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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":" -\u00ab*Pf'*\u00a5wwf^^ \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 ~\u00abp\njet Airliners\nThird Crash Within Year Spurs\nThorough Technical Examination\nBy PHIL CLARKE\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Britain Monday night grounded all\nher world-famed Comet jet airliners for a searching inspection, after the third fatal Comet crash in 10 months.\nThirty-five persons were killed in Sunday's crash off\nElba. High-ranking British airline and civil aviation officials\npushed a probe into the trag-\nwere a wheel, part of a fuel tank,\nwing splinters, torn cushions, and\na life preserver \u2014 all ripped from\nthe Comet as it plunged into the\nTyrrhenian sea.\nThere was evidence that the 29\npassengers and :six crew members\ndied when the jet airliner exploded\nat a great altitude.\nThe 15 bodies reovered from the\nsea Sunday were taken from the\nchapel at Cerbone cemetery on\nElba to the Church of San Gia-\ncomo.\nCmdr. Giuseppe Lombardi, head\nof the Italian search party, said\nthere was little hope of finding\nmore bodies immediately.\nedy.\nThe grounding, temporarily suspending British Comet services between London, South Africa, aria\nthe Far East at midnight, was\nordered by the government-owned\nBritish Overseas Airways Corporation BOAC said \u2022 it had taken its\nseven four-jet, 500-mile-an-hour-\nplus Comets out of service for \"a\nminute and unhurried technical examination.\" It called the action \"a\nmeasure of prudence.\"\nBOAC said the ministry of transport and civil aviation concurred\nin the decision. Canada and France\nwere informed of the action so they\ncould make their own decisions regarding their Comets.\nTwo French air lines, the government-subsidized Air France and\nthe privately-owned Aero Maritime Transport Company, also announced they were grounding their\nBritish-made Comets for the time\nbeing.\nThree Comets are operated by\nAir France, three by the Aero Maritime company, and two by the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force.\nThree BOAC Comets were\naboard: at Singapore, Johannesburg, and Tokyo. The company said\nthey would be flown back to Loiv\ndon without paying passengers.\nBOAC is still serving its Comet\nlines with conventional propeller\nplanes\nA brief BOAC announcement\nsaid \"normal Comet passenger services are being temporarily, suspended to enable a minute and unhurried technical examination of\nevery aircraft in their BOAC's\nComet fleet to be carried out at\ntheir maintenance headquarters at\nLondon airport.'.'\nSir Miles Thomas, BOAC chairman, decided to throw himself \"almost exclusively  into probing the\nComet mishap.\"\nSTUDY WRECKAGE\nAn on-the-spot probe was opened\nat Porto Azzurro, Elba, where bodies of the victims and remnants of\nthe wreckage were taken. A baby\nshoe, diapers, a souvenir dagger, a\nbaby sweater! a sodden children's\nbook \u2014 these were some of the victims' possessions studied'for what\nclues they might hold. Also studied\nAdjudicator\nExpecting Talent\nBy IAN  M. BALL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Graham Sut-\ner, the 34-year-old British actor and\nlecturer who has just arrived in\nCanada to start on an 8000*mile,\nthree-month assignment as adjudicator for the 1954 Dominion Drama\nFestival, says he has been told to\nexpect an \"unusually high standard\" in Canadian arriateur theatre.\nAnd he feels the explanation may\nlie in the dearth of professional\ncompanies across Canada. \"Many\ntalented people who might ordinarily make their way into the professional theatre have no alternative but to stay in amateur groups,\"\nhe said at a press conference here\nMonday.\nMr. Suter will travel by plane\nand train across Canada judging regional drama festivals. The winning groups each region will take\npart in the Dominion festival,\nscheduled for the week of May 10\nin Hamilton.\nSEEKS  IMAGINATION\n\"No actor will get many marks\nfrom me if he doesn't bring his\nimagination onto the stage,\" he\nsaid. \"Many amateurs are content\njust to plod along and give an accurate performance of a play, but\nthat is not good enough.\"\ni\n$1\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay:   Clear   today.   Light\nwinds. Low and high at Cranbrook\nS and 25, Crescent Valley 10 and 30,   \/\nRevelstoke 10 and 30.\nVol 52\n4 W-* ..\nWtMa\n2LSON, B. C, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 12, 1954\nNo. 220\n28 Die as $nS^?m^\/\nSmother Eastern Stafer<\nBy ARTHUR EVERETT\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A raging\nsnowstorm, the worst in five years,\nburied the northeastern United\nStates Monday and high winds piled\nup road-blocking drifts. Freezing\nradn and sleet moved in behind.\nTemperatures hit new lows for\nthe winter\u201427 below zero fn Maine,\nfor instance.\nAt least 28 persons died in the\nstorm from New England to Pennsylvania. Many toppled with heart\nattacks as they bucked the snow\nafoot or tried to shovel it. Auto accidents and sledding mishaps also\ntook lives.\nThe storm, the weather bureau\nsaid, will continue into today.\nThe great arterial highways that\nsnake along the coast from New\nEngland south lay lonesome beneath a restless sea of drifting\nanow. Planes were delayed or\ngrounded.\nSchools closed tight in many\nareas.\nPLANTS CLOSED\nAt Farmingdale and Port Washington, N. Y., Republic Aviation\nCorp. shut down, affecting 29,000\nemployees. General Motors Corp.\nshut its Linden, N. J., plant when\nfew of the 2000 employees showed\nup.\nPhiladelphia was hardest hit of\nthe major cities with some 10 inches\nof snow\u2014heaviest in seven years.\nAll city schools closed and many\noffices and factories limped along\nwith skeleton work forces.\nNew York took on a strange\nsmall-town look as the storm dumped 8.8 inches on the city in the first\n24 hours\u2014the worst since the 15-\ninch fall of 1949. Then rain and\nsleet punched the city anew.\nGarbage pickups were forgotten\nas the city threw its full 8000-man\nsanitation force into snow removal.\nCoast TV Station\nOn Air March 15\nPORTLAND CAP) \u2014 Vancouver\nRadio Corp. said Monday its station\nKVAN-TV will be on the air\nMarch 15.\nBroadcasting on channel 21,\nKVAN-TV will be Portland's third\ntelevision station and its second\nUHF station. Fred Chitty, general\nmanager, said he expects the transmitter and other equipment to he\ndelivered next month..\nHousing, Cf iminal Code\nFirst on Commons Agenda\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Commons\nreassembles today, after a 26-day\nholiday recess, with the bulk of the\nsession's work still ahead.\nDebate on the government's new\nhousing legislation heads the\nagenda, together with a motion for\n. establishment of a joint Commons-\nSenate committee to study how capital and corporal punishment and\nldtteries should be handled under\nthe Criminal Code.\nThe Senate will meet Tuesday,\nJan. 19.\nParliament passed several important bills during a five-week\nsitting before the Christmas recess\nstarted Dec. 16. Aftiong them were\nmeasures to give textile manufacturers and other industries protection against seasonal price cuts in\nImported goods, to bring interpro-\nvincial and international pipelines\nunder the federal transport board's\njurisdiction and to change the name\nof the resource's and development\n\" department to the northern affairs\nand national resources department.\nThere is a possibility the present session will end early in June\nwith a break for the Easter recess\nApril 14-26.\nThat leaves, approximately 20\nweeks for Parliament to deal with\nthe budget and the remainder of\nthe government's list of legislation\nfor the session.\nFinance Minister Abbott is expected to present estimates of proposed expenditure early in February after his return from the current conference pf Commonwealth\nfinance minister* in Australia. The\nbudget itself may be brought in\nabout March 25.\nThree major legislative items\nstill must be considered: The housing bill, revision of the Criminal\nCode and the. decennial review of\nthe Bank Act.   '.\n60-YEAR   LAPSE\nDebate on the housing measure,\nstarting today, is expected to continue for more than one day before\nthe bill is given second reading\u2014\napproval in principle. Then it will\nbe sent to the Commons banking\nand commerce committee, which also will study the Bank Act.\nThe Criminal Code revision will\nbe the first complete overhaul of\nthe code in more than 60 years. The\njob is simplified by the fact that\nsimilar revisions were studied, but\nnot passed, in the last two sessions\nand most of the groundwork already has been laid.\nAs well, three major aspects of\nthe Criminal Code will be given\nseparate study. The Commons-Senate committee will review the questions of capital and corporal punishment and lotteries, and a royal\ncommission will study the plea of\ninsanity as a legal defence.\nPENSIONS SCHEME\nLegislation for a federal-provincial scheme of pensions for the totally disabled was forecast in the\nspeech from the throne at the start\nof the session. The plan will be\ndiscussed at a conference here starting Jan. 25, to which all provinces\nare scheduled to send representatives. It would provide pensions of\n$40 a month to some 20,000 totally\ndisabled between the ages of 18 and\n65, with the cost split between the\nfederal and provincial governments'.\nTHIS PICTURE, made available In London\nby the Communist newspaper, the Dally Worker,\nIs described as showing a person clad like Santa\nleading youngsters through the Central Park of\nCulture and  Rest In  Moscow. Caption material\nsupplies with the picture said for the first time\never, some of Moscow's New Year's parties for\nyoung people are being held In the Kremlin and\nwould continue  until Jan. 10 AP Wlrephoto.\n168000 to\nCome to\nCanada-54\nST. THOMAS, Ont. (CP)\u2014Canada will accept about 168,000 Immigrants in 1954, including the 1,-\n000,000th post-war immigrant, Citizenship Minister Harris said Monday night.\nThe government believes there\nare still many opportunities for\nnewcomers and plans to take in\n\"about the same number\" as last\nyear's 168,000, he said.\nThere was evidence that Canada\ncould have placed \"\"at least another\n20,000\" during 1054, Mr. Harris said\nin a speech prepared for a church\nmeeting here.\n\"But it is better to under-estlm-\nate than to over-estimate your ability to find employment or settlement for the newcomer.\"\nBy the end of 1953, Canada has\ntaken more than 958,000 post-war\nimmigrants.\n\"We are looking forward to the\n1,000,000th immigrant some time In\nthe next few months, a post-war\nrecord equalled only by that of\nthe U.S.A.\"\nBritish immigrants, totalling 295,-\n000, had been the largest single\nracial group. There had \"been 115,-\n000 Germans, 92,000 Netherlanders,\n70,000 from the United States and\n386,000 of other racial groups.\nAtomic Pool Plan With or\n- Pearson\nDrug Convictions\nBring Jail Terms\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Sentences\nof seven and five years were passed\non two men In police court here\nMonday for illegal possession of\nnarcotics.\nJoseph Berg, 39, got the seven-\nyear term, and James Lamond, 24,\nfive years. They were arrested by\nHGMP officers who watched a'drug*\ncache and followed the men to a\nrendezvous with three addicts.\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Conviction\non a charge of narcotics possession\nin police court here Monday,\nbrought two-year penitentiary sentences and fines of $1000 each to a\nVancouyer couple, Preston Harper\nand'his wife Janet. Failure to pay\nthe fines will result In an extra\nyear's imprisonment\nThe pair arrived In Calgary Dec.\n7 and registered, at a motel where\nthey were visited by police Dec.\n27 after bootlegging complaints\nhad been received.\nDetectives searched the cabin\nwithout success but on leaving\nstumbled on a hole in the ground\nnearby in which were 189 capsules\nof drugs in rubber containers. The\ndrugs were valued at about $2500\nat street prices.\nWest Alliance\nMost Important\nEden\nSays\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Foreign\nSecretary Eden said Monday night\nthe West will never abandon its\ndefensive arrangements as a price\nfor agreement with Russia.\nIn a broadcast speech on foreign\npolicy' just two weeks before the\nscheduled Big Four foreign ministers conference in Berlin, Eden\ndeclared that if there had been an\nAtlantic alliance between the two\nworld wars, the second one would\nnot have occurred.\n\"Whatever happens, we cannot\ngive up this alliance, which is the\nfoundation of our safety and threatens no one.\"\nExpectant Mother\nGets Jail Term\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n--Doreen Price, 23-year-old expectant mother, was sentenced Monday\nto 20 months in Oakalla prison for\nan attack on a police officer during\na cafe riot here Dec. 23.\nA plea for leniency so her baby\ncould be born out of jail was not\nheeded by the court.\nThree others arrested during the\nriot were also given prison terrhs.\nRobert Anderson, 24, was sentenced to two years in the penitentiary; Harry Anderson, 17, and\nRobert Cunningham, 16, both to\n12 months definite and six months\nindefinite at Oakalla.\nCycling Tot Killed \u2022\nNORTH   VANCOUVER,   B. C.\n(CP)\u2014A two-year-old boy, Glenn\n, Gregg, was killed  here  Monday\n' when hit by a truck while he\nwas riding a tricycle on a street\nwithout sidewalks.\nThe accident was witnessed by\nthe boy's mother, Mrs. Frances\nGregg, who was walking to meet\nhim. Police said the truck was\nbacking around a corner when It\nstruck Kim.\nJIMMY GOLDSMITH AND HIS BRIDE, the former Maria\nIsabels Patino, smile as they appear at Preston Field House In\nEdinburgh, Scotland, They were married In a Scottish village after\nthe bride's father, tin multimillionaire Antenor Patino, withdrew\nlegal action to stop the marriage.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto via radio from London.\nCanadian Army Nearly Useless,\nFar Outnumbered by Reds SaysPeck\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Lt.-Col. H.\nW. J. Peck said In an address here\nMonday that the Canadian Army\nis just about useless, and almost\nnon-existent as a defensive fighting\nforce.\nHe is commanding officer of the\n102nd Coast Battery, Royal Canadian Artillery Reserve.\nCol. Peck told the Ad and Sales\nBureau of the Vancouver Board of\nTrade that not only is the army \"a\nmere token of a token force,\" but\nit is outnumbered three to one by\nCommunists and potential saboteurs\nin Canada. , *i\nHe summed up the regular army\nthis   way:\"\"W\u00abhdUt''the   reserve\nforce, It is not even a mote in the\nRussian eye.\"\nRESERVE FORCE WEAK\nHe said the reserve force across\nCanada is \"shockingly weak\" and\nlack of trained manpower maizes\nit \"essentially non-effective as a\nfighting force.\"\nCol. P\u00abck said the Canadian\nArmy, without the reserve force,\nconsists of one regular division\u2014\nstill in its formative stages. At full\nstrength It would have 18,000 men.\nThe -Regular army, he told the\nluncheon meeting, has one man for\nevery mile of Canada's Atlantic and\nPacific coastline.\n\"Or, if you prefer it, one man\nfor every 200 square miles of territory.\"\nThere' were 55,554 Communist\nvotes at the last federal election, he\nsaid, three for every regular soldier.\nIn B.C. alone there were 10,382\u2014\nmore than half the total strength of\nthe army.\nHe said Canada should not rely\non the United States for protection.\n\"In my opinion this Is a humiliating thing to do, and a type of protection which has not been effective in previous wars.\"\nCol. Peck said Canadians have\nbuilt a castle of security on sand.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Defence Minister Claxton said Monday night he\nhad \"no comment\" to make on\nremarks made earlier in the day\nabout the Canadian army by Lt.-\nCol. H. W. J. Peck of Vancouver.\nEnd to Strike\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Negotiating\ncommittees of the southern division Interior Lumber Manufacturers Association and the International Woodworkers of America are preparing to meet on Wednesday or Thursday In tho Okanagan or at the Coast, according\nto the IWA office here, to make\nfurther efforts toward settlement\nof contract renewal In dispute\nsince contract expired August 31.\nDispute led to strike action In\nIWA certified plants October 23,\nwhich Is continuing, IWA looal\nhere In a resolution to Premier\nBennett Friday urged, appointment of a successor to Judge A.\nE. Lord as commissioner appointed to Inquire Into the tleup. but\nhas had no acknowledgement.\nSouthern Interior Inquiry by\nJudge Lord, iheduled to start this\nweek, has been postponed for at\nleast a week.\nAUSTRALIA RAPS\nU.K\/S BUYING\nCANADIAN WHEAT\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) -\nNorth American wheat sales to Britain became a point of conflict\nMonday between Britain and Australia at the economic meeting of\nBritish Commonwealth finance\nministers.\n-Australia criticized Britain for\nspending scarce dollars for Cana\ndian wheat, when she could have\nused sterling to buy surplus Australian grain.\nThough wheat remains the centre of the dispute, Australia is also\nreported pressing for greater British frankness on dollar spending\npolicy in other fields as well.\nAustralian delegates said' that last\nyear their country agreed to increase wheat acreage as a means of\nsaving dollars. Now, they say, the\nindustry here faces a crisis with\nsome wheat already unsaleable.\nRussian Attitude Encouraging,\nBut Warns Against Over-Optimism\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014External Affairs Minister Pearson\nsays the nations should go ahead with President Eisenhower's atomic pool plan with or without Russia.\nThe door could always be left open for Russia to\ncome in later, he added Monday night during the CBC\nprogram \"Press Conference,\" recorded earlier for broadcast\non the Dominion network.\nMembers of the panel were Blair\nFraser, Maclean's Magazine, chairman; Robert McKeown, Weekend\nmagazine; Ann Francis, CBC;\nJacques Lamhers, Agence France-\nPresse; and Raymond Daniell, New\nYork Times.\nMr. Pearson said he is encouraged by the fact Russia has agreed\nto discuss the president's proposal\nfor pooling atomic resources for\npeaceful purposes.\nBut it would be wrong to \"go\noverboard with optimism\" about\nRussian intentions. The Soviet\nagreement to discuss the plan and\nattend a Big Four foreign ministers' conference at Berlin might indicate a change in the Russian attitude, but it would be better to\nwait and see what happens at these\nmeetings.\nMIGHT BE TE8T\nHe said the West and Russia are\ncloser to agreement on an Austrian\npeace treaty than on Germany.\nTherefore, the foreign ministers\nmight discuss Austria first and that\nmight be a test of Russia's willingness to work with the West.\nIf the Soviet really was anxious\nto make a gesture of friendship to\nthe west, one possibility would be\nRussian agreement to a unified Germany, which would decide its own\nfate in free elections.\nHe reiterated that if France does\nnot ratify the European Defence\nCommunity, \"then we will all have\nto reappraise our policies\u2014and all\nreappraisals are agonizing.\"\nIt would be a mistake to think\nthat EDO, which would provide for\n12 German divisions in a supra-\nnatural European Army, is the only\nway to incorporate Germany in\nWestern defence.\nBILATERIAL TREATIES\nOther possibilities might be German membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization or a\nseries of bilaterial treaties between\nGermany and NATO countries.\nHowever, these would mean a\nseparate German army under a\nGerman general staff.\nHe was commenting on the statement by John Foster Dulles. U. S.\nstate secretary, that if France does\nnot ratify E-DC the U. S. will have\nto make an \"agonizing reappraisal\"\nof its foreign policy.\nDulles' statement stemmed partly\nfrom the fact that'half U. S. military aid for Europe in the coming\nyear is earmarked for EDC. If no\nEDC existed\u2014and it can't without\nFrench approval\u2014it would require\ncongressional action to free this aid\nfor Europe.\nPaper Combines Trial Told of\nBelief That Files Destroyed\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The trial of\n27 corporations and two persons on.\ncombines charges in the fine paper\nindustry started Monday- Lawyers\nsaid it may last two months.\nAt the opening, Norman L. Mathews, special crown prosecutor,\nsaid he believes many documents\nand files were deliberately destroyed in an effort to reduce or\neliminate the possibility of prosecution. *\nHe said some exhibits contain\nsuch phrases as \"destroy letter regarding price,\" \"we have been\nparticularly careful not to give any\nincriminating evidence,\" \"omit any\nreference indicating arrangement\non prices,\" \"files should be cleaned\nup at once.\" and \"please destroy\nthis letter.\"\nThe crown plans to present at\nleast 3300 exhibits.\nThe seven fine paper mills and\n20 wholesale merchants are charged\nwith conspiring to fix prices during the period from 1933 to Oct. 31,\n1052, at the manufacturing and\nwholesale level.\nBecause they were charged under\nan  old  section,  since revised  to\nallow for ilnlimited fines and a\nmaximum of two years in jail, Mr,\nMathews said the maximum fines\nin the case, if convictions are reg\nistered, will be $4000 for individuals\nand $10,000 for corporations.\nThe seven mills charged are the\nAlliance Paper Mills, Merritton,\nOnt., Howard Smith Paper Mills\nLtd., Canada Paper Company, and\nRolland Paper Company Ltd., all\nof Montreal, The E. B. Eddy Company, Hull, Que., and the Don Valley Paper Company Ltd. and Provincial Paper Ltd., both of Toronto.\nThe other Individuals and corporations are all of Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton or London, Ont.\nThe seven mills charged, Mr.\nMathews said, produced more than\n95 per cent of the fine paper manufactured in Canada during 1948-51.\nIn 1951 the value of the 253, 081\ntons produced was $63,000,000.\nUN Assembly May\nMeet Feb. 9\nUNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)\u2014\nIndia called Monday for the UN\nGeneral Assembly to reconvene in\nspecial session to debate the entire\nKorean problem.\nMrs. Vijaya Lakshml Pandit,\npresident of the assembly and sister of Prime Minister Nehru of India, suggested the delegates reconvene Feb. 9.\nShe transmitted to the UN an\nofficial request from India for the\nassembly to meet sometime before\nFeb. 23, the date on which, under\nthe armistice agreement, India's\nresponsibility as a member of the\nNeutral Nations Repatriation Commission ends.\nSecretary-General Dag Ham-\nmarskjold ordered the request sent\nto all UN members and asked for\na reply within 10 days.\nMrs. Pandit Informed the delegates that if she did not hear from\nthem by Jan. 22, she would assume\nthey had concurred in her suggestion for the assembly to meet Feb.\nShe indicated she was confident\nthe delegates would agree with her\nin view of the continuing impasse\non Korea.\nThe 10-day deadline means the\nUN members will have taken a\nstand on reconvening the assembly\nat the time the crisis will be reached in Korea on release of thousands\nof anti-Commtmlst prisoners of war\nheld by the repatriation commission.\nThe United States is especially\nanxious that nothing interfere with\nthe release of these prisoners,\nscheduled to begin in Korea at 12:01\na.m., Jan. 23.\nWARRANT OUT FOR\nSHOOTING SUSPECT\nDETROIT (CP) \u2014 Donald Joseph\nRitchie, the missing key witness in\nthe Walter Reuther shooting named\nMonday as a defendant in the\nstrange, tangled case, was given\n$5000 of the $220,000 reward money,\nit was disclosed Monday night.\nThe CIO United Auto Workers\nUnion, which Reuther heads, said\nit paid the money to Ritchie's wife\nafter he had told authorities\nstory implicating four men in the\nattempted assassination.\nThe four have been charged with\nassault with intent to kill and with\nconspiracy.\nAfter telling his story, however,\nRitchie slipped from the protective\ncustody of two policemen in\ndowntown Detroit hotel suite and\nfled to Canada. That was last Friday and he hasn't been found since.\nConvinced that Ritchie would not\nreturn on his own, prosecutor Gerald K. O'Brien Monday obtained an\nassault-with-intent-to-kill warrant\nagainst the 33-year-old, Canadian\nfrom Windsor, Ont.\nWaiaJv dhvjrfa,\n'Kootenay Lake water level\u2014Saturday 5.38, Sunday 5.38, Monday\n5.35 feat above zero.\nCOAST AIRMAN DIES IN\nCAR CRASH IN FRANCE\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Fit. Lt. Kenneth\nLatta, killed Sunday in an auto accident near Grenoble, France, came\nfrom North Vancouver, B.C., air\nforce headquarters said today.\nA report from Grenoble said\nLatta, 24, a jet pilot stationed at\nGros Tenquln, France, with the\nRCAF 421 squadron, was killed\nwhen a car in which he was riding\ncrashed'750 feet down a mountain\nravine. The driver, Lieut. Rene Van-\nzer of the French air force, also was\nkilled.\nGas Workers Set\nStrike Deadline\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Some 230\ngas workers in Vancouver and Victoria have set Jan. 25 as a strike\ndeadline in their dispute with the\nB.C. Electric Co.\nBob Woodward, president of the\ngas workers section of local 213\nof the International Brotherhood of\nElectrical Workers (AFL-TLC). announced the strike date here Monday night following a meeting of\n185 Vancouver workers.\nAbout 45 gas workers in Victoria\nare also affected. They met to\napprove the . strike date Sunday,\nbut made no announcement of the\ndeadline.\nThe dispute centres around the\ncompany's refusal to bargain with\nthe gas workers through the IBEW,\nwhich lost its certification as bargaining agent for the gas workers\nearlier this year.\nThe workers are seeking a 20-\nper-cent wage increase to bring\ntheir pay in line with laborers in\nthe company's electrical department.\nBasic pay for the gas workers\nnow is $1.30 hourly, about 23 cents\nbelow the electrical workers.\nEdmonton Troubled\nBy Unemployment,\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Edmonton,\nCanada's fastest-growing major city,\nis facing an unemployment problem.\nThe national employment service\nreported Monday that the largest\njobless increase of the winter was\nreported last week, boosting- the\ntotal to almost 10.000.\nA total of 9914 unemployed resulted from an increase of 1186 during the week, compared with an\nincrease of 422 the previous week\nand 784, the previous record increase this winter.\nCAN  STRIKE   ENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A 42-day\nstrike against the American Can\nCompany ended Monday night\nwhen a CIO Steelworkers negotiating committee accepied a company\nproposal offering a 14-cent-an-hour\npackage increase.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nREGINA (CP)\u2014The 10 wlemaraner pups born to Fraya of Hl-\nHope last week have graduated to feeding from full-size baby bottles\nfrom the battery of miniature bottles which come with \"wet um\"\ndolls, owner Mrs, Ed August said today.\nThe feeding problem arose when Fraya was unable to feed all 10\npups at once. The pups were split In groups of five, allowing them\nto feed alternately on tha bottles and from their mother.\n\u25a0'    i\n--\"\u25a0\u25a0-.--\u25a0   '..j---    .   '  '\u25a0 i __, --     ,.  .-.-i;-.-^--'-;\n ; ; \"    - ..    \u25a0   .\t\n '-iv-,':*M\"<ri\n\t\n\u25a0 \u25a0  \u25a0,.<'\u25a0\n\"\"\u25a0ppw-\"-!\nPPliWi\n2~N6LSQN DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 12,1984\nLAST TlMrS TONIOHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00 \u25a0 9:00\nRegular\nPrices\n\u25a0 ,,,.(|r*'\u00bbw\"    KHDHDA FLEMING\n1EI1ESJI BREWER - GENE SARRY - CUV IrUIGHELL\nAGNES MOOftEHEAD - THE BEU SISTERS\nSTARTS WEDNESDAY\nWiniHiKiiinuniimijtiinii\n\" SWGER\n\\SkiWlMN\\&\n\"TECHNICOLOR\nMusicland\nTHEATRE\nKASLO,  B.C.\nSHOWING\nTUESDAY, WEPNE6DAV\nOne Show Each Night, 7i30 p.m.\n\"Fair Wind To Java\"\nFred MaoMurray - Vara Ralston\nVictor MoLoglnn - Buddy Baar\nEnding Untrue\nSuspicions Part\nOf Police Duties\n\"We do not only uncover evidence to convict a person, we uncover evidence to release him of\nSuspicion of guilt, Sergeant W. H.\nDavidson told Gyro Club members\nin describing police work Monday\nnight. The RCMP non-commissioned officer described the detailed\nwork in investigating a case.\nThe sergeant described a case\nin which suspicion of breaking and\nentering descended on \"Johnny\"\nwho had stolen a car. Wheel marks\nof the car were found in a driveway where the crime had been\ncommitted.\nOn \"the face of evidence that the\nyoung, man had, been absent from\nthe car while a companion waited\n1\u00a7 minutes, he was convicted. Con-\nttpued police investigation, however, revealed another responsible\nfor the crime and \"Johnny\" was\nreleased -after serving his car theft\nterm.\nCanadian justice, the policeman\nsaid, waa based on the proposition\nthat a man was innocent until proven guilty.\nSergeant Davidson commented\non the club's splendid work being\ndone. \"This makes our town a better place to live In,\" he said.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nResults of games at Nelson Curl-\nins Club Monday night:\nW.  Burdenle 8, J. Campbell 6.\nD. Cathcart 10, W. Gold 8,\nJ. Milne 9, V. Killeen 7.\nH- Bush 11, L. G. Peerless 9.\nR. Carmlchael 8, D. Porteous 5.\nR.  D. Wallace  10,  R- M.  Chandler 8.\nW. DeFoe 8, H. Farenholtz 7.\nT. A. Wallace 8. A. Farenholtz S.\nE. C. Hunt 11, W. Kline 10.\nFuel &  Transfer\nPhone 8U9 Nelson, B.C.\nSALE\nCONTINUES\nat\nHughes-Stuart\nMEN'S WEAR\nPRICES  CUT   FOR\nANNUAL CLEAR  OUT\nMawer to Lead\nPeace Promotion\nDiscussion Here\nR. J. Mawer of University of British Columbia will lead discussion\nduring meeting of the United Nations Association at Nelson Wednesday night.\nMr. Mawer. is residing in Nelson\nwhile acting on the Local Co-ordinating Committee on Doukhobors.\nHe is a director of the National UN\nAssociation and took part in the\nUN seminar at UBC last Summer.\nFilms will be shown prior to the\ndiscussion at the public meeting,\nPersons interested in \"the promotion of peace\" are invited to attend.\nRossland Driver\nTo Stand Trial\nTRAIL\u2014The Butorac manslaughter preliminary hearing closed in\nTrail Monday and has been laid\nover until the spring. The trial will\nlikely be held at Nelson.\nWilliam Butorac of Rossland was\ncommitted for trial by a higher\ncourt on a charge of manslaughter,\nlaid against -him as a result of a\nfatal accident on the Trall-Frultvale\nhighway Nov. 11. Mrs. Alfred Turner of Beaver Falls near Trail, lt\nwas charged, was fatally injured\nwhen struck by a car driven by\nButorac.\nMonday's hearing opened before\nan audience of about 60 people.\nMain witness for the crown was\nGordon Pillar of Trail who had\ngWen Mrs. Turner a ride in anjiutQ\nhe was driving during the day of\nthe accident. From this she had\nalighted before the accident. Mr.\nPillar was the subject of extensive\ncross questioning.\nMonday afternoon four residents\nof Beaver Falls took the stand,\nStanley Knight, John Bond, Ivan\nE. Hussey and Rudolph Henkee.\nMr. Henkee testified that he was\none of the first to reach the scene\nafter Mrs. Turner was hit. Mr. Hub-\nsey told of watchfng the accident\nfrom his nearby home, after being\nattracted by the squeal of brakes.\nFollowing the evidence a plea of\nnot guilty was entered by Mr; Butorac and he added that he would\nlike to reserve his defence. Mag.\nistrate A. J. Smith of Fruitvale\nordered Butorac's former bail ended\nbut granted new bail of $4000.\nThe Weather\nNELSON   21 33     -\nSt. John's  9 15     \u2014\nMontreal   -19 -2     .01)\nOttawa      -18 -3     .09\nToronto    -1 10     .10\nPrince Albert     -10 1     .03\nNorth  Battleford  .... -16 3     .06\nSwift Current     5 16      \u2014\nMedicine Hat     5 24\nLethbridge     8 27\nCalgary     .'.... 19 23\nEdmonton     17 23\nKimberley           8 23\nCrescent Valley   12 30\nGrand Forks   8 37\nKamloops  13 34\nPenticton   30 37\nVancouver   28 42\nVictoria            33 42\nPrince Rupert   31 37     .02\nPrince George   9 13\nWhitehorse   20 31\nSeattle         31 41\nPortland         ...'  31 46\nSan Francisco   4.5 55     .50\nLos Angeles    40 59     \u2014\nSpokane   28 36     \u2014\nChicago  18 22     .01\nNew York 15 23     .62\nChurch Groups\nJoin in\nEpiphany Pageant\nThe annual Epiphany pageant\nwas presented by the children and\nyoung people In St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral an Sunday night at the\nregular evening's service. More\nthan 40 took purt in the pageant\nunder the direction of Dean T. L.\nLeadbeater. The presentation was\ndone simply and with dignity, and\ncreated an atmosphere of devotion\nWhich was entered Into by a\ncapacity congregation-\nTaking part were Header, David\nBarrett, Mary, Ann Godfrey, Joseph, Bob Lake, Jnn Keeper, Ted\nMattlpe, Gabriel, Maurice Donaldson, Herod, Conrad Smith, Scribe,\nJohn Bennett, Kings, Mavvyn\nSmith, Charles Morrison, Stephen\nJames, Shepherds, Gary Kllpatrlok,\nAndre Hials, Berky Maddaford,\nRichard Norris, Barry James, Servers, Stephen 'Barrett and Allan\nStenaon,\nThe girls of the Junior Auxiliary\nrepresented the children, of all\nnationB who came in procession to\nworship the Christ Child at the\nManger.\nThe girls of the Girls' Auxiliary\nJoined with the Senior Choir which\nwas- under the direction of F. S.\nWheeler, the church organ|st.\nCostumes were jooked after by\nMrs. V. Fink, and Mtsfc Q. Curwen,\nwho were assisted by Mrs. G. E.\nGrlzzelle, Mrs. B, MacLean, Mrs. J.\nArgyle, Mrs. C. Mattloe, Mrs, Pun-\nean Smith; Miss Proudfoot, and\nMrs. F. Wheeler, who Is the Choir\nmother for the boys.\nACT8 Or WORSHIP\nA stage was built out from the\nChancel steps under the direction\nof H. Lake, who also prepared the\nlighting which was most effective,\nThe Sisters of Mount St. Francis\nloaned the incense burner used by\none of ihe kings.\nThe Dean introduced the pageants\ntelling of the part such have\nplayed in the life of the church,\nand of their significance as acts ot\nworship.\nThe pageants began with the\nVisitation of the angel Gabriel to\nMary and ended with a triumphant\nprocession through the church,\nafter the adoration of the Christ\nChild by all taking part, and the\nsinging of Onward Christian Soldiers, A moment of deep reverence\nwas experienced when all the chiN\ndren were gathered around the\nmanger scene and sang the carol\n\"Away in a Manger.\"\nThis is the fourth year the\npageant has been presented.\nHousing Co-Op\nHalves Costs\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Build a $14,000\nhome for half that price? Sounds\nfantastic but Rev, F. A. Marrocco\nsays that's what Is being done by\n34 young couples here.\nI Father Marrocco is head of the\n1 Canadian Catholic Conference's so:\n'cial action department and has\n! fostered a growing movement to\nI beat the housing shortage through\nI co-operative action.\n| One result will be completion\n: this spring of 34 homes at Lake-\nI view Terrace, a suburb of Hull\n! across the Ottawa river from the\nj capital. They are the vanguard of\nI about 500 more expected to be built\nat a similar saving.\n| Father Marrocco aaid in an interview Friday that the saving in\njhome building is achieved because\nthe prospective home owner does\n! a large part of the construction\n: work himself after taking a series\nI of lectures and attending demonstrations sponsored here by St.\nj Patrick's College.\nFurther savings come from bulk\nbuying by groups of home owners\nI with between 25 and 35 heads of\nfamilies in each group.\nNOTICE:\nQreyhound Ticket Office\nBaggage and Express\nWill Be Open From\n6 A.M. TO 7 P.M. DAILY\nEffective Sunday, January 10.\nFIVE FREIGHT\nRATE SCALES UP\nFOR DISCUSSION\nBy  JOHN   LEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-The board cf\ntransport commissioners Monday\ncompleted the receiving of 3,900,000\nwords of evidence dealing with a\nnational plan ot freight rate equalisation ordered by Parliament in\n1951.\nToday the board will begin hearing argument from spokesmen for\nprovincial governments, railways\nand other organisations concerned\nwith the proposed new rate setup.\nThe argument, involving conflict\nover five proposed new rate scales\naimed at uniformity of tolls over\nmost of the country, is expected\nto take about two days.\nAfter that, the board is to Bettle\non one \"equalized\" scale of \"class\"\ncelling rates which it hopes to put\nInto effect by next Jan. 1.\nFIVE PLAN8\nThrough 1953. the board held\nhearings in Ottawa and across the\ncountry on thhe equalization plan.\nThe commissioners wound up with\na variety of rate scales before them,\none put out tentatively by the\nboard Itself, two from the Canadian National Railways, one from\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway and\none from the Alberta government.\nAt Monday's sitting, previous divergencies in the views of Alberta\nand Manitoba on the proposed new\nscales were emphasized in evidence.\nWIUklAM H, BURNS\n, . , elected president of the Canadian Legion Branch No, 81 in\nNelion, Me has served three yean\n\u25a0I vice-president of the Legion\nand has been active In many\norganisations In the elty,\n  \u2014Vogue photo,\nKinnaird Forum\nInforms Public\nOn Friday Bylaw\nKlNNAIBD-PetBlls ot the \u00bb105,-\n000 water bylaw were explained to\nthe residents of Kinnaird at a forum\nmeeting here Monday night at the\nKinnaird Improvement Society Hall.\nThe Kinnaird village commissioners have been assisted In planning\nthe details of this bylaw by an advisory committee comprised of A.\nG. Eldridge, chairman, W. Carpenter and A. Gray.\nThe meeting was told that this\nbylaw, if passad, will provide for\nthe purchase of the Dumont Water\nSystem for the sum of $40,000 and\nfor the extensive improving end\nenlarging of the village-owned\nwater system which will include a\nnew larger pumping station on the\nColumbia River-\nAn eight-Inch water main from\nthe new pumping station to the\npresent storage tank will be in-\ns'alled and a large 100,000-galIon\nstorage tank will be constructed to\ngive additional water storage.\nWhere present service mains are\ninadequate there will be Improvements made. It Is anticipated that\nrevenues from water rates will be\nsufficient to finance this bylaw so\nthere need be no increase In either\nwater rales or village taxes.\nVOTE FRIDAY\nAt present there are restricted\nsprinkling hours, but It Is expected\nthat when the work planned (or\nthis bylaw is completed there will\nbe no further need for restrictions.\nThis bylaw will be voted on next\nFriday. All ratepayers of the village\nara eligible to cast ballots.\nA presentation of community Interest was made at this meeting\nwhen S. McKenzle, president of the\nKinnaird St. John Ambulance Association, presented the village with\nthe newly purchased pneolator,\nwhich was accepted by Chairman\nW. Jacob-son.\nMr. Jacot)son asked Fire Chief 0.\nI. Scott to have the village fire department take charge of \"this valuable piece of life-saving equipment,\"\nA pneolator is one of the latest\nand most efficient pieces of equipment'available for giving artificial\nrespiration. It ti easily portable\nand can prove invaluable in drowning or in asphyxin cases.\nGroup Advised\nTRAIL-The story of oil and Hi\nproduction was the topic chosen\nby Oris A Kennedy, executive\nassistant to Alberta's Premier Man.\nning, in an address at the annual\nmeeting of the Christian Business\nMen's Committee.\nWithout o)|, he ssid, \"wo could\nnot f|y a plane, a' train, run a\nwheelbarrow or a sewing machine,\nIt came not as many thought from\npools but from rocks and to illue.\nirate his point he produced a roclf\nwhich had been extracted from the\nLeduc oil field 6000 feet under. He\nalso talked of another field, a guaranteed field.'where anyone drilling\ninto it. never came out without\nfinding oil, he referred to the Bible\nand quoted severe! passages therefrom to bring home his points, Continuing his comparison, he said It\nis not enough to know the Bible's'\nwealth, it is there \"we must Btart\ndrilling and direct the oil Into useful channels. Canada's greatest need\ntoday is men and women who will\nproduce Christian'. There was a\ngreat need for Christian fellow.\nShip.\"\nMr. Kennedy praised premier\nManning as \"one of the busiest\nmen I know and yet week after\nweek he finds time for church activities and could often he found\npouring over the Bible.\" The Importance of encouraging ohlldren\nto read the Bible was stressed by\nthe speaker.\nA jreat need enisted in legislative bodies for men who will stand\nby the Bible. He felt that this\nwould be accomplished by getting\nchildren to read it. Then in twenty\nyears they will talte places in the\nHouse of Commons which he found\nj \"a dry desert\" when Jie was there.\n! \"If you believe the Book you can\nask for anything you want that is\nright in the sight of God and He\nwill give it to you.\n\"As an example of the healing\npower of grayer, he told of a case\nof a man In Edmonton who was\ngiven two weeks to live. He has\n.ilnue been discharged from hospital, healed. Dodtorg did npt know\nwhat healed the man.\"\nHe ended his talk with a chal-\nlenge to men and women to become\n\"a prodi'qer for the Lord Jesus\nChrist.\"\nAn announcement wag made at\nthe banquet, attended by 133, that\nIhe Western Canadian regional conference will be held in frail April\n29 to May 2nd.\nChairman W. N. Aslin gave a report on the activities of the CBMC\nin the district during 1933.\nCHILDREN SIND\nCLOTHING\nGIFTS TO KOREA\nTwo hundred pounds of new and\ngood used clothing have been sent\nto tile Save the Children Fund by\nthe Sunday School children of SI\nSaviour's and St. Andrew's church-\nel, The It) oartoni were packed for\neventual shipment to Korea after\nGifts Service during Christmas.\npver |9f) was also donated in\ngifts for the Milk fund (or Korean\nchildren.\nDOLLAR   UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was unchanged at a\npremium of 2 9-18 per cent In\nterms of U. S. funds. Pound sterling up 1-32 cent at $2.81 3-16.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U. S.\ndollar today closed at a discount\nof 2 15-32 per cent in terms of Canadian funds, up 1-32. Pound sterling $2.74 3-16. up 1-16.\nB.C. RED CROSS\nHEADS TO ATTEND\nNELSON MEET\nProvincial heads of the Red\nCross Society will be in Nelson for\nthe annual meeting of the Nelson\nbranch Wednesday night.\nLt. Col. G. P, Stirrett. OBE, ED,\nprovincial president; Col. C. A.\nScott, commissioner, both of Vancouver, and James Bryden of Trail,\nregional representative for the\nKootenays on British Columbia\nbody, ara to attend,\nReports on the year's business\nwill be given and officers elected-\nFather Held as\nWitness in Killings\nROBERVAL, Que. (CP)- Hospital authorities Monday night held\nout hope for Michele Bolvin, 11-\nmonth-old baby whose mother and\nsister were found Saturday brutally\nslain in their lonely Notre Dame\nde Lorette home.\nA coroner's . inquest into the\ndeaths of Mrs. Fernande Fanlellc\n'Boivin, 35, and her daughter Dlanr.\n2, will be held today at Mlstassini\nQue., 50 miles north of this Lake\nSt. John district town'police said\nMonday.\nThe father, Cyllen Boivln, a 30-\nyear-old laborer. Is being held by-\nprovincial on\"-- a materiel witless In the killings.\n$100 FINE FOR HAVING\nUNDER-AGED DEER\nGREENWOOD- Stipendiary\nMagistrate L. A. Dodd of Greenwood fined Joseph Tweedy of\nOsoyoos $100 and costs or two\nmonths in iail for having In his\npossession a deer under the age of\none year. The deer was found in\nhis possession November 11.\nGordon C, Halorow of Pentlcton\nwas counsel for the defence and\nJ- F. Aiklns of Penticton 'wai\nCrown prosecutor. Witnesses for\nIhe Crown wore H, J. Smith oil\n\u25a0Jamej Creeks, situated three miles'\nSouth of Westbrldge, Game WardenI\nDill of Princeton, E. W. Taylor of;\nVancouver, biologist of the B. C,\nGame Department, who gave tech- j\nntcal evidence ai to tho age of the\ndoer which was on exhibit.\nRotary Warned\nAgainst Yielding\nTo Regimentation\n\"Our way in life in Canada is\nfreedom, but the time is fait approaching when businessmen and\nothers must decide between one of\ntwo things, regimentation or freedom; said Roy Hunter when speaking before the Nelson Rotary Club\nat their Monday dinner meeting\nin the Silver Room,\n\"Our way of life In Canada is\nfreedom ... it is time to place\nsome safeguards on our right to\nmake decisions.\"\nIi something is not done In the\nbusiness world to maintain Independence and we fail to protect our\nvote then our rights will get Into\nthe hands of those who abuse them-\nThe few can disorganise our efforts If we let them.\n\"One just has to look around to\nsee what's taking place in our business and soolal life to realize we\nmust give more thought to our\nwelfare. We must get away from\nGovernment regimentation.\"\nTwo new members were Installed,\nVictor Neal and Ronald Qrimstead,\nwith Harry Harrison reading the\nRotary charge to them in a short\nceremony.\nThe club will hold a tjoket blitz\non Baker Street Saturday for their\nforthcoming lee Capade Review to\ntake place later this month.\nFour visitors were guests, Dick\nThomas from Kelowna, H. D. Kennedy of Lethbridge, Frank Troy\nof Vancouver and Fraser Tees of\nNelson.\nCOAST FUNERAL\nFOR MOTHER OF\nDISTRICT PEOPLE\nMrs. Maude Eleanor Houle died\nsudenly January 4 at Vancouver\nShe was born in Manchester, England, in 1664 and came to Canada\nas a child.\nShe is survived by her husband,\nthree sops, Wilfred of Creston,\nLeon of Kimberley, Louis of Trail;\nand three daughters, Mrs. J. De-\nBriske of Trail, Mrs, Ray Shaw of\nNelson, and Mrs. E. W. Paterson\nof Nelson; twelve grandchildren\nand five great grandchildren; three\nsisters and two brothers.\nFuneral services were held from\nthe Heather Chapel, Vancouver.\nRev. James W. Melvin D.D. officiated. Cremation followed.\nFox cubs take )8 monthl to grow\nto full size and strength and their\naverage life Is 13 years.\nHERRIDGE RESTS\nFROM OVERWORK\nA report from Ottawa Monday\nslated that H. W. Herrldge is mak-\n'ng good progress in hospital there.\nThe Kootenay West member, who\nwas taken 111 late in December, still\nrequires several weeks rest due to\noverwork.\nSEASONAL FURS\nErmine is the name given to tho\nstoat when its fur turns white for\nprotection in winter. I\nRepossession\n1947 DODGE\n7-Passenger\nSEDAN\nA-l Shape.\nNew Eiiajne, Heater,\nMUST SELL\nIMMEDIATELY\n797-L Evenings\nIke Promises Farms\nPrograms Change\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Preli-\ndent Elsenhower proposed Monday\ntoybulld a new U. S. farm program\non flexible price supports, aiming\nat a goal of agricultural equallt\nwith the rest of the economy and\na minimum of controls,\nIn a special message to Congress\noutlining plans for future government aid to farmers, the preslden:\nsaid present programs\u2014by creating\nsurpluses and pricing crops out of\nmarkets\u2014are \"hurtful\" to those\nwhom they are Intended to help.\nThe Eisenhower program offers\nlillle that is new and It proposes to\nkeep mu'ch that already is in oper\nation.\n\u25a0PM\nPROQRESS...\nIn The Kootenay-Boundory\nPRINTED and PICTURED\nIn the 19th Annual\nNELSON   DAILY  NEWS\nPICTORIAL-\nINDUSTRIAL\nSend Your Friends and Rolqtlvos\nThis Special \"Mail Away\" Edition\nOrder Today\n15c a COPY\nPlus 3% S.S. & M.A. Tax, Plus 6c for\nWrapping and Mailing Anywhere In Canada,\nGreat Britain or U.S.A.\nYour Choice - Shop for\nTOP VALUES\nol the Week at LIBERTY\nTomato Soup\nOumjibj'l'i. Tin \t\nChckn. Noodle Soup\nUpton's, Fkg \u201e\nVanllh - Vqn*Slx\nDoe; not bake out, % e|,   .....\nPure Cinnamon\nNabob. DT.\t\nFRESH EGGS\nA Large.\nCtm. Extra\ndo*, 55c\nLOOK and SAVE\nCorn Niblets\nDel Maiz. 14 oz. tin \t\nCohoe Salmon\nMinced. ^% oz. tin \t\nBiscuits\nBarker's Assorted. J doz. in pkg. ,\nSoap Powder\nSodone. While they last, Large pkg\nCHIVERS\nThe aristocrat of the breakfast table.\nOLDE ENGLISH MARMALADE\n12 oz. )er '     \t\nBLACK CURRANT JELLY\n11 oz. jar ...             \t\n32'\n37'\nStrawberry Jam ,^   ,\u00bb>\n12   \u00ab  ^JC\nRasoberry Jam ^M ^w\nSeedless. H oz. jar   ^^    ^\nYes, 17 varieties ot famous English jams now in stock.\nFROZEN FOODS-Save!\nPeas mmm\\ kmW *\nAylmer Fancy. 12 oz. pkg    Wm^mA  g^^^   F^\nIce Cream IsL    I\nPalm. Bricks, each          Mm   Wk mm.      \u25a0--'\nRaspberries\nNelson. 12 oz\t\nWaffles\nFraservale. Pkg\t\nSTAPLES\nTo Help Stretch Your Dollars\nPRUNES?;\nMedium to lorgol size. 3 lb. pkg. ...\n 2, .43*\nWHITE BjANS 31<\n2 )b. pkg. ...   m-        \u00abw I\nSOUP Mil ?Q*\n2 lb. pkg- ...   \u00a3  \u00ab*\u25a0\u00a9\nPEARL BlRLEY JHt\n2 lb  pkg.   .   \u00ab\u2022>   <*\u25a0 I\n3ISCUITS\nSweet mixta\"!' mil pound pkg.\nPREMf\nSwift's.     :h '\t\n37*\n\u2022\u00bb tins   *'\u00ab*\nMEAT BALLS\nSummerslde. 18 oz, tin  \t\naouR\nRobin Hood. Famous\t\nROBIN HOOD OATS\n} lb. Economy Pkg. \t\nPOTATOES\nLethbridge No. 1. Grand cookers. Sack \t\nCABBAGE\nB.C. Firm beads. Economlcilly priced. Lb\t\nJAPANESE ORANGES\nLast ot the Jobber's lot, Good quality. Box\nCRANBERRIES\nEatmor Lb\t\nDELICIOUS APPLES\nt lb. bags, each   \t\n39*\n,bs 3*\n43'\n\u00bb2.79\n6'\n99'\n33*\n49'\nTAStfY\nMEAT\nSPECIALS\nLEAN BEEF STEW:         Lb. 45e\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE:  Lb. 38c\nUAN POT ROAST:  Lb. 39c\nSLICED BACON:    Lb. 69c\nPRICES EFFECTIVE ALL THIS WEEK\nB^s^ : lil^LL-^.,- \u00b1.\\      : .,._.'   ..^..'....v.,\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0,: .,..:;..\u25a0_;.. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0   \u25a0 ..: .      ...    ...*...        ;  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,..   ...\u25a0\u25a0,,. . _.__.._,\n.       \u25a0 ^.'^'iliiJoiliii-tiwt^\n 1*\nSmart\nkm\n...... COLOBsl\nMb STYLES, f\n$2,95 to $5.95\nSEE THEM AT\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n5S3  Bakei  St.\nPhone 895\nriunruirruir\nBoard of Trade May\nBuild Grand Forks Rink\nGRAND FORKS\u2014Annual meeting ot Grand Forks Board of Trade\nwas held Friday evening in the\nProvince Hotel sample room, commencing with a banquet at 6:30\np.m. There were 45 present.\nGuest speaker was E. W. Euerby,\ncity clerk. He was Introduced by\nChairman Dr. D. A. Perley and\nspoke on attalrs oJ the city giving\na picture of the growth of Grand\nForks In the past 20 years and showing how civic officials had weathered the storm of depression. The\nA. Fleming President\nRod and Gun Club\nPERNIE\u2014Keen interest In hunt-\nIng and fishing in Fernie area\nwas revealed when over 260 people attended the annual meeting\nof the Fernie Rod and Gun Club\nIn the Oddfellows Hall. President\nArchie Fleming and Secretary-\nTreasurer Percy Starr were returned to office.\nList of officers elected follows:\nHonorary vice-presidents, Thomas\nWilson, Tom Uphill, Robert Lynch,\nStanley Edgar, R. Barnes, K. N.\nStewart and G. E. Elkington; president, Archie Fleming; vice-president, Jack Bryant; secretary-treasurer, Percy Starr; executive committee, George Rawson,*Harry Burrows, Wayne Fowler, Leslie Hamer,\nFrank Dvorak, Dick Gregg, Henry\nStuart, Robert Glover. Lloyd Phillips, Stanley Latak, Peter Ax and\nMicky Sosnowski.\nFrank Maher, provincial fish bi\nologist stationed at Nelson, explained the work of the biologist.\nMr. Maher informed the meeting\nmany plans were being formulated\nfor the East Kootenay area, and\nfinances were available to carry\nout these plans. These included\nplacing of bass in Tye Lake, complete cleaning out of a depleted\nlake and replacement with a suitable species of fish, cleaning up of\ncertain creeks, placing of gravel\nbeds for spawning purposes in such\ncreeks and removal of troublesome\nlog jams. In the question period Mr.\nMaher stated he was not personally\nin favor of the ban on the use of\nsalmon eggs in fishing for trout.\nHe felt that it did not meet the\nproblem.\nJames Osman, provincial game\nwarden, showed several films relative to hunting and fishing.\ncity is now in healthy condition, he\nexplained.     *\nDr. Perley, as president for the\npast year, gave an account of the\nyear's accomplishments. Two pro]'\nects on this year's agenda are the\nGrand Forks Fall Fair which will\nbr organized under the Board of\nTrade with all organizations assist\ning and possible construction of an\nartificial skating and curling rink.\nAt present the city has an open-air\nskating rink and a closed curling\nrink with natural ice.\nOthers presenting reports were\nGeorge Chahley, for civic affairs\ncommittee; J. A. Labron for retail\nmerchants committee; Fraser Car*\nmichael for agricultural committee:\nStanley Orris (in Jack Acres' absence) for. tourist and publicity\ncommittee, and Dr. Perley (in Leo\nMills' absence) for roads and public works committee. Mayor O. O.\nStephenson and R. W. Haggen,\nMLA, gave words of greetings.\nElected wree: J. A. Labron, president; George W. Chahley, first\nvice-president; Carl Wolfram Jr.,\nsecond vice-president. J. E. Watson\nwill continue as secretary-treasurer.\nThe 10 Board of Trade directors\nare Oscar Pennoyer, Fred Popoff,\nJack Acres, Randy Sandner (Christina Lake), Stanley Orris, Charles\nSenay, William Penman, Sid Cole,\nJames Lorimer and Bennet Hove.\nChaplin is Rev. D. L. Greene.\n'Forks Marriages,\nDeaths Increase\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Report ot\nvital statistics recorded for Grand\nForks district reveal an increase in\nmarriages  and  deaths  and  a de-\nMason's Craftsmanship\nTransformed Lonely Valley\nBy FERN PICKERING\nSLOCAN CITY\u2014Five miles from civilization in a\nvalley clipped from a Swiss picture book, stands the remains of a hand-made water wheel, a broken bridge and\nstone work unequalled in the Kootenay\u2014monument to a\nfairy tale figure.\nA man with a Santa-Claus beard\nand a yearning for solitude came to\nSlocan from Nelson in 1915, later to\nturn his back on life in his peaceful valley.\nLike \"Grampa\" in the well known\nchildren's book \"Heidi\", Eric\nErickson Palmquist made his life\none'of caring for his goats and farm\nin a valley walled in by towering\nmountains five miles up Goat Creek\nat Slocan City.\nMr. 'Palmquist, Swiss-, in every\nway but his ancestry, which was\nSwede, died in' 1943 but his son,\nPalmquist (Pairky to frierfhs) still\nlives in Slocan. His wife Jives in\nVictoria.\nThe solitary figure logged in the\ndistrict for about 15 years before\nInheriting his valley from a friend,\nNels Nelson.\nHe made his valley a contrast of\nfriendliness and loneliness. For\nweeks   he   would   be   alone   then\nA COMPUTE CHOICE OP\nWELL-APPOINTED AND\nFULLY SERVICED\nAPARTMENTS AND\nHOTEL ROOMS AT\nMODERATE RATES\nJohn H. Cforw, Men*]\"\nVANCOUVER   B.C.\nSAVE MONEY WITH\nBANTAM\" CRANE\nMount* on new\nor used truck\nLifts 10,000 Ibs.\n\u2022 Drives anywhere at truck speeds\n\u2022 Leads  pipe,   steel,   scrap,  ale.\n\u2022 Handles   Vz  yd    concrete   bucket,\n29\" magnet. 8 other attachments\n\u2022 Works with IS' lo 50' boom\n'\u25a0#\u2022']\nCALL or PHONB\n18 DAYS\nPhone 792-Y Evenings\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\n'If It's Machinery You Need,\nConsult Us First\"\n214 Hall St    Nelson, B.C.\nhunters would drop in for tea and\na chat. When need of food made it\ninevitable he would follow a path\nacross a series of ridges and low\nmountains to Slocan. Winter was no\nobstacle to the farmer, he packed\nenough food in on his back to last\nuntil Spring.\n\u201e His farm became a marvel of\nhandicraft. He fashioned a big\nwooden water wheel beside the\ncreek and a smaller one in the\ncreek to turn it. He fashioned\nbuckets on the bigger one that\nscooped water from the creek and\ntipped their contents into a trough.\nThe trough carried water to the\nfarmer's log cabin and irrigated his\ngarden and fields.\nAn old conveyer belt did the\ntrick in joining the wheels. The big\nwheel moved with a rustic grace,\naccompanied by the fascinating\nsqueak of wood rubbing on wood,\nagainst a mountain background.\nStonework to catch the eye of\naccomplished stone masons can\nstill be seen here. A roothouse for\nstoring fruit and vegetables the old\nfarmer grew, is a marvel in stone\nwork. It is built entirely of overlapping stone with no supporting\nwood. The master of stonework\nbuilt the roothouse arch with each\nrock overlapping just enough to\nmaintain a fine balance.\nMr.   Palmquist   learned   his\nmasonry   in   Saskatchewan   where\nhe moved from Sweden in 1885. He\nwas 20 at the time.\nWORKED ON  NELSON\nCOURT HOU8E, POST OFFICE\nWhen he came to Nelson in 1896\nhe found work helping build the\ncourt house and post office. Later,\nin 1911, he contracted to build the\nKerr Block and in 1914 the Maglio\nBlock, all Nelson landmarks.\nThe oldtimer bridged the creek\non his farm in three places and\nearlier built five miles of flume\nfor De Champ and Johnson lumber\ncamps on Goat Creek.\nThe mountains surrounding his\nvalley lent themselves to the ways\nof the solitary farmer's goats. They\nclimbed them at will, returning\nwith their bells tinkling across the\nmeadow at evening.\nThe last {wo or three years of his\nlife he spent on a farm nearer Slocan City where he continued to\ntend his goats.\nSTEREOTYPE  MACHINE\nWilliam Ged, an Btiinburgh goldsmith, patended a stereotyping machine in 1725.\nigdtiwiMmt tMitdmg May m Keaay by\nW\n;\n\u25a0Jmmz\nmSSi\nThis business-like modern building located in Kimberley's business centre will house the district's new\npost office, Unemployment Insurance office and the\nRCMP. It is expected to be finished by June and is\ncosting $229,000.\nLocated at Wallenger and Ross Avenues, the new\ngovernment building is of reinforced concrete frame\nwith brick and tile infill. Contractors are C. J. Oliver\nConstruction Company and architects are J. C. Williams\nfirm of Nelson.\nPost office will be located on the first floor with the\nfront of the building given over for post office boxes and\nlobby as Kimberley nas no mail delivery.\nAlso on the lower floor will be a garage for the\nRCMP.\nThe second floor will house RCMP offices, exhibit\nroom, cells and living quarters for two non-commissioned'\nmen and a suite for the RCMP official in charge of the\ndetachment.\nUnemployment Insurance office will also be on the\nsecond floor.\nThe new building will replace one too small for the\narea it must serve. The old building, too, was built on\nwhat should have been a street before the city was laid\nout.\ncrease in the number of births, registered here over 1952.\nFrom January 1 to December 31,\n1953 there were 117 births, 52 deaths\nand 20 marriages on the records.\nIn the same period in 1952 there\nwere 124 births, 39 deaths and 17\nmarriages reported to Victoria.\nGrand Forks area includes Christina Lake district   .\nL R. Campbell\nNamed Denver\nFire Chief\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Leslie R.\nCampbell was named chief of\nNew Denver volunteer fire brigade at the annual meeting of the\norganization.\nJ. Allan Roberts was named\nfirst deputy and R. E, Crellln\nsecond deputy. Douglas R. Godfrey is secretary-treasurer.\nInstruction on artificial respiration and gas mask drill will be\ngiven at a meeting January 20.     '\nStudents Share\nTheir Christmas\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 At Christmas\nthe Junior Red Cross of the P. J.\nMcKim Junior-Senior High School\ntook as their motto \"Share Your\nChristmas.\"\nThat they really lived up to it\nwas evident from the' heap of\nbooks, Joys, dolls, clothing and\nfood surrounding the Christmas\ntree in the effective living classroom.\nBecause of the generous response\nto their appeal by- students, parents\nand friends, the group was able to\ngive two food parcels to each of\nfour needy families. Gifts of toys\nmade it a joyous Christmas for the\nchildren. Articles remaining are to\nbe sent to Red Cross House at Vancouver.\nIn addition to this successful effort by the seniors, the junior students were also busy. A rag sale\nbrought in $19.75, and a popcorn\nsale an additional $3. Grade A conducted a March of Dimes appeal,\nnetting  $41.44  which has  already\n1000 MORE CARS\nCROSS COLUMBIA\nCastlegar ferry carried 100O more\ncars across the Columbia River in\nDecember than In the same month\na year previous, although it decreased the number of round trips.\nNumber of round trips totalled\n4053 as compared to 4096 in December, 1952. Automobiles crossing\nnumbered  21.800\n20,500 a year ago.\nFerry   statistics\n1952 and 1953 are:\nAutomobiles  \t\nas  compared   to\nfor   December\n19S3     1952\n21,856   20,512\n...   56,651   59,750\nRound trips \t\n...     4,053     4,096\n11,165     11,320\nTrailers and\n89         98\n730       843\n4           2\nHorse-drawn rigs\nFreight  \t\nLivestock \t\nnil         1\n2,468     3,663\n11          16\nbeen sent to the Crippled Children's   Hospital.   In   addition,   the\ncouncil has voted $25.\nInternational Woodworkers of America strike which\nhas left 5000 interior woodworkers idle for the past 12\nweeks, also stopped this giant mill, Creston Sawmills\nLtd., for a time before men returned to work through\nIWA picket lines to resume partial operation in mid-\nDecember. The mill, scene of two sabotage attempts, is\noperating steadily.\nBARON SOLEMACHER'S\nLARGE FRUITED\nEVERBEARING RUNNERLESS\nDWARF BUSH\nSTRAWBERRY\nFROM\nSEED\nHew!\\\nFirst T\/mo\nOffarad\nIn Canada\nFrom the Baron Solenucher plant breeding works in Western Germany comes\nthis valuable Large Fruited Strawberry\n(grown from seed), a strain entirely new\nto Canadian gardeners, ind for which we\nhave been appointed exclusive licensee\nfor sale in Canada of Originator's Seed.\nNot in any way to be confused with ordinary Baron Solcraacher.types but a vastly\nsuperior large and round fruited variety\nwith fruit averaging one inch; rich, juicy,\nluscious, with unique spicy wild flavor and\naroma. Bean early ana heavily all season\ntill hard frost. Starts bearing first\" year\nfrom seed. Plants ire hardy, compact,\nbushy, runnerless, perennial: easily grown.\nOrder now. Supply limited. Originator's\nSeed In two varieties. Red or Yellow.\n?kt. 11.00. 3 Pk\u00ab. $2.50, postpaid.\nCRCCBIG 164 PAGE SEED AND\ntrnKKNURSERY B00K F0R 1954\nDOMINION    SEED    HOUSE\nGEORO'ETOWM.ONT\nA MOUNTAIN OF LOGS which accumulated when\nCreston Sawmills Limited was shut down by striking\nworkers, is shown here waiting to become lumber.\nA resolution has been wired to Premier W. A. C.\nBennett by Cranbrook IWA asking that Judge A. E.\nLord, who was scheduled to hold hearings on the strike\ndispute, be replaced. The inquiry has been postponed\nfor at least a week and in the meantime Interior Lumber\nManufacturers and the IWA plan to meet in further\neffort to settle differences.\u2014H. M. Buckna photos.\nService Brings\nHappiness Profit\nMarians Told\nCASTLEGAR\u2014The need for special service, for which no tangible\nremuneration may be anticipated, if\nprofits of happiness and peace of\nmind are to be gained, was the\ntheme of the talk given to Castlegar\nRotary Club at their dinner hvthe\nCastlegar Hotel by Glen Cummings\nof Trail.\nSpeaking on the Rotary motto,\n\"He profits most who serves best,\"\nMr. Cummings pointed out that\nservice therefore means profits. He\nsaid there were three kinds of service, minimum, extra and special.\n\"It is obvious to all that there\nis profit in the first two services,\"\nhe said, and then showed that there\nis also profit, though not materialistic but spiritual, in the special type\nof service, the kind that is given\nfreely and for which no tangible returns may be expected.\n\"If we concentrate on special services, we will reap the \"happiness\"\nprofits,\" he said, \"just as surely as\nminimum and extra business service\nbrings material or dollars profits.\"\nIn the happiness profits we find the\nmore you share, the more you have\nthe more you get. That's profit,\nisn't it?\"\nMr. Cummings, who is a member\nof Trail Rotary Club, illustrated\nwith examples, how special service\nhas earned profits for him and concluded: \"We don't have to go in\nsearch of these profits.' Opportunity\nto serve, and the profits Uierefrom\nare in our offices, among our customers, fellow-workers and with\nthe strangers on the highways of\nlife.\"\n\"Happiness is ours if we but put\nforth our claim and serve.\"\nTUB.; JAN. IS, IMS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii\nAND If WASN'T \\9\nCOLD ABIT\nAIN8WORTH\u2014It may be January and there-may be Ice on the\nedges of Kootenay Lake but It\nhain't stopped young people here\nfrom going swimming. They held\na swimming party at Alnsworth\npool on the weekend . . . and It\nwasn't cold a bit. Of course, the\npool was supplied by the same\nhot springs water that makes It\na popular holldaytlme gathering\nplace.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinn\nSun Life Opens\nKimberley Office\nKIMBERLEY - The Sun Life\nAssurance Company of Canada thin\nweek opened a district office in\nKimberley.\nSituated on Wallinger Avenue In\nthe Lloyd Block, it will be staffed\nby Ab Neufeld, district supervisor,\nGeorge Maurice, Kimberley agent,\nand a stenographer.\nCONTINUES\nat\nHughes-Stuart\nMEN'S WEAR\nPRICES CUT FOR\nANNUAL CLEAR OUT\nROSSLAND \u2014 Birth, marriages\nand deaths increased in Rossland\nduring 1953. Births rose from 129 in\n1925 to 156 in 1953. Deaths last year\ntotalled 44 compared to 31 in 1952.\nThe total of 36 marriages in 1953\nrepresented an increase of 11 over\nthe previous year.\nREAD   THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILVi\n!VUf nr m\u00ab Ii MM!\nNeed MONEY for bilk?\nGet a\nNIAGARA\nFRIENDLY\nLOAN\nWhether you need $100 or*\n91000 or more\u2014you'll find\na Niagara loan can be quick\n. . . convenient--and you\nchoose the payment plan!\nOn loans to $1500 you get\nprotective life-insurance\u2014\nat no extra costl\nYOU PAY LESS f OR MANY\nFRIENDLY LOANS\nYou\nOat\nMonthly\nPoymont\nNo. of\nPaymanli\n$1682.10\n\u00bb\u00bb5.00\n24\n1003.80\n60.00\n20\n710.15\n53.00\n15\n338.95\n50.00\n12\n173 EVEN Ol ODD AMOUNTS\nI AGARA\n560 BAKER ST.\nPhone 1638\nAn M-Cmadim Company In^vorcVMnOf\nISlENMY LOANS $\u00bb\u00ab$ FBEND1Y tOANS J8S*\nQli&tiMed, 3ftlanded and Mottled in Jcottamd\nThis advertisement Is not published  by the  Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n\u25a0ss.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0        - --:--\n.   .-. . .^y- _.-.   }.  . _ '\u201e-.\n-\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0--\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0 -        .-..-\u25a0\n_\u25a0....-\n\u2014-\u2014-\u2014.\n \u25a0^T-\nNi>lBmt lallu Nftaa LETTERS T\nTHE EDITOR\nEstablished April 22. 11102\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished (Very morning oxcopt Sunday by till\n'NWS PUBLISHING OOMPANV LIMITED,\nBiker Strut   Nikon,- British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Offlci  Department. Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF TUB CACIADJAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT  BUREAU Pr* CJfK'UI.ATIONS,\nTuesday, January 12,1954\nAn Essential\nIt is not generally recognized how\nimportant newspapers are to the functioning of a highly organized'society\n! until a community is deprived of them.\nNew Vork in December went through\na period of ten days when six major\nnewspapers were prevented from publishing by a labor dispute. The effects\n..were felt not only in New York but\nfar afield.\nIt was not simply that the people\nwere deprived of access to printed\n'. news and comment, a right essential\nto the operation of a democratic system\nj of government. Commerce was almost\n'totally disrupted. The gift shopping\nseason, which was expected to have\n' been the most prosperous in history,\nI was reduced to a fractibn of even regu-\nI lar business. People did not know what\nwas for sale, and, deprived of the psychological   influence   of   advertising,\njust bought nothing.   They did not\nknow what shows were on, and the\ndowntown theatres felt a direct fall in\n' attendance. The people who use radio\n1 and television listings in the newspapers had to content themselves with\nregular programs, and miss the items\nV that were not carried on the one sta-\n| tion to which they were listening.\nThe people whb were out of jobs\n; had nowhere to turn to find new employment. The people who worked in\nthe newspapers were, of course, themselves unemployed,  and  lost  much\n| . money\u2014perhaps as much as $10 mil-\n| lion\u2014in unpaid wages. The news dealers and news delivery boys all over\n:   New York were deprived of part or all\n1 of their, income. Newsprint companies\nI in (Janada, the United States, and even\n1 as far off as Scandinavia, lost business\n1 which is gone for good. Waste paper\nI dealers and users in New York were\npractically put out of business for a\nf time. Those who provide the multitude\nj   of products beside newsprint which\nare daily uKd by the newspaners lost\ni   business which it is improbable they\n1  will! ever regain. Railways and ships\n.;   carrying newsprint pulp and the finished newsparjers back to readers lost\n1  revenue,  and   undoubtedly  some  of\n|  their employees lost wages as well.\nSuch commonplace items of news\nas births, marriages and deaths were\nnot published f6r ten days. Only on\nsuch occasions as this is it realized\nhow much people deoend on \\the newspapers to spread  the  knowledge  of\nthese basic episodes of life. A wide\nvariety of legal notices which are essential to the administration of justice\nwere  not  placed  before  the  nublic.\nMany other public notices, besides or-\nidnary    financial    information,    announcements of public meetings, markets and prices, were shut' off from\nthose who depended on them. Informa-\n\u25a0 tion of the activities of governments\nand public bodies was cut off.\nNewspapers have a function to entertain as well as to inform, and many\npeople who like to do puzzles, read\ncomics, follow sports and other hob-\nUtton W the editor on my topic of\nginuim Interest are woloomo II thiy ire .\nknit, icouriti ind fair. No littir will bo\nInserted In whole, or In part, eHcopt ovor\nthe ilanitun ind iddran of tho writer,\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot pi re-\nturnid,\nToo Many Disadvantages\nFor Growers\nTo tha Editor;\nSir\u2014An article In your piper of Jin, 8 on\ntho idltorlal page rither got wide* my skin.\nNow regardless of tho many things wo oannot\ndo, we still havo tho privilege to stand up ind\nsay our pilot, This article trios to Itiior that\nthi people on the lind in Kootenay West are\nfelling down, but candidly the agricultural\nindustry hero is the victim of a many-mouthed\noctopus, For ont thing, the site of the acreage\ntn one lpcality Is too small to make profitable\nuse of machinery. Again, thi average town\nhousewife much prefers to buy five poundi\nof potatoes, carrots, ltd.', regardleii of whit\nit costs, Instead pf 100 pounds it a time. Again,\nthe general aondition of virgin spil here is\nsuch that an enormous amount of oheip labor\nis necessary to put it into production.\nThen again, the financial returns for our\nproduce are very meagre. A crate of berries\nwill take at least two hours to pick, and when\nyou take them to town and ask.the lady S5\nfor them, fresh, choice, she no doubt will say,\n\"Oh, Safeway has them for $4.75.\" And yet\nthat person was not asking for more than\nwages, to say nothing of his outlay in land-,\nplants, fertilizer and care.\nThen again, the average farmer In the\nKootenays has no electricity, and when in\nthe name of reason is there people that need\npower more than the farmer, where lights and\nmotors could lighten many hours of labor every day? It seems to me that many of our\nutilities are operated strictly for profit rather\nthan service, as an example:\nWe live three miles from Nelson, 'and\nour buildings are 30 rods from No. 3 Highway, and we have had application in for five\nyears for telephone, and still waiting, and\ncity power says. \"No, It costs too much to\ninstall.\" No profit, see.\nNo, there are plenty of us'native sons\nwho love the soil, but we can't live on scenery. Our families won't stay where regular\nhours and wages are not to be had. So when\nthe powers that be see fit'to give the primary\nproducers, the producers of the real wealth\nof the nation, a square deal, then will we be\nJustified In producing more foodstuffs in the\nKootenays.\nJ. R. ANDREWS.\nHistory via\n>. News Columns\nFRANKFORT, Germany (AP) - \"Italy\nfalls to Hannibal! 70,000 Romans killed!\"\nTh\u00abH iri headllnei-on. t'.ncw Germiri\nperiodical which Is soiling (lit here. It's part\not publisher Alfred Wllhelm's Idea to teich\nhiitory In \"i fresh way\u2014with i punch.\nWllhilm'i publication, ; \"Newspaper for\nWorld History,\" describes major historical\nevonts In the some stylo i metropolitan dolly\nreports lilt minute news, He uni headlines to\ncatch the raider's interest, pictures md maps\nto liven up front page makeup. Then ire even\neditorial comments,\nWllhclm, who, plans to Issue his \"newspaper\" four times a year, already hii I circulation of 20,000. Hii main objective Ii to win\nentire school classes as regular subscribers.\nWhile some German <educitlonoil authorities\nrecommend the project, Wllheim says he still\nfaces much red tape before he can get whole-\nnle support from the schools.\nA recent edition described In \"front line\"\ndispatches the Bottle of Cannae, .where the\nRomans suffered a decisive defeat from Hannibal's elephant armies.\nt-tzisz:\nVerse\nDisil\nlusion\nI watched a group of nimble Indian girls\nBathing and splashing In a river pond.\u2014\nSkins   that   seemed   lovelier   than   our\n. boasted blonde.  ,\nThe straight hair truer than our twisted curls.'\nTheir laughter living\u2014and  the teeth  were\npearlsl\nAll that is amiable was In their bond: -\nThe low. soft voices, and the accent fond,\nUnmarred by lewd scream, or giddy whirls.\nI mused how their far ancestors had crosi\/rd\n.   The Bering Strait in dateless centurl'is,\nBrir\"'ng. from some dim Shangri-la, thiili\n. charm,\u2014 v.\nThat simple human grandeur we hiye lout:\nUnkrowp to them our flaunting vanlt\/ss\nUnknown our envy and Invidious haim\nCORDON STACE SMITH.\nBox 3S7. -  \u2022\nCreston, B. C.   ,\nBaeheve on\nWaterloo\nf. I. Pearee\nTry qnd Stop Me\nBy BENIfETT C6RF\nBenjamin Diiraell, when he wai'prime\nminister of Englind, had frequent occasion to\nadmire the speed with which the German\nchancellor, Bismarck, got rid of long-winded\nvisitors. \"How do you manage it so painlessly?\" marvelled Dizzy. \"I owe It all to my\nwife,\" explained Blssy. \"The moment she\nthinks some old fool la taking up\" too much of\nmy precious time, she sends in the butler\nwith an urgent message from the Kaiser saying he must see me at once*\" At that very\nmoment, the butler tip-toed In and announced:\n\"I'm sorry, Your Excellency, but His Majesty\nwishes your immediate presence.\"\n\u00ab      *      *\nWhile the missus vacationed in the Adl-\nrondacks, mister turned their elaborate apartment Into something of a club for his male\nfriends, with one poker game setting some\nkind of endurance record by lasting from Friday evening clear through to Monday morning. When the missus got home she surveyed\nthe wreckage grimly, but a few hours later\nshe was able to report to her sister, \"Well, I've\nswept out every nook and, crony.\"\n* *      *\nIn the French quarter of New Orleans,\nsomeone spotted a one-room apartment for\nrent. The sign outside read: \"No bath; suitable\nfor author, artist or actor.\"\n* *      *\nA cranky old party invested in one of\nthose new hearing gadgets that are so small\nthey're practically invisible, and was assured,\nhe could return it for full credit if it didn't\nprove effective. He came back \"two days later\nto express his delight with the new aid. \"I'll\nbet your family likes it, too,\" hazarded the\nclerk. .\"Oh, they don't know I've got It,\"\ncockled the old party. \"Am I having a ball!\nJust In the past two days I've changed my\nwill twice!\"\n* *      *\nThe proprietor of a swank London shoe\nstore discovered an item in his stock that was\ndlstfnctly inferior. \"I am an honorable business man,\" he told his staff, \"and believe we\nshould put our customers on guard. Put these\ndoubtful shoes In the window and mark them\n'Fit for a Queen.' You Jolly well know a queen\ndoes not have to do much walking!\" \u00bb\n\u00bb.    *     *\nOutside the university's registrar's office\nthen was a placard advising: \"Now Is the\ntime to sign up for a course In accounting for\nwomen,\" A passer-by tugged it the registrar's\nsleeve, and, In a disillusioned voice, announced, \"Mister, there IS no accounting for\nwomen.\"\nAt plghty-soven Mr, Robertson-\nScott can Mill find Interest and enjoyment in school and of all things,\n\u25a0 police hoodquartori. We, on this\naide of the Atlantic, \u00bbe jo acous-\ntomed to believing that England (\u00bb\nbehind the times that it comes as a\nsurprise to read thii description:\n\"In this operations room I was\nshown wireless transmitting and.receiving teti connected by landllnes\nto an aerial high on a distent hillside, and a plinth, itself tho size of\na v considerable room with a large\nscale map of the country under\nplate glass and illuminated from\nbeneath. Every road, river, lake and\nwood is shown and model police\ncars can be moved about on it with\nlong wooden rakes. Symbols on the\nmap indicate some Incident or other,\na road clock, a mountain rescue, an\nair 'Crash, a fire, an abnormally\nwide road or a railway accident.\nMessages are constantly coming in\non loudspeakers from cars equip\nped with wireless, or being transmitted to them.\n\"I heard a message come in from\na police car asking if there was\nanything against a man its occu\npants were questioning. A glance\nat the index on a nearby table and\nthe reply went back \"A warrant out\nfor him in Liverpool; bring him\nIn.\"\n----\nbusiness Spry\nKern Allies Await Report on\n0.5. Wall Commission Draft\nmm\nINSPIRATION\nIf I have quoted so largely from\nMr. Robertson Scott it is because\nhis interest and enthusiasm for all\nthings serve as an inspiration too\nthose who are concerned about the\nyears after sixty-five.\nHis magazine, \"The Countryman\"\nstill seems to possess the enthusiasm\nand abiding Interest in simple\nthings shown by Its founder. There\nare amusing examples of the vernacular from various parts of England. On Dartmoor a mother who\nspoils her children Is said to be \"too\ncokey with 'em\", and a good cow\nis said to give \"hundreds of milk.\"\nPeople in a rage are said to be \"some'\nwicked\".\nThere are articles on animals,\ntame and wild, about birds, trees,\ninsects, flowers and gardens. There\nare articles with pictures about antiques, but only those antiques\nwhich^belong to country farm houses. There are articles by readers\nfrom farmlands overseas or abroad\nand there Is a \"Fruit Growers\nDiary\" which is a mine of quaint\nand curious as well as useful information.\nBEEHIVES ON\nWATERLOO   STATION\nWho would Imagine that there\nare beehives on the top of Waterloo\nBy HAROLD MORRI80N\n. Canadian Press tttaf\/ Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada end'\nother Western allies have big financial and political stakes in the\nfindings of the United States Randall commission.\nPreliminary reports are that the\n17-man body will urge trade-boosting stops that may help Increase\ndollar earnings of countries, which\ndepend on the U. S. market for\ntheir economic, strength,\nBut among top government economists the question Is: How will\nCongress react? If past experience\nIs my indication of future action,\nthen there is doubt that Congress\nwill support moves to reduce U. S.\ntariffs and open U. S. doors wider\nto foreign goods.\nAnd while economists have one\neye on events relating to1 the commission report, expected to be made\npublic In a week, they have the\nother on the U. S. tariff commission, currently considering industry demands to place curbs against\nimports of Canadian fish fillets and\nbase metpls.\nASKS U. 8. 4.EAD\nSome top-level spokesmen here\nare Inclined to brush off the Can-\nada-U.S.. rift' as of little importance.\nBut twice in 1953 Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent saw fit to call on the\nU. S. to exert leadership in remov\ning the threat of Communism and\ndepression by reducing trade barriers.\nIn 1953, too, Britain asked the\nU. S. to underwrite a plan to make\nsterling freely convertible with\ndollars.\nIn all instances the allies were\ntold that while Eisenhower favored\ntrade-boosting programs, his decisions would have to await the\nfindings of the R_andall commission.\nThus the Western world has become concerned with this body and\nits work. Washington dispatches say\ntentative drafts call for repeal of\nthe 1933 \"buy American\" act which\ngives home producers preference\nover foreign suppliers on U. S. de-\nCanadian   economists    feel   the\nelimination would bi encouraging,\nfence contracts,\nEncouraging, too, la the report\nthe commission will recommend\ngranting Elsenhower greater tariff-cutting powers.\nBut disappointing la the suggested retention of the \"peril point\"\nand escape clause* In U. S. trade\nagreement!. These are restrictive\nmeasures designed to protect domestic Industry against heavy Imports and Canadian experts ny\nthey provide loopholes which make\nIt difficult to predict future American policy.\nStation in the middle of London, or,\nas he says, Edison's dying breaths\nwere preserved in a bottle by Henry Ford.\nWe know what happens to i\nhuman who takes epsom salts but\nwhat happens to a tree? Cox's\nOrange apple trees which had\nstopped growing and were be\nginning to die back were saved\nand brought Into heavy cropping\nagain by dressings of epsom salts,\n8 cwt. to the acre In three successive years,.\nYes, there are articles on many\nsubjects, but all are so simply written as to convey the unhurried\npeace of the English countryside\nwith gentle loveliness and its unfailing Interest.\nWhat is the fare to England?\nAnother Reason\nFor Living Here\nNEW YORK (A?> - Dollar a\npound coffee In the store and maybe 15 cent a cup coffee across the\ncounter Is the bleak prospect today for American coffee lovers.\nA frost last summer In Brazil,\nwhile Americans sweltered up here\ngets the Immediate blame. The\nfrost nipped some 12 billion cups\nof coffee in the bud.\nPRICE SOARS\nIn New York, the price of coffee\nfor future delivery has risen to record highs. In Brazil, traders have\nsent prices to new highs every day\nfor more than a week.\nLatin American coffee experts\nhere say there's a long-range lag\nIn production In the coffee countries that keeps a constant upward\npressure on 'coffee prices.\nPEOPLE DRINK MORE\nAnd throughout the world, particularly In the United States, more\npeople are drinking more coffee\u2014\nand apparently willing to pay more\nfor the brew. At the present rate\nof increasing demand, coffeemen\nexpect Americans to be consuming 50 per cent more coffee by 1960\nthan now.\nThe National Coffee Association\nsays that frost in Parana, the state\nwhere most young trees are being\nplanted now, cut output by between\n300 and 400 million pounds.\nKnow Canada Says\nVincent Masse*   t\nTORONTO (CP) '-*]Governor-\nGeneral Vincent Masse* suggested\nMonday-, tjiat Canada.nay interest\nmore tourjsts If lt liiprovijd its\nCanadiontsm ai well ai its coffee,\nIn a speech delivered to the Co\/\nnadian qiub here, hB aid that ,\n\"while dqin'g what we ca to raise\nthe standard! of our coff e md Of\nour cafeterias generallj,\" Cans*.\ndlans should strive to (offer th*'\n\"exhilaration\" of vlsftint a \"different country.\" f .'\nHe urged English-spooking Canadians to' take a deeptr. interest\nIn the. culture of French-speaking\nCanadians. ft'\nEvery English-speaking Canadian should be \"as familiar with\nand as proud of the achievements\nof hla French-speaking .klow-citi-\nzens as be is ot his own,! the governor-general said. . \u25a0'\n^O\nCanned foods for babies, now i\nbig industry, were virtually unknown 20 years \"ago.\nr\u00ae>&\u00bb\nStands- Suptem\nUNQUEUr, OOP.DON  \u2022  CO. 11%\n...lb\u00bb largest pin ellstlllsis In Hii we\u00abM\nThis advertisement isnot published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND WALL\nALL NEWLY DECORATED\nAn ideal family hotel right down town.\nReasonable rates.\nUNDER  NEW  MANAGEMENT\nYour Horoscope\nDo everything to advance yourself In the\nyear ahead. Friends and co-workers will\ndoubtless help, and some success and hapol-\nness should be yours. Look for a dependable\nand industrious personality to develop as\ntoday's child grows up.\nbies, were deprived of their enjoyment, It was even learned that boredom without the newspapers sometimes produced family friction that is\navoided when newspapers are readily\nat hand;\nThe fact is that as we. have organized our society, newspapers are essential to its operation.\n, For Clean Hockey\nHockey doesn't have to cater to this lowest possible common denominator of public\nInterest to make Its way, and the sooner all\nteam managers, etc., recognize that, the better\nWe think that instead of monkeying with\nthe rules of play, the people in charge of\nhockey should pay more attention to the rules\nof conduct of team managers and ,coachea. A\nclub official who is even slightly guilty of\n' stirring up bad blood between two clubs,\nparticularly on the Junior level or below,\nshould be asked to make room for someone1\nwith a saner head on his shoulders,\u2014Cornwall\n' Standard-Freeholder.\ning-\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nl-\nIt's Been Said\nThe world ii a beautiful book, but of\nlittle use to him who cannot read it.\u2014Ooldoni.\nToday's Bible Thouqht\nDon't build a house of folly, Build\non a rock and use sound material\nand workmanship. There are too\nmany wrecked houses In life already,\nThe floods oomo and tho winds\nblew upon the house' and It fell,\n-Mitt, 7:27.\n(hint tJiat\nTopping each other\nin the local- set-\nwell, emporium\u2014\nTHANK* ANSA TIP OF\nTUB HATt\u00bb HAT TC\nLEW. UPTON.\na. axsmKrm CANyoN,\n>\u00bb SB\/BRaV hius.cw.:p.\nMV\nIf I was Amy, I'd sure make lt\nhot for John. When she phoned him\nabout the wreck, his first question\nwas about the car Instead o' her.\n-;3\\\n' \u2014mm ^^\u2014^\u2014\u2014^\u2014~\u2014 \u2014\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\n3 TIMES 6 TIMES\n.74 - .96\nLINES\n2\n3\n4\nS\n6\n7\n8\nYOUR NAME\nMl\n1.48\n1.88\n2.82\n2.88\n2.96\n1.44\n1.92\n2.40\n2.68\n3.36\n3.84\n\u2022 Minimum charge is-two lines\n\u2022 Add lie for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates If payment Is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nADDRESS\nNo. of Pays Ad Is To Run ,\nPayment Enclosed\t\nBill Me\t\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B.C.\n:*.-i   \u25a0'.: \u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0-_   .      . . \u25a0  \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0-':_   \u2022   .\u25a0-\nsm\n\u25a0....,:,\nA ;::.;\u25a0 ;ii^^\u00a3&^t$limm-m\\\n \u2022 Slnglt Place el\n?*hSS flnoit ftvtno'\nSSaP \u00ab\"H\u00bbH\u00bb nadel\n\u2666 Smooth-slde next\nto foot for solid eomfwil\neNoVoim\nlinings to hurt or ruM\no Try on opolr today.\n3Vl to tO. AAAA to C\nSome slylss 3'\/j to 11\nAAAA to i.\nRv Andrew &: Co*\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASlilON\nEstablished 1902\nMrs. W. G. Hiring\nNamed WA Secretary\nNEW DENVER \u2014 The January\nmeeting of the Turner Memorial\nUnited Church Women's Association was held at the home of Mrs.\n,E. F. Angrignon with Mrs. James\nForsythe as co-hostess.\nIn the absence of the president,\nfirst vice-president, Mrs. James\nDraper presided with 12 members\nand a new member present\nI Mrs. Roy Laybourne waa welcomed,\nThe'devotional period was taken\nby Mrs. E. M. Kirkwood. Mrs. M.\nCarr acted as secretary in the\nabsence of the secretary. A new\ntreasurer, Mrs. Walter G. Thring,\nwas appointed for a term of five\nyears.-\nCommittees appointed for the\nyear were: Community Club representatives, Mrs. William R. Mott\nand Mrs. John Taylor; representatives to Hospital Auxiliary, Mrs.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Mrs. W. A. Andrews of Rosebery was called to\nVancouver by the illness of her\nfather, O. Olsen.\nMatthew Carr, after spending two\nweeks at his home with his wife\nand family has returned to Calgary,\nAlberta.\n'Constable W. G. MacLauchlin\nhas left for Shaughnessy Hospital\nat Vancouver.\nN. E. Babey and Mrs. Angrignon.\nVisiting report was given by\nMrs. Forsythe. All the members\nwill form the visiting commitee\nto begin the year.\nNext meeting will be at the\nhome ot Mrs. Carr with co-hostesses\nMrs, Laybourne and Mrs. Taylor.\nThe meeting closed with prayer by\nRev. D. R. Stone. Collection totalled\n$2.75.      -'\nTHERE IS AN EASIER WAY!\nGives'you gracious living beyond any standard\nyou hove ever known. But in so doing ft provides\nsuch' savings in time, money and work, that it\npays pays for itself.\n0\u00a3L JaAt, tffoajL, faowjnicaL\nFor Information and Service\nSea Your Dealer Today\nSALMO\nTaylor Bros. Ltd.\nWilson and Stenson Ltd,\nFRUITVALE\nNelson Lumber Co. Ltd.\nROSSLAND\nMitchell Cartage and\nFuel Supply\nTRAIL\nInterior Sheet Metal Ltd.\nNEW DtNVER\nSlocan Lake'Hardware\nNAKUSP\nNakusp Hardware\nKASLO\nMarshall-Wells Stores\n(Armstrong's)\nEnjoy The Comfort And Convenience of\nROCKETGAS \"The Modern Fuel\"\nMcKay & Stretton\nLimited\nYour Home Planning Centre\n532 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 1555\nClothes Designed for All-Year\nWear Are Spring Fashion News\nBy DOROTHY ROB\nNEW YORK (AP) - The new\nlook In Spring fashions is slim, silken and feminine..\nThis was evident today as New\nYork designers opened a crowded\nweek of Spring fashion showings\nfor some 180. visiting fashion editors,' revealing what U. S. women\nwill wear in the Easter parade.   ,\nYear-round; weather-wise fash-\nIons are the big news of the. new\ncollections, designed tor wear, in\nalmost any season, The new lightweight silk suits and coats will do\nduty all through the Summer; some\ngoing on Into Winter beneath fur\ncoats.\nHaving discovered in past seasons that the weather is likely to\nJump straight from Winter Into\nSummer, designers, are showing\nlow-necked, short-sleeved suits,\ncoats and dresses of featherweight\nfabrics. The dress-and-jacket ensemble in fur-trimmed silk print is\none ot the important styles of the\nseason, as is the silk tweed suit and\nthe dark silk fitted coat.\nThe narrow silhouette Is almost\nuniversal in daytime clothes, shown\nin Empire sheaths and high-waisted\nsuits. The line through the midriff\nis skin-tight and will permit no\nconcealing drapery to hide excess\npoundage. So we may expect a\nwave of dieting just before Easter.\nWIDE CUMERBUND\nDesigners achieve the h 1 g h-\nwaisted look in many ways, some\nsuits have skirts which reach to\njust below the bust, to- meet a fitted\njacket which ends at this point\nSome coats are belted just below\nthe bust, or have half-belts just below the shoulder-blades in back.\nThere are dresses which are seamed or tucked from bust to natural\nwaistline .to achieve the moulded\nmidriff look, and suits which employ a wide crushed cumerbund for\nthe same effect\nSmooth, ladylike styles are the\norder of the season, in luxurious\nfabrics and sophisticated cut\nNew suits do tricks, displaying\nsuch innovations as peekaboo jewels half hidden by a slot or pocket\nflap, handkerchief pockets in the\nelbow, button-in vests or collars of\nlinen or pique, stick-pin flowers\nstuck in a pocket.\nInstead of summer furs, one.designer shows filmy crips organza\nstoles for wear with suits, coats and\ndresses. Sheer lace-trimmed linen\ncollars and handkerchiefs with\ntweed suits are another whimsy of\nthe same house.\n8HORTER SKIRTS\nThere's a softly feminine touch\neven to the most tailored costumes,\nwhich have smoothly rounded lines\nabove the belt, petal lapels, open\nnecklines, dressmaker detail in\nrounded pockets, jewel trimmings\nand accessories.\nExpert workmanship reaches a\nnew high in this season's ready-\nmade fashions, which have the feminine shape built-in,-through skilful\ncut and carefully moulded inner\nconstruction. This year a dress retain* its shape even when hanging\nin the closet.\nSkirts are on the average one\nInch shorter than those of last season, though the difference is imperceptible in many collections. The\nshort-lived threat of knee-length\nskirts is past, and the usual length\nis mid-calf, the most becoming line\nfor most women.\nCouple Wed at Chiferdale\nMake Nelson Their Home\nVases of white mums graced the\naltar and white ribbons marked the\npews in the* Church of the Redeemer at eioverdale when .Rev,\nR. Stuart Faulkes, united In\nmarriage;, Beatrice Alice; youngest,\ndaughter, of Mrs. Ada Peet and-the\nlate John .Peet of Cloverdole, and\nOve Pedersen, only, son of Mr, and\nMrs. J. H. Pedersen of Castlegar.\nThe bride was given in marriage\nby Charles Turner of Burnaby.\nPosed over Satin, the bride's\nwedding! gown ' was of nylon net\nand lace trimmed with sequins. A\nhalo of lace and pearls held her\nfingertip veil, and Havana roses\nand lily of the valley formed her\nbouquet She wore a single strand\nof pearls with matching earrings, a\ngift of the groom.\nMiss Frances Peet her sister's\nmaid of honor, was gowned .in pale\nyellow, floral organdie over taffeta.\nShe carried Kokoma carnations\nand mauve heather.   -\nMiss Anita Redmond, R.N., as\nbridesmaid wore mauve net over\ntaffeta and carried yellow carnations and mauve heather. The\nattendants headdresses matched\ntheir gowns.\nOdd Aosland of. Castlegar was\nbest man and ushers were David\nand Robert Peet, the bride's\nbrothers.\nMr. Faulkes proposed the bridal\ntoast at the reception, which was\nresponded to by the groom.\nFlanked by; tall white tapers, a\nlarge three-tiered, cake, made by\nthe groom's mother, centered the\nbride's-table, with vases of pink\nand white chrysanthemums and\ncarnations.\nThe bride presented her bouquet\nto her mother,, Mrs. Peet who was\ncelebrating her birthday.\nFor the honeymoon trip to the\nUnited States, the bride donned a\nblue knitted suit with blue coat\nand matching accessories.\nHer corsage was of Havana roses\nand lily-of-the-valley. The couple\nare residing at 811 Victoria Street,\nNelson.\nCENTURIES OLD\nThe so-called \"new\" castle at\nNewcastle, England, dates from\nthe 11th century.\nWwUecMgL\nfly. SbxiLha, WhsslaA.\n:\nLOOK FOR\nTHIS SIGN\nfor the FINEST in\nDRY CLEANING\nJoin the hunderds of satisfied Sanitone Service\ncustomers who now can enjoy this complete\nand efficient service.\nTRY 8ANITONE SERVICE\nJloobuuuf dLoLUidhj^\nAND CLEANERS\nPHONE 1175 182 BAKER ST.\nm\nREMNANTS-TO-DRESS!\nEverybody loves the contrast of\nplaid or checks 'n' plain! So thrifty,\ntoo\u2014use remnants for this gay\nschool dress. Simple to sew\u2014cinch\nto embroider.\nPattern 727 in Children's Sizes\n2, 4, 6, 8 10. Tissue pattern; embroidery transfer. State size.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needleeratt Dept, Nelson,\nB.C. Printy plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER and 8IZE; your NAME\nand ADDRE8S.\nEXCITING VALUE! Ten, yes\nTEN popular, new designs to crochet, sew, embroider, knit\u2014printed\nright in the Laura Wheeler Needle-\ncraft Book. Plus many more patterns to send for\u2014ideas for gifts,\nbazaar money-makers, fashions!\nSend 25 cents for your copy I\nBonnington\nBONNINGTON\u2014Alex Stewart of\nVancouver has returned to his home\nafter spending the holidays with\nhis son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. J. McGregor.\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas Mclvor of\nMoses Lake, Wash., have returned\nafter spending the holidays at the\nhome of Mr. Mclvor's cousins, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. J. McGregor.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Golz of the Emerald mine were the guests of their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. C. H. Penny.\nMr. arid Mrs. H. Penny of Nelson\nhave returned after a holiday with\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. H. Penny.\nMr. and Mrs. S. C. Bradsbaw and\nMr. and Mrs. Billie Bradshaw of\nRossland were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. E. J. McGregor..\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. McGregor and\nMr. and Mrs. E. McGregor Jr. motored to Slocan City where they\nwere the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E.\nGraham.\nRobert McDougall has returned\nto Vancouver where he is attending\nschool.\nMrs. S. Somerville of Vancouver\nIs here to spend the winter with\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Teddy Gordon.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Biddlecombe\nhave as their guest their son Arthur\nwho has just returned from England where he is with the American Air Force.\n0mA. fyfL With.\nWloJtuuvVYtcutiiL\nNelson Social\n. PHONt 1M\nCALIFORNIA TRIP ... Mr. and\nMrs. K, D. Rees have returned from\na tree week holiday In-Hollywood\nand Palm Spring, California. Mr.\nand Mrs. Rees travelled south via\nSalt Lake City. \u2022 - ,  ,\n\u25a0 \u2022   *   * .\nHOSPITALIZED . . ,'Mrs. N. D.\nImmlng, 509 Latimer Street is a\npatient in Kootenay Lake Genersl\nHospital.\n-    \\ . \u00bb'   \u2022 . 0. \\ ,\nRETURN , . . Mr. and Mrs. Ci\nShannon,1 Willow Point, have returned from a holiday in Terre,\nHaute, Indiana, with their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Captain and Mrs.\nRobert Rudafc    .      \": \u25a0\u25a0 .'\nFROM TRAIL . ...Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Vance and family of Trail\nvisited Mr. Vance's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs, W. M, Vance, Terrace\nApartments, at the weekend,\n*\u2022\u2022.--\u25a0\nBAPTISED ... The Infant son\nof Mr. and Mrs, W. D. Coleman, 908\nSilica Street was christened Saturday in the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate, Father F, Monaghan officiating. The baby was given the\nnames, Richard Thomas. Mr. ahd\nMrs. Frederick Duke were the\nsponsors. . \u25a0 ,   i \u2022\n0      0      0\nHOMO AGAIN ... Mr. and Mrs.\nHoward Butterfield, Terrace Apartments, have returned from a two\nweek holiday in Vancouver and\nVictoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTO CALIFORNIA . . . Mrs. M.\nBarclay has left to spend the next\nfew months in California.\n*. \u2022   *\nIN HOSPITAL ... Mr. M. Jesty\not 812 Front Street, is a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\n\u00ab\u2014\u2014\u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2022   i\nAinswprth Notes\nATNSWORTH -A well attended club meeting was held in, the\nhall with R. Sherradiri in the\nchair. A good financial report was\nread. Resignation ot George Gilchrist as secretary was accepted\nand Mrs. D. Glasspoole appointed.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, \u25a0'TUtSDAY; JAN. 12,1M4 -i 1\nNatal Notes\nNATAL \u2014 Miss Mary Volmer has\nreturned to her home in Edmonton\nafter spending an extended visit at\nNatal,- the guest ot Mr. and Mrs. F.\nYarolim.\nSylvlo Gris of Natal has returned from Kimberley where he visited his son and daughter-in-law\nMr. and Mrs. C. Cris. ' . \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. V. S. Reed and sons\nof Lethbridge were visitors to Natal at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nD. Jenkins. They were accompan-\nled^by Mr. and Mrs. C. Quarrle of\nColeman.\nij Dave Barass has returned to' Michel after visiting his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. Barass at the Coast.\nMr. and Mrs. Atf Ball have returned to.their home In Vancouver\nalter holidaying at Natal at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs,\" M. Slemkp.\nThey a)so visited relatives for a\nfew days at Brant, Alta.\nWELL ARMED\nSTOCKHOLM (CP)\u2014The Kroner, one of Sweden's two post-war\n8000-ton cruisers, has been equipped\nwith the latest anti-aircraft guns\not Swedish manufacture. The 40-\nmillimetre weapons fire between\n250 and 300 rounds a minute, guided\nby radar.\nSALE SPECIAL\nFoam Rubber\nPILLOWS\nSleeping Luxury at Its Be\nRegular $8.95    ' '\nNOW ^77\nm\nNatal Woman\nVisits Holland \\\nNATAL\u2014Mrs.-W. Reynolds and\ndaughters, Anne, 7 ahd Lana, 6, have a\nreturned ot their home at Natal\nafter spending a six-month visit;\noverseas with Mrs. Reynolds' par- (\nents, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Geeve of\nRotterdam, Holland. \u25a0'        ?'\nThis was Mrs. Reynolds' first visit,\nto Holland in the past eight years.,\nShe came to Canada as a Dutch war\nbride in October, 1948. \" ].-\nDuring her extended visit she\nalso visited Amsterdam, Dea Haaf .-\nand Utrecht all in Holland. She\nleft Holland Dec 13. .\nalways insist on..\n;.fon2most^fozen^xxk\n9000 SZES M-\u00ab\nTO  8IZE  48!\nFrom the soft curve of the neckline to the hip-gathered skirt this\nis the most slimming \\shape tor\nyou! Note'the distinctive detailing\nunder the bosom that sleeks your\nmidriff so beautifully! Perfect for\na now-through-spring crepe; later\non in sheer.\nPattern 9000: Women's sizes 34,\n38, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 36\ntakes 3% yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENT8 (35c!r\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\n8IZE, NAME, ADDRES8, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care, of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B.C.\nAinsworth Notes\nMrs. M. M. Love is spending a\nfew days with her daughter, Mrs.\nL. Stainton at Balfour.\nCONTINUES\nHughes-Stuart\nMEN'S WEAR\nPRICES CUT FOR\nANNUAL CLEAR OUT\nW7\nEVAPORATED\nMILK!\n\"from Contented Cows\"\nJust look at\nCarnation\nMilk  and\nyon'tlknow\nifs a superior milk. Not thin\nnor weak. Carnation Milk\n. looks like rich cream. Not pale nor washed ont Carnation\nMilk is creamy-colored. And this creamy milk tastes richer,\ntoo \u2014 in coffee and in your cooking. Try it Even a few\ncans will win yon over from your present brand.\nFREE: Helpful booklet on quick, easy and delicious\n\"One-Dish Meals''. Write to Carnation Company,\nLimited, Vancouver.\n:^i.i '.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0''.  \u25a0:'\u2022'..:'\u25a0 \u25a0. , -i-.-v;-, >~.\nm\nMORE PEOPLE IN CANADA\nUSE CARNATION\nTHAN ALL OTHER BRANDS COMBINED\nlOttOtfgg1\nHunt's Choice,\noz. eon\t\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n\u00a7\u00a7 LYNN VALLEY PEAS B\n* TOMATO SOUP\n* LUNCHEON MEAT\n* PURE LARD 9\nFRUIT COCKTAIL .\"\u00bb\"\nHIGHWAY PEACHES S\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE T\u00ab\nTOMATO JUICE Sift\nGOLDEN CORN B\nStd. Halves.\nox. can \u25a0_\nTownhouse Natural,\nex. can       .\nTaste Tells. Choice,\nex. can\t\n24c\n17c\n34c\n__ 16c\n2 for 29c\n6 for 73c\n2 for 25c\n29c\n\u2014 19c\n* SOCKEYE SALMON 8fi\u00bb 35c\ni EDWARDS COFFEE KrA\u00b1^$M2\n* FRESH BREAD SWans*\u2014 2 for 27c\nAylmer.\n10 ox. can.\nCanadian Pur* Perk.\n12 ox. can\t\nNorth Star,\nox. ctn..\n3>JUL&k fi\/toduoL\nCrisp,\ngreen heads.\nFlorida.\nSweet V juicy.\n* NEW CABBAGE\n* PINK GRAPEFRUIT\n* DELICIOUS APPLES .=u\n\u2014\u2014\u2014- ^luthonlswL WImLl\nlb. 10c\n_lb. 15c\n2 Ibs. 29c\nBrisket.\nRed Brand.\n* BOILING BEEF\n* LOIN PORK CHOPS\n* CROSS RIB ROAST XL.\nRib\nend.\nlb. 19c\nlb. 65c\nlb. 49c\ni9ffl.jfc Em ww AX\nPrice* Effective Jan. l\u00bbh and 13th   '       \"'r v';\"ri\u2014 ?';<\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n\u2014\u2014. ; t\u2014\n .J-NEUON DAILY NEWS,TUESDAY, JAN. 12,19S4\ni\u00bbi *m \\<i pf .'\u25a0 mm \u25a0 i.   I \"''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0?\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\"\" \"-1\"1'1; j *m**>tfr, #***!*\u2014\u00bb?\u25a0\"*\u00bb\u25a0\nOLDEiHAlRDO-Thi,\nParisian couture, inspired by the\nC 0 I N C   BACK  INTO  USE- Hangar at South Weymouth, Mass. Used is hue tor antl-       YO U T H F U L 1S T A R - fourteen-yesr-old Bobble Sir\nsob patrols in bat war, will house llghter-thsn-alr craft formerly baaed at Squantum, Has*. Keittn, ot Temple City, Cal., sits on one ot his. motorcycles sur\nrounded by trophies he's woa in open motorcycle drag rices.\nTiuiiv   vaiiku    .. rariuiui coinure, inspired by the\nIMILY  TOUCH^.Mrs.jenIaRelch,21,oneofthefew Middle Attn, features a blonde\nwomen eloekmsktrs la the United States, adjusts chimes ot a 200. switch draped ever tha fore*\nyear-old Viennese clock la her father's New York City shop.\" head and outlined by a diamond\nnecklace and ear-inn.\nyi'l\"1\u00bb *n \u25a0; \u25a0 <iiMi>iy-\u00abiij ta\u00abKwj\\fm^mmfmpgm)iemm\nymMy^yy-iy^yyyyyyyB-iiymyiyyiwyi\n8yyyymyymy@ym:^S:si;i[y;:^iMymm\nm\n| BITEjFROM  PA ST \u2014A worker touches up teeth In restoration of Jaws of a prehistoric shark In the new fossil and Ash\nI alcove of American Museum of Natural History in New York.\nWHEN  MOTHER NATURE  R E B E L S-Resese workers move Into flooded streets\nof Beslers, southern Prance, after River Orb overflowed banks sad inundated part ef town,.\nS HO RT C UYIN   Hit LS-Trsme mores on new Venesuelan \"Autonlsta,\"'* tea-mil*    ,,,-,\nsuperhighway through Andean foothills connecting seaport ot UGtulrs with.Caxacia.^   H   \u25a0*\u25a0;\nJ08E FERNANDEZ, 73, and his 29-year-old ion Ramon are\nshown standing betide the 1914 Ford that they drove from the southernmost part of Argentina to Detroit, Mich. The pair estimated\nthat they have spent $30,000 since they left Patagonia, Argentina,\nIn July, 1901. Joe (aid the. car had 16 blowouts during the long\nJourney, much of It In areas where there were no roads. They\nalto had several collisions and were frequently delayed by lack\nof parts. They sold they began the 22,000-mlle trip more or lass\nas a dare, expecting It to take six months.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n' HERE THE \"BARC\"\u2014the U.S. Army Transportation Carpi'\nnew giant (0-ton heavy equipment mover\u2014contains a total ef 203\nfull field-equipped troops as It rolls up on the beach at Cape\nHenry, Va., during field tests. This water-going vehicle Is capable\nof \"also carrying a 47-ton tank, artillery pieces or truck, It dwarfs\nthe 26-ton \"dueki,\" the familiar amphibious carrier of World War II.\n\/ \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nTHIS FABRIC displayed at a Washington fashion show has a\napeclal meaning te farmers. It'a made from corn and is suitable\nfor dresses, drapes and many other Items. Barbara and Bonnie\nBemon, daughters cf U.8. Secretary of Agriculture Esra Benson,\nare showing the material at a display demonstrating the many uses\nto which agricultural products may be adapted by modern chemistry.\n\u2014Central Pren Canadian.\nA FRENCH INVENTOR, Paul Saudemont-Salntquentln, haa\nperfected an electronic artificial vision dsvloe that may prove to\nbe a miracle to the blind. Hii Invention consists of a lens similar\nto that cf a television camera, and transmits electrically all letters\nto. an \"artificial touch,\" which Is placed on the forehead. The In.\nventor laid that he hopes to perfect hla Invention io that tho\nblind can read ordinary newspapers and books. Mr. Saudemont-\nSalntquentln (glasses) Is ihown demonstrating hit machine before\nthe Froneh police veterans' committee,\u2014Control Frees Canadian.\nMARCELLA MARIANI, recently choien \"Miss Italy of 1953,\" Is\nthreatening Nadla Blanchl with a big lump of mow as they frolic\nat Cortina D'Ampezzo. Nadla was chosen \"Miss Cinema of 1983.\"\nShe Is IS years old.  Marcella  Is  16.\u2014Central  Press Canadian.\n- GETTING A PREVIEW of new toya that will appear at the\nBritish Industries Fair In London and Birmingham In May, Fronklo\nTaylor and David Dralger give this fire truck enthusiastic acclaim.\nThe fireman o'n the ladder may be a toy, but on pressing < button,\nreal water squirts from the hose\u2014at tha fire, presumably, but not\nlikely. The fair, largest permanent Industrial exhibit In the world,\nwill take up a million square feet cf floor space at Olympla In\nLondon.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nSON OF A RUNAWAY SLAVE\nwho escaped to Canada In 1870,\nRev. John C. Holland) 71, min.\nlater of the Stewart Memorial\nChurch In Hamilton, was awarded the city's Distinguished Citizenship award of the Hamilton\nAdvertising and Sales Club. It Is\nthe first time \u00ab Negro has been\nso honored. A former railroad\nporter, he ssrved without a salary\nfer yean as the church pastor.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nTHIS IB A. NEW miniature aubmarlns being\nbuilt by a company directed by Dan A. Kimball,\nformer secretary ef the U.S. Navy, Debra Paget,\nactress, left, and director Sam Fuller attended\nthe recant christening ef the sub In Les Angsles.\nThe plastlo craft weighs 155 pounds, Is 12i\/\u00bb feet\nlong, two feet wide and carries a two-man crew,\nit can be operated either by foot power or batteries, The baby sub was dubbed \"hell and high\nwater.\"\u2014Central  Preis Canadian.\n Behind\nthe\nGlass\nWith MAX DES BRISAY\nK1MBERLBY \u2014 Last week saw\ncompletion elf the Kimberley Club's\nfirst qualifying round robin. Sectional winners were:\nA\u2014Matheson, 70 points; B\u2014Ctm-\nolai, 00 polntsi C\u2014Nesbitt, 72 points;\nD\u2014Jordan, 70 points.\nThe second qualifying round\nrobin had these rinks who had\n90-60 points:\nSection A\u2014Clmolai, Jordan. Nesbitt, Holmes, Matheson, Caldwell,\nBates; Archibald and Bisgrove.\nSection B has rinks garnering\n'from 60 to SO points: Livingstone,\nLoraas, Edmonds, Case, Brlssette,\nHarrison, Gold and Leaman.\nSection C rinks with from 50\nto 45 points: James, Vance, Sor-\ntome, Morrison, Wolverton, Fopo-\nvich, Beattie and Smart,\nSection D will have rinks with\n45 to SO points: Taylor, Mc Vicar,\nSilverwood, Robertson, Maartman,\nAdams, Barrett and Anderson.\nSection E has from 30 down: Lilley, Nicholson, Rogers, Faterson,\nWhite, Moscovltch, Tweils, Murray.\nTRAIL CLUB PLAYDOWNS\nSection A:\nThe race for the top four placements is getting tighter as results\nof games played to Jan. 3. Otto\nQjll's rink of himself, Don Sutherland and Art' QUI now are sole\noccupants of top spot. While Otto\ndisposed of Max Gordon last weekend, Jim Morris lost his second\nstraight game \u2014 this one to Reg.\nStone, who thus kept his chances\nalive. Gill how has won 7 lost 1,\nwhile Morris and Chess Chesser\neach have a 6-2 record; Chesser\ndefeating B.C. President Alex Ron'\nrink tor his sixth win. Scotty Ross\nlost his third game. This one to\nBert Weldon'i four, making his\n(Scotty's) standing the same as Reg.\n8tone'i at 5 and 3. Weldpn's victory\nalso kept him in the running with\na 4-3 placing (a game in hand,\nwhich if won would give him the\nsame as Ross and Stone).\nSection B:\nFrenchy D'Amour'i rink kept up\nits winning ways with its seventh\nwin against one loss, defeating Rod\nStuart's store boys. Holding to their\nsecond slot are Bob McGhle's foursome, who defeated Hugh Beckett\nto give them a 6 and 2 standing.\nThird place with 5 and 1 is still\noccupied'by Perry Landuccl's rink\nof himself, Vic Ferguion, Joe Lan-\n, duccl and 8teve Matovlch. Last\n' weekend they defeated Bob Hill.\nJohn Cameron, who did not play,\n\u25a0has a 4-2 record for fourth spot and\nPete Mclntyre, who is a game ahead\ni of the field, has a 5-4 standing.\nPredictions:\nSectionA\u2014A bad habit to have\nbut as enjoyable as watching a\ngame \"Behind the Glass\"\u2014this second-guessing game. However, here\ngoes again! Look for Otto Gill's\ndark horse aggregation to be no\nlower than second spot. Otto, when\nwe spoke to him in Kimberley last\nweek, was very modest about his\nchances, but we believe he will take\none of his \"psy off\" games against\nStone or Chesser. Which one will\nbe In the lap of the \"curlers' luck\"?\nStone, of course, hat to beat Otto,\nwhile Chess' game Is not so much\nof a \"must\". This week it looks\nlike Gill \u2014 1st with 8 and 2; and\nChesser, Stone and Ross with 7 and\n3, all tied for 2nd spot. Trjis corner\nsees Morris and Weldon ending up\nwith runner-up money 01J6 and 4.\nWow! Here comes the axe brigade\nready to start chopping'that limb\nOff. -rf,\nPredictions\u2014Section Br Frenchy\nto lead the pack with \u00a3% and 1,\nREAL HELP FOR       ;*\nYour Itching Piles\nOR NO COST\nII Hem-Roid, in Interns] oils trestmsnl,\ness not quicklj easo tht Itching sorensss\n\u2022nd burning psln of Tout piles\u2014it eosti\non nolhing.\nGet I package ot Hem-Raid St sny drug\ntore and use as directed You will be\npleased at how quickly your pile trouble js\nrelieved. Only J1.S9 (or the big 61) tsblet\nusing Hem-Roid 2 or 3 dsvs. as a teat, ask\npackage. If you are not 100% pleated aftei\nfor your money back. Retund agreemen*\nby all drug  stores.\nclosely followed by Bob McGhle,\nB and 2. John Cameron and Perry\nLanduccl with \u00bb 7 and 8. Possibly\na 6 and 4 for Landuccl to tie him\nwith 5 Mclntyre if Cameron takes\nPerry, This corner cannot see\nPerry taking D'Amour or McOhie.\nThis and that: \"Sparky\" Jamei\nwill probably be missing his second\nB.C, Bonspiel in 20 years, Sparky\nwon the Grand Aggregste at the\nCreston Butterfly BonBplel last\nyear snd will probably defend his\ncrown this March.\n\"Pop\" Batei (now one of the\nmany retired Cominco employees)\nIs looking forward to years of fishing\/ golfing snd particularly enjoying that \"Life Membership\" card\nthat the Kimberley Curling Club\npresents to all pensioners,\nJack Kwasney Is the latest \"Silver\nCity\" curler to move to the \"Sun\nValley of the Kootenays.\" Jack was\nreminiscing with Storm Maartrruin\nabout the days of yesteryear at the\nTrail-Klmberley hockey game Friday.-He recalled when he played\nhockey for Coleman In 1935-36. and\nwhen they defeated the Dynamiters in the league opener by a\n2-1 score.\nSaid hello to Smoke Eater hockey\nboss and old friend \"Glno\" LeRose\nat the same hockey game. Believe\nGino would like to have taken up\ncurling (after the shellacking his\nclub took In the hockey game)!\nKimberley club prexy, \"Silver\"\n8llverwood, advises the East Kootenay curling zonal playoffs date\nhas not been definitely established\nas yet. Entries to date are only 4\u2014\none Worn Cranbrook and 3 from\nKimberley. Come on Creston, Golden and Fernie. Get in the-swim\nGet your entries In fast so Eric\nMacKinnon can line up the playdowns January 15-16 or thereabouts.\nBill Leaman'i many friends In\nthe curling fraternity will be sorry\nto hear that BUI Is out for a month\nwith a pulled leg muscle. Caused\nby shovelling snow. (It's as tough\nas the Dynamiters hockey club, eh\nBill?)\nAlso sorry to report that one of\nour first skips In the Trail Curling\nClub, ahd one of the finest curlers\nin Canada, Hugh Miller, former\nTrail 'fire chief, Is very ill at the\nCoast. Come on, Hugh, we're all\npulling for you to win this one.\nP.S.: I arrived at my 4-6 days\nextra \u2014 if the Kelowna notice of\namendment Is accepted. Presuming\nthe playdowns to be held in Trail,\nit would take a rink from Golden\napproximately 2 days travel time\nto Trail and the same home with\nthe playoff time involved (4 to 6\ndays). Practically the same with\nFernie going to Trail or In future\nyears Trail to Fernie. Nice thought,\neh? Who said they (and you can\nguess who) weren't trying to bust\nthe B.C. Bonspiel?\nLethbridge Stages\nSportsmen's Feast\nLETHBRIDGE (CP)\u2014Everything\nIs ready for Lethbridge's first annual sportsrnen's dinner and old-\ntimers' hockey game next weekend.\nThe $10-a-plate dinner, sponsored\nby the Kinsmen Club to help pay\nfor their $20,000 Little League baseball stadium, will have Jim Coleman of Toronto, nationally-known\nsports columnist and commentator,\nas guest speaker. Al Ritchie, one\nof Regina's most prominent sports\npersonalities, is also scheduled to\nspeak.\nThe oldtlmers' hockey game will\nattract a number of former and\npresent National Hockey League\nfigures.\nIncluded wjll be: Frank Boucher,\ngeneral manager of New York Rangers; Garth Boesch, ex-Toronto\nMaple Leaf defenceman; Pete Slo-\nbodian, former New Vork American; Joe Fisher, ex-rightwinger\nwith Detroit Red Wings; and\nSweeney Schrlner and Lome Carr,\nonce linemates with both New York\nAmericans and Toronto Maple\nLeafs.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\niters Close in on Trail\nAs Betker Shuts Out Kelowna\nW\nL\nT r  A\nPet.\nTrail \t\n16\n12\n5 148 140\n.846\nKimberley\n19\n13\n4 148 149\n,881\nSpokane . .\n18\n18\nG 187 176\n.488\nNelson ,\n\u00bb\n18\nI 198 168\n.443\nKIMBERTJUY-Earl Betker ranked up his second shutout of the\nseason .Monday night when he\nslammed the door In the faces ot\nthe Kelowna Packers In s close-'\nchecking contest before a crowd of\n1300 fans, His other shutout came\nat the cost of the Pentlcton V'\u00ab by\nthe same score earlier in the season.\nthe Dynamiters went out front\n1-0 In the rugged first period when\nLei Lilley .rifled in a biasing screened shot at 14:10, Doug Stevenson,\nin'the Packers' net, robbed Lilley\nof another marker a minute later\nby doing the splits like en acrobat.\nTho Dynamiters set a blistering\npace in the opening minutes of the\nsecond frame and swept down the\nice four men abreast, Buck Kavanagh scored the Dynamiters' second\ngoal at 1:05 by shooting the puck\nthrough a maze of logs.\nKelowna turned on the power,\nbut Betker rose to great heights,\nmaking four rapid saves.\nSully Sullivan stood out on defence like a beacon light, especially\nwhen the Dynamiters were playing\ntwo men short to Kolowna's one.\nPROTECT SHUTOUT\nThe pace slowed down in the\nfinal   period   with   Larson's   boys\nplaying It olose to tha chest In order\nto protoct Blither's shutout. Larson\nwas determined to win this one\nand made quick changes in bis\nlineup,\nPiaylng-ooach Phil .H'ergeshelmer\npsiied up \u2022 golden opportunity to\nbreak tho gooso osg when ho was\nhome free, but his shot doflootod\noff tho ibal\/post, '\nWith time running out, Kelowna\ntried desperately to get back in tho\nfight by sending five men on the\noffensive, only to hsve the Dynamiters pottle them up Iri their own\ntone. .   .\".     ,\nSpence   Tatehelt,   playing   his\nlast game In a Dynamiter uniform,   left   Kimberley   fnm , a\nhappy memory of him by turning\nIn a stellar performance.\nIn the dying minutes of the game,\nDoug Stevenson, the former Tacoma\npro,  stopped  shots  from  Larson,\nLilley and Claude Bell that were\nticketed for goals,\nThe phantom Hergeihelmer was\nthe pick of Kelowna with the aging\ncoach gaining speed ss the game\nprogressed.\nReferees Stan Layton and Red\nSutherland handed out a total of\n10 penalties, with each team drawing five.\nBetween' the first and second\nperiods, vice-president Gordon Wil-\nBon presented Tatchell with a cheek\nfrom the executive and players of\nthe Dynamiters for his outstanding\nNelson Bombers\nDrop Cage Game\nTo Cranbrook\nThe Cranbrook High School\nEagles set the Nelson High School\nBombers down 51-43 in an intercity basketball game at the Civic\nCentre.\nThe game Was hard-fought\nthroughout with Nelson taking a\nfirst quarter lead they were unable to hold In the remaining .three\nquarters.\nNelson went out front 15-13 on\nthe strength of Bill Phillips play\nwhen he- counted eight of his 15\npoints In the game\nIn the second quarter Cranbrook\nforged into the lead on W. Morgan's eight point effort that gave\nhis team a 28-23 edge by half time.\nIn the third quarter play was\nonce again close. Eagles outscored\nthe Bombers 12-8 to take a 40-31\nlead going into the final.\nThe Bombers In the final put on\na great spurt that saw them basket\nthe ball for 12 points as against 11\nfor the Eagles, but the middle\nsession lead compiled by the\nEagles was too much to overcome.\nW. Morgan with IB points and\nG. Walmsley with 17 led the\nEagles attackers while Pljllllps 15\nwas high for Nelson.\nHogan Wins\n$10,000 Belt\nROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - Ben\nHogan, Texas golfer who swept the\nU.S. and British Open championships and the Augusta Masters in\n1953 has won the Ray Hlckolc\n$10,000 belt as \"professional athlete\nof the year.\"\nHogan's decisive triumph in the\nvoting of sports writers and sportscasters was announced at Monday\nnight's annual Rochester Preis-\nRadio Club dinner for the infantile\nparalysis fund. Hogan was not\npresent.\nThe 41-year-old golf wizard received 51 first place votes among\nthe 03 ballots and a'total of 201\npoints on a 3-2-1 point basis.\nRoy Campanella, Brooklyn catcher who was voted most valuable\nplayer in the National League for\nthe second time in three years,\nfinished second to Hogan with 21\nfirsts and 102 points.\nLAWN BOWLERS\nTO TOUR CANADA\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland (CP)\n\u2014Percy Watspn^of Ireland will captain a 30-man British lawn bowling\nteam in Canada this summer, it was\nreported Monday,\nThe squad, made up* of 15 English,\nnine Scots, four Welsh snd two\nIrish bowlers, will tour the country. The bowlers will play for the\ncountries at the British Empire\nGames at Vancouver, starting in\nlate July.\nW for easy\nwinter\nstarting\nBAM ICE\n\/give me Chevron\nBan-Ice every time\nEmu la tha coldest wtittier, gisolim ind dlcial\nfail systems ira kept fm ef Ice with Chevron\nBin-Ic\u00bb. Simply idd it to full tanks In tha\nquantity shown by chart.\nSee your Standard of B.C Aginr today for full\nparticulars.\nSTANDARD OIL COMPANY\nOF BRITISH COLUMBIA LIMITED\nLadies Curling\nDraws in the Ladies' Curling\nClub's Sharpe Cup competition for\nthe remainder of the week follows;\nTuesday\u2014Mrs. T. McGovern vs.\nR. Little, Mrs. E. N. Mannings vs.\nMrs. W..J. Hipperson.\nThursday\u2014Mrs.' E.-N. Mannings\nvs. Mrs. M. DeGirolamo, Mrs, W. J.\nHipperson vs. Mrs. R. Little.\nFriday\u2014Mrs, A. J. Hesse vs. Mrs\nT. McGovern, Mrs. T. A. Wallace\nvs. Mrs. M. L. Craig.\nservices as 8 member of the team.\nAlio, a bouquet of roBos was presented to his wife, Dorothy.\nLINIOP\nKelowna\u2014Goal, Stevenson: defence, Kirk, Carlson, Hanson, Look;\nforwards, ' Culley, Henieshelmer,\nAmundrud, Brilliant, Durban, Connors, Mlddloton, Hosklns, McCully,\nKell,\nKimberley \u2014 Goal, Betker; telenet, Andrea, Jones, Craig, Sullivan, Larson; forwards, Kavanagh,\nHockley, B, Mellor, R, Mellor, Bell,\nCampbell, McNiven; Lilley, Tatchell.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period; (1) Kimberley, Lilley\n(Larson) 14:10. Penalties: Hanson,\nKirk (2); plus 10 minutes misconduct. ,'\nSecond period: (2) Kimberley,\nKavanagh (B. Mellor-Sulllvan)\n1:05 Penalties: McCully,- B, Mellor,\nBell, Campboll, Larson, Hosklns,\nThird period: No score. \"Penalty:\nTatchell,    \u25a0\n.      MARTIN BURTON\n. . \u25a0 newly acquired Leaf player\nfrom Sudbury, Ontario, Is fait\nfitting Into the swing of things\nIn the Western International\nHockay Leaguer\u2014Vogue photo',\n82 Rinks Set for Second Half\nPlay in Trail Curling Club\nMuzz Takes Over\nWednesday\nNEW YORK (CP) - Murray\n(Muzz) Patrick will take over as\ncoach of New York Rangers when\nthey play Detroit Red Wings in\nan National Hockey League game\nhere Wednesday night. .\nMuzz, son of Lester Patrick,\nformer Rangers manager, and\nbrother of Lynn Patrick, Boston\nBruins coach, was brought up from\nSeattle Bombers of the Western\nHockey League last week to succeed Frank Boucher who has been\nholding down the dual Job of coach\nand general manager.\nPatrick watched the Rangers defeat Toronto Maple Leafs 4-1 Sunday night. It was the fourth victory in a row for the fifth-place\nNew Yorkers and when Muzz takes\nover Wednesday night he will try\nto lead the .team to a fifth straight\n\u2014something the Rangers haven't\naccomplished since the 1941-42\nseason.\nTrail Curling\nFollowing are the draws for the\npresident vs vice-president play in\nthe Trail Curling Club Tuesday:\n6:30\u2014C, D. Stuart vs Hoy Stone,\nE. E. Perkins vs W. McLeod, T. A.\nRice vi W. Gregory, W. Mllburn vs\nJ. Devito.\n8:30\u2014N. S. Bentley vs W. B. Hunter, W.. L. Wood vs A, Snowball,\nJ. D. Rae vs V. E. Ferguson, A.\nM. Chesser vs L. F. Wendel, T, W.\nMathleson vs J. D. Hsrtley, R. K.\nDunlop vs S. G. Smlllle.\nlost\nNHL Leaders\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanding:  Detroit, won  22,\n10, tied 8 - Points 52.\nPoints: Howe, Detroit, 45.\nGoals: Richard, Montreal, 25.\nAssists: Howe. Detroit,' 28.\nShutouts:. Lumley, Toronto, 7.\nPenalties: Harvey, Montreal, 82\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy The Canadian\nPress\nThe leaders:\nG\nA\nPt\nHowe, Detroit \t\n16\n29\n45\n29\n19\n44\nLindsay, Detroit     \t\n15\n,23\n38\nGeoffrion, Montreal  ....\n20\n17\n37\nMosdell, Montreal \t\n19\n16\n3b\nSandford, Boston \t\n12\n22\n34\nBelbel, Detroit \t\n10\n23\n33\nTrail Curling Club has held Its\nthird draw. Although some changes\nhave been made in membership,\nthere are again 82 rinks to play in\nthe second half of the season.\nPlay commences wtih the President vs, Vice-President round. This\nwill be rotation style, with all\nmembers of each rink moving up\none position after every two ends.\nA six or seven-game round robin,\nfollowed by knockout competitions\nwill finish the season. Round robin\n.play will be Interrupted for one\nweek while the Trail club plays\nhost to B.C. rinks during February for the B.C. annual bonspiel.\nSkips, third, seconds and leads\nin order are:\nR. E. Hill, G. Babcock, W. Shan-\naruk and H. Dry.\nW. S. Ross, W. J. Bailey, R. Ew-\nlng'andDr. R.A.Love.\nJ. H. Hargreave, J. B. Biker, D.\nGriffiths and D. Roe..\n0. GUI, C. R. Bogstle, H. W. Tutt\nand E. Stogren.\nA. R. Robinson, R. Bowles, E.\nMortimer and E. Peterson.\nA. J. Burwash, F. M. Brennen, P.\nJarry and L. Secco.\nW. Milburn, A. Brokenshire, Dr.\nT. Mulr and K. McKay.\nG. Balfour, K. I. Broman, J. Mc-\nCullough and J. F, Nelson.\nC. D. Stuart, A. Buchan, G. Shaw\nand R. Somervllle.\nA. W. McDonald, J. M. Buchanan,\nC. E. Charlton and D. Mllburn.\nG. K. Fairburn, M,., Cameron, I.\nRintoul and L. Freeman.\nT. A. Rice, W. M. Cameaonl L.\nGrodski and R. Miller.\nS. G. Smlllle, G. Campbell, J. D.\nMcMynn and W. Robertson.\nF. Strachan, 0. A. Gamplon, H.\nW. Greene and J. N. Atwell.\nN. Bentley. G. Causey, M. F.\nGlover.and R. Donalson.\nG. Morrison, H. Chaddock, J.\nGagnon and L. J. Evans.\nR. C. Rose, 0, F. Funning, S.\nLyon and S. Barton.\nA. Crlchton, J. P. Cushner, R, D.\nCurtis and G. Zanler.\n\u2022W.  L.  Wood, H. Donaldson,  F.\nHedley and M, Molina.\nJ. D. Hartley, W. S. Douglas, M.\nGeorgetti and W. Zutter.\nW. Rae, R. H. Farmer, K. Miles\nand W. Burke.\nW. B. Hunter, J. W. Fish, R. Matthews and I. R. Corey.\nW. Gregory, R. Forbes, W. McKay\nand G. Finlay,\nR. McGhle, H. Fredericks, N. Zuk\nand A. E. Turner.   .\nS. DelPuppo, P. Gavrlllk, B. Lyon\nahd S. D'Archangelo.\nL. L. Fortln, A. T, GUI, G. R.\nMcMeekln and C. Dabner,\n- R, Bainbridge, W. E. Ginter, Bud\nBekett and K. Broe,\nR, Dunlop, M, Glrrard, M. Bowen\nand S, Coburn,\nG, S. Ortner, W. K. Gwyer, A. W.\nAyre and E. Johnston,\nA. A. Robb, J. Hadfield, K, Feth-\nerston and A. Tadey.\nH. T. Beckett, D. Haggarty, H. L.\nEmerson and C. Haggarty.\nJ. Landuccl, A. A. Hall, A. Orlando.\nW. P. Robertson, G. E. Hill, Sam\nReid and J. Tremblay.\nWm- McLeod, P. Holm, W. E.\nLucas and G'. Henne.\nS. Gray, P. O. Huso, A. W. McMillan and E. Storeschuk.\nE. A. Mitchell, i. C, Ink, R.\nThompson and R. Archibald.\nW. A. Forrest, W. Irvine,, S. W.\nCook and D, Calvert.\nR. Dockerlll, J. A. Jarrett, K.\nCampbell and H. W. Berger.\nJ, D. Rae, C. A., Johnston, L. Mark\nand J. A. Gray.\nRod Stuart, W. P. Jones, J. V.\"\nMcDonald and R. T. Knight,\nA. G. Cheyne, T. S. Knight, A.\nMartin and J. M. Kerr,\nA, Balfour, J. S. Langllle, M. Irvine and S. Koslk.\n'A. Defoe, S. B. Lund, S. Gould\nand J. Hanik.\nC. H. Wyatt, A. G. McCannel, W.\nFarnsworth and Dr. F. Jones.\n, -T. H. Wallace, A. W. McCulloch,\nH. Rishagen and J. Twaddle.\nJ. A. Robinson, D. S. McGibney,\nW. E. Gordon and W. Piatt.\nT. Cummings, W. H. McKay, C.\nBarry and N. W. Norman.\nJ. Mark, J. McMillan, W. Morris\nand T. Teahan.\nV. E. Ferguson, J. McNiel, A. V,\nKavic and W. Biker.\nA. Forrest, M. Malnarlch, C. F.\nSmith and A. Faunt.\nS. Matovich, A. E. Martin, E,\nMondln and A. Rella.\nM. Gordoon, M, A. Martin, J.\nWormold and J. G. Barnes.\nA. B. Anderson, P. E. Martin, P.\nHenne and W. Leaman.\nE. E. Perkins, J. F. Melvln, W,\nBailey and C. Sutherland.\nE. A, Todd, B. Merlo, P. Smith\nand W. Yuriok.\nDr. Krause, J, F. Mlllloan, P, Hal-\nllwell and R. Renwick.\nR. D. Perry, S. N, Mitchell, M. L.\nBrothers and D. Wetmore.\nJ. H. Weldon,'J. H. Morrii, C.\nBell and I. Fish.\nD, Minto, E. A, Mortimer, J, Mc-\nVie and G. Robb.\nA. G. MacKinnon, N..K. Neruse,\nO, Olafson and C. Lakes,\nE. L. Jones, C. D. Penny, A. Lyon\nand C. Plouffe,\nJ. Devito, M. Pistak, N. Hlnton\nand Balnes.\nA. Benedet, B. Pollock, D. lus\nand W. Wah.\nRoy Stone, L. A. Read, V. Car\nberry and F. E. Nelson.\nC. Strachan, J. Reid, D. W. Dykes\nand J. Reardon.\nP. F. Mclntyre, G. Robertson, B\nVeitch and A. Martin..\nT. D'Amour, J. P. Rooney, C. N\nAnderson and R. B. Heath.\nReg. Stone, H. Rothery, Rev, J.\nTaylor and D. Varner.\nA. M. Chesser, T. J. Sadler, M.\nMitchell and P. Laurlente.\nL. Landucci, M. Salsiciolll, A.\nBrown.\nE. Montpelier, N. D. Sanderson,\nJ. F. Smedley and E. Everard\nD. Sutherland, F. M. Sawyer, T.\nH. Wyatt and R. Porter.\nJ. Cameron, D. B\". Somervllle, S.\nBlagoni and T. Wah. \u201e\nW. E. Vance, C. M. Spencer, E.\nBenson and H. Barr.\nL. F. Wendell, J. Strachan, K. E.\nJohnston and R. G. Nelson.\nL. M. De Long, L. Telfer, t. Mc-\nFetridge and D. H. McViegh.\nE. G. Player, J. M. Thompson,\nW. D. Hermanson and J. Rae.\nA. B. RoSs, W, F. Watson, E. C.\nPhillips and G. Green.\nW. Forrest, L. Williams. M. Storia\nand O. A. Bergeron.\nF. Plester, A. H. Wood, A. H.\nKeffer and Y. O. Guthrie.\n\u2022\u25a0'. W. Mathleson, W. H. Wood-\nburn, P. Buna and D. Geronazzo.\nA. Snowball, C. H. Wright, A. V.\nMarcolln and G. R. Johnson.\nToBeKissed by\nWheta the Nelson Mtple Leafs\ntike on the Kelowna Packers Tuesday evening In-on lnter-leegue\ngame, they will still be playing\nshorthanded, Coach Willie Schmidt\nroportod Monday evening.\nBuck Jones, who relnjured his\nankle In practice last^ Friday, evening, will not see action. Marlowe\nMcDonald will also sit this one\nout, as will Bruno Pasqualotto, who\ndeveloped I charlle-hprsa in Saturday's game,\nBoth Mickey Moglio and Jimmy\nLowe will be back In action and\nSchmidt plans on using three lines\nWith Lee Hyssop and Don Apple-\nton filling the centre spots for all\nthree.\nA recount of goals scored by Red\nKoehle has his total at 20 and not\n19\u2014and this brings up an interesting matter between Red and Bud\nCooper, a'member of the Nelson\nBooster Club,\nCooper, an ex-lacrosse player,\napparentiy cornered Koehle a short\ntime' ago and tried to point out the\nfiner points of scoring goals. He\ntold Red that he couldn't hit the\nnet even if it was empty and that\nif he could score 20 goals in one\nseason he would gladly kiss his\nbig toe on the steps ot the city\nhall.     ,\nKoehle stated last night that he\nis now waiting for Cooper to'fulfill his part of the bargain because\nhe notched his 20th counter. Coach\nSchmidt considers it a good deal\nfor he would go down to see the\nact and lt would give him a chance\nto go in and pay up his parking\nfines,\nElsewhere on the hockey front,\nthere was news that Glno LeRose,\nmanager of the Trail Smoke Eaters,\nhad filed a protest to League President Harry Roblep In Spokane\nagainst the officiating in the\nSmokies' last game in Kimberley\nwhen Bob Kromm was handed a\nmatch misconduct.\n$3:\nPIWETOSTAY\nm BRITAIN\nLONDON (AP) -Gordon Plrie,\nBritain's great runner, is going to\nstay in England, The Mews Chronicle soys Motw3\u00bb?..;.:' \" ';*\nSeveral American universities' Including Oklahoma and Georgetown,\nhave offered scholarships to Britain's \"athlete of,18,3.\"   \u2022        ,\nThe News Chronicle, in a page\none story, quoted 22-year-old Plrie\nas saying:\n\"Naturally-1 was Interested in invitations to study in the United\nStates but I'll be remaining in\nEngland for a long while yet. I\nenjoy my running here and want -\nto do my best for my country.\"\nDeSpirito Gets   '\nStiff Suspension\nMIAMI, Fla. \"(AP),-Tony De-\nSpirito, one of the leading riders '\nJn the United States, was handed\nthe stiffest suspension of the Tropical Park meeting Monday when-\nthe stewards set him down for 20\ndays, effective Jan, 14 to Feb. 5.\nHe was penalized for rough riding in the stretch causing Interference which resulted In the disqualification of-his mount, Little\nColleen, in the fourth race on Saturday.\nTINY TOTS\nSKATING\nNO  CHILDREN  SKATING\nTODAY\n2:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nSoccer Standings\nLONDON (AP) - British soccer\nstandings, top five teams:\nEnglish League Division I and II\nteams played in Football Association\nCup third round.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision III Southern\nW T L Pts\nIpswich Town  17   7   2 41\nSouthampton  16   2   8 34\nBrighton   15   4 '7 34\nTorquay U   11   9   8 31\nNorthampton Town .... 11   8   7 80\nReading   1,2   6   \u00bb 80\nDlvlilen III Northern\nPort Vale  19\" B   1 43\nGateshead .  14   8   8 38\nBarnsley   14   7   8 35\nScunthorpe U 12  7  7 31\nBarrow    13   4 10 30\nBradford C 13   4 10 20\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision A\nHearts    11   4   8 28\nDundee     10   5   4 25\nQueen of South  11   2   7 24\nCeltic   10   3   5 23\nClyde  10   3   7 22\nDlvlilen B   -\nMotherwell 1  18   0   4 82\nSt.' Johnstone   11   2   8 24\nKilmarnock   10   8   8 23\nStenhousemulr    9  8  6\nAlbion R    9   6   6 23\nNamed Biggest\nUpsets of'53\nNEW YORK (AP)-Dark Star's\nKentucky Derby victory over Nat-\n>ve Dancer is rated the sports upset of 1953 by U.S. sports writers\nand sportscasters In an Associated\nPress poll.\nNative Dancer, unbeaten up to\nthat timet went to the post favored\nat odds of 70 cents on the dollar.\nBut the fleet little colt from Harry\nGuggenheim's Cain Hoy stable,\nrated 25 to 1, came home ahead\nof the big grey for one ot the\ngreatest upsets in U.S. racing\nhistory.\nPurdue's 8-0 upset of Michigan\nState in the U.S. college football\nseason just closed was voted second biggest upset. Third was the\n14-14 tie Iowa managed with Notre\nDame.\nLast season's National Hockey\nLeague semi-finals produced an\nupset rated No. 9. It was Boston\nBruins' elimination of Detroit Red\nWings In the best-of-seven .series.\nMontreal Canadiens beat the Bruins\nin the Stanley Cup final.\nCONTINUE*\nat\nHughes-Stuart\nMEN'S WEAR\nPRICES CUT FOR\nANNUAL CLEAR OUT\n\u2022Vv\nFor Guaranteed\nMarfak  Lubrication\nPHONE 75\nMeohanlcal Repairs by\nFactory Trained Mechanics\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nOpp. Port Offiee on Vernon.\nBudget Plan Available on All\nBICYCLES\nTRICYCUS\nParti \u2014 Repairs\nAccessories\n8AFE8 OPENED\nCOMBINATIONS   CHANGED\nEDEY'S\n787 Baker St.\nPhone 1048\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nAttention\nHOCKEY FANS\nASSURE YOURSELF OF A GOOD SEAT\nFOR THE PLAYOFFS\nBuy your Season Ticket\nor Contracts now\nClosing Data January 20th\nTTTJ\nCRESTON - Canadian Legion, Jan. 15\nTRAIL - Canadian Legion, Jan. 11 and 12\nmmm\n..,,.\u25a0'\u25a0 '.-^ .,   \u25a0-..      .:\u2022'\u25a0\n_\n-   - '      '   * \u25a0...\u25a0\u25a0' -  \u25a0      \u25a0 - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022\n I..',\nr\nLi\nA\nB\nIN\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n; AM\u00bbiW\u00bbw\u00bb*--iAfc\n(JaA\nI -      Sbl\n\u2022 1* 1\n*     E#m\nW\nr|j\u2014^m\n!'#      TR\nSP\nf fS&D        i\u00ab\nj S*^^        r^\n4*ir 1-12\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nV\nCJUSH SUDDENLY, AS IF THEIR\nUCURIOSITY WERE SATISFIED,\nTHEY SHOOT AWAY INTO SPACE1\nAT 10 TIMES THE SPEED OF OUR\nFASTEST JET.\nPERSON\/0-PERSON WANT ADS\nFOR QUICK RESULT'S \/\n\u00a5\nPhone 144\nDeadline fas Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nKINAKIN-To Mr. and Mrs..Pete\nKinakln of Crescent Valley at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Jan. 8,\na daughter, '\".v\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u201e'.    ..\u25a0'\u25a0 \"i \u25a0   \u25a0\nSHtTRSTOBITOFF-To :Mr, and\nMrs, Shurstobltoff of Castlegar at\nKootenay;' Cake \"General Hospital,\nJan. 0, a daughter. .,'\nVEITCH\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Bruce\nVeitch of 1662 Columbia Avenue,\nTrail, Jan. 9, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS ARE INVITED\nfor the position of assistant secretary-treasurer for the Nelson District Community Chest now being\norganized. Applicant should be\nfamiliar with Nelson district. This\nis a part-time position and it is\nproposed\" that remuneration will\ncommence when organizing process completed, in the meantime\nvoluntary participation in organizing will give ample training and\nknowledge. State remuneration\nexpected along with qualifications to Box 7557, Daily News.\nWANTED\u2014PIANO AND THEORY\nteacher for grade 9. Apply A.\nMazook, Erickson, B.C.   ,\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWANTED - LADY WITH SOME\nknowledge of bookkeeping and\nsewing ability. Permanent posi.\ntion. Apply, stating age and qual\nlfications, to Box 7556, Daily\nNew.\nWIDOW, 55-60, AS HOUSEKEEP-\ner, to pensioner on small ranch;\none wanting sociable home more\nthan high wage. Box 8685, Dally\nNews.\nHOUSEKEEPER, IMMEDIATELY.\n-Good wages and good home. 612\nCarbonate Street. >    \u25a0\nAGENTS WANTED\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT, WITH VIEW\n' to buying at a later Date\u2014Modern home on not less than one\nacre, Nelson area. Box 7654, Daily\nNews.\nF.OR. RENT-FULLY MODERN 4-\nroom house with 611 furnace; wired for electric range. Available\nFeb. 1st. Apply Box 7656, Daily\nNews. **'.>\n8-ROOM SUITE; FURNISHED;\nheated. $65.00 per month. Close in.\nFireplace. Suitable for business\npeople. Lease preferred. Box 9010,\nDaily News, or phone 482-X-3.\nLAKESIDE BUNGALOWS. SIN-\ngle or double room cabins. Comfortable, propane gas, heat and\ncook. Hot water all the time. See\nlt or phone 864.\nAVAILABLE FEB. 1st \u2014 FULLY\nfurnished lower suite, for 2 or 3\nmonths. Close in. References. \u2014'\nBox 9013, Daily News.\nFOR RENT\u2014TWO-ROOM SUITE.\nPropane gas, sink, cupboard, large\nbed-sitting room, extra bedroom\navailable. Phone 329-L.\nFOUR-ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\n\u2014Two bedrooms, living room and\nkitchen; on ground floor. \u2014 140\nBaker Street or phone 491-L.\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE ROOMS\nfor rent General heat; electric\nstoves. N. Shore Motel  Ph  1684.\nFOR RENT \u2014 ROOM WITH OR\nwithout board. Close in. Phone\n1494-Y.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFOR MORE CHICKS, BETTER\nchicks and higher profits, order\nBurnside Chicks. Bred right,\nhatched right and .Carefully selected under government supervision. Order early to ensure desired dates. R.O.P. sired White\nLeghorns, R.O.P. sired New\nHampshires, R.O.P. sired Leghorn-Hampshire and Hampshire-\nLeghorn crossbreeds, approved\nAustralorps and approved Austra-\nwhite crossbreeds, For further information and prices write to\nBurnside Poultry Farm A. E.\nPowell, Box 275, Hammond, B.C.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm. Mission City, B.C. We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm. Qur baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks, New * Hampshires and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request,\nFOP. SALE\u20141 COW, FRESHEN\nFeb.; I cow, freshen July; 1 heifer\nfreshen April, 1st calf; 2 pigs. 1\nbull calf, 2 months old; 50 Light\nSussex 8-month-old pullets, 1\nhornless billy goat, 8 months old\nSicknes only reason for disposal\nBox 446, New Denver, B.C., or\nphone 35-Y.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS;\nWESTINGHOUSE WASHER, AUT-I\nomatic wringer release, safety,\"\nswitch, etc., $75.00; walnut dresser i>\n$35.00; Winipeg couch, $15.00. \u00a3$1\nPhone 1067-Y. ;:iM\nLE ROUGE BAISER INDELIBLE\nLipstick, $1; Hair On Face Instant;;;\nRemover,   $2.   Corrective   CoK\u00a75\nmetics. 211 Birks Bldg., Van,. B.C.!\nZENITH HEARING AID; MINIA-?\nture E. Like new. $45.00 Overcoat,'.;\ntweed. $5.00. Chest 38. length 44.\n.924 Cedar Street. '-\u25a0','M\nCHEV.   1952   OR   G.M.   CUSTOM\ncar radio, $75.00. Excellent >con-;s\ndition. Jeffery Radio and Appli-\nances, 446 Ward Street.    \u25a0        m\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES \u2014 I\nSpecial low prices. Active Tradr,\nIng Co., 935 E. Cordova Street,;\nVancouver.\nCRESS WART REMOVER\u2014Leaves\nno scars.     Your  Druggist sells \u25a0\nCRESS.\nMAN'S TWEED OVERCOAT, SIZE',\n40, $7.50; English Pram, in good!\ncondition. $7.50. Ph. 189-L-2.\nSIX CORDS OF CLEAN, DRY\nbirch, $20.00 per cord, delivered..\nPhone 1316-L.\nBEACH STOVE. WHITE ENAMEL,\ngood shape. Phone 766-X after 8.\nNEW FOUR-ROOM HOUSE. NEAR\nschools. Low rent. Paul Markoff,\nSlocan Park.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms by the day, week or\nmonth Allen Hotel. 171 Baker St.\nYOUNG COUPLE DESIRES\nsmall furnished suite. Box 7854,\nDaily News.\nGOOD DISTRICT NOW AVATL-\nable for selling Rawleigh Prod,\nucts. Real opportunity,' Write\nRawlelghs, L1532, Winnipeg, Man.\nFOR RENT\u2014HEATED OFFICES.\nApprox. 400 sq. ft. area. Available\nJan. 16th. Apnly 702 Baker St.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nBABY SITTING IN MY HOME \u2014\nApply 310 Victoria Street.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nESTABLISHED GROCERY AND\nconfectionery for sale. Good cof-\nner location; industrial payroll\ncity. Energetic young couple\ncould operate without outside\nhelp. Priced right. Contact Box\n7642, Nelson Daily News.\nDRYGOODS BUSINESS FOR\nsale. Good Baker Street location.\nLease available. Require at least\n$10,000 to handle. Apply Box 7538,\nDaily News.\nFOR RENT-GENERAL REPAIR\nbusiness. 2 stall shop, fully\nequipped. Phone 1279-Y, Trail.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE Insurance Co. D. L. Kerr, Agent.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and reason\nable rates. Vancouver, B.C.\n2-RQQMED .FURNISHED APART-\nment. $35.00 per month. 718 Silica St., phone 1441-R.\nLARGE   FURNISHED   LIGHT\nhousekeeping room. Ph. 491-L.\nUPPER DUPLEX FOR RENT\nPhone 423-R.\nFOR RENT\u2014HEATED BEDROOM.\nGentleman preferred. Ph. 590-Y.\n2  ROOM   PARTLY   FURNISHED\nsuite, 723 Silica Street.     . -\nFOR RENT - WARM BEDROOM,\nclose in. Phone 653-R.\nHOUSE FOR RENT - APPLY J.\nMaras, 131 Chatham Street,\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nfor rent. 305 Victoria Street.\n2-ROOM    PARTLY    FURNISHED\nsuite for rent. Phone 879-Y.\nTWO'COWS FOR SALE \u2014 ONE\nJust freshened. One will, freshen\nin a week's time. Both Guernspvs.\nGeorge Polonikoff, Slocan Park,\nB.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014COW, JUST FRESH-\nened, with calf. Wagon on rubber\nwheels. Some garden tools. Apply\nJ. G. Kanigan, Winlaw, B.C.\nIICRONIC HEARING AIDS \u2014\nWrite P.O. Box 39. Nelson, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nSTAR SPECIAL - We will allow\nyou from $2.00 to $5.00 for your\nold battery on a new Willard,\nJan. 9 to Jan. 15 only. Star Auto\nService. Phone 1648.\nFOR SALE - 2 HORSES. HEAVY,\ngood for logging. Phone 40. R.\nDauphlnais, Salmo, B.C.\nCOW   FOR   SALE - APPLY   P.\nPodovinikoff, Slocan Park, B.C.\nPIGS FOR SALE - 110 POUNDS\ndressed. Phone 1323-Y.\nFOR  SALE\u2014FRESH  COW.  BOX\n7563, Daily News.\n2  FRESH  COWS  FOR  SALE   -\nApply N. Kabafoff, Thrums, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nBEDROOM FOR RENT \u2014 CALL\nat 923 Vernon Street.\nFOR RENT\u2014SUITE FOR ADULTS\nonly. Phone 394-R evenings.\nPERMANENT RESIDENT WANTS\nto rent family home  Ph   1750-L.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR ONE\nyoung business girl and two\nyoung business men. Ph. 474-X.\nDAILY CROSSWORD mmmmm\n4. Lengthwise\n5s Cereal\ngrain\n6. Beast of\nburden\n7. Used an\neasy gait\n8. Absent\n9. Companion\n10. Metallic\nrocks\n18. Public\nlodging\nplace\n19. Half\nan em\n20. Old coin\n(Egypt.)\n21. Mandarin\ntea\n22. Pole\n23. Help\n24. High\npriest\n28. Tiny\n26. Bitter\nvetch\n29. Not\nprofessional\n32. Negative '\nreply\n33. Lamina\n34. Wandering\nworkman\n35. Odd (Scot.)\n38. Not strong\n38. Employ\n\u25a0iaaa aaoa&jB\nuaaaaH anaa\nhh auau huh\nHbiLMaaaa aa\n\u2022 uua uua\naaaaaa aaaa\nBQ   LiMtfiliiniBM\naaa tttasm ram\naaua laciaaaa\nPHGK3B   UUO\nnaama aai\nTesterdty'i Answer\n*\n39. Mohammedan call\nto prayer\n40. Join by heat\n42. Lair   .\n43. Posed tor\na picture\nACROSS\n1. Cavalry\nsword\n$. Famous\naiisslon\n(Tex.)\n11. Light\nsarcasm,\n12. Native\nIndian\ncavalryman\n13. Diacritical\nmark over\na letter\n14.A freshet\n15. Killed\n16. Holes In\nneedles   \u25a0\n17. Forward\n21. Drawing\nchalks\n34. Female\nsheep\nJTLift\n28. More wap\n30. Sum up\nSI.Foea\nS3. Plants of\n.a region\n24. Long, pro.\nlonged cry\n27. Melt\n41. Mountain\nnymph\n48. Grab\n(4, Fern\n45. Of the ear\n'46. Made of oak\n47. Drift\nDOWN\n1.Perches\n3. External\nseed\ncovering\n8. Trunk of\na tree\n(Bot.)\n\u00bb DAILY OBYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work Itt\nAXVBIBAAXR\nis  LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simple stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\ntjacb day the code letter* are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nLB    OSTO    NQ    PNLQ    QOV    FBIQVLQ\nJBI.V,    YJBV    XBJAL    Q0IJ2    NPVBLQ\nr\u00bbTV   QB   OPBXl,~V\u00abJjrgrB.\nYesterday's Crvptoquoto: COMB, AND TRIP IT AS VOW\n\u20223Q, ON TPHB Wm VAM&&ES TQE-MILTOI4\nRamp Body and\nFender Works\nNelson. B.C.\nJobbers for\nSPICER\nNeedle Bearing, Power\nTakeoffs and Universal\nJoints\n556 Josephine St       Phone 193\nFOR SALE \u2014 1951 PONTIAC 4-\ndoor. Low mileage; same owner,\nHydramatic drive. Phone 1331-Y.\nWRECKING 1941 FARGO HALF-\nton truck. Paul Markoff, Slocan\nPark, B.C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 PAIR MEN'S GLASSES,\ndark frame, Dec.  24, downtown\narea.  Reward.  Box  9203,  Daily   ,\nNews.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W WIDDOWSON & CO.. ASt\nsayers  3Q1 Josephine St.>, Nelson,\nH S ELMES. ROSSLAND. B.C.\nAssayer Chemist. Mine Rep\nFOR SALE\u2014GRAVELY GARDEN\ntractor with mower, cultivator,\nsaw and plow attachments. Good\nworking shape. Apply Art Laybourne, Phone 36-H, Kaslo.\nFOR RENT - SHOVELS. BACK-\nhoes, dragline, log loader bulldozers, compressors, etc. Bayes\nEquipt Co., Cranbrook, phone 80.\nWINCHES: FOR RUBBER TIRE\ntractors, cats, trucks, etc. Bayes\nEquipt Co., Cranbrook, phone 80,\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C  AFFLECK, M.E.I.C.\nB.C Land Surveyor. P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.. Nelson   Phone 1238.\nR   K   COATES. STE   NO   8. 373\nBaker   St..   Nelson,   Phone   1118.\nB C  Lands Surveyor.\nS.   V   SHAYLER   PO   BOX  252,\nKimberley, Phone 54\nB.C   Land Surveyor. Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding,  motor rewinding   Phone 593. 324  Vernon St.\nPAINTERS AND DECORATORS\nDAVID NYSTROM\nPainting and Paperhanglng.\nPhone. 792-X.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... 1240 on the dial\n..'Pacific Standard Time '\nTUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1954\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:15\u2014Morning\" Devotions\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Warren's  Wigwam\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n6:45\u2014Serenade     '.\n8:55\u2014Woman's World\n9:00\u2014Earl Warren Show\n\u25a010:00\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Visit\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Here's Health\n11:00\u2014GSbriell Heatter\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00\u2014Noon Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Oddities In the News\n1:00\u2014Noon Concert\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Falrview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Pacific News\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4:15\u2014Barney Potts Show\n4:.30\u2014The Oriole's  Nest\n4:45\u2014Sleepytlme Story Teller\n5:00\u2014Something In Harmony\n5:15\u2014Int. Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the news\n5:25\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n5:30\u2014Supper Club\n5:45\u2014Sports   News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Tell Me Doctor\n6:15\u2014Highways of Melody\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Music Hall\n8:00\u2014American Writing in Russia\n8:15\u2014Hello Neighbor\n8:30\u2014Twenty Questions\n9:00\u2014Mr. Snowbuslness\n9:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014About Israel\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1954\n700\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n7:19\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes .\n7:40\u2014Morninj Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast  Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News  Commentary\n9 15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen    ,\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitker\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and Mis Music\n12:15-CBC News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:80\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to Ont\n1:00\u2014Afte noon  Concert\n2:00\u2014B. C School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n315\u2014Brav> Voyage\n3-30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:15\u2014Other Voices, Other Places\n4:30Wubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Music Picture Lady\n5:00\u2014Lyrical Lady\n2:15\u2014International Commnetary\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Rawhide\n5:55\u2014Have You Heard\n6.00\u2014Neighbourly News\n6:15\u2014Stars from Paris\n6:45\u2014Intro,   to   Wednesday\nf:00\u2014Newa\n7:15\u2014News  Roundup\n7:30\u2014The Political Novel\n8:00\u2014The Secret Agent\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Recitat\nNight\n\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0:..'.\u00ab%%\n .^mm*\nmwwmswsmwm\neff-MJitf ,4t1^ia0t.;\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<\u00ab\u25a0\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nDeadline fpi Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\n\u25a0ft\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nf\u00ab-WfJ.*f\u00ab\nTHE NEW 1954\n'.. MONMGHS\nAre on Display at\n608 Vernon St. \\\nnew cap;\nfor Immediate DeHyery\n1954 MONARCH LUCERNE SEDAN\n1954 MONARCH CUSTOM TUDOR\n1953 FORD CUSTOMUNE SEDAN\n1953 ZEPHYR. SEDAN\n'Year End SALE\nOn USED CARS and TRUCKS\n1953 Auitjn Sedan -...!,.._,,\u201e\n1953 Plymouth Hard Top Coup*\n\u20221952 Hudson Sedan \u201e.\u201e^-\u201e\n1952 Monarch Sedan \u201e,\u201e;,'.,..;\n1952 Ford Sedan .,\u201e,,, ,..,,'\u201e,\n1950 Pontlae Sedan _. \u2014\n1949 Dodge Sedan  \t\n19\u00ab Mereury Tudor __^_~\n1948 Pontlae Sedan ...\t\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan \u2014~_\n1946 Ford Sedan _ \t\n1941 Studebaker Sedan _\u2122\n1940 Oldsrrjoblle Sedan \u2014\n1940 Plymouth Sedan .\u201e_\t\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan \u2014\u2022\u2014~\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\t\nWAS\n$1750\n$2700\n$2550\n$2450\n$2300\n$1500\n$1300\n$925'\n$1000\n.$900\n$895\n$500\n$395\n$700\n\u25a0 $350\n$150\nNOW SAV11\n$1595 $155\n$2495 $205\n$2395 $155\n$2200 $250\n$2000 $300.\n$1250 $250\n$1150 $150\n$700 $225\n$750 $250\n$695 $205\n$695 $200\n$350 $150\n$250 $145\n$595 $105\n$195 -$155\n$99 \u2022   $51\nENGLISH UNITS\nI\n1950 Austin Sedan\t\nWSO^aneuord Sedan\t\n1950'Hillman Sedan\t\n1949 Austin Pickup \u2122_\n1949 Thames-Panel\t\n1948 Flying Standard ^-\n$1000\n$1100\n$1000\n$550\n$700\n$400\n$850\n$895\n$859\n$425\n$595\n$250\n$150\n$205\n$150\n$125\n$105\n$150\nUSED TRUCK BARGAINS,\n1952 Mercury Pickup _   $1700   $1550   $150\n1952 Mercury 3 Ton\nDump and Hoist , __,\n1951 Ford 3 Ton, Flat Deck _.\n1949 Mereury Plekup  \u201e_*.\n1949 Ford 3 Ton\nCab, chassis, new motor.\nPLUS\n$290Q\u201ell$2350 $550\n$1725T*$I450 $275\n$1000 n $850 $150\n$1000 _ $750 $250\n;\u25a0\n\u00a5.v.\nSPECIAL DEAL ;.\nFOR ALL NO TRADE CUSTOMERS\nSEEING IS BELIEVING V->\nel Emerge Motors\nLimited\n608 VERNON ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Cloilng Pris8\u00ab\u00bb\nMINgB\u25a0   \u2022\nArea . .\u201e\u201e......,\nAcadia Uranium\t\nAmal Ifirtor ',-...\u00ab>\u201e\u2022\nAmerioart \" K  ......\nArmls'lce \u201e.,.,,,,\u201e fj.;\nAumaque.......\t\nBagarnoo ,,.,...,...,....,\u201e\nBoryrntn '   ., ,...\u201e.,\u201e.\nBete Metals ,'\u2022...\u2022\u25a0,.\u2022.\u25a0\u201e\nBtVirWIfi-..'.,. -.....,\u2022\nBoboJ  ,\u201ew\nBoymar Gold ...,\u2022-.\u2014'\nBrelorrie \u2122\u201e.\u201er..\nBrewlsHI, .,......., ,'\nBreulen    ii^wi,\nBuffalo Ante ...,.....,..\u201e\nBuff Can  .:,\u2022,.........,.....-\nCjllffafl   ;$-*%\u00a3,\nCariboo GoM a\t\nCentral Patr|g|\u00bb ......\nCentral Pore'., ~\u201e\nChesWrk  ,_,....\u201e\n\u25a0A\ny\nTODAY'S SPECIALS\n1952 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR\nBeautiful 2-tone Blue. Mileage\n. 18,000. One Owner. Like New\n'   JSJO TABOO *4-TON BXPHBSS\nOhe Owner. Low Mileage.\nFully Winterised. Heater.\nPROPERTY\nETC.\nHOUSES. FARMS\nFOR SALE\nNEW 5-ROOM BUNGALOW; AL-\n- moat finished. Full basement,\nlakefront property, 4 miles tram\nNelson. 7 acres. Houia fully\nequipped; liveable, $8000 cash.\nV.L.A. approved. Phone 1685-R-3,\n0-BOOM HOUSE, \"CLOSB AT-\nSacrifice price, $4700,00 cash, \u2014\nPhone 454-X.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron,. steels, brass, copper,\nlead., etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 290 Prior St., Vancouver.\nB.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\n1\/\nyf\nWANTED - FLAT DECK TRUCK\nin good condition. About 176\"\nwheelbaie,' Give full details and\nterms. BOX 7848 Daily News.\nJAW CRUSHER, ROLL CRUSHER\ncompressor wanted. Give price\nand location. Box 7S60, Nelson\nDally News.\nWanteS t- Clear cotton\nrags, 12c lb. Must be 12 inches\nsquare or more. Daily News\n'\"\u25a0     WAMD-6hE-HOHSE   BLOWER\nApply P. Kimoff, Appledale, B.C.\nWANTED - HAND SEWING MA-\nchine. Box 8018, Daily News.\n~7 :      ! :\nLONDON CCP) \u2014 A worm farm\nwill be the latest project at Regent's Park Zoo. Earthworms are\nneeded as food for some zoo ex*\nfilblts. notably the kiwi bird which\neats more than 100 each day.\niO-ACRlf'VAltM FOR SMS: 57\nroom house and other buildings,\nApply J. q. Kaftlgan, Wlnlsw.\nSfolfimt latin ^pwa\nClassified Advertlslns Rates:\n18c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\ntic line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion\n,48c line for 6 consecutive inier-\nlons\nSI 88 line lor month (28 const-\ncuuve insertions), Box nurn\nbers llr extra Coven any\nnumber of insertions\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES.\nTENDERS etc - 20c pet line\nlira! insertion 16c per line\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE   rtATES   LESS\n10% rUR PROMP1! PAYM,EMT\nSubscription Ratal!    '\nore Than Listed Here)\nBy carriei   per week; i\nin advance 30\nBy carrier per yeai $1560\nUnited Stales, United Kingdom\nOne month $ lis\nThree rrfonthi     ._         -87*\nSix monlhi        . .. 7 80\nOne year    \" '19 Oi\nMa.ll in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month $ Hill\nrhree months  27fi\nSm Months   v        . 5 311\nOne veai |lll\u00bbi\nWhere extra oostaqe '\u00ab rpq'n rrrl\naoove rates plus p-jstaQe\nmm\n\u201e,.,..\u201e   ,w\n\u201e......-- .21\n;     .18\ny.y\u201e: ...m\n....\u201e..,..    .ml\n\u201e..\u201e.::.    1.80\n\u2022\u201e-,... .\u00ab\n.,.\u201e-. \u25a0.\u00bb\u00bb\n     XI\n5;i_,; j,io\n..,\u201e.._    ,11\n     M0\n..\u201e.-,.     .M\n II\n \u201e\u00ab-.-   .It\n-.-      \u2022\u00bb!\n      .88\nEL, .10\n3 8*H\nPnnajde   .., \u201e,M,^.r\u00ab,TO.v,l,,,.     .88\ntJUVgy      \u25a0', mtmiwiM-^nrwn >$$\nHalt Malartto \u201e,\u201e...,\u201e\u201e..,\u201e\u201e.\u201e.., 1,11\nHast Sullivan \u201e\u201en\u00abn-mnm\u201e, 8.10\nB\u00ab$ww Muteli ,\u00ab,\u201e\u00bb\u2122r\u00ab- lilT\nBlder Qold \u201e,,.mHmnntM*tnm*\"l '??\nBitelia '-\",ntv,\u00ab*^\u201eiiin,\u00bb^\u00ab..rt\u00bbm\u00bb iM\nProblsher , , .\u2014- 4,9(\nSlant Vel ' \u2022-,1Mw.wMM11'^iw^\u00ab\u00bb', \" ^'J?\nQd'S  Lake  nnt*^n^\u00abi*\u00abTtvl,\",n '^\nOeWerijit ,\u201e\u201e\u201em\u2122,,,.\u201e...\u201e..\u201e.,\u2122 .10\nChirno O- .\u201e.,, ',\u201e\u201e,.,H\u201en  1-80\nCnebwpur  ,\u201e .-\u00ab.,.  ,78\nCons M & S \u201e,\u201e\u00bb,\u201e\u2022\u00ab\u2022.\u201e\u201e 2J.80\nCons Sanneraa r  10\nConwwt' V ..,-h\u00ab\u2122\u2014\u2014 3-J5\nCom DlioovMy ,,\u2122\u201e - |W\nDetta B L .i ..-\u00ab\u2014 \u00bb\nPome ,.   \u201e:.;.,- \u201e\u201e\u2014\u25a0'- ..-. 18.00\nGolden ManitOU ,.. .. l.<0\nHeath; :,,.; \u201e., \u2122\u201e .10V4\nHollinger - .-.! v\u2014  W-15\nHomer Tf It ,,;,,\u201e,\u2014..-.....- '^20\nHudson 8iy wn>-  38)00\nInspiration. \u2014\u2022\u25a0\u2014  \u00bb.10\nInt Nickel  ,......'\u2022 - - 35:50\nJollet Qui  ,  M\nKerr Addison \u201e.\u201e.\u2014 1T.7J\nKirkiand Laiw \u201e\u201e_\u201e..\u201e \u201e.\u201e ,4]\nLabridor \u25a0% , ...!,.\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e, \u2122\u00bb... 7.88\nLuke Dn\u00abHlt \u201e.,,..,....-.  .W\nLakeshore    v.\u2122,,,,,.\u2122....-. S.78\nLeitol)     , ...,...\u00bb\u2022 \"-.\u2122. .'j \u25a0\nLexinrtin.    ,.  \u2022\u00ab\nLittle Long Ue ,  .M\nLouvicourt       ,... .13\nMlCMII             i\u2014.. Hi\nMacLeod Co\u00abk    Mf\nMadsen R L \u201e\u201e     1,78\nMalartic G F  \u201e _.    1.40\nMining Corp ;\u201e\u25a0\u25a0  \u00ab,\u00bb\nMonota., .      - w\nNew Btdlamiqui .,\u00bb., , 41\nNew C\u00bblumet \u00ab\nNpw Goldvue  JgH\nNew.Kelore  ,\u201e\u201e.,.\u25a0\u201e      J;\nNew Lund   ;      -JJ\nNew Lurder V     1,08\nNew Mylamaque \u25a0\u00ab\nNoranda ., \u25a0;\u25a0 -  01-JJ\nNormetals      2,80\nNorth Can  88\nOgama -.      .18\nO'Leary  .,.., 18\nQsisko ,\u201e. .'...      .40\nPamour  72\nParsrnaque IJ^\nPaymaster  35\nPiokle Crop     1.18\nPlacer Develop     28,00\nProston E D      J.70\nQuebec Lab  'J\nQueeniton  .,....\u25a0 88\nQuemont -.  43,00\nRadiore       .\u00bb-^      .80\nReovbi Mec \u00ab..;.    1.48\nRoche L L    14\nSan Antonio .:  1-80\nShawkoy              .10\nSherritt Qbrdon    4.20\nSilvermlller      .'. f\nSt\u00abd\u00bbcon\u00ab     [8\nSlarratt Olsan       .11\nSteep Rock       .'      8.80\nSudbury Cont -     .SO\nSurHWef ;5 '\nSylvanlte      \u2022     I'lJ\nTeok Hughes      -    1-W,\nThompson-Lund  \u00bbH\nTomblU  48\nTrans Cont Res -'. 88\nUpper Can    -     \u00bb\u2022\u00bb\nVentures -,.   18.00\nviolamac         :    S.JO\nWalte Amulet      8.10\nOILS\nAnglo Can  \u25a0...-.     5.28\nBAOIl            2i.8l\nCal it Ed ,-    10.50\nCdn Atlantio     4 90\nCentral Leduc         1.80\nCentral Explorer!      3,05\nChemical Research       1.83\nDel Rio     1.65\nFederated Pete .......*.     4.15'\nHome     8.25\nImperial Oil    26.87%\nInter Pete    ..:    10.12'A\nKroy      1-12\nMacDougal Segur Ex 17 .\nMid Cont       .88\nNat Pete ...: j ,     1.52\nOkalta          1.00\nPac Pete      8,20\nRoyalite     12.73 '\nRoxana  : 13Vj\nUnited Oils             .35\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibi     16H\nAlgoma Steel -. -   40%\nAluminum          48\nAtlas St        18H\nBathurst Power ~   41\nBeattie Bi-n     n -     7\nBell Telephone    38%\nBrazilian      7?4\nB'-C.Blee \u00abtti'  \"\nB C Forest      8\nB C Packers A  13\nB C Packers B     9\nB C Power A        10\nBuilding Products  38\nBurns B   38W\nCan Cement      05\nCap Packers A ,  37Mi\nCan Packers B :  87V4\nCan Breweries   2a\nCap Canners  29\nCan Car, it Fdy  20\nCan CeUnese -.,\u2022\u2022  24\nCan Dredge. 84V\u00ab\nCan Oil        .;   124\nCan Pac Rly  22\nCockshutt  1044\nCons M;.& S  23H\nDist Seagram  \u2014,-  28ti\nDpm Foundries         j4Va\nDpm Steel & Coal B ................ lift\nDomStorer;  .'.... 18%\nD(jm Tar 4 Chem   Vi\nDam Textiles       \u00ab.-. \u201e,... .7\nFamous Players \u2014-  19H\nFanny Farmer  - \u201e...\u201e  2oy\u00ab\nFord A      .'      -  -SVi\nQatlneau; \u2022 81'A\nGeo S'.eul Wares'  16%\nGopdyear   97%\nGreat Lakes  10%\nOypsum Lime      83%\nImperial Oil  28%\nImperlr.1 Tobacco  0%\nInt N:c'el  35'2\nlnl Pele      ..  _  19',\u00bb\nNew EqulDihenf Takes Sulphur and\nNitrogen From tow-Grade Gasoline\nBy tUNI HANDIAKIK\nLOS ANQBLES (API - A major\noil company has found a way to\nmake rtlk-nuMs giigiine from\nwWi'eor OtHie..\nThe equipment is galled \u00ab \"Un)<\nfiner.\" It removes the sulphur and\nnitrogen present in low-grade gaso.\nline; Sulphur pQModes an automo>\nbile engine, causing excesilve wear.\nNitrogen compounds gwm up valves\nand carburetors,   ,\nThe research and process depart\"\nment et the Union oil Company of\nCalifornia developed the uniflner\nafter more than Ave years' researoh,\nUnion will build one this yew at\nIts Oleum refinery in Contra Costa\ncounty te upgrade 18,780 barrels a\nday of high-sulphur, lowlgravlty\ncrudes from the Santa Marls area.\nThli wUI.be processed into 83 to\nJOO'Ootane leaded gasoline,\nThe sulphur will ba aold to chemical companies te, make sulphuric\n\u2022acid and bug-killing plant dust, The\nnitrogen baoomes ammonia and can\nbe mede Into tertUlaw. .\nLIMITINtt PAOT9R\n-fred' U Hertley, 'manager M\nUnion's commercial development division, says ot the hew process!\n\"Sulphur In many ot the world's\ncrude ells, including Californlan,\nhas always keen \u2022 limiting teeter\nin increasing the yield pt subline\nfrom a barrel of raw material. Sulphur removal tp date has been only\nincidental to conventional refining\nprocesses or by ' the traditional\nmethod of removing sulphur by sub\nphurlc acid. This is costly and entails a considerable loss of volume,'\nWith the unifier he said, there is\nno loBa of yield,\nHow does, it work?\nThe uhltiner includes pumps, pro\ncessors, heat exchanges and furnaces. The key apparatus is culled the\nreactor, a cylindrical vessel about\nKelvinator     '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '..-, \u201e \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 24%\nLaura Sacord  , \u201e  14\nLoblaw. A          88%\nMaple Leaf Milling     7%\nMassey Harris        ;     7%\nMcCoU Frontenao ,  JB\nMont'LocO   15%\nNat Steel Car _ ;, 28\nPage Hershey  71\nPowell River ..\u201e ,  28%\nRu\u00abs Industries   17%\nSicks Brew        24%\nSimpsons A  IB\nSteel of Canada   29%\nStandard, Paving   22\nTaylor Pearson    ,  fl%\nUnion Gas of Can    ,  84\nUnited Fuel A          88\nWinnipeg Oas S3\nthe site at * tank truck, It Contains\na catalytic agent \u2014 e bed at cobalt-\nmolyhdate catalyst pellets.\nHydrogen end; low-grade, high\nsulphur gasoline ere ted into toe\nreactor, Tho gasoline to be-prooeM-\ned at Oleum contains1,8,per cent\nsulphur \u2014 about six time* as much\nei can bo talented In auto fuels-\nGasoline made from tha best crudes\ncontains, in comparison, only .05\npet cont sulphur.\nHYQRQOBN  RRACT8\n\"In the presence of the catalytic\nagent,\" Hartley explained, \"the hydrogen reacts with the sulphur In\nthe petroleum to term hydrogen-\nsulphMe in. In addition, tho hydrogen replaces the sulphur moleoul<\nin the petroleum.\"\nThe hydrogen sulphide gas, after\nseveral atens, becomes molten sulphur, which la drained oft end ship\nped to chemical companies,\nAfter tha gasoline has been desulphurised and fractionated (separated), it becomes jet Plane fuel.\n\"And by a further step, a-ostalytlc\nreforming process,'' Hartley continued, \"wo produce not only a law\nsulphur gasoline but a gasoline of\nsufficient octane level to take care\nof tha moat. modem high-speed,\nhigh-compression automobile engines,\"   . \u25a0   - \",.,';:'\nHo said the process removed\nper cent of the sulphur,\nVancouver Stocks\n-'\"   (Olo$lnj Prices)\nMINIS\nBeaver Lodge\t\n-.81-\nBralorne   \u201e.,..,....,\t\n3.00\nCanusa ..,;.;.\u201e,,\u201e;, *..,..,.\u201e,\u201e.,',\n\u202204\nCariboo Gold ..\u201e , \u201e.\u201e\n.91'\nEstella  ,..'\u25a0\u25a0,\u2022 :\t\n.23\n.43\n.33\nKenvllie          \u25a0.\n.08\nPac Eastern Gold ...\u201e\t\n.95\nPend Oreille   \t\n4,00\nPioneer Gold    \t\n1.46\n.05%\nQuatsino , \u201e\n,25\n.1.40\nSilver Ridge\t\n,07\nSilver Standard  ,\t\n.69\nUtioa    ..  \t\n.01\nVananda  ...\n.01\n.04\n,6P\nYale\n.37\nOILS\nAnglo Can     \t\n6.30\nA P Cons\n.27'4\n14\n3.5!)\nHome                      \t\n800\nMercury\n,12\nNew Companies Show\nProof of Expansion\nVICTORIA (OP) - Continued\neconomic expansion in British Columbia is rofiegted in the number\nof new companies incorporated last\nyear. \u25a0 \u2022 .\nAttorney-General Bonner said today 1881 new firms were Incorporated in 1053-338 or 19 per cent\nmore than 1852.\nA 71 per cent Increase in inoorp.\noration of cooperatives wa$ regie,\ntered during the year. Registration\nof extra-provincial companlea remained stable at 160. ,\nTotal of 210 societies were incorporated in 1008, a 84 per cent rise,\nThe attorney.generai considered\ntho figures skewed \"very ietlsfeet<\npry business activity\" in tha prov<\nJnce.\n-.,    win    iu  .i ii ,,m,\u00bbi wu i^jmih,\nOttawa To Redeem\n2nd Victory Bonds'\nOTTAWA (W) - Justice Minll-\ntw Oenen, acting -finance minister. Monday announced that the\ngovernment will redeem tor 8474,\u00ab\n855,480 the outstanding balance ot\nthree   per   cent   seoopd   victory\nbonds,, \u25a0   \u25a0\n: The bonds will be paid off\nMarch 1 out of the government's\ncask resources which are et present at a high level due to the record sale of eighth series of Canada savings bonds.      - ,\nThe announcement alio said that\nth\u00ab government's, cash resources\nwill be augmented Fab. l when Ca-\nnadlan Natlopal Railways repays'\nthe government about $160,000,000\nof temporary advances made It for\ncapital purposes during the last\ntwo,'year|,:   ;'\nImpaired Drivers\nFined $250 Apiece\nVICTORIA (CP)' - -Four, men\nwere fined a total of $1000 on\ncharges of Impaired driving Monday at a special sitting of Saanich\npolice court end in city police\ncourt.\nFined $230 apiece were) John\nStephenson, who changed his pie*\nfrom not guilty In Ssanioh court)\nWilliam-.E. Williams of Vancouver,\nGordon Holiday, and Robert A:\nWalUa, \u25a0 .  '    :\nNational Pete \" 1.57 '\nOkalta Com      1,85\nPac Pete     8,00\nRoyalite  _ \u201e,   12.25\nVanslta \u201e 18\nVulcan  33\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates        25.00\nInt Brew B       4.28\nVlw 9ii Triir the Claiilfled Way\nNKW INSUK\nA,\nrail\n$200,000,000\nCanadian  National  Railway\nCompany 3%% Bonds\n(iunranteed unconditionally by the Government ot Canada as to both\nnrindr.\u00bbl and Interest\n, The Bank ol Canada is authomed by The Minister ol Finance to reteive qn iinhall ,o! toe\nCanadian National fiailwav Company cash \u00bbub\u00bbr.ription\u00bb (or      ,  ,\nTWENTY VEAR V\/,% BONDS\n.   DATED FEBRUARY I, 1994, DUE FEBRUARY 1, 1074\nCALLABLE ON OR.AFTER FEBRUARY 1, 1973\nInterest Payable 1st August snd February\n,, DlNOHIHATIONI\nS500, $1,000, $3,000, $25,000, snd $100,000\n\u00ab Issue Pricgi 09.30%\nYielding about $.78% to maturity\nPrincipal and interest payable in lawful money ot Canada, i Principal payable.at any\nAgency of Bank of Canada. Interest payable at any branch-in Canada of any chartered\nb^nk without charge.   The bonds will be dated and bear interest from February 1,1954.\nInterim Certificates will be available on or about February 1,-1954, in bearer form only.\nInterim Certificates will be exchangeable on or about May 1,19S4, for Definitive Bondi in two\nforms: bearer form with coupons attached (thli form may be registered: as to principal)\nand fully registered form with interest payable by cheoue. Definitive Bondi of both forme\nwill be in the above denominations snd (subject to the Company's transfia; requirement!\nwhere applicable) will be fully interchangeable, as to denomination and\/or form without\nCharge.  ' -\nany tanslssint\n'     Anoffidsl\nSubscriptions may be. made to Bank of Canada, Ottawa, Shi\ndealer eligible to act as a primary distributor or through any bank in\nprospectus may be obtained from any Agency of the Balk of Canada.\nSubscription! will be received subject to rejection er allotment In whole or In pirt.\nThe books at the Loan will open on January 14,1954, at Bank of Cauda, Ottawa, tad may\nbe closet) at any time without notice. v.   ,; V\nThese Bonds will be a direct obligation of the Canadian National Railway Company,\nthe Capital Stock of which is owned by Cauda, and under authority of tht Parliament of\nCanada payment of the principal of these Bondi and of the iatemt thereon wilt be guaranteed unconditionally by the povernMent'-of Cinada. \" r y-'\n\u25a0 The cash proceeds will be applied by the Canadian National Railway Company to\nthe redemption of $50,000,000 5% Bondi due February 1, ISM end to the repayment of\ninterest-bearing capital advances from tht Government of Canada.\nOrawa, Januabv 11,19H,\n\u25a0*n-.\nNELSON OAILY NEWS. TUII0AY. JAN. 12.19S4\nJll\nCNR Issues New\n3iPer Cent Bond\nMontreal (CP) - Donald\nGordon, chairman and president of\nCanadian National Railways, ah,\nnounced ^ohdey a new heme of\n$200,000,000, 20-year,. 3\u00ab.i per cent\nbonds to provide for the redemption Feb. 1 ot maturing 8 per cent\nbonds issued originally in 1924,\nf The remainder of the proceed! of\nthe issue will bo used to repay in-\nterest-bearing capital advances\nfrom the government which guar,\nantces the new bonds unconditionally. 09th as to principal and inter.\nHt.    '\nThe new Issue will be dated Feb.\n1, 108$, and mature Feb. 1, 1874.\nsubject to redemption at the option of the company on. or at any\ntime after Feb, 1. 1078, on 00 days\nnotice.\nThe. bondi ere being offered at\n09.80 to yield about 8,70 per cent\nto, maturity end win be available\nImmediately te the >pubi!o through\ninvestment dealers end banks.\nCalgary Livestock\nCAJfeiWy <CW \" Cettle end\ncalves 13.(10: market moderately so-\nfive with good butcher steers end\nbelters weak to 80 cents lower!\nsteers over 1300 pounds discounted\n50 cents or more; cows^steady to\nweak; bulla shout 80 lower.\nGood to choice bu.toh.ar heifers\n14.50-18.50, Common to medium 10\n14.2S; good cowg 10-11, common to\nmedium 8-9.50; cannon and outteri\n5.50-7.50; good bulls 10.8j-ll.80, com-\nmon to medium 9-10; good Stocker\nand feeder steers 14-15,8.0. common\nto medium 10.13.75l good to choice\nveal calves lfl-8!, eomraon to\nmedium 14.18.eo. . -.\nGrade A hogs closed lest week\n25 cents higher at 82-50; no sales\nFriday,\nGood lambs 10 to 10.50.\nRIVAL ATTRACTIONS\n\u2022WALSALL, Sngland (CPl-MaJor\nFrank Buckley, manager of the\nWajsall soccer team, told the club's\nannual meeting boys ere not what\nthey used to be,\n\"They do not come out of work\nor school to dash after t football,\"\nhe said, \"They dash after girls instead,\"\nMarket Trends\nNEW 1fOB,Jt. (AP) - Prlcee slip,\npad off without arousing any selling\npressure.   -\nInternational Nickel led Canadian\nissues an the downside It was tmM\nlowed by Canadian Pacific, down    --.\nand Distillers Seagram, off. Dome\nMinis golnod.\nTORONTO (CP) - Prices weW  \";\nmixed in moderate trading toward\nthe ClCse,     . i  ,   '   .\nWestern alls were stronger, golds\nMid uraniums were steady and base. -\nmetgls.end industrials slipped.\nMONTWOAL' (CP) - Prices were    \u2022\nIrregularly lower in fairly active\nafternoon trading.      \\\nSenior metals, senior oils, carriers\nand banks moved to- the downside,   ,,\nEarlier steadiness ruled the papers,    S\nutilities end ateels sections. Miacei- ..\nleneoui industrials and beverages\nfirmed.   , . Sffiq\nLONDON (Reuters). - Trading     '\nremlaned quiet with mQit of the\/\u25a0\nhuslness comprising evenlng.up '4n'    -\npreparation for Tuesday'i end twtrv\neount,        . --,\u25a0   ^W-l-T\nIn overseas iisuei. White Pan-\nand Yukon debenture* put on 8H\npoints to (8 on press reports that\nthe United statei and Canede were\ninterested In opening new gateways -\nto the sea through the Alaska panhandle, international Nickel and\nBrazilian Traction made fractional \\\nlieadwey.\".',- \u201ei'     3mm\nUTItTMPORT\nAsk your Invaslmsnl Dsolsr\nfer Kit loioii Rsporl\nMd fieipMlui ei\nCAIVIH BULLOCK\ntw.\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order Extra Copies of\nNelamt latlij Htms\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER\nOR TO THE OAIUY NEWS CIRtUUTION\nDEPARTMENT\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY.IN-'\nBLACK PENCIL\n;\u2022\nNnma\nAdHr^i\t\nCity     ;.\u201e.\u201e\u201e\u201e    ..    \u201e\u201e\nNinmn\nAddress      .\u201e.\u201e....,.\nCity   ..  ......    \u25a0 \u25a0 ,\nMnnw\nAHHrMc    , ,\nCity                             \u25a0\u2022''\u2022\u25a0'\nNnmf  '.  ,       , \u201e\nArli^r\u00ab^|\nC'ty                        ,                        \t\nNnpfi\u00b0\nAddress     .... ...\nf<*y\nNone\nAHHrf)M\nCity\nYmir Own NiTf\nY-fflir Own AffrtrfiM                                      .......\nCopy |5c and Qc Postage\n'   Plus i% S.S. ond M.A. Tox\nTotal ef 22e per copy eovers wrapping and mailing by\nus la any where In Canada, Great Britain\nor the United States.\nPHONE 144\nJfeUum lathj New*\n!\u25a0\n''i jll\n\u25a0 \u00b0 if\nyi:-\n.\ny\nmik\n--\n^^^___^.\n- ; -\nm$k Jim\n gj^r*^\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JAN. 13,19S4\n\"DISCRETION IS THE BETTErf PART OF VALOR\"\nThe Dieertet Husband Will\nRemind Hie Wife That Mann'e Are Having a\nHOT WATER BOTTIE\nSALE\nThie Timely Reminder May Cure\nThat Painful Disease\n\"Cold-Feet-in-the-Baek.\"\nFui) Moulded Viceroy Bottle       ..$1.19\nReliance Special.... ..\u201e.\u2014_      .7?\nReliance Sleeping Beauty............     .98\nPRICE8  EFFECTIVE  UNTIL  8ATURDAY  ONLY\nJtnmm\nDRUGS LTD\u00ae\ni\n\u2022**\u2014\nRoy Thomson Hinls of Reaching\nFurther Into U.K. Newspapers\nJiONDON (CF)\u2014Canadian publisher Boy Thomson may be interested in acquiring more newspapers\nIn England and Scotland, principally\nin the smaller cities and towns, it\nwas hinted Monday.\nThomson, who - last summer\nbought a 'controlling interest In\nthree Scottish newspapers, arrived\nduring the weekend to take up\nresidence in West Coates, a parish\nof,'Edinburgh. Monday the Manchester Guardian commented:\n\". ''As if it were not enough to\ntackle the problems of managing a\n.morning and an evening newspaper\nin V strange country, he is willing\nto-talk about what he thinks could\nbe done to exploit-smaller towns In\nEngland and Scotland which are\ngenerally thought to be stony\nground for \u25a0 daily newspapers.\n\"At home he has made handsome\nprofits in towns of no more than\n20,000 inhabitants, and he is evi\ndently struck by the number of\nmuch   bigger   communities   here\nwhich might, be made to support a\nnewspaper-if it were run by Roy\nThomson.\"\nOCCUPIES F1NDLAY HOUSE\nThomson, whbse son Kenneth now\nruns the Thomson newspapers in\nCanada, has, taken over the house in\nWest Coates formerly used by Sir\nEdmund Findlay, from whom\nThomson acquired control of the\nScotsman, published in Edinburgh,\nand two companion papers.\nThe Guardian described Thomson\nas in appearance the \"very pattern\nof the prosperous North American\nbusiness man.\" It was only when he\nwarmed to his conversation, always\nabout newspapers, that \"the gleam\nconies into his eye end the note into\nhis voice which tell you that he is\nmore than a' prosperous business\nman, that he has the restlessness\nand ardor of the expansionist.\"\nSerum Flown fo\nAustria From\nLansing, Mich.\nINNSBRUCK, Austria (CP) -\nEnding a trouble-plague, 4500-mile\ntrip from Lansing, Mich., a'supply,\nof vital blood serum arrived Monday for a nelght-year.old Tyrolean\nbby who has been slowly' bleeding\nto death with hemophilia.\nWithin 30 minutes after the precious vials of onti-hemophil globulin were received it Innsbruck\nchildren's hospital, doctors began\nadministering it to young Gottfried\nEder, son of an Innsbruck merchant..:, \u25a0 ': f \u25a0 \u25a0' ',.. .;\u25a0 '-\u25a0\u25a0-.\" '\u25a0'. ,i '.-''..\nJEEP TO THE RE8CUE\nThe aupply of the vital serum was\nbrought on the lest 80-mile leg of\nIts trip in a jeep station wagon\nwhich batted through a blizzard\nand deep snowdrifts in an effort to\nsave the life of Gottfried,\nEarlier had weather forced back\na TJ. S. Air Force helicopter which\ntried to fly the precious vials from\nMunich, Germany.\nPACKAGE MIXUP\nThe serum, a) blood coagulating\nextract pot' available In. Austria,\nreached Fuerstenfeldbrunk air base\nnear Munich, Sunday night. It came\nfrom the Michigan state health department,  .- '\u25a0 ' i. ...\nA package ot medicine thought\nto be the serum arrived Sunday but\nlt turned out to be a smallpox vaccine which got. mixed up with the\ncorrect package at Westover Field,\nMass., and was put on a Europe-\nbound military \"air transport in its\nplace. The correct package finally\nwas put on a later' plane.\nWithin 40 minutes after it arrived\nIn Frankfurt, the serum was aboard\na special C-47 of the 60th troop\ncarrier wing in Germany on its way\nto the TJ. S. base at Fuerstenfeld-\nbruck.\nT\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger typa rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nL.A. TO B. OF R.T.\nMonthly meeting tonight, 8:0 p.m.\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant fix It,\nthrow lt away. Prompt watch work,\nguaranteed, at reasonable prices.\nROBT. NOLTE\nMaster Tailor \u2014 253 Baker Street\n\u2022 -   January Extra Pants Sale\nTrade your old tires at\n8UPERI0R  MOTORS\nTire Department   \"\nLadies needed for homemaker\nservice, Nelson Soroptimist Club.\nPhone Miss Freeman, 115 or 959-H.\nFor that \"someone special\"\u2014Send\nFresh Flowers from\nCOVENTRYS'   FLOWER   SHOP.\nFor Freshness and Goodness, try\nORAY'S Chocolates. Phone 1347, 534\nJosephine Street.\nFishing licences are now due for\n1854. Get them from i\nJACK BOYCE.\ndean your rugs with Lamorene,\nthe wonder rug cleaner. Easier,\nfaster, for less money.. Buy Lamorene now at HIPPERSON'S.\nEBERLE'S MID-WINTER\nCLEARANCE 8ALE\nSample item: Lined jeans, sanforized, Sizes 2,4,6, Sale Price $2.29.\nATTENTION\nChild  Health  Centre  and   Preschool  Immunization  Clinic,  Memorial Hall today, 2 to 4 p.m.\nv: United Nations Association meeting Memorial Hall, 8:15 p.m. Films\nand discussion, led by R. J. Mawer.\nEveryone welcome.\n\u25a0jAnnual meeting Red Cross Society, Silver Room, Hume Hotel,\nWednesday, January 13, 7:30 p.m.\nBusiness reports, election of officers. Everybody welcome.\nMake your everyday cleaning\neasier with a Bissell carpet sweeper.\nA;few whisks over the carpet is all\nthat's needed. Two popular models.\nHE HIPPERSON'S.\nFurniture Clearance\nSt Only\u20143-drawer wal. dressers,\nreg. $39.50, $29.50; 1 only\u20144-drawer\nchlff., reg. $44.50, $32.50;  1 only-\ncorner cabt., reg. $89.50, $69.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\n; ;   PRE-INVENTORY SALE\nPRESTO COOKERS\nNo. 402 x 2V4 Qt., $14.95, now $12.75\nNo. 404 x 3% Qt\u201e $17.95, now $15.25\nNo. 406 x 5 Qt., $19.95, now $16.95\nDon't Wait \u2014 Buy Yours Now!\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nSpecial\u201410-piece Bedroom Suite\n- $199.50.\nAntique   furniture   repairs   and\nFrench polishing.\nWo buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME FURNITURE  EXCHANGE\n. . 413 flail Street\nGood aupply of knee and ankle\nsocks. - TOT-N-TEEN 8HOP.\nJanuary Clearance Sale at\nADRIAN MILLINERY.\nSunworthy wallpaper remover, 85c.\nBURN8 LUMBER COMPANY.\nLEOION  BINGO\nTONIGHT.\nCentral School P.T.A,\n-Wednesday, 3.pjn. Program sponsored by the teachers.\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save their soles!\nTONY'8  REPAIR  SHOP.\nWoodsworth Says\nSocreds Forced\nHis Resignation\nKELOWNA (CP)\u2014Bruce Woods-\nworth, 39, son of the founder of the\nCCF party, charged Monday that a\nmixture of politics and local resentment forced him to resign as\nprincipal of Westbank High School\nand take a straight teaching job at\nnearby Rutland High.\nMr. Woodsworth, an active CCF\nworker and unsuccessful party candidate in South Okanagan riding\nin 1948, said in an interview that\na local petition which forced an\ninvestigation of his work as principal was engineered by \"men with\nSocial. Credit party affiliation and\nleanings.\"\nThe   investigation   centered   on\ncharges that Woodsworth was not a\ngood teacher and his administrative ability was not satisfactory.\nCHARGES UNFOUNDED\nA department of education investigator inquired into charges of\nWestbank and Peachland residents\nagainst Mr. Woodsworth, and. he\nsaid Deputy Education Minister\nHarold L. Campbell finally reported\nthe   charges  \"largely  unfounded.\"\n\"But he asked me to resign to\ntake a new teaching post because\nof the'fuss that had been created.\"\nFAILURES HIGH\nEVERYWHERE\nCharges that an \"astounding number of Mr. Woodworth's pupils had\nfailed their grades last term were\nalso answered by the son of J. S.\nWoodsworth, founder of the. CCF\nwho died in 1942.\n\"It is true there were a good\nnumber of failures In the departmental exams far social studies in\nthe Canadian history course given\nfor the'first time In all B. C. high\nschools\/' he ssid, \"But my school\nwas no exception to the results obtained in most of the high schools\n. . failures were very high all\nover the province.\"\nEARLY COOKER8\nJ. Sharp was one of the earliest\nusers ot gas cookers in 1835 when\nhe' constructed gas ovens in England for baking.\nTakes Troubles\nTo B. C. (abinel\n' VANCOUVER (CP) - The 50,000\nmember British Columbia .Federation of L\/ibor will go to the provincial cabinet this month with a\nsweeping labor legislation reform\nprogram it adopted in convention\nhere Sunday.\nThe Federation, provincial arm of\nthe Canadian Congress of Labor,\nwill ask for major revisions in seven B. C. labor acts and reorganization of two government labor\nboards.\nProposals were adopted by delegates to 10th annual convention and\ncall for:\nReturn of the, Socred government's part-timer Labor Relations\nBoard to a full-time basis.\nSeating of two representatives of\norganized labor on the Board of\nIndustrial Relations.\nImmediate amendments to Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration\nAct, Workmen's Compensation Act,\nand B. C. Trade Union Act.\nAmendments \"to remove loopholes\" in the government's new\nEqual Pay Act.\nUpward evision of B. C.'s minimum wage laws.\nChanges In Hours of Work Act to\nguarantee a five-day 4ff-hour week\nto all workers and amendment of\npresent one-week annual vacation\nlegislation so that workers are\nguaranteed two weeks holiday each\nyear,\nFederation Secretary George\nHome plans to contact Premier\nBennett Immediately to formally\nrequest an audience before the\ncabinet.\nIt will be, the first time since\nAugust 1952 that Canadian Congress\nof Labor unionists in B. C. have\ngone before the government body.\n\"Man ol Munich\"\nDies, Aged 80\nLONDON (CP) - Viscount Simon,\nleading British jurist and cabinet\nminister in two world wars, died today He was 80. Simon was formerly, foreign secretary and chancellor\nof the exchequer.\nLord Simon had been ill in a London hospital since Christmas.\nLord Simon, one of the greatest\nlegal minds of his time, gave up a\n$200,000-a-year practice as a lawyer\n40 years ago for the greater tasks of\nstatesmanship, and played a central, part in many historical events\nof his time. He served under five\nprime ministers, and was in the\nthick of affairs during the abdication) of the Duke of Windsor, during\nthe Munich Fact in 19.38 and in the\ndifficult transitions between peace\nand war.\nViscount Simon was a \"man of\nMunich.\" He never ceased to maintain that the late prime minister\nNeville Chamberlain's Munich Pact\nwith Hitler was right.\nCranbrook Plates\nOn Stolen Auto\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A routine\ntraffic check by RCMP officers at\nCol wood resulted in arrest of a\nformer Victoria resident who was in\npossession of a car stolen from Lethbridge last October, police said\nMonday.\nAxel B. Dalquistwas returned\nto Lethbridge under RCMP escort\nto face charges of car theft and theft\nof licence plates. He faces a minimum jail term of one year.\nPolice stated that Dalquist was\nstopped in a car bearing licence\nplates stolen from Cranbrook, B.C.\nThe car was taken from Lethbridge.\nOct. 7.\nBefore living in Lethbridge, Dalquist was a Victoria resident, police\nreported.\n.'Presentation of a card table set by Mrs. A, J; .Harrison to Sister Mary Patrick for the residents of. Mount\nSt. Francis was made at the Infirmary on behalf of\nNelson service clubs.\u2014Daily News photo.\nWorld'Fattious Composer\nDies* Austria, Aged 83\nVIENNA (AP)\u2014Oscar Straus, the\ntamed Viennese-born composer of\nThe Chocolate Soldier and more\nthan 50 other operettas, died of\nheart disease Monday in Bad Ischl.\nHe was 83.\nThough he won fame in the same\nfield, he was no relation to Vienna's waltz king, Johann Strauss.\nStraus fled his native Austria at\nthe .1938 anschluss and lived in\nParis. In 1940, he fled the Nazis a\nsecond time and went to the United\nStates, where he lived until the Second World War. a\nStraus' first operetta Was produced 59 years ago. Called The\nWise Man lt was unsuccessful. His\nfirst big success was The Waltz\nDream, in 1907. It is still played.\nBE8T KNOWN\nThe Chocolate Soldier, his best\nknown operetta, was composed the\nfollowing year. Its libretto was from\nGeorge Bernard Shaw's play, \"Arms\nand Tiie Man.\"\nDuring the German occupation of\nFrance, his music was played without the mention of his name.\nBORN IN VIENNA\nStraus was born in Vienna April\n6,1870. He studied composition, here\nand in Berlin. From 1895 until 1902\nhe was a theatre orchestra conductor\nin Bratlslaca, Teplltz, Mainz' and\nBerlin. In the early years of the\ncentury, as a conductor in Berlin,\nhe composed several .serious operas,\nIncluding \"Colombme\" and the\nVValley of Love.\"\nMany of hla operettas received\ngreat acclaim in Vienna and other\nEuropean cities.,One of his last was\n\"His First Waltz\" written in 1950.\nWhile in the United States before\nthe war he wrote the music for\nmany Hollywood productions.\nlllth Battery\nNews\nWeekly training parade of lllth\nHAA battery will be held,, in the\nNelson Armouries' Tuesday at 2000\nhours and Friday at 1930 hours under Command of Capt. H. T. Gumbert, commanding officer, A full\nturnout, is' expected.\n\u2022 Part 1 Orders\/published by Capt.\nH. T. Gumbert, Commanding Officer:\nDuties\u2014Orderly Officer, Lieut. F.\nW. M. Drew, 12 Jan. 54; Orderly\nSgt. Sgt P. M. Stevens, 12 Jan. 54;\nNext for Duty, Bdr. G. M.' Stevens,\n14 Jan. 54.\nParades\u2014Roll Call, 1955 hours;\nCOS Inspection, 2000 hours; Training, 2000 hours,\nDress\u2014Roll call order.\nTraining\u2014As per syllabus.\nThe annual General Officer Commanding Inspection will be held in\nthe Nelson Armouries on 18 Feb. 54.\n-S\/Sgt. 0. E. Tfainor left the city\nyesterday to attend the training\nparade of the Cranbrook Cadet\nCorps. He will return to Nelson on\ncompletion of his tour.\nMajor E. C. .Whitelock has returned after successfully completing the senior officers course recently held' at Rivers, Manitoba.\nMajor Whitelock has been attached\nfrom the Supplementary Reserve.  ;\nRecruits are still needed to bring\nthe local battery up to strength.\nSeveral vacancies exist.for drivers,'\ngun numbers, radar operators, pre-'\ndictor, signals, clerks, etc.\nThe active force recruiting team\nwill be at the Nelson Armouries,\n315 Victoria Street on the 21 and 22\nJanuary 1954 for further information inquire at the lllth HAA battery RCA CA (RF).'   .\nPatteson, European\nManager, CPR, Dies\nMONTREAL \u2014 Word was reoelv,\ned here by cable late Sunday of\nthe death in Paris, France, of JVC.\nPatteson, C.M.G. of London, England, European general manager for\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway. Mr.\nPatteson, a native of Ottawa, had\nbeen European general manager for\nthe CPR since 1945.\nIssue Warrant\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 A warrant\ncharging assault with intent to murder was issued Monday against Donald Ritchie, 33-year-old missing key\nwitness In the 1948 attempted assassination, of CIO president Walter\nP. Reuther.\nJudge John P. Scallen signed the\nwarrant. It was sought by prosecutor Gerald K. O'Brien, who an-\nnounced last Wednesday that\nRitchie's story gave him a \"solution\"\nto the mysterious case.\nFLED TO CANADA\nRitchie, a Canadian, escaped from\nhis two policemen protectors In a\nDetroit hotel Friday and vanished\ninto Canada. O'Brien had said\nRitchie', would remain a witness it\nhe returned in a \"reasonable time.\"\nBut time was running out on\nO'Brien. One man arrested on the\nstrength of Ritchie's story comes\nup for examination Thursday, ahd\nan extradition hearing for Clarence\nJacobs of Tecumseh, Or\/t., is slated\nthe same day in Windsor. Without\nRitchie, O'Brien doubts he can convict any of four named in a warrant\nbrought on the strength of his story,\nTry for $20,000,\nEscape With $35\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Burglars\ntried for $20,000 in a branch' bank\nMonday, but escaped with only $35\nfrom a next door restaurant.\nA frail of broken plaster told the\nstory. The burglars climbed a shaft\nInto the attic of the cafe and from\nthere they broke through a wall\nand into, the attic of the Broadway\nbranch of the Bank of Nova Scotia.\nBy smashing through the ceiling\nthey got into the bank's lunchroom.\nFrom there they retreated, leaving\na crowbar behind after breaking\nthrough a wall into' the cafe.\nNo attempt, was made on the\nbank's vault' holding $20,000, but on\ntheir way from the Cafe they took\n$35 in cash and 20 cartons it clg-\narets.\nBut, the thieves overlooked $120\nin a paper bag, in the restaurant\nkitchen.\nQueen Mother to\nTry Again al\nGrand National\nBy STERLING 8LAPPEY\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Tho Grand Na:\ntlonal and the Derby \u2014 two races\nwhere Britons turn out nearly a,\nmillion strong, forget their troubles\nand bet a. few bob\u2014will- be raced\nMarch 27 and June 2.\ni Hottest early favorites for tho\nGrand National, far and away the\nworld's toughest steeplechase, are\nLittle Yid, Irish Lizard and Early\nMist,,the 1853 winner. -.'.\";.'\nOthers with an,air of Class who\ncon last the' four-mile, 858-yard\ncourse at Aintree with its 32 Jumps\n\u00abre .Ordinance, M'AsOTu-Tu-Vu,\nFire and Mont Tremblant.\nSENTIMENTAL BACKING\nM'As-Tu-Vu; owned by Queen\nMother Elizabeth, picks up sentimental backing on that score. Mont\nTremblant Is rated one of the finest jumpers in Europe but probably\nwill be asked to carry a heavy burden.  . ,\nA field of between 30 and 45\njumpers is expected and a turnout\nof about 350,000 spectators. The ancient course, just north of Liverpool;\nis jammed with a crowd of that size\nalmost every year.\nMother Punishes\nBoy Who Saved\nPal From Inlet\n\u2022 ,\u2022\u25a0''\u00bb\u25a0 '.,,'  - \u25a0 -\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Terry lha.\nski, 9, decided Monday there's no\nfuture in being a hero.\nSunday he helped rescue a. playmate, Marshall Magnon, 7, from the\nwaters of Burrard Inlet.\nHis reward when his mother\nlearned about it: A good strapping\nfor being near the water.\n\"He has been told time and again\nnot to go near the water,\" said his\nmother, \"So hero or no hero, he got\na good strapping.\"\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A seven-\nyear-old Vancouver boy was pulled\nfrom the waters of Burrard Inlet\nSunday by two playmates after he\nfell from a wharf. Young Marshall\nMagnone was revived by an lnhal-\nator crew after nine-year-old Ron\nnie Wong and Terry Ihaskl waded\nInto the shallow water to rescue\nhim. Magnone was stunned by the\n15-foot fall.\nw\nFrench Launch\nBattle at Seno\nSENO, Indo-China (AP)-French\nparachutists and North African\ntroops kept up a \"deadly game of\nhide and seek\" Monday with Communist-led Vietminh guerrillas in\nthe jungle northeast of this French-\nheld Loatian fortress,\nThe French forces claimed more\nthan 1000 casualties among their\nrebel enemy and asserted they had\nwiped out any serious, Vietminh\nmenace in central Laos.    '\nThey are fighting one \"of the most\nimportant battles of the seven-year\nwar against Ho Chi Minn's' rebels.\nIt is a battle without regular front,\non no fixed position, in a quadrangle 25 miles square in central\nLaos.   \u00bb'\u25a0'      ; '   \u25a0\nThe French commander, Gen.\nAndre Franchi, said1 the Vietminh\nno longer are capable ot mounting\nan attack on Seno unless .they re-\ncelve substantial reinforcement\nfrom other fronts,\nNew Landing System\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 An advanced\ntype of instrument landing system\nwill go into operation here Wednesday at Patricia Bay airport\nDepartment of Transport engineer who designed and installed the\nsystem Improved it to counteract\nreflections from surrounding hills.\nOrder Kremlin\nElections. March\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The Kremlin Monday,, ordered nation-wide\nelections tor a new Supreme Soviet parliament to be held March\n14, Moscow radio said,\nThe four-year-term of the present Supreme Soviet expires March\n12.     -\nMoscow radio said the elections\nwere called in ah announcement by\nthe presidium of the Supreme Soviet, signed by chairman Marshal\nKlimentt'Vorshivlov and secretary-\nN. M. Pegov,\nThe Soviet constitution says general, elections must be held on a\nnon-working day within two\nmonths of the end of the Supreme\nSoviet's four-year term, March 14\nfalls on a Sunday.\nRUBBER-STAMP BODY\nThe Supreme Soviet Is the supreme legislative, organ ot the Soviet Union but is little more than a\nrubber-stamp body. It consists of\ntwo hours, the Soviet of the Union\nand the Soviet of Nationalities,\nThe Supreme Soviet does not sit\nIn continuous session. It usually\nmeets twice a year and elects the\npraesidium, which is continually\nfunctioning legislative and executive body.\nJ\/ul MqhvayA.\nNo. 3: Southern Trans Provincial\nHighway\u2014Hope to Crow's Nest;\nopen. Cascade-Rossland: compacted\nsnow, carry chains. Rossland-Trail\nCastlegar: sanding in progress.\nCastlegar-Nelson-Balfour: Good\ncondition.' Kootenay Bay-Boswell:\nicy spots,- sanding In progress.\nKuskanook-Wynndel: grading in\nprogress. Wynndell-Arrow Creek:\nfair condition. Arrow Creek-Goais-\nfell: icy condition, Goatsfell-Cran-\nbrook-Fernle-Crow's Nest: icy in\nplaces, sanding in progress.\nNo. ,3A\u2014Trall-Salmo: good condition. Rossland-Patterson: open.\nCreston-Porthill: graded.\nNo. 6 \u2014 Nelway-Vernon: open.\nNelway-Nelson-South Slocan: good\ncondition. South Slocan-Needles:\nrough, icy sections, sanded. Needles\nMonashee: ploughing and sanding\nin progress.\nNo. 95 \u2014 Klngsgate-Cranbrook-\nGolden \u2014 good condition. Banff-\nWindermere: Open, sanding in progress.\nNelson-Kaslo \u2014 fair condition. Kaslo-New Denver\u2014fair condition, slippery sections between\nNew Denver and Three Forks,\nTemperature\u2014Rossland 18, Nelson 22, Cranbrook 10, Fernie 18,\nGolden 5 below. \u25a0\nWASHINGTON\nSnoqualmie Pass\u2014Overcast, road\nslippery in places from four miles\nWest to 15 miles East oj Summit, no\nnew snowi 71 Inches old snow in ski\narea. Temperature 18.\nStevens Pass\u2014Clear skies, snow\nand Ice on road from'one mile East\nto one mile West of Summit, no new\nshow, 102' inches old snow.in ski\narea. Temperature 18. ,\nWELL COVERED\nMost of Greenland lies under an\nice cap averaging 1000 feet in\nthickness. \u2022\nLs^ST LENGTH \\\nClearance of\nIMPORTED SUITINGS\nCUSTOM TAILORED TO YOUR ORDER     ,\nThis week is your lost opportunity to, buy Canada's\nfinest tailored, clothes at a very substantial discount.\nIMORY'S LTDv r \"\nthe Mans store '  .\nQueen Prod&ims Mith\nIn the Commonwealth\nBy GOMER JOnJES\nWELLINGTON, N. Z.-(Reuters)-\nThe Queen Monday proclaimed her\nfaith i in the Commonwealth as a\ngreat force for good in the world\nand described present difficulties\nas a challenge. .-!.\n\"The arduous times are a challenge to Us to exert the Commonwealth's beneficent influence with\ntelling effect,\" she said in reply to\nthe loyal toast at a state luncheon\nin Parliament House.\nThe Queen reaffirmed the dedication of herself and of the Duke of\nEdinburgh to devote their lives\nand energy to the advancement ot\ntheir peoples throughout the Commonwealth. '\nCROSSING THRESHOLD\nSaying she felt New Zealand was\ncrossing the threshold of a great\nera, the Queen said:\n\"May you continue to seize the Opportunities which \"here have been\nso richly bestowed; and may you\nnever fail in your determination to\nfollow the.paths of peace and orderly pogresa to Which your steps\nare' already turned so that the generations to come will honor your\nnames and this nation and the\nBritish people which gave it birth.\"\nCOMMONWEALTH INFLUENCE\nThe theme ot the Commonwealth's\nlie ahead of us,\" she' said. \"Our resources are inexhaustible and. given\npeace we can achieve much for the\nadvantage of mankind.\"\nWellington people saw .their first\n\"on the spot\" telecast when the Royal visitors attended a civic reception at the town hall earlier in the\nday.   '\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u2022'.'\u2022\nViewers, saw the Queen < and the\nduke accept embroidered rugs for\nthemselves and tor Prince Charles\nand Princess Ann, Each rug bore\nthe coat of arms of the city..\nOn behalf ot the Maori people the\nQueen was given a carved staff and\nthe duke a ceremonial Maori ax of\ngreenstone, a type of Jade mined\nin New Zealand.\ntop from Hotel\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 James W.\nSangster, 37, of Victoria, was killed\nMonday in a plunge from the third\nfloor of a downtown hotel.\nA loosely tied piece of rope with\na frayed end was (led around the\nman's neck and a matching piece\nwas found attached to a radiator\nin his room, police'reported.\nWritten on the glass-of the room\nwash basin was the name of a woman he wished notified of his death.\nThe message on the glass Included\nher telephone number.\nThe woman, po]|6e learned, was\nhis sister living in, Vancouver.\nSangster, a fornibj RCAF warrant\nofficer and department of veterans'\naffairs employee in Victoria, resigned from his Job some time ago\nbecause of ill health.\nUnmarried, he l(ved with his par\nentoi   , \u25a0.'\u25a0''\"\nPolice Just in\nTime, She Said\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A mother\nof three told reporters Morfday how\na\/ policeman checking for stolen\ncars in Beacon Hill park saved her\nfrom an assault\n\"It was God's mercy the policeman came when he did,\" the woman said.\nCharged with Indecent assault\ntoday were William James Ferguson and Anthony Follno, both of\nthe HMCS Ontario. They were remanded till Tuesday without plea-\nThe young mother said two sail\nors grabbed her on a downtown\nstreet Saturday night and drove\nto the park.\nThe two men will \u2022 miss the\ncruise of Ontario, which leaves for\nAustralia Tuesday.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n576 Baker St 'Phone tU\nW\nIGINTON\nMOTORS'LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\nSIS Kootenay Sf.       Phone SSI\nUnprecedented\nDevelopment in\nB, C\/s Economy |\nMONTREAL (CD-British Co->\nlumbia is in a position to compete'\/\nwith any area anywhere on tho I\neconomic, fundamental of energy,\nDr,.Aibert E. Grauer Of Vancouver,;\npresident and chairman of the) British Columbia Electric Railway Company, said Monday.\nAddressing a Canadian Club\nluncheon oh developments in the -\nPacific coast province, he said that\nthere has been a \"substantial\ngrowth\" in manufacturing in recent\nyears as well as an \"unprecedented\ndiversification of development,\" \u25a0'\nB.C'8 HIGHLIGHTS\nThese were the highlights 6f B.C.'\u00a7 I\npost-war economic development: \u25a0\n1. The greatest program of pulp\nand paper expansion in the world;\n2. - The largest industrial con-\nstruction program in the history of\nwestern Canada; .,.-;\n3. The proving of a major natural gas field and the allied discovery of indications of oil;\n4. The building of one ot tht'\nworld's largest aluminum projects;\n5. The laying of an oil pipeline\nfrom Edmonton to Vancouver;\n6. The establishment of a wide\nvariety of secondary industries.\nThere had been a notable expansion In mining, especially: in base j\nmetals, as well as all-time records\nin the cutting of timber, the pro-,\ncessing of fish and the Installation\nof hydro-electric, capacity.- J\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014     *       yM\nRussian Trawler\nSeized by Norway\n; OSLO (AP)\u2014Norway'a state radio announced Monday that Norwegian officials had seized a Russian\ntrawler it said was: fishing Illegally\nin Norwegian territorial -waterg\nabove the Arctic circle. The radio\nsaid the trawler tried to escape and\nthe Norwegian inspection ship\nwhich found it had to fire several\nwarning shots before officials could\nboard it. The trawler was reported\ntaken to Vadsoe, a Norwegian Arc*\ntic sea port hear the Russian border.\nHavo the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMaster plumber\nPHONE 815\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n\u25a0   , at tho\nNelson Upholstery\n401 Hall Streot Phoria 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\n,   'RECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\nSIS FRONT 8T. PHONE 61\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building     ,\nSuite 206       .   Phone 141\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono 327\n676 Baker Street\nMake your own Home-Made Bread\nwith ELLISON'S^\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on every package.\nPhone 238, or Call\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nNOXEMA\nSPECIAL\nTor Chapped Hands\nGiant 10 ex. jar.\n$1.25\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nBOX 460 PHONE 84\nI\n-    -    ... .\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_01_12","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\/1.0427952","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":"1954-01-12 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":"1954-01-12 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":""}]}