet deeper flion\nthe former main-haulage level and;\ntht ore can bo extracted at greatly'\nreduced costs. The tunnel will be\ncontinued to the Yankee Girl structure alter which a raise will be',\ndriven'to jrova continuity and provide ventilation. Simultaneously,\ndrifts>111 bt driven In both directions on the vein.\nIn tha course of tht drive, the\ntunnel encountered at 4092 feet, an\norebody five feet wide and assaying $25 par ton In precious and\nbase metals, with gold predominant.\nSince the vein hie not been correlated with any other previously\ndeveloped at higher altitude, It It'\npossible to have 2000 feet of backs.\nA drill hole intersecting the same\nvein at 90 feet above the tunnel\nshowed a true width of 8.0 feet,\ngrading $11 ln precious tnd base\nmetals. Drifting is now being undertaken both ways on tht Bonus\nvein concurrent with advance of\nthe main tunnel toward the Yankee\nGirl structure. '' -\u25a0.\"\u2022.\u25a0\u2022\u2022\nMarket Trends\nt?EW YORK (AP)-A handful ot\nleaders, including the highballing\nNew York Central, braced an advance!\nCanadian stocks were mixed. International Nickel advanced and\nMclntyre fell.\nTORONTO' (CP)- -e -Most -groups\nslipped 1 little1 tdwt'rd tho close of\nthe qujet seision.-Industrials)tnd\nwestern oils v\u00abtrertteady loufethe\nlilning groups'\\jlfci*-.gi\u00bb3^.;    If,\nConstructions, foods,- steels : and\nutilities added! slightly tn the industrials, but their strength was balanced by weaker manufactures, refining oils tnd liquors. -\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices followed an upward trend in moderate\ntrading.; _ .\u201e>'..\nMiscellaneous Industrials, beverages, papers, -utilities, senior metslr\nand steels were better, while ctr-\nPropose Monorail   -\\\nTo Link Islands      t<,\nNANATMO^B. C (CP)-A US,.\n000,000 monorail systom linking\nVancouver Island and the Gftflf\nIslands was proposed here Wednesday by tyr\/o Vancouvor businessmen,\nSidney Angel! apd W. D. Gffles-\npit announced formation of. tht\nGulf'lWand Ifeyelopment Company\nto Undertake a preliminary survey\not the proposed line that would link -\nNanaimo and Duncan on Vancouver\nIsland with several smaller Islands\nin tht Strait of Georgia. Mr: Angell\nis Vancouver representative of\nMonorail of San Francisco.\nUSB DIESEL TRAIN -oj\u2022;  ;\nMr. Angell said the systein^'lf\nbuilt, would use a diesel electric\ntrain running on 1 single steel irall\nand supported by an overhead \u00abebl\ncable. Re estimated that \"'$7^0\nwould be required for a preliminary\nsurvey.\nTht proposed system, totalling\"\nabout 160 miles of line, would link\nNanaimo to Gabrlola, Valdes, Gall-\nano, Mayne, Samuel, Saturna and\nNorth ahd South Fender Islands\nand Duncan to Salt Prlng Island.\nThe Gulf Islands have a population\nof about 8000. \u25a0\"\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\"\"; ;\nMr, Angell said hit company had\nthe assurance of full co-openjfton\ntrom the Canadian Pacific Railway\ntor the acquisition of land next to\ntht CPR ferry terminal here and for\n1 \u00abtepp$d-up Vancouver-Nanaijho\nterry service if the monorail system\nwas established. ,.-   ; i  !\nAt Vancouver, a CPB tpokeej*n_n\neald his cpmBaJMr;-had heard? *W\nsome such tMWKiM wt oant ton- ,\nalder this proposition until more\ndefinite detaile are avaialable.\"'_ii\u00ab\nspokesman added that the.CPR h\u00bbd\nmade no commitments to-increase\nIts ferry serviced\n ,f_   ,\nDividends cD\n'      By Tht Canadian Pratt)    A\nThe Butterfly Hotlery Co.,'Ml,\ncommon, 10 cents, March 15, record\nFeb. 22.   ._....,...\nCanada lilt. 'Assurance Co., W\ncents, April 1, reeord March 15.\nEasy Washing Machine Co., ltd.,\n3 cents, plus 5 cents extra, April 1,\nrecord March 15. \u25a0 '\n\u25a0 \u25a0''  1 i '. \u25a0.  ti\nWinnipeg Grain       \u25a0\nWIN NIP-HO 1 (CP) - Wtanip\u00bbf\ngrain oash prices:\nOats\u2014J\u00a5oi 1 feed, .70%.\nBarley-No, 1 feed, .92H.      Q\nrlers, banks and senior oils were\nmixed. \\    , 5\nLONDON\u25a0- (Reuters) -*\u25a0 London\ngtve 1 mixed display. The lower\ntrend ln Industrial shares continued,\nbut losses were generally small.\nAswmOF\nAM&\/MA\n1950 Chav. 2-Dr. Sedan\nRadio, Sun Visor,\n.-'.    .Air Conditioner.\n1948 Chrysler Sedon\nRadio, Neater, Sun Visor,\nA-l Shape, <\n19S0 Chrysler Sedan\nSurt Blue. One Owner.,\nLow MileSge.\n1941 DeSofo Sedan\nFluid Drive $438\nMaroon. One Owner.\n1949 Plymouth Sedan A\nWeU Looked After.\n1949 DeSoto Sedan\nOutstanding 2-Tone Paint.\nRadio. Guaranteed.\n1910 Plymouth Sedan\nLight Blue. Top Shape, f I\n1950 Plymouth Sedan  1\nColor: Surf. ;\n1954 Licence. Beautiful Shape.\n1951 Plymouth Sedan  ',\nMetallic Green. One Owner'\n1947 Ford Tudor\nMaroon.\n1951 Plymouth 4-Door\nRadio. Two-Tone.\n1949 Ford Tudor ft\nOne Owner. ^\n1950 Pontiac Sedan U\n2-Dobf. One Owner, r-\n1949 Dodge Sedan\n'   4-D6or. Scdtli Cfreen.\n1951 Dodge Sedan .\nNew Motor. Shiny Blue.\n,. i. :   \u25a0 Air Conditioner.\n1947 Ford Sedan\n4-Door;, Excellent Condition.\nGunmetal. Grey: Heater.\n1947 Ford Sedan\n'   Beautiful Shape..\n1948 Hlllman Sedan\n. Bargain $494\n1946 Mercury Sedan-\n\u25a0if4^6rM\u00a7\u00bb:'\n1947 Mercury- Sedan\n4-Door $946\n1947 Oldsmobile Sedan\n' Hydrtmttlc. Hetttr.\n1939 Plymouth Sedan\n\u2022'I- \u2022 NtWBnflne.; '\u25a0\n1941 Plymouth Coupe\nGreen. New Print..,\nDROP (N FOR A DEMONSTRATION!\nUSED TRUCKS      _\n1949 O.M.C. '4rTon      r\nN(ce Shape'. i-\n1945 Chevrolet 1>ick-Up,,\n1952 Chey. light Delvry.'.\n600 Miles. One Owner.\nLike NiSw.\n1947 Forgo-Express\nRepossession.\n1948 Fargo '\/.-Ton\nCanopy. A-l.\n-1950 Fargo Express.\n.   %-Ton. H.0O0 Miles.\n1940 Ford Piek.Up\nRunt -Good;\n.1946 Ford Dump\nWith or; Without Hoist.  .\nOTHER BARGAINS!\n\u25a0____.\n_______\n______\n- \u2022 '   '\n1\n \u25a0\u25a0V1 ' ' '-\nH\u25a0__ NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, FEB. 13,1954\n.LADIES!! When your husband hies to work today..,\nStraighten His Tie\u2014\nKiss Him Goodbye\u2014\nHe might be susceptible to a hint for\njfe FABERGE COLOGNE for your Valentine.\n(If \u2022   \u2022\u25a0.-.. ., -.\"' \u25a0'.\u2022\u2022-- .   *\"'    , .     \"' ' '\n7. He may buy you a VALENTINE HEART\nli\" crammed full of FRESH CHOCOLATES\n'i~      Or a kiss might remind him to get you your\nHEART'S DELIGHT\nat\nE_L 1\/   ._( i - r >\u00ab _-   ft\n_L_T   A   MM\nNAM!.\n1n i -, ^g\nOur store will be closed from 2-p.m\". till 3 p.m. today\n.out of respect of the memory of the late George Fleury.\niouzenko Says Russian People\npint Peace, Leaders Seek War\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Igor Gou-\ntenlrto. the lormer Soviet code clerk\nin Ottawa who gave Communist\nespionage secrets to the West, says\nthe? P.S.S.R. would.be at war with\nSt |*ee World within 10 years \"if\nft isjieft up to the Soviet high\ncommand.\"\nj';BUt, he added, in an interview\nitlth colpmniBt-comiAentator Drew\nPearsbn, that \"If you take the will\nit the Russian people alone, independently from their masters, they\nwish peace will be forever.\"\nThe interview was recorded in\nCanada for telecasting Friday night.\nNever given name\nGouzenko said Friday, as apparently he had before, that he was\nnever given the name of a person\ndescribed to him as a Soviet agent\nwho was an assistant to the late\n.Secretary of state, Edward Stettin-\nlus.rat the San Francisco confer-\n. ence of 1945. That conference set up\nihe United Nations Organization.\nGouzenko said in the interview\nwith Pearson that a cipher clerk\nnamed Kulakov told him he\nlearned in Moscow \"that the assistant of Stettinius is a Soviet\nagent, but he didn't say her name\nor his name, and I believe he didn't\nknow it.\"\nPearson   asked   whether   \"there\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n:>... 4C0-\nChartered Accountants\n... Auditors\n676 Baker St . Phone 235\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827\n676 Baker Street\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\u2022Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n015 Kootenay St        Phone Ml\nGeneral\nRepairs\nE '   \u00ab\u25a0\niff      Radios\nJI!' Commercial\n' Refrigeration\nService Shop\nY        Nelson, B.C.\nDancing\n; EVERY\nSaturday\nNight\nMICKEY McEWEN\nAND HIS\n\"MELODY MAKERS\"\n\" Come and Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir\n-    '     DANCING 9  TO I\nADMISSION   75c\nStudents  Must Present Cards\nwas ever any evidence that Alger\nHiss, now serving prison sentence,\nwas associated with the Russian spy\nring.\"\nGouzenko replied: \"To this I can\nanswer that I didn't have direct evidence, but there were the words of\ncipher clerk Kulakov.\"\nFBI\/MEMORANDUM\nThe U.S. Senate internal security\nsubcommittee 'in a report last summer quoted from ah FBI memorandum touching on an interview with\nGouzenko soon after he broke with\nthe Soviet embassy in Canada and\ndisclosed the existence' of a spy\nring. ,\nThe memorandum as quoted directed attention to various statements abqut Hiss and \"to the statement by Goujenko regarding an\nassistant to the secrtary of state\nwho was a Soviet agent.\" It also\nreferred to Gouzenko as one of the\n'sources of information on Hiss'\nconnection with the Communist underground.\"\nGouzenko has been reintervlewed\nldr the sub-committee by chairman\nWilliam B. Jenner (Rep., Ind.) and\nothers, but the information obtained\nhas not been made public.\nThe High.\nways\nNo. 3 Southern Trans-Provincial\n\u2014Hope to Crow's Nest open. Hope\nto Princeton 11 Inches new snow,\nPlowing and sanding. Carry chains.\nPrlnceton-Osoyoos-C'ascade five\ninches new snow. Plowing and\nsanding. Cascade-Rossland five\ninches new snow. Plowing. Carry\nchains. Rossland-Trail-Castlegar-\nNelson five inches new snow, plowing. Nelson-Balfour six inches new\nsnow, drifting conditions. Kootenay Bay-Creston-Cranbrook-Fer-\nnie-Crow's Nest eight Inches new\nsnow, plowing.\nNo. 3A Trail-Salmo\u2014six inches\nnew snow. Plowing.\nNo. 97: Rossland-Paterson\u2014new\nsnow, plowing and sanding.\nC r e s t o n-Porthill \u2014 new snow,\nplowing.\nNo. 6 Nelway-Vernon\u2014open. Nel-\nway-Nelson-South Slocan - Slocan\nCity-Nakusp-Needles, new snow,\nplowing in progress. Needles-Mon-\nashee rough, new snow, plowing.\nMopashee-Vernon, plowing and\nsanding. Carry chains.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Gol-\nden\u2014open, new snow, plowing.\nBanff-Windermere \u2014 new snow,\nplowing, carry chains.\nNelson-Kaslo\u2014new snow, \u2022 plowing.\nKaslo-New   Denver\u2014new   snow,\nplowing.\nWASHINGTON\nSnoqualmie Pass: Snowing, compact snow and ice on road from 17\nmiles west to 19 miles east- of Summit, chains required, 15 inches new\nsnow for total 127 inches in ski\narea. Temperature 19.\nStevens Pass: Snowing, snow and\nice on road from 13 miles east to\neight miles west of Summit, carry\nchains, 15 inches new snow for total\n138 inches in ski area. Temperature\n17.\nSays BCHIS Kent\nHospital Going\nIn Polio Siege\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Without British Columbia hospital Insurance\ncoverage, Royal Jubilee Hospital\nhere would not have been able to\ncarry the burden of 1953's polio-.\nepidemic, says George Masters, hospital administrator,\nHe said the total cost of caring\ntor polio patients from August to\nDecember was (97,010 including, an\nexpenditure of $30,524 for'essential\nequipment.\nSpecial foo'ds, laundry, drugs,\noxygen, laboratory, social services\nand other items cost $28,745.\nCanada io Have\nSchool TV\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Educational\ntelevision broadcasts will begin\nnext fall to schools in a number\nof Canadian provinces.\nThe national advisory council on\nschool broadcasting, meeting here,\ndecided to begin the educational\ntelevasts in those provinces served\nby CBC television.\nA spokesman for the council,\nwhich consists of representatives\nfrom the education departments of\nevery province, said the fijrst telecasts will be limited to grades 4 to 9.\nHe said he expects every city\nwithin range' of a CBC channel or\nprivate station will be Included ln\nthe experiment.\nThe CBC now has TV stations\nat Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa and\nVancouver with Halifax ind Winnipeg expected to have stations by\nyear-end.\nU.K. Serves Second\ndemand On China\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Britain has\nserved another demand on Red\nChina for \u00a320,000 compensation for\nalleged Chinese attack on a\nRoyal Navy motor launch near\nHong Kong last September.\nThe government previously had\ncharged that a Chinese Communist\nnaval vessel fired on the launch and\nkilled seven of her crew.\nThe Chinese rejected the charge\nand said the launch was at fault.\nNEW-TYPE   CARRIER8\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The first British aircraft carrier to be fitted with\nan angled deck for jet planes, the\n18,300-ton Centaur will join the\nhome fleet this year. Sister ships\nAlbion and Bulwark will be commissioned within the next few\nmonths.\nCitizens Inquire On\nToo Rosy Reports\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 VancoU-\nvcr's'Co-ordinating Council on Citizenship, representing about 30\nethnic groups, will Investigate com-'\nplaints that some immigrants have\nbeen \"led astray by too glowing reports of Canada's employment and\neconomic prospects.\"\nShapely Girls\nGel Chic Oullll\n\u25a0 \/\u25a0-;\/' \u2022-\"'. -\u2022  -'     ,   '-1'-','\" \u25a0\nEOHDON (Reuters) \u2014 Britain's\nair force girls will soon toss aside\ntheir shapeless, masculine uniforms\nfor a chic new outfit designed by\nVictor Stiebel, a dressmaker to the\nQueen.\nThe new style will \"conform to\nwomen's post-war shape,\" designer\nStiebel said.\n\"A woman's. shap\"e does change\nfrom time to time, and' the square\nshoulders, flat bust and longish\njacket of pre-war are no longer\nfashionable.\"\nTWO-PIECE TUSSORE\nIn the new Women's Royal Air\nForce wardrobe is a one-piece tropical dress made in cotton tussore\nof a biscuit shade. It will be worn\nfor the first time when the Queen\ncalls at Aden on her way home on\nthe Commonwealth tour.\nThe home dress uniform has a\nshort jacket, without breast pockety softer shoulders and a more\nemphasized waist. The single-\nbreasted jacket is beltless. Pockets\nare below the waist. The six-pari-\nelled skirt Is slightly flared.\nAn added touch to the new femininity are plain black opera pumps,\na revolution in British service wear.\nTTiese will be an optional item of\ndress.\nLONDON (Reuters)-rSir Oswald\nMosley, leader of the pri:war British Union of Fascists, backed Russia's proposals for general disarmament at a meeting here, marking\nhis return to politics after three\nyears. The meeting was attended by\nabout 300 members of his \"union\nmovement\".\nAbbott Asked to\nCut Cigaret Tax\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada's tobacco growers Friday urged the\ngovernment to cut the cigaret tax\nby five cents on a pack of 20 In a\ndrive to boost sales and eliminate\nsmuggling from the United Sattes,\nThe move would drop the retail\nprice |n most provinces to about\n27 cents a pack but it would cut\nfederal revenues by. about $19,000,-\n000 in the next fiscal year starting\nApril J, . ;,;\u25a0\u25a0\nThe proposal was made by a\ncommittee of five representing the\nOntario yiue-Cured Tobacco Marketing Association which covers'\nabout .93' per cent of Canada's\ngrowers.\nThe delegation, meeting with Finance Minister Abbott, a non-\nsmoker, said the tax cut would\nboost cigaret sales by eight or 10\nper' cent a year. Smokers last; year\npuffed.rrecord 21,000,000:000 cigareta.' ,..,'\u25a0 - J '. *\u2022''\u25a0\u25a0\nThis sales Increase would require\nan additional 5,000,000 to 7,000,000\npounds of tobacco from farmers,\n\"almost certainly bringing an end\nto years of acreage restrictions.\"\n. Ahd it would smash smuggling\nalready drastically reduced as the\nresult of two successive cuts in\nthe federal tax, currently about 18\ncents on a pack of 20.\nNew Road Links Red\nChina and India\n\"hONG.KONG (AP)-The Chinese Communists have opened a\nnew road linking Kunming and\nChell ln Yunnan province, giving\nthem an additional route to the\nIndo-Chinese border, a report received here from. Kunming says.\nThe Red Chinese have other and\nmore direct avenues into Indo-\nChina, but the new road undoubtedly was built with an eye to military\npossibilities.\nWORLD TRIP\nThe German dirigible Graf Zeppelin took 20 days, four hours for\nits roud-the-world flight in 1929.\nCircus Belongs lo Yoiuig Russia,\nIon\nBy  BILL  B088\nCanadian Preaa Staff Writer\nMOSCOW (CP)-Every day is\ncircus day in Moscow.\nAcrobats, trained dogs and birds\nCossack riders on charging horses,\nchild musicions and dancers provide the entertainment that thrilled\nan eight-year-old Russian boy who\naccompanied me to one performance, even though it lacked such\nNews of the sOciy\nRATE8: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger typo ratea on\nrequest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment\nFine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\nMoir's Chocolates at WAIT'S.\nTea and Bake Sale, Church\nRedeemer Hall, March 31st, 3-_.\nBake   Sale   Saturday   Morning,\nFeb. 13, at Mc and Mc Store. -\nFlowers  for  your  Valentine\nMAC'S  FLOWER SHOP\nLadies' Maternity Dresses, all\nsizes, $3.55. EBERLE'S JUNIOR\nSHOP.\nTrlmfit Hosiery. 2 pair guaranteed for 3 months, or two pair free.\nTHE SHOE CENTRE\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) .- Cpttle and\ncalves .00; trade active and strong;\nkeen demand for good to choice\nbutcher steers and heifers, steady;\nfair'to medium kinds about steady;\ncows and bulls moving in line with\nthe week's advance of about 50\ncents; stocker and feeder-steers not\nestablished; veal calves steady.\nGood to choice butcher steers, $17\nto $18.50; common to medium, $12\nto $16.50.\nGood to choice butcher heifers,\n$15 to $17; common to medium, $10\nto $14.75.\nGood cows,-$9.50; to $10.50; common to medium, $8 to $9.25; canners\nand cutters, $5 to $7.50.\nGood bulls, $10 to $11; common\nto medium, $8.50 to $0.50.\nPlastic Lino Binding in 4 colors,\n8c per foot.\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\nTrade your old tires at\n8UPERIOR  MOTOR8\nTire Department\nKOKANEE CHAPTER IODE\nANNUAL MEETING TUESDAY,\nFEB. 16TH.\nYOUR   NEW   FULLER   BRUSH\nrepresentative  is Don E. Sergent,\n206 Morgan St., Phone 1335.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix lt,\nthrow it away. Prompt watch work,\nguaranteed, at reasonable prices-\nBedroom Suites reduced to clear\nduring our February Sale.\nSTERLING  HOME  FURNISHERS\nMotors, Radiators, steam-cleaned.\nHigh Pressure Jenny Service.\nSHORTY'S Repair Shop, 714 Baker\nA -shipment of galvanised range\nboilers just received. Extra, heavy\ngauge, No. 30 size. Order yours today.\u2014HIPPERSON'S\nPLAN   TO   8AVE\nInvestors' Syndicate of Canada Ltd.\nJan S. M. Harts\nR.R. 1 - Phone 289-X-3 \u2014 Nelson\nDon't-'forget your best girl-friend\non Valentine's .Day. Give her delicious chocolates from GRAY'S,\n534 Josephine St., Phone 1347.\nOn Valentine's Day say \"Hello\nSweetheart,\" with . fresh flowers\nfrom COVENTRY'S ; FLOWER\n8HOP,\nTo help you get td work on time!\nWestclox electric and Spring wind\nalarm clocks. $3.50 and up.\nHIPPERSON'S\nSee our selection of used end tables.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture. - -n\nHOME FURNITURE  EXCHANGE\n413 Hall Street\nWe are pleased to announce that\nwe can now. offer you Hood's bread,\ncakes, pies, etc., as of Feb. 16th.\nRANNIGER'S CANDIES  LTD.\n466 Baker Street.\nSave Saturday afternoon, 27th-,\nfor the sale at the Hume, of 'the\nfinest quality blind craft ever\nshown here. There is no worthier\ncause. Tea served.\nSCRATCH PADS\u2014AN EVERYDAY NEED FOR BUSINES8 AND\nPROFESSIONAL MEN. GOOD,\nCLEAN STOCK; 40c PER LB. \u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, PRINTING  DEPT, PHONE 144.\nR. NADEAU, Plumbers\nSteam and hot-water' heating.\nGall us for all your plumbing needs.\nRod Nadeau Jim Scott\n615 Victoria St.     705 Ropson St.\nPhone 1157 Phone 329-L\nGL'ASS SHELVES and BRACKETS\nPlate and Crystal glass shelves\nfor homes, stores or cafes. Chrome\nand cadmium plated brackets and\nother fittings at\nT. H. WATER8 e_ CO. LTD.\nPhone 1S6 101  Hall Street\nATTENTION: To all former Tup-\nperware Home Party Hostesses \u2014\nThe lucky winner of the, electric\nkitchen comprising stove, refrigerator and automatic washer was Mrs.\nR. E. Henry of Lloydminster, Alberta. Mrs\". Marion Noonan of Vermilion, Alberta was the dealer. This\nnotice inserted through courtesy of\nMatthews Agencies Reg'd. of Nelson, B. C\u201e official distributors for\nTupperware Home Parties. '\n.    CARD OF THANK8\nMy   thanks -to   Kootenay   Lake\nGeneral Hospital and to Dr. R. B,\nShaw for the splendid attention to\nMr, Morgan while a patient.\nS ' - H. Morgan\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for Donald Nelson Montgomery, infant son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Ed Montgomery of Castle;\ngar, will be held in St , Rita's\nChurch, Castlegar. today at 10 a.m.\nRev. Father L., Trainor will officiate. Castlegar Funeral Home are\nin charge of arrangements.\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nCanadian attractions as lions, tigers\nand elephants.\nThere are three performances\nevery day of the year, two matinees for children, who must be accompanied, and an evening show for\nadults. -,\nClowns cavort about the one ring\nin the brick and stone circus building. They are not as imaginative\nas those seen in Canada, limiting\nmake-up to false noses, and wigs\nand wearing costumes that are largely a take-off on ordinary attire.\nTie acrobats, however, are outstanding, better than any I have\nseen anywhere else in the world.\nRussian-speaking parrots join parakeets in spinning miniature merry-\ngo-rounds and performing other\ntricks. There is a magician, too, but\nhis magic is mediocre. Costumed\ndogs., dance, box and jump over\nhurdles. -\u25a0\nMusic and dance routines by 40\nchildren, all under 12, made up the\nsecond bait of the circus program.\nThe ring was set up to resemble\na shooting gallery. At the back, on\na tiered stand, was the band, all\nchildren dressed aa teddy bears,\nbunny rabbits and billy goats.\nOther children, in front of them,\nwere the \"targets\" who broke into\ndance routines when \"hit\" by pellets from \u25a0air rifles manned by tiyo\nyoung marksmen,\nHalf-way through the program\nthe marksmen went to bed, the\nlights went out 4nd their dreams\nwere acted by the targets' and the\nother children wearing luminous\ncostume..\nThe. whole performance lasted\nabout 45 minutes and the accompanying musicians played without\na sheet of music or a conductor.\nUBC Students Leon\nTo Liberal Party\nVANCOUVER'\u2022(CP)' r-. Richard\nUnderhlll, 21-ycar-old law student,\nwas elected president of the Alma\nMater Society at University of British Columbia Thursday.\nThe election also snowed that political leanings of UBC students are.\npredominantly Liberal. The Campus Liberal Club won 23 seats in\nvoting for tho UBC mock parliament compared with 10 for the\\CCF,\nnine fbr. Ihe Progressive, Conservatives and six for Social Credit.'\n111 Reports on\nLung Cancers\nLONDON (Reuters) - A British\ncommittee of experts has flecided\nthere is a relationship between\nsraokirfg and cancer ot the lung,\nthe House of Commons was told\nFriday.\nHealth Minister Ian McLeod said\nthe, committee Has issued ' this\nwarning: \u25a0'\u25a0-    ,\n\"It is desirable that young people\nshould be Warned of the risks apparently attendant- on excessive\nsmoking. It \"would appear that the\nrisk increases with the amount\nsmoked, particularly of cigarettes.\"\nMcLeod added: \"I accept the\ncommittee's view that the statistical evidence points to smoking as\na factor in lung cancer.\n\"But I weu|d draw attention to\nthe fact that'there la ao far no\nfirm evidence of the way In which\nsmoking may cause lung cancer or\nof the extent to whleK It does so'.**\nMcLeod said the committee's findings so far -include:\n1. It must be regarded as established that there is a relationship\nbetween smoking and cancer of the\nlung.\n2. Though there ls a strong presumption that the relationship -is\ncasual, there is evidence that the\nrelationship is not a simple one,\nGIVES REASONS.\",\nThis is because:\n(a) The evidence in support of\nthe presence in tobacco' smoke of a\ncarcinogenic agent causing cancer\nof the lung is not yet certain.\n(b) The statistical evidence indicates that it IS unlikely that the\nincidence of cancer of the lung ls\ndue entirely to Increases in smoking- \u2022\u2022\u25a0:..* \"   '.'.;-.\n(c) The difference In Incidence\nbetween Urban and rural areas and\nbetween different towns suggests\nthat other factors may be operating\u2014for example, atmospheric pollution and occupational risks, -\nAt a press conference later, McLeod\u2014cigarette in hand\u2014said, \"Un-?\ninformed and alarmist conclusions\nshould not be drawn from the committee's advice. The qualifications\nmentioned by the committee should\nbe fully realized.\"\nFa\non\nREGINA (CP) -,; Tim' Buck, national leader of the Labor Progressive party, says a depression wlil\nhit Canada.by autumn.\nAbout. 200 people attended the\nthree-hour meeting in city hall auditorium at which Mr, Buck' an-\nNelsqp Clarke, provincial LPP leader, outlined the LPP platform ant\ncriticized the \"capitalist imperialist\ncamp\".\nMr. Buck said the depression\nwould arrive mainly because th-\ngovernment.. refuses io trade with\nthe \"socialist camp\", and allowed\nCanada to.be \"railed by Amerlcar\nmonopolists who are using Canadr\nas a strategic reservoir\".\n\"Unless there'is a change In the\npolicies of the federal and provin\ncial governments there will be a\nshattering economic crisis by th-\nend of 1954,\" he said, \"and we w*\nreturn to Bennett's slave camps of\nthe 1930s.\" '\nAussie Crowds More Orderly but\nBlack Flies Trouble Royal Pair\nL$\nii\"\nY       -YSr\nYv>\nSunday> Feb. 1 j4\nValentine's\nMake Him Happy With a\nFORSYTH\nSPORT SHIRT\n.Trim^ood looks, plus easy,\ncasual .comfort, smartly\ntailored. Ih plain shades or\nniwt patterns.    '\n\u266695andwp\nEMORY'S Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\n571 BAKER ST. PHONE 31\n251h Infantry\nOTTAWA\" (CP)\u2014The Queen has\napproved 18 operational awards to\nmelnbers of the 25th Canadian infantry brigade for outstanding ser-'\nvice' in Korea.\nAnnouncing the awardsThursday,\narmy headquarters said 20 other\nmembers of the 25th brigade have\nreceived mentions-in-dispatches.\nThe Distinguished Service Order\nwas awarded two regimental commanders of Canada's troops ln\nKorea: Lt.-Col. Jean-Louis Gason\nPoulin of Quebec City,vcommander\nof the 3rd battalion, royal 22nd\nregiment, and J\/t.-Cpl. Henry William Sterne of Kingston, Ont., commander of the 81st field regiment,\nRoyal Canadian Artillery.\n-Among other officers .and men\nmentioned in dispatches were:\nCapt. C. A. Kemsley, 3rd battalion,\nPpCLL Calgary.\n.-{Capt, A. A. McPherson, 59th field\nsquadron, RCE, Vancouver.\nJapan's 40,000\nChinese, Pro-Red\nTOKYO (AP) \u2014 Japan's 40,000\nChinese residents have organised a\ncouncil pledging allegiance to Red\nChina, a Tokyo police department\nsource announces. At the same time\nthe Chinese decided to send a delegate to Peiping, the source said.\nThe Grand National Steeplechase\nwith its 30 jumps was inaugurated\nat,Ain^e, England, in IS39,\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 144 .\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBqdy and Paint Work \u2022 Specialty\nFor a Better Flavor and\nTastier  Home-Made   Bread   Try\nEllison's U-Boke Bread Mix.\nFull directions on every package..\nTake a Package Heme Today or\n;  Phbne Ma* 1\nELLISON   MILLING      ::.\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nOn Valentine's Day\nWhy Net dive' a V\nBOX OF CHOCOLATES f ' .\nChoose From ' *\nCADBURY'S - PAGE A SHAW\nMOIRS\n8MILE8 & CHUCKLES\nTOFFEE8 and TURTLES\nA Complete Price Range\nAt Your Rexall Store        i\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Dispensing Chemists\" -'J\nPHONE 84\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED''\nBuy- Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nBATHURST, Australia (CP)\u2014The\nwestern district of New South\nWales gave Queen Elizabeth a\nsunny welcome \\Mien she arrived\nFriday at Bathurst, 150 miles west\nof Sydney, in a Royal Australian\nAir force Dakota.\nMore than 100,000 people from\nBathurst and other centres within\na radius of 200 miles cheered the\nQueen and the Duke of Edinburgh\nduring their drive from the airpor\nto the town hall,\nLater the Queen and the dukr\nwent to a fair ground where 14,000\nschool' children gave them,a big\nwelcome.       r.  \/\nDuring the drjve through th'\nranks of the children the Queen wes\nWorried by the common Australian\nfljc.\";. '.,.*\nThe cheering of the children\nstirred up the flies and other insects, and the Queen and the duke\nfound it difficult to wave, chase\nflies and at the same time to hold\non to the rail of their jeep., ,%\"\nLater the Queen and, the Duke\nvisited the town of Lithgow before\nreturning to Sydney' by train.\nDull, rainy weather kept the\ncrows in Sydney to their smallest\nyet as the Queen left Government\nHouse today for the third day ol\nher tour of the New South Wales\ncountryside.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST      .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'\nVISUAL TR A.NINO\nMedical Arte Building\nSuite 206       \u201e   Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED 4 REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\nSit FRONT ST. PHONI 68\nHave His Job Done -Right\nVIC GRAVES\n, MASTER PLUMBER\nPHONI SIS\n24-Hour Wrecker\nSERVICE\n1952 CHEVROLET SPECIAL SEDAN\n\u20221775\nAirconcjjfionedj seat covers,\ngood rubber; low mileage. __\n1951 CHEVROLET SPECIAL SEDAN\nAirconditi'cfied, radio, seat '|aT\"7C\ncovers, low mileage, good rubBer.     I J I iJ\n1950 METEOR DELUXE SEDAN\nCustom radio, custom heater, sun visor, fog\nlights, back-up lights, overdrive, '|^C\"7a\u00bbT\nseat covers. A-l shape. \u2022 IO \/ m*\n1949 1\/2 TON GMC PICKUP\nWinteriied.\nHeater. ___\n_*995\nTory's 5*****Spfe.ol\n1940 Ford 4-Door Sedan\nNew, Rebuilt Motor. Good Rubber. Ready To Go.\nOnly$200\nSEE US BEFORE DEALING.\nFREE TRACTIOI.IZING SERVICE ON ALL CARS\nAND TRUCKS PURCHASED FROM US\nDURING THIS SALE.\nPhones 121 -122\nCorns and Do Business With Us on Baker\n281 Baker Street      Limited      231 Baker Street\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK \u2014 G.M.C. TRUCKS\nListen tb Wiginton Motors Supper Hour. 6:30 p.m. to 6:45 p.m..\nEvery Day, Monday to Saturday\n\u25a0\n__L\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1954_02_13","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0427900","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1954-02-13 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1954-02-13 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}