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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":" PIPilfpfp\u2122\n:' \u25a0  '' . \u25a0\nm-tamuw:- ..i. ..\"   \u2014.\u00bb   \u25a0   \u25a0   .-...,' i .\u00bb \u25a0.!,\u25a0  .. . i , .i..,...i ..ii,_<.\n*-\u2014\u2014^\u00bb*\u00bb\u2014<\u2014i\n\u2022       \u2022\nraine\nifter CCF Votes\n- By WILF CHISLETT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSASKATOON (CP) \u2014 Major changes.in policy de-\ngned to lure CCF votes to Saskatchewan's Liberal party\n\u00abre expected to come from a party convention which\nmned here Wednesday.-\nNew policies, to be hammered out of the many resolu-\nons to be submitted to the three-day meeting, are con-\ndered to be equally important-as selection of a new party\nader, the reason the conven-\n\"political suicide\" now to press for\nabolition of government enterprises.\nConvention officials met Wednesday to start sorting out resolutions which will take up a good\n,   part of each day. Election of the\nnew leader has been set fqr Fri\nday afternoon, but the final  re\nsuit may not be known until early\n8aturday.\nOne major resolution reported to\nbe considered .by the 830 delegates\nis free farm electrification, a pro\ngram which would cost millions of\ndollars annually. Other, resolutions\nare likely to ask for measures to\nitles, further exemptions from the\nlighten the tax load for municipal-\nprovince's three-per-cent sales tax,\nmore aid\" fdr education and increased farm safeguards against crop\nfailures general throughout western Canada this fall.\nOne resolution, to be presented by\nthe 53-member Regina delegation,\nasks a royal commission to investigate sale and distribution of liquor\nin Saskatchewan. Manitoba now\nhas a similar commission at work.\nCANDIDATE\nSASKATOON (CP) \u2014 L. B.\nThomson, former director of the\nPrairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration, made his first appearance\nWednesday as a candidate for the\nSaskatchewan Liberal party.\nHe declined comment on charges\nby one of the four other candidates\nthat he is sponsored by Hon. J. G.\nGardiner, federal agriculture minister, and made no mention of It in\nan address to the University of Sas-\nm was called.\nWhile Liberals weren't expected\nrevamp their entire platform,\niportant changes will be made\n)ng with plans for rebuilding\nrty ranks. Liberal officials who\nye been doing a great deal of\nul-searchlng in recent months\nntend new policies and better or-\nhization hold the only hope the\nrty has of beating the CCF gov-\nkment in the next provincial elec-\n[n, expected in 1956.\n' Candidates for the leadership\u2014\ntne of five will be elected to replace Walter Tucker who resigned\nlast year to enter federal politics\u2014\n[lave stressed In their campaigning the need for a change In outlook by the party.\nthey have plugged for a \"posl-\n!e\" approach in election platforms\nher than one that is basically\n;l-socialist.\n)ne reason candidates and other\njeral- officers advance for the\n:cess of socialism in Saskatche-\nn is not that voters have turned\nialist but that they are anti-Lib-\nTV win back CCF votes they\nLiberals must offer a strong\n^native to electors. *\nATFORM8 ALTERED\naskatchewan   Liberals   already\n'e made some changes In platens sipce the CCF was elected in\nOne' of  the most  important\ntheir attack on the govern-\nnt*s crown corporations which\nle under fire as threats to pri-\ne enterprise. Liberals now have\npted the attitude that crown cor-\natlons are here to stay and one\neral  official   said  it  would  be katchewan's Young Liberal Club.\n-Year Term\nr Henderson\nALGARY CCP) - Donald Wins-\nHenderson, 37, Wednesday was\nid not guilty of murder but\nty of manslaughter in the alay-\n6f _jis fiancee, Yvonne Leves-\nAug. 11, 1949.\nwas  sentenced  to  14 years'\nrisonment.\nie reduced verdict was brought\n\u25a0n during the eighth day .of\nings in the Supreme Court of\nSrta   trial   before   Mr.   Justice\nMcBride and a jury of six.\"\nriginally charged with murder,\nderson, a graduate of the Unity  of  Saskatchewan,  was  on\nas a result of the. death of\nLevesque in an East Calgary\ncourt.   The   girl   died   from\n:k brought on by a beating,\nlroughout the hearings, the par-\nof the accused man remained\nthe   courtroom,   following   the\nleedings closely. Mr. Henderson\never,   was   absent   during   the\nsumming up by trial lawyers\nsday and his wife sat alone.\n:T APPROVED\n3NDON (AP)\u2014The House of\nIs Wednesday night announced\n\u2022oval of the Allied pacts to re-\nGermany. There was no rec-\nid vote. The House of Corn-\nlast week voted its approval,\nto 4.\nEOT8 INVITE\n5RN (Reuters) \u2014 Switzerland\nnesday turned down the Soviet\ntation to attend an all-Euro-\nsecurity conference in Mos-\nnext week. Most Western na-\nhave indicated they will re-\nthe Russian invitation.\nGerman Youths\nBi-iak Up Meeting\nAUGSBURG, West Germany\n(Reuters) \u2014 Rowdy young political\nopponents hurled beer glasses Wednesday night as Theodor Blank was\nabout to address a meeting here,\nand the West German defence commissioner waa slightly injured:\nBleeding from a superficial cut\noii one ear lobe, the 49-year-old\nBlank was rescued by police, put in\na squad car and driven to his\nhotel.\nPolice said some youths, chanting slogans against the proposed\nrearmament of West Germany, began creating an uproar and tossing\nbeer glasses before Blank got up to\naddress the meeting in the restaurant of a stadium.\n3-Way Mayoralty\nRace at Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The mayoralty race in Vancouver's Dec. 8\ncivic elections turned into a three-\nway battle when Archie F. Proctor\nfiled his papers before nominations\nclosed Wednesday.\nHe will run against Mayor-Fred\nHume, seeking his third\" term as\nchief magistrate, and Albert Dunn,\nan independent.\nIt will be the second attempt by\nMr. Proctor, also an independent,\nto gain the Mayor's chair. He ran\nthird in 1952 when Mayor Hume\nwas elected to his second term with\/\nthe backing of the civic non-partisan association, which is again backing him* this year.\nEleven candidates are contesting\nthe four aldermanic seats.\n&^>\n^\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy, add mild\nThursday. Wind south 20 In a few\nvalleys, otherwise light. Low and\nhi&h at Cranbrook, 25 and 38; Crescent Valley 35 and 48.\nNELSON. B. C\u201e CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1954\nNo.-182\nFOUR ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIESTS ofthe\nPasslonlst Order arrive In New York after five\nyears of \"house arrest\" in Red China. Left to right,\nRev, John Hotz of Brooklyn, New York; Rev. Llnui\nLombard, of Ipswich, Mass.; Rev, John Baptist\nMaye,Scranton, Pa., and Rev, Lawrence Mullln\nof Jersey City, New Jersey,\n'.    - \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nSteelwork for Kokanee\nBridge Is Completed\nLast rivet was hammered Home the Liberty Food Store new build-\nWednesday noon in the steejwork of\nKokanee bridge on No. 3 highway.\nThree continuous beam spans\nwere laid to set the stage for decking. When completed the new\nbridge will replace,a narrow span\nover Kokanee Creek, about 12 miles\nEast of Nelsor!.\nDominion Bridge Company crew*\nbegan loading their equipment for\ndeparture yesterday afternoon.'Earlier the company had raised steel for\ning on Vernon Street. The company\nwill have equipment at: work in\nNelson again in the New Year raising framing for the $444,000 federal\nbuilding. \u2022 .\nKenyon Construction Company\ndid foundation work for the Kokanee Creek bridge before the steel\ngang moved in Nov. 16. The steel\nwas unloaded and erected in under\nthree days.\nConsider New\nAlaska Roadway\nNOME, Alaska (Reuters) \u2014 Construction of a hew highway in\nAlaska which would permit motorists to drive almost within sight of\nSoviet Siberia is under consideration.\nThe highway, wnich eventually\nwould link up with Alaska's existing road system at Anchorage or\nFairbanks, would terminate on the\nshores of the Bering Sea, near\nNome, where Alaska and the Soviet\nUnion are less than 200 miles apart\nA natural extension of the Aldska'\nhighway, which already allow!\nmotorists tb drive from the United\nStates and Canada as far north as\nFairbanks, the new road 'would\nopen a vast new area of the sub-\nArctic to potential development.\nWORK STARTED\nIrving Reed, Alaska's territorial\nhighway engineer, announced recently that work has been started\non a short section of the proposed\nroad in. the Nome area.\nCommitted To\nState Hospital\nBELLINQHAM (AP) \u2014 Mrs.\nRegina Dykstra, 47, charged with\ncausing her daughter's death by\nbeating her and forcing hej to swallow poison, has been ordered committed to Northern State Hospital.\nThe victim was 9-year-old Ruth\nCarol Dykstra, who died three days\nafter the alleged incident last July\n25 at the family home near Fern-\ndale, Washington.\nSuperior Judge Bert Kale ordered, however, that if and when\nshe is released from the Sedro Wool-\nley institution she must stand trial\nfor first degree murder.\nGUILTY\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)\u2014 An\nAssize Court jury deliberated 80\nminutes here Wednesday before\nfinding 21-year-old Kenneth Harder\nof Vancouver guilty on a charge of\ncriminal attack on a, woman.\nlergy Will Approach Qov't for\noperation on Unemployed Relief\niSTLEGAR \u2014 Increasing need\nransient relief, the problem of\nnile delinquency and a clergy-\ns radio workshop to be held in\nwere discussed at a meeting\n-Ootenay Ministerial Associa-\nhere.\ne group, which included Ross-\nTrail and Nelson Associaifons,\nin the Parish Hall at Castle-\nit the invitation of Castlegar\nterial Association to discuss\nems and questions of mutual\nim. Archdeacon B. A. Resker,\ndent of Castlegar Association,\ned the meeting attended  by\ntransient relief, indicating ways in\nwhich police can assist the clergy.\nVery Rev. T. L. Leadbeater of Nelson outlined the problem from the\ngovernment point of view.\nThe clergy viewed with alarm\nthe Increasing unemployment\nwhich results In a greater need\nfor* transient relief. A committee\nwas set. up under the chairmanship of Dean Leadbeater to approach government officials on\nthe problem and Investigate ways\nand means of sharing the relief.\nThe clergy all felt that greater\nemployment was the solution to\nthe problem and \"look to the government to do something about\nIt.\"\nGIRLS'  HOME   INTEREST\nCanon W. J. Silverwood brought\nthe meetlng'up to date on what a\nCitizens' Committee is doing in Nelson to establish a home {or delinquent girls. The group believed\nthis was something the church\nshould assist and asked Canon Silverwood to bring further information to a meeting scheduled for\nsome 18 clergymen.\niw-imp rv.__iv_.ui_. t>   i*mM--___-, \u00ab*\nJanuary.\nThe clergy also heard an interesting 'talk on observance of tl_je\nLord's Day by Rev. R. E. Redman,\nprovincial secretary ot the Lord's\nDay Alliance.\nAs the Lord's Day diminishes\nIn significance, people use It lest\nand less for the worship of God,\nMr. Redman said, emphasizing\nthat the Lord'* Day Act wis\nenacted to preserve man's rights\nto h-ive one day free from the\nImperatives of toil. People are\nnot content to use the Lord's Day\nfor restjind re-creation; they find\nit tedious, Tedium Is a common\nvice of the day, he said. People\ndo not know how to use their\nleisure hours.\nRev. J. Taylor of Trail outlined\nthe program for a radio workshop\nto be held in Trail in January. The\nworkshop will assist the clergy of\nthe district to understand technique\nrequired in broadcasting. it will\nlast three days. A maximum 25 are\nenrolled. The workshop will be\ndirected by experts in radio broad-,\ncasting.\nn_,__.i__c_f__.   __-\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0< \u00ab  iM_.ni mill ai on\n3 Nations Hunt\nHorsetrader Bert\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Vancouver man arrested in Los An-\ngelep four weeks ago for Vancouver\npolice on a charge of obtaining\n$.1425 by false pretenses' Is again\nsought by police of three nations.\nThe' man is Albert (Horsetrader\nBert) Gage, 41, who disappeared\nfrom his Vancouver home May 4\nwith his wife and \"two children.\nFollowing his arrest in Los Angeles he was turned over to immigration authorities there for deportation back to Canada. He .was\nreleased on $W0Q bail pending hearing on the deportation order Qct,\n29, but failed to appear for. the'hearing,, i ..,;,. .('-. ., 4_< \u00bb\n\u25a0 Immigration offici-ls in Los Angeles said Gage now is listed as\nfugitive and may be in the United\nStates or Mexico. A check of border, points showed he had not returned to Canada.\nPair Released\nNANAIMO, B. C. (CP) \u2014 Ernest\nWilfred Chernuz, Port Hardy, and\nFrancis Johnny, Chemainus, were\nboth released by- Mr. Justice A. D.\nMacfarlane at the conclusion of fall\ncriminal assizes here Wednesday.\nChernuz, charged with theft of\na cheque and conversion of the proceeds, was given credit for two\nmonths already spent in jail and in\nview of his previous clean record\nwas allowed to go under surety of\n$1000.\nJohnny was originally charged,\nwith manslaughter following the\ndeath of his 3-year-oJd nephew\nwhen the car Johnny was driving\nturned over on the ' Port Alberni\nhighway.\nAn assize court-jury brought in a\nverdict of guilty of dangerous driving.\nRADIOACTIVE SILKWORMS\nTOKYO (Reuters)'\u2014A Japanese\nministry of agriculture spokesman\nsaid Wednesday tests have shown\nmulberry leaves grown in some\nparts of Japan are radioactive and\nthat silkworms which ate the\nleaves have also become radioactive.\nMARKETS AT\n25-YEAR HIGH\nRising Stocks\nDominate List;\nProfits Bring Losses\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014The stock\nmarket surged upward to another\n26-year high Wednesday, and it accomplished its feat on the heaviest\nvolume in nearly four years.\nThe gain was not so pronounced\nas that of Tuesday. Profit-taking\ndotted the list and brought a size-,\nable number of losses.\nRising stocks dominated the list,\nhowever, with excellent leadership\nin oils, steels and railroads, together\nwith many individual Issues affected by corporate developments.\n\u25a0Business amounted to 3,990,000\nshares, greatest since Dec. 18. 1950.\nwhen 4,490,000 shares changed\nhands.\nThe  market  rose  through  the\nfirst two hours, but thereafter It\nsold   off   on   profit-taking   until\nnear the close when It perked up\n.  under demand for railroads.\nThft,-Associated Press average of\n60 stocks\" advanced 40 cents at\n$146.30, its highest\" figure since Oct.\n14, 1929.\nin\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A light which\ncame oh in a garage in a lane off\neast-erid McCpnnell Avenue Tuesday night probably saved a 35-year-\nold immigrant mother from the\nhands of Toronto's strangler, police\nsaid Wednesday.\nOn her way to a' meeting at\nFrankland school at 7:30 p.m., she\nwas grabbed around the throat by\na man who pulled her into a lane,\npolice said.\nPolice think the man may be the\nstrangler blamed for killing two\nwomen in 25 days.\nTuesday night's attack victim,\nwho got away when the light went\non, said the man started to remove\nher stocking.\nThere were finger-marks on her\nthroat when she reached the school.\nPolice working on the strangulation slayings of Mrs. Marie Lip-\noweekyl Sept. 25 and Mrs. Olga\nZacharko, 29, five weeks ago, interviewed the woman.\n79 Years Married\nSANGLE, Idaho (AP)-Ben and\nDrusilla Hartley, who were kids\ntogether in Tennessee and married\nat 16, celebrated their 79th wedding anniversary Wednesday with\na hot cup of sassafrass tea. They\nare.believed to be the .country's\nlongest-iparried couple.\nA FORCE OP 26,000 oombat-oqulppod U.8, murines, aided by\n200 navy ships, charged \"ashore \u25a0\u2022 Onslo Beach, N.C, by air and\nsea In one of the largest and most up-to-date amphibious manoeuvres\never attempted In North America. This group, 'carrying recoillcsa\nartillery, were theoretically wiped out by an atom bomb dropped\nku M jV-Mmv\" oliM that oenetrated thd air defences,\nOutmaneuvered Beria\nARMED BANDITS\nROB BANK\nBold Vancouver\nRobbery Fourth\nWithin Three Weeks\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Three\nhasty, heavily-armed bandits escaped with $1500 in a bold daylight\nrobbery of the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce at Renfrew and'Grand-\nview highway shortly after 11:30\na.m. today.\nTwo of the men, one carrying\na deadly sawed-o(f shotgun and the\nother an automatic pistol, rushed\ninto the bank and forced the staff\nand one customer to' line up against\nthe wall and raise their hands.\nBoth wore masks and one man\nwas wearing a hearing'aid.\nThe man with the pistol jumped\nbehind the counter and grabbed\nthe money out of one of the tellers\ncages while the other kept waving\nthe shotgun at the staff and\ncustomer.\nThe bandit behind the counter\nhesitated for a second, snatched up\none of the bank guns, vaulted the\ncounter and sped out the door with\nhis companion.\nMAY, BE ESCAPEE\nPolice thought one of the men\nmight be Robert Bates, an escapee\nfrom the B.C. Penitentiary, after\nwitnesses said one of the men was\ncalled \"Bob.\"\nThe pair jumped into a waiting\ncar at the curb after dropping the\nmoney once, and roared off. The\ncar was abandoned about six blocks\nfrom the scene, and a witness said\nshe saw the three men drive off\nin another.\n..J., t.   Mennie,. bank   manager,\nsaid the exact amount of .money\ncould   not   be   determined,   but\njudged it at \"less than $1000.\"\nIt was the fourth bank holdup\nIn   three   weeks.    A    rapid-fire\nserres   of   robberies   saw   three\nbanks \"hit\". In as many banking\ndays   a   short  while   ago.   Loot\ntotalled $12,000.\nOne of the bandits, armed with\na revolver, jumped the counter and\ntook the money, while the other\ncovered the people with a vicious\nsawed-off shotgun.\nClerk Accused of\nAiding Communists\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A 27-year-\nold clerk was accused Wednesday\nof obtaining information about Britain's anti-aircraft installations while\nco-operating with the Soviet diplomats in London.\nJohn Clarence pleaded not guilty\nto a harge of violating the Offi-\nial Secrets Act and was ordered\nto stond trial at Old Bailey at a\ndate to be determined.\nClarence is charged with obtaining information about anti-aircraft\ndefences in Northumberland between August, 1953, and September,\n1954. The crown contends the information was calculated to be useful to an enemy.    \u2022\nBALTIMORE SAFE\n, KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP) \u2014The\ncoast guard said here Wednesday\nthat the 48-foot, seiner Baltimore\nhas arrived at Safety Cove, B. C,\nafter being storm-bound \u2022for two\nweek* in the Queen Charlotte islands. Wilfred Hanbury, his wife\nand two-year-pld son were aboard.\nThe seiner left here Nov. 8 for\nSeattle.\nSIGNS TREATY\nUNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)\u2014\nWe_t Germany. Wednesday deposited its ratification of the UN Genocide treaty outlawing destruction of\nnational, religious, ethnic or racial\ngroups. The republic was the 47th\ncountry to ratify the treaty.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014The Canadian\ndollar was 1-16 of a cent higher\nat a premium of 3 5-16 per cent in\ntprms of U.S. funds. Pound sterling\nwas down 3-32 of a cent at $2.791-16.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\ndollar closed at a discount of 3 7-32\nper cent in terms of Canadian funds,\nunchanged. It took 96 25-32 cents\nCanadian to buy jil American.\nPound sterling, at $2.70 1-16, was\ndown 1-J6.\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Civic nominations closed here Wednesday\nnight and city clerk Ron Thompson\nsaid all indications pointed to a\nrecord vote. The'voters' list totals\n219,333 persons\u201447,000 more than\nlast year.\nArmed Showdown Settled Struggle\nFor Power, Sent Police Boss Tb Doom,\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014An armed showdown by Communist leaders in the Kremlin settled the Moscow struggle\nfor power and sent police boss Lavrenty Beria to his doom*\nsays a former officer of Beria's forces.\nWriting in Life magazine, Lt.-Col. Yuri Rastvorov,\nwho defected to the Americans in Japan last January, declares:\nBeria, allied with Stalin's ton,\nLt.-Gen. Vastly Stalin, gathered\n\u25a0forces during Stalin's final, illnesi\nwith the intention eventually of\nseizing the' Soviet government by\nforce. Marshal Georgi Zhukov and\nOther military leaders, fearing a\nblood purge if Beria succeeded,\njoined forces with Georgi Malen*\nkov and other Communist element!\nto thwart the intended 'coupi seize\nBeria and his cohorts and send\nthem to death by execution.\nCol. Rastvorov until last January\nwas the head of an MVD (Beria'.\nsecret police) spy ring in Japan.\nExpressing conviction that Stalin\ndied a natural death in March,\n1953, he says a contest for power\nbetween the various blocs,became\ninevitable. Rastvorov sketches the\nKremlin events this way:\nMalenkov, who had flattered and\nwooed Beria in the past, had hli\nassistance in becoming premier,\nwhile Beria retained control over\nthe secre police and the country'a\narms program. Beria realized the\ntime was not ripe for a hated police\nboss to take over the top job, and\nthus joined a working agreement\nwith Malenkov and V. M. Molotov\nfor a governing triumvirate.\nBUILT UP POWER\nBut Beria set out to build up\nhis own power, quietly shaking up\npolice forces throughout the eoun-\ntry. He climaxed his moves by\nbringing about public acquittal ot\na 'group of doctor^ accuseS lii\nFebruary 1953 of plotting Soviet\nleaders' deaths.\nAligned    with    Beria   wer\u00bb\n8talln's son and several general*,\nnone  of whom  has been heard\nfrom   since   Beria   wat   seized.\nRastorov reperts all were quietly\nliquidated.\nMalenkov meanwhile began to\nstrengthen his position in the Communist party. Suddenly, with, the\nhelp of army generals, Malenkov\nhad young Stalin removed from\nhis post. Beria realized the .time\nfor action had come, and two divisions under trusted officers, wera\nordered into Moscow from the\nnearby provinces. But Communist\n'spieB in the ar'giy tipped off\nMalenkov.\nZhukov, along with defence minister Nikolai Bulganin and other\nhigh army officers, had secretly\nbrought in two loyal guards divisions from the Urals region. They\ncalled a full meeting of the party\ncentral committee June 26, 1953.\nKey Communist leaders wera\narmed as they gathered for the\nmeeting. They seized Beria on hi\u00bb\narrival. With Beria gone, the plot\ncollapsed.\nTwo Charged With\nPrisoner's Murder\nLEWISBURG, Pa. (AP) \u2014 Two\ncar thieves, prisoners in the federal\npenitentiary here, .were accused\nWednesday of murdering convicted\nperjurer William Remington in a\nprison dormitory.\nRemington, former government\neconomist convicted of lying when\nhe denied handing secret documents\nto a Communist spy ring, died this\nmorning at the penitentiary, two\ndays after a mysterious beating.\nPolice identified the convicts as\nGeorge McCoy, 34, and Robert Parker, 21. Both are serving three-year\nterms for transporting stolen cars\nacross state lines. .    .\nRemington's death was announced by acting warden Fred Wilkinson. The prisoner suffered head\ninjuries Monday when hit on the\nhead with a stocking-covered brick\nin his dormitory squad room.\nRemington, 35, a former commerce department official, was\nsentenced to serve three years for\nperjury after swearing that he had\nnever. been associated with Red\norganizations.\nReds Claim 106\nSpies Killed\nLONDON. (AP) \u2014 Sed China said\nWednesday it has killed 106 Ameri-\nan and Nationalist Chinese agents\nand captured 124 more air-dropped\ninto the ountry in the years of war\nand truce since 1951. The claim was\nmade in a Peiping radio broadcast.\nIn Washington, a U. S. state department spokesman said something along the line of Wednesday's\nPeiping broadcast has been expected as part of an efforito \"plump\nout all the- propaganda they can\"\n___( an attempt to- becloud the condemnation of the 13 Americans\nTuesday.\nNo Rush For x\nPost Office Jobs\nVANCOUVER (CP) - National\nEmployment Service officials said\nWednesday'an expected rush for\ntemporary Christmas jobs at the\nVancouver post office failed to materialize. Horace Keetch said about\n800 persons applied for the temporary jobs during a three-hour period : Wednesday. The post office i\u00ab\nseeking 3000.\nPatience Rewarded\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A Toronto\nwoman got a $300 television set\nfor $9.95 after an all-night vigil\noutside an appliance store.\nMrs. Joan Preston camped on\nthe doorstep Monday after she\nlearned the first customer In\nthe new store at 11 a.m. Wednesday could buy the set for $9.95.\nSEARCH UNSUCCESSFUL\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Frogmen\nsearched the waters of Burrard Inlet, near Pier H, in Vancouver Wednesday in an unsuccessful search\nfor the body of a sailor who disappeared Nov. 18.\nNels Madsen, 60, is believed to\nhave fallen overboard and drowned\nwhile on night watch duty on the\ncoastal vessel SS Lillooet.\nHUNDREDS HOMELESS\nMANILA (AP) \u2014 A. $500,000 fire\nWednesday left hundreds homeless\nin the central section of Ormos on\nLeyte island in the central Philippines, the Red Cross reported.\nI\nGround, Air Search\nCLINTON (CP) \u2014 A ground and\nair\" search is underway near here\nfor Hugh Nelson, 19, who has been\nmissing since becoming separated\nfrom his hunting companions Tuesday. Police said the missing youth\nwore no coat and had no matches\nWhen last seen, and that they fear\nhe may have been injured.\nTO JAIL FOR SHOOTING\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Dr. Robert\nStrang, 43, wealthy London physician, Wednesday was sentenced\nto 18 months for shooting a Scotland Yard detective he found with\nhis blonde showgirl friend. Strang,\nwho said he was drunk and mistook the detective for a burglar\nin his apartment, wounded detective Sgtr Edsard Anning.\nTO CONVERT PARTHIA\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 SS Parthia,\ngrand old lady of the west coast\nshipping lanes and once one of the\nfinest liners afloat, was towed into\nVancouver harbor Wednesday to\nbe converted into a self-loading bulk\ncarrier barge.\nAnd in This Corner...\nDALLA8, Texas (AP)\u2014After a 36-year absence, a book Is back\nan the Dallas public library shelves today,\nWith it Tuesday came a letter'saying not to expect payment of\nthe $262.94 fine that had accumulated In overdue fees at two cents\na day since the date of the checkout In October, 1918.\nT. K. Irwin, who found the book while cleaning out an old law\noffice, aaid he didn't check It out since \"I was only two at the time\nand unable to read,\"\nThe title of the book\u2014\"The Model T Ford,\" by Victor M. Page.\nPICTOU, N.C. (CP)\u2014Town council tried for months to find someone to turn on the curfew whistle every night at 9 o'clock.\nNow they're trying to find someone to turn it off.\nThe first search started when the curfew-blower quit the $85-\na-year job.\nThe second search is under way because a newly-installed auto-\nmatte curfew-blower Won't quit once the time clock sets, it off.\n. A\n______\n , i , . '    \u25a0'\u2022\u2022\"\u2022\"   \u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0\"^   -.\/*.-v-'.      .-'\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0   .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0,.    v^lmii^-lmm\n ^0%\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25,19S4\nCinemaScoPE\nROBERT MITCHUM\nMARILYN MONROE\nWH!2!!|mA^S COULD CAPTURE\nT\u2014\u25a0\u25a0_Sl      rAK)An'^' ROCKIES)\nPricei This Engagement Only: 75<, 50\u00a3, 2S<\nShows at\n7:00-9:00\nHUB\nTonight\nThru. Sat.\nMUSI CLAN D\nTHEATRE\nKA8L0, B.C.\nTONIQHT,  FRIDAY  AND\nSATURDAY\nShow Starts 8 p.m.\n\"CHARGE\nOF THE LANCERS\"\n(Technicolor)\nPaulotto Goddard,\n'Jean Pierre Aumont\nPlus COLOR CARTOON\nThe Weather\nNELSON _ _._..._. 86   44 -\nEdmonton  17   4* \u2014\nKimberley   J8   SO \u2014\nCrescent Valley  K   41 \u2014\nKaslo      82   41 -\nGrand Tort*  :  39   38 \u2014\nVanacuveir ,  41   58 M\nSpokane  _.-__\u2014_____ 83   41 \u2014\nChieago     84   38 .17\nNew York    43   47 .47\nNelson Woman's Story\nUnfolds at CARS Show\nsi im li\nIHE SUPERIOR\nLATEX-BASE WALL PAIHT\ntl Rinks in\nTrail Playdown\nTRA.IL\u2014Eighteen rinks have entered the Trail senior curling club\nplaydowns competition, preliminary to the provincial championships\nwhich will commence on the weekend November 27-28.\nPlay will consist df two sections\nof nine rinks each with each section playing a round robin competition. The three top ranking rinks\nin each section will qualify as the\nsjx rinks to represent the club in\nthe _one Four playdowns ta be\nheld the latter part of January.\nSection A rinks: H. E. Stone, 0. H.\nGill, P. I*. Mclntyre, Max Gordorf,\nElgin Hily, R. Dockerill, G. K. Fair-\nbairn, D. Somerville, R. K. Dunlop.\nSection B rinks: W. S. Ross, T. D.\nAmour, A. M. Chesser, E. Mont- j\npelller. J. D. Rae, H. T. Beckett, R. I\nRose, R E. Hill, S. Matovich.\nThis weekend draw:\nSunday, 1 p.m.\u2014Stone vs Dun-\n16p, Gordon vs Falrbalrn, Mclntyre\nvj Dockerill, Somerville vs Elgin\nHill, H. T. Beckett vs Rae.   .\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Rosa v\u00ab Matovich, Chesser vs Rose, D. Amour vs Beckett,\nR. E. Hill v\u00ab Montpellier, Dockerill\nv\u00ab Gill.\nThe story of how a Nelson woman,\nbadly crippled with arthritis, regained the use of her limbs through\ntreatment this year at Vancouver,\nunfolded Wednesday in Nelson,\nHer handiwork\u2014a beautifully-\nmade toy ram called \"Cordova,\" a\ntray, a basket and a rug\u2014astonished\nnearly 70 people who attended Ihe\nannual open house and demonstration of Nelson unit, Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society.  .\nThe patient, Mrs. Edward Boyes,\nwas there to see her own work on\ndisplay.\nAnd Mrs. Margaret Hahn, occupational therapist at the Association's Medical Centre at Vancouver,\nwas also there, to tell of the slow\nupward pull that physlotheraplsts\u00bb\noccupational therapists and Mrs.\nBoyes herself exerted.\nWork on the tray and basket helped restore use of the patient's curled fingers and arm. To make the\nrug Involved leg movement, and\nthus another limb was brought back\nto power. '\n\"In occupational therapy we start\nthe patients on some handicraft for\n10 or 15 minutes a day, and gradually increase the time,\" the young,\nattractive Mrs. Hahn said. \"But the\nfirst day they are usually exhausted\nafter five minutes.\"\nShe picked up a baby blanket. It\nhad been made by a woman who\nhad been bed-ridden bIx months\nbefore going to the Medical Centre.\nNow she is holding down a full-time\njob.\nShe laid across the palm of her\nhand a necklace, unusual in design,\nmarvellous in workmanship. Another bad arthritis case, an Indian\nboy from Mission, made it at the\nCentre. A' jewelery firm has engaged him as an apprentice, as a\nresult of the Association's efforts.\nThe  baskets  and  belts, jewelry\nand rugs, were on exhibition at a\ntea in the Nurses' Home, served by\nthe Ladles' Auxiliary to the Associated Canadian Travellers, with\nMrs, Peter Mathlsen as cpnvener,\nSo were the Association's \"self-\naid devices\" such as long, crook-\nhandled hair brushes and fingernail\ncutters.\n\"Most people with arthritis of the\nhands cannot manipulate scissors,\"\nMrs. Hahn explained. \"And they\ndon't like to bother relatives or\nfriends.\"\nThe Centre, she said, also teaches\npatients techniques for performing\nkitchen chores and oooklng, although partially disabled or In\nwheelchairs. \"Some of our devices\nare so good they should be used by\nall housewives,\" she added, laughing.\nEQUIPMENT DEMONSTRATED\nIn the newly-decorated clinic In\nthe old isolation hospital, Miss Marguerite Boullet, physiotherapist, put\nall the equipment there into operation for the visitors.\nThe actual demonstration models\nwere 12 patients, chosen' specially\nto Illustrate each piece of equipment. Exercises for arthritis of the\nspine were shown, the vibra-bath\nfor arthritis of the feet, the wax\nbath for hands, the paradism machine for strengthening weak muscles, and the short wave diathermy,\nwhich applies to swollen joints deep\nheat of such Intensity that it will\ncook an egg.\nMrs. G. A. Butling, physiotherapist for Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, also took part in1 the eye-\nopening demonstrations.\nIt was the third annual \"open\nhouse\" of the Nelson branch of\nCARS, and organizers agreed at the\nend of the three-hour show that it\nhad been the best yet held.\nREAD   THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nEMBROIDERS\nHILLY AUTOMATIC\nNO MORE FINISHING WORK BY HAND)\nNECCHI sews on buttons, makes buttonholes, blindstilches\nhems,, darns, monograms . . . beautiful embroidery possible\neven for a beginner because NECCHI sews by itself.\nThe new NECCHI BU MIRA in its beautiful soft grey colour,\nwith a built-in switch control, mechanical needle threader\nand new built-in light.\nNECCHI models available\nfrom\n$12400\nCoronation\nCONSOLE MODEL 404\nBeautiful, compact,\nrounded table top\nfor easy working.\nSeasonal Specials\nFLANNELETTE: CQ\u00ab      \u00a3Q\u00ab\nFloral or striped. Per yard    tw 7    and  Vm m\nBaby Flannelette: AX* CC*\n27\" wide. Yd         * m*      35\" wide. Yd.  \u00bbJ\nCUSTOM Sewing Centre\nLIMITED\n305 Baker St. \u25a0\nNelson, B.C.\nCrosswalk Is\nOrdered for\nCivic Crossing\nDangerous Civic Centre Intersection, where citizens swarm \"hig-\ngledy, plggledy\" across the street\nto and from recreation activities,\nwill have crosswalks painted in.\nCity- Council has decided by resolution to paint in the crosswalks\nin hopes pedestrians would observe\nthem and make the intersection\nsafer.\nThe intersection at Hendryx and\nVernon Streets was brought to the\nattention of council by Alderman\nStanley Smith, who pointed out a\npedestrian had been knocked down\nthere not long ago.\nCrosswalks will be painted with\ndiagonal lines where they touch the\nsidewalks, warning motorists they\ncannot park. The crosswalks may\nhave to curve around the boulevards.\nPublic Works Superintendent G.\nQ. Lake pointed out pedestrians\nwould have the right of way when\nthe new traffic amendments bylaw\ncomes into force shortly, whether\nthe crosswalk is marked or not.\nBut council hopes the marked\nwalks will encourage pedestrians to\nstay on the crosswalks and make\nthe street safer.\nFALSE TEETH\nLOST AT MOVIES\nC. J. Hughes, Civic Theatre\nmanager, Is wondering whether\nthe customers found his picture\nshow very exciting or very dry.\nForgetful film-goers have left\nsome strange things in his theatre, but none Bo out-of-the-way\nas a set of false teeth and an\nempty wine bottle which turned up recently.\nEnd Widows'Collections by Safely\nProgram, Woodworkers Are Advised\nKeller's Display\nTroupe To Show\nHere December 18\nI The Nelson Leaders display team,\ncoached and trained under Ed Kelter, will present their troupe to\nthe public December 18 with a two-\nhour show in the Civic Auditorium.\nAll proceeds will go toward the\nproposed swimming pool fund,\nwhich is being organized by the\nNelson Rotary Club.\nThe troupe has performed and\nreceived acclaim in Creston, Grand\nForks, Fruitvale, Trail, Kaslo and\nCastlegar.\n24,294 VEHICLE\nLICENCES ISSUED\nA total of 24,294 licences for passenger and commercial vehicles\nwere Issued in the Kootenays from\nthe first of the year to September 30.\nA total of 5817 were issued for Nelson and Castlegar.\nFigures for the district, issued by\nthe Motor Vehicle Branch at Victoria,  are:\nTotol\nPass. Comm. MVs\nKaslo  '   169     144     313\nNelson (includes issuance at Castlegar  _  3,977   1.840   5,817\nTrail     4,507   1,318   5,825\nGrand Forks      972     768   1,740\nRossland     688     178     866\nCreston    _ 1,117     930   2,047\nCranbrook (includes issuance\nat Kimberley) ... 3,208   1,701   4,909\nFernie   1,129     619   1,748\nNew Denver (in- ,\neludes issuance at\nNakusp) 566      463   1,029\nThere is just no point ln taking\nup collections tor widows or spending sympathies on a dead man\nwhen a little prevention and cooperative effort can avoid both the\ndeath and the widowhood.\nThis Is a view being expressed\nby IWA safety director John T.\nAtkinson to workers ln the Kootenay lagging and Sawmill industry\nto emphasize the need for safety\n.programs.\nAnd it's proving a telling argument. The response of both management and workers In all Kootenay operations so far visited has\nbeen \"remarkably good.\" Safety\nCommittee; and programs have\nbeen set up to start this section of\nthe Interior industry on the way to\nmatching the safety record of the\nCoast.\nSafely programs In coast operations, Joint effort of union, man-\naoement and Woriimen's Compensation Board, have reduced\nthe accident rate B0 per cent In\nthe mills and 38 per cent in the\nwoods. Those figures can be\ntranslated Into lives and limbs\nsaved and family tragedies\naverted.\nMr. Atkinson, safety director of\nthe B.C. District Council No: 1,\nInternational Woodworkers of America, CIO-CCL, is visiting Kootenay operations ln company with\nInternational Regional Director\nClayton Walsh of Kelowna and\nPresident Arthur Damstrem of\nCranbrook Local 1-405 which covers\nEast and West Kootenay. Management has welcomed the proposal\neverywhere they have visited. At\nNakusp, Castlegar and Nelson\noperations were halted while the\nsafety program idea was introduced and local committees set up.\nMr. Atkinson will be in the East\nKootenay until mid-December and\nwill return to this area in the\nSpring.\nM08T DEATHS IN  INTERIOR\nThe need for the Interior program is' Illustrated by accident\nstatistics. Last year there were 25\nfatalities throughout the B.C. industry; 17 occurred East Of the\nCascade Mountains. The same ratio\napplied to compensable accidents.\nMen on the Job, Mr. Atkinson\nmaintains, when encouraged by\nmanagement can do more to create\na safe operation and reduce the\nlosses of accidents than all the\nperiodic inspections it is possible\nto devise. For one thing the \"workers have more knowledge of their\nparticular plant, machinery and\nhazards than an inspector could\nacquire.\nAt the coast, no  man goes to\nwork  without safety  shoes  and\n\"not a single self-respecting logger goes Into the woods, without\na  hard   hat.\"  80   much   has  the\nhard hat become the badge of the\nskilled, sensible worker that on\none occasion a' logger, unable to\nbe fitted   by  a  real  hat,  manu\nfactured a cardboard hat so that\nhli  fellows  would   not  point  to\nhim as an  Irresponsible worker.\nLectures by Mr. Atkinson cover\nwhat accident prevention means to\nthe working man, management responsibility, union obligation, Workmen's Compensation  Board  procedure, and specific injuries.\nThe problems of horseplay among\nworkers (last year seven men died\nbecause of others' foolishness) safe-\nJ, T. ATKINSON\nty committee functions, and use of\nsafety equipment are all covered.\nWorkers are urged to share their\nskills and experience with others\nto create safe operations. The safety programs cost no money, but\nthey reap'large dividends, the director declared.\nThe Interior is far behind the\ncoast, but it has started on its way\nto catching up, Mr. Atkinson said.\nHe forecast that there would be\nreal examples of workers' Ingenuity\ncontributing to safety programs;\n\"they are the experts jvhen it comes,\nto anything involving their work.\"\nMr. Atkinson was among'the original designers of the safety program under way on the Coast for\nthe past six years. An employee of\n18 years standing with B. C. Forest\nProducts at Youbou, he is on leave\nof absence to direct the province-\nwide safety development.\nKiwanis Turkey\nShoot Tonight\nThe eighth annual turkey shoot\nsponsored by the Nelson Kiwanis\nClub will' get under way at the\nCivic   Auditorium.\nChairman Stan Morris of the\nshoot committee said Wednesday\nnight that -it Is expected to be bigger and better than previous shoots\nheld..\nWorkers have been busily preparing the auditorium fpr the event\nwhich will carry on for three days.\nHe said that the noise problem of\nother years when the shoot was held\nin the Civic had been remedied.\nWinners will not necessarily have\nto cart their turkeys home right\naway as' a system of chits will be\nused. It was believed by the com'\nmlttee this must be done so those\nwithout a locker or deep freeze\ncan keep the bird till Christmas.\nBesides the shoot there w 11 be\n\u25a0a bingo game and irfany other attractions.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nNational League\nBoston 1, New York ...\nAmerloan League\nHershey 2, Cleveland 7.\nBuffalo 2, Springfield 4.\nQuebec League\nMontreal 3, Quebec 8.\nChicoutiml 4, Ottawa 8.\nGet Your\nFILMS\nCAMERAS\nand\nFLASHLAMPS\nat\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED  AOS GET  RESULTS1\nmHamAcUfjL\nQamsheuL\n497 BAKER ST.\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\npnUMHElUR OEEP SUM\nFor Real COMFORT and SATISFACTION\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER Fuel & Transfer\nCOAL\nSchool Grounds\nLevel By Weekend\nLevelling of Hume School grounds\nwhich began Nov. 13.is expected to\nbe completed this weekend. Third\nStreet side of the grounds at rear\nof the school was cut down about\nseven feet and the earth removed\nused to fill on the Behnsen Street\nside where a house was torn down.\nHere a four to nine-foot fill was\nneeded.\nTopsoll which was scraped off\nbefore levelling began will be distributed over the grounds preparatory tp sowing grass. Front part of\nthe grounds, will remain entirely\nlevel with a slQpe of five feet ln the\nlast 40 feet toward Third Street.\nH. Learmonth, who is doing the\nlevelling, said he will be starting\non the Junior High grounds next\nweek and expects the levelling job\nthere to take from two and a half\nto three weeks.\n25-Page Book Condensation\n\"Russia Re-viewed\"\nAa a foreign correspondent for the\nNew   York   Times   in   Moscow, '\nHarrison Salisbury was forbidden\nto tell all he learned \u2014'but now\nhe's home.\nDecember Reader's Digest\nbrings you the story he couldn't\nwrite behind the Iron Curtain.\nRead this fascinating report on\nthe siniater facta of Stalin'a death,\nvast slave labor camps, realistic\nvignettes of life in Mosoow, and\nRussia's aim in world affaire.\nGet your copy of December'\nReader'a Digest, today: 35 articles\nof lasting ir*ereat, condensed from\nleading magazines, current books.\n>H0toE    144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n-LA8SIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nMust Ask To Erect\nBanners Council Rules\nAnyone wishing to hang banners\non Baker Street must first receive\npermission from city council and\nthe banner must be erected by the\ncity electrical department, council\nhas ruled.\nRuling was made after Electrical\nSuperintendent A. C. VanSacker explained displays have been hung\non traffic cables, high voltage street\nlight wires. The Workmen's Compensation Board has said foreign\nattachments shpuld be removed\nfrom power or communication lines\nand the Chief Electrical Inspector\nhas Instructed only trained personnel should work on the lines, Mr.\nVanSacker explained.\nNO RING, NO HOUSE\nDARTSORD, England (CP) \u2014\nPreliminary applications from engaged couples for council-owned\nhouses in this Kent town will be\ncancelled, the council says, If the\nengagement is broken.\nTrail Minors\nHere Saturday\nNelson minor hockey fans will\nhave their first glimpse of outside\ncompetition Saturday when Trail\nsends over a midget and a juvenile\nteam to do battle with the local\nlads.\nNeither will be a rep team but\njust lads picked out of the various\nteams.\nWith the games set for the afternoon a change has been made in\nthe schedule for Saturday. Gregoir's\nRangers will cancel their practice\ntime until the following week.\nWith the teams playing top-notch\nhockey this season, it is hoped parents and all interested fans will\nturn out Jor these first inter-city\nmatches.\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP) \u2014\nGeorge Chilbs, 36-year-old factory\nworker who is father of two sets\nof twins and three other hildren is\nlooking for a bigger house. His\n32-year-old wife Beatrice has just\ngiven birth to triplets.\nSWWSHlWWWtWWUHlWlttStSWSH.\nJklA. SsLCLhOttl.\nStock. \u00a7A. (KsUUL\u2014\nWe Welcome Browsers\nCome* In and Look Around\nSHOP ON OUR\nLAY-AWAY PLAN\nDULLUMS\nLADIES'\n415 Hall St.\nWEAR\nPhone 1320\nJust'Down Hall S)\nFrom the Bus Dl\n\u2022eat\nlot\nsfo-ns'fr.ry.'M-.s'T -v \u00aby\u2014r*saaw\nThe Volues Are Terrific. See the Savings in Genuine\nAppliances.\nSALE ENDS SATURDAY, 6P.M.\nrm47 Electric Range\nRegular   \t\nYour Trade In\nYOU PAY ONLY\t\nEASY TERMS\n.    $359.00\n60.00\n$299\nrd44 Electric Range\n     $459.00\n80.00\n$379\nRegular\t\nYour Trade In\nYOU PAY ONLY _\nEASY TERMS\n_\u00a3__!__-.\nm mm32PT ELECTRIC WASHER\nRegular         $229.0C\nYour Trade In           60.0(\nYOU PAY ONLY        IO,\nEASY TERMS\nTELEv.aiON\nSETS\nEnjoy the perfection of\nG.E. Television. Our\nprices start at\n$229\nG.E. KETTLES:\nRegular $13.50. SALE \t\nPOLISHERS: *...   -n\nRegular $54.50. SALE  _  f*T*T.5U\nVACUUM CLEANERS: COO   FA\nRegular $99.95. SALE  \u201e   ^OV.^U\nPOP-UP TOASTERS:\nRegular $27.50. SALE  .1....\nMANTEL RADIOS:\nONLY\t\nSTEAM IRONS:\nRegular $21.00. ONLY \t\nFEATHERWEIGHT IRC.N8.\nRegular $13.50. ONLY   \t\n$9.95\n$21.95\n$24.95\n$17.95\n$9.95\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.!\nGENERAL\n574 Bolter St.\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\nELECTRIC\n M....-W..WW.,||IJ|-..--. \u00ab< I \u25a0 I.     I\nv1    \"\"\u25a0', \u25a0!\u00ab I.\" wwuu\"\" tmm\u00ab.i,^t^!^.iAjmmmmim ^mmm.mmimmimii*i>m,ii< \t\nW-^WPWW^^\n|I#|\u00ab^PI1^JJ,M|I\u00ab\nvsffl\nMove To Ross Spur...\nSalmo Lumber Firm To\nIncrease Operations\nSALMO \u2014 Four brothers who\nare partners in a lumbering business at Salmo pl_m to move their\noperation from Remac to Ross Spur.\nThe timber at their present locale is depleted,\nHearn Brothers Lumber Company\nLtd. plan to enlarge their opera-\nLion when they make their move.\nThey employ 30 men at present and\nmay increase the number pf 50,\nThe four brothers \u2014 -J. C, A. W.,\nH. M. and F. B. \u2014 report that like\nmost interior lumber operators they\nhave enjoyed a very good year.\nThey have shipped lumber as far\naway as Louisiana.\nBelow the border, lumberjacks\nind operators locked horns inva prolonged strike. As a result,-British\nColumbia's forest industry \u2014 the\norovince's   top \u25a0 money-maker\u2014ex-\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuer\n& Transfer\nperienced one of its most profitable*\nseasons. \u25a0\nIndustry leaders claim the backlog of lumber orders at coastal export mills is substantial and tending\nto increase as United States busines\nremains steady along the Atlantic\nseaboard. Also, firm orders are coming in from the United Kingdom-\nOther Commonwealth countries\nare increasing their quotas of B. C.\nlumber. Both Australia and South\nAfrica, which a year ago took relatively small amounts, are buying\nmore than 10,000,000 board feet each\nmonth. \/\nOne*of the prime factors for the\nbanner year was a wet. dreary\nsummer which kept the forest fire\nhazard to a minimum.\nTrailife's Brother\nBuried at Coast\nTRAIL \u2014 A brother of Mrs. R. D.\nMcDonald of Trail. William Watt\nPorteous, has died at Arnprior, Ont,.\nat 32 years,\nBesides Mrs. McDonald he is survived by his wife Mary, another\nsister, Mrs. Florence Templeton of\nVancouver, three brothers, Harry\nof Montreal, Russell of Los Angeles,\nCalif., and Earnest in Ontario. Funeral services were held Wednesday\nat Vancouver, Rev. J. R. Frizell and\nRev. N. G. Robertson officiating.\nInterment was in The Abbey.\nEveryone Is Proud of His Own Home\n, .. But It needs modern materials to bring it in line\nwith modern living.   .\nm HAVE IT\/\nFOR WALLS\u2014-r^\\ OR SEILltiGS\nSQUARE-^\nEasy To\nApply\n4 x 8 x Va\nPanels.\nLined at  16\"\nCentres.\nThis Modern\nCEILING\nPANELLING\nIs easy to apply over existing material or on new jobs,\n'shows no joint seams and\nis easily painted.\nIN 4' x 4' x 14'; SHEET8,\n12\" 8QUARES\nI Per sheet .\n*2.16\nm WALLS\nMud Bogs Down\nLumber Projects\nINVERMERE \u2014Unusual weather\nconditions for November have slowed activity in the Windermere district. Lack of frost in road surfaces\nhas caused some shutdown -of industry in lumbering projects.\nWilders' Lumber Camp, 22 miles\nfrom Radium, in the Settler's Road\narea, has closed, and some activity\nat the Columbia Contracting camps\nat Canal Flat has been slowed for\nthe Same reason.\n' Simon Ronacher Lumber Company at Athalmer will have to shut\nits camps unless frost comes immediately. A company official says\nroads are a \"sea of mud.\"\nOne lumber operator said this is\nas bad as the spring break-up.\nIn Kootenay Park officials have\nannounced thatload limits on trucks\nincluding load'and driver must not\nexceed 16,000 pounds. There was\nfrost in Kootenay Park Monday\nnight but thawing Tuesday erased\nthe effect of the brief hardening.\nRain also curtailed the cutting of\nChristmas trees.\nOTTAWA TCP) \u2014 Magistrate\nGlenn E. Strike Wednesday confiscated $3285 in sweepstakes betting\nmoney seized by morality officers\nin raids on railway express offices\nhere..\nBesides the cash, police seized\n326 parcels containing 2118 tickets\nand 4763 stubs for the Army, Navy\nand - Air Force and Irish\nstakes.\nsweep-\nBuy   Sell, Trade tha Classified Way\nCranbrook Faces Up to\nGrowing Bread-line\nNELSON DAJ|Y NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954 \u2014 >\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A joint service\n.among congregations of all Protestant dhurches in Cranbrook is being\narranged for December 5, for a\nspecial purpose\u2014to establish a\npooled fund to meet increasing applications by transients and unemployed for emergency meals and\nshelter,\nSalvation Army fund for this\npurpose is close to exhaustion white\nneeds are, intensifying. Ministers of\nthe various churches report frequent individual appeals made at\nthefr homes, but no general congregational funds existing for this\npurpose in most cases.\nThe decision to hold the joint service, with all collections to go to a\ngeneral fund to be administered\ncentrally, was made by the Cranbrook Ministerial Association. The\nnew Cranbrook City Band has accepted an invitation to provide the\nmusic for the service anfi hymns,\nand there will be a brief address by\nRev. William Black of Knox Presbyterian Chtirch. Church services\ntrtat night will be set for 7 p.m. so\nthat congregations can continue to\nthe joint service.\n' 111111111111111111111111111111111111111 f f 11 tl 11\nMore District\nNews On Page 8\nf 11111111111111T111111111111111 f 111111111111111\nYour Inquiries Are Invited For Our\nHOME IMPROVEMENT\nFINANCING PLAN\nFree Delivery In the City\nLumber Company\nP$8Ni-       \"Everything .or the Builder   ''.i   PHONE\n'^?.\u00b0' '     602 Baker St. .Nelson, B.C. \"81'\nLIBERTY'S\nNelson's Family Food Store\nPRE-M0VING\nSALE!\nYou'll be glad you waited when you\nsee the large gift selections we have for\nyou in our grand opening in December.\nLook over these everyday low weekend\nspecials.\n<\n\u2022 CURRANTS\nLiberty's fresh. m\\ 4P(i\n1  Ib. cello pkg.       Albs.  *TJ\n\u2022 RAISINS\nAustralian A     -   4ZT^\nSultanas    T1 Ibs. O '\n\u2022 FRESH EGGS\nGrade A Medium. A Qt\nCartons extra.  Doz. .   TTO\n2 Doz. 95\u00ab.\n\u2022 SHELLED WALNUTS\nLight pieces. Tm\\\\^\nLb      I J\n\u2022 BUTTER\nAll first grade. &%*\n\u2022 VELVEETA CHEESE\nKraft ... Big Sale. ^%*\n\u2022 KRAFT DINNER\nAnother *) JK*\nBig Saving.  mm  for emttw\nRedeem your NABOB\n& DEBT ______       MINCEMEAT\nCOUPON 43\nToMt      H0NEY\nmTT   v     Na 1 Alberta Wni,e-\nI \u00bb i'-h_\"tH_!Ti\/      s 48 oz. tin  \u25a0\nMtf      '   '1.15\na HOTHOUSE\n<-\u00ab TOMATOES,\n-IM-JOWlH TEA T0VKI No  ,   Lb\n0R <=\u00bb \"=\u2022_.\u00ab.\nFACECLOTH Zj\nIN EVERY ^\npackage       MaclNTOSH\nCANT SIZE 73 .< APPLES\nWITH COUPON * <* m n\u2014\u00ab\nURGE SIZE *y)    < 'mm1 Ibsi.ZD\nWITH COUPON *J_fc > \u00a3Q*\nFernie Keeps\nPressing Work\nOn Highway 93\nFERNIE \u2014 Fernie Chamber of\nCommerce will continue its efforts\nto have Highway No. 93, Elko to\nRoosville on the International\nBoundary, brought up to a paved\nhighway standard. A letter from\nB.C. public works minister Hon.\nP. A. Gaglardi said the road would\nreceive consideration, no definite\naction was promised.\nRepresentatives of the Waldo\nStockbreeders Association, the\nFarmers' Institute and the Social\nCredit Group in the area through\nwhich the road passes, were present at the meeting. All agreed the\nroad was a necessity, that the government should be urged to take\naction, and that the highway would\nbe more beneficial to other East\nKootenay centres than to Fernie\nand points east. Highway 93 would\nprovide a direct route fgom Mexico\nnorth to Radium* and'Banff by way\nof Cranbrook and Kimberley.\nPICNIC TABLE8\nRoss Colgur and Bill Quail will\ndraw up a list of locations suitable\nfor placing of roadside picnic tables\nwhere tourists and others 'could\nlunch or rest. The development of\nroadside parking campsites will be\nleft to the provincial departments\nconcerned.\nMorley Obee, Ross Colgur and\nJim Cameron were named as nominating committee to select a list\nof nominees for ihe positions of\nofficers and directors in the\nChamber.\nA letter from t*e public works\ndepartment showed that the in\nstallatlon of a wig-wag signal at\nthe level crossing east of Michel\nwas held up due to the expressed\ndisinclination of the CPR to share\ncosts. The Chamber will write to\nthe CPR District Superintendent,\nGeorge Phillips at Nelson, for information. A resolution requesting installation of wig-wag signals\nat all level crossings In B.C. will\nbe presented to. the quarterly\nexecutive meeting of the Asso\nciated'Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commerce of Southeast\nern British Columbia In January.\nGeorge D'Andrea \u00bbof Cranbrook,\ncollector of the five per cent sales\ntax, outlined some of the difficulties regarding collection of the\nDefence Volunteers Number\nOver 300 in East Kootenay\nKIMBERLEY - The civil defence\nmovement now has 305 enrolled\nvolunteers, exclusive of municipal\nofficers, in the East Kootenays.\nOf this number 107 ari\/ classed as\npotential civil defence woVkers,\nKenneth McRae, district co-ordinator, tpld delegates to the East Kooe-\nenay civil defence conference in\nMcDougall hall h,ere. The delegates\ncame from Cranbrook, Kimberley,\nFernie, Marysville, Chapman Camp,\nthe Windermere and Radium Hot\nSprings.\nMajor General C. R. S. Stein, provincial civil defence co-ordinator,\nwas in attendance. He told the conference that civil defence's greatest\nimportance was at the local level:\nthe heads might formulate plans\nbut the local groups executed them.\nMr. McRae, in sketching the picture of East Kootenay civil defence\nprogress, said there are 36 trained\npeople in the area who have taken\ncourses at provincial schools ancj at\nArnprior College. It was up to civil\ndefence officers to see that these\npeople were given responsibilities.\nThere are heads of services in\neach municipality, and federal and\nprovincial government heads who\nare specialists in their own lines.\nIn this area, Dr. Watts is health\nhead, Mrs. Burnam of Cranbrook,\nwelfare head, and Fire Chief Dicken\nof Kimberley, fire head.\nDr. Watts informed delegates that\nthis area was fortunate in having\nmany opportunities for its people\nto learn first aid. In Kimberley\nalone there are 100 fully trained\nnurses willing to help in case of\nemergency.\nSpeaking for the Windermere, Dr.\nF. E. Coy of Invermere said it was\ndifficult to obtain and maintain\ninterest. Isolation of settlements\nhampered first aid courses.\nAs the East Kootenay is a reception area, the transportation department must have a complete list\nof all available equipment, Mr.\nNeale said.\nLast year there were 47 buses,\n800 three-ton trucks, 270 one and\na half ton trucks, 1000 light delivery trucks and 8000 cars. There\nwill be a survey of the number\nof passengers to each vehicle and\nof the vehicles that could be used\nas ambulances.\nDEMONSTRATION\nA welfare exercise was staged by\nMrs. Virginia Adlard, Mrs. Rhea\nMontgomery and Mrs. Harvey Webber. The scene represented a welfare centre following a \/'disaster\"\nat Chapman Camp. The centre was\ncomplete with registration desk, inquiry desk, first aid station, person-\ntax. Out-of-the-province purchases 'nel services, food, billeting, clothing,\ngave some difficulties in tax col-1and social service boards. Delegates\nlection and such purchases also\naffected business in border towns.\nMr. D'Andrea clarified the not very\nwell known regulations governing\npurchases by non-residents. These\nare: A non-resident purchase accepted in the province is subject\nto the five per cent sales tax. If\nthe purchaser takes the goods out\nof the province within thirty days\nhe may apply for tax refund.\nIf a non-resident purchaser orders\ngoods and such goods are shipped\nto   his   home   address   outside   the\nwere asked to portray the various\nvictims, which ranged from babies\nto grandparents in all stages of injury and shock, those who couldn't\nspeak English and those who were\nmentally deranged. Members of the\nWelfare Centre, who incidentally\nwere recruited from among those\nwho volunteered their services dur\ning the Spring flood threat, handled\nthe various cases with efficiency\nand dispatch. Families were reunited, the injured treated, and all\nother coses handled  with a mini-\nprovince, the purchase is exempt of; mum of confusion,\ntax but seller must have proof that\ngoods were shipped out of the\nprovince.\nEAST KOOTENAY\nDOES UNDER FIRE\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A week's season on shooting does in Cranbrook,\nFernie and Columbia electoral districts opened Wednesday and runs\nuntil'the last day of November. The\nseason on bucks also closes then.\nA big woods invasion of hunters\nis anticipated for the final week of\nthe season by those who count on\nstocking, their freezers with venison over the winter months. The\nbuck season has heen in effect since\nSeptember 15, but extraordinarily\nmild weather through November,\nwith only an occasional light dusting of snow at accessible levels during the month, has kept the herds at\nhigher altitudes where they appear\nto retreat when the season opens.\nThe number of bucks\nfar  is1 well  below  average.\nWelsh girls in a factory in Glamorgan make strings for almost\nevery known type of stringed instrument in the world.\nSgt. W. H. Davidson of the Kimberley detachment, RCMP, spoke\nto .the delegates after the exercise,\nand stated that he hoped to train\n24 men as auxiliary police during\nthe winter, who, could be used in\ndetachment, RCMP, spoke to the\nany emergency. They must be stable\nconsiderate men, who must be\ntaught the rights and authority of\nauxiliary police.\nYule Tree Shipments\nReach 100 Carloads\nINVERMERE \u2014 Christmas Tree\nshipping from Lake Windermere\nstation at Athalmer is reaching its\npeak this week. By Monday 100 carloads had been shipped to United\nStates points.\nForest Service records indicate\nthat 368,156 trees have been cut to\ndate. It was hoped to establish\nnew record this year with 400,000\ntrees, but mild weather with rain\nhas curtailed activity and it is possible that last year's cut of 379,119\ntrees may not be exceeded.\nAgnes Maule Mahar, Canadian\npoet and novelist, died at Kingt-\nton, Ont., in 1927 at age 90.\nSeagram's V.O.\n0m Seagrams\nSure\n\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ',>\u25a0\nSeagram's, \"83\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nIho liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nCRANBROOK MAN GUILTY |N SLAYING\nOKANOGAN. Wash. (AP)\u2014A Cranbrook, B.C., man was found    I\nguilty of manslaughter  Wednesday for the  fatal beating  of an\napple harvest worker in a cabin last Oct. 10.\nLawrence Jacobs, '22, was convicted by a jury of 10 men and    1\ntwo women after an eight-day trial.\nCarl  Stalnaker, 42,  was  found  dead  ln the  blood-splattered\ncabin and police said he was beaten and then kicked in a brawl.\n-,\nTwo Toronto Men\nNabbed at Fernie\nFEHNIE\u2014Harold Kenneth Armstrong and Douglas Fedi, both of\nToronto, were sentenced to 30 -4ays\nin Nelson jail when they pleaded\nguilty to vagrancy charges. Further\nserious charges may be laid against\nthe two young men.\nFernie RCMP received a telephone call from John Peter Wall of\nMcMahon, Sask., who said that he\nhad been thrown out of his car\nnear Michel by two men he had\npicked up at Maple Creek, Sask.\nPolice stopped the car as it arrived\nin Fernie where police arrested the\ntwo occupants, Armstrong and F?di.\nA commando-type knife was found\non the seat between the two men.\nThe car had been reclaimed by the\nowner, Mr. Wall, who has returned\nto Saskatchewan where he may lay\nfurther charges. Mr. Wall alleges\nthat he picked up Armstrong and\nFedi, who were hitch-hiking. He\nclaims that west of Maple Creek,\nSask., they held him at knife point,\nkept him as a prisoner across Alberta and threw him out of the car\nnear Michel.\nIn other police court cases. George\nEverette Hartwick of no fixed address, pleaded guilty to a charge\nof shoplifting in Rahal's store in\nFernie. He was sentenced to 30 days\nin Nelson jail. Bill Letcher of Flagstone was fined $100 and costs and\none day in jail. He was charged\nwith stealing Christmas trees from\nAlbert McGuire.\nNatql Without Ice\nNATAL \u2014 Due to the present\nwarm weather, no ice is available\nat the arena at Natal. It is not\nknown where and when the Natal-\nMichel Coalers will get into shape\nfor the ABC Intermediate Hockey\nLeague which opens next month.\nWindermere School     :\nDelegates Elected\nINVERMERE \u2014 Trustees for the\/\/\nWindermere school district for 1955'\u25a0'\nwere elected at the annual meeting,\nof representatives held at Winder-*-\nmere.\nRe-elected  for  a term  of three\nyears were Oswald F. Young of Invermere and Melvin Mogef of Wind-.',\nermere. A new member of the board1'\nis Jim Stone of Brisco. Remaining   '\non the board with a further term-\nto serve are Mrs. Ian Weir of Invermere, J. Alfred Laird of Sparkling Creek, Harry Erskine of Canal\nFlat  and  Mrs.   Tommy' Moore  of\nEdgewater.   Other   representatives \\\nare  Mrs. Ferd Rauch of Wi-taier,\"\nMrs. Duncan Macintosh of Radium.\nHot Springs, Mrs. William Penner\nof Edgewater, H. Shuttleworth oi'\nGiant Mascot mine, A. Roberts of\nSpillimacheen and J. Mcintosh of\nMineral King mine.\nLIBERTY\nMOTEL\nNorth 6801 Division St.\nThree Miles North of City Centra\non U.8. 395, 195, 2\nSPOKANE\nPhone Glenwood 4112'\nTelevision\nForced Air Heat\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nLACKMAN'S\nMOTEL\n(Formerly Snider's)\nPhone RI-9271 - W. 1929 6th Av*.\nSpokane, Wash,\n22 DELUXE UNITS.\nKitchenettes, Electric Heat and Gag\nHeat, Simmons Beds,  Radio,...\nTelevision, Private Baths (Tubs and '\nShowers), Adjoining Cafe and Store I\nHenry Lackman, Owner\nClose  to (He  Heart of Spokane\nOff the  Highway\nWeek        End\nSPECIALS\nFOWLS: lb. 43c\nPORK\nVEAL\nMinced and\nblended for\nBEEF      delicious loaf.\nJib.)!\n.._ Blade removed.\nPOT Top steer.\nROASTS Tasty lb-\n43c\nVEAL\nLoin.\nTender\nSTEAKS -\nIb.\n65c\nROASTING\nCHICKEN\nGraode A.\nFresh and\nfirm.\n6 Ibs. up. .\nIb.\n55c\nPORK\nROASTS \"\u25a0'\"'-\"   lb.\nKIPPERS\nYoung, lean M  B\"\u00ab\nTender \/I *%,**\nEastern.\nLarge. _.\nlb. 43c\nTURKEYS, GEESE AND DUCKS\nFar your Christmas and New Year's dinner... Donlt Be\nDisappointed.\" Place your order NOW and be assured\naf getting the bird you want. i\n\u25a0fir ilk I JtH^ir A jf\nFoods Limited\nMEATS\nPhone 1177\nGROCERIES\nFree Delivery\nmmwssmismimamm\u00absaunBm\n____!_______\u25a0\n -~\u2014\u2014. ,        .U,PlKIl||l|ii\nmmmmm\nupppw\nJMamt 5a.ljj.NroB\ni\". Established April 22, 1902\n;;!* British Columbia's '\nI:,       Most Interesting Newspaper\n'\". Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\ntCg Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Ofllce Department, Ottawa,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nJHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\na,\";' \u25a0\u2014 '\n;v .'..  Thursday, November 25, 1954\n~ . The Public Must Know\nThe Press Council in Britain, which\nwas set up primarily to judge newspaper ethics and point out questionable\npractices by newspapers, has made a\nreport, and its harshest criticism is not\nfor the press, but for municipal bodies\nWhich try to conduct official business\n,in secrecy.\nIt remarked on the public officials'\nuse of \"private and confidential\" to\nlabel any document they wished to\nsuppress. \"Many a fussy little Jack-in-\nOffice would like to set up his own\nofficial secrets act in this way,\" the\nCouncil found. \"Every experienced editor will refuse to be fenced off. If\nhushing up a matter is against the public interest, the duty of the press is\n-clear: it must tell the public what is\nhappening.\"\nThe Press Council declared \"it is\nwrong for members of a town council\nto treat the public affairs entrusted to\nthem as if they were'their own private\n! concern, and to make arrangements for\nthe spending of vast amounts of public\nmoney without .giving the ratepayers\nample opportunities to have their own\nsay in the matter.\"\nThe Press Council was originally\nset up after a Royal Commission investigation of the British press in 1947.\nThere had been attacks on the press\n*m Parliament and by public figures,\nbut the Royal Commission inquiry did\nnot reveal any serious violations of the\nfreedom of the press, which is really an\nessential freedom of every citizen in a\ndemocracy. The Press Council has no\ndisciplinary powers, because any such\npowers would of necessity place press\ncontrol to some measure in the hands\nof the Council, rather than of editors.\nIt is composed of working newspapermen, owners and editors, and members\nof the powerful National Union of\nJournalists, men of a variety of political faiths. Its members are men acquainted with the problems of day-today news gathering.\ni#\nBest When Earned\nThere is only one thing that will\nreally train the human mind, and that\nis the voluntary use of the mind by the\nman himself. You may aid him, you\nmay guide him, you may suggest to\nhim, and, above all else, you may inspire him. But the only thing worth\nhaving is that which he gets by his\nown exertions, and what he gets is in\nj direct proportion to what he puts into\nJilt.*\u2014A. L. Lowell.\nI^TTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters to the Editor on any toplo of\ngenuine Interest are welcomo If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe signature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned. \\\nDemands Consideration\nFor Pedestrian Students\n\u2022    On North Shore\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Let's have some concrete suggestions\nfrom the readers of this paper on methods by\nwhich we can combat a growing menace on\nthe North Shore.\nI am speaking about the plight ot the\nchildren attendiife the Willow Point School.\nThey are forced to walk on the road and have\nno protection whatsoever from vehicles using\nthe highway. The 35 m.p.h. speed limit so far\nhas helped, but it is not sufficient. The width\nof the road is totally inadequate for both\nvehicles and pedestrians, particularly during\nthe Winter when the width is narrowed considerably by the existence of snowbanks. Two\nvery dangerous corners are Townshend's arid\nEmory's. A child walking on the inside of\nthese corners has no place to go if he is suddenly confronted by an oncoming vehicle. And\ndon't think a driver can always stop in time!\nWith our icy road conditions in the Winter\nthe effort to stay on the road at .all sometimes\nbecomes almost superhuman. l\nWe are told that we shall soon have a\nnew bridge. With the advent of said structure\nwe can expect an increase in traffic and a\ncorresponding increase in the hazard to our\nchildren. We all revel at the prospect of a\nbrand new bridge. But will we revel at the\nsight of our children lying dead on the road?\nThe Victoria brain trust has evolved a\nscheme whereby we can happily tootle our\nvaried assortment of clunkers over a fabricated steel monster for which we shall be\npaying plenty through the proverbial proboscis. Perhaps our elected master minds can\nallot a few of our hard-earned tax dollars\ntowards protecting' our children. If we do\nnot insist on protection we may be letting\nour. Government stoop to murder. Then we\n, would automatically become accessories before\nthe fact.\nThink it over.\nW. HARRISON.\nNelson, B. C.\nHard To Ignore _\nAn anthropologist reports that Canadian fathers show an amazing\namount of interest in their young children. Well, somebody who is standing\n:', lriyour lap forcing pieces of a scrabble\nset into your mouth when you are trying to read the paper naturally arouse\nyour interest.\nDisavow Proxy Leader\nTo the Editor:,\n, Sir\u2014This word is from members of the\nChristian Community and Brotherhood of Reformed Doukhobors. Krestova:\nDue to absence of our spiritual leader, S.\nS. Sorokin, Anton Kolesnikoff was appointed\nas a chief executive of our Brotherhood Community. We now see he has showed himself a\n' traitor to our Doukhobor ideals, taking sides\nwith Emmett Gulley and the Government. We\nunanimously declare through the press, to all\npeople, the Government and S. S. Sorokin, for\nhis treason we are expelling him from his\nservice to us. Therefore, from now on he cannot be our chief executive, and has no rights\nto sneak a word for our organization.\nWe the under sign for all.\nDOOVIA MAJELSKI\nMAI..-.SHA   LEGEBOKOFF\nMASHA MAHONEN\nMARTHA CHERNENKOFF\nNASTIA KOORBATOFF.\nANNA HADIKIN\nPOLLY KOORBATOFF\nPOLLY PEREVERSOFF\nNASTTA BOWOOLIN\nPOLLY KOFTINOFF\nFT.AVA P07I.NTWOFF\nANNIE KOFTINOFF.\nKrertova. B. C.\nHumbleness\n&\u25a0'     I am embarrassed because there i ,\n'      so much good 1 could do, and 1 lihvg so\n; little to do it with.\u2014Sir David Eccles.\nThe Kaiser Dam\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Residents of the Arrow Lakes are\nfully pwrre of the powers of the Federal Gnv-\nerntrrnt nn navigr-ble waters. Between the\ntwi p\"i't . n~ of Ihe Arrow L^kes. Upper Arrow\nL'__? and Lmvpr Arrow I.i'kp, is a narrow\nchannel of water known as The Narrows.\nThf.se narrows have a tendency to become a\nnatural d-m and thus crrjate two lakes. To\nprevent this the Federrl Government has\no ,^1-ated a dred .ing crew to keep the passage\nfree r'1r navigation\nNature is not concerned in politics If the\nProvincial Gnvernm.nt persists in its ri ,ht\nto build the dTn and the Federal Government\npersi-ts ln its right of control, the two parlies\nwill have the right to b .pea] to the Supreme\nCourt for a decision. If the court rules that-\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader., Name* of person*\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL exoept where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nHousewife, Nelson\u2014Would you please give me\na> recipe for smothered fish steaks?\nTwo fish steaks, one cup milk, two mild\nsliced onions, one tablespoon fat, two slices\nbacon, half teaspoon salt, pepper, quarter cup\nflour. Combine pepper, salt, flour and sprinkle\nover fish. Place on bottom of greased shallow\nipan, add milk and bake in hot oven (425 degrees) for about ten minutes. Brown onions in\nfat, place bacon and onions on top of fish arid\nbake ten to twelve minutes longer, or till fish\nis tender.\nPuzzled, Nelson\u2014Will you kindly outline the\nduties of the Police Commission and of\nthe Chief of Police and all constables?\nPolice Commission duties, as defined by\nthe B. C. Municipal Act: Board of Commissioners shall' from time to time make such\nregulations as it may deem expedient for the\ngovernment of the police force and for preventing neglect and 'abuse and for rendering\nthe force efficient in the discharge of its\nduties. The Chief of Police and all constables\nmust obey the lawful directions and be subject to the government pf the board, and\nshall be charged withf the special duties of\npreventing infractions of the bylaws of the\nmunicipality, preserving the peace, preventing\ncrime, and apprehending offenders; and shall\nhave, generally, all the powers and privileges\nand be liable to all the duties and responsibilities which belong by law to constables.\nG. F., Creston\u2014Is it known what caused the\nroof of the Vancouver Forum to collapse\nin 1953?\nThere was 18 inches of slush on the roof\nat the time,  and  the weight  is  believed to\nhave caused the roof to cave in.\nAnonymous,   Nelson\u2014Can  you   give  me  the\ncorrect address fer Girls' Church  Home\nin Burnaby?\nChurch   Home  for  Girls   (Anglican  and\nUnited), Burnaby, B. C, is sufficient address.\nK. J., Trail\u2014Is there any society that helps\npoor people to pay money needed to get\na divorce?\nWrite to the Secretary, Law Society, Vancouver, B. C, giving full particulars of applicants' problems. The Law Society will then\nrefer the case to the Legal Aid Committee.\nGems of Thought\nTHANKS\nWho gives not thanks to men, gives not\nthanks to God.\u2014John Lewis Burckhardt.\n'O Lord, who lends me life, lend me a heart\nreplete with thankfulness.\u2014William Shakespeare.\n* +       *\nNothing is more honorable than a grate-t\nful heart.\u2014Lucius Seneca.\n* *      #\nGratitude is \"much more than a verbal\nexpression of speech. Action expresses more\ngratitude than speech.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* *       *\nHe enjoys much who is lhankful for little;\na grateful mind is both a great and happy\nmind.\u2014William' Seeker.\n* *      *\nGratitude is not only the memory but the\nhomage of the heart\u2014rendered to God for His\ngoodness.\u2014Nathaniel Parker Willis.\nIt's Been Said\nIt is reasonable to have perfection in our\neye that we may always advance toward it,\nthough we  know it can  never be  reached.\n\u2014Samuel Johnson.\nCapital. Memo\nEk\nBY JAMES  K. NESBITT.\nVICTORIA\u2014Liberal  MLA  Gibbs  of  Oak  Bay,  who\nknocked Tory power Herbert Anscomb out of public life in\n1952, has come up with-a new name for the dear old troublesome Pacific Great Eastern Railway, but using the same old\ninitials, PGE, which is part\nof the game. Have you any\nentries?\nMr. Gibbs calls the PGE Poor\nGunderaon's Expense sheet!\nSocial Credit power Gunderson\nwas also defeated, in 1953, by Mr.\nGibbs, Mr, Gibbs being death on\nfinance ministers, \"Messrs. Ans-\ncemb and Gunderson each being\nthat important when Mr. Gibbs\ntrampled over them.\nPremier Bennett, determined to\nkeep Mr. Gunderson close to the\ngovernment, though Mr. Gunderson\ndoesn't need a job. made Mr. Gunderson PGE vice-president, which\nhe is now.\nMr. Gibbs evidently believes Mr.\nGunderson, who has been touring\nEurope as special trade emissary\nfor the .Premier, has had his bills\npaid by the PGE. Maybe he has!\nWho knows?\nSo now, thanks to Mr. Gibbs, we\nhave a new name for that old favorite, that poor relation'that must\nbe fed so the family's good namt\nmay be maintained. Yes, a new\nname \u2014Poor Gundersqn's Expense\nsheet! And not a bad name it is.\nLet's see what else the PGE is\ncalled. The Please Go Easy is an\nold one. Then there's the Prince\nGeorge. Eventually \u2014 though that's\nreally out pf date now, thanks to\nByron Johnson, who, as Premier,\npushed the PGE from Quesnel to\nPrince George.\nWhen J. A. Kennedy was PGE\ngeneral manager, he-said his wife\ncalled the road Papa's Greatest Effort.\nThe PGE costs the people of B. C.\nplenty of money, but at least they\nget some fun out of it\u2014costly fun!\nThey haven't, either, any say when\nit comes to their money being\ndumped in it. The PGE lives in\nthe future\u2014perhaps, someday; not,\nindeed, that it's not a good railway,\nrunning through magnificent country. It is, and it does!\nWhile on the subject of the PGE\nat a recent Liberal meeting, Mr.\nGibbs grabbed at an inkling that\nMr. Bennett may be getting ready\nto sell the railway to U.S. inter*;\nests, Mr. Bennett and the Governor\n,of Alaska recently had a conference\nhere. Mr. Gibbs, sniffing suspicious-\nlike outside the Premier's door,\nsaw signs, or so he became convinced, that it was the PGE these\ntwo discussed. Neither the Premier\nnor the Governor would discuss in\npublic   what   they'd   discussed   in\nprivate. That only increased Mr.\nGibbs* overpowering suspicion.\nWell, there's nothing new in a\nB. C. government discussing the\nPGE with U.S. interests. That has\nbeen going pn for years. When a\ngovernment wants to bathe the\nPGE in glaring lights it calls in\nsomebody from the U.S. and lets\non the PGE is about to be gobbled up.\nThat's supposed to be a'come-on\nto the CNR, the CPR and the Federal government to hurry, hurry,\nhurry, or the PGE wjll be gone. So\nfar the CNR and the CPR have\npaid absolutely no attention to the\nPGE. In fact, they couldn't care\nless about B. C.'s white-elephant\nrailway. And the Federal .government has snubbed Mr. Bennett\nabout the PGE; a year ago Mr.\nBennett asked Ottawa for some financial aid for PGE extensions, but\nwhat has happened? Not a yes or a\nnay from the Federal government;\nMr. Bennett has been ignored, that's\nall!\nMr. Bennett, as a matter of fact,\nsome months ago said that if he\ncouldn't get the big Canadian railways or the Canadian government\nto do something about the \u00a3GE\nhe'd certainly consider selling it to\nU.S. interests, if he could get a good\ndeal for B. C.\nBut nobody in Canada so much\nas even nibbled on Mr. Bennett's\nPGE bait!\nMr. Bennett, however, won't be\nselling the PGE to U.S. interests.\nHe, like other B. C. Premiers the\nlast 3ft years or more, likes being\nPGE boss too much for that. He\nwants to go-down in our history as\nthe greatest railway builder of B. C.\nIt's a strange thing, the way all\nPremiers delight in having a railroad to play around with,.and pour\nthe people's money into. However,\nit might some day pay . . .\nIt must be the small-boy streak\nin most men that makes them love\nto play with trains.\nRains and Snow\nSweep Britain\nYour Horoscope\nThis should be a remarkable anniversary,\npromising a good deal of gain in all activities.\nToday's child may be of a forceful nature,\nfond of outdoor games and sports and proficient at them.\nthe Federal Government has no control of\nnavigable waters, then dyking and dredging\nof these waters will be a provincial responsibility, q.\nMaybe the powers that be want provincial\nautonomy.\nH. KERSHAW.\nNelson, B. C.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\u25a0.,i>i._j u 1 r_*.t OB..\nT:\n.      ...\nff. '\nBy Jimmy Hatlo |    Today.s Bible Thought\n%\n, ,'UEN 80SS-O DOES A JOB, HIMSELF,\nWE LETS EVEJ2YOME KWOW HOW\nTOU6U WAS TUE TASK\"-\nBut when he \/.ssisns one of tue\ntmere's no twins to it<\u00ab a cimoj \u2022>\u2022\njust knock it out\".\nI'M ALL IN-STAVED\nUP PRACTICALLY TWEEE\nNBMTSW-.JKINSO.J-TV.IS\nWIDaET CO. REPORT-\nWHEW\/WHATAJOB\/!]\nDETAILS .'DETAILS.'\nru.NEEDAFEW '\nDAYS OFF AFTER\nTHIS\nTW3 WHOLE\nPAGES OF\nNCTCS-VOU\nCERTAlNLy\nSHOULD BE\nTIRED.J.B.\n'WJTOM8L._CHIN-.11_L WANT FULL  \u25a0\nREFORTS AND AUDITS ON THE QOONLEV\u00bb\nACCOUNT AHD THAT tisfl OWWNy     M\nOVE'RE TAKING OVER-NOTHIN' TO\n'7.;: J4.*5 v0u M w\u00b0u^ or so\n^MAVE'EM IN THE\/HORNING\ne'NlGHT-.\n_<^V|!\nTT     JVl\nCOft IM. UNO FEATUttl IWDICATI. ba.\n\"  W0\u00bbm KIO-tTI tfmvgp\n.HUH?\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Flooding\nwas reported in many sections of\nBritain Wednesday after a night of\nhigh winds and torrential rain buffeted eastern England and churned\nup ocean' waters.\nSome roads in Suffolk, the region\nchiefly affected by the severe east\ncoast floods of two years ago, were\nunder 18 inches of water and rivers\nwere on the rise. Farther north in\neast Scotland a 24-hour rainfall\nturned to snow, blocking many\nroads through the hills.\nTHAMES RISES\n\"The river Thames also rose sharply in its upper reaches, and extensive flooding was reported in the\narea of Staines, west of London.\nMeanwhile, hundreds of firemen\npolice and troops- relaxed after an\nanxious overnight vigil in many\nareas of western England. Rivers\nthat burst their banks Tuesday\nnight were reported receding, and\npersons evacuated from their\nhomes in a 15-mile area around\nPlymouth were preparing to re\nturn.\nAt Sunderland, near Newcastle, a\nheavy swell tossed the 16.700-ton\nPanamanian tanker Duna Evgenia\nagainst a pier, damaging her bow\nplates and pushing in a section of\nher,stern. The vessel, just departing on her maiden voyage, was ordered into drydock.\n(older Weather\nHits Unemployed\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Unemployment\nis increasing with the arrival of\nCpld weather, though the number\nof persons at work last month was\nabout the same as a year earlier.\nThe bureau of statistics estimated\nWednesday that 179,000 persons\nwere without jobs at Oct. 23, compared with 167,000 a month earlier\nand 111,000 a year previous.\nAt the same time, the bureau estimated 4,819,000 ' jJersons were\nworking full time on that date. This\nwas almost exactly the same as the\n4,820.000 a month before and compared with 4,830,000 a year earlier.\nHowever, persons on part-time\nwork swelled the total by 334,000,\ncompared with 344,000 in September and 286,000 in October, 1953.\nLABOR FORCE HIGHER\nDuring the year, the labor force\nincreased to 5,481,000 from 5,351,000.\nIn a simultaneous release the labor department reported that 259,-\n270 persons were looking for work\nthrough national employment service at Oct. 21. This was up 15,753\nfrom a month earlier and 67.324\nfrom a year earlier.\nA rise in the number of job hunters between this year and last was\nshown in every province, with the\nincrease sharpest ln Ontario. There\n100,645 persons sought work in October compared with 62,711 a year\nearlier.\nFigures for other regions with\nthe 1953 comparison in brackets:\nAtlantic region 26,064 (24.814), Quebec 74,343 (57,708), Prairie 29,317\n(20,542), Pacific 29,051 (26,171).\nWIFE'S SHARE   ,\nMarried women in Colombia since\n1932 have been entitled to a share\nof property jointly acquired since\nmarriage.\nTHE SUPER\/OR\nLATEX-BASE WALL PAINT\nHindu Restaurant\nApproved r t Coast -'\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Establishment of a Hindu restaurant, first\nof its kind in Vancouver, was approved by city council. Earlier,\ncouncil refused to issue Mohan Lai\na licence on grounds that the proposed site has a bad reputation under previous managements.\nGET YOURS\nNOW!\nMBEKTA   CQAL\nONLY\n$17\nLump\nDOMESTIC\nClean, easj\nto-handle\nlumps.   Get \\\nmore heat f o\nyour dollar\nwith\nVesta Cobble!\nNew \"utility\nsize\".\n\"EVERYBODY LIKES VESTA\"\nORDER TODAY\nTowler Fuel\nAND TRANSFER\nPHONE 889\nGOOD,\nWflSNf\nLord if thou wilt thou canst make\nme clean.\u2014Luke 5:12.\nFaith is the key. A clean soul is\nmore importapt than a healed body\nSome have festering sores of the\nsoul and are Indifferent to them.\n(bint disL\n*$m\\\\\n.. There's no excuse for a woman\ndrinking.' What a man gets by\ndrinking, a woman can get by buying a new hat, and it lasts longer.\n____________\n________\u25a0\n. \"\u25a0 '\u25a0 '--.-'\u2022: :.' \u25a0 \"y \u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\"-\u25a0 '\u25a0 -'' '\u2022\u2022-' :. -.-.'\u25a0 .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\n____________\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\nStandard Oil Plans\nA-Research Project\nLINDEN, N. J. (AP) \u2014 Stan'dard\nOil Co., N. J., has announced plans\nfor a major atomic research project.\nAn atomic radiation laboratory\nwill b'e built here by the company's\nresearch affiliate, Standard Oil Development Co.\nExperiments to be conducted at\nthe new lab will aim at applying\n\"the vast* potential of atomic energy to the petroleum industry,\"\nEdgar V. Murphree, president of\nStandard Oil Development, said.\nThat free sample of NestlS's QUIK the postman left\nat your door wa^ delicious, wasn't it\u2014or did the\nyoungsters get to it first?  Now you know how\ncbocolaty-good fresh milk can taste with that famous\nNestles chocolate flavour. And weren't you amazed\nhow easily the QUIK powder dissolved with one\nquick stir\u2014even in refrigerator-cold milk! Stayed\nmixed too, right down to the last delicious sip.\nParticularly satisfying is Nestles QUIK in hot milk\n\u2014for breakfast, after school or as a nourishing\nnightcap.   Children and  grown-ups alike love\nQUIK', chocolaty-rich flavour whenever and\nhowever you serve it. .\nUSE YOUR COUPON THIS WEEK!\nThat coupon you received with your aampl* of Quik Is\nvaluable. Pin it to thla week's shopping list. It's to help\nyou introduce your family to tht nourishing chocolaty\ngoodness of Neitlt't Quik at a great saving. Quik is\nalways economical. ..\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor   by   the   Government   of   British\nColumbia. %\nHOT OR COLD-DELICIOUS EITHER WAY\n\u25a0\u25a0. '  .'    \u25a0;       \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. -. \u2022:\u25a0.-'      \u25a0 .   \u25a0  ...'\u25a0 ......       ,_\u25a0...'-..:_\u25a0___...     :..<:\n__\u00bb nM,\n._,_.     .\u25a0,.\u25a0..,.-.\u2022:, .it.\n mm\t\n;.     ^ ..'      '.'\u25a0-.\nSave $10\nOil   Tan   Engineer's   Bootl,\nShelling lined.\nNeoprene soles.\nNOW\n*\n14.95\nRegujar Price $24.95\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nEstablished 1902\nLEADERS IN  FOOTFASHION\nMrs. Arsens' \"Arsenisms\"\nLone Woman Member\nIs Colorful, Outspoken\nAuxiliary Completes\nBazaar, Tea Plans\nFRUITVALE - Plans for their\nFall bazaar and tea were completed\nby members of the Ladies' Auxiliary to Fruitvale branch of the Canadian Legion at their meeting here.\nConveners appointed were Mrs.\nF. M. Peitzsche, tea -tables; Mrs\nFrank Kaluslk, bake table; Mrs.\nMabel MacKenzie, sewing; Mrs. Joe\nCampbell, fish pond.\ni By STEPHEN 8COTT\n' VICTORIA (CP)-Firm in her convictions, Mrs. Lydia Arsens, only\nwoman member of the British Columbia legislature, has enlivened\ntwo sessions of the House with her\ncolorful ideas.\nElected Social Credit member\nfor Victoria in 1953, Mrs. Arsens\nhas made many down-to-earth and\nsometimes unorthodox proposals\nduring her House speeches.\nDUBBED \"ARSENISMS\"\nMany of her suggestions have\nbeen termed \"arsenisms\" 'by one\nVictoria newspaper.\nOne of 10 children, she was born\nin Didsbury, Alta., in 1908, and\nbefore coming to the coast 20 years\nago taught school in Alberta.\n\u25a0 At high school in(Calgary, Mrs,\n, Arsens was a pupil of William\nj Aberhart, the school principal who\nwas the founder of Social Credit in\n! Canada.\n!    She   admired   Mr.   Aberhart   so\nmuch that when he became Social\nCredit premier of Alberta \"I kpew\nhe must be right.\"\nBut it wasn't until 1952 .that she\n{p*tf*WC**\u00a9TOi\u00abi**\u00abi\u00abts^\n'\"' ft-\nAre You Worried #  \u00bb#*      *\nAbout Christmas Gifts?\nMake It a\nPORTRAIT\nAnd Your Problem Is Solved\nFor An\nAppointment\nSee\nVOGUE STUDIO\n'   \"THE HOME OF FINE PORTRAITS\" j\n460 Ward St. phone 1552    i\n-t_._>iM.,a_\u00bb.B_s.\u00bb_H_\u00abaa_B_aafe_fca8tea-^fe->^^\nParty Brings $50\nFor Yule Parcels\n. GREENWOOD \u2014 The Greenwood\nWomen's Institute card party and\nauction was successful both from\nfinancial and entertainment viewpoints. The entire proceeds of nearly $50 will be used for Christmas\ncheer parcels, which the WI gives\nevery year locally.\nThe winners of the whist were\nMrs. H. Lawrence, women's first;\nMrs. J. Ettel, consolation. Men's\nfirst was won ,by a woman playing\nas a'man, Mrs. W. E. McArthur, Jr.,\nand men's consolation was tied for\nby p. A. Johnson and W. Van Unen,\nwith Mr. Van Unen winning the cut.\nThe door prize was won by Andy\nMcMillan and was donated by Mrs.\nJ. Roylance. During preparing of\nrefreshments, an auction of home-\ncooking was held, with F. Bell as\nauctioneer, assisted by C. Dunn.\nChristmas Gift Suggestions\n0K from\n,v   MILADY'S\nFASHIONS\nHOUSECOATS\nShort and Long For All Tastes and\nSizes.\nSWEATERS\nIn Sets or Singles. Many Colors and\nFull Size Range.\nREMOVE   THE   WORRY   OF   LAST\nMINUTE   BUYING  AND   BE   SURE.\nUSE OUR INSTALMENT PLAN and Have Gifts\nPut Away For Christmas\nat the\nJhs. Sions. Off. QowttsouA. $svw'icsl\nWHERE YOUR CLOTHING $ GOES FURTHER\nBRAD1EYS\nMEAT  M-ARKET\nWE   SPECIALIZE   IN\nGood Quality Fresh Meats\nFor Tenderness and Flavor\nALLSWEET MARGARINE:  O      7c*\n\\ mm lbBi    I J\nROASTING CHICKEN: CC\u00ab\nA Grade. 5 to 6 lbs. Lb. ..      m* mf\nVEAL SHOULDERS:\nBoned and Rolled. Lb\t\n49*\nVEAL STEAKS\nShoulder. 3CT^\nLb 3D\nLEAN BRISKET\nLb  19*\nSPARERIBS\nBack. AfVt\nTROUf\nWhole or half. AS*\nVEAL, PORK, BEEF:\nMinced \t\nPOT ROASTS:\nBoneless. Lb.\t\n3,..'i.oo\n 45'\nCHRISTMAS TURKEYS\nbecame active in the Social Credit\nmovement. She was an unsuccessful legislature candidate in Victoria in 1951. A year later success\ncame when she was elected at the\ngeneral elections.\nNOT DEMOCRACY\nHealth and welfare have been\ntwo of her big debating points in\nIhe legislature. And she has been\nfirm in her opposition to chlorina-\ntion and fluoridation of water supplies. These, she says, are against\n\"true democracy.\"\nMrs. Arsens, who with her husband, James, operates a restaurant here, has told, the House:'\n\"The physician gives you pills\nwhieh are expensive and break\nyou. The surgeon cuts your parts\nout which God put there, but the\nphysiotherapist or the dietician can\nprevent all ailments.\".\nTermed- an \"arsenism\" was her\nproposal that Victoria residents be\n\"compelled\" to keep their gardens\nneat and to have three garbage\ncans in every front yard\u2014one for\nflattened cans, one fbr paper and\nthe other for waste foods. The food\nwould be composted for fertilizer\nfor Victoria's famous Beacon Hill\nPark.\nBY ALICE ALDEN\nBRIDES ARE ALWAYS In fashion. We thought we'd show you\na really lovely bridal gown designed by Jean DesBea In a rich\nbrocade that breaks down Into a mixture of rayon, nylon and\ncotton. The color Is the very palest mauvef The luxurious looking\nfabric is simply handled, the\"brief, long-sleeved bodice topping a\nskirt that is hip-smooth but with a tremendoui fullness below that\nline, achieved through godets. Without tho demure Jacket the\ndress becomes a low-cut evening gown with tho designer's favorite\nJewelled  shoulder straps.\nLister Girl Is\nLISTER \u2014 At a quiet wedding\nsolemnized at New Westminster,\nRev.  Tudor Jones united  in  mar-\nj riage the,former Barbara Jane Yerbury,  eldest daughter  of  Mr.  and\nJ Mrs. Frank Yerbury.of Yahk, and\nRoland Charles Wilson, youngest\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wil-\n[ son of New Westminster.\nI The bride wore a light blue gabardine suit with navy accessories\nand a corsage of pink roses.\nHer bridesmaid, Miss Margaret\nGillis, wore a grey suit with mauve\naccessories and a corsage of yellow\nchrysanthemums. Junior bridesmaid was Miss Marilyn. Wilson,\nsister of the groom, who wore a\nbeige suit, a corsage of white carnations and   tan  accessories.\nThe bride was given in marriage^\nby her father. Best man was Mr.\nRobert Wilson, brother of the groom.\nA reception was held at the home\nof the groom's parents. Mr. Peter\nJenkins, uncle of the groom, proposed the toast to the bride.\nThe happy couple left for the Interior where they will spend their\nhoneymoon. They will reside in\nNew Westminster. The bride was\nborn in Lister and lived there until\na year ago when she left to reside\nin Vancouver.       '\nWillow Point Wl\nHolds Card Party\nWILLOW POINT \u2014 Five tables\nwere in play at the monthly card\nparty sponsored by the Willow\nPoint Women's Institute, with hostesses Mrs. R. Thompson and Mrs.\nC. Haycroft.\nMrs. D. Belyk-and Mrs. W. Spooner won prizes for high scores and\nMrs. C. Shannon won a beautifully\ndressed doll. Tea was served by the\nhostesses, the tea tables centred\nwith bronze and yellow chrysanthemums.\n(DhMA lip. LOiik\nTlfanmn. Wlwdui\nEASY-CROCHET\nSure to make a hit with your\nlittle miss\u2014this skirt and matching\nshrug in shell stitch.\nCrochet pattern 526: Easy-crochet\nSkirt and Shrug in heavy, knitting\nworsted for larger sizes; sport yarn\nfor smaller sizes. Girls' sizes 7 to\n14 included.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, N.D.N., 60 Front St., West. Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your.NAME and ADDRESS.\nDon't miss our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Catalog! An exciting\nvariety of crochet, embroidery, and\niron-on color transfer patterns to\n\u25a0send for. Plus four complete patterns printed in book. Send 25 cents\nfor your copy today! Gifts and bazaar best sellers!\nCrawford Bay Wl\nElects Officers\nCRAWFORD BAY\u2014Officers for\nthe coming year were- elected by\nCrawford Bay Women's Institute at\nits annual meeting. Mrs. M. Haverstock was re-elected president, Mrs.\nNorman Anderson was chosen vice-\npresident, Mrs. E. Reilly was reelected secretary, and Mrs. E. Vance\nand Mrs. H. Brown are the directors.\nA children's Christmas party, to\nbe held December 21, was planned.\nMrs. K. Howell was put in charge\nof the supper.\nFinal arrangements were made\nfor a bazaar to be held Friday. Conveners named were Mrs. F. La\nPlant and Mrs. Vance, novelty\ntable; Mrs. William Fraser, aprons;\nMrs. L. Pratte and Mrs. Brown,\nhome cooking; Mrs. Haverstock and\nMrs. M. Linn, Mrs. A. Foster and\nMrs. Reilly, games.\nIt was decided to hold the regular WI meeting on the third Saturday of the month.\nMrs. M. Linn agreed to stay on\nthe Sunshine Club.\nRecipes...\nChinese Food\nEasy lo Cook\nIn the Home\nBy   MARGARET  CARR\nAs more Canadians have travelled the Far East, or even eaten at\nsome of our very fine Chinese restaurants, the taste for Chinese cooking has Spread across the country\ninto our own home,\nAnd with the generally available\nsupply of ready-prepared Chinese\ndinners. Vegetables and specialty\nItems, these meals with a foreign air\ncan be prepared in your own kitch\nen quickly and economically.\nChow mein and chop' suey are\ncanned In several styles\u2014meatless\nor with chicken or beet. For a switch\nIn the usual Friday fare, serve the\nmeatless chop suey with shrimp,\ntuna, salmon or crab meat added,\nCrunchy chow mein noodles have\nlong been a must with chow mein\nor chop suey dinners. They also add\ncrispness and flavor to creamed and\ncasserole dishes of your favorite\nrecipes.\nBean sprout's are popular ln home\ncooking, too. Serve, well drained,\nin marinated salads, or add, to\nscrambled eggs, stews and meat\ndishes for crisp extra flavor.\nChinese cooking offers great variety in food combinations for color,\ntexture and flavor. Once you've begun* exploring the seasonings and\nunusual food combinations, you'll\nfind you will want to experiment\non your own.\nBamboo shoots, another Far East\nfavorite, are popular in extra fancy\nj chop suey or in dressing up every\n! day creamed chicken, sea foods or\nj vegetables. Again one small can will\n! add crispness to a main dish to serve\n] four to six people.\n]    Soy sauce adds zip in Canadian-\nstyle dishes as well as for Chinese\nspecialties.\nHere's  a   suggested  menu  for   a\nChinese dinner in your own home.\nCHINESE   MENU\nHam Cantonese\nPineapple Coleslaw\nCandied Ginger and Coconut\nAlmond Cookies\nChinese Tea\nHAM  CANTONESE\n3     tablespoons butter or\nmargarine\n\\Vi cups cubed cooked ham or\nluncheon meat\nVz cup minced onion\n1     cup sliced celery\n1     cup water\n1     can mixed Chinese vegetables\nor chop suey vegetables, well\ndrained\ny% teaspoon sugar\nVz teaspoon salt\nVe teaspoon pepper\n1     tablespoon soy sauce\n1V4 tablespoons corn starch\n1     can sliced mushrooms\n1\/3 cup slivered almonds\nMelt butter or margarine in large\nfrying pan; add ham or luncheon\nmeat, onion and celery; cook 5 minutes, stirring often. Add water; cover and cook 8 minutes. Add drained\nmixed Chinese vegetables or chop\nsuey    vegetables    and    seasonings;\nheat to boiling. Blend corn starch\nand    two    tablespoons    water, to\nsmooth  paste; stir into meat mix\nture; cook, stirring constantly, un\ntil slightly  thickened. Add  mush'\nrooms and almonds, if desired. Serve\npiping hot, with chow mein noodles\nor fluffy rice. Makes 4 servings.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954\nCOURTSHIP  CC-URSE\nHASTINGS, England (CP)\u2014Kent\ncounty health officials may give\nlectures on courting to schoolchildren. \"A sympathetic reference to\ncourtship and the degree of love-\nmaking permissible during that period might help encourage in girls\na proper pride and self-respect.\"\nsaid an official.\n6-14\nJUMPER   DRESS\nLook Mom. It's a jumper for\nschool now, a sundress later\u2014the\nmost for your time and money!\nPrincess lines \u2014 easy sewing! Simple details \u2014 fast Ironing! Sew the\nblouse with three-quarter and\ni short puffed sleeves: two versions\nfor school and play!\nPattern 9275: Girls' Sizes 6, 8,\n10, 12, 14. Size 10 jumper, Vk yards\n35-inch; blouse, Vk yards.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., West,\nToronto, Ont.\nEUROPEAN  GL0VE8\nKITCHENER, Ont.  (CP)  \u2014 The\nfamily workshop of Mr. and Mrs.\nLeslie Varga turns out European-\ntype gloves for Kitchener women.\nHe's from Hungary arid his wife\nis Danish. They say these gloves\nserve the same family for generations.\nPLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY\nFOR BEST SELECTION.\nD. C. MURPHY, JR.  DR. R. A. GRAY  DR. D. C. MURPHY\nOwner\nHOURS: 8:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.\nDr. D. C. MURPHY\nand ASSOCIATES\nOptometrists\nPHONE MAIN  3537\nLICENSED BY . ,,, \u201e\n\u2022STATE EXAMINATION        Copner 8|)raau', \"nd Wa\"\n43 Years In Spokane\nSPOKANE 8, WASH.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nFor Children's\nStomach Upsets\nFor quick, happy\nrelief, (five Children's\nOwn Tablets, designed\nfor    youngoters   from\n8 to 16. Speedily help\n\u25a0wester,    eour    upset\nstomach,    clean    out n,\nbowels   gently \u2014 yet -\nthoroughly.   Pleasant, J\noaoily-Bwallowod.\nMade by the makers of \u25a0*,\nBaby's Own Tablet*\u2014\nyour assurance of a reliable product. Be aure\nto get a package today at your druggiatt\nPhone 50\nIRENE'S\nat 569 Ward St.\nIdeal Christmas Gifts\nSpecial Clearance Prices\n\u2022 HOUSE   COATS\n\u2022 DRESSES\n\u2022 HATS\n\u2022 BLOUSES\n\u2022 SWEATERS\n\u2022 STOCKINGS\nAlso\n.\nEVENING BAGS AND ACCESSORIES'\nMarty More Items Greatly Reduced\nShower Given\nFor Newlywed\nMrs. Mel Tarr, the former Darlene\nWard of Longbeach, was honored at\na miscellaneous shower held at the\nhome of Mrs. B. Schneider.\nGames were played and the gifts\nwere presented to the bride in a\nlarge Imitation wedding cake.\nLunch was served by the co-hostesses, Mrs. Arvid Shnelder and Mrs.\nMaurice Bouillet.\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\n-\nWe Are Not\nUp Here as Usual\nBecause\nOur Full Page\nIs On Page 7\nQumpeJiLl\nI\nThat Are\nEspecially Styled\n'For Your\nMan-Tailored\nShirts!!\nSleek, Trim,\nColorful\nAnd Neat\nAppearing\nJumpers of\nSuch Styles as\nThese Make\na Choice\nof Costume\nA Pleasure.\nFrom\n\u00bb9 95\nTo\n$25\nYOUR\nCHARGE\nACCOUNT\nINVITED\n'Anna\nDUTCHERTERIA\n\"Nelson's Premier Meat Market'\nTurkeys Grade A\nAlberta. 12 to 2.0 Ibs.\nPer Ib \t\n55'\nPORK RIBLETS SHOULDER ROASTS\nFresh.                    OC^ and Steaks.           3 6T^\nPer Ib.  mm J Veal. Per Ib  3 J\nBEEF KIDNEYS CHOPPED SUET\nFresh.                     | C0 ' lb. cello bags.    *i *\\%\\\nPerlb _..    \\J Each   mmttm\nBEEF LIVER\n3\nPer Ib.\nLean\nMINCED BEEF\n$1.00\nIbs.    II\nLamb Shoulders\nFully trimmed. Neck, breast and shank 30^\nremoved. Rolled on request. Per Ib.    mf \\w\nNECKS,   SHANKS   AND\nBREASTS OF LAMB\nAll flavors.\nHalf gallons\n20'\nREAM\n95'\nPer lb\nLEGS OF LAMB\n75*\nPer Ib. ......\nPETERS ICE CREAM pOT   ROASTS\nt      Top Steer. Blade ACt\nand cross arm. Lb.\nTop Quality Steer Beef\nSirloin, Round, Wing Roasts and Steaks.       CQ''\nPer Ib. .____:.._  J*\nCompare This Price.\nTHE BUTCHERTERIA . . . First in financed food\nplans . . . first in budget turkey clubs . . . first in\nfrozen foods.\nWe Specialize in Catering To Your\nRequirements, Don't Be Disappointed.\nSee Us FIRST.\nPHONES 527-528 FREE DELIVERY\nMm\n _-__.\npr        TfPl\n\t\nWm-\nU NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25,1954\ni.\nlissles Hope lo\nelcome Royalty\n!\u00a3ELBOURNE (Reuters) \u2014 The\nU'een Mother and Princess Mar-\nSet will \"almost certainly\" visit\nustralia within the next two\njars, the Melbourne Herald says.\nThe paper says Prime Minister\nobert Menzies will discuss such\ntrip when he is in London next\n|ar for a scheduled Common-\nealth prime ministers' conferee.\nCjueen Elizabeth and the Duke of\nrdinburgh toured Australia earl-\nthls year.\nFirst\nRgYALCiTYj\npeas\nFlavor ^\u2014\nBGYALOty\nWoman Injured by\nLawn Collapse\nSHENANDOAH, Pa. (AP)\u2014A 85-\nyear-old woman was pulled to safety Tuesday when her front lawn collapsed and she was plunged 75 feet\ninto a mine breach. Mrs.i Catherine\nMurphy was injured critically when\nher front yard virtually disappeared\nin the cave-in. A fireman was lowered into the We and pulled the\nwoman to safety.\nSask. Coal Output\nSlightly Higher\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canadian production and imports of coal continued to decline in October.\nThe bureau of statistics reported\nWednesday output was 1,411,000\ntons, down from 1,631,286 in October, 1253. Declines occurred in all\ncoal-pnoducing provinces except\nSaskatchewan which barely increased production to 250,000 tons\nfrom 249,904 in October, 1953.\nLanded imports in October totalled 2,278,283 tons compared with\n2,561,810. ,\nIn the January-October period\nproduction totalled 11,735,964 tons\ncompared with 12,616,184 last year.\nImports dropped to 15,666,879 tons\nfrom 19,996,447.\nPrincess Gravely Takes Greetings\nIntended for Her Royal Mother\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Bear hugs\nfrom Prince Charles and Princess\nAnne and kisses from the Queen\nand the Duke of Edinburgh welcomed the Queen Mother home to\nLondon Wednesday after the\nmonth-long visit to the United\nStates and Canada.\nPrincess Margaret, who planned\nto be with the family to greet her\nmother, had to stay at home with\na feverish cold. \/.\nSHINING EYES\nThe Queen Mother greeted her\nfamily\u2014with her eyes shining with\nteaar\u2014at London's Waterloo Station. Then she shook hands with\nPrime Minister Churchill, Foreign\nSecretary Eden, Norman Robertson,\nthe Canadian high commissioner,\nand Winthrop Aldrich, the American ambassador.\nThe Queen, wearing a fur-collared blue coat almost the same color\nas her mother's chatted animatedly with the Queen Mother as they\nwere helped into an open landau\ncarriage for the state procession\nto Clarence House, near Buckingham Palace.\nCHEER8 ALONG ROUTE\nThere were more warm-hearted\ncheers and shouts of \"Well done!\"\nfrom thousands-of Londoners pack-\n.\nFOR PERFECT WASHINGS\n^ol WOOL, NYLON, SILK, RAYON\nGLORIFIES COLORS\n;0ftKSOUTST\u00bb\nAT YOUR GROCER'S\ning the streets on the processionaf\nroute as the carriage jingled past,\nescorted by a' clattering detachment\nof the dashing Household Cavalry\nwith plumes flying in the sunshine.\nFour-year-old Princess Anne, her\nhands tucked into a warm fur muff\nwhich matched the tur on her coat\ncollar and green bonnet, sat snugljr\nbetween her grandmother and the\nQueen in'the carriage.\nPrince Charles, merrily waving\nto the happy'crowds, sat with the\nDuke of Edinburgh, who- *as tn\nnaval uniform. The one empty seat\nih the carriage was to have been\nfor Princess Margaret who was\nkept at home at the last moment.\nAll along the route the Queen\nMother, smiling broadly and nod\nding her head, brought waves of\ncheers,\nPRINCESS   POPS   UP\nDuring the few minutes the\nQueen and her family waited for\nthe Queen Mother's train, Princess\nAnne\u2014who can never keep as still\nas her big brother on important occasions\u2014trailed after her mother,\nshaking hands with the top-hatted\ndignitaries who towered over her.\nSeveral times, just as the Queen\nwas about to shake hands, the tot\npopped up in front of her and took\nthe outstretched hand instead.\nCrowds six and seven deep lined\nthe broad, tree-lined Mall, the\nstately avenue which leads to Buck\ningham Palace, to catch a glimpse\nof the royal procession on its way.\nAs the carriage with its high-stepping dapple greys entered the\ngrounds of Clarence House, the\nQueen Mother's personal standard\nwas broken from the flagstaff,\nsign to Londoners that she was\nhome again.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nPRESTON, England\u2014Nevill A. D.\nArmstrong, 80,\" gold prospector,\ntrapper and big game hunter.\nDUISBERG, Germany \u2014 Eugene\nMarchand, 94, once a celebrated\ntenor at New York's Metropolitan\nOpera.\nLONDON \u2014 Sir Edward Keeling,\n67, Conservative.MP for Twickenham.\nTORONTO \u2014 Lawrence Lee An-\nthes, 74, past president of the Canadian Manufacturers Association.\nguy md EftjOtj.\nPACIFIC\nMILK\n?*-\n\"ToAte tke Lwmde^u\u00a3 ctrffetotce\nCEYLON'S PREMIER\nTO VISIT CANADA\nLONDON (Reuters):- Sir John\nKotelawala, Ceylon's prime minister, will visit Canada Dec. 2 to Dec.\n5 at the invitation of the Canadian\ngovernment.\nAn authoritative source says the\nCanadian government plans to send\na special plane to New York to fly\nhim to Ottawa Dec. 2 and later\ntake him back to the United States.\nThe prime minister, now in Britain- during a goodwill tour of .10\ncountries, is Sue to fly to New York\nSaturday.\"       \u00bb\nMonty Advocates Caning Bad Boys\nNEW YORK (AP)-What modern education needs Is more of the\nold-fashioned cane, says Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery.\n- The British military leader says\nhe\"\"ought to know: \"I was well\nbeaten myself, and I am the better\nfor it.\"\nSpeaking at Columbia University,\nMontgomery said more corporal\npunishment for unruly boys in\nschools would help stop \"the flow\nof hooligans and criminals in the\nworld.\"\n\u25a0 \"A boy cannot be expected to\nimagine intellectually the misery\nand pain he has the power of inflicting on other people; he has no\nexperience, no imaginative capa-'\ncity, to enable him to do so.\"\nBut Montgomery hastened to add\nthis qualification:\n\"I'm for beating the bad boys \u2014\nnot the girls.\"\nThe deputy supreme commander\nPl_AN GREENLAND TESTS\nCOPENHAGEN (Reuters)\u2014Denmark has given the United States\nair force permission to carry out\nexperirnental rescue work on the\nice-covered mountains of Greenland. The American planes will be\nfitted with plastic skis and with\nfour jet rockets to assist takeoffs\nat high altitudes.\nof the North Atlantic Treaty Organization received an honorary\ndegree from Columbia.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nHakes ANGEL FOOD so grand\nit's hard to believe!\ni \u25a0\u2022*m\n** *J_\nw_\u00a7_____\u00a7Ri\n.:..!s..:...l.\n\u25a0\n^\n13 ^g Whites\nare right in this mix\nWATER IS ALL YOU ADD\n~\"^s\u00bb-\nWmm.,\u201e..\nV\n\"\u00bb.,\n1\nLike everyone else, you'll be\namazed, really. The whites of\n13 eggs are right in this mix.\nWater is all you add to get\nangel food so toweringly high,     ^\nso light and delicate,'it's 111\nas fine as the very best you *\never tasted. You have to\nmake it, see it, eat it, to really\nbelieve it. How about today? Get a\npackage,of Pillsbury Angel Food Mix\nat your grocer's.\nmm\n.*\"*\u00bb*\u00ab\nBtm\nNOW MADE IN CANADA\nby fltl%pp-Pillsbury of Canada Ltd.\nCAKE\nMIX\n'\u25a0\"     -    \u25a0'' I '      \u25a0' \u25a0   \u25a0 -      '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' '\u25a0    \u2022 \u25a0    \u25a0 \u25a0        -\u2022-.'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .-::\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0,.\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0     \u2022-    \u25a0  -..\u25a0   .\u25a0\u25a0 , ..     ....  -.v      \u25a0,\n j,^iff\u00bbpiiPiiip     \u25a0 \u00a3jpm\nNELSON, B. Cm CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MOHNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1954\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy and mild\nThursday. Wind south 20 inn few\nvalleys, otherwise light. Lqw and\nhigh at Cranbrook, 25 and 38; Crescent Valley 35 and 48.\nNo. 182\nMalenkov Divisions\nOutmaneuvered Beria\n*<4\u2122_\u00bb\u00bb.s_ft?\u00bb c\nSam\u00b00.   ?N\n-\u00bb\u00bba0 BANDITS\nArmed Showdown Settled,Struggle\nFor Power, Sent Police Boss To Doom\noo.>X**%<S,,\n*Pi\n^.Sl^d S0ite\n''>\u00abfc,\".c\",*\"\u00bb- .\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014An armed showdown by Com-\n-*\u2022_ leaders in the Kremlin settled the Moscow struggle\n-p \" \u00ab*d tent police boss Lavrenty Beria to his doom,\nM*m\\Mm **\"\"er \u00b0* ^eria's f\u00b0rces-\n^rMm)\u2014m    fm^ \"Agazine, Lt.-Col. Yuri Rastvorov,\n^ C    MWme.' in JaPan lftst January, de-\n]th  Stalin's \u2022 son,\nGathered\n'39.\ny>s. \u00bb\u2022\ny*i,\nRt\n****,\n'ii\/f\n\u00bbSt. r.\n\u2022\u2022 *\u00bb:,'\u2022\u00bb____.'\"\u00bb\naAfl\n**\n\u25a054Se*\n77\n^,\n*\u00ab\nrfflj\n\u00b0\u00bb-#l\n'\u00bb\/.\n4fe\n'op\n\u00bb\u00bb. *?* \u00ab\n'*\n*\u00bbe^\nf0^\nSt __\n<*e\n.^;i>.\n'\u2022ve, ,w\u00ab\u00bbfe;-,\u00ab\u00ab,\/\n4te\n\u00b0*k \u00a3*!* \u2022\"\u00bb'\n*\n*\u201e,!! <'\u00ab? \u00ab\u2022\n*ed,\n**'    ?\">e.\n^\n$?'44>:Smi?*<<M\nw\n^V**\nc Sc*ttet\n\"e\u00bb\nfe\nVs\nitt\n\/>;_\n%\n\u00bb\u00bb.\u00ab_ \u2022** \"O\/1\no\/\/\n_?<\u00bb.\n?^Sl\n\"\u25a0\"\"rf,\nOf.\n\u25a0ftl\n(S_M\u201e\ny*v$>Ct\nMt\nHe3ul.\n3-*.77\nC\u00ab\nHnr\/f\"\/\n*efc >\u00b0*e, ;\u00b0f\n4_^^*1\nCS**\u00bb\nAf,\n>\/\/e\n>\u00ab..\nA<0\n'o\/<\/\n* *'*\u00ab_5-\nW95\n*fMi?\u00b0\u00b0p\u00bb,\nme\n!\"os\nKffi%\n^;\n\u00bb'*e,. *efe.\n*\u00bb\u00ab_,\n^7*7^\ne\u00bberfi_     0V1\n\u00ab6\n*\u00ab.\nO\/l\n-?a\nS^C\/.\ncMi\n^\u20227.\n%\n0\/\/\nfioy\n&pm$*ilS\n, *\"\u25a0 ft    \u00b0oei .    \u2022 '\ns*lt     'I-re\nIff*\nfob), r\n*iiy*,\\ti\u00bbyH,e*>'io0t,     *eS\nfbW>^.9e'-Thef.\n'^h\nd, Trail ana >^\nt in the Parish hn__.\nat the invitation of Ca_*__^\nnlsterial Association to discuss\n>blems and questions of mutual\nicern. Archdeacon B. A. Resker,\n(sldent of Castlegar Association,\nlired  the  meeting attended  by\nfelt\ntha pr\u00bb\u00bb_.\n\u2022nd means m\nTha oicrgy al\nempioyment was the solution ^\ntha problem and \"look to the gov-\nornmcnt to do wmethlng about\nIf\nGIRLS'  HOME   INTEREST\nCanon W. J. Silverwood brought\nthe meeting up to date on what a\nCitizens' Committee is doing in Nelson to establish a home for delinquent girls. The group believed\nthis was something the church\nshould assist and asked Canon Silverwood to bring further information to a meeting scheduled for\nsome 18 clergymen.\nECMP Constable R. Mullock of\nS3-\"<**\nco*.,;!n \u00bb0oJ? n,0l\nWe\n**7.\n^\"Sf_S&\n*>e?\nBe\n\u00bbnt\n,foh\n*A\n'ee*\n%\n%%?><\u00ab\n\u202277\n*2>\n** -fa-\n\u00ab\"><\/\n*SS a\nTri'fi9^ m,\n\/a\n**\u00a3\u00a3?*\n%\nCA>*\noff\nn\u00b0iee\nof\nvie* at c__\ndo not know \u2022__.\nleliure houn.'\nRev. J. Taylor of Trail outliru--..\nthe program for a radio workshop\nto be held in Trail in January. The\nworkshop will assist the clergy of\nthe district to understand technique\nrequired in broadcasting. It will\nlast three days. A maximum 25 ar\u00ab\nenrolled. The workshop will be\ndirected by experts In radio broadcasting.\nCastlegar opened a discussion on\n20\n*tyi<\n'\u2022\u00bb\n\u2022\u00bb\u00ab<\/\nWs\nco\/o,\n'\u00bb.\n%\noff\n\u2022SIV\nb' _.W.:\n^m^.\nA FORCE Of 26,000'combat-equlppo^\n200 navy ships, charged ashore at) Onilo Bboo.,,\n\u2022\u2022a In one of the largest and mott up-to-date amphlblou.,\naver attempted In North America. This group, carrying fex.\nartillery, were theoretically wiped out by an atom bomb dropped\nby an \"enemy\" plana that penetrated the air defence*.\nS7-77\nAll\n!\u25a0*-.'\u25a0\n______________\u25a0\n PPPP\";      \u25a0'\u25a0\u2022    .   \"ii!^^^^^^m^^!^^f^h['' ':',T^!W!PPi\nIPPBSPKPiSSf*^   \u2022 ~~. ^^pi\n______ , _ -__ . >\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0    :'.--'-.'-V.5.\n_^,...   p* . ,-3\/^'::;\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954\nNatal Latest Place To\nJoin Recreation Plan\nNATAL\u2014The purpose of a public\nmeeting, combined with the regular\nmonthly Parent-Teacher Association\nmeeting of Natal-Michel and held\nin th'e junior-senior high school at\nSparwood, was to form a Community Recresltlon Commission which\nwould help the various sport groups\nin the community, especially for\nthe adults.\nThe Community Programs Branch\nof the B.C. Prdvincial Government\nwill give assistance in the form of\ninstruction and financial grants to\nsuch groups which are formed at\npublic meetings, it was learned. All\ncommunity recreation .activity\nwould be, affected by the setup, including sports, drama groups, arts\nand crafts \u00abnd square dancing.\nSid Hansen of Cranbrook, Community Programs Branch representative of the East Kootenay, explained the method whereby a local\ncommission could be set up, and\na motion was passed for forming\ncommission. The Michel-Natal\nArena Committee, largest active\ncommittee functioning at present in\nthe district, will take charge of the\nlocal commission setup. ,\nSix members would be named\nfrom the arena committee at a later\ndate, while five women were added\nto the committee: Mrs. Bea Mogielka, Mrs. R. Taylor, Mrs. L. Mullett,\nMrs. George Sofko and Mrs. Ed.\nBakken.\nThe arena committee decided to\nact as the operating body of the\nCommunity Recreation Commission\nbut asked that any group receiving\nany other financial assistance in\nany other form should not ask for\naid. Support will be given to groups\nnot receiving financial assistance.\nMr. Hansen stated that grants would\nbe given to all sports and recreation groups each month, providing\nthat two-thirds of the amount was\nspent as expenses. The grants would\nbe payable every three months.\nFilms on sports and recreation\nand how a commission should be\nMedical Officer\nTo Be Appointed\nSLOCAN' CITY \u2014 The board of\ntrustees of Slocan school district,\nat its November meeting in the W.\nE. Graham High School, had Dr. H.\nT. Lowe of the Selkirk Health Unit,\nand N. Scott, sanitation inspector, a?\nguests.\nDr. Lowe gave a brief talk on\nfour subjects; Slocan Park well,\nPerry Siding water supply, environmental inspections in the schools of\nthe district, and appointment of a\nschools medical Inspector.\nMr. Scott reported that he had\nchosen a site for the new well at\nSlocan Park, in consultation with\nthe Board's secretary^ who stated\nthe well would be driven next\nweek. He also gave a report on\nlighting, sanitation and heating of\nthe various schools. Mr. Scott complimented the board on the very attractive interior and excellent\nlighting\" in the new elementary\nschool at New Denver.\nA resolution was passed by the\nBoard asking Dr. Lowe to appoint\nDr.   W.    Chornobay   as'  acting |\nschool medical Inspector for this\nschool district\nIt was decided by the board to\nre-route the \u25a0Slocan school bus down\nthe highway direct to Winlaw, and\nreturn on the old road on the morning trip. This would avoid extra\nearly 'catching of the bus in certain cases, Permission was also\ngranted for the travelling instruction unit from the Provincial Fire\nH._._!-i_-__._i.__mtiii.!t_._.i!i_iiiiimiii\nCOPS THIRD PRIZE\nAT WINTER FAIR\nINVERMERE - A Windermere district farmer haB won\nhonors at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair at Toronto.\nF. R. Coy of Invermere, owner\nof Dutch Creek Ranch, came\nthird ln five entries in alfalfa,\nanother B.C. man, S. Weston bf\nFort St. John, coming fourth.\nMr. Coy placed again to the\norchard grass or ' cock't foot\nclass, coming 18th in 28 entries,\nIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nCastlegar Woman's\nBrother Passes\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Jyhri Bath Rae,\nbrother of Mrs. S. Drain of Castlegar, died at his Vancouver home at\nthe age of 64.\nHe is survived 6y his wife Mary,\na son James of Surrey, a daughter\nMrs. R. Grlce, Surrey; three grandchildren; a brother Thomas of Canoe, B. C. and another sister Mrs. C.\nH. Watson of Brittania Beach, B.C.\nFuneral services were held at Vancouver Wednesday. Rev. T. D. Barnett officiating.\ntub Packs Again\nFormed al Natal\nNATAL \u2014 After a lapse of two\nyears, Cub packs in Natal and Michel are being organized through\nthe effortl ot W. R., Sallis of Natal, who will act as Cubmaster.\nSeparate Cub groups have been\norganized, with 'the Natal group\nmeeting every Thursday ln the\nUnloA hall and th*s.Mlchel group\nmeeting ln the United Church\nrooms. Already 30 boys, ranging In\nage from eight to 12 years have\njoined the membership ln both\ngroups. During the past two weeks\nthe groups have enjoyed hikes.\nLeaders will be appointed ln the\nnear future. The main problem at\npresent is to name a group committee for both Natal and Michel.\nThese groups will be formed\nthrough active volunteers.\nAs soon as the Cub packs are on\ntheir feet Boy Scouts will be started\nln Natal-Michel. Also assisting the\nCub groups will be former Boy\nScout members who have volunteered their services and experience.\nINVERMERE BACKS\nRECREATION MOVE\nINVERMERE -* Sid Hansen of\nCranbrook, regional consultant for\nEast Kootenay of the community\nprogram branch of the Department\nof Education, attended the Novem-\nber meeting of the board of management for the Lake Windermere\nMemorial Community Centre.\nMr. Hansen explained that the\ncommunity programs branch can\nassist community enterprises both\nmaterially and financially and advised that a local commission be\nset up to centralize activities and\nto conform with requirements of\nthe department.\nA committee was appointed consisting of the board of management\npresident and secretary, Tom Cook-\nson and Wayne Lacy respectively,\nand Mrs. R. B. Harris to start proceedings, Co-operation of the Invermere Village Commission will be\nsought and other members Will be\nappointed to the commission, required by the department to work\nunder the Community Programs\nBranch.\nBoard Tackles\nPower Problem\nSLOCAN CITY\u2014Ways of furthering Its efforts to bring' power to\nthe Slocan were discussed by many\nmembers of .the Slocan Board of\nTrade at Its meeting In the WI hall\nhere.\nIf the Slocan could obtain a\ngreater supply of power, lt would\nbe an inducement to Industry, it\nwas felt.\nGuest Bpeaker Mayor Joseph\nKary of Nelson gave a talk on\nboosting our country as a- whole\nand every district within it. He\nenumerated achievements to date,\nand Indicated achievements that\ncould be expected in the future.\nThe Board renewed its membership in the Canadian Chamber of\nCommerce and the B.C. Chamber\nof Commerce.\nNorman Brookes, chairman of the\ntransportation committee, was appointed to attend the meeting of\nthe  Trans-Canada Highway Asso\nciation (Crow's Nest Boute) Ifl\nDecember 8.\nGreetings were extended by\nOwen, president of the N\nChamb\"er of Commerce; P. m\nkins, vice-president; Rex I\nJohn Learmonth and C.\nHarper.\nThe dinner was served by'.}\nen'\u00ab Institute members. ,\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nLefs keep Christmas\nWe call friends \"hard to\nfor\" \u2014 yet who does not i\nlove, consideration, s hel\nhand? We \"can't feel the Ch\nmas spirit\" \u2014 yet who cai\nrejoice at Jesus' coming?\nIn December Reader's Di|\nPeter Marshall (subject\nMan Called Peter) toll? how\ncan keep Christmas' glorj\nour homes \u2014 and in our he\nBe sure to read this perti\nmessage on the real meanii\nChristmas in December Reai\nDigest. It's just one of 35 art\nof lasting interest, conde\nfrom leading magazines\ncurrent books.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nformed   and   operated   were   also\nshown by Mr. Hansen.\nTHREE   OTHS-RS\nTo date community recreation\ncommissions have been set up at\nKimberley. Marysville and Cran.\nbrook. It was pointed out that the\nmore commissions that are organized the more clinics for recreation\nactivities would be made available.\nEvery year summer school courses\nare being held in Victoria, B.C., for\nthe benefit of the commissions.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 The Office of Defence Mobilization announced Tuesday it has authorized\nthe postponement of Canadian copper shipments totalling 260Q tons\nthis quarter, to^help relieve Canada's shortage of the metal.\nMarshal's Department, to hold evening instruction classes in the W. E.\nGraham High School, periodically\nduring the next six weeks.\nApproval was given to the teaching staff of the Slocan City schools\nto show National Film Board films\nto the general public, in the W. E.\nGraham High School.\nA donation of $5 per classroom\nIn the district for Christmas treats\nfor the current season was passed\nby the Board.\nThe resignation of J. A. Boyd of\n.the teaching staff of the W. E. Graham High School has been accepted\nby the Board, with a statement ol\nappreciation for his services during\nthe past two and a half years.\nKinnaird Opening . . .\nNew-Type Heating at\n\"Valley View\" School\nYRSHIRE\ntime pig sryir\nSAUSAGE\nYOUR    FOOD   STORE !\nKINNAIRD' \u2014 The new Valley\nView school in Kinnaird built at a\ncost of $30,000, was declared officially open by Inspector J, J. McKenzie of Nelson at a public opening ceremony.\nRepresenting the department of\neducation, Mr. McKenzie brought\nmessages of congratulation and\ngood wishes from the minister of\neducation and his department\nJ. G. Craft, chairman of the\nboard of trustees of Castlegar\nschool district, told of the steps involved in the planning and building of the school. He introduced the\nspecial guests at the ceremony, the\nschool trustees, and the school principal and his staff.\nDr. D. C. Smith, Inspector for the\nschool district expressed his pleasure   and   satisfaction   in   the,  new\nschool.\nSPECIAL  FEATURES\nPaul Smith of Trail, architect,\nexplained the special features of\nthe building, the principle one be-\nCLEAR\nHand-e-uirap\nHEAVY UlflXED PAPER I\nWhen packing lunches, here's a tip\nThat's sure to meet with favor-\nWrap sandwiches in Hand-e-wrap\nTo keep that fresh food flavor.\nWith new,  transparent Hand-e-wrap\nYou do the job with less work\nWhat's more, it lets you see inside\nWith nothing left to guess work!\nHand-e-\u00abTap is more transparent,\nmore pliable, more moisture-proof.\nGet the box with the handy cutting\nedge. . .\nAND SAVE WITH REFILL ROLLS\nPop a roll into your empty Hand-e-\nwrap box\u2014save the cost every timet\ning perimeter heating. Pipes extend\nfrom the furnace to the outer walls\nand are laid in the concrete slab' on\nwhich the school stands. The walls\nare not only instilated above ground\nbut the insulation extends below\nthe ground for a depth of two feel\nThe theory is that the ground below the concrete also become,\nwarm and that this warmth-is retained within the- area by the below-ground insulation, ensuring\nwarm floors at all times.\nThe Valley View school and the\nnew one-room school in Robson,\nalso designed by Mr. Smith, was\nalso officially opened Tuesday and\nwere belieyed to be the first schools\nin B. C. to have this form of heating. Others however are now under\nconstruction.\nWalter Jacobson, chairman of the\nboard of commissioners, brought\ngreetings and congratulations from\nthe village of Kinnaird.\nThe key to the building which\nwas handed over by the builder, G.\nGuido, was given to the principal of\nthe school, H. Bate. Mr. Bate expressed his satisfaction with the design, attractiveness and .functional\nutility of the school.\nA highlight of the ceremony was\nthe planting of two oak trees byj\nMajor John Moll, who had grown!\nthem from acorns. Major Moll, a j\nretired Salvation Army officer, has!\nbeen an active and very popular]\nWolf Cub leader in Kinnaird for!\nthe past few years. ' i\nTea was served by members of!\nthe Kinnaird Parent-Teacher As-!\nsociation. Mrs. J. Kennedy was con-'\nvener. '\nHave You Tried the\nWests Favorite Bread Yet?\nDURING RECENT WEEKS HUNDREDS OF FAMILIES IN NELSON\nAND DISTRICT HAVE BEEN FINDING OUT WHY McGAVIN'S GOOD\nBREAD HAS BEEN WESTERN'CANADA'S FAVORITE FOR OVER FORTY\nYEARS. ITS FRAGRANT GOODNESS AND OVEN-FRESH FLAVOR\nTRULY MAKE IT THE GOOD COMPANION OF EVERY MEAL!\nDon't say\nBread\"...\nThe following varieties of McGavin's Good Bread\nare available In Nelson and district:\nMcGavin's MILK WHITE LOAF (Sliced)\nMcGavin's Ml LK WH EAT LOAF (Sliced)\nMcGavin's CRACKED WHEAT LOAF (Sliced)\nMcGavin's WHITE SLICEBURST LOAF\nMcGavin's WHITE   SINGLE   SANDWICH   LOAF\n(Sliced)\nMcGavin's WHITE   DOUBLE  SANDWICH   LOAF\n(Sliced)\nMcGavin's GOOD WHITE LOAF (Un-sliced)\nSay McGAVIN'S\nLoaded with Flavor!\n[J5_;\nEnjoy\nNabob INSTANT Coffee\nToo!\n_________\n\u25a0.        ,'\u25a0  : \u25a0     \u25a0  \u25a0\n___________\n' '\u25a0     -    ''\".    \u25a0\".    .' A        ''     ^    \u2022'\u2022- \u25a0      '\\    -\t\n;v-\/--.' -.;'.'- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'   \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\n\u25a0_\u25a0\n Pf? ~~^P\nBehind\nthe\nWith MAX DES BRISAY\n;iMBERLEY \u2014 Did my ears\nn after last week's \"go\" on the\nmoney Bonspiels? Well, to be\nlk \u2014 no, they didn't. However,\nJ_get closer to home and talk\nyt the \"B.C.\"!\nrom our spot \"Behind-the-Glass\"\nfeel that the \"B.C.* should con-\nte to draw the top notch rinks,\nthose rinks whq are going to\n'Spiel    for    the    comradeship\nf.   (This  has  been  the  case  in\npast,)\nerlence Rubs Off .\nhe fact, that the tops are\nired, is a drawing card to those\nts who wish to gain the experi-\np of tough competition! They\ni have some \"rub off\" on Ihem\u2014\nwill (they know) be better\nlerg themselves tor what thfey\ne learned.\nhen, if the draw is made up\nthe Trail draw was in 1953-54)\u2014\nweaker rinks will group themes, after the necessary primary\nsecondary events, and, can (if\nif so desire) curl for the fuh of\nat the same time they can\n5 home their fair share of the\n:es.\nikum!\n11 of this talk that we hear\nut   the   stronger  rinks   busting\n'Spiel is bunkum!! All that is\nHired is a better publicity pro-\nm, so that all member clubs in\nB.C. Association \u2014 know that\nentries will get sufficient curl-\n(of   the    calibre   each    rink\nThree in Leaf Victory\n5-3 Flyer Defeat Here\nMoves Nelson to 2nd Spot\nNelson Maple Leafs moved into second place in the(\nWestern International Hockey League Wednesday night by\ndefeating the Spokane Flyers 5-3 before a good mid-week\ncrowd at the Civic Arena. Flyers had held second spot\nbefore the game.\nA three-goal outburst in a little over three minutes\nin the latter part of the second period gave Leafs their\nmargin of victory after the determined Flyers had gone\nahead 2-1.\nWendy Keller was the big gun for the Leafs, picking\nup a goal a period to register his second hat-trick of the\nseason. Linemate Bruce Carmichael also had a three-point\nnight, picking up a second period marker and assisting on\ntwo of Keller's. i\n, Centre   Herb   Jeffery   was   the j \u00a3\u00b0od fioaltending by Mikulan kept\nwants). We have yet to hear any\nother remark \u2014 at the 'Spiels\nand, except \u2014 \"That was a swell\n'Spiel! See you next year if\npossible !\"\nAnd the \"Briar\"!\nThere, also, has been a great deal\nof agitation to pull this top competition out of the 'Spiel \u2014 notably\nby a certain very fine coast curler\nand orator. We feel the Vancouver\nClub has not proferred to hold the\nB.C.\" \u2014 mainly because of the\ndrop in their revenue if they held\nit. This is simply a case of business,\nand obligation to their members to\nretire a certain amount of debentures each year. Understood by\nthose to whom it has been\nexplained.\nOn the other hand they would\nlike to see this top competition,\nthe B.C. playdowns held yearly at\nthe Coast. They would be able to\ncharge a small fee per' head to\nwatch the games and would break\neven, or loss little revenue.\nZonal Playdowns\nWe are all for zone playdowns,\nbut also feel that a certain number\nof rinks should be allowed to\nqualify their entry into the Dominion Championship through the\nB.C. BonSpiel. As it happened in\n1953-54 at Trail, when the Milt\nRyalls and Reg Stone rinks did,\nwhen Northern B.C. reps did not\nshow.\nOnly, and this is our point, there\nshould be approximately 4 rinks\nfrom each Bonspiel primary qualified. Of course, this figrue should\nbe adjusted from year to year in\nthe light of the previous year or\nyears' experiences.\nDo I tie it in? Yes or no. Let's\nhear some of your viewpoints\nDrop me a line care of the column\nKeep It To Yourself\nOur old time friend and fine\ncurler \"J. B.\" Stark now of the\nToronto Telegram visited his old\nhaunts and friends this past summer in the W.K. We met Jack and\nHelen in the Sliver City. Were you\nglad to be back in the West Kootenay, John? You should see the\n\"Sun\" in the East Kootenay!!\nSorry to hear that up and com\ning fine skip. Norm Bentley, is on\nthe shelf this season. Hope your\nhand improves soon, Norm.\nThe Kimberley Shift Club has\ngrown with the addition of 4 rinks\nfrom the fertilizer \"A\" shift and\none from \"B\" shift. This makes it\n12 rinks, now. Stan Nelson, John\nMacKenzie et.*al are to be warmly\ncongratulated in getting this club\ngoing. Anyone interested can\nwatch the curlers every Monday,\nWednesday and Friday morning.\nThe first big \"7\" ender was scored\non the first day of club curling in\nKimberley,   when,   \"Ex-hex\"   Jim\nother lamp-lighter.\nthem   off   the   scoresheet   further.\nCarl  Currilo,   Gino  Rozzini  and I Lea*s had ^e  F1yers hemmed in\nMinor Hockey\nTONIGHT - 8 P.M.\nBANTAMS\nCanadiens vs. Rangers\nMIDGETS\nQuakers vs. Canucks\nAdults 2S0    Children IOC\nKIWANIS\nTURKEY\nSHOOT\nTonight\n7 p. m. - Civic Centre\n\u2022 BINGO\n\u2022 TURKEYS\n\u2022 GAMES\nFree Admission\nLarry Plante were marksmen for\nthe visiting team.\nP  W.LTF  A    Pts.\nKimberley .13   7   5   1 46 53    16.7\nNelson     17   8   8   1 73 64   16.7\nSpokane 14   7   7\nTrail     13   4 10   0 56 69      7.8\nPoints awarded as follows, home\nand away respectively: Kimberley\n2.1 and 2.66;.Nelson 1.9 and 1.735;\nTrail 1.9 and 1.735; Spokane 2.1 and\n2.1. (A tie shall count as one-half\nof a win.) mJL\n\u2022   \u2022 \u25a0*<?\nRAGGED OPENING\nThe fir_t period was somewhat\nragged, with most of the play being\nbetween bluelines. Leafs outskated\nthe Flyers but failed to get many\nlabelled shots at Spokane netminder\nGerry Fodey. At the other end of\nthe rink, Ray Mikulan turned aside\nmost of the pucks to come his way.\nKeller opened the scoring at the\n7:13 mark when he drove home the\npuck from a maze of players in the\nSpokane zone. Vic Lofvendahl and\nCarmichael drew assists.\nA Good Try, but...\nTiger-Cats Coach\nOut for New Blood\ntheir own zone when the final\nbuzzer sounded.\nTempers threatened to flare at\ntimes but referees George Crothers\nand Bill Vickers kept the game in\nhand, handing out 13 penalties,\n0 60 48 14.7 \u25a0 syven t\u00b0 Me Leafs. Kubasek and\nf Red Tilson of the Flyers both drew\nten-minute misconducts.\nLineups:\nSpokane!\u2014Goal: Fodey; defence:\nLuke, Plante, Hodges, McDougald;\nforwards: Curillo, Tilson, Rozzini,\nRamsden, Nadeau, Kubasek, Johnston.\nNelson\u2014Goal: Mikulan; defence:\nLofvendahl, Gare, Schai, McGregor;\nforwards: R. Koehle, Carmichael,\nKeller, Jeffery, Kinasewich, Hyssop.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1. Nelson, Keller\n(Lofvendahl, Carmichael) 7:13; 2.\nSpokane, Curillo, 18:17. Penalties:\nKubasek (10-min. misc.), Luke.\nSecond period: 3. Spokane, Rozzini (Nadeau, Kubasek) 11:02; 4.\nNelson, Carmichael (McDonald, McGregor) 14:32; 5. Nelson, Jeffery\n(McGregor) 15:20; 6. Nelson, Keller\n(Carmichael) 17:45. Penalties: Lof-\nHAMILTON (CP) \u2014 Coach Carl\nVoyles of Hamilton Tiger-Cats Wednesday gave his team credit for a\ngood try this year but said he Is\nalready after new blood for next\nseason.\nThe Hamilton club, defending\nGrey Cup champions, were eliminated Nov. 20 by Montreal Alouettes.\nMontreal meets Edmonton Eskimos Saturday in the Grey Cup final.\n\"The boys gave out with everything,\" he said. \"They didn't win\nbut they didn't lack much and we\nwere never more than one com\npleted pass away from victory.\"\nIt was the fifth season in a, row\nVoyles led his club into the Big\nFour playoffs.\nVoyles said Vince Mazza, all-star\ntackle, now in Hamilton Hospital\nwith a spine injury, will get all the\nhelp the.club can provide.\n\"If it requires specialists from\nanywhere, we'll go all the way with\nVince,\" the coach said.\nASK ALL PLAYERS BACK\nHe said every member of the\nteam \"will be invited back for a\ntryout. Defensive end Bill Quinlan\nand tackle Les McClelland will enter the United States armed forces\nbut halfback Hal Waggoner and\nend Joe Shinn are expected back.\nVoyles said he will try to get in\ntouch with some Canadian and American college boys. He plans to\ntalk with Steve Oneschuk, star\nhalfback with University of Toronto and said he would be happy to\nacquire  Oneschuk.\nThe meeting ^of Big Four teams\nto draft college players will be held\nSunday, the day after the Grey Cup\ngame.\nFlyers   began   to   show   better j vendahl,    R.   Koehle,   McDougald,\nform late In the period and with   Gare, Nadeau, Rozzini, \u00a3chai.\nless than two minutes to play,\nCurillo notched the equalizer unassisted. The Spokane drive continued into the middle frame and\nGlno Rozzini sent the Flyers Into\nthe lead on a play with Nadeau\nand Frank Kubasek near the 11-\n\u2022   minute mark.\nLeafs bounced back soon after\nwhen, with the teams playing four\na side, Carmichael tied the game\nat 2-2 on passing play with Buddy\nMcDonald and defenceman Don\nMcGregor, who played another\ngood game for the Leafs. Less than\na minute later, with Rozzini and\nthe Leafs' Garnet Schai still in\nthe penalty box serving two-min'\nThird   period:\n(Jeffery)   2:47; I\n(Hodges)    9:37.\n(10-min.   misc.).\n7.   Nelson, Keller\n. Spokane, Plante\nPenalties: Tilson\nMcGregor, Schai,\nHodges, R. Koehle.\nStrikes n Spares\nDot Waterer returned to th<\nlimelight in the Senior Ladies'\nLeague by capturing both the single\nand aggregate honors Tuesday\nnight. She rolled a single of 288\nand an aggregate of 673.\nTeam honors went to Speirs, with\na 1029 single, and Korbin, with an\nute roughing\" penalties.\" Herb \"jef- j aSSregate \u00b0f 2677\nfery scored on another  pass from !    Those hitting the 200 mark were\nMcGregor.  Keller and Carmichael f i*el R,\u00b0g!!\u2122' \u2122' Ru.t\\MacKenzif \u25a0\nteamed up just over two minutes\nlater with Keller notching his second goal.\nWith onlytwo minutes gone In\nthe third frame, Keller registered\nhis  hat-trick  on  a  neat  passing\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954 \u2014 *\nEskimos Away to Grey Cup\nClassic; Allouettes Favored\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Edmonton\nEskimos leave by air today for\nToronto and their Grey Cup final\nagainst Montreal Alouettes.\nTheir special plane, a 48-pas-\nsenger Trans-Canada Air Lines\nNorth Star, is reserved each year\nfor the champions of tho Western\nInterprovincial Football Union on\ntheir oup trip.\nThe party is scheduled to leave\nEdmonton at'a a.m. MST, set down\nfor about 20 minutes in Winnipeg\nabout two hours later and arrive\nin Toronto at 5:40 p.m. EST.\nTwo hot meals, inluding a roast-\nbeef lunch after leaving Winnipeg,\nhave been ordered by Eskimo coach\nFrank (Pop) Ivy to be served en\nroute,\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Montreal Alouettes are hot favorites to win\n228 and 218; Dee Anderson, 227;\nLorna Speirs, 233; Maj Ines, 201;\nBetty Stewart, 204; Pearl Faren^\nholtz, 200; Vivian Cook, 208; Wilma\nStern, 205 and 200; Betty Wicken,\n! 203; Jean Butler, 206; Flo Gill, 205;\nplay with the flashy centremanjElizabeth  Korbin'  202;   F1\u00b0  Kel'y-\njeffery. i 200' and Mary McGinn, 223.\n' Larry Plante closed  the gap to |    The league standinS shows three\ntwo goals at the midway mark. The! teamS tied for flrst with slx points;\nFlyers tried hard to score the equal- j Koehle, Wicken and Morris.\nizers but a stout Leaf defence and)\nWhifey Ford Signs\nYankee Contract\nNEW YORK (AP) - Whitey\nFord, one- of New York Yankees'\ntop pitchers, signed his 1955 contract Wednesday for what he said\nwas a \"pretty good\" raise.\nFor the last two seasons he had\nTrail Curling\nDraws in the Trail Curling Club\nfor Thursday and Friday follow:\n6:30 p.m.\u2014R. H. Stone vs O. H.\nGill; G. R. Balfour vs D. Sutherland;\nJ. H. Mark vs J. D. Hartley; A. M.\nChesser vs E. A. Todd; C. D. Stuart\nvs H. T. Beckett; J. Atwell vs E.\nMontpellier; T. Rice vs G. S. Ortner;\nA. R. Robinson Vs A. A. Robb.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014T. Cumming vs H. Hargrave; J. Devito vs S. J. DelPuppo;\nM. Krause vs L. M. DeLong; P. F.\nMclntyre vs G. Morrison; J. A. Robinson vs A. B. Anderson; L. Landucci vs F. K. Fairbairn; J. D. Rae\nvs T. H. Weldon; R. D. Perry vs\nR. Bainbridge.\nFriday, 6:30 p.m.\u2014R. K. Dunlop\nvs W. A. Forrest; A. Crichton vs\nR. E. Hill; A. W. MacDonald vs S.\n,Smillie; S. Matovich vs L. Fortin;\nA. Snowball vs R. P. Dockerill; A.\nG. McKinnon vs T. D'Amour; A.\nForrest vs V. E. Ferguson; A. B.\nRoss vs W. L. Wood.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014D. MacDonald vs D. J.\nMinto; J. Wallace vs F. J. Plester;\nT. Mathieson vs D. McLennan; W.\nS. Ross vs J. Landucci; A. Dafoe\nvs R. C. Rose; R. McGhie vs H.\nMilburn; A. Balfour vs E. E. Per- .\nkins; C. H. Wyatt vs F. Wendell\nthe Grey Cup claislo against Edmonton Eskimos here Saturday.\nTho Eskimos were 5 to 1 underdogs In many betting circles here\nWednesday night. The bookmakers couldn't recall a Grey Cup\ng\u00abme where the West had as poor\na ohance as Edmonton has against\nthe Als. NEW YORK (AP) - Wally Her-\nEarly  in  the  week they quoted I gesheimer marked his first appear-\nRangers Beat\nBruins 3-1\nLivingstone's   Crew   pinned   it   on\nJim McFarlane and his rink.\nHugh (Pop) Bates, spending most\nof his time at the rink since retirement last year, is now coaching the\nnewer members of the Kimberley\nWomen's Club \u2014 in the arts of the\ngame. Nice going \"Pop.\"\nWe hear Ina Hansen is taking en been one of the club's most stub-\nformer teammate Isobel Leith, and't-orn holdouts,\na couple of more enthusiastic! Ford won 16 and lost eight in 1954\ncurlers to bring back the B. C.\" and posted a 2.82 earned run aver-\nWomen's Championship to Kimber-j age, bfst among the regular Yankee\nley. Good luck! Watch out Lil.       I hurlers.\nCottonwood Lake Plan\nWaits for Springtime\nIf plans for Cottonwood Lake\nmaterialize, and they show every\nindication of doing so, then the\narea will develop into a family\npark .next spring.\nBill Hepper ln charge of parks\nand recreation sites for the Forest\nService in Nelson stated Tuesday\nrecommendations have been sent to\nVictoria for approval.\nAlthough nothing can be done at\nthis time next Spring will likely\nPro-Rec Classes\nDoing Very Well\nEd Kelter, recreational director\nfor Nelson, reported Wednesday\nthat recreational classes this season\nare at a par with those held last j\nwinter. v ;\nKelter stated over 300 youngsters I    r,    Bruce,    J.    Braybrook.\nwere  taking  part and that every j Wicken, H. E. Dow.\nclass but one was doing very well, j    h.    Ronmark,    W.    Tickner,\nHe said that the senior men's class ' Brett, E. W, White.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nThursday nights second draw\nwill see a tie playoff and two sectional playoff games played.\nIn the tie playoff Ernie Ramsbottom will meet- Max Sample\nwhile in the sectional playoffs Jim\nLeeming will play J.. E. Young\nwhile Earl Hunt meets Rod Carmichael. *\nThe section playoff will likely be\ncompleted Friday.\nRinks chosen from out of the hat\nfor the second competition, the\nSharp Cup, first named being skips\nfollowed by thirds, seconds and\nleads, follow:\nJ. Campbell, Sid Rogers, L. Wigg,\nD. Plumpton.\nW, Defoe, E. Leeming, W. Shukin,\nE. Wallbank.\nW. Gold, F. Ozey. R. Beaton, T.\nFox.\nArt Gilker, J. Strachan, W. J.\nEbson, W. Joyce.\nH. Hinitt, W. H. Riley, R. Mcintosh, T. Thomps. n.\nJ. Leeming, S. Jeffrie's, J. Melville. H. Lange.\nJ. Milne, N. Sardich, F. E.'Scott,\nC. J. Clark.\nW. Marr, R.  Edwards, A. Ther-\nrien, K. W. Dixon.\nE. Ramsbottom, Mel Gee, B\nSchneider, Spare.\nD. Sample, S. Linton, J. Fargher,\nJ. McAfee.\nJ. Teague. R. Dennison, H.\nDoelle, Yo Hamakawa.\nJ. Thom, A H. Sinclair, A. S\nCook. R. Handy.\nT. A. Wallace, D. Yost, E. T.\nI Bodard, H. Kidd.\n|    R.   F.   Wallace,   R.   Riddell,   J.\nSpencer, H. McArdle.\nR. D. Wallace, J. R. Sinclair, N.\nCollett, B. Wigg.\nJ. E. Young, A. S. Lockwood, E\nMiller, S. Buchanan.\nJ. Bailey, A. Reid, T. Wiginton,\nL. Kennedy.\nN. Lutkiwich, W. Kitto, L. Bucci\nD. Spiers.\nC. Mattice, J. Alexander, W. Eckmier, E. Owen.\nW. Young, T. Romano, P. Filleul,\nSpare.\nW. Triggs, E. Hallbauer, L. Maglio, D. Coen.\nJ. Haines, W. Stern, J. Rogers.\nG. Belyk.\nJ. Sutherland. G. Schumaker, J.\nR. Taylor, A. K. McAdam.\nMontreal 2% to 3V4 favorites. That\nis, if you wanted tb wager on Edmonton, the bookies would lay 2%\nto 1. If you wanted Montreal, you'd\nhave to give them 3V4 to 1.\nThe odds went to 3 to 4 Tuesday. A fan had to bet 4 to 1 if he\nwanted Montreal or get 3 to 1 if he\nrode with Edmonton. Wednesday it\nwent to 3% to 5.\nIn Montreal the Alouettes remained solid 13-point favorites.\nAlmost -all betting was being\ndone on a point-spread, basis. Bettors wishing to wager on the Als\nhad to bet that they would win by\n13-point margin.\nOPENING  DINNER\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Grey Cup\ndinner, a $10-a-plate feast that at-\nracts football fans from across\nCanada, will start the big Grey\nCup celebration' in Toronto this\nweekend.\nAt least 650 persons are expected lor the dinner, held Friday\nnight on the eve of the cup classic:\nThe dinner, begun five years ago\nby a committee of men connected\nwith the game, will have G. Sydney Halter, commissioner of the\nWestern interprovincial Football\nUnion, and Frank Shaughnessy,\npresident of the International Baseball League, as guest speakers.\nSeveral me nwill be given plaques\nin recognition of their service to\nthe game. They include Joe Ryan,\nformer manager of Winnipeg Blue\nBombers and Montreal Alouettes;\nDave McCann, former coach of\nOttawa Rough Riders; Dr. Andy Davies, former president of the Rough\nRiders and Sepi Dumoulin of Hamilton, former president of the Ontario Rugby Football Union, the Big\nFour Union and the WIFU.\nance of the season with the first\ngoal of the game and Danny Lewicki followed with a pair as New\nYork Rangers defeated Boston\nBruins 3-1 Wednesday night in s\nbitter National Hockey League\ngame.\nThe victory, breaking a five-\ngame losing streak for the Rangers ,\nat home, bolstered their hold on\nfourth place, moving them three\npoints ahead of the Bruins. Boston\nhad a non-losing streak of four\ngames.\nHergesheimer, top Ranger- scorer,\nhas been .out of action since la-it\nMarch 11 when he suffered a broken leg against the Bruins. He scored\non a solo effort at 13:35 of the first\nperiod. That broke a shutout streak\nof 180 minutes and 50 seconds by\nBruin rookie goalie John Henderson.\nLewicki tallied his first goal at\n2:12 of the second period. His second came at 4:11 of the finale.\nLorne Ferguson scored the Boston goal at 19:45 in the last period\nfinally breaking through Johnny\nBower who was subbing for the\nRangers' injured Lorne Worsley,\ntheir regular goalie. *\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, New York, Hergesheimer (Ronty, Irwin) 13:35.\nPenalties\u2014Lewicki, Labine and\nHowell (major), Irwin and Labine,\nEvans.\nSecond period\u20142, New York, Lewicki (Raleigh, Guidolin) 2:12,\nPenalties\u2014Flaman (2), Murphy.\nThird period\u20143, New - York, Lewicki (Prentice) 4:11; 4, Boston,\nFerguson  (Costello)  30:45.\nPenalties\u2014 Irwin, Raleigh and\nArmstrong, Mohns and Chrystal,\nMackell (major) and Chevrefils,\nHenry.  \u25a0\nSKATING TODAY\nTiny Tots\n2:00 - 4:00\nChildren\n4:05 - 5:55\nW.\nhas again proved to be the difficult\none. with very few showing up.\nCLASSIFIED  ADS GET  RESULTS\nI. E. Kraft, Carlo Arcure, S.\nGatensbury, A. Schnieder.\nV. Davies, K. K. Lepage, Jack\nStrachan, Ozey Jr.\nCIVIC\nCENTRE\nDEC. 3\nHARLEM CLOWNS\nvs.\nKELSON\nNEW YORK CITY\nROAMER GIRLS\nvs.\nNELSON\nsee  the larld   developed  by  youth\ncamp groups.\nThe park site will see picnic\ntables erected and a parking area\nfor cars.   N\nThe Nelson Rod and Gun Club\nalso plan to do a little work on the\npark by helping clear the logs\nfrom the lake and make it ready\nfor fishing for the youngsters.\nThe game branch has also stated\nihe lake would be'stocked with\nI fish.\nFREE DELIVERY\niBoiikdtB&&M\nKOOTENAY   BREWERIES   LIMITED\nPHONE 24 ano 175\nBe Sure To Order by Brand Neipe\n\u2022 COLUMBIA   LAGER      \u2022 FERNIE LAGER\n\u2022 KOOTENAY \u2022 COLUMBIA\nPALE ALE CREAM STOUT\nEMPTY BOTTLES COLLECTED ON DELIVERY ONLY\nThis advertisement is not published or deployed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the'Government of British Columbia.\nRemember him on Cfiristtnas with one of these\nGillette Gifts\n\u2022 You'll get plenty of \"thank yous\" when you select\nGillette gifts for the men on your shopping list Each\ngift is practical, beautifully packaged and sure to please.\nss'V-'-r\neWT PACK ^ojsrtNS^^^^x\n\"ZS\"^*^\n0m\nm\nrream.plusane\n$2*o\nIN WS^\u2014*BS\n\u2022 * *\u00a3\\23w3\u00a35\u00bb\u00a3 4079!\ntravel case. ,\n'    \u2022 Months of shaving comfort are\n500 ahead for every man who gets to\nW attractive carton holding five 20-\nblade dispensers. 100 blades in all.\n;\u25a0.\u2022'.\u25a0 ;.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0-.. '\u25a0\u25a0.'.. ..   -'   \u25a0 -'    .' ' '\u25a0-.\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\n -m\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0;.;\u25a0 -\". \u25a0 ~~~\nPP.'\"  \u2022     ;\u25a0, '\u25a0'\u25a0' \" \u25a0 \u25a0.\u00bbV-- .; \u25a0'\u25a0 ^?BWWi\n_^__________r___\n5^(P5??S|..<   \"' ?.':'\n\u2014\u2014'\n\u2014< -wwpifpspww\n&7$\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THUMPAY, NOV, 25,1954\nL '\t\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\n<3\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nY\nW\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n8HKXS\u2014 ALLAH\nLOST IN mETKgDWr\nWElWACDUPLA\nSTRANDS Of\nHAIR\/TMCfrm\nVALOOESLE,\nm^^SB^i\nrim-,\n'OT VALUABLE 10-rW,\n'-BUtVeHtVVlUJtM\nto two sa&irmc&mt-\nMm lets lookmourm\nPOLKEEXAMINER KW\ntvcKtoup-ntSFifsr\nSTHANPOfHAm\u2014\nvajfl\n>, YOU EV&ft\nSLAVED A\nVIOLIN?\n,.,  ii  ,ii   i ii        li\n,N0,V\u00a3f*. HOhfoH-\n'BUT.IONCE-l'-FaJNe\ni ONE. OOULWTSELL\nrr-saiusEDiTTo\nBOIL SOUP IN.\nadmaS    ^ CM*~\nn*** *i\n*  VMANTTO   \"\n1 \u2022\u2014\u2122i\u00bb^\nPEimm!\nO Q J^~\nTUBMAN FROM *\"\nTUB RU9 OKNER'S\n*HBJE,PEW. I THINK IT\nWOULP BE NICE IP VOU\nSAVE HIM A HAND WITH\n, THAT HEAVY RU6\nCalgary Livestock\n' calgary (cp) -r. rnnutlm \u00bbt\nthe livestock yards were crowded,\nwith 41,000 cattle and calves oh\noffer. N ; ,   ' \u2022\nOwing to unusually heavj re.\ncelpts of cattle this week, yard\nofficials have advised stock raisers\nto curtail deliveries during the next\nfew days.        \u2022    \u2022\nGood and choice butcher cattle\nwere steady at Tuesday's levels.\nVlain anad in-between kinds about\nsteady but draggy; medium butcher\nheifers slow to easier; cows and\nstocker and feeder steers steady;\nstock heifers slow to easier; butcherweight heifer calves steady.\nHogs gained 75 cents Tuesday at\n$24.75 A grade and \u00bb17.50 live-\nweight for export; sows up 25 cents\nat $14 to $14.75; good lambs $16 to\n$17; few tops $17.25.\nGood - to near choice butcher\nsteers $10 to $20.50; commbn to medium $1S to $18.50.\nGood to near choice Butcher heifers $18.50 to $18.50; common to medium $10 to $16.\nGood cows $8.50 to $9.25; common to medium $7.25 to $8.25; canners and cutters $4 to $7.\nGood bulls $9.50 to $10; common\nto medium $8 to $9.\nGood stocker and feeder steers\n$16 to $17.50; common to medium\n$10 to. $15.50.\nGood to choice veal calves $18 to\n$16; common to medium $9 to $9.50.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne    .'.\t\nCariboo  Gold  \t\nEstella _ _\nGiant .Mascot ~\nGrandview   \u2014\nHighland Bell \t\nPac Eastern Gold .\n 48\n     8.00\n.75\n.._ .14\n,._ .54\n._      .17<A\n 41\n.14\nPioneer Gold      1.75\nQuatsino -      \u202216-\nReeves Mac _ -    1.65\nSheep Creek  75\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) -The stock\nmarket reached ahead to new highs\nsince the bull market peaks of\n1929.\nInternational Nickel, up 2H following Tuesday's increase in the\nprice of niokel, led Canadian issues\nhigher. Distillers Seagram rose ft,\nHiram Walker H, Mclntyre Vi, and\nCanadian Pacific 14. Dome Mines\nslipped tt.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The stock market, after breaking 20-year highs\nin morning trade, added more\nstrength in another direction toward the close.\nThe industrial index hit three\nsuccessive highs and at 1 p.m. stood\nat 373.02, best in 20 years. Then\ntoward the close base metals surged\nahead, gaining almost two pointa\non the day, and their index hit\n155.73, highest since July, 1953.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket moved to higher ground in\nactive trading.\nInternational Nickel jumped 2Vk\npoints and Ford 2. Algoma Steel\nwas \\Vt stronger while Asbestos\nimproved' Vt. Half-point advances\nwere scored by Walker and McColl\nFrontenac.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The stock\nmarket remained selective, unaffected by tho fresh advance on\nWall Street.\nGovernment securities continued\ndull with UttlJfUsposItion to enter\nthe market until the government's\nloan intentions'are known. Foreign\nbonds were mixed.\nSherritt Gordon  _.\nSilver Ridge    \t\nSilver Standard-\t\nSurf Inlet \t\nVananda\nWestern Exploration \u25a0\nWestern Tungsten \t\nYale\t\n0IL3\nAnglo Can\t\nA P Cons  \t\nCal & Ed\nCan Anaconda .\nCommonwealth\nHome \t\nMercury   \t\nMid West Gas ...\nOkalta Com \t\nPac Pete\n4.85\n.27\n.76\n.10\n.01V4\n.57\n.35\n.40\n4.70\n.63\n13.50\n.06\n4.20\n7.10\n.07\n1.68\n1.30\n11.62 V,\n7.30\n12.00\nPeace River Gas \u2014\nRoyalite   \u2014\nVanalta    \u2014 \u2122\nVulcan  \u2014.      .25\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates      4.95\n-m-mwmrmm IU1H mtm)\nft brightens yonr teeth\nThe delicious flavour of Wrigley's Spearmint Gum\nbrightens your day\u2014gives you a little lift .. . while\nthe pleasant chewing brightens your teelh. Keep a\npackage handy In your purse or pocket.\nTELEVISION for TODAY\nKXLY-TV\nChannel 4\n):00\u2014Thanksgiving Day Football\nGame. Green Bay Packers\nversus Detroit Lions at Detroit\nZ:00\u2014Big Payoff (L)\n2:30\u2014Bob Crosby (L)\n2:45\u2014Bob Crosby (L)\n1:00\u2014On Your Account\n1:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n1:45\u2014Brighter Day\n2:00\u2014Thanksgiving Festival\ni:00\u2014Love of Life\n1:15\u2014Robert Q. Lewis\n):30\u2014Garry  Moore\n3:45\u2014Garry Moore\n4:00\u2014T.B.A. *\n1:30\u2014Strike  It Rich\n5:00\u2014Dale Starkey Show\n5:30\u2014Range Rider\n1:00\u2014Barker Bill Cartoons\n1:15\u2014Uncle George\n3:25\u2014Weather Girl\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards (L)\n1:45\u2014Jane Froman\n_:00\u2014Star Showcase\n_:30\u2014Ramar of the Jungle\nS:00\u2014Pro-Football Hi-Lites\n1:30\u2014Clmiax (L)\n):30\u2014Lone Wolf\n):00\u2014Four Star Playhouse\n0:30\u2014Theatre\n1:00\u2014The Late Show\nKHQ-TV\nChannel 6\n12:15\u2014Test Pattejn\n12:30\u2014Color Test Pattern\n12:45\u2014London Blackout Murders\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014The Greatest Gift\n3:15\u2014Golden Windows\n3:30\u2014Matinee Melodies\n3:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00\u2014Hawkins Falls\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Ballad of Jacob Stein\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\n6:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Cisco Kid\n7:30\u2014Dinah Shore\n7:45\u2014News  Caravan\n8:00\u2014You Bet Your Life\n8:30\u2014Waterfront\n9:00\u2014Dragnet\n9:30\u2014Treasury of Plays\n10:00\u2014Lux Video Theatre\n11:00\u2014The Well\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\n12:35\u2014Bible Reading\nIN  CRE8TON  IT'8\nCreston Electric\nFOR   R.C.A.   VICTOR   TV\nSALES *AND  SERVICE\nMARCONI\nLIFE-TESTED TV\nHERMAN'S  APPLIANCES\n1241 Cedar Avenue\nTRAIL PHONE 668\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Praia\nB. C. Forest Products Ltd., 10\ncents, Feb. 1, record Dec. 31.\nJohn Labatt Ltd., 25 cents, Jan. 8,\nrecord Dec. 15.\nDominion Glass Co., Ltd., common, 26 cents plus 62 ty cents extra,\nJan. 14, record Dec. 28.\nThe Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, Ltd., 50 cents, Jan.\" 15, record\nDec. 15.\nPhlleo Television\nSales and Service\nJEFFERY RADIO\nAND APPLIANCES\n' 446 Ward St Phona 1302\nFor\nPHILCO TV\nSALES AND SERVICE\nCall In at\nKLINE'S FURNITURE\nAND APPLIANCES\n1474 Bay Ave. Trail\nGeneral Electric\nTelevision\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\n674 Bojtor 8t Phona 260\n_____\nFor\nG.E.  ULTRA-VI8ION  TV\nIt's\nTHE BAY ELECTRIC\n1460 Bay Ave. Trail\nPHONE 039\nTV INSTALLED\n$38.92 DOWN\n$14.50 per month\nIncludes Installation Charge\nYour Daily News\nBrings Entertainment and\nInformation to All the\nFamily'\u2014 6 Days\na Week\nWinnioeq Grain\nWINNIPEG  (CP)-Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, .83H.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.20V4.\nMetal Prices\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLead\u2014New York, .15.\nZinc\u2014East St. Louis, .11W.\nHiram Walker LI\nProfits Higher\nWALKERVILLE, Ont (CP)\nHiram . Waiker - Gooderham\nWorts Limited had a net profit\n$20,252,490 for the fiscal year en\nAug. 31, the annual report shoi\nWednesday. Net profit for the si\nperiod In 1953 was $19,093^24.\nSales   of   $330:285,815   were\nsecond  highest  in  the ' compai\nhistory.   Net   per   share   for\nwas   $7.02   against   $6.62   the\nvious year.\nThe company had $127,110,812\nworktag capital this year as c<\npared \"to $123,089,211 in 1953.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Claiilfiad W\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAI\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1954\n(Paciflo Standard Time)\n30\u2014Koffee and Kay\n00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Koffee and Kay\n15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Rise V Shine\n:00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Breakfast Club\n:45\u2014Serenade\n:55\u2014Behind the News\n:00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n:30\u2014Harmony House\n45\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n15\u2014News\n20\u2014Musicale\n30\u2014Story Parade\n45\u2014Coleman Concert Hall\n00\u2014Women's World\n:05\u2014Musicale\n15\u2014Shopping Guide\n45\u2014Consumers' Corner\n:00\u2014Noonday Merry-Gd-Round\n:15\u2014Sports News\n20\u2014News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n'5\u2014Hollywood Calling\n:30\u2014Specialty Shop\n1:45\u2014Musicale\nl:55-;Women Today\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlnoo\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n4:00\u2014Concert Hour     -\n4:30\u2014Time for a Story\n4:45\u2014Camp Wilderness\n5:00\u2014Wax Wagon\n5:15-The Lighter Side\n5:25\u2014Fashions for You\n5:30\u2014Sports News\nS^S^-Today in History\n5:40\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Hit Parade\n6:45\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30-Nelson Sr. High School\n8:00\u2014Citizens' Forum\n8:45\u2014Notre Dame to Enterta*-\n9:00\u2014Concert Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Night Spot\n10:30\u2014Sport* Roundup\n10:45\u2014Devotions\nU:00-NEWS Nlghteap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954\n(Paciflo Standard Time)\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014 Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited'\n9:00-CbBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:13\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\nll:00-Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcoes\n12:30-r-Farm Broadcast\n13:55-.FIve to One\n1:00\u2014Art Gallery Recital\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014National Sohool ^roadeas\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlnoo\n3:30\u2014Programs Resume\n3:45\u2014Share the Wealth  .\n4:00\u2014B. C Roundup\n4:30\u2014Anne of Avonlea\n5:00\u2014Current and Choice\n5:15\u2014International Commentar;\n5:20\u2014News\n5:_lo\u2014Folk Song Time \\.\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Sing foe Your Supper\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Toronto Symphony Pop (\ncert\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014The Nation's Business\n9:15\u2014John Fisher\n9:30\u2014Sports Page\n10:09\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Ballad Time\n10:30\u2014Curtain Melodies\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n:._._-__n auiiiais\nACROSS\nt. Diminishes,\nas coloV\n6. River\n(So. Ant.)\n11. Harden\n12. Native ot\nIowa\n1). Unaccom<\npanled\n14. Title of\nrespect fo?\na woman\n15. Loiter\n16. A play on\nwords\nIf. Evergreen\nconiferous\ntree\n18. Famous\nU. S.\nInventor\n21. Jobs\n23. The Thin\nMan's dog\n27. Sharpens,\nas razors\n28. Island near\nAustralia\n89. Projecting\nend of a\nchurch\n30. Harsh\n31. Young\nwoman\n33. Man's namo\n36. Wager\n37. Male cat\n40. The evening\nbell\n42. State flower\nof Utah\n43. British\nnovelist\n44. Lakes\n(Brit, dial.)\n45. Remover\n(Print),\n49. Fertile spots\nln deserts\nDOWN\n1, Occupy to\ncapacity\n2. Wild OX\n(Celebes)\n8. Strong,\nunder,\nground\ncells\nt. Before\n9. Southeast\n(abbr.)\nt. Musical\nInstru.\nment\n7. Danish\nweight\n8\/Absent\n9. Domesticate\n10. Afresh\n14. Disarrange\n16. Pastry\ndesserts\n19, Suffe; <d\n(Scot.)\n20. Artless\n21. Mandarin\ntea\n22. Leap\n24. Places\nwhere\nores\nare\nmelted\n25. High,\ncraggy\nhill\n26. Part o_\n\"to be\"\n28. THal\n30. Merganser\n32. Incites\n33.Frosted\n34. Measuring\nstick\n35. External\ncovering\nof\na seed\n_. 1-2     00   HHB\nHHHIHEIH\nHGH_._-.HB  HHHS\naiimsi Has.c_.t_i\ngBSEI   BHHSBE\nuauiiiaa\naaa tan    nam\nannatj Banns\naaaam lagane\nletton__r'\u00bb tmrtm\n33. fi-shaped\nmolding\n30. Flowerlcso\nplant\n41. Enemy\n42. Body\nof\n\u2022alt\nwater\n44. Missouri\n(abbr.)\n1\n1\nr~\nT-\n\u2022_-\n1\ni\n7\na\n9\nT\n11\nv4\nll\n1}\n^\nA'\n15\"\n%\nIb\n^A\nH\n^\nV\/\/,\n18\n19\nlit\n'^\n'^\n%\nil\nIX\n%\n-J\ni4\n75\n-S>\n27\n%\nIS,\n29\n(A\n30\n\/\/\/\n'\/\/\n<-v\n51\nIX\n^4\n%,\n35\n34\n3?\nft\nib\n^\n37\n38\n3.\nAO\n41\nM\n41\n45\nI\nAA\n45\n^A\n4b\n\u2022\n11-1S\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Hcro's how to work It:\n' AXYD LBA AX K\nIs   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ts utt4\n\/or the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apovj\ntrophies, the length and formation Af the words are all hints.\nEach day tht code letters are different,\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nKARQR WQR BYER YHARQ. HAWH\n1 I\n1   WOOYXD-1    GJPR    WDT    OAJCTQRDj\n8XH  WB  SJCCB  YP  O A WQLRB-S WO Y Tx\\\nYesterday's Crypt-quotet THERE, TOO, FULL MANY Alt,\nALDERMANIC NOSE, ROLLED ITS LOUD DIAPASON AF*\nTER DINNER - BARHAM. ;\nDistributed by King Festurti Irndlwtt\n:';<.        '   -   \u2022;\u25a0 ':    . . :,,:. \\     V. :_ y.} .\n__________________________________________\u25a0\n f-wmmmm'kw \u25a0 m\n\u00ab-_>|Ww<oWlo<oyw\u00abWo^^ ii ilMniriilw \\u*a imm*\nGolden Opportunities and Wise Buys\nA Daily Classified Directory For - The Buyer - The Seller - The Trader - The Swapper and Shopper\nBIRTHS\nDETTA \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Herman\nDetla of Silverton, at the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital in New Denver. November 20, a son.\nHelp wanted\nJANITOR FOR KASLO \"SCHOOL,\npreferrably with engineer's papers. Give particulars regarding\nqualifications and salary expected. Applications to be in by 12\nnoon, Nov. 27, 1054. H. W. McLeod, Sec.-Treas., School District\nNo. 6, Kaslo, B. C.\nKIMBERLEY CARRIER WANTED.\nFor Nelson News. Upper Lois\nCreek, new route to be opened\nby carrier canvass. 25c for each\nnew customer. Good possibilities\nof steady^ route. Ph. Mr. Bate,\n364-X, Kimberley.\t\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nHOUSE KEEPER ~WANTED~AT\nonce. Apply 612 Carbonate.\nFEMALE COOK FOR MAPLE\nLeaf Cafe, Salmo, B. C. Ph. 89.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED A C C 0 U N TAN T\nwould like evening work. Phone\n545-X-l.       \t\nFOR NEW CONSTRUCTION OR\nany repairs, ph. 434-X-2.\n RENTALS\nFOR RENT - ROOMING HOUSE,\nin the 200 block Vernon Street\nConsists of one independent suite\nand four separate bedrooms for'\nrent and a suite for renter. Apply\nP. Poulin. Phone 70. Box 130.\nPRIVATE HOME FOR WINTER\nmonths. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, dining' and living room, bathroom.\nFurnace. Only 3 blocks from bus\nstop. No children. $65 month.\nAvailable Dec. 1. Ph. 1773-R.\nFOR RENT: SMALL SUITE, BED\nsitting room and kitchen, suitable\nfor bachelor or two working girls.\nPrivate entrance. Phone 381-R\nmornings.\n3 ROOMS AND BATH, SEMI-\nfurnished. Vacant Dec. 1. 3 minutes to ferry. Phone 1623-L-2\nmornings or evenings. Con Cbm-\nmings. *\nTWO 2-ROOM CABINS FULLY\nmodern furnished, one propane,\none coal heated. Apply Grand\nView Auto Court, Phone 186-R-2.\n2-BEDROOM HOME IN ROSE-\nrnont for winter months. Box 9786.\nDaily News, or phone Trail\n1844- L-2.\nDWELLINGS TO RENT, CITY AND\nNorth Shore, $35 to $55 per month.\nT. D. Rosling, Real Estate and Insurance. Ph. 717.\n3 ROOM APARTMENT AND BATH\nprivate entrance, very reasonable.\nBlock from town. Vacant Dec. 1\nCall 306 Victoria St.\t\n2-ROOM, PARTLY FURNISHED,\nself-contained suite for rent. 723\nSilica St. Apply Suite 6.\n3 - ROOM FURNISHED APART-\nment, $45 month. 718 Silica. Ph.\n1342-L.\n2-ROOM UNFURNISHED APART-\nment, B room, central, bright,\ncomfortable. Ph. 1580.\nTWO 2-ROOM APTS. FURNISHED\nand steam heated. Hot and cold\nwater. Srtathcona Hotel.\nFour-r o o m,  unfurMshed\napartment. Fairview. Private entrance. Box 6866 Daily News.\nSINGLE   AND   DOUBLE   HOUSE-\nkeeping f-oom, private bath, heat-\ned. North Shore Motel. Ph. 1684\nTOR  RENT  -  3~_KDOM~APART-\nment. Furnished and heated. Ap.\nPhone 1062-R, Nelson, B. C.\n2-ROOM    UNIT    WITH    BATH.\nAutomatic   central    steam    heat.\nWinter rates. Philips Motel.\nHOUSEKEEPING   OR   SLEEPING\nrooms,    furnished,    heated     Day.\nweek, monthly  rates   171   Baker\nFOR RENT LARGE HOUSEKEEP-\ning room, suitable for two Gentlemen preferred   Ph  620-X\nMODERN  HOUSE  IN   FAIRVIEW.\nPh. 1287-L.\t\n4-ROOM   COTTAGE   FOR , RENT.\nClose in. Apply McHardy Agencies\nFOR RENT \u2014 HEATEDTToUSE-\nkeeping room for two. Ph. 405-L.\nWANTED  HOUSE  TO  RENT.  PH.\n1367 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.\nHEATED FURNISHED APART-\nment for 2 adults, Dec   1   -604,-R\n3   ROOM  CABIN ~AT ~912-STXTH\nStreet. Phone 1263-Y 9 a.m.-7 p.m.\nHOUSEKEEPING RM   FOR REN I\nPhone 1564-X\n\u2022Nelson* laihi Niutta\nClassified    Advertising    Rates:\n.   15c per line first inserlion and\nnon-consecutjve Insertions\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion\n48c line for 0 consecutive insertions.\n$1 56 line for month  (26 consecutive Insertions)   Box numbers   lie   extra    Covers   any\nnumber of insertions.\n' PUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc - 20c per line\nfirst   insertion    16c   per   line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL    ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROIvIFT PAYMENT '\nSubscriptions   Rates:\ntNot More Than Listed Here)\nif        By carrier par weejs\nln advance .30\nBy carrier $1500\nUnited States, United Kingdom\n*     One month ,     $ 1-25\nhree months     $ 375\nSix months    ....    $ 7.50\nOne year     $15.00\nOne year ... $10.09\nMail In Canada, outside Nelson\nOne   month              $ 1.00\nThree morfcha      $ 2.75\nSix months   \u201e     $ 5.50\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES.      BICYCLES\nSAVE\nUP TO $400\nOn No Trades On\n14   '\nFord\nSedans\nOnly 6 Cars Left\nUSED CAR\n1954\nMONARCH SEDAN\n1800 Miles.\nRadio. Automatic.\n^S? Monarch Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Ford Custom Tudor\n1951 Chevrolet Tudor\n1953 Consul Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1951 Consul Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1950 Prefect Sedan\n1946 Ford Sedan\n1938 Chevrolet Sedan\nPICKUPS\nOne New\n1954 Ford Pickup\nOne New\n1954 Ford One Ton\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1952 G.M.C. Pickup\nBrand new factory\nmotor.\n1951 Chevrolet Pickup\n1949 English Ford Panel\n1946 Ford Pickup\nTERMS and TRADES\nMEL    .\nPhone 1744 608 Vernon St,\n' Nelson\nTHE BEST IN\nUSED\nCARS\n1954\n1954\n1954\n1953\n1953\n1953\n1952\n1951\n1951\nAustin Sedan\nFord Fordor\nChevrolet Coach\nChevrolet Coach\nAustin Sedan\nZephyr Sedan\nChevrolet Sedan\nFord Tudor\nChevrolet Sedan\nMANY MORE\nCHOICE UNITS\nINCLUDING\nAN EXCELLENT STOCK\nOF LIGHT DELIVERIES\nSPOT CASH FOR      '\nLATE MODEL CLEAN CARS\nC^SH     TERMS-    TRADES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\n500 Blk. Vernon   Phone 1661\n803 Baker St.        Phone 1135\nNELSON, B.C.\nSACRIFICE FOR QUICK- SALE\n1049 Anglia 2-door sedan, $199.50\nPhone 532-R.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,    BICYCLES\n(Continued!\nFOR   SALE:   CREDIT  NOTE   ON\nnew or used car,  lB%  discount.\nPh. 331 or apply 563 Ward St.\nFOR SALE Ok TRADE, 1950 FORD\n4-door  sedan.  Ph.  461-X-3  after\n5 p.m.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF NELSON\nMUNICIPAL ELECTIONS\nPUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given\nto the' electors of the Municipality\nof the City of Nelson that I require\nthe presence of the said electors at\nthe'City Clerk's Office, City Hall,\n501 Front St., Nelson, B. C, on\nThursday, the 2nd day of December,\n1954, at ten o'clock, a.m. for the purpose of electing persons to represent\nthem as Aldermen and Police Commissioner for the City of Nelson, and\nSchool Trustees for. the City Area\nof Nelson School District No. 7.\nThe mode of nomination ehall be\nas follows:\nThe Candidates shall be nominated in writing, the writing shall ba\nsubscribed by two electors of the\nMunicipality as Proooser and Seconder, and shall be delivered to the\nReturning Officer at any time between the date of this notice and\ntwelve noon of the day of nomination, the said writing may be In\nthe form numbered 3 in the schedule of the \"Municipal Elections Act,\"\nand shall state the names, residence\nand occupation or description of\neach person prooosed, in such manner as sufficiently to identify such\ncandidate, and in the event of a poll\nbeing necessary, such poll shall be\nopened. Thursday, the *9th day of\nDecember, 1954, from 8 o'clock, a.m.\nto 8 o'clock, p.m. ln the Badminton\nHall of the Civic Centre,' 719 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C. of which\nevery person is hereby required to\ntake notice and govern himself accordingly.\nGiven under mv hand at the City\nHall, Nelson, B. C, this 25th day of\nNovember, A.D. 1954.\nC. W. R. HARPER,\nReturning  Officer.\nNOTE:\n(Representatives to be elected):\n3 Aldermen for two years.\n3 School Trustees for two years.\n1 School Trustee for one year.\n1 Police Commissioner for two years\nTENDERS ASKED\nBids will be received at the office\nof the City Clerk. City of Nelson\nup to Tuesday, 12:00 noon, Nov. 30,\n1954 for the demolition and purchase of the City gasholder only,\nsituated at the City Gasworks on\nRailway St. All metal must be\nremoved from the installation.\nDemolition of concrete foundations will not be required. Interested persons are asked to contact\nthe Gasworks Supt regarding\nmethods of demolition and the\nsuccessful bidder must be prepared to commence demolition wtlh-\nin one week of notification of\ntender acceptance and must have,\nthe site cleared  by January  31,\n1955 to the satisfaction of the\nGasworks Supt.\nC. W. R. Harper, City Clerk.\nCORPORATION OF THE\nVILLAGE OF NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C.\nNominations will be received for\nthe office of three commissioners\nfor the Village of New Denver at\nthe office of the clerk, between the\nhours of ten o'clock a.m. and 12\nnoon, Thursday, December 2nd,\n1954.\nElection, if any, will be held In\nthe Village Hall, on Thursday, De\ncember 9th, 1954,,between the hours\nof 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.\nF. H. ANGRIGNON\nClerk.\nNew Denver. B, C.\nNovember 22. 1954.\nLIVESTOCK.   POULTRY   AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n500 4-MONTTv-OLD WHITE ROCK\nby White Leghorn Cross Pullets\nfor sale at $1 75 each Any quantity can be shipped The Appleby\nPoultry Breeding Farm. Mission\nCity   B  C\t\nWANTED 7 GOOD FRESH HOL-\nstein milk cows. Give prices to\nBox 6856. Nelson News.\nPETS. CANARIES, BEES. ETC.\nBEAUTIFUL PEKINESE PUPPIES\nfrom champion bloodlines. Show\nand pet stock. Mrs. S. Abrey, 515\n19th St., N\u201e Lethbridge, Alta.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS   \u00abND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W    WfDDOWSON  i,   CO\nAs'sayrs. 301 Josephine St  Nelson.\n1'    S    ELMES    ROSSLAND    BC\nAssayer Chemist   Mine  Rep\nENGINEERS  AND   SURVEYOR8\nBOYD  C    AFFLECK,   M E.I.C\nBC  Land Surveyor P  Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson     Phone 1238\nA. L PURDY. B.C.L.S\nSul.    No  8. 373 Baker St.. Nelson\nPhone  1118    B   C   Land Surveyor\nS    V    SHAYLER   PC    BOX   252\nKimberley   Phone 54\nB C Land Surveyor. Engineer\nGRAVEL\t\nFLETCHER'S SAND AND CRUSH'\ned Grave. Wholesale and deliv\nered   Phone 1677 R\nMACHINISTS\n'\" BENNETTS LMITED\nMachine Shop    Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593, 324 Vernon St\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFAWCETT FACTORY - BUILT\nwhite enamel oil range; copper\ncoil, fan, some itove and water\npipe. Excellent condition, phone\n1507-Y.\nl-OOKS OF KNOWLEDGE, 20 V5T-\numes. World Book's, 10 volumes.\nLeatherette Jacket size 20. Call at\n308 Robson St.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED FUR\nniture, basement 801 Baker St\nPhone 47   \"Wa buy u\u00abed  lurnl-\n-   ture \"\nfOR SALE'bAftLBV,' toe PER IV.\nWheat, $2.10 per 100 lbs. F. Vick-\naryasi, Wynndel, B. C.\n27' HOUSE TRAILER AND BASS\nFiddle. For. details write V. Hanson, Salmo, B.C.\nFIFE - mTINUS - TUBES -\nspecial low prices Active Trading\nCo 935 E Cordova St  Vancouver\ndilROME SEt FOR SALE, LIKE\nnew. Ph. 1352-R.\nd-V6Lf   GOOD   CAR   BAffWT.\nPh. 144 in office hours.\nHAY FOR SALE. WRITE F. KER-\nshaw, Box 77, Nakusp, B. C.\nFINE p6rTHA_T_5' BV PtTtn 67\nCastlegar. \t\nW I C R O N I C HUARINO AIDS -\nWrite PO   Flox 39   Nelson   R(\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nHOUSE FOR SALE\u2014FULL BASE-\nmerit, 4 rooms not completed. For\nlow down payment $75 per month.\nFull price just $2500. On 7th Ave.,\nCastlegar. Write P. Gretchen. 2535\nBirch St., Vancouver, B.C.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SMALL\nhouse, Fairview or downhill. Box\n9574, Daily News.\nFOR SALE 4-ROOM HOUSE IN\nTrail. Small down payment. Ph.\n1173-Y.\nLOT FOR SALE. PH. 470-X-l\nevenings.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET1 PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron, steel, brass, copper\nlead, etc Honest grading Prompt\npayment made Atlas Iron St Me\ntals Ltd. 250 Prior St.. Vancou\nver   B C  Phone PAclfir 6357\nWANTED - SECOND HAND ARC\nwelder, complete with or without\nengine. Box 6869 Daily News.\nWANTED\u2014CHILD'S PEDAL CAR,\ngood condition. Box 6799 Nelson\nNews.\nWANTED AT ONCE~-^\" STRING\nbase, good condition. Phone 262-R\nWrite  1221 Kootenay St.\nMACHINERY\nCHAIN SAWS, NEW AND OLD,\nfor rent or sale and repair. Apply\nBud's Saw Shop. 806 5th St., Nelson   Ph  791-L.\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY: 8-\nfoot sawmill. Must be in good\ncondition. Box 700. Cranbrook,\nB. C.\nDeposits, Loans\nA) New Highs\nRevealing the highest capital figures ln Canadian banking history,\nthe 137th anual financial report of\nthe Bank of Montreal shows record\nlevola for deposits and loans, with\nresouroes at a new high (or the\nbank at $2,543,508,239. The report,\ncovering the y\u00abr ending October\n31, was released this week by Archie Burnle, Bank of Montreal manager at Nelson.\nThe bank's paid-up capital, which\nfor many years stood at $36,000,000,\nIs now shown at $43,927,912, following the recent offering of new\nB of M stock, while the rest account\nstands at $87,855,824. When the new\nIssue of stock Is completed, the figures will reach $45;000,000 and $90,-\n090,000 respectively \u2014 a total In\nshareholders' funds, exclusive of\nundivided profits, of $135,000,000\u2014\ntht highest figure for any of the\nchartered banks.\n- Beyond thla increase in the bank's\ncapital position, the most notable\nchange in the balance-sheet figures\nis the enlargement of $139 million\nin deposits, which stand at $2,365\nmillion, compared with $2,226 million a year ago.\nIncreases occurred in the holdings\nof government and other securities,\nnow totalling $1,170 million, aa om-\npared with $982 million In 1953.\nThese holding comprise the largest\npart of the bank's liquid resources\ntotalling $1,694,056,000, which equal\n70.17 per cent of the bank's public\nliabilities.\n\"Commercial and other loans\" are\nup from $787 million to $794 million, while call loans at $97 million\ncompare with $70 million a year\nago. A new item in the statement\nthis year is \"Mortgages and hypothecs insured under the National\nHousing Act, 1954\" at $10,880,652.\nThe statement of earning* shows\nthat, after provision was made for\nIncome taxes of $6,925,000, net profits amounted to $7,334,274, compared with $7,042,676 in 1953.\nDivldent payments to shareholders were $5,436,395 \u2014 about a million and a half less than the bank's\ntax bill \u2014 and represented the\nsame rate of return as in 1953.\nPERSONAL\nTHE ALMER HOTEL, OPP. C.P.R.\nDepot, Vancouver, B.C. 100% fire\nproof, 24 hr. Elevator Service.\nClean, quiet and comfortable. Reasonable rates. City Centre.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSMALL GROCERY AND CON\nfectionery business for sale Good\nlocation. Apply 1103. Hal)'Mines\nRoad\nCanners' Strike\nIn 2nd Month\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Strike of\nUnited Packinghouse Workers'\nUnion (CCL-CIO) at five B. C.\nplants of Canadian Canners (Western) Ltd., went into its second\nmonth Wednesday with a charge by\na union leader that the company is\n\"strike-breaking.\"\nBill Symington, union representative for B. C, claimed the company is shipping canned goods into\nB. C. from its non-union plants in\nManitoba and Ontario in an effort\nto break the walkout.\nCHARGE DENIED\nThe charge was immediately denied by a company official who said\nthe firm normally brings in canned\nproducts from eastern plants and\nis not asking for extra shipments\nbecause of the strike.\nMeanwhile, there is no sign of\nsettlement .in the 28-day walkout to\nback up the union's wage and fringe\nbenefit demands.\nThe union is striking at Canadian\nCanners' plants in Vancouver, Mission, Penticton, Kelowna and Ashcroft. About 500 workers are involved.\nThe union seeks a 25-cent hourly\npay boost and adjustment of hours\nduring the peak of the canning season.\nCanadian Mayors To\nMeet In Edrnonton\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The 1955 general meeting of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities will be held Aug. 28 in Edmonton the federation executive decided at a meeting here Wednesday.\nTho national executive, headed\nby Mayor Don Mackay of Calgary,\npresident, is putting the finishing\ntouches to a brief it will present\nto the federal cabinet Friday. It\nwill consist largely of recommen-\naationS made at the September\ngeneral-meeting in Windsor, Ont.\nElectric Workers'\nRequest Refused\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Aldermen\nheld firm to their decision refusing\na demand by cjty electric workers\nand Aid. Birt Showier warned that\na strike is unavoidable if the stand\nis continued.\nDemand that payment be made\nfor a statutory holiday which falls\non a day not ordinarily a work day\nis being made by the International\nBrotherhood of Electrical Workers,\nrepresenting 37 city-employed men.\nThe men do maintenance work\non the fire alarm system, traffic\nlights and street lights.\nUnion business agent George Gee\nsaid a strike vote had been taken\namong the men, but disclosed no\nfurther, details of it.\nz\nLAND #\n' ROVER\nThe\nGo\nAnywhere\nVehicle\n4-WHEEL DRIVE\n8 forward speeds, 2 reverse; has 2 power takeoff points, power driven\ncapstan winch can be\nfitted at the front or rpar.\nOptional metal or canvas\nhood. The world's most\nversatile vehicle.\n\u2022    \u2022\nPHONE 18\nPhone 792-Y Evening!\nNELSON\nMACHINERY\nCompany Ltd.\n'If It's Machinery You Need\nConsult Us First\" .\n214 Hall St.      Nelson, B.C.\nHEAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   UAILV\n3uy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954 -\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTho  Dally  New* does not  hold  ltoi.lt reapontlbla  in  tho  ovarii\nof an error  in tha following  Mitt-\n4\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\nAmal Larder \t\nAnglo Huronian .\nAre*   \t\nArmistice    \t\nAtlas Y K \t\nAumaque \t\nAunor .. \t\nBagamac   ....:...\nBarymln \t\nBase Metals \t\nBelloterre  \t\nBevcourt  \t\nBobjo   \t\nBralorne   \t\nBroulan  \t\nBrunswick   \t\nBuffalo Ank  \t\nBuff Can  \t\nCaliffan  \t\nCampbell R L ....\nCanvMal \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nCastle  Treth\nCentral Patricia\t\nCentral Pore \t\nChesterville   \t\nChiirib G \t\nCochenour \t\nCons Golden Arrow\nCons Denison  \t\nCons M & S \t\nConwest\t\nCons Discovery  ......\nCroinor   \t\nDelnite\t\nDetta R L  _..\nDome    \t\nDonalda  \t\nDuvex \t\nDyno\nEast Malartic   \t\nEast Sullivan\t\nEastern Metals*\t\nElder Gold    \t\nEstella \t\nEureka   .   .  \t\nFalconbridge   \t\nFrobisher   \t\nGeco    \t\nGiant Yel \t\nGod's Lake \t\nGold Hawk     \t\nGoldcrest     \t\nGolden   Manitou   \t\nHallnor\t\nHardrock   \t\nHasaga    \t\nHollinger      \t\nHomer Y K \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration   \t\nInt Nickel \t\nJoliet  Que   \t\nKerr Addison  \u2022\u25a0\nKirk-Hudson Bay\t\nKirkland Lake  _..\nKirk Townsite \t\nLabrador   \t\nLake  Dufault   -\nLakeshore    \t\nLake Wasa \t\nLamaque   \u2014\t\nLeitch   \t\nLingman (new)  -\nLittle Long Lac  .'.\nLouvicourt   \t\nMacassa    \t\nMacDonald  .'  \t\nMacLeod  Cock \t\nMadsen R L   \t\nMagnet \t\nMalartic G F \t\nMclntyre  Pore  \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMcMarmac    ...\nMcWatters   \t\nMining Corp  _.\nMoneta\t\nNewMBidlamaque \t\nNew Calumet \t\nNew Goldvue \t\nNew Kelore    _\u00ab\nNew Lund   -,..\u25a0\nNew Larder U\t\n.11\n.12-%\n18.79\n.41\n.16\n.13\n.12\n2.12\n.15V.\n2.30\n.33\n2.80\n.19\n.28\n3.00\n1.48\n9.75\n.62\n.62\n.18%\n8.40\n.36\n.75\n2.92\n.70\n.UK\n.33\n1.77\n.90\n.29\n1.32\n29.15\n3.05\n3.00\n.18\n1.00\n.17%\n16.35\n.36y4\n.20%\n1.19\n2.89\n4.00\n.61\n.62\n.15\n.90\n19.75\n4.25\n9.40\n7.95\n.64\n.24\n.20%\n1.75\n2.90\n.12\n.15%\n...   16.15\n.l-Vi\n52.50\n2.00\n55.85\n.47%\n17.00\n.47\n.36\n.13%\n8.25\n.70\nS.35\n.20\n4.10\n.68\n.17\n.58\n.13%\n1.75\n.57\n1.75\n1.67\n.16%\n1.71\n65.00\n.34\n.12%\n.12%\n16.00\n.45\n.36\n.12\n.13\n.13V4\n1.00\nNew Mylamaque  18\nNipissing        2.26\nNoranda     81.00\nNormetals    ,      3.25\nNorth  Can   65\nO'Brien    84\nO'Leary    24\nOsisko   55\nPamour    70\nPaymaster  44\nPickle Crop       1.15\nPlacer Develop     33.00\nPowell Rouyn  63%\nPreston E D       4.30\nQuebec Man  71\nQueenston  20\nQuemont      20.35\nRadiore    96\nRayrock    88\nReeves Mac       1.55\nRoche L L 22\nSan Antonio       1.45\nSherritt Gordon       5.00\nSigma M       5.20\nSilvermiller       1.02\nSlscoe   37\nStadacona    26\nStarratt Olsen  14\nSteep Rock  ;     725\nSylvanite        1.11\nTeck Hughes      4.10\nThompson-Lund    15%\nTornbill    30\nTorbrit        1.60\nTrans Cont Res  33\nUnion Mining  -      .16%\nUnited Keno     6.30\nUpper   Can         1.22\nVentures    _    17.00\nVlolamac       2.15\nWaite Amulet     12.35\nOILS\nAnglo Can _     4.90\nA P Cons  25\nB A Oil  \u201e    28.00\nCdn Atlantic      5.00\nCentral  Leduc   \u2014     134\nCentral Explorers         4.70\nChemical Research  _..    3.90\nCommonewalth Pete      4.23\nDel Rio      1.14\nFederated Pete        3.55\nHome     _     7-15\nImperial  Oil        39.12\nInter Pete  \u2022_....   23.00\nKroy   ?.....-......_      1.17\nMid  Cont  _ 45\nOkalta     _....      1-35\nPac Pete       11.75\nRoyalite  \u2014    1225\nRoxana    10\nUnited Oils            99\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi      25%\nAlgoma Steel    -    47\nAluminum    68\nMUST VOTE\nAll women 18 years of age OJ\nolder In Argentina must vote under the enfranchisement law of\n1947.\nArgus     19ty\nAtlas  St   13H\nBell Telephone   45Vi\nB C Elec 4s  02\nB C Elec 4>\/4s  103\nB C Forest       8%\nB C Power A   24%\nBurns B   46\"\nCan Cement    _  141\nCan Malting       70 J\nCan Packers A   39\nCan Breweries   25%\nCan   Canners  29 .\nCan Car & Fdy        24V4\nCan Car & Fdy A   24%\nCan Celanese   23.\nCan Dredge   16\nCan   Oil   16\nCan Pac Rly   28^\nCons Papers\nDist  Seagrams  v  34%\nDom Foundries    17VS\nDom Steel & Coal B   16%\nDom Stores ...  31M\nDom Textiles       IVt\nDom Magnesium  _.  12%\nFamous Players   -  27%\nFanny Farmer  :  27^\nFord A   ....    _..... 104\nGatineau   2BM\nGen Steel Wares  _ \u2014 10*\nGoodyear   -.... 170\nGreat Lakes    80V\nGypsum Lime  v  48VI\nHiram. Walker .._.  68VI\nImperial Oil   . S9VI\nInt Metals  36\nInt Nickel \t\nInt Pete  \t\nKelvinator  ....\nLaura Secord\nLoblaw A  ..\nLoblaw B\nMaple eaf Milling ..\nMassey Harris\nMcColl  Frontenao\nMont Loco\t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat Steel Car .\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River  \t\nPower Corp   \t\nRuss Industries \u2014\nSIckB Brew  \t\nSimpsons A  \t\nSoutham\nSteel of Can\nStandard Paving ...\nTaylor Pearson    ...\nUnion Gas of Can .\nUnited Corp B \t\nUnited Fuel A \t\nUnited Steel    \t\nWestern Grocers\n55'\/.\n23\n23V\n17V\n46\n71\n9V\n35V\n17 V\n33V\n25V\n62?\n39 V\n48\n14V\n27V\n18?\nS6V\n.   39\n26\n\u25a0   9V\n.   41\n1\u00ab\n,   \u00ab1\n13?\nno\nWeston George     62V\nEXECUTORS   AND   TRUSTEES   FOR   OVER   HALF   A   CENTURY\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\nbli WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER\n-.        GEORGE O, VALE, MANAGER\nConttill us,\nor our lorn-on office\no. 8 Si. Jatttot't Squat\nMA.  8411\nSally Stepper A\nTHE REAL\nWALKING\nJust like a real\nllttlo girl\nwalking wllh\nh\u00abr Mother\nSHE REALLY WALKS!\nTurns her head\nSs as she walks\nm '\u2022 STANDS-SITS-SLEEPS\n\"%'h   WASHABLE\n),' UNBREAKABLE CONSTRUCTION\nFREE!\nwith\nevery\nDoll\nBeautiful Dresser Set fo\nComb, Wave and Braid\nher fine\nwashablo\nA    HA1R\nm    WS&\n\u2022SMI BRUSH Mllll-Ot\nNationally Advertised\nat Much Higher Price\nNOW YOURS FOR ONLY\n3\n95\nLIMITED\nSUPPLY\nSALLY DOES\nEVERYTHING!  C*\".?\nSally Stopper Is ono of fho roost boenrft*\nllful dolls you'vo'ovor _oen ... oven to\nsmall details of dimples, flntjer nails\nand creases In her chubby arms and\nleg*. Sally hai long llfotiko Hair\nthaT can be washed, combed, waved\nand curled, set or braided. She con bo washed, drened and undressed\nIn standard doll costumes. Sturdily made of a naw shoekproof ploille\nfor years and yaars of loving play.  Sally Stopper Is the doll your\nfavourite llttlo girl would choose for herself.   Order Now af this\nspecial low price.\nSTRATTON MFG. COMPANY\n47 Colborne, Street, Oepl.\nToronto, Ontario\nJit ORDER NOW\n_*,*    Ti      \t\n10 DAY TRIAL OFFER\nIf you are not as delighted as tho :\ntittle girl herself whan you open tho\npackage, return package far full refund.\nMAIL NO'-WI'SK COUPON TO-DAY\nStraiten Manufacturing Company!\n94 Adolaldo Slratt West, Dept. Gn-0 Toronto, Ontario.\nPlssteruih  Stlly Stopper Witting Dolls & J3.B5 snd Include complete\nIres 3-plecn dresser set with each. It Is undiritood lint 111 im nut dsllttiled lull pur-\nthese prto will be refunded\nNAME , \u201e\nADDRESS \u00ab.\nCITY PROVINCE _____..\u201e......_..\n^close % \u201e Sinn\nCASH         [j CHEQUE\nMONEY SACK OUARAMTtE\n pp\u2014-\u2014\u25a0 \u2014\u2014 \"fpiipipi^^ \u2014 -xiri '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954\n! I\nOur Private Eye\nReports That:\n1. The ladies had better start giving each other\na CHRISTMAS TONI.\n2. One month from today the menfolk will have\ndiscarded their Santa suits and will be strutting\nabout bragging how easy it was preparing his\nhousehold for Christmas.\n3. Our BOXED GIFT WRITING PAPER makes a\nwonderful gift.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n' \"'\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\n: AMBULANCE SERVICE\nSIB Kootenay St        Phone 301\nBa\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n,610 FRONT 8T. PHONE 03\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono 827\n676 Baker Street\nfcPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n\"No Patronage\" Ban\nConsidered, Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The possibility of putting a \"no patronage\"\nban on five hotel beer parlors\nwhich allegedly refused, to serve\ngroups of mixed colored and white\npersons was being considered Wednesday by the Vancouver Labor\nCouncil.\nDecision to discuss the ban at its\nnext meeting was made by the\ncouncil Tuesday night following a\nreport on a survey made by the\nUniversity of B. C.'s Civil Liberties\nUnion, and a complaint by an East\nIndian research assistant at the\nuniversity.\nThe UBC group said waiters in\nfive beer parlors where service\nwas refused mixed parties \u00absaid it\nwas the policy of the hotel.\nAther Ali, the research assistant,\nsaid he was refused service while\nwith a party of white friends.\nSoliciting Jars\nLondon Visitors\nLONDON (AP)\u2014A leading figure\nin Britain's tourist industry said\nWednesday that prostitutes parading London streets disgust visitors\nfrom abroad and give the metropolis an unsavory aspect \"without\nparallel in the Western world.\"\nThe charge was made by James\nMaxwell, chairman of the Association of British Travel Agents, at\nthe opening of the association's\nannual convention.\nA government committee is Investigating vice conditions with an\neye to giving the police more powers to combat prostitution. Maxwell expressed the hope that the\ncommittee will suggest \"an effec-\nutal remedy to deal with this grave\nproblem\" before it is too late.\nMaxwell said many important\nvisitors have commented to him\n\"in most uncomplimentary terms'\nabout the problem. He added:\n\"It is almost impossible fop visitors to walk in the main thoroughfares of the West End at night\nwithout being accosted, 6r, a\"t any\nrate, being brought face to face\nevery few yards with the aggressive soliciting of street walkers,\noperating especially in the neighborhoods of leading hotels.\"\nOttawa's Monthly\nPayroll Higher\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Strength of\nthe federal government service in\nAugust exceeded 185,000 workers\nwith a monthly payroll of more\nthan $48,000,000..\nThe bureau of statistics reported\nWednesday that classified- civil servants totalled 139,696, up from 139,-\n475 in July and \u25a0 131,835 in August\nlast year. Their earnings rose to\n$35,912,345 in August from $35,861,-\n032 in July and $31,334,757 in Aug-\nust, 1953.\nPrevailing rate employees, casual\nemployees and ships' crews numbered 45,476 In August compared\nwith 43,166 in July and 40,166 a year\nearlier. Their earnings advanced to\n$8,879743 from $8,751,131 in the\npreceding month and $7,716,831 in\nAugust, 1953.\nWomen were admitted to the faculty of arts at McGill University\nin 1884.\nA Christmas Present\nFor Father\n\u2022 CUSHIONED WITH\nFOAM RUBBER\n\u2022 ADJUSTS\n'    AUTOMATICALLY\n\u2022 EXTENDS  FULL  LENGTH\n\u2022 SMART, LIVING ROOM\nLIVING\n10950\nand up\nHow father will love this adjustable chair that gives him\nfloating-on-air  comfort!   Tilting\nback and footrest gives head-to-toe'\nsupport \u2014 even for six-footers!\n<5^\u00a3A\/i\/10L. Home Furnishers\n441 Baker St.\n' Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 553\nNo. 3 Southern Trans-Pravincial\n\u2014Hope-Princeton, sanding where\nnecessary, Princeton\u2014Osooyoos\u2014\nCascade good, sanding where necessary; Cascade\u2014Rossland fair to\ngood; Rossland \u2014 Trail \u2014 Nelson\u2014\nCreston \u2014 Cranbrook \u2014 Fernie \u2014\nCrow's.. Nest, Trail-Salmo\u2014normal;\nRosslancl-r-Patterson, Creston\u2014\nPorthill,  normal.'\nNo, 6 Nelway-Vernon\u2014Nelway-\nNelson-Sputh Slocan normal; South\nSlotan-Needles-Nakusp - Needles\nfair to good, rough sections; Needles\n-Monashee fair, rough sections; Mo-\nnashee-Vernon   fair.\nNo. 95, Kingsgate-pranbrook-Gol-\nden\u2014Banff-Windermere \u2014 Normal;\nNelson-rtaslo, Kaslo-New Denver,\nKaslo-Lardeau, and Lardeau-Gir-\nrard\u2014Fair to good, rough sections.\nLabor Against\nExpelling Rebels\nLONDQN (Reuters) \u2014 Britain's\nLabor party Wednesday decided\nagainst expelling seven parliamentary members who defied party leader Clement Attlee's orders on the\nGerman rearmament issue.\nThe party's 28-member national\nexecutive board voted that no further action should be taken against\nthe seven Socialists. Tuesday nigtft\nthey were banned from participating\nin the,party's parliamentary orgafl-.\nization.\nThat means they will not be invited to strategy meetings of Labor\nmembers of Parliament, nor be consulted in any way about the party's\nparliamentary activities.\nSix of the seven \"rebels\" voted\nagainst ratification of the Paris\ntreaties to rearm West Germany.\nThe seventh voted in favor of ratification. Attlee had ordered all\nLabor members to abstain.\nArrest Over 125\nHot-Rod Drivers\nCOMPTON. Calif. (AP) \u2014 More\nthan 125 youths from 15 to 21 years\nold were arrested and their \"souped\nup\" cars impounded early Wednesday as police squads sought to\nbreak up illegal and dangerous hotrod racing on a divided highway\nhere.\n' Some 60 officers in 16 patrol cars\nconverged in a mass raid on the\nracing strip.\nSeveral of the hopped up autos\ntook off across bumpy fields, with\npolice cars roaring in pursuit.\nRaces up to 60 miles an hour developed. t\nAll the youngsters, including four\ngirls, were booked on suspicion of\nengaging in an illegal speed contest and abbetting such a contest.\nPreviously, when officers had\ntried to crack down on the hotrod racing, the cut-down cars had\nmanaged to elude officers because\nonly one 'or two police cars were\ninvolved.\n(oast Defence\nGuns for NATO\nVICTORIA (CP) - Modern progress has' finally caught up with\nthree mammoth artillery pieces,\ntwo of which have been providing,\nprotection for the entrance of the\nStrait of Juan' de Fuca for almost\n50 years.\nIt was reported here that the\n9.2 calibre guns, installed In the\nearly 1900's and never fired in anger, are to be sent to Europe.\nIn their long history the guns\nnever did anything more hostile\nthan arouse the ire of Greater Victoria homeowners by cracking plaster and smashing windows.\nThe thr;e installations, said to\nhave cost $1,000,000 each in 1938\nwhen moved to Albert Head, 20\nmiles west of here, are being dismantled to be sent to Europe under\nthe North Atlantic Treaty Organization's mutual aid program.\nArmy spokesman said the guns\nare ho longer of use to the Pacific\ndefence system.\nThe guns are powerful enough to\nlob a 385-pound shell onto the American shore 20 milse across the\nStrait of Juan de Fuca. -\nCOAST POLICE\nINVESTIGATE REPORT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nWednesday were investigating a report by Lorne Mitchell, 26, who said\nthat he was beaten up and thrown\n\u2022into False Creek here last night.\nMitchell staggered into the city\npolice station and said he had been\npicked up by two men, driven to\nthe vicinity of the B. C. Electric\ngas plant, attacked, and then thrown\ninto the water.\nHe collapsed in the detectives\noffice and was revived by a fire\ndepartment inhalator squad and\ntaken to hospital for further treatment.\nThe attack victim said he was not\nrobbed.\nAnnounce Dividend\n. VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 MacMillan and Bloedel Limited Wednesday\ndeclared a dividend of 12.5 cents on\nclass A shares and 20 cents on class\nB share* for the quarter ending\nDec. 31, 1954. The dividend is payable Dec. 31 to shareholders on\nrecord Dec. 10. '\n._.l_._l_l.l_..-..!___.l_._lll_____l__ll!lt__l__\nNo Post Office in'\n\"Heaven\" This Year\nLOY, Germany (Reuters) \u2014\n' Postal authorities Tuesday\ndecided against reopening their\nbranch off lea. in \"Heaven.\"\nFor several years, the tiny\nsuburb of Himmel (Heaven)\nhere has received letters addressed to Santa Claus. The\nbranch post office Is operated\nonly at Christmas time by arrangement with a business man\nwho tries to meet some of the\nchildren's requests.\nThe business man also founded a service enabling people to\nsend their Christmas cards\nthrough the branch office so\nthat they bear a \"Heaven\"\nmark.\nBut the post ministry announced it will not support the\nproject this year because of protests from church authorities.\nilllllllll.llll.l.llll.ll.lllllllllllMIIIIII.\nArmed Man Robs\nTruck Driveer\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A city coal\ntruck driver was robbed- of $528\nearly Wednesday morning by an\narmed man who threatened to blow\nhim \"to pieces\".\nVictim of 'a lone gunman with a\nnickel-plated revolver was Fred\nRobertson. An unidentified friend\nwas with him.\nRobertson told police the man\ncame up behind them as they were\nwalking through a lane near the\n300 block, Carral Street, and told\nhim: \"Give me your purse or I\nwill blow you to pieces.\"\n\"The man turned and fled down\nthe darkened lane after Robertson\nhanded over the money, part his\nand part belonging to the company.\nNeither man could see the man\nclearly in the dark alley, but police\ndescribe him as about five feet, ten\ninches, and between 25 and 35 years\nold.\nPARAGUAY JOINS UNESCO\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Paraguay has\njoined the United Nations educational, scientific and cultural organization, bringing the number of\nmember countries to 73, UNESCO\nannounced here Tuesday night.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c Una black face type; larger typo rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount (or prompt payment\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676. Baker 8t Phone 236\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arta Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nPYREX\nRecipe Book\n13 Piece\nChristmas Set\n1\u2014No. 212 Loof Pan\n1\u2014No. 231  Utility\nDish\n1\u2014No. 209 Pie Plate\n1\u2014No. 622 Casserole\n1\u2014Pyrex Cook Book\nAll the Above\nPriced at Only\n1\u2014No. 221 Rd. Cake\nDish\n6\u2014No. 462 Custard\nCups\n1\u2014508 Measuring\nCup\n*_&.so\n6\nPYREX 5 Piece Clear Mixing Bowl Set No. 97 $2.\nWood Vallance Hardware co.Ltd.\nPhone 1530\nWholesale-Retail\nNelson, B.C.\nTop prices paid for used furniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nFor Christmas Tojjs, let's go to\nEBERLE'S  JUNIOR   8HOP\nFree! Ring Inspection Service\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY, 611 Baker\nNails all sizes, per keg $11.95.\nCOLUMBIA TRADING\nFuller Brush Representative.\nDon E. Sergent - Phone 1335.\nPeople's Credit Jewellers. Phone\n1367, Mrs. K. Mason, Agent, Nelson\ndistrict\nCheck our displays of quality\ncarpenter tools for Xmas Gifts.\nWOOD   VALLANCE   HARDWARE\nFOR EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone B.  J.  Kelly,  378-R-3\nYOUR MIMEOGRAPH 8ERVICE\nJOYMAKERS\nWhist and Dance tonight, Eagle\nHall. Chickens as prizes.\nMartha and Mary Square Dance\nClub, Friday, Nov. 26, 8:30 p.m.,\nMemorial Hall.\nWagons for the youngsters in all\nsizes; wood or metal. Priced at $2.80\nand up. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nWorthwhile gifts of tablecloths,\npillow slips, towel sets, or dress\nlengths.\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOOD8\nMotors, radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh   pressure  Jenny   Service\n8HORTY*S REPAIR SHOP\n714 BAKER 8T.\nSmart plaid  towels  suitable for\ngentlemen. Red, blue, green, yellow\nor black.\nSTERLING  HOME   FURNISHERS\nHAVE YOUR RADIO TUBE8\nTE8TED   IN   YOUR   OWN   HOME.\nPHONE 1324-R\nREBEKAH TEA AND 8ALE\nOddfellows Hall, Saturday, Nov. 27.\n2:30 to 5 p.m.\nDoor Prize. Admission 26 cents\nAssorted   jeans,   lined   corduroy\nslacks, sweaters, etc. Special price\n$2.44 on bargain counter at\nEBERLE'S\nMen's   all   wool   cruiser   coats.\nDouble all the way through. Specially treated. Sizes 36 to 44, $14.95.\nWADE'8\nA new shipment of lovely nylon\nand silk scarves. Make excellent\nChristmas Gifts.\nADRIAN   MILLINERY\nChurch Council\nBacks Mulligan\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Vancouver Council of Churches has expressed full confidence in Police\nChief Walter Mulligan.\nThe council adopted a resolution\nsaying \"our relationship and dealings with Chief Mulligan have always been such as to inspire every\nconfidence in the jnan , personally\nand officially.\"\nThe council also said it \"regards\nwith grave concern recent action\nbf sections of the press and certain\nmembers of the city council in voicing violent criticism of the Vancouver chief of police, substance\nfor which criticism either does not\nexist or has' been withheld.\"\nThe church resolution was forwarded to city council.\nPHONY LOVE NESTS\nBRINGS ARRESTS\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Two Montreal\nprivate detectives, convicted of an\nattempt to set up a phony love\nnest to gather evidence for a divorce\ncase, were sentenced Wednesday to\n15 months.\nMaurice Pichette. 36, an Paul San-\nterre, 35, were charged with attempting to fabricate evidence and\noperating as private detectives in\nOntario without a licence. They\npleaded guilty only to the latter\ncharge, on which they were fined\n$200 apiece.\nThey were arrested after police\nalleged they installed a 25-year-\nold Ottawa waitress in a hotel\nroom here and then attempted to\narrange a rendezvous between her\nand a city man. But the| intended\nvictim became suspicious and police kept the rendezvous instead.\nThe waitress was fined $'50.\nCrown attorney Raoul Mercier\nsaid the Ottawa man might have\nbeen trapped for alimony payments\nfor the rest of his life.\nSTAPLE DIET\nRie, fish vegetables and plenty\nof fruit form the average diet in\nThailand, old Siam.\nGIVE HIM\nSOMETHING TO WEAR\nNothing would pleose\nhim more than one of\nthese all wool Cardigans\nor Pullovers. Also made\nin the zipper style. All\n.the new Fall shades.\nCARDIGANS:     $ft.95\nPULLOVERS:      $Q.95\nO Up\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nThe stoking frame, for faster\nprodution of hosiery, was invented\nby William Lee of Nottinghamshire\nEngland, 400 years ago.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole  Wheat or  White\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome-Made Bread.\nPHONE 238\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nREVOLUTIONARY!    NEWI\nERASE\nMax Factor of Hollywood\nHides Blemishes and Shadows\nConceals Skin  Discolorations\nLightens Shadows\nUse Before Makeup\n$1.95\nCity Drug\nYOUR REXALL PHARMACY\n658 Baker 8t. Phone 895\nFL0WER8 FOR  EVERY\nOCCASION\n,      PHONE 187\nGRIZZELLES* FLORISTS\nLADIES . . . HAVE YOU\nWINTERIZED?\nFall and Winter Corsages in a\nwonderful assortment. Only 75c ea\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER 8HOP\nShop from our'%-price window:\nBooks, Toys, China, Plaques, etc.\nWonderful gift ideas.\nKOOTENAY   STATIONERS\nAND SPORTS SHOP\nSHEET PLASTIC\nVa\", 3\/16\", Vi\" Lucite Sheets, 36\"\nx48\", or cut sizes always in stock at\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St. \u2014 Nelson\nHow about a new circular bench\nsaw for Pop for Christmas? Or we\nmight suggest a ball-bearing planer,\nelectric sanding, or perhaps a new\nelectrii motor?\npiPPERSON'S\nCITY OF NELSON\nNotice of Sale\nCity Lots\nTENDERS will be received by the undersigned\nuntil Monday, December 6, 1954, at 5 p.m. for the\npurchase of lots 1 and 2 in Block 58, Map 349, City\nof Nelson, situated on the South-East comer of Delbruck arid Falls Strefets. .\nState purpose for which property will be used ond\nimprovements to be erected.\nThe highest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\n,       C. W. R. HARPER,\nCity Clerk.\nDated at Nelson, B.C. this 25th day of November, 1954\nStar\nOLMmStaJL\n5ajdwuj. (DsLpwdmsLut\nCOFFEE: $1 1-7\nStar Grocery Brand;        Lb      I \u2022 I   *\nTEA BAGS:\nTenderleaf, 60's;   - pfct\nINSTANT PUDDINGS:        J\n  mm^\n\"pkts.\npkts.\n1 lbs.\nRoyal; \t\nJELLY POWDERS:\nRoyal, Strawberry, Raspberry, Cherry;\nCHEESE WHIZ:\nLarge. 16 oz. jar _\t\nMARGARINE:\nAllsweeft   \t\nPEANUT BUTTER:\nMcColl's;  24 oz. jar\nCOCOANUT OIL SHAMPOO:\nWoodbury's, %-Price Sale; $1.20 size only\nWOODBURY'S LOTION:\nLanolin Rich, %-Price Sale;     $1.40 size only\nCOLGATE BEAUTY SOAP:  3\n .'. ,  m. bars\n(YYhjaL 0\u00a3pivdmmL\nFRYING CHICKEN:\nB.B.B., Cut Up Ready for the Pan;    Lb.\nPHEASANT CHICKEN:\nFor Roasting,' B.B.B.;   Lb.\nSTEAKS:\nBaby Blue Beef, Sirloin, T-Bone, Club;   Lb.\nDELICATED STEAKS:    ,\nBlue Brand Beef; Lb.\nROUND BONE ROASTS:\nBlue Brand Beef;  Lb.\n77*\n29*\nmt nlrtj. etmj\n67*\n75*\n59*\n59*\n69*\n27*\n(phodvLcs, QsLpwdmsttt\n2\n2\n2\n2\nCALIFORNIA ORANGES:\nNew Crop Navels, Size 252's;  \t\nFLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT:\nWhites, Size 80's;   \t\nTOKAY GRAPES:\nlbs.\nlbs.\nlbs.\nMclNTOSH APPLES:\nFancy Wrapped;  \t\nTOMATOES:\n14-oz. Cello Tubes;  i _ Each\nCABBAGE:\nSolid, Green Heads:  - Lb.\nCLIP TOP CARROTS: J\n20-oz.  Cello  Pkts.;          mm\nNORTHERN SPY APPLES:\n1 for\nExcellent Cookers;\nlbs.\n59*\n55*\n69*\n59*\n39*\n29*\n29*\n31*\n25*\n23*\n7*\n29*\n* STAR *\nGROCERY\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\n488 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 10\n________ :        : '\n\u25a0   \u25a0-       - \u25a0__\u25a0_\u2014\n__________________________________\u25a0\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_11_25","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\/1.0427955","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":"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:\/\/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":"1954-11-25 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":"1954-11-25 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":""}]}