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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":" Canada-Soviet\nTrade Pact\nDrafted\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A draft Canada-Russian trade\nagreement has been concluded here and sent to the governments of the two countries for action.\nA trade department official said Monday the draft\npact was put together late last week by Canadian and\nRussian negotiators after nearly four weeks of meetings.\n; Its   terms   may   be   made\nParliament\nMonday\nBy The Canadian Press\nH. W. Herridge (CCF\u2014Kootenay West) urged the government\nto call a federal-provincial conference on soil, forests and water\nconservation.\nAuguste   Maltais    (L \u2014 Charlevoix) suggested instead a federal-\nterms    may\npublic in a few days.\n\"The draft agreement has been\nsent to Moscow and to the government here,\" he said.\nA joint announcement on the\nsigning of a trade treaty will be\nmade, following consideration of\nthe draft by the two governments\nand the official signing. The Canadian announcement on details\nof the pact will be made in the\nCommons by Trade Minister\nHowe.\n\"The date of the announcement\nprovincial inventory of resources I mostly will depend on the length\nso Ottawa might give provinces; of time it takes Moscow to study\naid within its jurisdiction.\nMervyn A. Hardie (L\u2014Mackenzie River) requested government\naction to stop the depletion of\ncaribou in the Northwest Territories.\nPipeline Break\nFires Homes\nthe draft,\" the official said. \"There\nmay be an announcement in a\nday or two.\"\nThe treaty is expected to be of\nthe \"most-favored nation\" type.\nThis would put Russia on the\nsame basis for trade, in goods\ncovered by the pact, as the United\nStates and other countries with\nsimilar agreements with Canada.\nThis also is the basis on which\nCanada trades with Communist\nPoland, Czechoslovakia and\nChina.\nThere is no indication here what\nWEST  LOS   ANGELES,  Calif.   Canada win take from Russia\n(AP)\u2014 A-district of several square; der th\u20ac treaty,\nmiles was declared an emergency\narea today after gasoline from a\nsevered ^pipeline ignited several\nhomes.\nThree persons were taken to\nSanta Monica hospital for emergency treatment.\nAll fire units in the area were\ndispatched to the scene, about 18\nmiles west of downtown Los Angeles.\nA mechanical trench digger\nworking on construction of the\nSepulveda freeway cut the gasoline line about, midmorning. The\ngasoline flowed into sewers and\nignited an estimated nine homes\nand one commercial building,\ngome as far as a mile away. There\nwere several explosions.\nFiremen went through the\nemergency ares 'ordering householders to turn off all natural gas\nand any electrical appliances that\nmight cause sparks.\nThe pipeline runs from Ventura, 55 miles north, to Wilmington, near Los Angeles harbor.\nmiuiriiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiitiHiii\nTells of Prudham\nFish Revival\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A fish\nstory about how Mines Minlt-\nter Prudham iuecesifully tried\nartificial resuscitation on fish\nwas related In the Commons\nMonday.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF-Koote-\nnay West) told the story during a speech on conservation\nof natural resources.\nHe said that last summer\nMr. Prudham was with a\ngroup of anglers In the Rocky\nmountains who caught more\nfish 1-han they could eat. After\nsupper they had some fish left\nover,\nThe minister's conservation\nInstinct went to work,\" Mr.\nHerridge said. Mr. Prudham\ntried artificial resuscitation\nand brought the fish back to\nlife. They swam away,\n\"That's a true story,\" the\nCCF member declared,\nii 111 r 11111111111111111 e 11111111111111111 f 11111\nPROSPECTS LIMITED\nLast fall Mr. Howe said trade\nprospects are limited since Russia\nproduces the same things as Canada.\nIn the first 10 months of last\nyear Canada sold Russia $2,672,000\nworth of goods, mostly wood pulp\nand vegetable oils. It imported\n$554,000 worth of Russian goods,\nmostly furs.\nHowever, reports here say the\ntreaty may involve the sale to\nRussia of millions of dollars worth\nof Canadian wheat.\nRussia would pay in dollars for\nany Canadian wheat, thus opening a new market for surplus\nCanadian stock.\nJOSEPH CLIFFE,\nPIONEER EDITOR\nAT GOLDEN DIES\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Joseph\nByron Cliffe, 79, former editor and\nmember of a pioneer newspaper\nfamily, will be buried here today.\nHe died last week.\nMe was born In St, Catharines,\nOnt., one of four sons of Charles\nCliff, founder and operator of\nseveral newspapers including\nthe Sandon Morning Record,\nJoseph Cliffe was editor of the\nGolden Star during the early\n1900.\nHe operated a book store in\nKamloops until he came to Vancouver in 1920 and was a manufacturer's agent when he retired in\n1938.\nSurviving are his widow and\nthree sons\u2014Charles of Calgary;\nWilliam of Edmonton; and Walter\nof Vancluver. A daughter and\nthree brothers\u2014William of Ymir,\nHerbert of Sault St. Marie,' Ont.,\nand Osborne of Chicago, also survive.\nDeclares Innocence\nIn Fraud Charges\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014R. E. Sommers resigned Monday!\nnight as minister of lands and forests in British Columbia's\nSocial Credit government. ;\nMr. Sommers announced his resignation in the;\nlegislature after declaring that he was innocent of any\nwrongdoing in his office.\nPremier Bennett rose to say he would consider\nthe resignation and probably make a statement in the;\nHouse Tuesday. I\nMr. Sommers condemned what he described as a J\ncampaign of \"distortion, falsification and villification\"\nwaged against him in the so-called \"Sturdy case.\"\nA suit for slander started by Mr. Sommers against\nVancouver lawyer David Sturdy now is before the courts,\nThe suit is based on charges made by Mr. Sturdy before\nthe -Sloan forestry commission.\nIn his statement read to a hushed Legislature Mr. Sommers said:\n\"Never at any time have I used\nmy ministerial office for personal\ngain, either directly or. indirectly,\neither morally or technically.\n\"To the  beit of  my  knowledge 1 have never, at any time,\nviolated the oath of office that\nI took on becoming a minister ot\nthe crown.\"\nMr. Sommers said that since\nthe start of the current legislature session Jan. 17. \"taunts and\naccusations, rumors and innuendo\nhave been spread through this\nhouse and across the pages of\nsome of our local newspapers.\n$1 Billion To Be Spent on\nRoads, Bridges, Says Bennett\nATTACK TWO-FOLD\n\"The attack is two-fold. It is\naimed at defeating the government and at discrediting myself\nas minister of lands and forests.\n\"I am told that the fact that I\nhave declined to defend myself\nor to accept the caustic recommendations of my friends, in the\nopposition, is looked upon as a\nconfession of guilt.\n\"I want to straighten out the\nmembers of this House and the\npeople of British Columbia on this\npoint right now.\"\nThe    dramatic    announcement\nwas made while the House was in\ncommittee   dealing   with   1956-57\nestimates. When discussion started\nj on Mr. Sommers' salary as minis\nR. E. SOMMERS\nmaster until now \"for reasons\nwhich I, believed were sound.\"\n\"The charged that have been\nmade\u2014and I regret that I cannot\nexpress an opinion on them at this\ntime, because they are part of a\ncourt action\u2014involving not only\nmyself. '\n\"Also named, are several im-\nporunt industrial corporations-\ncompanies that have been and\nstill are important factors in the\ndevelopment of this province.\"\nBackground of the case was\nalso outlined by Mr. Sommers in\nter of lands and forests he   rose! his statement.\nBennett to Ottawa\nFor Meet March 9\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier\nBennett said in the legislature today he will leave next Monday\nto attend a federal-provincial tax\nconference   in   Ottawa   March  9.\nMrs. Zucco Quits Legislature\nSteps Until Wicks Studies Case\nVICTORIA (CP)4 \u2014 A protest'\ndemonstration on the steps of the\nlegislative building was called off\nMonday, at least temporarily, by\nMrs. Bernice Zucco and her three\nyoung children.\nMrs. Zucco, who is seeking a\ngovernment pension for her bedridden husband, left with the\nchildren for the home of friends\nhere after a meeting with labor\nminister Wicks.\nMr. Wicks made a statement in\nthe house that he is studying the\nsituation. There was a \"dispute\"\nover how long Mr. Zucco had been\na miner, the minister said, and he\nhoped to be able to reach an understanding soon.\nMr. Zucco wants the workmens'\ncompensation board to pay a\nsilicosis pension to her husband,\nJack, 44. She says he now suffers\nfrom tuberculosis which blocks\nout the evidence of silicosis on X-\nray plates.\nLabor minister Wicks said it\nwas \"unfortunate\" that Mrs, Zucco\nhad never correspondend with him\non the matter and given him\nto make the statement\nPreviously opposition members\nhad said they would read Mr.\nSturdy's statement of defence in\nthe. slander action in the House\nwhen the salary vote came up.\nOpposition members have demanded during the session that\nMr. Sommers resign while a full-\nscale inquiry is made into the allegations. The demand^ were intensified when it was disclosed\ntwo weeks ago the RCMP had\nbeen   called  in  to  investigate  a\n\"body of evidence\" said to be held  accepted bribes.\nCHARGE  PHONY\n\"About a year ago an individual\nnamed Eyersfield fled to California after' I am informed, unsuccessfully attempting to' shake\ndown his employer in Vancouver.\nWith him, this man who had been\na trusted employee, took photostatic copies of a large number of\ndocuments belonging to his employer.\n\"These documents, it h claimed,\nare the evidence that show that\nthe minister of lands and forests\nchance to order an investigation. I warm.\nHe referred to a report made in\nOctober last year by Dr. A. R.\nRiddell of Toronto which stated\nthan an eximination failed to support a diagnosis of silicosis in Mr.\nZucco's case.\nMrs. Zucco said she had been\nasked to obtain more information\nabout the case and expected to\nhave another meeting with Mr.\nWicks.\n\"Now that I've seen him. I\nwill not stop now until I've definitely won my victory,\" she said.\n\"I'd like to have the act changed.\"\nMrs. Zucco indicated she will\nremain in Victoria until some\ndecision is reached. The family arrived here from Vancouver Monday morning.'\nShe spent most of the morning\ncamped on the stone steps of the\nbuildings with her children, aged\n13, 11 and 6. There was a slight\ndrizzle and a chill wind blowing\nfrom the harbor.\nSome MLA's brought out coffee\nfor Mrs, Zucco and two of the\nchildren were taken Inside the\nbuildings for a short time to get\nby Mr. Sturdy.\nAttorney-General Bonner has\nalso been severely criticized\nfor falling to order an Immediate inquiry when Mr. Sturdy\nfirst made the charges to him\nlast October before going to\nthe Sloan Commission.\nKEEPING  HOUSE SEAT\nMr. Sommers, 45, did not resign\nhis legislature seat He has represented Rossland-Trail riding since\nSocial Credit took office in 1952.\nPresent standing of the House\nis Social Credit 28, CCF 14, Liberals four and Independents two.\nMr.  Sommers began his legislature statement   by saying:\n\"The time has come to break\nmy silence on a matter which has\nbeen booted about in this House\nin a most irresponsible and reprehensible manner and which has\nbeen the subject of the most dirty\nand slanted news coverage in the\nhistory of B. C. conducted principally by Mr. Stuart Keate, publisher of the Victoria Daily Times.\n\"Ever since I took office as\nminister of lands and forests, my\ndepartment and myself personally\nhave been subjected to a continuous and increasingly bitter attack.\n\"The stakes are large enough\nto warrant the expenditure of\nthe hundreds of thousands rff\ndollars that have been Invested in this campaign of destruction in the past 3'\/2 years.\n\"The ultimate objective, I can\nassure you, Is to wipe out all\nlegislation that provides for\ngovernment control In the cutting of our forests,\"\nMr. Sommers said he had refrained from commenting on the\nTrail Buses\nBeing Sold to\nKitimat Firm\nTRAIL (CP)\u2014Buses which rolled through Trail three weeks ago,\nwill  go  into service in Kitimat.\nInterior Stages Lto\\, strikebound since February 10, announced Monday it is surrendering its licence for the city service\nand selling six twin-coach buses\nto the Kitimat Transportation\nCompany.\nInterior Stages officials said the\nfirm is surrendering only its city\nlicence, retaining the franchise\nfor the Rossland - Salmo - Nelson\nrun which remains struck.\nThe sale leaves the company\nwith four buses of a fleet of 11\nbuses ^nd two trucks. Union officials were not available for\ncomment.\nNo price was disclosed on the\nbus sale.\nBus drivers struck to back de-\nmands for a wage increase to $1.56\nan hour from $1.43.\nSunday Sport\nIssue Takes \u00bb\nHume to Victoria\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mayor\nFred Hume flew to Victoria today\nto seek a personal meeting with\nPremier Bennett in an eleventh-\nhour effort to allow Sunday\nsports in Vancouver.\nCorporation counsel Russell\nBaker went with him.\nBefore leaving, Mr. Hume said\nhe personally is opposed to commercial sport on Sundays, Vancouver citizens voted in favor\nof the change in a plebiscite last\nDecember.\n\"I will do everything possible\nto have those wishes carried out,\"\nthe Mayor said.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nFilled the Church\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP)\u2014Salesman Kenneth Rlchell kept his\npromise to fill the First Methodist Church for the Sunday\nevenings services.\nRltchell took it on himself\nto get more people to attend\nthe services. Going on the\ntheory that almost everyone\nwill go to church if someone\nInvites them, he Invited members of ill denominations, en-\n. tire clubs and a whole host of\ncelebrities. Few of the celebrities made It\nThe plan worked anyway.\nRltchell estimated that more\nthan 2700 persons showed up\nSunday night.\nIf extra chairs hadn't been\n\u2022 available, there would have\n.been standing room only.\nHe used prayer, persuasion,\npersonal letters and invitations Newspapers, radio and\ntelevision helped spread his\nInvitation to \"come fill your\ncup with good fellowship.\"\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII\nCOULD DESTROY\nWORLD'S CITIES\nMANCHESTER, Eng. (Reuters)\n\u2014The scientific corrsepondents of\nthe Manchester Guardian writes\nthat \"the United Kingdom now\nhas enough nuclear explosive in\nits own possession to destroy\nevery large city in the world, and\nprobably most of the large towns\nwell.\"\nHe estimates the stockpile of\nnuclear material in Britain\nenough to make 2300 and 4000\natomic bombs. The U. S. stockpile\nof atomic explosives was \"much\nlarger than the amount needed for\n32,500 bombs.\"\n\"Let me tell you that this charge\nis as phony as the man who makes\nit.\"\n\"In December, this trusted employee sneaked back into Canada\nand swore to an affidavit before\nhis old friend, Sturdy. He stayed\nin this country long enough to appear once before the attorney-\ngeneral then he hurried back to\nLos Angeles where he would be\nsafe from any prosecution except\nfor extraditable crimes.\n\"The purpose of the visit to\nthe attorney-general, as you know\nwas to demand a royal commission to investigate these charges.\nSuch a plan was perfected suited\nto the campaign of those who have\nattacked this government and the\nforest management licence system.\n\"We in British Columbia have\nhad some experience with royal\ncommissions of this kind in the\npast year. We know how they\ncan be used as a vehicle for publishing hearsay, half truths, of\nembarrassing and smearing individuals and groups and corporations. Regardless of the final outcome, the reputations and even\nthe lives of the innocent persons\ncan be irreparably damaged\nthrough a vicious campaign of\nhatred.\n\"On the other hand, the courts\nof law are set up to deal with\ncriminal offences and to protect\nthe civil rights of our citizens. If\nthere was one shred of evidence\nto show that I had been guilty of\na violation of my oath of office,\nthe lawyer Sturdy as he wall\nKnows, had only one legitimate\ncourse of action\u2014to take his.client\nEversfleld before the local court\nclerk and have him swear out an\nNO INQUEST IN DEATHS\nBROCKVILLE. Ont., (CP) \u2014\nThere will be no inquest into the\ndeaths last week of Nancy Ann\nMoore, 19, and her boy friend,\nGerald Walker, 26. it was announced Monday. The two were\nfound shot to death in Walker's\ncar Wednesday. Crown attorney\nHarworth Atkinson said police\nhave labelled the shootings murder and suicide, believing Walker\nshot tht girl through the head\nwith a .22-calibre rifle and then\nturned the weapo non himself.\n\"Urgent Need\" Forced Use of Toll\nPrinciple, Looks to Tourist Revenue\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Expenditure of one billion dollars on new highways and bridges in B.C. in the next\n10 years is planned by the Social Credit government,\nPremier Bennett said Monday.\nThe statement was made during an impassioned\ndefence by the premier in the legislature of the province's\ntoll highways and bridges authority.\nA bill increasing the authority's borrowing power\nfrom $50,000,000 to $60,000,000 was given second reading\n\u2014 approval in principle \u2014 after prolonged opposition\ncriticism.\nPremier Bennett said the government is opposed\nto the principle of tolls but had found an \"urgent need\"-\nfor new bridges and highways when it took office in 1952.\n\"We're having to use tolls to\ncatch up on work that was not\ndone in the last 40 years,\" he said.\nThe billion-dollar expansion in\nthe next decade should be aimed\nat bringing a greatly increased\nnumber of tourists, particularly\nfrom, the western U. S. to B. C,\nthe Premier said.\nThe present tourist revenue of\n$90,000,000 annually should be increased 10 times, he said.\nMr. Bennett also defended the\ngovernment's decision to build an\n$8,000,000 pontoon - causeway\nbridge over Okanagan Lake at\nCruise Planned\nBy Queen, Duke   .\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Queen\nElizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh will go on a week's cruise\nin the Mediterranean in the 4000\nton royal yacht Britannia next\nmonth, Buckingham Palace an\nnounced Monday.\nAGA KKAN ON MEND\nCANNES, France (Reuters) -\nThe Aga Khan's health is steadily\nimproving, a member of his\nhousehold said Monday, The 78-\nyear-old Moslem religious leader\nRED BOSS FLEES was ^ken *or a d\"ve *n sunny\nBERLIN (Reuters) - Heinz westher and returned to sit in\nGriese, a leading official of the 'he *rawing\u2122om \u00b0J his vUff' .He\nEast  German  ministry for  coal  has been suffering from arthritis\nand energy,  has  sought political   and heart trouble-\nasylum  in   West  Berlin,  refugee\nofficials  said   Monday.  Griese,   a   DOLLAR  LOWER\nCommunist   party   member,   was      NEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canauian\nquoted as saying he feared  the  dollar was 1-32 lower at a pre-\nconsequences   of   party   investl-  mjUm of % per cent in terms of\ngators into his refusal to join the  U.S. funds Monday. Pound sterl-\n\"factory fighting  group\"\u2014a  sort ling 1-16 of a cent higher at $2.1\nof Communist home guard. ' 29-32.\nKelowna. He described as \"most\nuntrue\" a statement by Liberal\nLeader Arthur Laing that a highway could be bujlt down the west\nside of the lake, circumventing\nKelowna, for $1,000,000.\nAnswering opposition questioning, the Premier also stated\nthat each bridge system built\nby the authority would be considered as a unit, and paid off\nseparately.\n(nether words, toll from one\nbridge will not be used to pay\noff another bridge which has\nless traffic.\nWilliam Moore (CCF-Cornox)\nclaimed that the tolls collected on\nthe new Agassiz-Rosedale bridge\n\"won't pay the interest or paint\"\nbecause of little traffic. He asked\nwhether citizens of the Vancouver\narea would be forced to pay it off\nwith tolls from bridges over Burrard Inlet and Fraser River crossings after they have been paid\nfor.\nOpposition members urged a\nnon-political highway board or\ncommission be put In charge of\nthe province's road and bridge\nbuilding\" program.\nLeo Nimsick (CCF-CranbrooJjj\nclaimed that the government is\ngiving the authority a \"blank\ncheque\" with big borrowing\npowers and said every new\nbridge should first be approved\nby the Legislature or an Inde-\n.    pendent planning board.\nMr. Laing said tolls systems\nwere coming into disfavor in the\nU. S. He said his group opposed\nthe toll authority in B. C. \"because\nit is unsound and going to cause\ntrouble.\" Tolls were an \"uneven\ncharge\" on the people of B. C, he\nsaid.\n926 Died in Europe's Big Freeze\nBy EDWIN 8HANKE climbed above freezing to as high\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Warming tern-1 as 46 degress in southern Norway,\nperatures Monday ended Europe's WASHES AWAY SNOW\nROBERT C. McMORDIE, one\nof Canada's leading hydraulic\nengineers, has been appointed\nchief engineer of the B.C.\nPower Commission. Mr. McMor-\ndie, whose appointment Is effective March 1, comes to the\nPower Commission from the\nHydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario where he has\nbeen senior project engineer.\ninformation charging me with the\noffence.\n\"Unfortunately, as Mr. Sturdy\nalso knows, there can    be very\nheavy penalties for false wrest\nand malicious psoMenttoB.**\nworst freezeup of the century but\ncrumbling ice and melting snows\nbrought a new peril of floods and\nlandslides.\nWeathermen predicted a continuing rise of the mercury and a slow\nthaw after the month-long cold\nwave which has cost 926 lives and\nan estimated two billion dollars in\nmaterial damage.\nTales of the February tragedy\nstill came from all over Europe.\nThe Danish navy gave up as\n\"lost\" four sailors missing on -a\ndrifting ice floe in the Kattegat between Denmark and Sweden. The\nfour men were sent out Sunday\nwith a naval rescue team to help\nfishermen endangered by drifting\nice.\nHeavy rains and thaw sent rivers\nflooding over rich farmlands in\nsouthern Italy. Huge ice blocks\nswirled down Europa's river arter-\nies, forming jams behind which\ntheir waters rose dangerously.\nAnti-flood preparations were in\nfull swing. NATO troops stood by\nto give emergency assistance\nwhere necessary.\nMERCURY SOARS\nAfter weeks of cold and snow\nvacationers along the French Riviera sunbathed in a summary 77-\ndegree temperature. Rome basked\nin * balmy 70 degrees.\nIn northern Europe, too, daytime  temperatures  generally\nHeavy rainstorms washed away\nthe snow in central and southern\nItaly. The river Pescara flooded\nseveral towns. The Brandano river\nin the province of Matera inundated fields and cut off highways.\nBari reported the Oftanto river\nhad burst its banks and damaged\nplanted fields.\nA huge landslide crept toward\nthe Adriatic city of Vasto and its\n18,000 residents at a rate of 20\ninches a day. Forty landslides were\nreported in Pescara province, slowing or blocking traffic. No loss of\nlife was reported in the floods or\nlandslides.\nIn northern France and Belgium,\nthe thaw advanced slowly enough\nto raise hopes there would be no\nsudden release of pent-up waters\ninto raging torrents. Some parts of\ncentral France still were virtually\nisolated by snow.\nGAS MAINS CRACK\nWanner weather in Holland\ncracked gas mains in Schiedam\nand 10 persons were sent to hospital with gas poisoning.\nIce tore away a steel bridge support at Linz, Austria, and disrupted traffic across the Danube. A\n600-yard-wide ice jam moved sluggishly down the Danube toward\nVienna and the river ahead of it\nrose nine feet. Authorities said,\nhowever, there was no immediate\nflood danger.\nAnd in This Corner . \u2666.\nNORWICH, Conn. (AP)\u2014Deputy sheriff Paul A, Del Monte\ntook hl\u00ab wife out for a driving lesson Sunday and police said this\nhappened:.\nIn the centre of the city Mrs. Del  Monte misjudged a turn.\nThe car ran up on the sidewalk and knocked down a parking\nmeter.\nThen the car turned off the sidewalk and shot across the street.\nIt hit a parked car and pushed It onto the sidewalk. That car\nknocked down another parking meter.\nWhen police arrived they arrested sheriff Del Monte on a\ncharge of failure to have a motor vehicle under control while\nInstructing an unllcenced person.\nDANVEHS, Mass (AP)\u2014A man checked into the Coronet Hotel\nSaturday night and when he checked out Sunday management\nfound these items missing:\nTwo table lamps, a pen stand and pen, a mahogany night table,\nan ashtray stand, four sheets, two pillow cases, two foam rubber\npillows, two blankets, two bedspreads, two bath towels, two hand\ntowels, two ashtrays, two glass tumblers and a shower curtain.\n -^~\nI --\u00abp$p .iyppw '.. i , i .\u00bb\u00bbj|Lf\n\u25a0\n...... ,  . \u2022\nS|p|S||SS||||^-\"--\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-9:00\n-- IHE MOST EXCITING MR S^ADVENTURE EVER FILMED!\nlooking (or HUMPHREY BOGART\nescape .\nlooking for\nmoney ...\n-WILLIAM\nWYLER'S\nSTARTS\nWEDNESDAY\niiliiimiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiilliHi\nMusicland\nTheatre\nKASLO,  B.C.\nShowing\nTonight and Wednesday\nSHOW AT 8:00 P.M.\n\"THE YELLOW\nCAB MAN\"\nRED   SKELTON\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nClubs Learn of\nRed Cross Work\nNelson Rotary and Gyro Clubs\nMonday heard talks and saw a\nfilm on work being accomplished\nby the Canadian Red Cross. The\nprogram, preparatory to the\nlaunching March 1 of the annual\ncampaign for funds by the Nelson\nbranch of the Red Cross .Society,\nwas presented to Rotarians at their\nnoon luncheon at the Hume and to\nGyros in the evening.\nN, C. Stibbs, president, who attended the provincial Red Cross\nconvention at the Coast last week,\nsaid he had been given an eye-\nopener to the Society's work in\nB.C., particularly that being done\nat Shaughnessy Military Hospital.\nHe had learned, too, that the Red\nCross was spending $2,000,000 a\nyear in Canada in operation of outpost hospitals, and of the great\nwork being carried out in maintaining the blood transfusion service. \"People are inclimed to take\nthe free blood for granted, but it\ntakes money to make it available\nto everyone,\" he said.\nTha Red Ctobs was able also to\npoint proudly to the fact that practically all Its endeavors are undertaken on a voluntary basis. Only\nthree per cent of workers in\nCanada receive remuneration.\nDr. N. E. Morrison described the\nWood transfusion service as \"probably the greatest\" of the marry\nnotable services of Red Cross. The\nsaving lt represents can best be\nreckoned when remembering that\nin the United States a pint of blood\ncosts the patient $35. In Canada it\nis also administered free of charge\nby doctors.\nA film entitled \"Prescription for\nLife\", showing collection of blood\nfrom donors the American Red\nCross and the many uses to which\nit is put, was shown by E. W.\nWhite.\nPAYS $25 FINE\nMagistrate R. S. Nelson Monday imposed a $25 fine on George\nByres of Nelson after he pleaded\nguilty to driving with an expired\ndriver's licence,\nSAVE $1.00\nUSE\nDuBARRY\nCLEANSING CREAM\nFor DRY SKIN\n8 oz, jar. Rea. $2.50\nFar Only $1.50\nNelson Pharmacy\n'Ynur   Fortress  ol   Health\"\n433  Josephine  St..   Ph.   1203\nD. P. Fairbank\nTo Head Rotary\nDavid P. Fairbank, energetic\nyoung professional man, is presi-\ndent-el?ct .of Nelson Rotary Club\nMr. Fairbank, together with R.\nH. Dillr vice-president, and C. B\nMutchler, secretary, selected by\nthe new board of directors, will\ntake office July 1.\nThe announcement was greeted\nby applause at the club's luncheon\nmeeting in the Hume Monday.\nRotary Club received an invitation from the Nelson School board\nto the opening of the L, V. Rogers\nsenior high school March 10.\nInter-service club bonspiel cup,\nwon by Rotary Club, was displayed by president K. D. McRae, and\nthe event was pronounced as a\nsuccess by V. R. Neill who made\narrangements for -Rotary rinks\nwhich entered.\nAndy Laurie of Vancouver was\na luncheon guest.\nPLAYOFF DATES\nIN ABC LEAGUE\nFERNIE\u2014The Alberta-B. C. In\ntermediate Hockey League wound\nup 'its schedule Saturday night\nwhen Kimberley Legionaires beat\nFernie 0-4 and Coleman trounced\nCranbrook 13-1 at Coleman. For\nthe first time in league history the\n80-game schedule was completed\nwithout a postponement.\nLeague playoff positions were\ndecided by the final games.\nIn one semi-final Kimberley\nLegionaires will meet Coleman\nGrands at Kimberley with the\ntentative date for the first game\nbeing March 4. The second game\nwill be on Coleman home ice on\nMarch 10 and the third if necessary, at Coleman March 11. Playoff dates for the other semi-final\nbetween Cranbrook and Fernie\nhave not yet been arranged.\nProtects in\nRain & Snow\nIO POPULAR SHADES\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON  (AP)-^Soccer standings:   (Top   five  teams):\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nW T\nManchester U  19 S\nBlackpool  16 6\nNewcastle U   16 3\nWest  Bromwich   .... 15 4\nWolverhampton   .... 14 5\nManchester C   12 9\nEverton     _.... 12 9\nSunderland     13 7\nDivision III\nSheffield   W    14 11\nLeicester  C    16 5\nBristol Rovers   16 5\nBristol City     15 5\nLeeds United   15 5\nPort Vale   12 11\nSwansea Town 15 5\nDivision  III  (Southern)\nLeyton Orient   20 7\nIpswich Town   18 10\nBrighton     20 5\nTorquay  United   .. 15 9\nNorthampton T     .. 17 5\nDivision  III  (Northern)\nSouthport      19 6\nGrimsby Town   19 5\nAccrington S   19 5\nDerby  County   18 6\nChesterfield      18 4\nHartlepools U 18 4\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nDivision A\nRangers   14 6\nHearts  14 5\nAberdeen     12 7\nHibernian   14 3\nCeltic    12 6\nDivision B\nQueens Park   18 6\nAyr United   18 1\nStenhousemuir   16 4   8   36\nSt. Johnstone   15 4   5   34\nFINED $60\nWilfred P. McDonald of Nelson\npleaded guilty in city court Monday to molesting two girls on\nWard Street Saturday night while\nintoxicated. He was fined $50 and\nan additional $10 on the intoxica-l\ntion count. |\nL\nPt\n7\n44\n\u00ab9\n38\n13\n35\n12\n34\n11\n33\n9\n33\n11\n33\n10\n33\n7\n39\n11\n37\n10\n37\n11\n35\n9\n35\n8\n35\n11\n35\n4\n47\n5'\n46\n8\n45\n7\n39\n10\n39\n7\n44\n8\n43\n7\n43\n8\n42\n12\n40\n11\n40\n1\n34\n4\n33\n3\n31\n6\n31\n5\n30\n2\n42\n7\n37\nCR.\nEarly (PR Af\u00abenl\nAt Nelson, Dies\nA pioneer resident of B. C. who\nmoved west from Manitoba as a\ntelegrapher with construction\ngangs laying the CPR tracks and\nopened a railway agent's office\non\u00aba tree stump in Nelson, diedj\nin Vancouver: He was 90.\nEdward Riley Redpath was\nborn in Effingham, Ont., and moved to Selkirk. Man,, when he was\na young man. He joined the CPR\nin Melita, Man., and travelled\nwest as the railway progressed\nuntil he reached Craigellachie\nwhere the line was completed.\nAs a railway agent in Nelson\nduring the early mining boom\ndays, he conducted his first business from a tree stump.    4\nPrior to the Riel Rebellion in\n1885, he often gave Manitoba Indians bacon and \"goodies\" to\nleave his equipment alone.\nMr. Redpath subsequently was\nagent at Trail, Grand Forks and\nGreenwood, where he spent most\nof his railway career.\nMr. Redpath retired at Nelson\nin 1932 and moved to Vancouver.\nHe was a member of Oriental\nLodge AF & AM, Melita, for 67\nyears, and a life member of the\nIndependent Order of Foresters.\nHe is survived by his wife, Annie; a son, Dr. George Redpath,\nPortland; four daughters, Mrs. W.\nP. Goulding, Coutts, Alta., Mrs.\nGeorge Mclnnis, Cranbrook; Mrs.\nJack MacDonald, Kemano, and\nMrs. Cym Williams. Kamloops, a\nsister, Mrs. Dora Thomas, Niagara Falls, Ont., eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.\nFuneral service was held Saturday in the Chapel of T. Edwards\nCompany in Vancouver with Rev.\nJ. C. Bothwell officiating. Burial\nwas in Masonic Cemetery.\nCity Council, at its shortest meeting of the new\nyear, Monday night authorized School District No. 7\nBoard of Trustees to appoint a successor to Trustee P. H.\nHoskins, who has resigned. He is leaving the city shortly\nfor a Vancouver post. Ten months of his two-year term\nremain.\nCouncillors, who have been holding long, heavy\nand frequent meetings since the first 6f the year, cut\nthe Monday night meeting short so those who wished\ncould attend a portion of the first hockey playoff game\nbetween Trail and Nelson,\nCouncil pledged co-operation\nin entertaining 180 Texans when\nthey stop at Nelson July 17 during\ntheir seventh annual farm tour.\nThey are travelling by special\ntrain and will be in Nelson two\nto three hours en-route via the\nKettle Valley railway to Vancouver, Council offered its co-operation after reading a letter from\nthe CPR asking if they favored\nthe visit and would be interested \\\nin   entertaining   the   farm   study\ngroup.\n\u2022    *   \u2022\nRequest from the Civic Centre\nCommission for a licence for\nRoyal Canadian Shows to bring\ntheir carnival here May 14-16, was\nrefused by council. Alderman C,\nF. Blakeman felt the show added\nnothing to the culture of the city\nIt was also noted their appearance\ndates coincided with West Kootenay Music Festival dates.\nCalgary Rink\nWins Fernie\nway No. 3. Mayor Kary stated\nthat tourists frequently find\nthemselves on this route after\nmissing the turn off Nelson Avenue and find it \"extremely difficult\" to locate the main highway again.\n\u2022 *   *\nA request from the city 'police\ncommission that three traffic stop\nsigns be placed on the South side\nof Vernon Street at Hendryx, Hall\nand Josephine Streets was turned\nover to the public works committee.\n* *   *\nThe parks committee was instructed to estimate the cost of\nbuilding a fence around the fish\ntank installed by the Nelson Rod\nand Gun Club in Lakeside Park,\nThe club informed council that\nthey are faced with replacing one\nplate glass side of the tank at a\ncost of $400. The glass was broken\nby vandals last summer.\nRequest from H. M. Prout, 518 j The Civic Centre Commission I\nFirst Street, for the city to widen; were authorized to purchase 100\nthe street with fill at the bottom i new chairs for the badminton hall:\nof the hill so cars will have turn-1 at a sost of $567 and replace elec-\n... Speaking of\nOdds and Ends\nThey say every dog has his day,\nbut I haven't seen any lately that\nwould do for a spaniel with draggy\nears. Saw one poor pooch with\nsuch a hang-dog expression on his\nface because his snow matted ears\nwore literally dragging him down.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nWhy is it at concerts or such\nwhen they play \"O Canada\" nobody sings? Was at a concert recently when, after about the first\ntwo lines, some hardy soul started\nU pipe up and everyone, appreciating the fearless gesture, joined in.\nSeems to me if an MC came out\nand said \"We will rise and sing O\nCanada\" everyone would know\nwhat was expected of him and\ntake the plunge. As it is the\naudience doesn't know for sure if\nit is to be a grandiose performance\nby the pianist or entertaining\nchoir, of whether it is supposed to\ntune its rusty pipes and come forth _\nwith the song all Canadians ought j\nto be proud to sing.\n* *   \u2022\nGoing past the tourist park the\nother day I was struck with the\nbeauty of it dressed in its snow\nmantle. The trees looked stately\nand shrubs along the border bowed low neath their withe crowns,\nCouldn't help wondering if this\nforgotten cousin of Nelson beauty\nspots might come in for a bit of\ndressing up before the tourist\nseason. A bit of levelling, new\nlawn, paved driveway and even\na few bits of children's play equipment would do much to say \"welcome tourist\" and even be a place\nfor neighborhood children to play,\nGoing past a Nelson shoe store\nby eye was caught by the daintiest\nlittle pair of patent leather shoes\nwith eyelet and tiny pink flower\ntrim. In my mind's eye I could see\nthem on some demure little miss\nwith skipping feet. And I was filled with remembrance of the joy\na new pair of shoes once held.\ning space and will not gouge deep\nruts in his driveway by turning\nthere, was referred to the public\nworks committee to be considered\nin the 1956 estimates. At present\nall cars and trucks that come\ndown the hill have no place to\nturn except Mr Prout's driveway\nand as he explained it to council\nin a letter \"I have gone to a lot\nof lime, work and expense to put\na driveway into my garage at the\nrear of lot 10\"\n\u2022       \u2022       4\nApproval was voted to a recommendation from Mayor Kary that\nthe provincial highways department be requested to designate\nas highway No. 3A the secondary\nroad from Fairview to the city\ncentre. This route starts at Nelson\nAvenue and Anderson Street,\nmoves along parts of High, Edge-\nwood, Park, Cedar and Vernon\nStreets to were it rejoins High-\ntrie drop cords in the curling rink\nat a cost of $200.\n* *    \u00ab\nThe sale of three lots near the\ncorner of Railway and Carbonate\nStreets for $1000 to Bennett and\nWhite Construction Co. Ltd was\napproved. The firm plans to build\na shed on the property for the\nstorage and repair of construction\nequipment.\n\u2022 *   *\nThree applications for city business licenses were approved. Applicants were:\nMrs. Helen C. McCallum for a\nBeauty Parlor to be located at 659\nBaker Street, upstairs;\nErie Halliwell for an oil furnace\nand refrigeration service;\nHarold S. Ritchie for the Ritchie\nSaw Service at 205 Hall Street.\nRitchie will act as agents for\nSpear and Jackson Saws and\noperate a saw repair service.\nilalion Spiel\nFERNIE - A Calgary rink\nskipped by Mrs. Mary Rubleski\ntook top honors in the Fernie\nWomen's invitational bonspiel\nwhich wound up three days play\nlate Sunday night.\nWith nine wins and one loss the\nRubleski rink won the grand aggregate, . .the Interior. ..Breweries\nNo. 1 event, and-the King Edward\nNo. 3 event. The members of the\nrink were Mrs. Mary Rubleski,\nskip, Mrs. Bernie Hegy, third;\nMrs. Dorothy LaR, second and\nMrs,  Olga Young,  lead.\nThe Imperial Oil No:\\l event\nwas taken by Mrs. Jean Fields of\nColeman, Alberta. Members of\nher rink were Mrs. Dolina Pow.\nMrs. Eunice' 'Fraser and Mrs.\nMarianne Mczell.\nThe consolation, was -won by\nMrs. Violet Wilson of Fernie\nOthers on her rink were Mrs.\nMary Jones, Mrs. Grace Rahal,\nand Mrs. Mary Traska lead.\nThe prize for the first rink\neliminated went to the Hornquist\nrink of Fernie. Player on this\nrink were Mrs. Doe Hornquist,\nMj*s. Mary Servello. Mrs. Vivian\nKasmar and Mrs. Fi'ank Gigliotti.\nComplete list of winners follows:\nGrand aggregate. Mrs. Mary\nRubleski, Calgary; No. 1 event,\nImperial Oil, first, Mrs. Jean\nField, Coleman; second, Mrs Martha Chester, Fernie; third, Mrs\nRaffie Sowchuk, Fernie; 'fourth,\nMrs.  Evelyn  Mitchel,  Fernie.\nNo. 2 event, Interior Breweries,\nfirst, Mrs. Mary Rubleski; second.\nMrs. Sherling. Cranbrok; third.\nMrs. Helen .Baker, Fernie; fourth.\nMrs.  H. Nelson,  Galloway.\nNo. 3 event, King Edward first\nMrs.    Mary    Rubleski,    Calgary;\nsecond, Mrs. Martha Chester, Fernie;   third,  Mrs.   Sherling,   Cran*\n( brook; fourth, Mrs. Grant, Cran>-\nj brook.\nNo. 4 event, consolation, first,\nI Mrs. Violet Wilson, Fernie; sec-\nI ond, Mrs. Helen Barr, Cranbrook;\nI third, Mrs. W. Little, Elko; fourth,\nI Mrs.   Helen  Dicks,  Fernie.\nIf Ratepayers Okay It'...\nCity to Buy Old Post\nOffice for $16,000\nIf Nelson ratepayers agree the\ncity will purchase the old post\noffice building and site for\n$16,000.\nCouncil Monday night approved the action of a commit-\n. tee of the whole council which\n- moved to accept a Crown Assets\nDisposal Corporation offer of\n$16,000 for the old turreted stone\n\u25a0 building and site after the corporation turned down the city's\noffer of $6700.\nIf the city didn't accept the\n$16,0.0.0 offer, the corporation\n, tcld them In a letter, the property would be advertised for\nBale,\nThe city's first offer was $6700.\nUHlflilMMEIimmillHCIMfUHHllIMP\nMore Local News\nOn Page 12\niimiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiimmiMimin\njust under the city's population\nnumber. It offered this because\naccording to the Municipal Act\nany offer exceeding $1 multiplied\nby the city's population, must be\nratified by the ratepayers.\nKimberley .made a similar offer\nfor their old post office last year,\nthe letter said, but the corporation\ncouldn't accept the offer so it ad\nvertised and sold the building to\nthe Hudson's Bay Company foi\na \"considerable figure.\"\nThe corporation asked $16,000\nbecause it was what two centres\nof similar size at Yorkton, Sask ,\nand Dauphin, Manitoba, had paid\nfor similar buildings. Yorkton\nhad matched the figure advertisements had brought in.\nThe new $444,000 post office k\nexpected to be completed the\nend of April, the letter said, \"put- (J\nting forward by a month the date\nthat it will be available.\" The\ncorporation suggested the city\nconsider June 1 to July 1 as the\npossible \"vacancy possession'*\ndate.\nTo Complete\nBench Waterline\nIn Spring\nTRAIL \u2014 Shavers Bench Improvement Association, at its\nmonthly meeting Monday, learned that the new water pipeline\nthroughout the whole bench will\nbe completed in the Spring.\nMembers felt that while the\nstreets were torn up storm sewers\nshould be installed. This will be\nbrought up at the next Trail\nproperty owners meeting.\nA representative will be sent\nto a meeting of the district\nchronic hospital society to be\nheld March   1  at Trail.\n\u25a0Plans for an amateur talent\nshow on March 10 are in full\nswing.\nHerb Brown, vice - president,\nwas in charge of the meeting.\nThe Weather\nNelson     25 35 .25\nSt. Johns'  24 32 .14\nOttawa      7 27 \u2014 .i\nToronto     14 26 -1\nWinnipeg  -24 0 \u2014 I\nRegina           -23 5 \u2014 j\nLethbridge             -19 32 \u2014 j\nCrescent  Valley    22 35 .05,\nMinor Hockey\nRoundup\nGreg Gregoire's Ranger bantams won their last League game\nat Civic Arena Saturday afternoon\nas they edged out the Canadiens\n5-2. It was Rangers' 28th win.\nIt was also one of their toughest wins as Canadiens battled\nthem right down to the final\nwhistle.\nCanadiens were sparked by\nveteran Jay Paterson and a sparkling display of goal tending by\nDoug Seaby. Rangers were paced\nby their ace centreman and the\nleague's leading goal getter, Mike\nLaughton. Mike scored four goals.\nRan Abrahamson picked up the\nother goal while assists went to\nAtwell and McElroy. Larry McEachern and Alec Wallach popped j\nin the Canadiens goals with Pater \u25a0\nson, Schmidt and John Sample I\ngetting assists. Only two penalties.!\none to each team were called by\nOfficials Wayne Farenholtz and\nDale Skapple. Stu McKinnon kept\nthe time and score.\nBantam Bruins moved up into\nsecond place in the Bantam League as they edged out Black\nHawks 2-1 in a game at Civic\nArena Saturday afternoon.\nThey will likely stay in second\nor remain tied for second as with\nonly one game remaining in the\nLeague, that between Red Wings\nand Hawks.\nA win for Red Wings In this\ngame will keep them tied for second while a loss will leave them\nin third and a win for Hawks\nwould put them in fourth place,\nwhere they are at present tied\nwith the Canadiens.\n. In Saturday's game with Hawks,\nBruins went one goal up in the\nfirst period with Al Swetlikoe\nscoring from Burdenie and Pax-\nton. In the second each team scored once. For Hawks it was Dave\nBorch from McLeod and for the\nwinning Bruins it was Al Swetlikoe again on a play from Cain.\nOnly one penalty was handed out\nby officials Dale Skapple and Tom\nHufty.\nHockey's Big Seven\nBy The Canadian Press\nAll eyes are on Jean Beliveau\nof Montreal and Detroit's Gordie\nHowe as they battle it out for the\nIndividual scoring honors in the\nhome stretch of the 1958-56 National Hockey League schedule\nWith 10 gamea remaining for\nthe Canadiens and the Red Wings,\nthe Montreal sharpshooter holds\na five-point edge on the Detroit\nstar.\nBeliveau, who leads the goal-\ngetting department with 42, picked un an assist in weekend play\nto boost his point-total to 75. His\nSCOUTS, GUIDES\nHOLD \"THINKING\nDAY\" SERVICE\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Proud parents\nand interested onlookers filled the\nauditorium of the Stanley Humph-\nres high school'in Castiegar, when\nthe cubs, scouts, guides and brownies held their annual thinking day\nservices. This \"scouts and guides\nown service\" comes as a finale to\n\"Thinking Week\", and is observed\ninternationally, in conjunction\nwith Lord Baden-Powell Day.\nCubs, brownies, scouts and\nguides from Kinnaird, Robson and\nCastiegar took part in the special\nceromony, which commenced with\nthe parade of the colors.\nFollowing the hymn \"Onward\nChristian Soldiers\", the last message of the founder, Lord Baden-\nPowell, was read by queen's scout\nBill Murry of Kinnaird. Guide,\nbrownie, scout and cub laws were\nrecited by the various packs after\nwhich an address was heard from\ndistrict guide commissioner Mrs.\nW. Fox of Kinnaird. District scout\ncommissioner, Archdeacon B. A.\nResker also addressed the gathering, and retraced the growth of\nthe scout movement from its first\nbeginnings half a century ago, to\nthe world-wide organization it is\ntoday. Archdeacon Resker is himself a \"Silver Wolf,\" which is the\nhighest award in scouting, having\nreceived this award ten years ago.\nThe Archdeacon hopes to attend\nthe 50th anniversary of the scout\nmovement to be held next year\nin England.\nAlso taking part was major J,\nMoll of Kinnaird, cubmaster of\nKinnaird cub pack. Major Moll's\nname was included in the governor\ngeneral's honors list ayid is to be\nawarded the medal of merit for\noutstanding service as cubmaster\nThe award will be made in Vancouver at the annual meeting of\nthe B.C. Provincial Council of the\nBoy Scouts Association March 9th\nGuide law was recited by Rose-\nmarie Guido, of Kinnaird, first\ngold cord guide in the district.\nDivisional commissioner for\ngirl guides, Mrs. H. Hyson of Robson, acted as chairman for the* occasion.\nA \"Renewal\" of promises was\nmade by each group in turn, and\nthe Castiegar guide company sang\n\"Taps\".\nThe return of the colors, singing\nof \"God Save The Queen\" and the\nretirement of the color party,\nbrought the ceremony to a close.\n'56 Car Plates\nA Must March 1\nOfficials of the Nelson Motor\nVehicle Branch expec^ a- stampede of district motorists today\nand Wednesday seeking to pur-\nLchase their 1956 licence plates\nbefore the March 1 deadline,\nSaturday the sales total had\nreached 673 commercial plates and\n1614 private vehicle plates. Last\nyear 1473 commercial plates and\n3769 private plates were sold\nthrough the Nelson office.\nAn appreciative audience In\nTrinity United Church Monday\nevening heard some 30 intermediate piano, violin and vocal pupils\nin recital.\nMrs. C. W. Tyler, president of\nthe Nelson Registered Music Teachers Association was chairman.\nPianists included Sheila Munch.\nSandra Gray, Jim Rogers, Jim\nTurner, Gail Meakins, Sharon\nWalls, Luella Bate, Diana Skapple\nJohn Read. Maureen Fenner, Ina\nStiles, Joy Livingstone, Valerie\nRusnack, Diane Rogers, Maureen\nLipsack, Leslie \u25a0 Waldie, Mary\nFink, Robin McFadden, Meredith\nPond, Shannon Norris, Carol Ann\nLocatelli. Anne Hoskins, Ernie\nWah, Rosalie Spray. Arnold Bate\nDon Peck, Donna Marie Wilson,\nMildred Fulkco, Sara Law and\nRichard Swanson.\nTwo piano duets were given by\nNormie Kuhn and Dick McElroy;\nEric Johnson and Ken Leinweber.\nViolinists were Roy King and\nWendy Herbison.\nVocalists included Ken Graham,\nGeorgina Hadden, Jackie Galli-\ncano, Lea-Anna Scott, Pat Hooker,\nwith a vocal duet by Jackie Galilean t> and Lea-Anna Scott.\nThe young performers were pupils of Ruby McLean Angus, Ve-\n! rica Deerward, Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, Sister M. Jeanne, Daisy\nLee, Mrs, Lawrence McPhail, Mrs.\nR. Bain Oliver and Mrs. C. W.\nTyler.\nBaby Born on Ferry\nMany babies have come into\nthe world in taxis, but an unusual variation of this situation\noccurred Monday morning when\na baby girl was born in a car on\nthe Nelson  ferry.\n\u2022The eight-pound baby daughter\nwas born to Mr. and Mrs. John\nBoiowski in the Borowski car.\nMrs. Anker Johnson was. called\nfrom a bus to assist Mrs. Borowski.\nMother and daughter are both\ndoing well in Kootenay Lake General  Ho^nit?].\nMountie Committed\nOn Rape Charge\nA \u25a0 Nelson detachment RCMP\nconstable has been committed for\ntrial at the Spring assize here on\na charge of rape.\nConstable R. W. Holsten, who\nhas been charged^by the RCMP.\nwas committed by Magistrate\nWilliam Evans in provincial court\nafter \u2022 a day-long preliminary\nhearing. The alleped offence occurred February 4 in Nelson district.\nR. B. Allan is crown counsel\nand G. B, Arneseo defence counsel.\nSPORT\nJACKETS\nby Fit-Reform\nNEW...\nSMART . . .\nDIFFERENT\n$2950   *35\n$37.so\nGodfreys'\n\\    PHONE J*-270-*I BOX\nlmmmmmm*m\\m%tmMAmm\\mmM\nE\nTO CONTRACTORS\nTENDERS will be received at. the offi-e of the\nundersigned up to 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 6%\n1956, for the following project:\nA Municipal.Building for The Corporation of\nthe Village'of'Marysville, at Marysville, B.C.\nPlans and Specifications may be obtained from the\nVillage Office.\nLowest or any tender wil! net necessarily be accepted. DATED this 10th day of February, 1956.\nLILLIAN GILBERT,\n\u25a0Village Clerk.\n\"SO LITTLE DONE \u2014\nSO MUCH TO DO\"\n* (Author's name  below)\nthere is so much to do\nin our Pharmacy that like\nthe busy housewife, \"Our\nwork Is never done.\"\nThousands of different\nmedicines, health and comfort aids must be kept\norderly, and watched carefully to make certain they\nare always fresh and potent. New shipments arrive\ndaily so that we have In\nstock exactly what you\nwant.\nWe are continuously\nlearning about the new advances In medical treatment\nto be prepared to compound the orescriptions of\nany Physician with the\nexact Ingredients he specifies.\nY0\"R PHYSICIAN\nCAN PHONE\nMelson 1203\nWHEN YOU NEED\nA  MEDICINE\n\u00a9\nPick up your prescription if shopping near\nus, or let us deliver\nprcmptl ywithout extra\ncharge. A great many\npeople entrust us wi*h\nthe responsibility of filling their prescriptions.\nMay we compound\nyours?\nNELSON\nPharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nNelson\n* Quotation  by\nCecil  -Toll\"  Rhodes\n1853-1902)\nCopyright 1956 (3W2)\nrival, meanwhile, picked up two\npoints with his 84th goal at the\nseason and 36th assist.\nThe  leaders: G'  A Pts\nBeliveau, Montreal 42 33 75\nHowe, 'Detroit ,. . 34 36 70\nM. Richard, Montreal 34 36 70\nSloan, Toronto-. .. 35 20 61\nBathgate, New York 18 41 59\nOlmstead, Montreal .. 1L 47 58\nReibel,   Detroit       16. 36   82\nARE YOU MOVING?\nTMtit!!!!\n33\njmstance mmnm.\nNATIONWIDE POOL VAN SERVICE\nSTORAGE -PACKING.\n\u25a0%\u00abDsfr f drill American Van Lines\nNELSON, B.C.\n  ..\"\u25a0\u25a0 .J. V\n***} ' *\" ~~ \u25a0\n ; ! \u2014 \u2014\u2014 ' :\nSo\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\nWelcome Mat Out In May.....\n50Q Kin Ta Imaie\nTrail for Convention\nTRAIL-On May 19, 20, and 21\nthere will be a Kinsmen convention held in TraJ.1.\nThe Trail club iir being assisted\nby the Warfield Kinsmen club\nand the Rossland Kinsmen club in\npreparing the convention. The\nCominco Arena will, be. use4 as\nthe main convention headquarters\nand almost all of the activities pf\nthe convention will be held In\nthe Cominco. Arena.\nIt  It expected that  at   least\n500 delegates.from 63 clubs In\nthe province will attend and that\nIt will be the largest convention\never held In Trail. In order to\naccommodate   the   delegates   It\nhas been arranged to book all\nthe  local  auto  courts and  the\nclub has even arranged to hold\nrooms In the hotel at Castiegar\nand the auto courts In Castle-\noar, .In the event that local accommodation will not prove to\nbe sufficient.\nOne of the luncheons will be\nconsidered to be a Kootenay Zone\naffair and th'e Kinsmen clubs of\nthe Kootenay Zone will each cooperate to put on this luncheon,\nthese clubs being Rossland, War-\nfield, Trail, Nelson, Slocan  City,\nCranbrook, Kimberley, Natal-Mi-\nchel-Sparwood and Fernie.\nCertain preliminary work has\nbeen done towards the formation\nof a new Kinsmen Club at New\nDenver-Silverton and the Trail\nClub hopes that it will be chartered at or before the convention\nIn Trail.\nThe steering committee of the\nconvention consists of Peter Raw-\nkins, chairman, Lin Stewart and\nBill Siddall. This committee heads\n. a number of other committees\nsuch as advertising, accommodation, catering and so on. The\nC M & S has offered tb assist the\nKinsmen club with the convention\nand an official of the company\nwill be in attendance at the convention. As well, a representative\nof the City of Trail will be invited to attend one of the functions of the convention, together\nwith a representative from various service clubs in the city, who\nwill  also   be   invited.  The   local\nMLA. Hon. R., E. .Sommers will be\nextended a ninvitation.\nFOUNDER INVITED\nThe officers of the- Kinsmen Association, will also '6e;'An attendance, Including, Ken McConnell\nof Ladner. An invitation has already been tendered to Hal Rogers of Hamilton, founder of the\nKinsmen Association.\nThis is the first Kinsmen con\nvention held in the Kootenays\nsince the- one held in Nelson in\n1945.\nEach of the clubs coming to\nthe convention will be dressed\nIn distinctive apparel and the\nTrail club will be dressed In\nred vests and black bowler hats.\n,A parade will be held with each\nof the attending clubs repre*\n. tented and for this week, the\n. Kootenays will be advertised\nthroughout the province.\nRadar Material\nTo Be Displayed\nIn Trail, Nelson\nTRAIL\u2014The latest in radar de-!\nfence equipment has arrived at j\nthe Trail  Armories  and Will  be I\nSlocan Hospital\nFinances Sound,\nPatients Gain\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Last year was\nthe busiest year experienced by\nthe Slocan Community Hospital\nsince 1949.''\nTotal patient days numbered\nnumbered 4960, an increase ol 1137\nover those of the previous year,\nthe directors' report given at the\n29th annual meeting before a small\ngathering of citizens, showed.\nPatients under care had numbered\n582, and average days stay was\n8.64. a slight reduction from 19.54.\nThe financial statement was one\nof the best ever presented, and\nshowed the Society to be still in a\nhealthy, financial position. Operating costs were $42,258, an Increase\nof 3? per cent since 1948, the year\nbefore hospital insurance was introduced.\nDirectors chosen for 1956 are\nJ. L. Wilson, T. W. Clarke, J. A.\nGreer, W. G. Trlno, M. Wright,\nL. R. Campbell, J. L. Irwin, Mrs.\nE.  Avison  and  Mrs.  Art  Ham.\nMrs.  James   Draper  will  again\nbe Hospital  Aid  representative\non the Board. One. vacancy for\nSilverton has yet to be filled.\nThe Hospital Aid gave an excellent report of its activities. Assistance   given ' the   Hospital\namounted to $598.\nKaslo Ratepayers\nSpur Enthusiasm\nKASLO\u2014Bolstered by 20 new\nmembers and Intense interest by\ncitizens, the Kaslo Ratepayers'\nAssociation hopes to build up\npurjlic spiritednees in Kaslo.\nWhen the association met recently in the city hall under the\npresidency of Miss E. G. Pye, a\ndelegation was appointed to wait\n, on  the school  board to enquire\ndistance,  and  passes information j into thc method a(J ,n\nto fire con trolimi   computer and| pointing the schoo, mtict seJe_\nthe order to fire is made. It can  t\noperate  with  uncanny  accuracy,\npublicly displayed at some future\ndate by the 24th Medium Anti-\nAircraft Regiment both in Trail\nand in Nelson.\nEquipment consists of 90-millimetre anti-aircraft units which\ncan also be used for guided missiles, firing shells weighing approximately 50 pounds, an M3S\nelectronic computor and three big\n30-ton trailers.\nOne unit picks up a plane and\nhitting its moving target by at\nleast the third shot. It is entirely\nautomatic and the boys can be\naway drinking coffee at the time.\nAll they need to do is bring in\nthe ammunition to feed it.\nOne of the trucks consists of a\ncomplete workshop, carrying necessary parts and repairs right\nalong on the job.\nThe equipment is similar to that\nused in America's first line of\ndefence, also used in Europe and\nIn Canada.\nAldermen H. Carlson and Ralph\nPatterson .gave interesting talks\non the power situation.-.\nTrail Pays Tribute to\nLord Baden-Powell\nTRAIL\u2014A special service was\nconducted here Sundayi afternoon\nin the East Trail Guide Hall in\nmemory of the founder of the\nGcout movement, Lord Baden-\nPowell, whose birthday was observed February 22.\nThe meeting was attended by\nTrail Girl Guides, Scouts, Cubs\nand Brownies. The Guides and\nScouts conducted their own service and it was alternately led\nby Scout Ted Hilder and Guide\nJoan Fulthorp. A Bible reading\nwas given by Guide Patsy Wilkinson. Assistant District Scout\nCommissioner Dr. V. Fanderlik\naddressee! the gathering and compared the scout with a sort of\nmodern knight fighting for a better life, not by the sword, but by\ngood turns, friendliness and helpfulness.\n400-FOOT DROP\nIN CAR DOESN'T\nSTOP SALMO MAN\nVERNON (CP) \u2014 The story\nof Arthur Henry Doree's wild\nride came to light here Monday.\n' RCMP said, a resident, of Salmo, was driving along Highway 97\nFriday about 10 miles south of\nhere when he lost control of his\ncar flri an icy road.The vehicle\nhurtled over a retaining\" wall\nand dropped 400 feet, sommer-\nsaulting overboul ders and\nthrough trees. It ended up minus\nall four wheels on the ice fringing Kalamalka lake.\nDoree climbed back up the 400\nfeet and hiked to a nearby\nRCMP office\nToo Big a Nighf?\nFor Upset Stomach\nTake\ni FOWLER'S\ntxtraet ot\nWILD STRAWBERRY\nGet the genuine, effective The horned owl, largest of Cana-\nDr. Fowler's. Made 'only by the dian owl species, is nearly two feet\n; T. MILBURN CO. j in length.\nf\nJ. W. BROCKBANK\nOF GOLDEN DIES\nGOLDEN - Resident of Golden\ndistrict for 21 years, John William\nBrockbank died at the hospital at\nthe age of 52 years. He had been\nill for some time.\nWhen he came to Golden in 1935\nhe engaged in road construction\nwork on the Big Bend highway,\nand after its completion worked\nat the Base Metal mine at Field\nfor several years. After that he\npurchased a (arm property at\nMcMurdo which had been his\nhome ever since, and his wife\nsurvives him there. Also surviving\nare a daughter, Mrs. R. Tress at\nParson, and his mother, Mrs. J\nGaskell. Funeral service by Rev.\nD. S. McKinnell at SI. Paul's\nChurch was followed by burial In\nGolden cemetery.\nBIG OWLS\nS.V,,,,, F\u201e,m      BECAUSE YOU DID     wmrt\/\/WW\/Dortmiu mspmt\nLIBERTYS\n5c to 10c\nSTORE\nDOLLAR DAY BUYS.\nHot Water Bottle\nViceroy.  Guaranteed  Good\nQuality. Reg. $1.15. ffi   f\\f\\\nSALE *LUU\nYes, because thousands of you patronized Liberty\nduring- 1955 . . . we broke oil existing tales\nrecords in pur 16-year history. And, to show our\nappreciation . . .\nYOU'RE GOING TO GET\nwonderful, extra cash savings in the form of many\ndramatic reductions that now mean even lower prices\n. . .Liberty meets all advertised competitors prices\nplus Liberty's features. Very best quality fresh fruits\nand vegetables are yours at low prices.\nHe's headed for Liberty because Liberty meets all advertised prices   brand\nfor brand plus their own features. At Liberty  there  are  so  many   selections   ot\nsuch big savings. '\nPlastic Dust Pan\n75*\nReg. 98c,\nSALE .\nAnd We're Glad to Do It \u2022 Coffee\nBread\nMalkin's New Blend. You will enjoy\nthis coffee. New flavor.  \t\nThere's no .need to waste precious' .time shopping around all\nover town for bargains when you can shop for all the town's\nfeatures under one roof \u2014 at Liberty, Keep your money\nIn Nelson. Liberty Ii your friendly home-town store. Liberty\npacks out your orders to your car, too.\nlb. 99c\n2 for 27c\nFlannelette Sheets\nSunnyside. Size 70\" x 90'\nReg. $6.2J.\nSALE  ....\/\t\n$5.55\nDrinking   Glasses\n25.*:   12for*1,00\nSponge Mats\n>n 36 x\nReg. $1.07.\ntipron 36 x 48. Cj   f\\f\\\nMen's Work Socks\nReinforced With Nylon.\nHV*.2for.$1.00\nWriting Paper\nComplete With Envelopes.\nSS,,m 51.00\n3 Cell Flashlight\nSpotlight   Complete C|   f\\f\\\nWith Batteries   ** I .\\J\\J\nUtility Basin\nPolly. Guaranteed\nUnbreakable. tl   f\\f\\\nReg. 11.19    *I.UU\nEnter LIBERTY'S COLOR CONTEST NOW!\nFull Sets Free on Request. Picture No. 8.\n\u00b0\\      t\nNAIVffi OF ANIMAL \t\nCOLORED BY AGE\nADDRESS \t\nComplete jet of 10 pictures now available, ask clerk. Get\nyour back copies from Liberty. $30 cash prizes. Don't delay,\nkiddles 10 or under. Al! pictures must have a sales slip of $1\nor more to enter. Save the set of 10 before mailing them to\nLiberty Color Contest.\nSandwich Pak\n(Plastic). Keeps sandwiches\nReg. 29c.        4for   *1 .00\nI l'V''i< i\/l ^re,n 'l'eed, enriched white or 50%\nDICCjCJ whole wheat- Aunt Mary's. 16 oi. ....\nIf you use 2 loaves a day you can save u p to $21.00 a year on delicious bread alone,\nVelveeta Cheese 2 Ib. box 99c\nKetchup fit  27c\n3 for $1.00\n- 3 for 25c\nZip.\n15 oz. tin.\nSwift's Prem\nDog Food\nKeiller Jam\nLSBURY.\nCake Mixes\nPILLSBURY.\nor marmalades. 6 oz.  10\nfamous  jam  special\t\nChocolate, white, spice,\norange, golden, yellow. ..\n2 for 35c\n2 pk. 49c\nINSIDE 6\/ANrVH\nVEL\nSPECIAL\nLARGE\n2pk.\n87c 69c\nCups and Saucers\nReg. 29c set. 4 sets * I .00\nStedman Wool\nWITH NYLON\n29c ball. 4for   \u25bc! .00\nWhite Sheets\nGood quality. Approx. 72\" x 99'.\nReg. $6.85 pair. \u00abtt- \u00abC\nNOW *D.oD\nCOTTAGE CHEESE S=.\u00ab, _       18c\nSPAGHETTI KS:.\"\"*-..,...-. 2 Ibs. 29c\nMargarine-Good Luck 2 Ibs. 67c; Solo 2 Ibs. 59c\nTUNA FISH \"stf JBt.     _ 2 tins 35c\nMUSHROOM SOUP \"=\u00bb- 2 tins 35c\nSHARP CHEESE as*. __ - lb. 69c\nTOMATO SAUCE KV    - 11c\nSPAGHETTI\nWITH TUNA\n\u2014 Cook, one-half\n7-ounce package {1 cup) cut spaghetti In boiling\nsalted water until tender; drain. In 1'\/a-quart\ncasserole combine spaghetti with one 7-ounce\ncan (1 cup) tuna, chunk; and 1-3 cup tomato\nsauce. Brown V2 cup sliced, blanched almonds\nIn 1 tablespoon margarine, stir In 1 can con*\ndensed cream of mushroom soup, % cup milk,\nand 1|\/'2 cups grated sharp process Canadian\ncheese. Heat and stir till cheese melts. Pour\nover spaghetti mixture. Bake In moderate oven\n(350 degrees) 30 minutes or till heated through.\nGarnish with tomato and parsley. Makes 4\nto 5 servings.\nHand Towels        ^JS*    at liberty    YOU COUNT YOUR      \u00a9ESSI\ncolors.  Approx. x     **^Amm\\ WKmfffl SBBBj WM SJJ A%W JBf-\\    \u25a0\u25a0ffj \u25a0fSIBMHHV BiStt fJHM\nAll ass't colors.  Approx. 24\" x\n40\". Reg. 69c **, t<   AA\neach. NOW    Zfor   \u25bc I ,\\J\\J\nCar Blankets\nPure wool. Approx. 50\" x 70\".\nReg. J4.85. C3   Q C\nNOW .... \u25bc3\u00abOJ\nSAVE $1.00\nSAVINGS EW\ni*1\nReliable as a certified cheque. That's carried by our popular meat dept., only the very best government inspected\nmeats. Trimmed of excess fat and bone, pan ready.\nGrade A meats.\nDevon BACON\nBy the piece.\nBaby Sleepers\nMuch fresher fruits and vegetables are yours or Liberty. Speeded up handling brings you premium garden fresh spring vegetables, no better place\nthan Liberty. You save money too by our large volume. Why pay more?\nOne-piece. Sizes 1-3. Colors: pink\nand blue. Reg. $1.19.\nNOW, each\nNEW SPRING VEGETABLES\nNEW CABBAGE\n$1.00\nPie Plate\nFire King. 9\". Guaranteed two\nReg\u21225Bc. ....  2tor   *1.00\nCoffee Mugs\nLarge. Ivory or   *\\ \"JQC\ngreen  A for  JLst\nClay Pots\nTo  start  your  early  bedding\nplants.\n15* to 50*\nNylon Stocking\nLadies', First QO\/\u00bb\nQuality. Pair   ...... JO*'\n4 pairs $2.89\nTreasure Trove Winners.\nWATCH\nMrt, Ann Chernoff, Slocan Park,\nB.C.; E. M. Brown, 712 Latimer\nSt.; Mrt. C. N. Sewell, 41 High\nSt.; Mrt. R. Chitin, Salmo, B.C.;\nMr. Leslie Bond, Emerald Mine,\nSalmo, B.C.\nGROCERY HAMPER\nMrs. E. Clum, R.R, 1, Nelson;\nMrt. Birch, 2113 Stanley St.; L. E.\nLevasteur, 418 Silica St,; Mrt.\nLll Christie, 102 View St.; Nelson; Mrt. Win. Berukoff, 704\nHouston St.\nGreen, compact\nHeads. Lb.\t\n10*\n18*\nCELERY\nCello. Clean,\nCrisp. Lb ' .-\t\nSPINACH\nGreen,  fresh, washed.\nLarge bunches. Each ..\nSPRING CARROTS\nLarge *y       OT*\nBunches.       Am for Am I\nBest Way To Buy Now.\nMARMALADE\nORANGES\n23*\nlbs.\nNAVEL ORANGES\nTOMATOES\nFancy.\n5 Ibs. 65c\n\u201e.._._.:.... 27c\nNo. 1. 14 oz. tube. Red,\nfirm, ripe for slicing. \t\nAPPLES 5      ?5*\nCooking Mac's;   *** lbs.   m***\nAPPLES 2     29*\nFancy Delicious:   \"\"lbs.   *****\nPOTATOES: NO. 1 WYNNDEL\n.19 S\u00abJ .25 $J,-19\n__ :  39*\nLEAN HAMBURGER\nGuaranteed lean _  Olbs.    I >vV\/\nBABY BEEF LIVER\n3Q*\nChoice. Lb.  .  ._    \u00ab\/ m*\nCORNED BEEF\nLean, Ideal, with spring cabbage. Lb (... ..  iJ\nROLLED BRISKET\nFor boil or pot roast.- ...GRADE   A   LB. J7C\nWEINERS\nMaple Leaf.  No.   I.   ZIbs. 05\nSLICED COD\nLing. Lb    -  - * Z\nGive assorted frultt In basket for hosoltal friends or relatives.\nLarge Basket $1.50\nAll meat guaranteed tender, juicy or money back.\nCountry Mail -Orders welcome.  Include approx. amount,\nbalance will be sent back with your order.\nSeeds for Bedding Plants \u2014 Buy Now.\nPrices Effective Tuesday, Feb. 28, to Saturday, March 3.\n25 Ibs.\n$1.\nSO Ibs.\n100 Ibs.\nONIONS   Oregon\nJ LBS. J. JC\n m      \u2022   \"'    '       \u25a0\t\n\u201e\niSPS^RSJ^f?\n\t\nNrhnnt laihj $> 1110\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nInferior British Columbia's Largesf  Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized at Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER  THE AUDIT BUREAU OJ  CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  PRESS1\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper\nand aLo the Local news published therein.\nTuesday,-February 28, 1956\nCanada Must Hold Her Economic Freedom\nSpeaking before the Gordon Economic Commission, Mr. R. E. Powell,\npresident of the Aluminum Company\nof Canada, said he suspects there is\nan \"unfortunate\" growth of nationalism in Canada and that she should\nmake up her mind whether she wants\nto be a great world trading country\nor wants to \"take in her own washing.\"\nIt is quite true that there is\na rising tide of nationalism in Canada, but it can hardly be described\nas \"unfortunate\". There is every\nreason why she should, after many\nyears, begin to have a strong pride\nin herself and her destiny. It is also\nthe outcome of her belief that her\nnatural resources should be used to\nthe advantage and benefit of her\npeople. Canada does indeed want to\nbe a great world trading country,\nand to do that she wishes to build up\nher industries, both primary and secondary, but rather than take in other\npeople's washing she is prepared to\ndo her own.\nMr. Powell also stated that it\nwould be dangerous for Canada to\nbelieve that she has a power monopoly, and that there are attractive\nplants and smelter sites in other parts\nof the world.. That, of course, may.be\ntrue, but ik is no reason why Canada\nshould part with hers unless she is\nassured that it is to her best interests\nand not just the interests of private\nindividuals or great corporations. As\nit is, with the growing shortage of\npower in North America, time is on\nher side and she can afford to wait.\n\"Canada,\" said Mr. Powell, \"was\nnot the only country which wanted\nsecondary industries, but some secondary industries had no business in\nCanada because they could not stay\non their own economic feet.\" With\nthe example before us of our neighbors to the south, whose nationalism\nis notorious and whose high tariffs\nhave nursed industries along, there is\nno reason to believe that Canada cannot also have secondary industries.\nCertainly she should not be a primary producer employed in providing for the wants of secondary industries in other countries. That is precisely the theory against which the\nAmerican colonies revolted. They objected to being considered as suppliers of raw materials which Britain\nmanufactured and returned as high-\npriced processed goods. In the same\nway Canada desires to control, if\npossible, her natural resources and\nher raw materials to the processed\ngoods. She, like other countries, desires the greatest possible self-sufficiency. She is indebted tb other countries for capital which has made\nmuch of her progress possible. She\nwould welcome more such capital,\nbut not at the risk of losing her economic freedom.\n-Laughing, At Oneseli\nTo appreciate history truly s man needs\na sense of humor, for In many ways history\nis a record of a chain of disappointments. It\nIs the story of man's grasping for progress,\nonly to come off second best so often. And\n\u25a0o the man without the abality to laugh at\nhimself may well live In despair and history will have for him a gloomy and warped\ncountenance.\nBut, really, what'* wrong with being\nsecond best? It's better than third best. And\nwhat's wrong with sometimes compromising\non one's ideals? Compromise at times represents the flexibility upon which the progress of freedom is based.\nThese are thoughts to which Canadians\ncould give sincere consideration, for it so\noften appears that, living in the gigantic\nshadow of their southern cousin, they suffer\nan inferiority complex from being only second best. An honest appraisal would likely\nconvince most of them there's little to complain of in enjoying the .world's second\nhighest standard of living.\nThe anility to laugh at oneself puts\nthings back in perspective. It's much easier\nto laugh at yourself than to have someone\nelse laugh at you. And there's no more\nlaughable object than the fabled mouse\nsuffering an inferiority complex because he\nisn't an elephant.\u2014Penticton Herald.\n50: Years of\nCkicanery\nJoseph Weil, now 80, lives quietly in a\nsmall apartment in Chicago. He is reputed\nto have made and lost $8,000,000 in various\nconfidence games, and in a recent interview\ndeclared: \"Looking back on 50 years of chicanery, I can only say that I enjoyed every\nmoment.\"\nWeil rationalized his crimes by saying:\n\"Each of my victims had larceny in his own\nheart, and I never fleeced anyone who could\nnot afford to pay my price for a lesson in\nhonesty.\"\nDespite his various shady deals, Weil\nspent only six years in prison\u2014his victims\nwere so ensnared in shadiness themselves\nthat they feared to go to the police.\nOnce, according to the United Press,\nWeil rented an abandoned bank, hired pool\nhall characters as tellers and filled money\nsacks with slugs\u2014all stage setting for the\npurpose of fleecing a thoroughly unsusnect-\ning soap magnate from out of town.\u2014Cleveland Plain Dealer.\nIt's Been Said\nWe ought not to judge of men's merits\nby their qualifications, but by the use they\nmake of them.\u2014Pierre Charron.\nWatch Your Language\nEXCAVATE (EKS-ka-vate) \u2014 Verb\ntransitive: To hollw out; to form cavity or\nhole in; to form by hollowing, as a tunnel;\nto dig out and remove earth. Origin: Latin\u2014\nExcavatus, past participle of Excavare, to\nexcavate, from Ex, out, plus cavare, to make\nhollow.\nNew Fuels\n(Fort William Times-Journal)\nIn the past some men prominent in the\ncoal mining industry have worried about\nthe probable effect of the development of\nfuel oil heating on their business. Later\nthere were eome oil people who looked\nahead apprehensively at the prospect of\ncompetition by natural gas. Now, if we pay\nheed to members of the Canadian Electrical\nManufacturers' Association, we may begin\nto wonder what may happen to natural gas\nwhen further electronic advances have been\nmade. For the electrical manufacturers predict that some day homes will be heated and\ncooled with a strange pump that operates\nonly on electricity and air.\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished. There Is no charge for this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL NOT 8E\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\nthere Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nReader, Marysville\u2014Could you tell me if\nthere \u201eis a Better Business Bureau in\nToronto? If so, please give me the address.\nBetter Business Bureau,  Toronto,  Ontario, ls sufficient address.\n\"Wondering\",   Cruston\u2014Could   you   advise\nme how to keep a white sweater from\nturning yellow after washing?\nOne of the powder bleaches can safely\nbe used on woolen goods. Another trick is\nto put a faint dash of blueing in the rinsing\nwater.\nA. H., Kinnaird\u2014Would you please tell me\nif there is any  way to remove stains\ncaused   by  paraffin   wax   from   cotton\nclothing?\nAs home treatments for these kind of\nstains are not always successful, we strongly\nadvise taking the garment to a commercial\ncleaner.\nInterested,   Nelson\u2014Was    daylight    saving\nused in B. C. during 1939?\nDaylight saving time was not enacted\non province-wide basis until 1940.\nCurious, Fairview\u2014What fur is considered\nthe most fashionable and likely to prove\nthe most profitable to a breeder?\nMink.\nIndignant, Fernie\u2014To  settle  an  argument,\nwhich country covers  the larger  area.\nCanada or the United States?\nCanada.\nG. E. W., Trail\u2014What is the population of\nAugsburg, Germany?\n196.600, according to the latest census.\nRotate Prime\nMinisters' Meetings\nSir Anthony Eden's suggestion that assemblies of the Commonwealth Prime Ministers be rotated among the various capitals\nis an excellent one. In earlier stages of the\nCommonwealth's development, London was\nthe logical site of such meetings, but the\nnewer concept of partnership in this unique\nsociety of nations permits, and indeed requires, a change of scene.\nEach nation thus honored would be\ngiven a fillip as a member of the Commonwealth. There would be no opportunity for\nthe anachronistic suspicion that subservience was involved in making the trek to\nLondon. Perhaps most important, it would\ngive the distinguished visitors and their\nretinue a fortuitous occasion to study the\nhost country and understand better its problems.\nSir Anthony, diplomat that he is, made\nno suggestion as to priority or sequence.\nSince there was no implication that the rotation of site should be alphabetical, Prime\nMinister St. Laurent should take the initia<-\ntive when he gathers with other Commonwealth leaders at London in June, and invite them to hold their next meeting in\nOttawa, Canada would welcome them.\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nHard Up Farmers\nHow hard up are prairie wheat farmers?\nRt. Hon. C. D. Howe probably put his\nfoot in it the other day when he told Members of Parliament, after relating that he\nhad ridden with a Western wheat grower in\nthe letter's car after a meeting last fall in\nwhich the governor had berated the government wheat policy, of his conversation during the car ride:\n\"I said,\" Mr Howe related, \"this is a\nnice car you have.' He said: 'Yes, I bought\nit this year. I like it very much.' Then he\nsaid:  'You know, I'm doing far better\nthan I said I was at that meeting. All my\nlife I've looked forward to the day when\n1 had my farm clear of debt and one\ncrop in the bin ahead of harvest. For the\nfirst time I have that, and no man can\ntell me I'm in very bad shape.\"\nNow, of \"course, growers will  say that\nthis story is the exception that proves the\nrule.  Mr. Howe will  probably stick to it\nthat farmers are not so hard up. The truth\nis probably somewhere in between.\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n-By Frances Drake-\nLook  in  the  section  in  which\nyour   birthday   comes,   and   find\nwhat your outlook is, according to\nthe stars,\nFor Wednesday February 29, 1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Whatever you do, do quietly\nand with good will; all will be'\neasier, even that which starts out'\ntrickly. Fine rays prevail. Your1\nplanet aspect strongly for your1\nactivities IF you have self-control.1\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Many things which can be eliminated for your own good and\nthe good of those about you. Think\nbefore you decide in all matters,\nbut DO decide against anything\nquestionable.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) \u2014\nThe truth, yes, but say it calmly\nwith no harsh words. State your\nbright ideas, and listen to others',\ntoo. You will go far this day with\ngraciousness.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer) \u2014\nBe not upset at the least little\nthing, as day may tempt. Go\nalong with humor and tolerance of\nhuman frailty; note how much\neasier chores can be..\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23  (Leo)\n\u2014 How are you fixed for system\nand readiness? These are more\nimportant than many of us realize.\nLittle annoyances may catch you\nready for hasty words: DON'T!\nThink; maintain dignity.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 In the rush of work,\nwe often think only of big things;\nhence we may overlook the truly\nvital items that belong to wiser\nliving. Reflect a while; be of\npeaceable mind. j\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 You may be able to\ngo through day without obstacles,\nopposition, but I doubt it because\nwe all are due for some in one\nform or another. Don't be upset.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Review, note where\nyou can improve, alter FOR THE\nBETTER, not just make changes.\nYour planet Mars in excellent position promotes loundly aggressive\nefforts for best purposes.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Several ways\nin which you can instigate new\nmethods  for  efficiency  and  pro\ngress. Work on the most feasible\nDon't be over-particular.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Saturn (your especial planet), Mars and Pluto the\nonly ones in auspicious aspects\nnow. You can make noteworthy\nheadway if you remember not to\nto step on others' toes along the\nway.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Think, study; then\nact, and with conviction. Your day\ncan be ordinary only if you let\nit be. It is within your capacity to\nbuild up this period to fine result-\nbringing position.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 There are matters to\nbe attended to that may seem trivial at first. But most- are urgent\nfor a complete afid satisfactory\nday. Differcntiate^well; don't be a\nputter-off.\nYOU BORN TODAY: This is the\nSign Pisces, ruled especially by\nNeptune; other planets have their\nsay, too. You are sensitive, on the\nintellectual side; you dislike anything crude, unworthy and ill-\nkent. Naturally neat about your\nperson, ton meticulous at times\nabout little things. You are kind\nto all by nature; can be excellent\nstudent, Be careful of associations;\ndon't let your sympathies be imposed dpon. Birthdate of: Rossini, and\nother famous composers.\nKing Features.\nReading for\nEnjoyment\nF. B. Pearce\nEgyptian Women to\nBe Allowed To Vote\nCAIRO (AP) \u2014 Egyptian women will have the vote for the first\ntime under a proposed new electoral law published Monday. It\nmakes voting compulsory for men\nover 21. The women may vote\nor not.\nn (oast City\n3\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Red\nCross here reports their blood i\nbank is so low that cijy hospitals\nwere forced to use type O blood,\nonly for emergencies during the j\nweekend.\nOnly a few pints of the type are |\navailable, said officials.\nIn an attempt to relieve the\nshortage, the Red Cross has set\nup two donor clinics which will\nbe open today in the afternoon!\nand evening. Officials blamed\nsnow and cold during February j\nfor the shortage as regular donors!\nmissed appointments due to the!\nweather.\nJack Scott, writing in the Vancouver Sun, wonders why his 15\nyear-old friends have not found\nout that literature is fun. He an\nswers himself in the last paragraph when he says, \"My own\nmemory of studies in English is\nhaunted by grammarians who\nsomehow made good reading a\ntedjous chore.\"\nThat this is true may lie in the\nfact that we have too few good\nteachers of English. To be able to\nteach really well they must themselves be good readers, they must\nbe great, and indeed avid, readers,\nthey must have a large and clean-\ncut vocabulary and an appreciation of the language. To them literature must be alive and they\nmust be able to convey their love\nof it to their pupils.\nUnfortunately, Canadian education in the mass has no tradition:\nof love for literature. Teachers,!\nwho themselves wa,re taught by;\ngrammarians are carrying on the i\nsame way. They prefer to drill\ntheir pupils in grammatical rules\nand English usage rather than to1\nread a book for enjoyment. If they j\ndo have a book like \"Kidnapped\"!\nin the course of studies it is used,\nto again quote Scott, \"as a sort of\ncadaver to be dissected for the}\nstudy of English usage.\" They can\nnever stop being teachers,\nTOO HARD\nThe pupils' reaction to this is\nthat literature is too uninteresting\nand too hard. It is not really so,\nand this may sound incredible,\nbut once I met a class of 14-year-\nboys whose greatest delight was\nto read the parts of Shakespeare's\nplays. They were not the brightest and best of England's educational system either. They were\u25a0\nwhat the school called \"leavers\",\nwhich meant that they were due'\nto leave school at the end of the\nterm.\nThey lived in the East End of,\nLonden and were left behind1\nwhen the brighter boys went on.\nto secondary and trade school.;\nThey were not there to learn and\nall I had to do was to keep them]\noccupied. That was not difficult:\nfor I found that there were two,\nways of getting their interest; I!\ncould talk about Canada or I\ncould let them read the parts of1\nPLANE CRASH-LANDS\nMOSCOW, Idaho (AP) - Fifteen persons aboard a west coast\nairlines DC-3 escaped serious injury as the plane crash-landed in\nthe midst of a blinding snow\nstorm. The plane landed on a hill,\nabout three miles northeast of the\nMoscow-Pullman   airport;\n 4\na play. They loved Hamlet and td\nthem it was real. They dropped\ntheir aitches wholesale, but theii\nlines were full of fire and understanding. They had favorite passages too which they would\nchoose if given the chance. In\nshort they were Shakespeare fans.\nNow, I was not responsible for\nthis. All this love for literature\nhad been engendered in the school\nlong before I netered it. It must\nbe said, too, that they had no\nformal grammar on which to dissipate their iking for English\nIt also can ba said that, given the\nchance, Canadian children could\ndo the same, for I'know-of one\nteacher who had a wonderful\ntime with a grade six class reading Oliver Twist together. As\nreading went, it was on the hard\nside for 12-year-olds, but the\npleasure they got out of it waa\nimmense thanks, of course, to the\nteacher who was full of enthusiasm for the book.\nBut if the child does not like\npoety or literature, blame it on\nthe teachers, but not too much.\nThey follow the pattern and th\u00ab\ncourse of studies. No one in the\neducational system has ever encouraged them to spend time on\nmaking the literature lesson the\nhappiest period in school.\nWHY OH WHY\nSUFFER\nCOLD MISERY\nFOR DAYS\nWhen the first Buckley's Cinnarnated Cold\nCapsule starts to give relief in seconds, helpi\nmake you feet better fast, then, every capsule\nyou take pill give you more and more relief\nuntil all cold symptoms are gone, or double\nyour money bacli. 4 cold-fighting ingredient!\nin each Capsule, that's why ihey work so fast\n12 Doses 35C 30 Dose* 79tf. Sold everywhere.\nBUCKLEY'S\nCOLD CAPSULES\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nb|U\u00abi>l.lWMOIa\nBy Jimmy Hado\nWrlEN FLOTILU WAS ME4SURED FOR 4\nNEW DRESS, SHE WORE HER NEW GIRDLE-\naho cm ah almost perfect figure-\nThen SHE W4DDLES IN FOR THE FITTING\nWEARING HER OLD H4RMES6 WITH THE\nSPRUNG SWS-\/4ND EXPECTS A MIRACLE*\nThought\nToday's Bible\nAnd let the beauty of the Lord\nour God be upon us. Psalm 90:17.\nGod loves beauty. He made the\nlily of the field; He made the orchid. The sun sets and sun rises;\nbut most of all He loves to see\nbeauty in the lives of His children.\n(hint dist\n2-22\nIt ain't age that makes old\nmaids. It's havin' the idea that\nmen are dreadful creatures a girl\ncan't trust too close.\nBetter days are here for Phil Fraser!\nIn all his years of railroading, Engineer Phillip Fraser has\nseen some big changes.\n\"Rolling along in this smooth diesel locomotive,\" says Mr.\nFraser, \"is a real thrill \u2014 a far cry from driving the old\nsteam jobs. Its extra power gives, it quicker pick-up and\nmore speed on the grades. Besides, it can run from coast\nto coast without a change. That's what I call progress I\"\nPhil has seen progress in the life insurance business too.\nAs a family man, he knows that this business offers better\nservice today than ever before.\nTake life underwriters, for instance. Modern training makes'\nthese men better qualified to guide people through the\ncomplex problems of planning for future security.\nToday, too, life insurance is more flexible. There's a wider\nrange of plans \u2014 allowing people to'meet their own\nindividual needs.\nMoreover, people with certain physical handicaps, can now\nenjoy the protection of life insurance.\nIn these and other ways, the life insurance companies in\nCanada have progressed with the times to meet the changing\nneeds oj people in all walks of life!\nTHE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA\n . \u2014;        -\n5^3\nNUPTIAL MASS celebrated at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate united In marriage Angelo Domlnato and the former\nRosa De Nale, pictured above. Rev. Father Armando Maglio conducted the rites. Mr. and Mrs. Domlnato will make their home In\nGrand Forks.\u2014Renwlck photo.\nUnited Church School Aims lo Help\nIndian Progress, Yel Keep Heritage\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014Individuality may be a difficult word for a\nsix-year-old to understand but in\nthe classrooms and on the playgrounds of the Indian Residence\nSchool just north of here that is\nwhat teachers are trying to create.\n\"There are three words of great\nimportance that we must remember in our work here,\" said Rev.\nO. B. Strapp. principal of the\nschool. \"Individuality, love, and\npatience. We are not seeking assimilation of the Indian. We are\nseeking to integrate the Indian so\nthat he will retain his rights and\nmahian. MaJddn.\nhis heritage, yet he himself Will\ncome forward and take part in\nCanadian society.\"\nOPERATED   BY  CHURCH\nThe school, five miles north of\nEdmonton, is operated by the United Church of Canada. Its buildings are situated on a three-acre\nsite on an 800-acre farm purchased\nfor the purpose. A long, three-\nstorey red brick building, constructed in 1923 and since i\nproved regularly, is the centre of\neducational, religious and administrative activity.\nAn annex contains a classroom\nfor junior high school students\nand a large barn, converted when\nfarming became mechanized\nhouses a combined drill hall-gymnasium and a manual training\nshop. The barn is to be replaced\nnext summer with a new building\nof four classrooms, a manual\ntraining shop, a home economics\ndepartment and combined auditorium-gymnasium.\nFARM PRODUCTS HELP\nThe buildings and equipment\nare owned by the federal government and financing is done\nthrough a federal per capita grant\nof $310 annually. Farm operations\nsupply milk, vegetables and some\nmeat and supplement the grants\nto a certain extent.\nThe government also pays salaries of five academic and one home I\nTV Promoting Visual Arts\nBallet Popularity Up,\nSays Agnes de Mille\nBy CHARLES MERCER\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Once upon\na time there was a little girl in\nLos Angeles who watched the late\nIsadora Durtcan dance and heard\nher admonish the audience to go\nout and run barefoot through the\nhills. The little girl did\u2014and filled\nher feet with cactus thorns.\nIt was the beginning of a thorny\npath for Angnes de Mille which\nled in later years to the summit of\nachievement in the world of the\ndance. Today she is the person\nwho more than any other has\ntaught Americans to appreciate\nand understand the ballet.\nIn the world of television these\ndays there's increasing interest in\nthe ballet because\u2014to the amazement of many\u2014the public has\nshown great enthusiasm for it.\nFAMOUS FAMILY\n\"The reason the public likes the\nballet,\" .says Miss de Mille, \"is\nbecause it finally is beginning to\nsee some good ballet. I believe in\nthe innate good taste of people. In\nyears past in many cities they saw\nsome very poor ballet\u2014and rightly\ndecided they didn't like it. Now\ntelevision is offering good ballet\u2014\nand the people know it's good.\"\nAs a youngster Agnes de Mille's\ngreatest problem was that in the\nview of her family well-brought-up\ngirls didn't try to become ballerinas. Her father was playwright\nWilliam de Mille, her uncle is\nmovie producer Cecil B. de Mille.\nand her maternal grandfather was\nHenry George, the renowned\nAmerican single-taxer.\nWhile she never knew outright\nfailure she knew some lean years\nbefore she joined the.New York\nBallet Theatre in 1938. Gradually\nshe turned from dancing to choreography and composition of ballets.\nHer ballet, \"Rodeo,\" was widely\nacclaimed in 1S42. Her choreography for \"Oklahoma\" brought\nher to the attention of an even\nwide audience.\nVISUAL ARTS DEVELOPING\nBasically what she has done\nirlore successfully than any other\nis to adapt folk music to the form\nof the ballet.\nHer choreography in  this field\nAPRON  OR   BEACHCOAT\nLove or your busy life \u2014 that's\nthis versatile style! Make it a\ncobbler-apron of gay cotton, with\npretty \"heart\" pocket; or make\nit a terrycloth beachcoat; perfect\nfor summer sun and fun! Sewing\n\u2014 a cinch; easiest ironing tool\nSend for your pattern right away.\nPattern 9355: Misses' Sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20. Sizes 16 takes 2%\nyards 35-inch fabric.\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, NDN, 60 Front St., W.,\nToronto, Ont.\nAnnounce New Way\nTo Shrink Painful\nHemorrhoids\nScience Finds Healing Subitance That\nRelieres Pain\u2014Shrinks Hemorrhoids\nToronto, Ont. (Special)\u2014For the\nfirst time science has found a new\nhealing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and\nto relieve pain. Thousands have been\nrelieved\u2014without resort to surgery.\nIn case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place.\nMost amazing of all\u2014results were\nso thorough that sufferers made\nastonishing statements like \"Piles\n*}ave ceased to be a problem!\"\nThe secret iB a now healing substance (Bio-Dyne*) \u2014 discovery of\na famous scientific institute.\nNow you can get this new healing\nsubstance in suppository or ointment\nform called Preparation H*. Ask for\nit nt all drug stores. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or money refunded.\ns Trade Mark Reg.\nAsk Cockneys\nTo Donale lo\nChurch Funds\nLONDON (CP) ~ Cockneys\nnow living in Canada are being\nasked to join their brothers\nthroughout the world in contributing toward the restoration and\npreservation of \"their\" church.\nLondon's Lord Mayor, Cuthbert\nLowell Ackroyd, has launched a\n\u00a3150,000 appeal for the reconstruction of the ancient Church of St.\nMary-le-Bow which, with its famous Bow bells, was badly damaged during the Second World\nWar.\nLegend has it that to be a Cockney, a \"pure Londoner,\" one must\nhave been born since May 11, 1941,\nwhen German bombs .shattered\nthe 1 bells.\nIt is planned that the bells will\nring again from the tower of the\npartially reconstructed church by\nNovember of this year.\nRECAST OLD BELLS   '\nNew bells will  be recast from\nthe remnants _of the old ones cast\nafter the church was destroyed by\nthe great fire of London in  the\n' 17th century.\nThe lord mayor has asked all\nCockneys to contribute toward the\nreconstruction of the church that\n\"belongs\" to them. London Cockneys are asked to contribute half-\na-crown each.\nA gift of $50,000 has been re\nceived from Trinity church in New\nYork, whose charter is based on\nthat of St. Mary-le-Bow. The\nQueen Mother has also made\ncontribution,\nThe church, dates back to 1000\nand parts of the Norman archi\ntecture still remain. It was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren\nafter the great fire. Surviving\narchitecture will be preserved\nthe rebuilt church. Piles will be\ndriven 40 feet into the ground to\nhold up the existing walls whose\nfoundations   have   been   wrecked\neconomic teacher. From the\ngrants, the United Church, which\nhandles administration, must pay\nthe salaries of the principal, a\nmatron, a chaplain and 15 other\nstaff members who maintain the\ngrounds and handle the farming.\nSome staff members conduct\nevening 'craft classes and in this\nthe children sparkle. Some of their\nhandiwork is displayed in the\nschool \u2014 necklaces, Christmas\ndecorations, totem poles \u2014 and\ntheir work has won many honors\nfor the school at exhibitions.\nThe boys are particularly proud\nof their cadet squadron which,\nunder supervision of Rev. J. C,\nLudford, the school chaplain and\nrecreation director, won the Alberta trophy as the group \"making the-greatest contribution to\nthe air cadet movement in 1953-\n54.\"\nMECHANIZED  FARMS  (\nNAPIER, New Zealand (CP) -\nCattle are familiar with cars,\njeeps, tractors and hay balers on\nthe highly-mechanized farms of\nthe Hawke's Bay district. But they\nshy in fright at the sight of a man\non a horse. Many of the cattle\nhave never seen horses.\nSymbolic Lighthouse\nNEW   YORK    (AP)    \u2014   Four\ngiant revolving searchlights\nwill be visible 300 miles away on\na clear night are to be mounted\natop the Empire State buflding.\nCol. Henry Crown, the building\ncorporation's president, announced the plan over the weekend and\nsaid the lights will be an \"air-age\nsupplement\" to the Statue of Liberty beacon as \"a symbol of welcome and freedom\" to visitors to\nthe  United  States.\nhas marked a long series of Broadway hits\u2014\"Bloomer Girl,\" \"Carousel,\" \"Brigadoon,\" \"Paint Your\nWagon.\"\n\"It seems to me that we're now\nin a period of great development\nof the visual arts, what I'l call\nthe theatre of movement,\" she\nsays. \"The Shakespearean stage\nwas a theatre of language. The\n18th and 19th century developments were a theatre of music. But\nnow It's the visual arts\u2014meaning\nsuch things as the dance and such\nprominent performers as Charlie\nChaplin.\n\"Television is a part of this development.\"\nThe Doctor...\nSuitable Togs\nEssential for\nWinter Sports\nBy Dr. HERMAN N. BUNDESEN\nWinter sports are fun and\nhealthful\nBut you've got to keep bundled\nup if you want to remain comfortable and avoid chills and\nnumbing frostbite. Dress sensibly\nand you will get more enjoyment\nout of skating, skiing and tobog\nganing.\nYou do not become cold be\ncause of the change in your body's\ntemperature, but because of a\nchange in the temperature of your\nskin.\nNORMAL TEMPERATURE\nWhen your skin becomes cold,\ninvoluntary messages are sent to\nyour brain. There, a device, acting like a thermostat, automatically helps your body maintain its\nown temperature.\nIf you are in good health, this\ntemperature may vary from 97 to\n99 degrees Fahrenheit. This built-\nin thermostat, however, needs the\nhelp of the warm clothing to do a\ngood job in the winter.\nI think you will find that several layers of light wool, such as\na wool shirt or dress and one or\neven two woolen sweaters will\nkeep you much warmer than just\none heavy garment.\nLIGHT GARMENTS\nAnother good reason for wearing several light garments is that\nyou can easily remove or add\nthem according to the temperature or amount of exertion called\nfor in the activities.\nOver these woolens, you can\nwear a light windproof coat or\nother covering. This will greatly\nhelp to keep your body heat from\nescaping.\nYour hands, feet and ears are\nthe best targets for frostbite.\nEarmuffs are essential for sub-\nfreezing weather. Woolen mitts\noffer the best protection for your\nhands. In extremely cold weather,\nwater-repelent mittens worn over\nwoolen mittens will keep your\nhands not only nice and warm\nbut dry as well.\nLIGHT WOOL\nFor your feet, I advise two pair\nof socks. The first should be light\nwool. Over them put on a pair of\nheavier socks.\nAnd finally, a pair of comfortable boots. Avoid tight boots. They\ntend to increase the chance of\nfrostbite In fact.lall winter cloth\ning should be fairly loose.\nTight clothes restrict blood circulation'and cold temperatures are\napt to slow down circulation any>\nway.\nNelson Social\nPHONE 1844\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Mitchell\nhave moved to 910 Edgewood\nAvenue from their home on the\nNorth Shore. Mr. Mitchell is principal of Harrop School.\nMr. and Mrs. D. M. Sample,\nJosephine Street, were hosts Saturday evening to the wives and\ndirectors of the Kootenay Society\nfor Handicapped Children. After\nsome work* on finalizing records of\nnew members obtained from their\n\"blitz\", a social evening was enjoy ned.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA recent business visitor to\nNelson was Ed Huss of Rosebery.\n\u2022 *   *\nBert Daynard of Trail, a former\nNelson resident, was a weekend\nvisitor to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. M. Steele, Sixth Street, has\nlefj for a week's visit to Vancou\n\u25a0 J\nBy TRACY ADRIAN \\\nMINK, WHICH has always been tops In luxury, hai appeared\nthis season In many new and glamorous roles, all rich, flattering\nand beautiful, The fur Is seen here in a really handsome and\nImpressive opera stole. It Is clever manipulation of the blackest\nof black mink with the whitest of white mink, and is the perfect\ncomplement for formal evening gowns and chic dance dresses.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - At a recent\nmeeting of the Harmony Group,\na talent show was the feature of\nthe evening. Solos, recitations,\ntrios and group singing accompan\nled by Mrs. Thomas Steenhoff\nwere presented by the members\nOld-time dances brought the evening to a close. Refreshments were\nserved by Mrs. H. T. Butler, Mrs.\nG. P. Stewart, Mrs. S. Heslip and\nMrs. Hermann Clever.\nA birthday party was held at\nthe home of Mrs. K, Ono to cele\nbrate the seventh birthday of their\ndaughter Lily. Indoor games were\nplayed after which lunch was\nserved. The large decorated birth\nday cake with its seven lighted\ncandles, centred the table. Each\nguest received favors of hats bal\nloons and plastic baskets of candies\nand nuts. Lily received many\nlovely gifts from her friends.\nMrs. Wm. S. Henderson returned\nfrom visiting in Trail with her\ndaughter, Mrs. Anne Teirf for a\ncouple of days and also in Nelson\nwith her sister. Miss Leona Boss.\nWord has been received, that\nthe son of Mr. and Mrs. William\nMartin is doing nicely. Stanley is\na patent in the Vancouver General\nHospital Vancouver.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956 \u2014 S\nRESIDING AT 514 Victoria Street are Terrance Panton and\nhis bride, the former Betty Hecker, who were married at the home\nof the bride's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Steve Hecker. Mr. Panton is\nthe son of Mr, R. L. Panton of Pomona, Calif. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Lydia Hecker, and Mike Bodnaruk was\nbest man.\u2014Renwlck photo.\nRecipes\nNow's Time of Year\nTo Make Most of Eggs\nBy MARGARET CARR\nThere are several good reasons\nfor making the most of eggs at\nthis time of year. Because of the\ncool weather, the proportion of\ntop-quality eggs in the total production is large. Also, there's a\ngood share of large size eggs.\nYolks of eggs at this season generally are delicate yellow in color\nso give a light yellow to omelets,\ncustards, cakes or other favorite\negg dishes. Later as spring comes\non and many hens will be on\ngreen feed, eggs will have a deep\nyellow yolk. But the shade of yellow is no indication of the vitamin\nA value of the yolk. Now that\nmost hens are scientifically fed,\nthey get their full quota of vitamins and other nutrients at all\ntimes of the year.       ,\nWe are frequently asked for\nsuggestions as'*o ways in which\negg whites or yolks, left over from\na recipe might be used. Unless\nused soon, they can spoil and go\nto waste. To store, place egg yolks\nor whites in small covered container and refrigerate. The Poultry Products Institute offers the\nfollowing ways of using these\nleft-overs:\nEGG   YOLKS  OR  WHITES\n1. In making custard sauce or\nbaked custard fuse two yolks or\ntwo whites in place of each whole\negg.\n2. By adding to an omelet or\nscrambled eggs.\n3. In thickening dessert or vegetable sauces,\n4. Mixed with a little water and\nused as a dip when crumbing food\nfor frying.\n5. In making salad dressings (a\nraw egg yolk helps keep French\ndressing from separating readily).\n6. In    making    butter   icings.\nGives added smoothness and replaces all or mnst of liquid.\n7. In sandwich fillings, mixed\nwith celery, nuts or other crunchy\ningredients.\nTo  Hard-Cook  Yolks\nCover with warm water and\ncook below boiling point five to\neight minutes or until set. Test\nwith a toothprick.\nTo   Hard-Cook  Whites\nPour into hot salted water at\nleast one inch deep, cook below\nboiling point until set, about three\nto five minutes; or place whites\nin a greased heat-proof container\nsuch as a four or eight ounce wide\nmouth olive jar. Set in pan of\nwarm water and cook until set,\nTurn out and cut with small fancy\nshaped cookie cutters and use for\ngarnishing salads and casseroles,\nor chop as desired for other uses.\nTo Tint Cooked White\nLet stand five minutes or longer in water colored with food\ncoloring. The water must be considerably darker than the tint desired.\nLeft-Over Egg Yolk\nIn gold cake, cookies or desserts. Hard cooked and seived and\nused sprinkled on soups, salads\nor creamed dishes.\nLeft-Over   Egg   Writes\nIn angel cake.\nIn prune or seven-minute frosting.\nBeaten and added to extend\nwhipped cream.\niiiHrm;iiMiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii!i\nRED HOT BUY\nFor a\nCOLD DAY\nHassocks\n20<7\u00b0 OFF\njMCinonA-\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllll\nMrs. J. A. Wilson\nHeads Socred WA\nA new slate of officers for the\nyear ahead won election when the\nNelson Social Credit Women's\nAuxiliary met at the home of Mrs.\nRichard Palmer, Third Street.\nThe officers are: Mrs. J. A. Wilson, president; Mrs. J. Q, James,\nfirst vice-president; Mrs. Jack\nWiginton, second vice-president;\nMrs. R. H. Bradley, secretary; Mrs.\nFloyd Searle, treasurer, and Mrs.\nWalgren, chairman of the phoning\ncommittee.\nThe provincial bulletin which\ncontained a report of the auxiliary\npresidents conversion in Victoria\nin January was read by Mrs.\nLouis Hanic, immediate past president of the Nelson Auxiliary.\nArrangements were made for a\ncard party at Willow Point early\nin April.\nOdd Games Ployed\nAt Gray Creek Party\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 An evening\nof progressive games arranged by\nMrs. Feenie proved popular.\nYoung and old did their best to\nmake high scores with a different\ngame at every table.\nBeans and straws, scissors and\npins in potatoes, guessing white\npowders, smelling brown powders,\nknotting string, pick up sticks,\nnursery rhymes, advertising slogans. Kim's game, being at some\nof the tables. First prizes were\ngained by Mrs. Horst Wirsig and\nW. J. Kocher, while consolation\nprizes went to Mrs. Oscar Wirsig\nand C. C. Feenie.\nOIL OUTPUT\nKARACHI,    Pakistan    (CP)  \u2014\nMore oil drilling operations are\nunder way in West.Pakistan. Oil\nproduction for 1955 reached more\nthan 1,300,000 barrels compared\nwith 300.000 in 1947.\nSpecial Sale Ad\nCrammed with'\nBAY SUPER VALUES\nbiihiiiin's btui (L (i iii u n ii it.\nTWIN PANELS.\nTWO pretty wall panels to\ndecorate a child's room! Charming scenes of nightime and daytime prayer \u2014 all in easy, colorful\nembroidery. Make wonderful gifts!\nPattern 546:. Embroidery transfers, directions for making twin\nwall panels, each 9x12 inches,\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. '\nLook for smartest ideas in\nneedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting, embroidery and lovely things\nto wear, iron-ons, quilts, aprons,\nnovelties \u2014 easy, fun to make!\nSend 25 cents for your copy of\nthis book NOW! You will want to\norder every new design in it.\nRUB\nAWAY\nTHROBBING\nPAIN\n*W^mf<*        Arthritic and\n4I&W&   Rheumatic Achoi\nHere is how to prove it yourself I\nJust massage the aching spots briskly\nwith Buckley's White Rub. Right away\nyou feel a comforting, glowing, warmth\nwhich means the circulation is being\nstimulated, and local congestion broken\nup. Tortured muscles and joints respond\nquickly from the combined action of the\npain relieving ingredients, in every jar.\nWhy spend another minute of misery-\nget WHITE RUB today, and comfort\nright away. Only 594 \u2014- but priceless\nwhen you get an ache or pain.\nFR E E- GENEROUS SIZE TRIAL JAR\nI Soiid IJ< fo cover pottage and packing to\nW. K. BUCKLEY LIMITED, TORONTO\nWhat a\nPICK-UP\nrnTiiFTl\nyet it\nRELAXES\nTea gives you such a refreshing lift...and leaves you feeling s6 good afterwards.\nTea Council\nk:    That's\nthe 4MOM of\nTEA\n ' \u2014\u25a0 \u20147\u2014 \u25a0 \u2014 . .\n\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0        .'   .\u25a0 -\nwmmmm-- -\u2014- . ^.^p^^ \"' i\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\nCan't help loving that wl money-saving SAFEWAY\na   \u00b0   o 0\nO\no   O\n0\nc?\nTaste Tells \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nPORK and BEANS\n4s:49c \u00a3*,$169\nIndeed, yooll love this big Stock-Up Event! Every time you\nturn around, in the store, you see another Stock-Up value...\nanother wonderful buy for your cupboard. And your savings\ncan be really impressive. Why not, right now, take a penal\nand check your favorites on this page? Then come in and shop\nto your heart's content, to your budget's satisfaction. Come in\noften during our store-wide Stock-Up Event. Pack away a\nwhole cmpboardful of good eating!\nAylmer Choice.\n28 oz. tin.\t\nTOMATOES\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nTOMATO JUICE\nAPPLE JUICE\nTownhouse.\n48 oz. tin. .\nSunny Dawn.\n48 oz. tin. _\nSun Rype.\n48 oz. tin.\n2 for\n2 for\n2 for\n2 for\n55c\n59c\n73c\n59c\n\\S&l JoodL tf&L <&nL\nHALIBUT\nSliced or in the piece. ..\u201e  Lb.\nCOD FILLETS\nFresh Frozen. .   Lb.\nSMOKED FILLETS\nJumbo Eastern.   . ... Lb.\nEASTERN KIPPERS       3Q*\nDeliciously cured  Lb.  \"* **\n43<\n49'\nSOCKEYE SALMON\nCourt Fancy, TA oz. tin \t\nFLAKED TUNA\nFlying Cloud, 7 oz. tin \t\nSARDINES\nBruniwiek, 3Y\u00bb oz. tin ***    for\nHERRING\nClover Leaf, Tomato Sauce. 15 oz. tin\n47*\n17*\n3 .29*\n20*\n...Fresh coffee!    $\nIreshly-ground\nol ihe Colloo Mill\nR*\u00ab-\njj$|s\u00bb*\nDelicious Together\nKRAFT DINNER\n7V, oz. pkg         Z for    27*\nPINK SALMON\nCloveileaf Fancy.        *\\ AG*1\n7=4 oz. tin      m\\ for    *t>''\n^    1    TIDE DETERGENT\nRich Aromatic\nNOB HILL \\l   *1.07\nMild and  Mellow\nAIRWAY\ni ib.\nbag   _..\n99*\nGiant Package.\n12c Off Pkg.\n71c\nSKYLARK\nSilhouette Bread\n19'\nLow in\ncalories.\n16 oz .loaf.\nROLLED OATS\nRobin Hood.\nSib. pkg. 43c\nUPTON'S\nSOUP MIX\nTOMATO VEGETABLE\nBanded      3 for    33^\nBEEF NOODLE\nBanded Z for  Z\"^\nWestminster Tissue\n6 oz. roll.\n5 for 45c\nChocolate Chips\nVan Kirks. 6 oz. pkg.\nCHAMPION\nDOG FOOD\nDr.  Ballard's.  15 oz. tin.\n4 for 49c\nDAVID'S\nFANCY BISCUITS\n13 Varieties. 16 oz. pkg.\n2 for 75*\n25c\nCampbells Soup\nVelveeta Cheese\nPeanut Butter\nChoice-Peaches\nTomato or\nVegetable. .\n10 oz. tin\n4 ^ 49c\nOr Kraft Canadian.\nBeverly old Fashioned or\nHomogenized.  \t\n1 Ib. pkg\nTaste Tells.\nHalves. __\nIS oz. tin.\n55c\n89c\n21\u00ab 39c\n48 oz. tin\nSsjwsl Jul, Joa&L and, WiUimaladjL\nCanterbury TEA\n$|29\nOrange\nSatisfying flavor.\n1  Ib. pkg JL.\nFRESH BREAD\nPolly Ann\nI,IT\n16 oz.  sliced\nwrapped loaf.\nMarmalade\nEmpress Pure\nOrange Seville.\n4 Ib   tin. \t\n69*\n. Prices Effective: FEBRUARY 28 to MARCH 3.\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\nFRESH PRODUCE\nSafeway's the best place in town to buy Fresh Fruits and Vegetables.\nic Compare Quality     it; Compare Price     it; Buy by Pound and Save\nTomatoes\nBananas-\nCarrots\nCabbag\n14 oz.\nTube.\nCrisp, fresh.\nCalif. Tops off.\nNew, firm,\ngreen heads.\n\u201433c\n2 Ibs. 43c k\n2 Ibs. 29c I\n\u2014lb. 13c\nPINEAPPLE\nFresh Hawaiian\nlb. 19c\nEmperor\nGRAPES\nLarge Bunches.\nlb. 16c\nCooking\nONIONS\nNo. 1 Quality.\nlb. 10c\nOranges\nGrapefruit\nSunkist novels.\nSweet juicy.\t\nIndian River.\nRuby Reds. .\n2 Ibs. 25c\n\u2014Ib.13c\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n ; ,   \u25a0 H     WW \u25a0'     '   ' ' \". '        :       ' ^^\n^5\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\u20147'\nBIG SALE\nMAPLE LEAF\nBRAND\nQUALITY PRODUCTS AT\nSafeway This Week\nCheck the Many Values - Don't Miss This Big Event - SHOP EARLY\nMaple Leaf Quality\ndkadif~-to-\u00a3aL\nSMOKED\nHAMS\nMAPLE LEAF BRAND \u2014 TENDERFLAKE\nPURE LARD   2,b31c\nPURE PORK LUNCHEON MEAT\n12 oz. tin\nKLIK\n::3-95c\nZIP BRAND \u201415 oz. tin\nDOG FOOD It&S\nSNOWFLAKE BRAND\nSHORTENING2ibs45c\nRose Brand MARGARINE\n3ibs.85c\nExceptional\nValue\t\nSample This\nReady-To-Serve\nProduct At Our\nDemonstration\nTable\nWHOLE, HALF OR\nQUARTERED\nPer Pound\nc\nPure Pork Sausage\nSmoked Picnics\nCottage Rolls\nMAPLE LEAF.\n1 Lb. Carton ...\nMAPLE LEAF.\nWhole or\nShank Half. ...\nMAPLE LEAF.\nWhole or Half.\nMAPLE LEAF \u2014 Skinless\nWieners\n1-Pound\nCello Package\n_ 35c\nlb.33c\nlb. 49c\n-35c\nJumbo Bologna\nBack Bacon\nMAPLE LEAF.\nTop Quality.\t\nMaple Leaf. Finest Fancy\nQuality. By the Piece\t\nFrying Chicken\nMAPLE LEAF.\nCut Up In Trays.\nMAPLE LEAF \u2014 Finest Fancy Quality\nSide Bacon\nONE POUND\nPACKAGE .....\nlb. 25c\nIb. 69c\nlb. 65c\n-59c\nWieners\nMAPLE LEAF.\nFinest Quality.\nNo. 1\t\nb.\n29\nc\nPRICES EFFECTIVE\nFEB. 28 to MARCH 3\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n ;\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28,1956\n :  -\nV\no \u25a0                : \u25a0. \u25a0<,.     ?\n'. i\n, \u25a0 r - ,-*;v \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\n^HSM <4 mvi***        *&      $Bp\u00bb\n\u25a0**. r - at\n<>\">*.\nRECORD IN MAKING \u2014 Bob Barksdale of Morgan\nState Is caught by camera in high jump at New York A. C.\ngames In New York. This jump of 6 feet, 9 Inches, broke 22.\nyear-old meet mark ot 6 feet 854 Inches set by Walter Marty.\nHMS M'fAJA RIDES THE WAVES \u2014 This Nigerian war gig, making up In manpower for lack of horsepower,\nIs weighted down with passengers and bunting. The colorful craft just manages to stay alioat during display at Port Harcourt\nfor visiting Queen Elizabeth II. It is a relic of 19th century tribal wars when It was used for spare weapons and ammunition.\nEXCUSE, PLEASE\u2014 Jerry Bird of Kentucky lands on\ntop of Auburn's Brownie Nelson after firing a good back-hand\nshot In Southeastern Conference basketball game at Montgomery,\nAla. Kentucky won, 82-81 with a basket In last ten seconds.\nMiJM..\nWATER SPRITE \u2014 Lee Dodds, 4, once a polio victim, rests during \"Mississippi River\" swim at San Diego, Cal.,\na contest for tin longest distance between Feb. 12 and 25.\nLANDLOCKED \u2014 Girls of Towle High School, at Newport, N. H\u201e compete in a canoe race\ndown Dorr Hill ski slope. Aluminum boats are as fast as toboggans but almost impossible to steer.\nNAVY* APPOINTEE\n\u2014 Vice Admiral Itoscoe F.\nGood, Deputy Chief of Naval\nOperations for Logistics, was\nnamed bji U. S. Navy asscom-\nmandcr of forces in Far East.\nFOR THE BRIDE \u2014 Headdress of orange blossoms\nsewed onto tulle, shown In Paris by Lanvin-Castillo, was\ninspired by a painting of 17th century Spanish artist Velasquez.\nTOPSY-TURVY \u2014 An upside-down view of things is\ntaken by the harpy eagle at \"Birds of Prey\" farm near Ocala,\nFla.,  which  has, cooperation  of  the   University  of , Florida.\nJAPANESE  ENVOY\n\u2014 Masayukl Tanl, 66-year-old\ncareer diplomat, has been\nnamed Ambassador to the\nUnited States. He was Foreign\nMinister under Premier Tojo.\nDEDICATION GUESTS \u2014 U. S. Chief Justice Earl Warren, left, talks with Puerto\nRico's Chief Justice Cecil Snyder, center, and Spain's Presiding Justice Jose Tobcnas in San Juan\nwhere Warren was principal speaker at dedication of Puerto Rico's new Supreme Court building.\nWINTER    IN   G E R M A N Y _ A West Berlin border\nguard shovels snow from his vsi near Brandenburg Gate, background, one of principal entrances to lted-controlled East Berlin.\nLIF\nwhere\nE   OF   PARTY \u2014 The Duke of Kent, 21, attends party at Klostcrs, Swiss ski resort\nhe ls holidaying. At right is Jane Sheffield, 18, with whom his name has been linked.\nSICHTSEEING   IN   I N D I A _ American evange-\nlist Billy  Graham  takes  a  ride  on an  elephant during  his1\n.-..-   _# .i    .\u00abj4n    Ho   oallpH   It   \"onltfl   an   ftYnRrlnnnB.\"\nMIXING   UP   THE   DOUBLES \u2014 Ken Rosewall offers Yvonne Foster, 2, a racket\nas she strolls on court during Rosewall-Lew Hoad vs. Gil Shea-Herb Flam match In Melbourne.\n \u2014\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..'   \u25a0 .\n\u2014' , .. '\n5^\nSPORTS\nSpsakinq. on\nS\nKORT\nPORT\nn\nAs that ole debbil deadline popped up agaifi Monday afternoon and made sure yours truly pounded out\n' a column before the hockey game, we are unable \"to\ngive you our personal impressions of the first game of\nthe Nelson Maple Leaf-Trail Smoke Eater best-of-seven\nWestern International Hockey League final.\nWe will do what we consider the ifext best thing\nand talk about the troubles, real or imagined, of Trail\nSmoke Eaters. Their defence, not an exceptionally effective unit at best, was further weakened over the weekend\nwhen Don Fletcher walked I\n_u. j Cor our choice is that Parker per-\nI forms   a   defenceman's   foremost\nPerhaps Smokie Coach Jimmy j duties and  nelps hold Leafs to-\nMorris can encourage Fletcher to,ge,her ,n thejr own end\nreturn before too long. Somehow .      ,\n.    ., ..... .-t\u201eii     Kraiger and Conn, in this man s\nwe doubt it. If he cannot. Trail       ,  , ...\n.,,  .     .,     , m\u201e..i,\u201er  u.. opinion,   seem   more   content   to\nwill be the losers. Fletcher  has  ,F,      ' ...       .    .,     ,.\n, t-i    \u00ab,.  befuddle   opposition   inside   the\nall season been operating in the *r\n,    .       \".uv.iv   : .   opposition zones and tend to leave\nshadow cast by Yogi Kraiger and    H1. ,.....,        \/-.\u201e    .\n,     \u00b0 . ; ...   , .        the r goalie to stand alone. Grant-\nJoe   Conn,   his   more   illustrious     '   \u201e    . .  \u201e \u201e . \u201e  ,\ned, Kraiger and Conn are hard-\nteam-mates, 'shooting,    smart-passing    point\nWe believe, however, that de-  men   Bul_ they  are llabilitles on\nfence is the basis of any hockey  defence,\ngame. If they don't score on you.\nyou won't be beaten, even if all\nyour forwards are either crippled\nor dead.\nConn and Kraiger can both put\nthe puck into the net. But so can\nFletcher. Various opposition forwards have nominated Fletcher\nthe hardest ma.n in the league to\ngo around in his own end.\nNeither Kraiger nor Conn receive such accolades nearly as\nfrequently as does Fletcher. During the period in which Leafs\nexhibited their regular-season\nmastery over Smokies. Fletcher\nwas Smokies' most effective defenceman. He did some scoring\nbut not nearly as much as did\nKraiger.\nBut    Kraiger,    especially    last\nl\nSmokies Stun Lagging Leafs 6-0\nOur personal opinion is that:\nTrail should do the necessary \u2014 i\nwhatever that is \u2014 and coax, beg,\nor sell their souls in order to ensure Fletcher's return.\nJ believe I speak truth when I\nsay there are three clubs in the\nWIHL and perhaps four in the\nOkanagan Senior Hockey League\nwhich would be only too pleased\nif it could be arranged to have\nFletcher join them.\nWe are, naturally, speaking\nonly from having seen Fletcher\non \/the ice. If dissension exists,\nand rumors indicate it does, perhaps Smokies are better off without Fletcher or the other club-!\nhouse lawyers. \u00bb i\nAll we are saying Is  Smokies!\nNiemi Joins\nWeinineister\nOn Sidelines\nVANCOUVER <CP)~The second of two powerful tackles, who\nbolstered British Columbia Lions'\nline when that was about all they\nhad, says he has quit playing\nfootball.\nLaurie Niemi, one-time Washington Redskin, in a telephone\ninterview from his home at Clark-\nston, Wash., said he had talked\nabout a new contract with Clem\nCrowe, coach of the WIFU team.\n\"But we couldn't come to terms\nthe way I wanted it,\" Niemi said,\n\"Besides, I think the Lions have\nthe right idea. They're right to\nwork with young college players.\nOld pros like me are too set in\nour Vfays.\"\nNiemi said he may coach at a\nWashington school, but declined\nto say which one.\nA week ago Arnie Weinmeister.\nformerly with New York Giants\nand first name player signed by\nLions when they joined the league\nin 1954, quit to go into business.\nRED MOUNTAIN\nSKIERS TOPS\nSPOKANE (AP)\u2014Three slalom\nrunners from Red Mountain Ski\nClub at Rossland, B.C., swept the\nClass A men's division in the first\nannual Copper Cup tournament\nat Mount Spokane Sunday.\nDon Bruneski, of the British\nColumbia club, recorded the fastest time over the course, a blazing 1 minute, 58.9 seconds. He\nwas followed by teammates John\nPiatt  and  Vern   Anderson.\nGrant Gibson, RMSC, won the\nB men's title.\nTuesday, when Leafs came from i will be weaker without him.\nbehind a 6-2 deficit to edge Smo-1  \u2014\t\nkies in the last regular-season j\ncontest between the two clubs,\nlooked sick, although he did score j\ntwo goals. His defensive record!\nwas  pitiful.   He   was   on   for   at.\nRCMP Team\nBest at Shoot\nleast five Nelson goals during the\ncomeback.\nIt was common to see Fletcher! Undaunted by Saturday's lithe only man back as Leafs broke I inch fall of snow, Nelson Trap\nin three-abreast over the Smokie j nub was host to 35 seattergun\nblue-line. It was common to see I enthusiasts at the CPR flats week-\nKraiger and less often, Conn,! end shoot. It took a six-hour bull-\nhustling out from behind the Lea:! dozing stint to get them, however,\nnet in' an attempt to catch up; Surprise of the day was the\nwith the play. j ;.hooting of a darkhorse team of\nYours truly believes Murray ] two RCMP constables, R. Santor\nParker is the best defenceman in and E. G. Forest, who captured the\nthe league, as we have said sev- Buddy Shoot with perfect shooting.\nNHL LEADERS\nBy The Canadian Press\nStandings: Montreal, won 38, lost\n12, tied 10. Points, 86.\nPoints: Beliveau, Montreal, 75.\nGoals: Beliveau, 42.\nAssists: Olmstead, Montreal, 47.\nShutouts: Hall, Detroit, 10.\nPenalties: Fontinato, New York,\n177 minutes.\nPenner, Yogi Kraiger\nHeroic in Easy Victory\nSkating and checking incessantly, Trail Smoke\nEaters all but devoured Nelson Maple Leafs at Civic\nArena Monday night. Smokies' 6-0 victory opened up\na one-game margin in the best-of-seven Western International Hockey League semi-final.\nLeaf Coach Charlie Rayner summed it up as well\nas anyone when he said after the game: \"They checked\nand we didn't. That was the difference. But we're not\nout yet, not by a long way.\neral  times.  One   of  the  reasons\nTrail Midgets,\nBants Play Here\nTrail midgets and Bantam\nhockey teams will meet the Nelson\nRep teams at the Civic Arena tonight in West -Kootenay play-\ndowns.\nFor the midget series it will be\nthe second meeting of the two\nclubs. A week ago the Trail midgets took a one-game lead in the\nbest of three series when they\nhammered out a 9-5 won over Nelson in the Cominco Arena. Tonight\nNelson will have a chance to extend the series on their home,ice\nthis evening. A win for Nelson will\nforce a third game back in Trail\nprobably this weekend.\nIn the bantam series it will be\nthe first meeting of these two\nsquads this year and it is a two-\ngame total-goal series. Nelson midgets will have a switch in the\ngoal department with Don Holmes\nreplacing Dave Grundy. Tbe defence will include Gord Jeffs, Barry Waters, Jerry Poulin and I^rry\nHufty, The forwards will be chosen\nfrom Bernie Monteleone, Mike\nBorch, Lloyd Atwell, Mike Horswill, Don Stevenson, Bernie Benedetti, Frank Perehudoff, Gene\nKraft, Wayne Farenholtz and John\nMcMasters. ,\nBantam Reps will have the following players out, Ernie Wah,\nFred McClelland, Bern'e Arcuri,\nClare Palmer, Hugh Hooker, Bob\nMcCandlish, Dan Lang, Arlo Sjoberg, George Fieldhouse, Dick\nGelinas, Tom Ramsay, Billy Harrison, Garry Kilpatrick and Noel\nCutler.\nRunnersup were Rod Mclndoe,\norganizer of the'shoot, and Sinny|\nSinnerud. The winning team took!\nthe Savoy Hotel Trophy and two\nhams.\nHam and bacon winners were\nN. Bowcock, Ken Peter, J. Clark,\nI. Skeen, John Bennett, a junior,\nE. G. Forest and George Coletti,\ni some of whom won as many as\nI three hams. The contestants.shot\nI for 23 hams and bacons.\nThe clubhouse has been made\nI more comfortable, the marksmen\ni found, and wives of members were\n! able to watch the proceedings from\nnewly-installed   windows   instead\nof sitting in cars. The clubhouse\nhas been relined,' and now boasts\na   chesterfield,   sink,   stove   and\nrestrooms.\nSid Smith operated Mr. Sinne-\ni rud's bulldozer, which ploughed\n! through four feet of snow to open\nj the road to the flats. Cars had some\nj trougble getting through, a num-\n: ber being pushed or pulled.\ni Glen Macintosh served a hot\n1 lunch of chili con came.\ni Next shoot will be held Sunday,\nj March 11, and it hoped to held\nj the Kootenay championships here\ni in about two months.\nTon Jockey Killed\nIn Racing Mishap\nTUCSON, Ariz. (AP) \u2014 Charlie\nGuinup, a leading jockey at Rillito\nracetrack, was fatally injured Sunday when he was thrown from\nLetitia's Boy in the ninth race and\ntrampled by several horses.\nLeafs had but few dangerous\nshots at Smokies' Seth Martin as\nthey managed only 18 shots, four\nin the first period, eight in the\nsecond and six in the finale. With\nSmokies leading 5-0 midway\nthrough the third period, and a\nfew die-hard fans still believing\nLeafs might stage a revolution.\nRed Koehle plunked a quick shot\noff the post With Martin beaten.\nLeafs* fast-waning hopes died\nat that moment.\nGerry Penner, who has been\noffered a professional contract\nwith Seattle Americans of the\nWestern Hockey League, showed\nan estimated 1500 fans the reason\nwhy as he started Smokies off\nwith a goal at 3:38.\nVic Lofvendahl was sitting out\nan elbowing penalty and had 16\nseconds of penalty-time remaining when Penner picked up his\nown rebound off Don McGregor's\nskate and slid the puck into the\nopen side.\nDIDN'T   LOOK   BACK\nSmokies didn't look back as\nthey added two goals in the second and three more in the third\nperiod. Other Trail scorers were\nAlex Birukow, Mike Shabaga,\nFrankie Turik, Norm Lenardon\nand Yogi Kraiger.\nNeatest goal of the evening was\nTrail's third, scored by Mike Shabaga, who coasted around McGregor to take a pass from pesky\nBobby Kromm and cruise in alone\non Leafs' Gus Adams. Last time\nShabaga walked in alone on\nAdams was last Tuesday when\nGus outguessed him to preserve\nan 8-7 Leaf victory. Perhaps Shabaga profits by his mistakes.\nKromm was a general nuisance\nto Leafs almost from the opening whistle. He teamed with Shabaga and Ray Demore to keep\nthe pressure on Leafs every time\nthey stepped on the ice. Early in\nthe first period the shifty winger\nthreatened to lean over the boards\nat a fan in the northeast corner.\nThe fan grabbed Kromm's stick\nto avoid a possible scalping.\nThe   Trail   defence,  supposedly\nweaker for the absence of Don\nFletcher, played its best game of\nthe season on Leaf ice. Yogi\nKraiger scored the final goal on\na blast from 20 feet out after taking a pass from Alex Birukow\nand earned assists on Trail's\nfourth and fifth goals, by Turik\nand Lenardon, respectively.\nOn Turik's goal, Adams fell in\nblocking a Kraiger bullet from\nthe blueline. Turik was further\nfrom the rebound than at least\nthree Leafs. But he reached it\nfirst and flipped it high into the\nrigging.\nTrail \u2014 Goal: Martin; defence:\nKraiger, Conn, Hamilton; forwards: Shabaga, Kromm, Demore,\nPenner, Turik, Lenardon, Birukow, Saplywy.\nNelson\u2014Goal: Adams; defence:\nParker, Lofvendahl, McGregor;\nforwards: Hyssop, F. Koehle, Andrews, Appleton, Howe, Keller,\nBell, Jeffrey, R. Koehle.\nOfficials\u2014Laurie Ludlow, Cranbrook; George Cullen, Vancouver.\nFirst period: 1. Trail, Penner.\n3:38.\nPenalty: Lofvendahl (elbowing)\n1:54.\nSecond period: 2. Trail, Birukow (Saplywy) :24; 3. Trail, Shabaga  (Kromm)  11:00.\nPenalties: Lenardon (tripping)\n8:17; Penner (roughing) 19:00; R.\nKoehle (roughing) 19:00.\nThird period: 4. Trail, Turik\n(Kraiger, Penner) 3:20; 5. Trail,\nLenardon (Kraiger) 9:37; 6. Trail,\nKraiger  (Birukow)   18:07.\nPenalty \u2014 Parker (tripping)\n13:28.\nFights\nHollywood\u2014Vince Delgado, 127,\nLos Angeles, stopped Nunu Handle,\n130%, Oakland, 2.\nLansing. Mifh. \u2014 Kenny Lane,\n139%, Muskegon, Mich., outpointed\nIsaac Vaughn, 136, Cincinnati, 10.\nSainte-Nazaire, France \u2014 Gerhard Hecht, 173, Germany, defeated Charles Colin, 173, France,\n13. Colin did not come out for\n13th round,\nMmism\nLEE HYSSOP, Nelson Maple\nLeafs' standout centre, wa* presented with the Howard Anderson Memorial Trophy as most\nvaluable and sportsmanlike\nplayer In the WIHL Monday\nnight between th\u00ab second and\nthird periods of the Nelson-Trad\nsemi-final contest. Hyssop, In\ncommon with his mates, failed\nto score. Mayor Joseph Kary\npresented  the trophy.\nIrish-Trained\nI0-Year-Old\n'Chase Favorite\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Irish-trained\nQuare Times became a 6-1 favor\nite Monday for the 110th running\nof the Grand National steeple\nchase over Aintree's gruelling\ncourse March 24,\nThe 10-year-old bay gelding,\nwinner of last year's race by 12\nlengths, heads the big challenge\nby women owners in this year's\nchase over four miles, 856 yards\nand 30 jumps.\nMrs. Ciceley Welman of Mul-\nlingar in County West Meath,\nIreland, owns Quare Times. Five\nof the seven top betting choices'\nbelong to women.\nSTAFFORD, England (CP)\nA bridge game came to an abrupt\nend when a coping stone dislodged by gales fell through the\nroof, ceiling and card table. No\none  was  injured'.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1936 \u2022\nSpokane Flyers\nDown Blasters\n8P0KANE \u2014Spokane Flyers\nconstructed a 6-0 lead during\nthe first two periods of their\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague semi -final opener In\nSpokane Montfay night and\nhung on to dump Kimberley\nDynamiters 5-1. The victory\ngave Flyers a 1-0 lead In the\nbest of seven series. Second\ngame will be played here tonight.\nRed Tilson scored twice and\nadded an assist for Flyers to lead\nall scorers. Other scorers were\nArt (The Dart) Jones, with a goal\nand two assists, Jack Miller and\nTom Hodges. Hodges added an\nassist.\nGino (Razor) Rozzini was instrumental In every goal by his\nlinemates, Jones and Tilson as he\nearned an assist on each.\nHodges and Tilson both scored\nwith Kimberley a man short and\nRay McNiven took passes from\nMcTeer and Norm Knippleburg to\nput Dynamiters on the scoresheet-\nRalph Luke was sitting out a\npenalty at the time.\nShots on goal were low for a\nWIHL contest, indicating clubs\nboth st\u00abck to playoff style hockey.\nShots on goal against netminders\nJohn Sofiak and Earl Betker were\neven in every period as each\nstopped 26 shots.\nShots on goal against each\ntwine-tender were four in the\nfirst period, 10 in the second and\n12 in the third. Five penalties\nwere called, three to Kimberley.\nFirst period\u20141. Spokane, Miller\n(Hodges, Nadeau) 1:17; 2. Spokane, Tilson (Jones, Rozzini) 8:38;\n3. Spokane, Hodges (Nadeau)\n15:10.\nPenalties: Barre, 13:37; Rozzini,\n16:39.\nSecond period \u2014 4. Spokane,\nJones (Tilson, Rozzini) 11:05; S.\nSpokane, Tilson (Jones, Rozzini)\n16:06.\nPenalties\u2014Lebioda, 10:32; Andrei, 15:29.\nThird period \u2014 6. Kimberley,\nMcNiven (McTeer, Knippleburg)\n15:35.\nPenalty\u2014Luke, 14:59.\nRC\/s Curling Champs Bound For\nMoncton Seeking Dominion Crown\nStewart, Vincent\nBoth \"Grounded\"\nNEW YORK (A?>\u2014Two United\nStates touring tennis players,\nHugh Stewart of San Marino, Cal.,\nand Tony Vincent of New York.\nhave been temporarily \"grounded\" in Europe on orders from\nthe U.S. Lawn Tennis Association.\nHarold Lebair of New York,\nchairman of the international play\ncommittee, said the two had not\nbeen suspended.\n\"It's merely a grounding until\nthese boys meet with regulations.\"\nYOULL BE MORE\nCOMFORTABLE\nIM #\nCLOTHES\nKIMBERLEY'S CHAMPIONS, from left, Harold\nJordan, Jimmy Livingstone, Bill Moscovitch and Don\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Four men four times skipped strong con-\nwho travelled widely divergent tenders in the B.C. playoffs,\nroads to the Canadian curllnoi ALL-ROUND ATHLETE\nchampionships will represent; Jim Livingstone, who- curls\nBrltlBh Columbia at Moncton.! third, was born in Vancouver in\n1911 and came 'to Kimberley at\nthe age of 13,\nFor years he was catcher for\nsenior baseball teams and played\nwith the Kimberley Dynamiters\nhockey team. He joined the Kimberley Curling Club in 1938.\nThe rink's lead is Don Beattie,\nfive-feet-11,    185    pounds.    Born\nin Webbs, Sask., he started curl-\nthe [ ing in 1933 with the Webbs curl-\nclub.\ne moved to Kimberley in 1946.\nBeattie. They left on*Monday's train for New Brunswick.\u2014C. Wormington photo.\nN.B., March 6-9,\nThe Harold Jordan rink, playing its first season as a unit,\nbeat the best In the province\nfor the honor.\nHarold is a 44-year-old foreman\nfor Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. and a former defenceman for Trail Smoke Eaters\nwhen it was one of Canada's top\namateur hockey clubs in\n1930s\nHe took up curling in 1943 and\nOnly 38 now, he is employed as a\nmeat cutter, is married and has\ntwo children.\nYOUNGEST PLAYER\nBill Moscovitch. stocky second,\nis the youngest of the foursome.\nBorn'in Southey, Sask., 28 years\nago, he stands five-feet-10 and\nweighs 205 pounds. Bill started\ncurling with the Southey club at\nthe age of 12 and moved to Vancouver in 1944 where he joined\nrinks at the University of British\nColumbia.\nHe played for the Vancouver\nBlue Bombers when they won\nthe  B.C.  junior  football  crown,\nWhile attending university, he\nplayed baseball and football and\nheld the UBC light-heavyweight\nboxing championship for two\nyears.\nMarried and with a baby\ndaughter, he has curled with\nKimberley rinks since 1950. He is\nemployed as manager of a clothing store.\nTogether, they curl a distinctive\nchop and lie style in preference\nto the running type of game.\nWARRIOR ROOKIE\nEQUALS RECORD\nSET BY POPEIN\nSEATTLE (AP) - Barry Cullen\nof Winnipeg Warriors' has scored\n32 goals to tie the Western Hockey\nLeague record for rookies, league\nheadquarters reported Mon\nday. Larry Popein of Vancouver\nCanucks set the standard in 1952.\nCullen ii in 11th place among\nthe league's top point-getters with\n62 points.\nBlinky Boyce of New Westminster Royals and Phil Maloney of\nVancouver are tied in the scoring\nrace with 79 points each.\nRay Mikulan of Vancouver\nmoved Into the lead among the\ngoalies with an average of 2.70\nper game.\nScoring leadersi\nG   A   Tp\nMaloney,  Van     33   46   79\nBoyce, Nw _    33   46   79\nKilburn, Vic\t\nMelnyk, Edm\t\nLove, Nw\t\nCouture, Cal     29   41\nFashoway, Nw _....   42   27\nFielder, Sea    18   51\nFinney, Cal. _    36   31\n41   35   76\n76\n33   43\n20   56\nBraves Sign Aaron\nMOBILE, Ala. (AP) \u2014 Henry\nAaron, outfielder who had refused to sign his 1956 baseball\ncontract with Milwaukee Braves\nsaid Monday he has come to terms.\nThe 21-year-old Mobile youth\nwas reported to have received\n$14,000 last season. Aaron led the\nBraves in hitting last year with\n.314.\nRossland Skier\nOn Canadian\nSkiing Team\nRed Mountain Ski Club of\nRossland member Mickey Johnson will be one of Canada's rep-\npresentatives in the American national ski chapionships at Fran-\nconia, N.H., next weekend. He\nwas listed in the team nominated\nSunday at Port Arthur, where he\ntook part in the Canadian junior\nski meet.\nJohnson captured the slalom\nevent, sweeping down the longest\nslalom course ever set up on\nMount Baldy, winding through 78\ngates in 1:15.5. He also won the\nalpine combined title with a first\nplace in the slalom and fifth place\nin the downhill event. A ski mate\nfrom Rossland, Don Bertoia, was\nfirst in the cross country and\nsixth in the slalom.\nJohnson was chosen on the\ndownhill and slalom team for the\nU.S. event.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nATLANTIC COAST SENIOR\nMoncton 0, Amherst 7\nAmherst   leads   best - of - seven\nsemi-final 3-2.\nNORTHERN ONTARIO SENIOR\nSoo (Mich.) 4, Sudbury 1\nSudbury   leads   best - of - seven\nsemi-final 3-2.\nSoo (Ont.) 2, North Bay 6\nNorth  Bay  wins  best-of-seven\nsemi-final 4-1.\nONTARIO   SENIOR\nStratford 3, Chatham 4\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nCalgary 1 Winnipeg 3\nEdmonton 4 Saskatoon \\\nWESTERN JUNIOR\nEdmonton 3 - Lethbridga 6\nBest-of-seven semi-final tied.2-2.\nRegina 5 Medicine Hat 3\nRegina leads best-of-seven semifinal 3-1.\nOSAHL Scores\nVernon 7, Kamloops 2.\n(Vernon Canadians lead best-\nof-seven semi-final, 1-0.)\nKelowna  6, Penticton !.  '\n(Kelowna Packers lead best-\nof-seven semi-final, 1-0);\nTROPICAL AREA\nThe federation of Nigeria, covering 373,000 square miles in West\nAfrica, lies entirely within the\ntropics. *\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nTJNY TOTS' SKATING\n2:00-4:00 p.m.\nCHILDREN'S SKATING\n4:05-5:55 p.m.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nMINOR\nHOCKEY\nPLAYOFFS\nTONIGHT\nTRAIL BANTAMS vs.\nNELSON BANTAMS\n8:45 p.m.\nTRAIL MIDGETS vs.\nNELSON MIDGETS\nAdults 50\u00ab*\nAdmission:\nStudents 25\u00ab*\nChildren 15\u00ab\nI\n \"\n,\n\t\n~mwmMmmMmmmmmmm\n......,,.,,.,,. .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,,.,;...,:\u25a0>, ^::.,,v.\n'..'..\n^^o\u00abfpl\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0fV,^'. ,;\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb-'.;;-'\u2022'-;';:'\u25a0?\"\/.,!\"-\u00bb-.\u25a0\"';\u25a0\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\neft\n^t?'.o 2z\n^Ikf\u2014-^\nJ\\ifci.M.j\n\u00ab,\nkHf~\"~-\nj\nC-AttL- _f\u00bb\ni\ni\n>\n<\nI\ni\nj\ni\n3\n^\nrJV\ni^llj^\n'^g^l\nJOf)\nIJ-J^\nl\u2014\nJ.2J\n'\/IT Wf SHOWDOWN, FAP30&,\nDIJE FOP A SURPRISE j 1\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newt does not hold Itself responsible in the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nIMIIllllillllllllllllllllIlinillllllliilin\nQuotation Hits from the\nCanadian stock markets are\ncompiled and published by the\nDaily News as a service to\nsubscribers. The lists are added to or revised constantly.\nStocks In which there Is particular Interest and not now\nquoted, can be added at the\nthe request of readers.\niiimmiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium       .22\nAlgom Uranium    17.50\nAmal  Lardrr  18\nAnacon Lead       3.05\nAnglo Rouen     12.62V4\nAtlin Ruff  15\nAubelle  14\nAumacho   .,.: 56\nBarnat ._ 92\nBase Metals        1.02\nBaska Uranium  52\nBibis Yukon  12%\nBobjo  45\nBoymar        .15\nBnlund         1.82\nBroulan .._      1.74\nBrunswick      11.25\nBuff Can  27\nBulldog    17\nCallinan       25\nCampbell C     22.37%\nCan Met   i      2.70\nCassiar              8.45\nCentral Fatriqia       1.25\nChimo             1.70\nCoin Lake _ 14%\nConiaurum   57\nCons Denison      10.00\nCons Howe       4.25\nCons Mining & Smelting    34.75\nCons Orlac      16T4\nCon Sanorm    20\nCon Sub  _      4.85\nConweiit            6.00\nCoDpei Man  42\nD'Aragon    46\nDetta M  a 19\nDonalda    _ 53\nDuvax        2.90\nDyno             1.45\nEast Malartic       2.25\nEast Sullivan  _      6.40\nElder Gold     56\nFalconb-idge     30.75\nFaradav         1.95\nFrobisher          4.25\nGeco       19.00\nGeo. Scientific Pros     3.35\nGiant Yel      5.70'\nGod's Lake    58\nGoldale      38\nGoldcrest    _ 24\nGolden Manitou       3.25\nGoldora       24\nGrandine.s       45\nGunnar Gold     18.30\nHarminerals 91\nHasaga      \u2014 21\nHaedway       1.16\nHollinger       24.50\nHudson Bay     67.50\nInspiration   _      1.40\nInt. Nickel     81.87%\nIron  Bay        3.35\nJoliet Que      1.14\nJonsmith   \u2014 45\nKeyboycon  12\nLabrador  \/...   18.87%\nLake Lingman       -'1?,^\nLakeshore             5.10\nLexindin        \u2022*>\nLittle Long Lac _      1.75\nLorado   ,\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0     Ljj\nLouvic't        \u00bb3\nMacassa            {\u25a0}\u00bb\nMacDonald       1-J4\nMackeno               \u2022*>\nMadsen R. L      235\nManeust  38\nMart McNcely  \"\nMcMarmac    <%\nMcKenzie R L        -38\nMining Corp    2,1.75\nMogul      3.00\nMulti Mins      L40\nNew Alger               \u2022JO\nNew Bidlamaque        .\u00ab\nNew Delhi  _     101\nNew Highridge  \u2122\nNew Harricana    _ **\nNew Jason  47\nNew Lund       \u2014 \u00bb\u00bb\nNew Thurbois     .A-\nNoranda New     55.20\nNorgold            f\nNornictals  \u2014      '\u2022\u00ab\u00bb\nNorpax             \u25a0\u00ab\nOpemiska       f-'J\nPickle Crow       l.'J\nPlacer Devel  _    '  \u201e\u201e,,\nPurdy M        -    \u201e\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\nPreston E. D      ~-50\nQuebec Copper      *f'\nQuebec Lab             \u25a0\u00ab\nQuebec Lithium     J]-\u2122\nQuebec Metallurgical     14.05\nQuemont        ,'U\nRadiore   \u2014\u25a0     tM\nRayrock     f\"\nSan Antonio         L;\u00bb\nSherritt Gordon       (\u2122\nSilver  Miller        115\nStadacona             \u2022\u00bb\u00ab\nSteep Rock      ...\u2014    \u2122.\u00ab2%\nSlocan Van Roi       \u25a0'\u25a0<\nSullivan Con  .'...     5.30\nSylvanite             \\M\nTeck Hughes       J-g\nTemagami            '\u2022\"\"\n\u2014 -       \" ,ul\n.45%\n.95\n.3d\n7.10\n.95\n36 25\n.26\n2.90\nBeatty Bros.  -  7V\u00ab\nBell Telephone  _  50%\nBrazilian 6%\nb!C. Electric 4s      93\nB.C. Electric 4%s   104%\nB.C. Forest         _  16%\nB.C. Packers A   16%\nB.C. Powe rA   38y4\nBurrard A              8%\nCanadian Breweries   31%\nCanadian Canners  33\nCanadian Celanese   19V4\nCan 'Chem Co        t.  9%\nCanadian Dredge   .  \u2014  21%\nCan Oil    1                   21%\nCanadian Pacific Rly    33%\nCan. Packers A           39V4\nCan. Packers B     35%\nCockshutt       _  7%\nCons Gas         '.  22\nDist. Seagram      37%\nDom. Foundries     29%\nDom Magnesium _  17\nDom. Steel Ord          19%\nDom.   Stores                33%\nDom. Tar & Chemical   13%\nDom. Textiles     8%\nEddy Paner          60\nFamous Plavers _  21%\nFanny Farmer     23%\nThomo-Lund \t\nTombill    '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nTorbrit   \t\nTrans Cont Kes\t\nUnited Keno    ......\nUpper Canada \t\nVentures \t\nVicour ' \t\nViolamac        _\t\nWaite Amulet          If\u2122\nWright argreaves       t.m\nYale\n47\nKenville    \t\nKerr Addison-    17.50\nYeiiowknife Bear       2.19\n11%\n.87\n.14%\n24 50\n5.95\nYukeno\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc \t\nBata Petroleum     \t\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCdn Atlantic\nCanadian Collieries       12.25\nCanadian Devonian         3.45\nCan Decalta ..        69\nCentral  Leduc       2.73\nCommonwealth Pete       8.75\nCan East Crest    72\nCons Peak        11%\nDevon Leduc       1.59\nDuvcx  34\nGreat Sweetgrass       5.20\nHighcrcst   28\nHome A .. _    10.62%\n,,,,,Kroy       1.18\n\u2022IS* Liberal Pete       2.72\nMarigold  39\nMidcon _ 75\nNat. Pete       4.30\nNew Continental  83\nMew Gas Expl         1.65\nOkalta       ._      2.10\nPac Pete        13.00\nPathfinder 85\nPetrol         1.35\nPonder   __      1.35\nRoyalite     12.62%\nSpooner   33\nTrans Era  \u25a0_ 32\nTriad       6.85\nUnited Oils           1.68\nYank Canuck       18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     37 V*\nAlgoma Steel      99\nAluminum         _ 106%\nArgus 2nd pfd    54%\nAtlas St _    17%\nBathurst Power     64\nFleet Air\nFord A \t\nGatineau\nGatineau 5<\"n pfd\nGoodyear ofd\nGvpsum   Lime    ..\nHiram   Walker\nHowaid Smith\nsmooth\nchewing\nsoothes\nyour feelings when you're\nready to hit the ceiling!\nSPEARMINL\n\u25a0\"chewing B\"\u00a3\nEnjoy chewing Wrigley's Spearmint every day!\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV \u2014 Channel 4\n00\u2014Sign On\n15\u2014Love of Life\n30\u2014Love Story\n00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n30\u2014Houseparty\n00\u2014Big Payoff\n30-TBA\n45\u2014Bob Crosby\n00\u2014Brighter Day\n15\u2014Secret Storm\n30\u2014On Your Account\n00\u2014 Variety Hour\n:30\u2014 Search for Tomorrow\n45\u2014Guiding Light\n:00\u2014 Valient Lady\n15\u2014Beauty Tips\n30\u2014Gary Moore\n00\u2014What's Cookin'\n30\u2014Strike It Rich\n00\u2014Western Roundup\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014 Weather Vane\n15\u2014Doug Edwards\n30\u2014Name That Tune\n00\u2014$64 000 Question\n30\u2014Confident File\n00\u2014The Phil Silvers Show\n30\u2014 Inner Sanctum\nOO\u2014 Meet Millie 1\n:30\u2014Red Skelton\n00\u2014 Badse 714\n30\u2014Follow That Man\n00\u2014News\n:05\u2014I Am the Law\nKHQ TV \u2014 Channel 6\n8:40\u2014Test Pattern\n8:45\u2014Color Test Program\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading\n9:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30-j-Ernie Kovak\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Now The News\n1:10\u2014Weather Watcher\n1:15\u2014Modern Romances\n1:30\u2014Queen For A Day\n2:00\u2014Women\n3:00\u2014Willy\n3:30\u2014Trouble With Father\n4:00\u2014Mr  Engineer\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Pinkee Lee\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Storms at The Century\n6:30\u2014Little Rascals\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Curtain Time\n7:30\u2014Dinah Shore\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Bop Hope\n9:00\u2014Fireside Theatre\n9:30\u2014Playwrisht 56\n10:30\u2014Big Town\n11:00\u2014Racket Squad\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n11:45\u2014Test Pattern\n12:00\u2014Afternoon Film Festival\n2:00\u2014Movie Time on Two\n3-30\u2014The Ruggles\n4:00\u2014Storyland\n4:15\u2014John Daly\n4:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:55\u2014Watch The Birdie\n500\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00\u2014Autry-Rogers Western\n1.70\n1.2.1\n31\n111\n52\n57%\n70\n40V\nImpeHal  Oi!           41 V<\nImD. Tobacco\nInt. Pete\nLaura S^cord\nLoblaw A\n12\n31'I\nW.\n54%\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nYour Individual\nHoroscope\nOn Page 4-\nniiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\nLoblaw B       90\nMassey   Harris      \u2014  9'\/4\nMcColl-Frontenac   46%\nMont. Loco  llVi\nMoore Corp  41\nNat. Steel Car  _  32%\nPage Hershey   81\nPowell River    58\nPower Corp.     53%\nRuss. Industries   13% \u25a0\nShawinigan    69%\nSicks Brew. '.  26%\nSimpsons A           17%\nStandard Paving  _  35%\nSteel of Canada   67\nTaylor Pearson     9%\nUnion Gas of Can   49%\nUnited  Steel        15%\nWeston George _  30\nWinnipeg Gas     11V<\nStudents from all parts of the\nworld attend the Imperial College\nof Tropical Agriculture In Trinidad.\n7:00\u2014Hollywood Playhouse\n7:25\u2014News\n7:30\u2014 Warner Brothers Presents\n830\u2014Wvalt Earp   '\n9:00\u2014Make Ronm for fladdv\n9:30\u2014 Duponi  Cavalcade Theatre\n10:00\u2014 Guy Lombardo\n10:30\u2014News\n10:30\u2014Mystery Playhouse\n11:45\u2014Layman's Call to Player\n(Program, sublect to change by stations without  notice 1\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\n . ^\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n0:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014 Pnone  1300\nEvenings - Phorre 1033 R\nDaily Except Sundays\nand Holidays\nMe & Mc\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1956\n6:30\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014March of Truth\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n7:40\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n8:30\u2014Home  Gardening\n8:35\u2014Musicale\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Entertainment World\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang'\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Ridin' the Range\n11:15\u2014Musictime\n11:30\u2014Date with Dave\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014News\n1:00\u2014 CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:30\u2014Pacific News\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014House of Commons Report\n3:35\u2014Music for Relaxing\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime Story Teller\n5:00-UBC Digesj\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Supper Show\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Interlude\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Dinner Music\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester   Square\n8:00\u2014Anglican Angles\n8:15\u2014Canada at Work\n8:30\u2014WIHL Playoff\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014University Talk\n10:30\u2014Rendezvous\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29,   1956\n:00\u2014Fishermen's  Broadcast\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n:30\u2014 News\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n2:00*-B. C. School Broadcast\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n2:30--Trans-Canada Matinee\n:55\u2014Musical March Past\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n:00\u2014News\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n:10\u2014Bill Good\n4:30\u2014Music for Young Muslclanl\n:15\u2014Morning Music\n4:45-rLegends of Italy\n:45\u2014Laura Limited\n5:00\u2014Neighborly News\n:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n5:15\u2014Byline\n:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n5:20\u2014News\n:30\u2014Morning Concert\n5:30\u2014Five-Thirty\n:00\u2014Morning Visit\n0:00\u2014Rawhide\n:15\u2014Happy Gang\n6:15\u2014Divertimento\n:45\u2014Man Around the House\n6:45\u2014Introduction to Wednesday\nNight\n:00\u2014 Your Good Neighbor\n:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n7:00\u2014News\n:30\u2014Man and His Music\n7:30\u2014CBC Wednesday Night\n:15\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk by Tom Emery\n:25\u2014Showcase\n10:30\u2014Recital\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n3. Beneath\n4 Conger\nI. Steamship\n(abbr.)\n6. Defraud\n7. Loiter\n8. Unit\nof work\n9 Macaws\n10 Novice\n14. Wild pig\n16 Hawaiian\ngarlands\n19 Estimator\n20 Greeting\n21 Hole In\na needle\n22. Astern\n23. Body\nof water\nasataa aauuta\nsanaa ueihiib\naaa aaui sbe\nHHEIHH\nananaia caaaa\naaaaa ranann\naaiari uan&iHiPi\nauaura\nH3H   aHH   fflHB\nBnaraaa amaraa\nnaaau aaaaa\naaaaa aatma\n28 Large\nroofing\nslate\n27. Piece\nout\n29. Likely\n30. Cold\nwind\nof\nBOUth*\nem '\"\nFrance     Vtiterdsy's Answer\n32. Variety of      41. Rant\nchalcedony\n35. The white\npoplar\n36. A half nolo\n(mus.)\n37. Begone!\n38. Wander\n42. Pitcher\n44. Short sleep\n45. Contend for\n46. Pike-like\nfish\n48. Negatlvt\nreply\nACROSS\n1 Infants\n6 Device to\nhold rope, as\non a spar\n11 S-shaped\nmoldings\n12 Harass\n13 Soothe\n14 Mendicant\n15 Sign of\nZodiac\n16. Larva of\neye-threadworm\n17. Therefore\n18. Encircle\n22. Like\n24. Ventilate\n25. Journey\nin circuit\n28. Deeds\n30. Dismal\n31. What stock\nquotations\nare printed\non\n32. Lubricate\n33. Earth as\na goddess\n34. Window\nover a door\n37. Senior\n(abbr.)\n39. Secondary\n40. Anger\n43. Opposite\nof concave\n46. Chew\n47. Benefit\n48. Artless\n19. Conical tent\n(Am. Ind.)\n50. Ear shell\nDOWN\n1. Cotton pod\n(Bot.)\n2 Chills \t\nand fever J1*\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONOFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L'i, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoi.\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nDAP    AHM    MNSS    N    OH    JHUK    DAP\nJHEIKJHSP      JKDZOJ      UHQK     HALS EU LOZ K\nYesterday's   Cryptoquot*:   PRAISE   UNDESERVED   IS\nSCANDAL IN DISGUISE\u2014POPE.\nDistributed by King Features Syndics!!\n1\n2\n3\n4\nS\n1\n<o\n7\n6\n9\n10\n11\n%\nii.\n13\n4\n\\%\n14\n15\n%\nlb\n^\/A\n%\n17\n%\n'^\n18\n19\n20\n11\n^\nVA\n22\n23\n*^t\n24\n%\n75\n2b\n27\n28\n29\n%\n30\n31\n^\/A\n32.\n%\n33\n^\/\/,\n34\n55\n3b\n%\n%\n37\n38\nf\/l\nV\/l\n39\n^\n40\n41\n42\n43\n44\n45\nf\/A\n4b\n+7\nl\n46\n49\n^A\n50\n \u25a0 \u2014\u2022  : ! ! : ! :\u2014\" \" \"\" ;\n3$1\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story   -   PHONE   1844\/\nBIRTHS\nSOOKEROOKOFF\u2014To Mr. and\nMrs. Alex Sookerookoff of Slocan\nPark, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Feb. 26, a daughter,\nCARLSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. K\nCarlson of Salmo. at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital,' Feb. 27, a\nson.\nBOROWSKI-To Mr. and Mrs.\nKarl Borowski of Crawford Bay\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital. Feb. 27, a daughter.\nHEI P WANTED\nWANTED\nFOUR MEN\nTo   Be  Trained  as\nSPECIALTY   SALESMAN\nMen chosen will tie sent to\nsales school and will be paid\na salary during school attendance. Trained men receive\n$435 nn ner month to start.\nBox 6623, Nelson Daily News\nYOUNG LADY OR YOUNG MAN\nfor position in national organization. Excellent opportunity for\nadvancement. Apply Box 1494.\nNelson _ Daily News\nWANTED\u2014EXP. GRILL COOK.\niPhone 504 or call between 9:00\na.m. and 2:30 p.m. or 6:30 p.m.\nand 8:00 p.m.\nWANTED - SALESMAN OR\nsaleslady Phone 1367 or cail 615\nVictoria Street.\nPART TIME STENOGRAPHER\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nHELP   WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nHOUSEKEEPER FOR ELDERLY\ncouple. No children. Apply 612\nCarbonate Street.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nE X P E RI ENCErT\" STENOGRA-\npher wil] do typing and bookkeeping at,home. Phone 790-Y.\nWILL DO HOUSEKEEPING FOR\nWIDOWER OR BACHELOR.\nBox 1485. Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES- OF\nused equipment: mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B. C. Ph\nPAciflc 6357.\nSALE AT CRAWFORD BAY -\nBeef, Pork and Veal, delivered\nanywhere. H. Harrop, Phone\nNelson 1278.\nFir and larch cull lum-\nber. good fire wood, limited supply 1 truck load equals 2 cords\nSpecial $15 delivered Ph  1702-R\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, 301 Baker St. Phone\n47  We buy used furniture.\nCOLEMAN SMALL OIL HEAT-\ner. See it at Fashion Barber\nShop, 334 Baker St., Nelson.\nFOR SALE: $250,000 CREDIT\nnote at local garage. Phone\n1670-R-2.\t\nHEINTZMAN UPRIGHT GRAND\nplayer piano, 200 rolls, $350. Box\n6662, Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u201425 USED VENDING\nmachines. Apply Box 6660,\nNelson Daily News\nSMALL  KITCHEN   STOVE-.\n1152, evenings.\nPH.\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, automatic heat, fully\nfurnished. Day, week or monthly rate. Allen Hotel. 171 Baker\nFOR RENT-BASEMENT STOR-\nage space, central location Baker St   Apply Box 8142. D   News\nWANTED    2 OR  3    BEDROOM\nhouse,    immediate    occupancy\nPhone 774-L-l.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2-ROOM  HOUSE\nin   Rosemont.   For   information\nphone 342-R.\nWANTED   TO   RENT  \u2014   2-BED-\nroom house or suite. Phone 415\nMarch 15, or sooner.\nFURNISHED APT. FOR RENT.\nMarch 1, near Baker. Petty Apt.\nPhone 1253-R.\n4 - ROOM UNFURNISHED APT\nPrivate entrance, Fairview, Box\n1485, Nelson  Daily  News.\nHEATED   BEDROOM,  GENTLE-\nman only. 410 Victoria St.\nROOM FOR RENT AT\ntoria Street.\nPARTLY   FURNISHED   2-ROOM\nsuite. 723 Silica Street.\nFURNISHED   HEATED   APART-\nment to rent. Phone 1715-Y.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper Used parts foi\ncars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132. Granite Road. Nelson. B.C\nPHONE  189-R-4\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nsnd cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail Kootenay Products   Box 450   Nelson\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity ol\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2736\nNelson  Daily News\nMACHINERY\nLOGGER\nMINE OPERATOR\nGENERAL CONTRACTOR\nWould you like the following features for your next\ntractor?\nLow Initial Cost\nLow Upkeep\nTop Trade In Value\nServiceability\nHigh Speed Portability\nTorque Converter Drive\nAutomatic Transmission\nNo Clutch\nPower-Steering\nPivot Turns\nAbility to purchase the following attachments for your\ntractor from the same manufacturer:\nBulldozer and Angledozer\nBlades,   Winches,   Front   End\nLoaders,   Backhoes,   Log\nLoaders,   Forklifts.\nIf you are interested in obtaining a crawler type tractor\nwith these features, cut out\ncoupon and mail. Mark your\nspecial preference.\nBENNETTS LIMITED,\n324 Vernon Street,\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 593\nSend in this coupon.\nDear Sir:\nWe are  interested in the following:   pi Bulldozer,  rn Angledozer, pi Front End Loader,\nrn Backhoes, p Log Loaders, |\nrn Forklifts.\nMy address is  \u201e\t\nL_\nOur representative will contact you without delay.\nA  product  of the  American\nTractor  Corporation.\n\u25a0 \"Terratrac\"\nLIMITED\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St. Ph. 593\nHome Owners\nAs a special introductory\noffer for this spring the\nnew all new\n\"FAIRBANKS\nMORSE\"\nAt the Unbelievably Low Price of\nCOMPLETE\nThis price includes the\ncomplete furnace w i,t h\nenamaloid casing, high\npressure gun type oil burner, Minneapolis Honeywell\ncontrols, blower and fibre-\nglass filters. 84,000 BTU\noutput. Never before has\na name brand furnace\nbeen offered for such a\nprice $375.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nfor cordwood. small stands or\nwhat have you? -Phone 1702-R,\nor write Box 6705, Nelson News.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD. CALL~AT\n1011 Fourth St., Fairview.\nLtd,\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson. B C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nM\\i> FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS, R.O.P\nbred Leghorns, also R.O.P sired\ngrades of Legnorns, New Hamp-\nshires. Hamp-Leghorn crosses.\nBuy our chicks and follow our\ndirections how to raise them\nand keep them for complete success Over 30 years' experience\nwith chicks and poultry Apply\nour agent Nelson Farmers' Supply Ltd., Nelson, or write direct\nto New Siberia Farms, RR3.\nChilliwack, B. C.\nSCHOOLS\nAND INSTRUCTION\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS\nfrom the Appleby Poultry Farm\nMission City. B C All our\nbreeding stock* is now respected\nas being tops in Canada. White\nLeghorn, White Rocks, New\nHampshires and Crosses Send\nfor free literature.\nFOR   SALE   -   2   FRESHENED\ncows. J. FilHpdff, Winlaw, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014GOOD COW. MIKE\nSherstobitoff. Castiegar. B. C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFOR SALE - 28-FT. FACTORY\nbuilt house trailer. Must sell.\nCall weekends or after 5 on\nweek days behind Creston Hospital. Harold Timchishen, Creston, B. C.\nFOR SALE\u201429 FT. AMERICAN\nfactory-built house trailer, fully modern with bathroom. Tandem axle. Phone 318T or write\nBox 583, Creston, B. C.\nFOR SALE\u20141955 CUSTOMLINE\nSedan. Excellent condition. Can\nbe financed. Apply Fruitvale\nDairy, Fruitvale, B, C, or Phone\n3191.\nDIESEL HEAVY  EQUIPMENT\nTrained men are needed for all\ntypes of jobs in the Tractor and\nEquipment industry. If you are\nmechanically inclined and are\nnot making better than $90.00\nper week, or you don't have job\nsecurity, you owe it to yourself\nto write for free facts, without\nobligation, about this training\nand our Advisory Placement\nService.\nIRACTOR TRAINING SERVICE.\nBox 6531, Nelson Daily News\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\n1954 FOUR DOOR FORD SEDAN\nCustomline, low mileage, excellent condition. Can be financr.\ned. Phone 1269-R.\nFOR SALE\u2014LATE 1952 AUSTIN\nA40. New condition guaranteed\nStar Auto Service. Phone 1648\n'56    PLY MOUTH.    CONSIDER\nany trade. Phone 471-X-4.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 368 or   Phone 366-R\nTHE ALMER HOTEL. OPP C.P.R\nDepot Vancouver. B C 100%\nfire-proof 24-hour elevator ser\nvice Clean, quiet and comfort\nable. Reasonable rates, city\ncentre\nNelson latin Neros\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844.\nSubscription Rates\nPrice per single'copy 6c Monday\nto' Friday. 10c on Saturday.\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month      $ 1.25\nThree months     $3.50\nSix months ...    $ 6.50\nOne year $12-00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom\nor the  United States\nOne month      $ 1.75\nThree months        $ 5.00\nSix   months        $ 9.50\nOne year ....     $18.00\nWhere extra  postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\n2 FEMALE COLLIES, 6 MONTHS\nOld. Ideal for breeding purposes. Each $25. H. Harrop, Ph.\nNelson '1278.\nWANTED \u2014PERSIAN   FEMALE\nkitten. Phone 532-Y.\nLOS1 AND FOUND\nLOST - GOLD AND BLACK\ndouble-hooped earring. Phone\n1083-R.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W  WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers 301 Josephine St. Nelson\nH   S   ELMES, ROSSLAND. B  C\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nG. W  BAERG\nBritish Columbia  Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St. ,   Nelson     Ph  1118\nand Box 34, Fruitvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A   L. Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C.\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.     Nelson   Phone 1238\nS   V   SHAYLER  PC   Box 252\nKimberley   Ludlow 2-2136.\n8C   Land  Surveyor. Civil  Engr\n MACHINIST?\t\nBENNETTS   LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.' Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motoi rewinding  Phone 593     324 Vernon St\n_ TIMBER  CRUISER\nEUGENE   H    KIRD\nSliioan   Cily    B   C\nConfidential   Estimates.\nDISTRIBUTOR REQUIRED FOR\nNelson and district for fast-\nselling novelty just introduced\nto Canada. Liberal remuneration for volume producer. Full\nparticulars to De Wit & Brind,\n1306 Oakwood Crescent, North\nVancouver.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARM ETC., FOR SALE\nTO CLOSE AN ESTATE 80-ACRE\nWest Arm wooded beach property at 9-Mile Narrows, south\nside of lake. McBride & Allan\nCLASSIFIED1 DISPLAY\nVancouver Stocks\nClosing Prlceo\nMINES\nBeaver  Lodge   _\nBeta Gamma\t\nBralorne       \t\nCan Lithium  \t\nCariboo Gold      \t\nFarwest Tungsten  \t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc     _\nGrandview   \t\nHamil Sil    \t\nHighland  Bell \t\nJackson Mines \t\nNational  Ex        \t\nPac Eastern Gold \t\nPend Oreille   \t\nPioneer Gold\nPremier  Border   \t\nQuatsino \t\nReeves MacDonald \t\nRexspar \t\nRix-Athabaska Uran\t\nSheep Creek        \t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Ridge \t\nSilver  Standard    \t\nSunshine  Lardeau _\t\nSurf Inlet\t\nTaylor      \t\nTrojan   \t\nUnited Esf'ella   \t\nUtica \t\nWestern Exploration \t\nWestern Potash  _\nYale       x\t\nOILS\nAltex\nA P Consolidated    \t\nCalgary & Edmonton\t\nCanadian 'Anaconda \t\nChamberlain   \t\nCharter     \t\nDel Rio    \u201e....\nHpme   >        \t\nNew Gas Ex \t\nOkalta  Com   \t\nPacfic Pete\t\nPeace River Gas .'.\t\nRoyalite       \t\nI Royal Can  _\t\nSDarmac  \t\n! United  _ _\t\nVanalta    \t\nVantor   \t\nVulcan     \t\nYankee Princess  _\nINDUSTRIALS\"   \u25a0\u2022     \u25a0\nAlberta Distillers       \t\nAlberta Distillers Vt  \t\nB C Forests ..\n.62\n.11\n5.65\n1.25\n.75\n.42\n.78\n7.20\n.18\n.07\n.70\n.78\n1.15\n.11\n4.70\n1.80\n.12\n.68\n2.35\n.50\n1.00\n1.47\n.22\n.20\n.38\n.3H4\nm\n.22\n1.52\n.29\n.03\n.50\n.53\n.43\n.24\n.31\n23.00\n.17\n.34\n1.90\n1.60\n10.00\n2.60\non^\n12.75\n8.00\n22.25\n.12\n.27\n1.60\n.17\n.89\n.53\n.61\n1.90\n1.60\n16.62^\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (A.P) - The Stock\nmarket marked time Monday with\na small decline after five straight\nadvances.\nCanadian issues were mixed.\nCanadian Pacific was up 7\/s, Dome\nMines, Hudson Bay Mining and\nHiram Walker all added Vs and\nInternational Nickel gained %\nAluminum Ltd, and Distillers Seagram both fell1 Vk and Granby\nMining slipped Vz.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\nTORONTO (CP) -- The stock\nmarket bounced ahead at the\nopening Monday. Speculative cop>\npers continued to turn over heavy\nvolumes, but leadership came\nfrom the industrials. After' the\nfirst-hour, profit-taking cut into\nthe market's gains and prices\ndrifted lower. At the close, general tone of the market was a little higher.\nMost industrial groups tended\nhigher. Gains ranged to $2. In\nternational Paper, at $117, and\nCanada Malting, at $60, each gained that amount.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Industrial\nprices were narrowly firmer on\nMonday at the close of moderately j\nactive trading on the Montreal\nand Canadian stock exchanges.\nIn a firm paper group, Abitibi\ngained a point, Fraser Vz and\nGreat Lakes, Powell River, Price\nBrothers and Donohue V4 each\nPower Corporation added Vi and\nBell was steady in the utilities.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The\nstock exchange remained sensitive Monday with little desire on\nthe part of traders to extend commitments-in the light of Britain's\nuncertain economic conditions.\nGilt-adged securities were well-\nsupported with gains ranging up\nto %.\nCalqary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - Trade was!\nactive on the livestock market\nMonday and prices were steady\nto higher. Only 825 cattle and 20\ncalves, were available, though a\nfair run off truck for the day was\nin sight. Bulk of offerings were\nmedium to good butcher steers,\nwith a fair percentage of choice\nkinds.\nGood to choice butcher steers\nwere in reasonably good demand\nat steady prices, fair to medium\ngrades 25 to 50 cents higher; good\nto choice butcher heifers fully\nsteady, common to medium grades\nsteady to strong; all classes of\ncows solely readily at firm prices,\nthe odd heifer kind topping $11;\nbulls generally steady; veal and\nbutcher^weight calves in strong\ndemand at steady to strong prices\nChoice butcher steers 16.25-16.75\nwith odd sales higher; good 15.25-\n16; medium 14-15.15; common 10-\n14; choice butcher heifers 14-14.50;\ngood 13-13.75; medium 11-12.50;\ncommon 9-10.50; good cows 10.25-\nII; medium 9-10; common 7.75-\n8.75; canners and cutters 4.50-7.50\ngood bulls 11-11.50; common to\nmedium 8-10.50; good feeder steers\n13.50-15; good stock steers 13.50-\n14.50; common to medium 10-13;\ngood butcherweight calves 350-\n500 pounds 15-17 with odd sales\nhigher; good to choice veal calves\n18-21;  common to medium  13-17.\nHogs closed 50 cents lower last\nweek at 20.50.\nGood lambs 17-18.  ''\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG  (CP) - Winnipeg;\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 78^. -  -\nBarley, No. 1 feed 1.04%.\nDividends\nBy  The  Canadian  Press\nMinnesota and Ontario Paper1\nCo., new 35 cents May J, record\nApril 6. -\u25a0\nCanadian Hydrocarbons Inc.;\n12% cents March 15, record March\n5.\nBeaver Lumber Co.. Ltd., pfd 35\ncents; a 25 cents April 2, record\nMarch 10.\nBiltmore Hats, com. 10 cents; a\n25 cents April 15, record March\n23.\nMarcus Loew's Theatres Ltd;,\n$1 March 29, record March 9.     \u2022_>\nPHONE   1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nB C Power     37.75\nB.C. Telephone       50.50\nInt Brew B _  _     5.10\nInland Nat Gas       3.30\nLucky Lager       500\nMacM & Bloedel B     44.00\nMid Western   ~     4.10\nPowell River _   56.00\nTrans Mtn        48.50\nWestminster Paper     26.50\nWestern Plywoods     23.00\nUNLISTED\nAuwon    24%\nBluebird   03V4\nMidwest Copper  90\nNew Mo] Mac    10\nWestern Mines  48\nWoodbury    24\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal    49.50\nCan. Bank of Com. 45.75\nImperial Bank of Canada 59.25\nRoyal Ban* of Canada .... 62.00\nFUND8\nBalanced Mutual        5.23\nCan. Inv. Fund      9.09\nCommonwealth Int      7.76\nGrouped Income \" _..     3.83\nInvestors Mutual  _      9.81\nLeverage              5.80\nTrans Canada \"C\"       6.00\nNEW METHOD\nFirst Atlantic crossing by a vessel using gas turbines was made\nin   1952\nAuris.\nby   the   British   tanker\nIATEST REPORT\nAlk your Inveitmenl DflattC\nfer tho Latest Riport\nand Proipoctui 0*\nCALVIN BULLOCI\nEXECUTORS   AND   TRUSTEES   FOI  OVER   HALF  A   CENTUBVj\nYour will\n\u2014Kit bridge\nbetween your estata\nand your dependents\nroyal trust\nCOMPANY\nYowWW.\n1S0J GOVERNMENT, VICTORIA   \u2022   Mi PENDER ST. W, VANCOUVEK\nR. W. PHIPPS, MANAGER GEORGI a VALE, MANAGE!\nAahr\nMf DOOtTpJr    rTCrCfrCOI\nHiVrb on Planning\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.  LTD.\n614 Railway St Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nCONCRETE LTD.\nPHONE 871\nPlant Psychology\nComes Under Study\nSASKATOON iCP) \u2014 Plant j\nbreeding by a simple cross and\nselection from succeeding generations has become a thing of the\npast, says a research worker here.\nPhysiology, psychology and genetics of plants now are being\nstudied along with seed irradiations, to cause mutations and\nchange plant characteristics after\ngermination and growth.\nDr. D. R. Knott of the Saskatchewan field husbandry department believes plant breeders are\nonly making a start with new\nbreedings techniques.\nDEEPER STUDY\nHe says plant breeders have\nlargely ignored the physiology 0:\nplants, with no knowledge wh>\nfailures were experienced in som-\nattempts at wide crosses betweei\ndifferent plant species. In somt\nrases sterility had been genetically\notpduced in the plants, but the\nreason for this was not known.      '\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Renting\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u2022\nt\nFIRST LINI\nKCOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH-UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINI\ne  Put one word in each space.\nli'jen grcup of numbers or letters count at one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1 Insertion\n2 Consecutive  Insertions\n5 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive  Insertions\n$ .20\n.33\n.43\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge it two Knot\n\u2022 Add lit for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates if payment b\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the lew th rime rate\nIon Consecutive Insertions 20# a Line Far Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run ______\nYOUR  SAME  \u2014\t\nADDRESS\nBill Me \t\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n  , ,\t\n1- - NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1956\nSILICARE\nBy REVLON\nPROTECTIVE LOTION\nFor the Hands and Body.\n(Medically tested and proven.)\nThousands are benefitting\" By the use\nSILICARE\n$1.50\nWHY NOT YOU ?\n&mvd\u00a3fm\\\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nCivic Band Responding\nTo Fishwick's Baton\nThe Nels* Civic Band may be\na long way from concert calibre,\nbut the gentle perseverance of\nDirector Norman Fishwick is\nrapidly closing the gap.\nAt the Capitol Theatre Sunday,\nmaestro Fishwick cajoled 27 local band enthusiasts through their\nfifth practice and aroused noticeable improvement as the 60-min-\nute session progressed.\n\"We want it alive,\" he pleaded\nto the dance band pros who were\nfinding it difficult to conform to\nthe more demanding march band\ntechnique.\nMr. Fishwick, former assistant\nconductor of Trail's Maple Leaf\nBand, frequently called upon an\ninstrumentalist for a solo rendition of his part. Occasionally, the\nsounds resulting deviated sharply\nfrom the score, and a return to\nfundamentals ensued.\nYoungest members of the recently formed group are 14-year-\nolds Donald Ebdon and Tom\nSmith.   A  winsome   flutist,  Miss\nRochelle Crawford, is the band's\nlone member of the fair sex.\nBefore the regular group session Mr. Fishwick spends an, hour\nwith his fledgling band members\ngiving   individual   instruction.\nHere is the band personnel:\nFlute\u2014Rochelle Crawford\nClarinets \u2014 Alex Steele, Leo\nNimsick, Arthur Pomrenki, James\nMcKinlay, Charles Chatfield.\nSaxophones\u2014Bob Denison, Bill\nHalliwell, Archie Renwick.\nTrumpets\u2014Bert Lashmar, Bob\nRobinson, Ron Ebdon, Bill Lambert, Frank Anderson, Eugene\nO'Genski. Marvin Smith.\nAlto horns\u2014John Jacino, Tom\nSmith.\nBaritone horns\u2014John Hopwood,\nBill DeFoe. \/\nBass horns\u2014Tom Daloise, Jock\nHawkins, Scott Mclvor.\nTrombones\u2014Mike Borch. Eugene Kraft, Vincent Fink, Benny\nAnderson.\nDrums\u2014Rube McCandlish.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face.type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nDON   ELDER   STUDIO\n659 Baker St     \u2014     Phone 1205\nSpring Tweeds made-to-order\nSEW^RITE  TAILORS\nBINGO\nLEGION   HALL   TONIGHT\nGood  selection   of  Jig-Saw\nPuzzles at Wait's News.\nBest materials only used on your\nQuality   Footwear  for  the  entire, family at R. Andrew and Co\nBabv Budgies now in stock\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nPHONE 962\nLegion general meeting, March\n1 at 8:00 p.m. Presentation of Life\nMembership to H. E. Thain. Films\nto be shown.'Refreshments.\n1 only 10 cu. ft. Frigidaire re-\nBhoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS   [rige,.ator, \u201eke new. Spec. $i84.50\nPEOPLE'S~CREDIT JEWELLERS ' WE  PAY T0P PRICES\n615 Victoria, St.\nWatch trade-ins' now on.\nBedroom Rugs, in gold, red.\ngreen, white and grey at Sterling\nHome Furnishers.\nKnitting Needles all sizes, including circular ones. Tot-n-Teen\nShop.\nChild Health Conference to be\nheld today at the Selkirk Health\nUnit offices at 303 Baker Street.\nCriskay Special:  A good range\nof colors in cracked ice, waffle, etc.\nSpecial Yd. 79c\nTAYLOR'S    DRY    GOODS\nPlywoods of all kinds.\nFull sheets or  cut sizes,\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.     Nelson\nLost: New galvanized passenger\ncar chain with black rubber straps\nbetween Rosemont and town. Reward. M. Juriloff, phone 342-L.\nAnnual meeting of the West\nKootenay Agriculture and Industrial Exhibition, Wed., Feb. 29 at\n8:00 p.m. Civic Centre, Room A.\nGet your St. Patrick's Day Cards\nearly. ]0c, !5c, 25c. Stock complete\nKOOTENAY STATIONERS\nAND SPORT SHOP\nKIN SUIT OF MONTH WON BY\nA. T. Richards. Lady's hat, Mrs.\nA. G. Howison. man's shirt D. W.\nLond\nSmart, new sub-teen dresses.\nBeautiful fabrics a*nd smart styling at moderate prices.\nEBERLE'S ON   BAKER ST,\nFIRE   PREVENTION   SERVICE\nLeslie's Fire Equipment \u2014 recharging, sales and service. 536\nStanley Street, Phone 441-L.   \u00bb,\nR.  TARLING,  TAILOR\nCleaning,   alterations,   pressing.\nhats cleaned  and  blocked. Room\n207 Johnslnne Block. Phone 1256\n576 Baker Street.\nFOR  USED FURNITURE.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE  1560.\nPOST-INVENTORY   SPECIAL!\nSHURLEY-DPETRICH-ATKINS\nHANP SAWS\nNo.   162\u201426\"x7  pt,   Reg.  $6.15.\nON  SALE  $4.55\nNo. 1900 24\"x8pt; 26\"x7 pt. Reg. $9\nON  SALE  $5.26\nWE   HAVE   ONLY   A   LIMITED\nNUMBER   OF THESE   QUALITY\nHAND   SAWS.   ORDER   YOURS\nTODAY.\nWOOD,  VALLANCE   HDWRE.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our most\nsincere thanks to our friends and\nneighbors for their' kind expressions of sympathy. Especially Mrs.\nSmith for her kind help, in our\nrecent sad  bereavement.\nMrs. Mary Johnson,\nNorman and Cathie,\nVernon and Margaret,\nMarion and Harry.\nCARD OF THANKS\nI wish to extend my sincere\nthanks to all my friends, neighbors and relatives for their acts\nof kindness, messages of sympathy\nbeautiful floral tributes and donations to the Cancer Society received during my recent bereavement in the loss of my beloved\nwife. I especially wish to thank\nDr. Beauchamp, the nurses and\nstaff at the Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nJ. Ma'cMILLAN.\nLUKETICH \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Steve Luketich will\nbe held at the Thompson Funeral\nHome Wednesday at 11 a.m. Rev.\nFather F. Monaghan will officiate\nand interment will take place in\nNelson Memorial Park.\nBrutality in\nPrison Ended,\nSays Christie\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Rehabilitation of prisoners by individual\ndiagnosis and treatment is the\nultimate goal at Oakalla prison\nfarm, Warden Hugh Christie said\nMonday.\nSpeaking to the legislature committee on social welfare, Mr.\nChristie said that in the past prir\nsons have, been forced to accept\nind treat all inmates on the same\nbasis,\nHe compared this with the old\npractice of using leeches in hos-\nnitals for all ailments and said\nthe day is coming when prisons\nwill \"sort out\" inmates in the same\nmanner that modern hospitals div\nision patients.\n\"This outstanding, major change\nis just a matter o* time,\" Warden\nChristie said.\nThe need is for highly-trained\nspecialists able to determine the\nroot of the prisoner's anti-social\nbehaviour and give- treatment on\nthe basis of that cause.\nThe new approach is to have a\nprison staff able to maintain strict\ncontrol and at the same time\nbring about mutual respect. Brutality is a thing of the past, he\nsaid.\n\"The staff have got to represent\nthe standards you're trying to\nsell these people,\" Mr. Christie\nsaid.\nThe warden said Oakalla has\nundergone a great change and\nexpansion of treatment facilities\nin the last four years and now\nranks at the top of Canadian prisons. \"But to suggest that we have\narrived is ridiculous,\" he added*\nMore Than They\nBargained For\nLONDON fAP) - The Russian\nembassy has complained that\npropaganda balloons are descending on its palatial premises in\nLondon's millionaire row.\nAnd to make it worse, the balloons are being sent up by Russians.\nNikolai Belokyhvoytikov, Soviet\ncharge d'affaires, called at the\nForeign Office to protest against\na balloon campaign by the \"National Alliance of Russian Soli-\ndarists,\" a Russian emigre movement.\nBelokyhvostikov said Alliance\nmembers were sending up children's balloons carrying \"provocative\" pamphlets from outside the\nembassy grounds. The balloons\ndrift onto the Soviet area, he\nsaid, and a number have wound\nup tangled in Ambassador Jacob\nMalik's  rose  bushes.\nPERMANENT CATS\nLONDON (CP) - New members of the BBC staff are a pair of\ncats, formerly with the Ealing\nstudio film company. The cats \u2014\nTommy and Nigger\u2014were left behind when the movie company\nmoved out\n\"''   '   *              t^rns JvSfc?- vKv     \"*$*% .'^V\n\"* \u25a0 -*r        *\ni.      JS .   V,\n\"<'\u25a0\"\"'                  \u25a0,     %a\u00ab\n- *V\u00bb *   \u00bb\n\u25a0\u25a0  **' ' \u25a0\u2022 .:..         \"V, 'W*\u00bb>,\u00abi *\u2022 \u25a0\"%\n\">\n*\"*   *     ~-     '                                                  \"                    .                              0&   ;   '4*\u00ab   ^Y\nen .    ! ...\n\u2022\u25a0       if%    .'.          .            :..',,**\"                   \u25a0                      4       \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\n**%%%\u00bb J\n$&       -.        \u25a0   *\"^           \"   ''^'Jfamm. ,Sl!J\u00bb***mmm*.  ' * *\nV>-^wUi \u25a0\nI:>\n%0\\  '     '\n(&                            \u25a0 mm;\"'\u2022'\u2022&, ^_H_ itif-Jtk \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   l^v^BttmKi\ni \u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0          <,-,\n%   4^-\n\\v        *                     *~\"\\ r. vswja.imm\u25a0'\u2022;\n\u00ab\u25a0\nThe Week\nAt Victoria\nRISING   WATER   floods   a   residential   and\nbusiness   area   of   Kennewlck,   Washington   as\nyifi y\"   ^^\nheavy rains sent creeks and rivers over banks\nto plague the Pacific Northwest\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nKOOTENAY MEN\nDIRECTORS OF\nMOTOR DEALERS\nHarry D. Harrison of Nelson and\nGeorge Haddad of Cranbrook\nwere elected directors of the Motor Dealers' Association of B.C.\nwhen the 200-member group met\nin Vancouver for its annual convention.\nThe convention deplored the\nlack of a national highway system\nand called upon the Federal Government to enter into more liberal\narrangements with the provinces\nfor the construction, of first-class\nmain highways throughout Canada.\nDelegates felt there is room for\nimprovement in advertising ethics and techniques used by some\nauto retailers. They instructed association leaders to jconsider the\npossible application in B.C. of\nAlberta legislation which prohibits free offers as bait advertising and other \"undesirable'and\nmisleading practices.\"^\nRetiring as president of the association was Gordon Smith of\nKamloops. He was succeeded by\nWilf Sherwood of Vancouver.\nLandlord Warned of Faulty Fuses\nFind Defective Wiring Caused Fire\nThat Took Lives of Six in Ottawa\nJhsL dtiqhwwjA,\nCascade-Rossland, compact snow,\nplowing, carry chains, slide haz-.\nzard. Rossland-Trail, compact\nsnow, sanding. Trail - Castiegar,\nmostly bare, sanding. Castlegar-\nNelson - Balfour - Kootenay Bay-\nCrestoq-Goatfell, compact snow,\nsanding. Goatfell - Cranbrook-\nFernie-Crowsnest, two inches new\nsnow, some'slippery sections, good\nwinter condition, plowing and\nsanding.\nNo. 3A, Trail-Salmo, mostly bare\nto Fruitvale, remainder compact\nsnow.\nNo. 6 Nelway - Nelson - South\nSlocan. compact snow. South Slocan - Nakusp - Needle's, fair, four\ninches new snow, plowing. Need-\nles-Monashee, fair winter condition. Monashee-Vernon, fair, carry\nchains.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate - Cranbrook -\nGolden, two inches new snow, icy'\nconditipns, sanding, widening and\nsanding Canal Flats to Golden.\nNelson-Kaslo. new snow, small\nsluffs, plowing. Kaslo-New Denver,\nsix inches new snow, plowing.\nKaslo-Lardeau, new snow, plowing. Lardeau-Gerrard, twelve inches new snow, plowing.\nDoukhobors Honor\nMemory of\nC. W. Johnson\nA commemoration read bV C.\nMaloff on behalf of the Doukhobors of Thrums district was included in funeral services for.\nCharles William Johnson Saturday at Thompson Funeral Home.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood\nconducted the service, with Mrs.\nW. A. Manson as organist. Hymns\nsuog were \"Abide With Me\" and\n\"Rock of Ages\". There were many\nfriends in attendance.\nPallbearers included* F. Olson.\nW. Leahy, W. Pratt. R. G. Chalmers. C. Maloff and F. Kavic.\nA Doukhobor prayer was also\ngiven as interment took place at\nNelson Memorial Park.\nMr. Johnson had been postmaster and general storekeeper at\nThrums from 1920 until 1955 when\nhe became ill and moved with his\nfamily to Nelson. During his 35\nyears at Thrums he was held in\nhigh esteem by his Doukhobor\nfriends and neighbors.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A coroner's\njury found Monday that defective\nelectrical wiring was the cause\nof a Dec. 17 fire that took six lives\nand that the landlord had been\naware of the defects but took no\naction to correct them.\nThe jury, leporting after an inquest into the death of 24-year-old\nMrs. Florence Estenson, found she\nhad been asphyxiated. She died;\nwith her five children in a west;\nend home.\nLandlord Michael Walsh had testified earlier he had been warned j\nelectrical fuses were blowing con-l\ntinually in the Estensen home but'\ndid not have the $230 needed to re-,\nwire the home.\ni    Leading seamen  Arthur Esten-J\nj sen was the only survivor of the!\n| early morning fire that wiped out\nI the remained of his family.\n; URGES INSPECTION\nThe jury recommended that \"the.\nOttawa fire department or the Fire!\nPrevention Association of Ontario,'\nas well as licensed electricians, be\ngiven proper authority to inspect:\nthe wiring of all city and subur\nban homes and report their findings to the hydYo-electric commission, who in turn would take ne-\ncessary action to see that the wiring of such homes is put in a safe\ncondition for occupancy.\"\nIn his testimony, the Landlord\nsaid Estensen had told him about\nfuses blowing,\nUnder questioning by city prosecutor Raout Mercier, Mr. Walsh\nsaid:\n\"I didn't think it was that bad.\"\nMr. Mercier told the jury there\nwas no law to force anyone to fix\ndefective wiring in a house, The\npenalty was that power would be\ncut off.\nTaxpayers Win\nMaaiy Appeals\nTrail Store Hour\nChange Voted Down\nTRAIL \u2014 At a meeting of Trail\nmerchants held in the City Council chambers Sunday afternoon a\nmotion that stores remain open\nfrom 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Fridays\nwhile the bus strike is in duration was almost unanimously defeated.\nOne merchant who felt that the\npurpose of the meeting should be\nlo try to solve the bus strike insisted that this would not be a\nsolution. \"Should not the Public\nUtilities Commission be called in\nto make a thorough investigation\nbefore the merchants do anything?\" he asked.\nChairman Fred Moffatt said that\naccording to the commission the\nstrike is still going on and that\nnothing can be done until word is\nreceived from Interior Stages that\nthey are going out of business.\nWilliam Forester, president of\nthe Trail Chamber of Commerce\nsaid that he understood a definite\nstatement from the bus company\nwould be forthcoming within the\nnext three or four dayi.\nTo Hold Conference\nOn Jordan Diversion\nAMMAN, Jordan (AP) \u2014\nMoves for a summit conference\nof Middle East Arab states next\nmonth on the Israeli issue gained momentum Monday with\nword that Syria had joined Lebanon and Iraq In supporting the\nJordan proposal,\nIn another weekend development In the Middle Eastern area\nIraq offered Lebanon and Syria\n\"any military aid that they may\nask\" (a block Israeli diversion\nof   the Jordan river.\n|     Of   every   five   taxpayers  who1\nI deposited  $15   to   file  an   appeal\n! before   the  \"Income   Tax   Appeal\n: Board, two got their money back\nwhen   officials  found  they  were j\njustified, at least to some extent.1\naccording to.a review of 1955 tax\ncases by CCH Canadian Limited,\nnational   reporting   authority   on\ntax and business law.\nThe taxpayer did not fare quite\nas well before the courts, where\nhe may have taken his case if it\ni went against him -before the\n; board, or in a lower court. Even\n, here, out of 31 appeals reported.\nI the taxpayer was successful in\ni seven cases.\n!    The record of the Income Tax\nAppeal  Board, shown in the review, lists 225 appeals heard during the year,  with the taxpayer\n; being completely successful in 63\ncases. In another 19, he managed\nto get some concessions although\n[ not all he wanted. Some 40 to 50\n1 appeals were allowed by consent\n: of  the Minister  of National  Revenue    before    they    were   even\nheard by the Income Tax Appeal\nBoard.\nBan Low Planes\nNear Cranes\nOTTAWA (CP) - Whopping\ncranes will'be protected by a ban\non low-flying planes over their\nnesting grounds in the Northwest\nTerritories.\nThe northern affairs depart'\nment announced Monday that i\ntransport department order effective April 1 forbids planes either\nto fly lower than 2000 feet over\nnesting grounds in Wood Buffalo\nNational Park or land within the\narea.\nThe whooping crane, one of\nNorth America's most beautiful\nbirds, has been close to extinction for years. Their present re\ncorded number \u2014 28 \u2014 is the\nhighest in recent years, but their\nsurvival chances are still regarded as critical.\nAbout two^t.hirds of the crane's\nnesting grounds lie within Wood\nBuffalo Park, a vast wilderness\nof lakes, forest and bush straddling the Alberta-Territories boun-\ndaiv.\nThe low-flying ban will remain\n\u25a0in force annually from April 1 to\nOct. 15, the period covering their\nresidence  in  Canada.\nCHRISTIAN HEALING\nPOWER CITED\nThe power of Christian healing\nin all ages was set forth at Christian Science services Sunday in the\nLesson-Sermon entitled \"Christ\nJesus.\"\nSelections from the King James\nVersion of the Bible included the\naccount of Christ Jesus' healing of\nthe \"Man whose right hand was\nwithered\" as recorded in Luke's\nGospel (6:6-12).\nFrom \"Science and Health with\nKey to the Scriptures\" by Mary\nBaker Eddy the following was\nread: \"Christ, as the spiritual or\ntrue idea of God, comes now as of\nold, preaching the gospel to the\npoor,' healing the sick, and casting\nout evils.\"\nThe Golden Text was from\nPsalms (45:2): \"Thou art fairer\nthan the children of men: grace is\npoured into the lips: therefore God\nhath blessed thee for ever,\"\nClassified Ads Got Results\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Abbe Pierre, French apostle of the poor and\nhomeless, sftys the world's 8,000,-\n000 lepers could be cured with\nthe money needed to build two\nmodern bombers. About 300.000,-\n000 people suffer from malaria\nand \"three-fifths of the world's\npopulation are menaced witfi trachoma,, which makes you blind,\"\nhe said in a television talk on\nillness.\nBy LEO T. NIMSICK\nMLA  For Cranbrook\nWe have just finished four night\nsittings in a row so if this week's\narticle tends to reflect a tired\nfeeling, you may rest assured that\nis just how I feel. The Premier is\ndetermined to have us out of here\nas quickly as possible, -and if it\ntakes 16 hours per day he is going\nto do it. If I was a song writer' I\nwould, write a parody to that song\n\"Sixteen Tons.\" Nevertheless the\nsession has entered the stage of\n\"Legislation by Exhaustion,\"\nwhich to my way of thinking is\nnot good.\nSunday,I made my annual pilgrimage to Colquitz, the mental\ninstitution. This is a trip one does\nnot appreciate since you are meeting some people whom you have\nknown many years ago either at\nschool or at work. They are all\npleading with you to help them\nget back to freedom again and\nalthough you do1 your best to\ncheer them up, you know it is\nhopeless.\nUnder the Minister of Agriculture's vote the Premier cut off\ndiscussion by Mrs. Arsens, the\nonly lady member in the house,\nby passing the estimate without\ngiving her a chance to have her\nquestion answered. This is the\nfirst time that this has been done\nand I am sure that every member\nof the house considered the Premier acted in undignified manner\nand violated the democratic rights\nof the member. The Premier seems\nto get hostile if one of his own\nmembers asks to6 many questions.\nUnder the Attorney-General's\nestimates I questioned . the expenditures of monies from the\nGame Conservation Fund for surveys made on Frobisher, Libby\nDam and Mica Creek developments. I maintain that this is the\nresponsibility of the projects concerned, or should be paid out of\nthe 25% of the game receipts that\ngoes into consolidated revenue.\nThere was an amendment made\nto the Land Act which makes it\nunlawful for anyone to dispose of\nany garbag^, bottles, or cans on\nany Crown property -whatsoever,\nand if so you are liable to arrest\nby any police without warrant. I\nagreed with some control of the\nindiscriminate disposal of garbage\nalong our highways and roads,\nbut I objected to making it so\nwide in scope that a person could\nbe arrested if he was caught\nthrowing away a tin can or bottle\nany place in the bush. This is\n' warning to any of you hunters\nwhen you have a can of pork and\n! beans in the hills, either pack the\n! empty can back home with you or\ni dig a hole and bury it.\nj I placed an amendment on the\nOrder paper to the Metalliferous\nMines Act asking for a certificate\nof competency for miners, as is\nprovided for in the Coal Mines\nAct, but it was defeated by the\nGovernment.\nDuring one of Ran Harding's\ntalks he said he was going to send\nI his horse down to sit on the Government side of the house to give\nthem a little horse sense. This\ncaused some amusement, and now\nit is quite common to hear a request for the horse to be sent\ndown.\nHospital insurance was discussed tonight until 12 o'clock,\nbut the minister did not give way\non his freeze order. He may realize\nthe impossible situation he is\nplacing the hospital boards in if\na number of them give up in disgust as the Kimberley Board has\ndone.\nWith the following thought I\nwill say thirty for another week.\nfriends: \"Some people grow wiser;\nothers just grow older.\"\nJackets\n... for Spring\nNEW  JACKETS\nJust Arrived\n\u2022 Bright Poplins\n$5.95\n\u2022 Wool Checks\n$11.50 to $16.95\n\u2022 Cleanable   Suedes     ;\n$24.50\nat\nEmory's\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE    I\nBOX  100 PHONE 31\nKIM BO, 350-pound puma, perches on kitchen sink as his\nowner, Mrs-. Melvln Koontz does dishes In her Thousand Oaks,\nCalif., home. Mrs. Koontz acquired Klmbo five years ago as a\nbaby, bottle fed him and reared him as a pet. Klmbo romps\naround the house, consumes about ten pounds of horse meat\nand a gallon of milk a day.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nftrdcery Business\nAt Cranbrook Sold\nCRANBROOK \u2014 One of Cranbrook's best-known businesses,\nthe Van Home Grocery, has been\nbought by two of its former longtime employees, E. R. Leonard\nand Mrs. Doris Muirhead, who\nwill take over its management\nThursday.\nIt was started in the late 1930's\nby Mr. and Mrs. Peter Shypitka\nas a sideline to the service station\nthay operated, then was considerably expanded. Arthur Godderis\nbought the store in 1949 and with\nits stock it was demolished by fire\na few months later. He transferred\nthe operation a block North to a\nsite in the Cranbrook Hotel block\non Van Home Street which he\npurchased and later added a\ncinder-block annex and warehouse. Mr. and Mrs. Godderis have\nmanaged it until its sale.\nGolden Odd Fellows'\nOfficers Installed\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Odd Fellows\ninstallation party headed by deputy district grand master S. E.\nMoase of Revelstoke visited Golden to install the new officers of\nRocky Mountain Lodge.\nThey are noble grand William\nRandc, vice-grand J. Bergenham,\nsecretary Otto. Bergenham, treas*\nurer William Wenman, and other\nofficers are F. L. Parker. D. Kirk-\nnatrick, Arthur Kallman. E W\nOakland, George Wiebe. V. Maki,\nS. H. Hautala, and J. Hickmott.\nin Square\nDance Workshop\nA crowd of 180 West Kootenay\nsquare dancers proved' themselves\na hardy group Saturday rjight\nwhen they defied treacherous\nroad conditions and a heavy\nsnowfall to take part in a square\ndance workshop at the Nelson\nJunior  High  School.\n\"The most' successful workout\nwe've had,\" said J. G. James, organizer of the event.\nLes H. Boyer of Okanogan,\nWash., introduced the dance enthusiasts to several new \"breaks*,1\nthe Allemande A, Soucy Que and\nWaggon Wheel, and two novel\nround dances, the Tennessee Wig\nWalk and the Carolina Capers.\nThe workshop was sponsored\njointly by the Community Programs Branch and three local\nsuqare dance clubs, Buttons *n\nBows, Beaux and Belles, and\nGingham  Swing'ems.\nDistrict centres represented\nwere Creston, Gray Creek, Crawford Bay, Riondel, Slocan City,\nNew Denver, Trail, Procter and\nNelson.\nHospital Matron\nLeaving Grand Forks\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Miss Helen\nCampbell is temporary matron of\nthe Grand Forks Hospital, pending\nappointment of a matron to succeed Mrs. Glenn Allan, who ls\nleaving Saturday for Vancouver to\ncontinue her nursing career in\nanother field.\nMrs. Allan has lived in Grand\nForks for the last live years, \"and\nhas been matron for the last two\nyears.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front 8t Phone 83\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 838\nI. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAININO.\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone  327\n576 Baker Street\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\nU        LIMITED **\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nMake  your own  Home  Maae\nBread with  ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on every packagl\nPhone 238 or call\nELLISON MILLING\n*   ELEVATOR  CO   LTD.\n*\nTIFFANY\nCUANIING\nCWAM\nTIFFANY LOTION\nCLEANSING\nCREAM\nGently and quickly dissolves dirt\nand grease, deep\ncleans, conditions\nand Boftcmt the\n\u2022 y      skin.\nIn plastic squeeze 4,1) M\nbottle. 6 oz. $Z.UU\nSold Only        '\nAt  Your   Rexall   Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG CO,\nPHONE 34\nBOX 460\nI\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_1956_02_28","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\/1.0428937","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1956-02-28 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":"1956-02-28 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]. 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