{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2023-03-28","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1955-11-25","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429110\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" u- '   . \u2014\n y, ...    .....   \u25a0 '.uu.ii\n^spi?.\nwmmmmmmmmmmmmm\n>\n_v. Claims\nIron Curtain Down\nMay Lend India Nuclear Scientists\nRuss Ready To \"Fight For Co-Existence\"\nBy HAROLD K. MILKS\nBOMBAY, India (AP) \u2014 Nikita Khrushchev said\nThursday night Russia has torn aside the so-called Iron\nCurtail! \"No one who applied for permission to enter the\nSoviet Union was refused ai     ;\nvisa this year,\" he said. ; fare of our future generations.\"\n| He frequently thundered at \"en-\nThe   Soviet   Communist   party emles who would find a   way to\nchief challenged other countries to J en\u00a3j peace.\"\nopen their frontiers\u2014\"as we have\";    Warning     Western     countries\n-JTn a speech before the Indian-\nSoviet Cultural Society, conclud\ning the Russian leaders' visit to\nBombay.\n\"Why,\" he said, \"we had at\nleast 17 American senators touring Russia this year, I believe,\nas well af farmers, newsmen'and\nothers.-Does that sound like an\nIron Curtain?\"\nBoth Khrushchev and Premier\n. Nikolia Bulganin, who preceded\nhim in speaking to more than 750\npeople at a banquet, praised the\n\u25a0 society for contributing to improved relations between the two]\ncountries and assisting world\npeace.\nSTANDS FOR PEACE\n\"Russia does not stand alone today1,\"\nhe said \"we have many other\ncountries who'think as we do and\nIndia is among them.\"\nThe Communist party boss\nsaid coexistence was his principal theme, \"I don't like the\ncapitalistic system and when I\nspeak about coexistence It Is not\nfor the purpose of continuing)\nthat system, but I give de facto\nrecognition to capitalism and\ngrant It does exist,\" he said.\nKhrushchev drew cheers,when\nhe told the Indian audience Russia would not beg for coexistence, but would fight for It.\nIn New Delhi, Gromyko and Deputy Trade Minister Pavel Kumy-\nGovernor Harek7ushna Mahtab!\u00a3in \u2122M0r abo(ut a\" hour with N\nof Bombay State sounded the key\nnote for the meeting whence \"told\nKhrushchev and Bulganin:\n'That your country stands firmly\nfor peace is not questioned seriously in any quarter.\"\n\"Khrushchev said India and Russia are firmly committed to work\ntogether for peace and \"the wel-\nEden Urges Plan\nOn Arabs, Jews\nBy ARTHUR GAV8HON\nLONDON (AF)\u2014Prime Minister Eden Thursday pressed Arabs\nand Jews to accept his plan for a\nPalestine peace amid stormy protests by opposition Laborites that\nit would carve up Israel.\nThe British leader told the House\nof Commons his government and\nhe personally still stand ready to\nmediate in the seven-year-long\ndispute that threatens the uneasy\npeace of the Middle East. He\nclaimed he had the full support of\nthe U. S. government in his quest\nfor a settlement.\nEden's statement\u2014renewing an\nOffer first made Nov. 9\u2014at once\ntouched off a prolonged opposition\nhssault on the substance of his\npeace plan.\nFour former ministers In the\nlate Labor government joined in\nthe cut-and-thrust of, the. cheated,\nunscheduled debate. Each charged,\nfiercely that the Eden mediation\nproposals by definition mean that\nthe already tiny Jewish state\nwould have to surrender chunks\n,of its territory to Arab countries\nwhich attacked it in 1948. Former\nwar minister John Strach'ey claimed half of Israel's present territory\nappears to be at stake.\nEden's own aides, meantime, reported that the Arab countries\nihave reacted positively to his mediation offer in the course of pri-\nJvate. diplomatic exchanges.\nIsraeli leaders have rejected it\nIpublicly. But, the aides claimed,\nithe Jerusalem   government   pri-\n'vately has indicated its interest in\nBusing British good offices in the\n\"search for peace.\npiimiiiifiiiiiiiififitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nNo Surprise To\nFind Car In Bed\nDALLAS (AP)-When Mrs.\nEdward Lee Cowart Investigated a noise In their hotel\nbedroom Wednesday night she\nreported to her husband,\n\"Honey, you've got a car In\nyour bed.\"\n\"I've been expecting It,\" replied her husband, night\nclerk at the St. Paul Hotel.\nA late-model car had missed\na turn In a skyscraper parking building next to the hotel,\nleaped six feet through space\nand crashed through the wall\nof the third-floor bedroom,\nThe Cowarts were visiting in\nanother room across the hall\nat the time.\nThe parking station attendant, Fred Jackson, 22, said the\near's brakes failed to hold and\nthe vehicle leaped off the\nwinding ramp.\n\u25a0iiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiitiifiiii'\nR, Pillai, secretary-general of In\ndia's external affairs' ministry.\nThey discussed Bulganin's offer,\nmade in a speech earlier in the 15-\nday tour, to help India develop her\natomic energy program. It is believed here that Russia may lend\nIndia nuclear scientists but will\nnot make any dramatic offer, such\nas aid in building an atomic power\nstation.\nMeanwhile, five Russian oil\ntechnicians arrived in New Delhi\nto advise the Indian government\non prospecting and drilling.\nSB.\n2o6~\nVol. 54\n0\nih\nh..>\nNELSON, B. \u00a3*\u201e.CANADfl.\u2014FRIDAY NJ6RNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1955    Not Mora Than 80 Dully, 10o Saturday\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy. Snow flurries\nexcept rain and snow mixed la.\nsome southern valleys. MUd^ix\nLow-high at Cranbrook 20 and 38,\nCrescent Valley 25 and 36. 4!.\n%\nie\n'COPTER TO AID\nTRAFFIC CONTROL\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Ontario\nprovincial police said today they\nhave borrowed a helicopter to\nuse In their drive to cut high*\nway accidents.\nThe aircraft will patrol today\nabout 200 feet above the four-\nlane Queen Elizabeth Way and\nwill relay information about\ntraffic Jams and speeders to patrol cars on the Toronto-Niagara highway, they said.\nCYPRIOTl\nTWO BRITONS\nWorst Wave Qf\nViolence Yet\nHitsQjIony\nNICdSIA^fCyprus (Reuters) \u2014,\nTwo British soldiers were killed\nand three\/- others were injured\nThursdays' Greek Cypriot insurgents armed with machine-guns\nand Home-made bombs sparked a\nnew AVave of violence in this British island colony.\n.'One of the victims was a sergeant who was trailed home by terrorists and mowed down with a\nmachine-gun outside his barracks.\nA private was killed and an officer and another private was- Injured when the terrorist's, demanding \"enosis\" union with-Greece,\nambushed two army- trucks in the'\nfountains of central Cyprus.   .\nAnother British soldier was\nwounded in the leg when terrorists tossed a bomb at two army\npatrols cars in a crowded Nicosia;\nshopping centre. j\nThe deaths brought to five the\nnumber of British soldiers killed,\nin terrorists uprisings in the last\nmonth. j\nAuthorities said Thursday was]\nthe worst 24 hours for Cyprus'\nBritish garrison since the underground started their terrorist campaign for union with Greece last\nMarch.\nNo. 18?\nSlain Priest's Dad\nAsks Clemency\nFor Youth s.\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 The father\nof a Roman Catholic priest who\nwas slain and robbed on the highway near Brandon . last January\nhas appealed t\u00a9 the fioyernpr^en-,\n&kV **>'*\" ^dtr^icjT ih -the\" ciistf \"of\nttfre'e Quebec youths, sentenced to\nHfe hanged for the murder.\nIn Liberie et La Patriote, the\nFrench-language weekly newspaper published here, says Olivier\nQuirion, 84, of St. Jean' de la Lan-\nde, Beauce County, Que., has sent\nthe appeal in behalf of all the\nmembers of his family.\nEarlier, he wrote a friend here\nthat he felt sure his son would\nhave forgiven his assailants if he\nhad lived long enough.\nQuebec Fights To\nSave Old Building\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014A move to demolish one of the oldest buildings\nin Quebec City has been turned\ndown flatly by the authorities\nhere.\nThe municipal town - planning\ncommission, which has almost absolute control over even superficial\nalternations to any buildings considered of historic value, refused\na request by the owner of a building known as \"Montcalm House\"\nto tear the place down.\nThe building in question, owned\nby Josaphat Doyon, is believed by\nhistorians to have been built in\n1677. It is situated at the corner\nof St. Louis St. and Des Jardins\nSt. in the oldest section of Quebec.\nMr. Doyon asked permission to\ndemolish the house and replace it\nwith a combined restaurant and\nboarding house. The commission's\ndecision is final.\nThe house, which now serves as\na small restaurant with living\nquarters behind, traces its history\nback to the earliest days of the\nFrench settlers here.\nAccording to city archives, it is\nbuilt on land donated in 1674 to\nearly Quebec citizens by the Ursu-\nline nuns, whose adjacent convent\nis the oldest in Canada.\niWinnfe Visits Old School\nBy   EDDIE   GILMORE\nHARROW, England (AP) \u2014 Sir\n[Winston Churchill made a senti-\nfcnental journey back to his old\nKchool Harrow. Thursday to relive\n|the fading memories of his youth.\nA tear or two slipped down his\nIcherubic cheeks as he sat with\nB50 students at his alma mater\nland sang the same old songs he\npsang nearly 70 years ago.\n\"This is the sixteenth time, if\nImemory serves me right,\" he said.\nJ'tha t I've return ed to Harrow\nfcince the beginning of the Great\niVar_\"\nBritain's former prime minister\nland wartime leader, who -will be\nBl years old in six more days,\nfcaused and looked out (over the\nJroung faces.\n\"I hope,*' he said very slowly,\nJ'that this Is not the last time I\nf hall come to sing with you.\"\nLady Churchill, wearing a green\nliat and a mink coat, sat on the\nplatform near her husband. She\n[ooked at him with a warm smile\nWould Cut Down\n\"Cosl of Dying\"\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A Toronto\nchurch group says it has a plan\nto \"cuj down the high cost of\ndying.'\\ .\nThe recently - formed Toronto\nMemorial Society hopes to popularize an unorthodox type of funeral service which will be both\ncheap and simple while still honor- j\ning the dead. !\nRev. Donald Stout. 27, organized I\nthe group from among members of\nthe congregation of South Peel\nUnitarian church where he is min-1\nister.\u25a0 I\n.He said the society wants to do\naway with the present type of:\n\"morbid and barbaric\". funeral\nrites. \"We also want to cut downj\non the cost of dying, It's far too\nexpensive these days.\"\nThere would be np ^embalming,\nno public display P* the bp&'np\nfieapft of floral\" \u25a0fribute^no sdmbre;\nmusic and no gr&veside commits!'\nattended by members of the deceased's family.\nThe body would not be on view\nbut would have been buried or cremated previously at a private ceremony.\n\"Too often undertakers capitalize on loved ones' desire to do the\nright thing by making sure the\nright thing is the most expensive\nthing,\" Mr. Stout said.\nHe said the new type of service\nEN ROUTE to'the Arctic Where they will serve the oause of\nscience, husky dogs are taken,aboard the Canadian sealing ship\nTheron aB she was loaded In London, Eng. The ship Is taking a\nparty of scientists from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and\nthe United Kingdom to Vahsel Bay, Falk'ani hies. \u25a0\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n.iiii.iiiiN..m:....nii'._niiiHiiii!:_n\nFriends Send Dutch\nCouple To See Son\nAMSTERDAM (Reuters)\u2014A\nDutch couple left here by air\nThursday night for Canada to\nvisit their son both of whose\nlegs were amputated following a plane crash In the\nNorthwest Territories.\nMr. and Mrs. W. F. Lozie\nbought the tickets with money\nthat poured In from many\nparti of Holland.\nTheir son, Gerhard, spent\n10 days without food beside\nhis wrecked plane before he\nwas rescued.\nIIIIMIMHIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIMIMI\nlo\nOkay Siege Slate\nRuss Rejects\nCompromise Proposal\n3 KILLED IN\nPLANE (RASH\n16 Rescued by\nFishing Boat\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Three\nairmen were killed and 16 other\npersons were rescued Thursday\nflight when an RCAF Canso crash\nlanded in Johnstone strait, 130\nmiles northwest of here. The survivors, four of them injured, were\npicked up by a fishing boat.\nSeventeen of those aboard the\nflying boat were air force petson-\nnel. Two were civiliahs.\nNutting Says Soviet Avoiding Issue\nOf Controls In Disarmament Scheme\nBy JACK BEST\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (CP) - Russia threw\ncold water Thursday on France's compromise disarmament\nplan and the app&jpht rejection came only 24 hours aftejr\nFrench delegate Jules Moch\nadvanced the proposal\nRussia's Arkady Sbholev told the\nUN disarmament commission that\nthe compromise was' tied in with\nWestern refusal, to-, avoid taking\nconcrete steps while restricting\ntalks to disarmament control.\nThe French plan\/calied. for a\npreparatory period in which arms\ninspection measures proposed by\nTwo of the dead were identified; President Eisenhower, Prime Min-\nas FO. P. C. Walker, navisator of\nthe plane, and FO. D. K. McPherson, radio officer.\nIdentification of the third airman was withheld pending notification of next of kin.\nThe injured:\n'FO. D. F. Sutcliffe, &lot, Fit. Lt.\nL. F. Fatt, a member ot the crew,\nand T. (_-rant, a civilian passenger.\nExtent of their injuries was not\nimmediately known.\nRIO DE JANEIRO (AP) \u2014 Con-I\ngress moved Thursday toward final [\nNEW HALL NEEDED\nFOR FESTIVAL\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A new con-\n\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e-!     r ,\u201e.       t     \u25a0 \u201e i cert hall, seating perhaps 2500 per-\nSlhi lt\u00b0L a ii \u00abte. _ ln c ge \u00bbns, would be necessary If an in-\nS^d^blt^S^ ^Uc\u00a3? wS \u00ab\"\u00bbtltmal music and arts festival\nStSw\"eSgThei I* * be .taged-in Ottawa, Ian\nviolent political war. | Hunter   Scottish   impresario,  has\nThe Chamber of Deputies early j sported The new hai is a key\nin the day voted 178 to 91 to pro- Pwnt !\u00bb hls \u2122?\u00b0rtKto a 2J?;nSmb?r\nclaim a state of seige-modified | committee which brought him to\nmartial law-and give provisional I C?n?Ja \\1\u2122\"th af\u00b0 to determine\npresident Nerue Ramos and his I jjf*1^ ^!i\u21225\"?r2!?,S\"\u00b0f \u25a0\u25a0f6S'\nmilitary backers strong powers to'\nsuppress disorders and prevent the\nreturn of Joao Cafe Filho to the\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A teachers' conference at Vancouver has\ndrafted a salary scale ranging\nfrom $650 to $1110 a year more\nthan the current salary of the\n\"professionally prepared teacher.\"\nin B. C. *\nTwelve delegates to the Western\nconference of teacher federation\nnfesidents and' secretaries from\nManitoba,  Saskatchewan, Alberta\nwould last only 30 minutes and be! and B. C, meeting at the office of\ncalled not a funeral service but a\nmemorial service,\nDOCTOR KILLED\nBY PATIENT\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Dr. Rex\nHylton, 57-year-old orthopaedic\ncohsultant, was shot, to death\nThursday in his office at the Ontario workmen's compensation\nboard hospital-in nearby Malton.\n[Police are holding Robert Martin. 49, a carpenter from Ottawa.\nThey said Dr. Hylton was killed\nwith a single shot by a man who\nwalked into the office carrying a\n.30-30-calibre rifle under his overcoat. About 50 patients were waiting in a nearby office.\nPolice said Martin was admitted\nto the hospital Sept. 21 for treatment of an injured elbow and\nhad been a patient intermittently\nfor three years.\nTupper Hearings\nHalted Till\nMonth End\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The royal commission under R. H. Tupper\ninvestigating charges of graft and\ncorruption in Vancouver's police\nforce will not resume sitting before the end of the month, officials said here Thursday.\nThe hearings, which have already led to the dismissal of chief\nWalter Mulligan at his own request, began in mid-July and were\nadjourned indefinitely Oct. 12.\nAutopsy Shows\n2 Loqqers Drowned\nPOWELL RIVER (CP) \u2014 Two\nof three loggers reported missing\na week ago from their camp on\nDesolation sound, 30 miles north\nof here, were victims of \"accidental death by drowning,\" the RCMP\nsaid Thursday night.\nAutopsies on the bodies of Charles Haines, 34, of Portland, Ore.,\nand Fred Jennings, about 40, believed of Vancouver, showed they\nwere drowned.\nStill missing' is Uno Nyliind, 54,\nof Courtenay, B..C.\nRCM\u00a3 were j^luctant to comment on a report they questioned\nand released a man who walked\ninto RCMP headquarters in this\npulp and paper producing town\nand claimed he killed the three\nloggers. But they said there was\nnothing to substantiate such a\nclaim.\nB. C. Teachers' Federation Thurs\nday, termed the scale the western\nconference schedule.\nThe meeting proposed the scale\nfor those with university degrees\nplus teacher training.\nUnder the plan, the maxlfhum\nof $6200 would be reached in annua] increments of $225 each. The\nscale starts at $3600.\nAverage scale for the professionally prepared teacher in B. C...\nnow is from $2950 to $5100.\nC. D. Ovans, general secretary\nof the B. C. Teachers' Federation,\nsaid if teaching \"is ever going to\nenjoy full professional, status, salaries will have to be paid which j REMANDED FOR\npresidenoy.\nAs the fchamber wound up 14\nhours of debate, the Senate went\nInto- session before.dawn to debate\nt^biilf'Manys&nators.announced\ntffey wduld.'speqlc Be'foreHheir Vote\ni's taken.- V   ''',\nDuring the debate party leaders\nhuddled privately. Although they\ndeclined to speak for publication,\nthey indicated they were seeking\ngrounds to compromise their differences. They were spurred\" on to\ntalk peace because of fears the\nconstitutional government might\ncollapse and a military dictatorship take over.\nTwo Die When Car\nSkids Off Road\nLYTTON, B.C. (CP)\u2014Two acred\nIndian hitch-hikers were killed\nnear this Cariboo cattle town\nWednesday when the vehicle in\nwhich  they   were ^ given   a   ride | st\u2122rT, Harold BurtTthe pTann\"\ntival can become a reality.\nMr. Hunter, 36-year-old former\ndirector of the famed Edinburgh\nFestival, said in an interview he\nhas decided the best site in Canada for a festival would be Ottawa. \u2022'\nConstruction Firm\nTried Bribery\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A judicial\ninquiry has found that a construction company last summer attempted to bribe four officials of\nsuburban  Scarborough   township.\nA report on the inquiry was released Thursday at a meeting of\nthe township council., which voted\nunanimously to send a copy of it\nto the attorney-general,\nIt was written by Judge Robert\nForsyth, who sat earlier this\nmonth as a special commissioner\ninquiring into charges that Gram-\narcy Building and Development\nLtd., sent four $500 cheques to\ncouncilors Donald Horton and Len\nskidded off the road\nNews of the accident, which\nkilled Harry Hants, 73, and Susan\nNali, 71 reached here late Thursday. RCMP said Norman Badger\nof Vancouver, driver of the jeep,\nwas injured along with another,\nunnamed passenger.\nThe injured two were reported\nin fair condition in hospital.\ndirector, and Clifton Tripp, township clerk.\nare much more comparable with\nearnings in other professions,\"\n\"THE PROPHET\" DIES\nOXFORD, England (AP) \u2014 Lionel George Curtis, 83, a scholar\nwhose grave demeanor and air of\ncertainty earned him the nickname \"The Prophet\", died Thursday after a lifetime of battling\nfor international federation of\nwestern Europe.\nPRELIMINARY HEARING\nCLOVERDALE, B.C. (CP) \u2014\nJohn D. MacRae, 43-year-old\ncrippled logger, Thursday was\nremanded for preliminary hearing in the strangling of his\nmother, Mrs. Marie Copeland\nMacRae, 80.\nMacRae, arresting officers said,\ntold them he killed his mother\n\"because I didn't like the way\nshe cooked my -breakfast.\"\nLives 10 Weeks\nAfter Brain Dies\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A 41-year-\nold Pole who was found unconscious in a gas-filled room in London lived for 10 weeks after his\nbrain had ceased to function, an\ninquest was told Thursday.\nOxygen was administered at the\nhospital and though there was a\nslight improvement in his general\ncondition the brain was so damaged that it never recovered, a\nsenior physician said.\nThe man, Wladyslaw Popek. remained unconscious the whole\ntime before he died, the physician\nsaid. The doctor declared the .case\nwas unique in his experience.\n$50 Million Hydro Dam\nSlated for Northern B*G\nVlfcTORIA (CP) \u2014 A new\nmulti-million dollar plan In the\ndevelopment of British Columbia's vait northern hydro-electric power and metallurgical potential wai unveiled here on\nThursday.\nThe scheme of the giant Fro-\nblsher-Ventures Interests Involves the Initial expenditure of\n$50,000,000 for a hydro dam on\nthe Nass river.\nElectric  power  will   be  carried over a 32-m|le transmission\nline to Alice Arm,, on the coast,\nwhere a smelter and Industrial\ntownsite will be built.\nDetails of the plan were disclosed by Premier Be_inett at a\npress conference after a meeting\nwith Robert Anderson, head of the\nFrobisher-Ventures    group.    The\nPremier said construction is expected to start ln 1957.\nNorthwest Power Industries Ltd.\na ''Frobisher-Ventures   subsidiary\nwhich  is undertaking the work,\nalso has plans for a $270,000,000\nhydro and metallurgical jjroiaet'\nfarther north on Taku inlet and\nthe eventual expenditure of $700,-\n000,000 in the area.\nHowever, it was indicated that\nthis plan is being held up as the\nresult of intervention by the federal government.\nBill 3, passed by the last session\nof Parliament, gives the federal\ngovernment control over all international, waterways.\nThe Taku inlet involved diversion of the headwaters of the\nYukon river, which flows through\nAlaska to the Pacific.\nSurveys have been under way\nin the area for three years and\ncompany engineers say it would\nbe possible to develop 4,300,000\nhorsepower, twice the potential of\nthe St. Lawrence seaway development.\nPremier Bennett would not elaborate on tt\\e delay of the original plan, but he described Bill 3\nas \"ridiculous\" and \"foolish.\"\nTt' hop* fiiese differences with\ntha federal government will be\nresohwW* __fa Bennett said.\nImport Duty\nAsked on Spuds\nVERNON (CP) \u2014 B. C. Federa\ntion of Agriculture in convention\nhere asked a year round import\nduty of $7.50 a ton on United\nStates table and seed potatoes.\nThe resolution passed after pro\nvincial agriculture minister Ken^\nneth Kiernan told of his visit to\nthe Columbia basin reclamation\nproject in Washington State, and\nsaid B. C. growers can't compete\nwith the subsidies which the\nneighboring growers enjoy. He\npromised to press for the growers'\nprotection demand.\nHe said the Columbia, basin\ngrowers \"dumped\" apricots and\npotatoes at anything \u201e they could\nget, and that 'we cannot develop\na stable B. C. agriculture in the\nfaca of this unfair competition.'\nister Eden andsFrance's Premier\nEdgar Faure Would go into operation. V  .\nSucceeding stages would be\nbuilt round the Anglo-French and\nRussian plans for progressive cuts\nin armed forces.\nSobolev   said   Moch's   proposal\nCanadian Butter\nTol. Germany\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The government has sold between 7,000,000\nand 8,bpQft)00 pounds of its surplus\nbutter tfi a Dutch importer for resale in East Germany, it was learned here \"Thursday. n\nAn agriculture department official said a sale has been completed and the butter now. is being loaded aboard ship in Montreal. *^\nThe contract price, the official\nsaid, is in the neighborhood of 37\ncents a pound, 21 cents less than\nthe price paid for the supplus butter by the.agricultural prices sup-\nport'boarcj. Vf'' '* ,-'\n, JSSUpronrt ri .^tffjjpOtf PQupda .at]\n37 cents V pound' would cost Ca-\nri\u00a3<Li'an taxpayers iabout $1,470,000.\nThe butter was purchased by the\ngovernment at a cost of $4,060,000\nand the sale price at 37 cents a\npound would amount to $2,590,000.\nIt is understood that the contract\nwith the Dutch, company calls for\nan immediate purchase of between\n7,000,000 and 8,000,000 pounds.\nHowever, there also is an option\nto buy an ' additional 3,000,000\npounds.\nmade no provision for disarmament itself and clairried it confirmed Russia's view that the.\nWestern powers have retreated-\nfrom earlier positions,\nReplying to Sobolev, Anthony\nNutting of Britain charged that\nRussia was evading the key question of arms control.\n\"In all the years we have discussed this problem,\" Nutting said\/\n\"we have never been able to get\nthe Soviet Union to agree that,\nmachinery for controls must be\nset up first.\"\nASKS CONSIDERATION\nHe asked Russia to' consider .immediately three possibilities: \u25a0\n1. A plan for such disarmament aa can be carried out now.\n2. A system of control to support the plan.\n3.,A pilot plan which could be\nput Into, effect, promptly and\nwhich could be guaranteed.as a\nprecursor to actual disarmament.\nCanada's Healtti Minister Paul\nMartin' said, \"the' Smjiet Unibn lias\nshown .little \/willingness tp- cofoe\nto grips with the practical-problem of control.\"\nThere was no failure on'Ruo-\nsla's part to recognize the. need\nfor control, \"but I, for one, have\nnot been able to understand Why\n...the Soviet Union would'not\nbe prepared to answer the whole\nseries of questions put by Mr.\nNutting and Mr. Moch, In particular.\"\n' He was referring to, meetings .of\nthe' commission's   sub-committee,\nwhose report the commission ii\nconsidering. *\nMartin expressed confidence,\nltOWifever^that Ao'disarioniaiWJiti'agreement \"cairbfrreacliAd-ahdjaBkea\ntfiat the sub-committe^.'he' reconvened at fhe earliest possible moment.\nSNEEZES  UP  BULLET\nCIMRLEVILLE, France (AP)\u2014\nJules Petiteux, 73, was wounded\nin the head while fighting the\nGermans in 1914. But the wound\nnever bothered him and he bore it\nlike a soldier. Lately he suffered\nfrom headaches which he attrib\nuted to some obstruction in his\nnose or .throat. Last Sunday he let\ngo a half dozen sneezes. Out came\nan   inch-long  rifle   bullet.\n\u2022iiiii ii 111111 r 11 in v 11 tii i ur i inr>\nPoliceman's Lot. \u201e .\nROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) \u2014\nNobody could blame Patrolman Ernest Pallas if he wondered whether he should have\ntaken up a less-hazardous occupation\u2014say that of a, stuht\npilot or a steeplejack. In a\nsingle day, Wednesday, he\nnearly had a smash-up as he\nchased a speeder in his patrol\ncar; got butted In the stomach\nas he and some fellow officers\nwere rounding up a cow that\nescaped from a slaughter\nhouse, and was bitten by a dog.\nM11 111 11 III f 1111II 11 f 1111111M11\nDEMAND   FOR   CANADIAN\nChristmas trees In the U.S. Is\ngreater than ever before \"and\nthat Is sending the price of trees\nhere up by 25 cents or more. But\nIf two or three dollars seems a\nhigh tag for a tree, look at what\nIs happening In Venezuela. The\nNorth American and European\nfamilies there have already paid\n$35 each.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nAnd In This Corner...\nJENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP)\u2014Boom! went Cliff Boone's pipe\nwhen he touched a match to It while fllshlng Wednesday.\nWhen Boone recovered from the shock, he explained to other\nfishermen that he had reached Into his pocket to fill his pipe with\nloose tobacco.\nA forgotten ,22-callbre rifle cartridge was packed with the\ntpbacco In the pipe bowl. The bullet flew upward and glanced off\nthe rim of Boone's hat.\nHe went on fishing.\nRAVENA, N.Y. (AP)\u2014 William C. Sano&ski was stormed on\nthe New York thruway Wednesday because a load of hay was\npiled too high on his truck.\nHe paid a $25 fine, but brought his load down to the legal\nheight by selling the top layer \"of hay for an undisclosed sum.\nLOS AMGeLFQ (AP\\\u2014It \u00bb\"** a m'\u00ab*ike. Jo\u00abaoH Stadelman\nsaid, to park hjs automobile under a monkey nuzzle tree.\nThe tree benan sheddlna seed cones shortly afterward. Some\nof the cones weighed en much as elr-M oounds f^b, j*\"d wire as\nbig ** footballs. Flvi of th*m \"-^hH rin top of St^dHman'* car.\nHe put In a claim of *1ftr; on d^m^e* aialmt th* citv of\nLos Angeles, which pl*mt*H th\u00ab r.h\"ean ev*>*nreen tr*es. On advice\nof t^l ^i*1' at*->->i(M\/. +u* rl^'\u2014i i\"-i<( h^\u00bbr>'\"H U\/\"'ln\"\u00ab'''V.\nBut the city won't be planting so many of those trees In the\nfuture.\nNEW YORK f APt\u2014 T-offin ffot Into n h^-rlhip snarl nn **1\u00abtbiirfl\nAvenue in B^o^V^m Wp^ip^iv. A short circuit caused all traffic\nli?hfs along a nn\u00b0-mlle st^+ch to s*av red. f\nALICANTE, finaln <C,o\\~An ^\u00ab*r\u00ab-t|r qnfl-Uh \u00ab<om_.r, ha*\n*<MjnH a w\u00bb\u00ab to k**n **\u00ab\" o',,1\u2022,'\",-- '-* '*->-'-l*\u00bb f-i ->-fln*v \u00bb\"\"irv,\nRt\u00bbft \u00ab0*s from chur*\"^ fo fthnp-H vlth a _-\u2014>** -* rM-i._,..., (,\u00ab\u00bb< i\u00abi\"-*i\nand groom emerge. For the rice, you know.\nen as the happy bride\n JK'\"'\"\"':\"\n;     .\n\u25a0:\"-<v       *     : -y-y~r\n__ _p, T\u2014\u2014\u2014 \"\t\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25,1955\nFerry Fares Rapped as\nBeing \"Out of Line\nII. A\nFares charged on the Kootenay\nLake ferries Anscomb and Balfour\nwere described in Nelson Thursday as \"a tariff which makes exceptions for . some and not for\nothers.\"\nThe charge for individual travellers is entirely out of line, H.\n' D. Harrison told ihe Nelson Cham:\nber of Commerce. On his recommendation, the roads and bridges\ncommittee will meet immediately\nbo discuss the rates.\nMr. Harrison, in reporting on the\nrecent Trans Canada Highway Association (Crows Nest Route)\nmeeting in Lethbridge, told of\nhaving returned via Kootenay Bay-\n' Balfour and having been (Charged\n$3,25 for the one-way crossing ($3\nfor himself and the car and 25\ncenta for his wife).\n'It was the first time I have\nbeen charged more than $2,\" he\nsaid.\nThe speaker also sew no reason\nwhy special rates should be allowed residents of lakeshore communities because the ferry service\nwas not for special people.\nONLY ROUTE\nThe Association, which elected\ni*_r. Harriaon vice-president, was\n'.W firmly convinced as ever that\ni^feis Southern part of the country\n^possesses the only Trans-Canada\n\u25a0Highway route, an all-year high-\nWay, he said, the Big Bend'route\n_,Wng closed from October to May.\n'-.. The route having been completed in Alberta and Saskatchewan,\n'J and a ribbon of paving existing\ntorn the The B.C.-Alberta';b*rder\n-\u2022to Winnipeg, there was lorne ia&\n-Of the Association .disbanding.\n' However, the idea was shelved\n' jvhen speakers, principally the Alberts president, advocated a uni\nform highway atgaa program and\npublicity.\nIn telling the Association that\nthe main work left to be done\nalong the route in B.C. lay in the\nBoundary-Columbia gap, Mr. Harrison had handed out a bouquet\nfor the Kootenay Lake ferry service, saying that the \"bottleneck\"\nimpression left in many travellers\nminds from former days was false\ntoday. \"We have exceptionally\ngood ferry service,\" he said.\nFurthermore, he believed that\ncompletion of the Blueberry-Paulson road would bring so much\ntraffic that a tie-in with Salmo\nand Creston via Champion Lakes\nwould become a reality.\nThe Association's- next meeting\nwill be held in Creston.\nGreeting Cards\nOf Character\nBy RUST-CRAFT\nFor All Occasions and\nSpecial Events\n(Com* in and look around . . .\nyon are welcome.)\nNelson  Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St - Phone 1203\nThree Apply\nFor Bandleader\nThe board of patrons working\nto form a Nelspn Civic band have\nreceived three applications for the\nbandmaster's position it Was reported by secretary Ben Sutherland at a meeting of the board\nThursday' nfght.\nThe board decided to table the\napplications pending receipt-, of\nother replies to advertisements\nplaced in several B.C. newspapers. They also hope to receive\nmore applications from local\nmusicians, to become members of\nthe tefod.. .\nIt was reported that the rie'w\nband expects to be granted the\ninstruments and .music of the\nNelson City Band, inactive for the\npast several years.\nPythian Grand\nChief Here Today\nPythian Sisters from . Nelson.\nNakusp and New Denver will\nhonor their Grand Chief of B.C.,\nMrs. Dela Parent of Nakusp here\ntonight.\nMrs. Parent will be guest speaker\nat a lodge meeting. Grand Treasurer for B.C. Mrs. Elsie Bereau of\nNelson will also be a guest.\nTONIGHT\nSadie Hawkins\nMASQUERADE DANCE\nProcter Hall \u2014 Dancing 10 To 2\nMickey McEwen's Orchestra\nREFRESHMENTS \u2014 FREE FERRY\nChristmas Shopping Hours\nNELSON AND DISTRICT\nRETAIL MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION\nFriday, Dec. 16 \u2014 9 p.m.\nSaturday, Dec. 17 \u2014 8 p.m.\nMonday, Dec. 19 \u2014 5 p.m.\nTuesday, Dec. 20 \u2014 5 p.m.\nWednesday, Dec. 21 \u2014 5 p.m.\nThursday, Dec. 22 \u2014 9 p.m.\nFridqy, Dec. 23 \u2014 9 p.m.\nSaturday, Dec. 24 \u2014 5 p.m.\nCLIP THIS OUT  FOR   REFERENCE\n>?i_.8iBi?.3>g,_>,-?>_fe_>,?^_>a3;3ia^gt3\u00bbaaaa?. ?>._\"ji..?;?.s.?i3.?.?. __\u25a0_*\u25a0>. ?.\u00bb.**,'\nLAST CHANCE\nTo See\nThe   Little  Theatre   Production\n\"Be Your Age\"\nBy Mary Orr and Reginald Denham\nPresentation of Greenwood Trophy by  H. A. D. Greenwood\nat 8:00  p.m.\nTickets on s.i!e at Mann', or from Little Theatre members,\n\/d   '-I--; Ad'il.s 75c Students 50c\nPost Office Will Bf\nReady in March\nNelson's new $444,000 post office\non Vernon Street will be completed in March.\nContractor Laurence Simpson\nsaid Thursday that delay in receiving authorization to go ahead with\nthe revised mail lobby plans slowed the work which he had earlier\nanticipated would be finished by\nthe end of the year. Authorization\nto go ahead with construction of\nthe lobby was received November\n1 and since then bad weather has\nalso hindered work.\nWorkers will be ready to pour\nconcrete in the mail lobby addition\nMonday if weather permits.\nPainters are working ion the\nthird and second floors ahd plastering is nearly finished on the\nfirst floor,\nA Vancouver firm O'Neail Company, has begun the terazzo work\non the building under a separate\ncontract. All stairways Inside the\nbuilding and a portion of the\nground floor will be terazzo,\nmarble chips and colored cement\nwork that gives a polished marble\neffect.\nThis was Nelson in 1892, when panning gold was the chief concern of the\n600 inhabitants. The view looks west along Baker Street, where A.'H. Buchanan,\nafter snowshoeing 50 miles, opened a Bank of Montreal office in a tiny wooden\nbuilding formerly used as a barber shop.\nAn artist's impression of A. H. Buchanan's famed\n50-mile snowshoe trek from Northport, Wash., to the\nmining settlement of Nelson, where he established a\nB df M office in February, 1892.\nBank Expansion Program in Tune\nWifh Nelson District Progress\nThe new extension and complete I real decided to erect its own build-\nrenovation of the Bank of Mon- ing and obtained land, again on\ntreal building in Nelson is an in-  Baker Street.\ndication of the giant strides this\ncommunity has made since the\nfirst B of M office opened here\nmore than 60 years ago.\n(See pages 6 and 7.)\nThe modern, attractive altera\ntions, which almost double the\nsize of the banking room and\ncilities, are a far cry from the\nfirst office,, housed in a small\nwooden building on Baker street\nafter the manager had borrowed\n$13.50 from one of the businessmen\nin order to establish the branch.\nThe manager was A. H. Buchanan, who was sent by the B of M\nto establish the office in the two-\nyear-old mining centre of Nelson.\nHe travelled by train to Northport,\nWash., but discovered there was\nno form of transportation to Nelson. Not to be stopped by this,\nhe trekked the 50 miles on snow-\nIt  is  this  building  which   has\nbeen    enlarged    and    completely\nrenovated in order to provide for\nthe   needs   of   Nelson\npopulation.\nFormer Nelson\nAthlete, Passes\nLouis Aurelio, native of Nelson\nwho was well known in sports\ncircles here for many years, died\nin Vancouver General Hospital\nWednesday night, aged 47. He had\nbeen residing at, 1009 West 10th\nAvenue in Vancouver. I\nBorn in -Nelson September 7, |\n1908, he was the son of the late \u25a0\nMr. and ^Irs. Dominic Aurelio.      j\nEducated at St. Joseph's Acad-j\nemy in Nelson, he was widely |\nknown in sports activities as a'\nbowler, softball and baseball play-;\ner. and coached softball teams.!\nonce coaching the CYO team in\nthe old City League, and- also the\nmen's rep softball team when it\nparticipated in West Kootenay\nplayoffs for the Gilbert Rowling\nMemorial Trophy.\nHe was a member of the Fraternal  Order  of  Eagles,  which  he\ndui_.-_.ichmn    ucunyeu    ju    nines    un \u25a0 .   .       , ._ XT_.i u-.*- :-_\u25a0. *\u00ab\nsnowshoes to establish the Bank j >\u00b0med in Nel=\u00b0n be\u00a3ore m0\u2122? '\u00b0\nof Montreal office here in i892j Vancouver, aftd wa. a member of\n_ . ,      , , the order of ra lroad conductors,\nmanagers have payed an impor-   .,.?   J     .   . ,    4\n.\u201e\u25a0_ ,\u201ei i .k .\u2122~\u201e-i.\u201e in.1 \\t the Coast, he was a conductor\nof th   CU commun\"y  llfc  f0r B. C. Electric Raflway.\nMr. Buchanan, who founded the!, He is ^rvi\"d.by h's *}\">\u25a0 *e\noffice with $2.50 of his own money! '\u00b0\u2122\u00ab R\u00b0se. YadeI\u2122* of Cran-\nnnj ci? cn \u00a3\u00ab-..\u201e \u00aba *.\u201e\u201e, \u00ab\u201e_-_ J*'brook; a twin son and daughter,\nand $13.d0 borrowed from one of; T . ' , \u201e. \u201e ,, ,T , . .\nih\u00bb i7_iie_\u00ab_.\"i i\u00ab._ji \u00ab \u00ab\u00abw*k,.\u00abi__ \u201e_ i Louis, and Mrs. Scott (Louise)\nthe villages leading merchants at'       . , ,r ..     _   _,,\nt^m tim& ,,,,,. m..mJmmAmA t^, t o Jackson, of Vancouver five grand-\nthe time, was succeeded by L. B.    .... \u201e\u201e ._,\u201e,-     '  T\u201eu\u201e   \u201e\u201ej\nDe Veber, who remained as man-j chlldre\"' on.e. br\u00b0*er' \u00a3ohn'J\"^\nager until 1929. E. E. L. Dewdney! \u00b0ne slster' Mrs' Mar^ Ross- both\nTraffic Slowed by\n7.75 Inch Snowfall\nA 24-hour snowfall piled up 7.75 bourn, 62 Ymir Road', \"collided at\nBank Has Had\nSeven Managers\nFrom   the   time   when   A.   _\u25a0:\nBuchanan   tramped   50  miles\nthe intersection of Ward and\nLatimer Streets, but damage was\nnot extensive.\nDamage was also slight in\ncollision of a delivery truck and\na small car at Baker and Stanley\nStreets intersection.\nDuring the early hours, between\nmidnight and 8 a.m., there were\nnumerous minor accidents, police\ntook over the rapidly expanding\nbranch then, and served until 1940\nwhen he was succeeded by H. Rad-\ncliffe.\nIn 1943, H. A. Doak was appointed manager and J. B. Barnum\nbecame manager of Nelson's B oi\nM office five years later.\nThe present manager is Archie\nBurnie, who came here in 1952,\nwith 26 years' banking experience.)\nA native of Dubuc, Sask., Mr.\nBurnie entered B of M service at\nSaskatoon in 1926. From there, he\nwas transferred to branches in\nMontreal and Toronto, and, in 1941,\nbecame accountant at the Dundas\nstreet and Roncesvalles avenue\noffice in Toronto. He later served\nin the same capacity at Lindsay\nand Port Arthur. Ontario, branches, and in Saskatoon, Sask.,\nwhere he was appointed assistant\nmanager. In 1949, he was transferred to the B of M's head office\nin Montreal as an assistant inspector, and became inspector two\nyears later. It was from this post\nrhe took up his duties here.\nKeenly interested in sporting\nand community activities, Mr.\nBurnie was a member of tyie Sudbury Wolves hockey club which\nrepresented Canada at the World\ngrowing | Games in Prague, Czechoslovakia,\nI prior to World War II.\ninches of snow, in Nelson by\nThursday night, bringing city and\ndistrict snowplows out for late-\nnight shifts to clear streets and\nhighways.\nThe snow by evening had turned\nto rain, giving the plows additional\nhelp and making travel less hazardous.\nAlthough traffi\" was slowed, lt!i\nkept moving  through   the  storm, j said.\nSeveral accidents were reported i From the district, reports were\non city and district roads and city received that a lumber truck had\npolice reported numerous minor rolled off the highway into the\naccidents due to the slippery con- yard of a South Slocan residence\nditions in which only slight dam- and that a car and truck went ott\nage was caused. the highway in the Crawford Bay\nThursday  night  at  8  p.m.,  a1\"\".   No  details   were   available\nsmall car driven by John C. Ross.:late Thursday night.\n924 Nelson Avenue, was in collision with a pickup truck driven by\nPeter Kolesnik of Ymir. The former was going north on Cedar\nand the truck east off Vernon.\nThere was at least $400 in damage\nto the front end of the .Ross car.\nit was estimated, while the truck\ndamage was slight.\nIn the afternoon, cars driven by\nHugh Gordon Blaney, 508 Hoover\nStreet,   and   Raymond   J.   Well-\nof Nelson. His mother predeceased\nhim in 1949 and his father in January of this year.\nFuneral  services  will  be held'\nin Nelson,\n*\u25a0\u2022 | Time Proposal Qoes\nTo Chamber Committee\nA straw vote on the proposal of\nyear-round advanced time at the\nDecember civic election ill Nelson\nwould only be a waste of money\nand effort. Mayor Joseph Kary\nsaid Thursday.\nStating his personal views at\nthe Nelson Chamber of Commerce\nluncheon meeting in the Hume,\nthe Mayor pointed out that \"time\nand time again\" the city and the\nshoes, only to find on arrival that! Chamber of Commerce had ex-\nthe money being sent to him to j pressed themselves as favoring\nestablish the office had not arriv- mountain time. Public assent had\ned. I also   been   given   when   daylight\nBuchanan immediately ap- time was put to a plebiscite at the\nproached E. H. Applewhaite, a I provincial election.\nlocal merchant who was operating! Only a limited number of peo-\na private bank, and asked him j pie who would be affected by such\nif he would lend him some cash a change would turn out for a\nto begin operations. Mr. Apple- straw vote at municipal election\nwhaite. realizing the importance of time, he added,\nhaving an established banking in- The Chamber referred the substitution in the community, agreed'Ject to its committee concerned,\nto do so. But he had only $13.50 at j the civic affairs committee, after\nthe time. Mr. Buchanan took It, J- A' Bracken, reporting on pres-\nadded hjs own $2.50 and rented a1 entation of the Associated Boards\ntiny wooden building on Baker j of Trade brief to the Cabinet, had\nstreet that had previously been 1 informed the meeting that' the\nused as a barber shop. j Cabinet declared the holding of a\nNelson was a town of some 600  plebiscite on time by municipal\ninhabitants at the time, with most\nof the populace attracted there by\nthe gold-producing possibilities of\nihe district. When the mining boom\nbegan to settle down, dther pursuits were followed, with lumbering, fruit growing and other industries becoming important contributions to the district's growth.\nThe need for larger quarters for\nities to be outside their jurisdiction.\nThere was nothing to prevent\norganizations from holding straw\nvotes, and if a municipality wished advanced time, the provincial\ngovernment would not oppose that\nchange.\nThe Cabinet, which gave audience to the delegation a day later\nthe B of M soon became evident'than scheduled owing to  its stand the office was moved to rented tendance at the *uneral for George\nspace in a two-storey building at\nthe corner of Stanley and Baker\nstreets. Here the branch remained\nuntil 1900 when the Bank of Mont-\nany definite decision is made on\nTrans-Canada Highway rerouting\nowing to Mica Creek dam, a full\nand thorough survey of Jumbo\nPass possibilities would be made,\nthe delegation got a promise that\nthe matter would be considered.\nThe board's resolution on power\nasked that the provincial and federal governments co-operate to\nexpedite completion of the \\png\ndrawn out survey.\nNelson Chamber itself, however, had gone a step further by\nhaving endorsed a brief from B.\nC. Affleck opposing diversion of\nthe Columbia River into the Fraser or of the Kootenay into the Columbia at Canal Flat. This was also\ndrawn to the Cabinet's attention.\n200 Enjoy Comedy\n\"Be Your Age\"\nClose to 200 persons alternately\nchuckled and laughed, then warmly aplauded Nelson Little Theatre\nplayers Thursday night as they\nagain brought to life the light\nand entertaining comedy \"Be Your\nAge.\"\nIf was. the second night of a\nthree-night run of the amusing, at\ntimes boisterous but always entertaining Little Theatre Fall production.\nNot a word the 11-member cast\nuttered went unheard. The setting\nwas modern and right for the modern philosophy the dialogue followed..The play will have its last\nappearance tonight.\nformer Nelsonile\nE. Felly Dies\nEarl Felty, former Nelsonite.\ndied suddenly of a heart attack at\nthe age of 64 at his son's home in\nSouth Burnaby, B. C, Sunday.\nThe Felty family left Nelson in\nMarch, 1940, and settled in South\nWestminster, where they operated\na store and post office for 14 years,\nselling it in March, 1955.\nMr. Felty was employed here\nby Heintzman Piano Company before leaving for the Coast.\nEarlier this Spring, Mr. and ^rs.\nFelty were away for six months\non a prolonged journey Bouth,\nvisiting a sister and brother in\nNew York and Boston he hadn't\nseen for 43 years.\nMr. Felty was a veteran of\nWorld War One. (\nHe is survived by his wife, Margaret; three sons, Ronald, Gordon\nand Norman; one brother, one sister in New York and four grandchildren.\nFuneral service was held Wednesday at Woodlawn Funeral\nChapel in New Westminster, Rev.\nW. Evan Fullerton officiating.\nCremation followed.\nCity buses were slowed durinj\nthe heavy afternoon fall, but wen\nbkek on schedule by night.\nProvincial public works plowi\nwere expected to work all night\nif necessary, clearing main high'\nways. All roads were in good con\ndition, though slippery, Divisiona\nEngineer J. A. Dennison said.\nEarly in the day road report\nsaid six inches of snow had fallei\non the Rossland-Cascade highway\nin the Slocan and over the Mona\nshee Pass.\nThe Weather\nRegina     -10,\nCalgary    :.. -14\nEdmonton    -12\n\u201e,_-,,__,    Kimberley      14\nnis sum-1.-,           ,\\, ,, \u201e0\ntrasedv ! Crescen' Valley \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 2'\ntrageay \u201e   . ,,\nI Grand Forks\nMany At Rites\nFor Mrs. Truswell\nThere was a large attendance\nof friends at the funeral of Mrs.\nAlma Truswell conducted at\nThompson Funeral Home Thursday.\nShe died In Nelson at the age\nof 72 on Monday of this week.\nHymns sung were: \"Jesu, the\nVery Thought of Thee\" and\n\"Nearer My God To Thee.\" The\norganist was Mrs. W. A. Manson.\nPallbearers were P. E. Poulin\nH. H. Hinitt, J. A. Bterguson, R.\nW. Waters, E. Schumaker and A.\nM, Noxon.       '\nInterment was in Knights of Pythias Plot, Nelson Memorial Park.\nF1\ni\nRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor  Bills,  Fuel,  Repalri,  Cars,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ud.\nSuite 212. Medical  Arto Bldg..\nPHONE   I7W\nMoxham, Member for Vancouver\nCentre, gave a kindly reception\nand paid \"quite sincere attention\nto our wishes,\" Mr. Bracken said.\nRather than read the lengthy\nbrief, the delegation hammered\non fdur subjects: highwiyi, a time\nchange, Jumbo Pass UiS. tha power\nquestion. ,\nThe Premier gave assurance\nthere would be no delay in plans\nfor Blueberry-Paulsdn and Salmo-\nCreston cutoff. WHen the party arrived in the capital they learned\ntenders had been called for the\nWest end of the former (contract\nhas since been awarded), and were\ninformed that the East end section\nwould be let next, and that the\nSalmo - Creston cutoff tenders\nwould be called next year. '\nTo   their   request   that   before\"\nBishop McCarthy\nTa Address Meeting\nMost Rev. T. J. McCarthy.\nBishfcp of Nelson, will deliver a\nChristmas message to the Nelson\nChamber of Commerce at its next\ndinner meeting December 22.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nof Football Association Cup first\nround replays played Thursday:\nShrewsbury T 4, Gillingham 1\nWalsall 6, Margate 1\nRevised second rdund ties Dec,\n40 are: Shrewsbury Town vs Torquay United and Walsall vs Southampton.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nTANKS\nOil Storage Tanks now In Stock\n310-Gal. For Underground Storage\n110-Qal. With Threaded Bushings\nfor  V\/t\"  Pipe   Legs for\nAbove Ground Storage.\nColumbia Trading\nCo.\nPhone 1511\n902 Front St.\n41\nFIRST AIDERS\nSHOULD RELY ON\nCOMMON SENSE\nPROCTER\u2014Five aditional registrations brought the membership\nof the St. John Ambulance West\nArm centre to 34 as the second\nlesson in first aid under W. H. Aitchison settled down to serious\nstudy> NELSON          29\nThe class has progressed from f^' John'5       J?\nthe structure of the body, bandage  19}}av\/a          *]\nand slings to the ttiree methods of \u201e \u2122Jeg       \"J*\nartificial respiration, a branch of\nthe course particularly vital to wa\nterside dwellers. The importance\nwas sharply pointed up this sum\nmer when a drowning tragedy |\u00ab .\ntook the lives of two children on'   as \u00b0\nholiday at Balfour. J Kamloops        24\nThe lecturer repeated that first |Pentict0Pn         32\naId, V \"7aJly  ?at-Iir* ald -Vancouver        36\nand the duty of even the most victoria\ncompetent first aiders is to treat\nfor shock, send for a doctor, stop\nprofuse bleeding, immobilize any\nfractures, protect the wound from\ninfection and further injury, and\nmake the patient as comfortable\nas possible in body and mind. He\nshould apply artificial respiration\nif it ia necessary continuing until\nthe doctor conies to the patient, or\nin some cases, the patient to the\ndoctor and from then on the medical man is in charge .\nHe explained that while learning, one is apt to overlook the fact\nthat a \"practice\" patient is quite\ndifferent from a real one, especially in the application of artificial\nrespiration when a practice patient is breathing naturally whereas an asphyxiated one is not\nbreathing and is dependent on the\noperator. Too, in theory, first aid\nis by the book, but real cases\nare never standard.\nCommon sense Is the best ally\nof first aid knowledge and practice makes perfect. Speed and ef-\n- ftclency are vital and what Is\ndone by alders in the first five\nminutes may spell the difference between life and death.\nClasses will continue as sched-\n35\n31\n36\n2\n3\n-1\n-3\n34\n33\n35\n35\n35\n38\n47\n46\nCKLN Off fhe Air\nFor Seven Hours\nRadio Station CKLN was off the\nair for seven hours Thursday because of transmitter trouble. The\nstation went off the air just after\n2 p.m. when a high voltage condenser in the neutralizing tank\ncircuit went out. The trouble was\ncleared at 9 p.m.\nuled with the omission of the\nTuesday falling between Christmas and New Years.\nFurther donations and membership fees have brought the total\nof the resuscitator fund to nearly\n$870.\n\u2022 PADDED  VANS\n\u2022 CAREFUL   PACKING\n\u2022 EXPERT  CRATING\n\u2022 LARGE  STORAGE\nFACILITIES\nTwice Daily\nFreight Service To\nCastlegar, Trail\nRossland\nLocal Pickup and Delivery\nService\nUnited Trucking\n& Storage Ltd.\nAgents for Allied  Van  Linei\n\"Canada's Master Movers\"\nNELSON   B.C.\nPHONE 1106 OR  1471\nFrank Hufty, Manager\nns vo.\n0*? Seagrams\n*m\/\/e Sure\nfliia advertisement is not published or displayed by the tl\nquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbi.\n Procter Teen-Agers   ,\nHave Few Idle Hours\nInto\nes 9\n12,\n', Sun-\n_ birthday\nand\nwith\nguest\ni and\nsing-\n: order\n; birth-\n1 Gar-\nPROCTER\u2014Procter teenagers,\nand there are about 40 of them,\n'are solving the problem o\u00a3 what\nto do with spare time, It any.\nThey are divided roughly\ntwo groups made up of Gra^i\nand 10 and of Grades 11 and\nand Include pupils of Procter, \"\nshine Bay and Harrop. A bir\n.Js an  occasion for  a party\n.'they  bring the sandwiches\nthe mother of the honored\n\u25a0supplying the birthday cake\nsoda   pop.   Games,   stunts,\n-songs and nonsense are,the\nof the evening. The latest\nday was that of John MacLeod\ntwo weeks ago it was Warren '\nner's with 18 attending each\nA dozen of the teen agers\nJoined Sea Cadets and RCAF\nettes and go to Nelson on Monda:\nnights. Some are enrolled in\nfirst aid classes currently b\ntaught In Procter and are wor\nfor their badges. Work has\n\"menced on the skating rink\nis largely done by the bigger\nwith some fathers lending a 1\n\u25a0Once the rink Is in operation\nother activities take second place\nMaclean's hill at Sunshine Bay and\nIwanik's hill in Procter offer excellent coasting for bob-sleighs.\n\u2022Skiing is popular among the\nyoung people here. In the summer,\nbeach parties, swimming, fishing\nand softball replace these winter sports.\nTeeners participate in card par-\n.ties, showers and dances sponsored\n|_y various Procter organizations.\nMost entertainment Is family fare\nand teen-agers are made so welcome that the problem of baby\nsitters arises. A popular dance on\nschedule for next week that has\nbecome an annual event is the\nSadie Hawkins' night when patrons arrive in the garb of Al\nCapp characters. Of late, the parents of the older teen set have\nbeen   taking   turns   entertaining\n; have\n' Cad-\nbelng\n>rking\ncom-\n. and\n\u2022 boyK\ni hand\nonszni\nTrail, B.C. \u2014 Now 8howlng\n\"INTERRUPTED MELODY\"\n(Cinemascope - Color)\nEleanor Parker \u25a0 Glenn Ford\nBUYING A CAR?\nSee ur about low cost auto finance\nCURRIER'S\nALL-RISK INSURANCE\nAGENCIES\nTrail,  B.C.\nPhone  1589\nMITCHELL\nTRANSFFR AND FUEL LTD.\nBooker Furnaces Sales and Service\nXrall, 1252 Bay Ave. Phone 62,1321\n, Castlegar. Box 568, Phone 3651\n[SCHRUMP'S SHOES\nFOR THE FINEST IN\nFASHION FOOTWEAR\nfhons 2514 1447 Bay Ave.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nSPEEDWAY\nI SERVICE  A  GARAGE  LTD.\nSales and Service\nMercury - Lincoln \u2022 Meteor\nledar and Farwell Sts. Tral\nPHONE  834\n'ARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITH1NG\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING   SUPPLIE8\n61 Bay Ave. Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C,\nNew NORGE\n(.ufomatic Dryer and Waihei\nMODERN  ELECTRIC\nPHONE 133\nHB32 Bay Ave. Trail, B.C.\nOIL HEAT\nC. J. MILES\nllumblng,   Heating,   Sheet   Metal\nWork\n1274 Bay Ave.      Phone 30\nTrail, B.C.\nlillcrest Motors Ltd.\nTrail's Car Accessory House\nllrestone Home and Auto Supply\n1 Radiator Specialists\nf95 Highway Drive \u2014 Glonmerry\nPHONE 1555\nLOWEST   PRICED   SEWING\nMACHINES\nIn the'Kootenays.\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n(10 Bay Aye., Trail - Phone 2080\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\n(AZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD\nPrescriptions,\nStationery, Toiletries,  Books\n43 Spokane St    Phone 11\nTrail, B.C.\nHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nthem at bacon and egg breakfasts\nafter a dance. A-commercial feature is the weekly movie kindly\nmade available by T. Hetherington\nbut the gate and projector are'\ntaken care of by the teeners.\nChurch suppers and the annual\nschool award and graduation banquet give balance to activities that\nteach social graces.\nThis month should see the're-\norganizatlon of the badminton\nclubs, and basketball and volleyball are popular in physical training periods. The teams travel to\nKaslo and Castlegar and in turn\nhost visiting teams in Procter. Last\nyear the girls made an excellent\nshowing and the boys won the\nWest Kootenay. volleyball championship. The Students' Council\narranges school parties for themselves and also organize parties\nwith the help of the PTA for the\nyounger' children at Hallowe'en\nand Christmas! Most of them belong to the square dance club that\nwill soon resume sessions with\ninstructions from W. A. Henke.\nAVID   READERS\nA surprising number of the\nyoung people draw books regularly from the Open Shelf in Victoria and many have hobbies. Most\nof the girls study music and a\nfew boys and girls attend weekly choir practice.\nThey take part in other serious\npursuits too, one being the chairman of the St. John Ambulance\nWest Arm local centre, one being\nsecretary of the Procter community hall society and three forming\nits entertainment committee and\nanother two heading the skating\nclub. Some take roles in plays to\nbe presented at concerts.\nIn between times the students\ndo homework and scholarships are\nnot unusual, having most recently\nbeen won by Ronald Garner, Joan\nFerguson and Roberta Stevenson.\nThese attended Procter Superior\nSchool to Grade 10 then rode the\nbus dally to Nelson to further\ntheir education. As they emerge\nfrom their teens some marry and\nmove away or settle in Procter.\nSome have joined the regular\nNavy and Air Force; one has gone\nto Calgary to study television; two\nhave gone to normal school and\none girl is attending UBC, studying pharmacy. All have happy\nmemories of teen times in Procter\nfilled with swimming, fishing,\nwinter sports, school, church, fun\nand parties.\nMill lo Sfarf Up\nAgain After Fire\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Columbia Contracting Company, Canal Flat, has\nsecured a rented portable mill\nwhich wtfl' be Installed as soon\nas possible at Cedar Creek to resume production in this Upper\nKootenay area following Monday's\nflash fire which destroyed the\nsemi-stationary mill, edgar and\ntwo light plants. The company is\na subsidiary of the Cranbrook\nSash and Door Company Ltd.,\nwhich reports it anticipates resumption of mill production there\nin two weeks. The fire apparently\noriginated in one of the light plants\nsoon after the shift started Monday\nmorning and spread quickly to\nenvelop the whole plant.   \"*\nMost of the mill crew have left\nthe camp for the present though\na few are remaining on cleanup\nwork. Logging crew and pole crew\nare continuing work without intermission, and the bunkhouses,\ncookhouse and machine shop were\nnot damaged in the blaze. Total\nloss in the fire is estimated at between $40,000 and $50,000.\nSoap Box Appeal\nWithdrawn\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 An appeal to\nthe Supreme Court of Canada\nagainst damages awarded to Mr.\nand Mrs. Bmce King and Mr. and\nMrs. Peter Chubety for injuries\nsuffered during a soap-box race\nhere Mirtle 23, 1951, has been withdrawn.\nThe case was first heard before Mr. Justice Clyne at Rossland\nwho awarded a total of $16,346 to\nthe four plaintiffs. The case was\nthen taken to the B. C. Court of\nAppeal where Mr. Justice Clyne's\ndecision was upheld.\nVancouver solicitors for the in\nsurance company handling the\ncase on behalf of the Trail Gyro\nClub, sponsors of the Soap Box\nrace then announced the case\nwould be appealed to the Supreme\nCourt of Canada.\nSEEKING re-election to Kinnaird Village Commission, of\nwhich he is chairman, Is A, A.\nLambert, above. A'30 bidding\nfor the two positions becoming\nvacant, that of Mr. Lambert and\nof K. M. Spence, who will not\nbe running for re-election, are\nA. R. MacDermld and' Qeorge\nJackson, who had a considerable\nvoice In Ratepayers' Association\nmeeting recently which draft*! |\nnine questions concerning village administration for which\nanswers are expected at a public\nforum  December 6.\nBugaboo Being Diverted\nInto Spillimacheen\nINVERMERE \u2014 Construction ls\nunder way on the diversion of\nBugaboo Creek into the Spillimacheen River to increase the\nsupply of water available for the\nSpilltoacheen' Jiydro development\nto -meet the ever-Increasing demand (or power in the Columbia\nValley. ,\nTo take the water from Bugaboo\nCJreek into the Spillimacheen,\n2800 feet of 88-inch steel pipe is\nhping laid over the height of land\nseparating the two waters. The\nBugaboo water will come' into\nthe Spillimacheen River about1\nhalf a mile above the intake dam.\nVA 30-foot high earth dam has\nbeen built to divert the additional\nwater,.to the river, increasing its\nstream flow by 20 per cent during\nlow water periods. .\nThis will increase the capacity\nof the B.C. Power Commission's\n5500 horsepower Spillimacheen\nplant similarly.\nSix miles of the present' road to\nthe Bugaboo Creek site has been\nwidened to 18 feet. A camp for\nthe workmejvhaB been built at the\nsite of the Bugaboo construction.\nHeavy machinery has been shipped ln by General Construction\nCompany Ltd. to lay the steel\npipe and to build the diversion\ndam. ' '\nHomesick Lad's\nStory Told in\nOld Newspaper\nINVERMERE \u2014 Old copies of\n\"The Wilmer Outcrop\", the first\nWindermere district newspaper,\nyield many tales of old times and\nold timers. Among them is the\npathetic story of the boy who\ncame back. The tale is told in the\nFebruary 22 issue, 1905, as below:\n\"Ted\" Egge, nephew of Mrs. J.\nS. Barbour, evidently started for\nhis home in Iowa last Friday evening and he has not been heard\nof since. Poor little Ted is about\n15 years of age and has been a\nvery homesick boy for some time\npast and no doubt his longing to\ngo home and see his friends is\naccountable for his silent departure.\n\"It ls about three years since\nhe came to Wilmer with his aunt\nto live on the ranch six miles up\nToby Creek. He was brought here\nfor his health, which had improved wonderfully and also because\nhis mdlher had just died. He appeared contented until last fall\nwhen he received word of his\nfather's death and ever since he\nwanted to go to his brother but\nMr. ahd Mrs. Barbour thjmght it\nbest for Ted to stay here. Ted\nrode down to school every day\nand when he did not return Friday night, Mr. Barbour, fearing\nhe had been thrown off his horse\nand injured,* came to town very\ndistressed but no information\ncould he obtain of Ted's whereabouts until he went to the stable\nwhere the horse was kept. Here\nhe found Ted's school books and\nsaddle and fastened to the-saddle\na pathetic little note which read\nsomething like this: \"Tell my aunt\nnot to worry. I am going away.\nWhen I get far enough away I\nwill write to her.\" When Mr. Barbour read this he shouted: \"He's\nalive! He's not hurt. He's all\nright.\" Ted is a good boy and a\nfavorite with every person who\nknows him and anyone who meets\nthis orphan,- homesick boy and\nwill aid him will receive the\nhearty thanks of this community.\nIt is believed he started South toward Cranbrook.\"\nWritten in the melodramatic\nstyle of the time, the story left\nthe reader wondering. Questioning of old-timers in Wilmer\nbrought out the sequel. The boy\ndid go to Cranbrook and worked\nthere for a time before making\nhis way back to Iowa. He had had\na tendency to tuberculosis and\nlack of care somewhere in his\ntravels had caused a flare-up.\nWithin a few years h'e returned\nto Wilmer to Mr. and Mrs. Barbour and remained with them until he, died of tuberculosis some\ntime later.\nHe is buried In the Windermere\ncemetery.\nElection Pace\nIs Quickening\nAl Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Nominations\nfor candidates in the December\nelection at Castlegar will close\nDecember 6, it was announced at\nthe Village Commissioner's meeting this week. Returning officer\nwill be Mrs. J. E. Wallace.\nGeorge Atchison has'stated he\nwill again run for office. Mr. Atchison has served on the Commission since V. Jenks was appointed\nsuperintendent of works, thus\ncreating a vacancy on the Board.\nAt the present time H. Sommers,\na member of the Commission for\nthe past four years, has made no\nannouncement of his plans.\nIt was stated at commission\nmeeting that a plebiscite on the\nquestion of a contract with Inland!\nNatural Gas would be held at the |\nelection along with the Water \u25a0\nBylaw. |\nDue to the fact children are,\nsleigdriding on the village streets,!\nthereby creating a traffic hazard,]\nit was decided to set aside the hill j\non Elm Street between sixth and\nninth Avenues, tdr the period I\nfrom 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Signs will be!\nplaced to warn motorists and\nsleighriding on all other streets\nwill be prohibited.\nA delegation of the Village Commissioners attended the meeting\nof Lillian'Killough Chapter IODE,\nto receive the framed picture of\nQueen Elizabeth for the Village\nHall. Commissioners present were.\nH. Sommers, E. Kraft, G. Atchison,\nand W. Harris. They reported am\nenjoyable evening at which they'\nwere shown pictures taken by Mr. I\nand Mrs. H. Westwood on their,\nrecent trip to England. |\nA motion was passed that the;\nsum of $250, as architect's fees, be!\npaid in connection with plans for;\nthe new Villige Hall, and that ten-'\nders be called as soon as the plans;\nare finalized. Also a grant of $150;\nwas made to the Castlegar volun-j\nteer firerpen, to go toward the ex-,;\npenses of their annual dinner, etc. j\nAn electric pipe-thawer will be\npurchased by the Village for the'\nsum of $50. j\nIt was reported that the maintenance crew will be cut to three\nfor the Winter months. |\nIt was announced that trees hadi\nbeen plarited around the Ball Park!\nthis Fall. The rink which has been i\nstarted in the Ball Park has been I\na great success. A great deal of:\ncredit goes to P. Harvie for the1\ncare of the rink, as well as to the]\nfiremen. The rink has now been;\nturned over to the AOTS, who wilj!\nundertake to keep it functioning.'\nA letter from the Board of\nTransport has been received ad-1\nvising they require a survey to be\nmade of the proposed Railway\nCrossing, and plans submitted to\nthem.\nThe Commissioners advised that\nplayground signs will be erected\non Maple Street, also special signs\nfor emergency parking areas to\naccommodate doctors and ambulances.\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022y.-yr\n;   \/ f ' ' 3o5l\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25, 1955 \u2014 3\nJim Morris Named President.\nSnow Valley Ski Project\nExample of Cooperation\n\u2022\u25a0\nAt Cranbrook\nIn Operation\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Four month?\nexpansion program in construction\nand installation of a cement block\nand tile dry kiln, and boiler plant\nand fuel bins has been completed\nhere in t\\ie Cranbrook. Sash and\nDoor Company Ltd. yard, and the\nboiler fire was lit Wednesday to\nbring the steam pressure up to\n15 pounds for constant 24-hours-a-\nday function of the new unit. Four\nheating engineers to supervise the\nboiler have beeji added to the\ncrew.\nDry kiln installations were completed several weeks ago under\nsupervision of a dompany representative to put into working order\nthe reversible gable fans which\nalternately circulate steam and\nhot dry air through the stacked\nplaned lumber in the kilns. Kilns\ncan handle up to 130,000 board feet\na charge, dried in approximately\n72 hours to the stage ready for\ndelivery, which requires three to\nfive weeks under yard drying conditions.\nOverhead blower pipeline conveys shavings from there to the\nboiler fire.\nInstallations also Include steel\ntrack through the kiln from the\nplaner platform where planed\nlumber is loaded with planed lumber onto bunker cars. The cars\nslide into the kiln for the drying\ntreatment, then out the other end\nfor loading for delivery.\nThe new equipment will sub-i\nstantially reduce the volume of'\ninventory the company has found\nnecessary in its yard, which runs\nup to 20 million board feet an-1\nnually. j\n1IIIIT1II1111 till 11 IM 1111IIMM llllir IIMIII |\nCARIBOU ALL BUT '\nSAT DOWN IN CAR\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 Now that ;\nhunters can follow the power\nline road, they are able to get !\nhigher up for their quarry. Log- '\u2022\nglng trucks get above the cedar j\ntrees that are hung with with |\nusnea or caribo moss. !\nJim   Burge   was   fortunlte   to  i\nsee caribo below him. He bagged  .\na 300-pounder. But when  H. D. i\nPowell    from    Moscow,    Idaho,  '\nhunted with George Oliver they  '\nwere not so  lucky. They drove\ntheir four-wheel   drive  Jeep  to  :\nthe Crossing. There they put on  \u25a0\nsnowshoes   which   neither   had   ;\nworn for a long time. The going\nwas   heavy.   Up   they   plodded.\nThey reached  Mr. Oliver's new i\ntrapping   cabin.. Not  a   sign   of\ncaribou. At last they decided to\ncall   it  off  and   laboriously   re-  :\nturned  their truck.   Caribou ;\ntracks were all around.\n\"If we'd left the t_bor open\none would have gone In,\" they\nquipped,\n:v .:'.i;i!_u.i_r..i.!.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;\nMRS.  PLOTNIKOFF\nOF  CASTLEGAR   DIES\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Funeral service\nfor Mrs. Mary Plotnikoff, 48, wife\nof W. W. Plotnikoff of Castlegar,\nwill be held Sunday in the Doukhobor hall here, and burial will\ntake place in Brilliant.\nShe died in Vancouver, and is\nsurvived by her husband, one\ndaughter, Mrs. A. Savinkoff in\nVancouver, and two sons, Paul and\nPeter, in Castlegar.\nFERNIE \u2014 Jim Morris, mine\nmanager at Elk River Colliery,\nwas elected president of the Snow\nValley Ski Association of Fernie\nat its first annual meeting Tuesday night. Other officers elected\nwere Jack Crabb, vice-president,\nMiss Sheila Quail, secretary, and\nMiss Evelyn Lewis, treasurer; The\nboard of directors elected will\nconsist of L. M. Dwarkin, Karl\n.Hoellcr. Isaac Haile, Ross Colgur\nand George Lees.\nJack Crabb, retiring secretary-\ntreasurer^ of the old Fernie Ski\nClub, reported on the activities of\nthe past year. The old Fernie Ski\nClub was Reorganized in November, 1954, when officers were\nelected. Skiing activities were carried- out on the hill known as\n\"Owens' Field.\" In January the\nI group, wishing to expand, looked\nfor possible ski hill sites where\na new. hill, a chalet and a ski\ntow could be constructed. Mount\n; Proctor was chosen due to its\naccessibility to the highway and\nthe many slopes suitable for all\ntypes of skiing.\nIn February the club carried out\n'he first ski meet ever conducted\nj in the Fernie area. In July the\nI owner of some of the property on\ni the site chosen was approached\n| regarding a lease on or purchase\nj of the property required. An access road and parking area were\n' constructed In August with the\ni use of bulldozing equipment and\nj labor donated by local men. Ski\n! club representatives approached\n| the Chamber of Commerce for\ni assistance. The Chamber co-oper-\nI ated to obtain equipment to clear\ni the hill site, to obtain building\n! materials for  the  chalet and   to\nInvestigate the possible purchase\nof a ski tow.\nA*joint meeting with the Fernie\nChamber of Commerce was. held\nin September when it waa decided\nthat the ski club should incorporate under the Societies Act.\nthat the name of the organization\nh% changed to \"Snow Vallfcy Ski\nAssociation of Fernie,\" and that\na canvass be made for fields to\npurchase a tow. A committee- consisting oj L. M. Dwarkin* Theo.\nLaumann, Jack Crabb, Jack Minton, George Lees, Ross Colgur and\nBill Quail was named to carry\nI out the Incorporation. In the\nI meantime work was being carried on at the hill with further\nbulldozing equipment being donated. A hill 2400 feet long and\nvarying in width from 100 feet at\nthe top to 500 feet at the bottom\nhas been cleared. Room for expansion is unlimited. The chalet,\nwith the exception of some finishing work, has been constructed,\na power line to the chalet is being\nconstructed, the poles fo^ the tow\nare being set in place and a power\nplant for the tow has been purchased. Work on the chalet, tow\nand power line should be completed.within three weeks.\nRetiring president L. M. Dwarkin outlined the financial situation of the organization. Starting\nfrom scratch a year ago, the club's\nassets today were a ski hill on\nwhich $1500 of bulldozing and\nland clearing had been done with\nboth the labor and equipment\nbeing donated; a chalet valued at\n$1500, of which all the materials\nand labor had been donated, a ski\ntow being installed which will\ncost about $500. Mr. Dwarkin stat\ned that the actual cash outlay for\nall work done would be about\n$600. Main cash expense was the\ntow rope, which will cost about\n$450, All this had been; accon}-\nplished by community co-operation and by substantial donations\nof money, material and volunteer\nlabor.\n\u25a0\nA\nRossland PTA Looks al Hobbies\nFrom Student, Adult Angles\nCRANBROOK CITY WORKS EMPLOYEES\nASK 10-CENT PAY HIKE, BENEFITS\nROSSLAND\u2014The Rossland high\nschool Parent-Teacher Association\nat its monthly meeting featured an\nexcellent program on student and\nadult hobbies.\nWith Norman Harrod as interviewer, representatives from the\nvariotrs high school student clubs\noutlined their hobbies, with an\nadult hobbyist in each category\ndemonstrating how these hobbies\nare carried on and enjoyed in;\nidult life. Most speakers stressed\nthe feeling of enjoyment and accomplishment as the greatest reward for taking up a hobby. Displays of both student and adu1'\nwork were arranged to show,\nhobby results.\nRepresenting the different hobby clubs were Michael Butorac\na*)d Ted Feise for the student\nstamp collectors, Thurlow Fraser\nfor the adult .collectors, Miss Diane Brown for the student art\nclub and Mrs. W. Ternan from,the\nRossland Art Club, Barrie Lawrie\nfor the student camera club and\nA. A. Turner for the adult camera\ngroup, Chris Feise for the student\nwoodworkers, and George Dyson\nKimberley Scenes       !\nPut On Celluloid\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 \"Kimberley In I\n[he Kootenays,\" 16 millimetre doc-j\n\u25a0jmentary filmed and edited by i\nCharles Wormington of Kimberley,!\nlias been launched here at an invitation showing, prior to going\ninto general circulation. Its sub-'\nject matter covers Kimberley's\nindustrial sites, its city components, and scenery, sports and1\n'vild life in the general vicinity.\nMr. Wormington has engaged in\ncommercial and news photography\n:n this district for several years.\nCommentary for the film is supplied by his brother, Sam Wormington.\nMarysville Branch, Canadian\n, Legion, is the first organization to\nsponsor public projection of the\n! film, which will take place at its\n1 hall at Marysville Saturday even-\nfor the adult woodwork hobbyists, and Don Comba from the\nschool band, with Cyril Gillis, a\nmember of the Rossland City\nBand, giving the adult viewpoint\non band work.\nPHONE\n593\nFor\nExpert\nElectrical\nand\nMechanical\nInstallations\nIndustrial Wiring\nMines ond Sawmills\nNew and Used\nMotor Rewinding\nSEE\nBennetts\nLtd.\n324 Vernon St\nPhone 593\nThe Best by Test...\nThermo-Plastic\nSTORM\nWINDOWS\nIN STOCK NOW\nA complete set to cover 10 average windows with\nadhesive border tape. Simple to apply. Fireproof,\nstormproof, waterproof, leakproof and shatterproof.\n$6.50 a SET\nADHESIVE   BORDER   STRIP\nFor those who have their own plastic.  $\n47 yd. roll __  ...\n1.69\nImmediate Service on Mail and C.O.D. Orders\nvolumbia  trading Lo.\n902 FRONT ST.\nPHONE 1511\nNEW OFFICES\nINVERMERE \u2014 The Windermere District Public Health unit\nhas moved into new quarters in\nthe Masonic Building here. Three\nrooms recently part of the former\nmedical clinic and vacated when\nthe new medical clinic was completed have been renovated for\nthe Public Health offices. They\nconsist of a waiting room, office\narid utillity room,\nTHIS IS LIVING ... \/\nA Modern Bathroom\nMakes life more pleasant and housework easier.\nYour family will appreciate It . . . your guests\nwill admire it. Visit our showrooms and see the\nlatest styles.\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Phone 666\nJAMES BYRNE\nIN HOSPITAL\nKIMBERLEY (CP) \u2014, James\nByrne, Liberal member of Parliament for Kootenay East, entered\nhospital here Thursday for an operation that had refused to respond to treatment.\nDoctors said he is expected to\nbe in hospital about two weeks\nbut will be able to return to Ottawa when the House reconvenes\nin January.\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Terms propos\ned by the General Workers Union,\nlocal 212, CCL, certified bargaining\nagent,for city works employees,\nfor renewal of its master contract\nwith the city due January 1, have\nbeen presented in writing to the\nMayor and City Council. Negotiations will start Monday.\nRequested contract changes include general 10 cents increase in\nall categories, accumulated holiday\ntime1 or pay for seasonally employed  workers,  accumulation  of\nYou cant qo\nany unused portion of the 11 days\npaid sick leave now allowed annually over a five-year period, and\na city checkoff of dues for works\nemployees belonging to the Cran-\nbrook-Kimberley Medical Benefit\nAssociation.\nThree Terms Expire\nOn Invermere Board\nINVERMERE \u2014 Three positions\nwill be vacant on the Board of\nCommissioners for the Village of\nInvermere. Commissioners G. E.\nCleland, Dr. F. E. Coy, chairman\nsince 1951 incorporation, and William Weir will 'complete their\nterms of office this December.\nThe Commissioners and staff of\nthe' Village will present their annual report to the ratepayers and\nothers interested in.the affairs of\nthe village on Tuesday. Progress\nto date will be outlined and proposals for the future betterment\nof the village will be discussed.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nfc\u00bb\nIF you feel\nALL-IN\nThese days most people work under\npressure, worry more, sleep less; This I\nstrain on body snd brain makes-physical\nfitness easier to lose\u2014harder to regtin.\nToday's tense liring, lowered resistance,\noverwork, worry\u2014any ol these may affect\noormal kidney action. When kidneys get\nwl of order, excess acids and wastes\nremain in the system. Then backfthe,\ndisturbed rest, that \"tired-out\" heavy-\nheaded feeling often follow. That's the\ntime to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's\nstimulate the kidneys te normal action.\nThen you feel better\u2014sleep better\u2014work\nbetter. Ask for Dodd's Kidney Pills at\nony drug counter. 51\nRENT A\nCAR\nas private\nits your very own\nIt's practical and modern to pay for a car ONLY\nwhen you use it... the Rent-a-Car way. low rates\nInclude FREE GAS, OIL and INSURANCE. You have no capital\noutlay, storage costs, depreciation or repair bilk Rent a car\nwhenever you need one, for an\nhour, day or week. Go anywhere\nfor business or pleasure. Coll In\nto-day let us show you the inexpensive way to run a car.\nCOASr.TO-COAST\nINCLUDED IN RATE*\n'LOW\nDEPOSIT\n. PROPER\nINSURANT\nWiginton Motors Ltd.\n281  BAKER ST.\nPHONE 121\nINSUL-PANEL\n\u2022 Eliminates Condensation\n\u2022 Slashes Heat Loss Through\nGlass by 50%\n\u2022 Reduces Drafts\nFastens to outside of your\npresent windows and can\nbe installed by anyone.\nAvailable Immediately\nFREE ESTIMATES\nSEND FOR ADDITIONAL\nINFORMATION\nTODAY!\nNN-4\nPROVINCE..\nNORTlf WESTERN SUPPLY\nCOMPANY  LIMITED\n833 RIVER ROAD\nLULU ISLAND\nVancouver 14, B. C.\n ^^^^^.       UIMJJPPI\n\u00bb\u2022{  a, 11 ,-\nf^^lPH'\nv'.'\"v '\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0\nJfotwm Imlg Nruia\nKstabnslied  April  32.   1UU2\ninterior  British  Columbia's Largest  Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning e\u00bbcapt Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized at Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottswi\nMEMBUR   Of   THE  CANADIAN   PRESS T AND\nTHE   AUDI!    BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nFriday, November 25, 1955\nLet's Make S-D Day a Safe Driving\nDay for Everyone\nWhat makes a good car driver\u2014\nljuick reactions, skill with the wheel\nSnd controls?\n\u00a3 Not at all. A boy of fifteen may\nhave these. The one outstanding\nquality of a good driver\u2014and a safe\ndriver\u2014is emotional maturity. Such\na person controls the car. He does not\nlet its speed, manoeuvrability and\nease of stopping lull him into a sense\nof superiority. He will drive fast,\nbut he will not hurry, for he will\nallow neither haste nor anger to obscure his judgment. He remembers\nalways that time is not so important\nas safety.\nHe seldom needs to use his brakes\nfor he looks ahead and anticipates\nhappenings. Cars ahead stopping or\nturning into the road find him prepared to slow down. The hidden part\nof the road finds him slowing down\nso that he may remain in his own\nlane on the curve. He is no show-off.\nHe does not pass a line of traffic proceeding at the legal limit on a restricted highway, nor does he pass\na single car unless there is a clear\nroad ahead. He yields the right of\nway where necessary for he is mature\nenough not to insist upon his rights\n\u00bbt all times. He is always courteous\nand he takes special care when approaching children and pedestrians\nand gives them the right of way.\nPedestrians and children can, for\ntheir part, assist the careful driver\nby keeping well to the side of the\nroad, not walking in twos or threes\nbut singly. They can assist him by\ngiving right of way, where necessary,\nat intersections and by never crossing in the middle of the block. Light\nclothing on dark nights help him lo\nsee the pedestrians and make for\nsafety.\nThe Nelson Lions Club is preparing an exhibit of cars damaged by\ncollision and accident. It will show\nthe terrible effect that speed has o'n\ncars when they collide on go over\nthe bank. It will not show its'effect\nupon the occupants. For that you\nmust go to the emergency ward or\nthe mortuary.\nDecember 1st has been set aside\nas S.D. Day (Safe Driving Day). It\nis hoped that on that day all car\ndrivers will make a special effort to\ndrive well and safely in the hopes\nthat for one day, at least, there may\nbe no accidents in any part of\nCanada.   \u2022\nNews: A Service to the Public\nThe role of the press is often misunderstood or deliberately ignored by some people\nwho should be in a position to know better,\nThe function of the press is based on the\nright of the public to know what is going on\nin the community, especially in the field\nol municipal, provincial or federal affairs.\nSometimes efforts are made to block the\nflow of news, and when this is done the\npublic suffers.\nMunicipal business is the affair of all\ntaxpayers. They have the right to elect the\npersons who will represent them, and they\nhave an equal right to know what these\nmen are doing around the Council table.\nWhenever a meeting may be closed to\nthe press, whenever members of a public\nbody refuse to divulge information to tho\npublic, the cause of democracy has been\ndealt a blow. No elected public servant has\nthe right to censor what should go in the\npress. And when he votes to refuse admittance of a press reporter to a meeting or declines to divulge information to which the\npublic is entitled, he Is indulging in a form\nof censorship.\n\u2022   Some organizations seem to think that\nnewspapers are to be \"used\" but that re\nporters should not always be given the news\nwhen they ask for it. Sometimes the story\nthat is refused is the one in which the newspaper is most interested .and the public\nshould have.\nA newspaper attempts to service the\npublic by providing a good cross^ection of\nthe news. At times it falls short of its objective, and the failure is due frequently to\nthoge who' withhold information to which\nthe public is legitimately entitled.\nA newspaper depends on good will, and\nit endeavors to the best of its ability to develop this spirit. It hope* to get all the nc'S\nthat's fit to print, but it does not want (ts\nnews sources to decide this question. E-ulo s\nare trained to decide what is news, and they\nalone should have the privilege of using or\nrejecting stories for the paper.\nA newspaper does not attempt to tell a\ndoctor, a lawyer, a merchant or a Councillor\nhis business. And by the same token it docs\nnot appreciale censorship by individuals or\norganizations which may have an axe to\ngrind in wihholding legitimate news.\n\u2014Nanaimo Free Press.\nNo Star Chamber\nChief Justice McRuer of Ontario, in an\naddress at the Osgoode Hall Convocation,\nwarned members of the graduating class of\nthe danger of trials by newspaper and gossip. Everyone will sympathize with his plea\nfor preservation of the right of an individual\nto a fair trial.\nAt the same time there seems to be a\ngrowing tendency in Canada to restrict the\nfreedom of the press to report court activities. Practices long established have been\ncurtailed, and rules long ignored are being\nenforced.\nThe rights of individuals to fair trials\nare important and should be preserved. But\nthe public has the right to know what is\ngoing on in court. It Is several centuries\nsince the Idea of \"open court\" replaced that\nof the Star Chamber in British law. Turning\nback the clock, even a little, would be regrettable.\u2014London Free Press.\nSuccess Story\n(Fort William Tines-Journal)\nFor a pleasing success story, casting an\nInteresting light on the scope of opportunities in Canada, we have the record of H. F.\nPowers, president of the Ontario Building\nCleaners Limited, and his partner, Edward\nM. Carroll.\nDuring the war, one was an accountant\nwith the air force, the other a cook with the\nnavy. After hostilities, one obtained a job as\na hotel clerk, the other staying on in the air\nforce.\nOne day in 1947 they were eating together when they heard someone close to\nthem comment on the dirty appearance of\nsome Ottawa buildings. Before that day was\nover the pair had resigned from their jobs\nand set about organizing the Ontario Building Cleaners They obtained Canadian rights\nto a patented method of cleaning\u2014and success has been theirs. On the strength of their\nwork on buildings and statues, they are now\ncleaning the National War Memorial, to be\nready for Armistice Day.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persona asking questions will not ba published. There is. no charge for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE AN-\nSWERED BV MAIL except where there\nIs obvious necessity for prlvaoy.\nC. M., Rossland\u2014Would you please repeat\naddress of nearest doll hospital?\nWe have been .informed that the Dolls'\nHospital is situated at 2241 Main Street, Vancouver.\n\\\nE. M., Nelson\u2014We are newcomers-to Nelson.\nIn Vancouver we learned sign language\n' with the Deaf Club in that city, and\nwould like to know if there are any deaf\npeople in Nelson who would help us\nto practise this?\nWill other readers help?\nM. M., East Arrow Park\u2014Stove fuel oil has\nbeen split on our living-room carpet.\nCould you tell me how to remove the\nstain without injuring carpet?\nThis is really a job for a professional\ncleaner. When in Castlegar or Nakusp you\ncould consult a hardware dealer, who may\nhave a special solvent for this purpose. A\nword of warning: See that smokers do not\nlet hot (or even warm> ashes fall on the rug,\nas a serious fire could result.\nReader, Nelson\u2014Have you any instructions\nfor making' those large square candles\nused so much as table, decorations, especially around Christmas?\nWe are indebted to Mrs. A. D\u201e Nelson,\nfor the following information: Take a box\nof parawax. lightly soften wide sides of two,\nthen stick them together. Do same with remaining two. Then lay heavy piece of grocery cord down centre, coated with melted\nwax, lightly soften one side of bars already\nstuck together, and put over cord, thus making your square candle with wick. Take\nextra wax. melt, and when half cool beat\nwith egg-beater till the consistency of soft\nsoap. Also, separately melt pure wax crayons of various colors, beat to soapy consistency, fold into beaten parawax and spread\nover outside of square candle. Finish by\nsprinkling mirror metallics over whole.\nEscapee Caught\nBy U.K. Police\nPENZANCE, England (CP)\u2014A\nsix - day manhunt ended here\nThursday with the recapture of\nescaped prisoner Cyril Michael\nBond.\nBdnd, 32, escaped, from a working party at Dartmoor prison last\nFriday after serving about two\nyea^rs of a five-year sentence for\nreceiving stolen goods.\nHe was captured by a police\ncordon 'thrown around this Cornwall town following a report that\na man answering his description\nhad been seen here. He offered no\nresistance.\nPolice reports describing Bond\nlast Friday said he spoke with a\nCanadian accent, but police later\nsaid his parents lived in Britain\nand that he was believed to have\nacquired the accent through association with Canadians during the\nwar. He served in the Royal Navy.\nPenzance is near the southeastern tip of England and some 80\nmiles from the prison.\nTrace Radioactive\nRain To Russ Test\nTOKYO (AP) \u2014 The Japanese\nmeteorological observatory \u2022\u2022Id\nThursday that radloaotlve rain\nfell on two Japanese cities Monday. A weather official said. 11\noame from Siberia.\nThe two reports came on tho\nheels of a Washington announcement that Russia has touched off\nher mightiest nuclear blast\ntho observatory said tho radioactive rain fell on Aklta and\nSendal In northern Honshu, Japan's main Island. Newspaper\nreports said rain registering >n\nunusual degree of radioactivity\nalso fell on Tokyo.\nFamily*\nColds\nWICKS\nWapoRub\nSuffering with\nDUCKY WORK \u2014 John Bommer's aim waa good and\ntrue as he brow ht down the flrsb of several ducks flying Info\nhis decoys at Municipal Lake Ovtrholser near Oklahoma City.\nOkla. He was moving on a new target when picture waa taken.\nNeed money to pay\nGuarding Prosperity\nFort William Times-Journal)\nBasically, Canadians are prosperous because this country is so richly endowed with\nraw materials, But care must be taken lest\nthe 'presence of all this potential wealth\ngive the idea that there is no limit to how..\nprosperous Canada can become.\nMore than that of most countries, Canada's economy is bound up with international trade. Canadian products must be competitive in both domer.tic and foreign markets, and. if we are not careful of costs, we\ncan price ourselves right out of both markets.\nQuote (hen Yi\nOn Formosa\nBERLIN (CP)\u2014Chen Yi, deputy\nChinese premier, is quoted as saying Red China will invade Formosa if negotiations with the\nUnited States break down.\nHis statement was made In an\ninterview Thursday by Junge\nWelt, East Germany's official\nyouth newspaper.\nCben Yi lists the following \"active\" preparations for invasion:\n1. Railroads are \"rapidly\" being\nbuilt in the province of Fukien, on\nthe mainland across from Formosa.\nPreviously the province had no\nrailroads.\n2. \"Numerous\" airfields for jet\nplanes are under construction on\nthe coastline bordering Formosa.\n3. \"Numerous\" ships are being\nbuilt \"in order to sail across to\nFormosa.\"\nChen Yt declared there are only\ntwo ways of solving the Formosa\nquestion: 1. For U. S. forces to\nl?ave Formosa of their \"own \"free\nwill\"; 2. \"The second possibility\nthat the U.S.A. does not want to\neave Formosa of its own free will.\nThen we can free Formosa only\nwith the force of arms.\"\nBelieve Missing\nRembrandt Found\nMAASTRICHT, Holland (Reuters)\u2014A Dutch art dealer claims,\nat nearby Valkenburg, to have\ndiscovered an unknown painting\nby Rembrandt called \"The Musicians\". Dealer C, J. Habets said\nthis could be a picture mentioned\nin several biographies of Rembrandt but which had never been\nfound. Only the first letter \"R\" of\na signature is visible, and the\nnumber \"35\", which, according to\nHabets, may mean the year 1635.\nwhen Rembrandt was 29.\nOverdue Bills\n\u25a0 Clean them up alt at one timel\nLoans of $50 to $1000 made at Household Finance on your\npromise to rep^y. Simple requirements. One-day service. Up to\n24 months to repay. Today... keep your credit good, start\nfresh with an HFC loan!\nNeed money ?\/ Bills to pay ?  Call HFC today\nOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nR. M. Brrg\/ily, Manager\n608 Baker Stroof, oocond floor, phono 1890\nNELSON. B.C.\nProspects for Towns I'M! Merger\nIn an address to the Ontario Club in\nToronto the other day. Prime Minister Louis\nS. St. Laurent expressed the hope that continuing Canadian growth will not be confined to the larger centres. For a balanced\ndevelopment it should reach into the smaller\nplaces, too.\nDoubiless it will, but not in all cases,\nfor there are so many towns, small and large.\nA large number, of course, will be affected\nby national growth, but in different ways.\nSome, strategically located for new developments, will become industrialized and\ngrow. Others, within commuting distance of\nsmall cities in process of getting larger, will\nbecome thriving suburban points.\nThe hindsight of another century will\nshow sharply where and how this occurred.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nIt's Been Said\nA word that has been said today may\nbe unsaid\u2014it is but air. But when a deed is\ndone, it cannot be undone, nor can our\nthoughts reach out to all the mischiefs that\nmay follow.\u2014Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.\nWatch Your Language\nSATIRE\u2014 (SAT-ire)\u2014Noun: A poem or\nprose work holding up human vices, follies,\netc., to ridicule or scorn; trenchant wit,\nirony or sarcasm, used for the purpose of\nexposing and discrediting .vice or folly, Synonym\u2014Irony. Origin: French from Latin\u2014\nSatira, Satura. a poetic medley, from Satura,\na dish filled with various fruits, a medley\nfrom Satur, full of food, sated.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nBuy A DRESS WHICH HAS JUST A FBW\nFIR-MLy ATTACHED BUTTONS, AHD\nTOEy GIVE YOU SOME SP4RES--\nBut we dozen- button outfits never\nseem to be fastened sood, don't come\nWrrU SR4RES AHD NO CAH MATCH\u2014\nW-MEr\" popped V\n0FF4ND6OT   u\nLOST-lVE BEEN\nAll OVER TWINS\nTD\/M4TCH\nTHBM\nToday's Bible\nThought\nCome let us return to Jehovah.\n\u2014Hosea 6:1.\nWhole nations have abandoned\n' Jehovah, but in those lands there\nis no song in tne heart, no stars in\nthe sky, no hope. Barbed wire entanglements are needed to prevent the escape of citizens. They\nthat sought bread were given a\nstone.\n(hint ML\nThe pen may be mightier than\nthe sword, but the weapon that\nstill rules the world is the tongue.\n\\ CALGARY (CP) \u2014 The royal\ni commission on Canada's economic\nffuture he^rd a suggestion Thurs-\n1 day that Canada's transcontinenta'\nj railways\u2014the CPR and CNR\u2014be\nj armfcamated.\nMayor Don Mackay, in a sub-\nI mission to the five-man commission, said Canada's freight rate\nstructure has reached such a state\nof confusion \"it is almost unfathomable.\"\nWhat is needed, he said, Is a\nfundamental equalization freight\nrate pattern to bring consumer\nprices in western Canada to a\nlevel similar to those in eastern\nCanada,\nIf the two railways could not\nwork out some equalization system, then it might be possible to\nbring in a single railway system\nowned by the public serving the\nneeds of Canada's development.\n80UND BARRIER\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Thousands of;\ntons of earth are being used as anj\nadditional noise barrier at London!\nAirport. Excavated from foundations for new buildings, the earth\nis being built along the brick noise\nbarrier already erected.\n____________\n \u25a0w :\u2014- !\u2014: :\u2014 .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25, 19?5 \u2014 5\nTHE MARRIAGE of the former Elizabeth Clara Maria Van\nVelzen and James Albert Huiberts took place recently In the\nCathedral of Mary Immaculate, Very Rev. Father F. Monaghan\nofficiating. The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius\nVan Velzen, and the groom It the son of Mr. and Mrs. Adrian\nHuiberts, \u2014Renwick photo.\n_\u00a3 \u2014\u2014  | jfl\t\nNelson Social\nMrs.   H.   F.   Stevens of  Moose\nTaw   is   visiting   her son   and\ndaughter-in-law,    Mr. and    Mrs,\nArthur    Stevens,    202 Delbruck\nStreet.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nT. H. Waters has returned to his\nBen Sutherland\nfor the exciting\nRCA VICTOR\n2\/mnomw\"\nNEW\nnly\n\u2022BETTER 7 WAYS\n1 Alumlnlted \"Deep Imaga\"\n90\u00b0 Picture lube.\nJ Extra Sensitivity end Stability.\n3 Belter Brightness.\n4 Better Contrast.\n5 Batter Interlace.\n6 Easier Tuning.\n7 Better Sound.\n\u2022p JU\".\"3    In walnut\nflnlih.\nSlightly flight\/\" _n mahogany or\nlimad oak finiihti,\nTtST-VIEW (T TODAYI\not\nBEN\niUTHERLAND\nUSIC - APPLIANCES - RADIO\n645 Baker St.\nNelson,  B.C.\nServing Nelson and Vicinity\nin Music and Radio\nSince 1927.\nhome, at 1223 Stanley Street after\nspending a week in Kootenay\nLake General T-Io-r?J*TL\nMr. and Mrs. L, G. Peerless,\nDavies Street, have left for Vancouver to attend the Grey Cup\ngame.\nMR. AND  MRS. FRANK WILLIAM SCHNEIDER'\nTrail, Nelson Share\nInterest in Wedding\nSOCIAL EVENT\nAT CASTLEGAR\nIS SUCCESSFUL\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Kinnaird, Robson and Castlegar members of St,\nAlban's Aglican Church in Castlegar met recently for a social\nevening. Owing to poor road conditions and cold weather, the\ngathering was smaller than usual,\nbut was otherwise a success.\nGames and dancing were enjoyed, particularly the ever-\npopular square dancing. There was\nalso a short program, including;\ncolor pictures shown by Ven.1\nArchdeacon B. A. Resker. These\ninteresting pictures depleted\nbeauty spots in the Kootenays, as\nwell'as scenes of local events, and\nwere taken by the Archdeacon.\nA highlight of the program was\nFred Hostetter's trumpet solo,\n\"Sonia\". Fred was one of the Castlegar Cadets attending the Band\nCourse for Sea Cadets this past\nSummer, and his trumpet playing\nis a joy to hear. His accompanist\nwas Mrs. Art. Hostetter,\nLunches brought by each family\ngroup, were pooled and served at\nthe end of the program.\nTRAIL\u2014Rev. D. R. Stone officiated at a double-ring ceremony\nin East Trail United Church recently uniting in marriage Dorothy McNerlin, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Jacob McNerlin, arid\nFrank William Schneider, son of\nMr. and Mrs. L. Schneider of\nNelson. \u2022\nWhite chrysanthemums banked\nthe altar and the guest pews were\nmarked with satin bows centred\nwith small white 'mums. Miss\nDoris Thatcher sang \"Because\"\nduring the signing of the register\naccompanied at the organ by Miss\nRoberta McKinnon.\nA floor-length gown of nylon\ntulle and lace was chosen by the\nbride, who entered the church on\nthe arm of her father. The full\nskirt fell in layers trimmed with\nlace and the lace bodice was accented by a Queen Anne collar\nand lily point sleeves. Her tiara\nshaped headdress was trimmed\nwith pearls and rhinestones and\nPast- Noble Grands\nOf Rebekahs Meet\nThe past noble grands of the\nQueen City Rebekah lodge met at\nthe home of Mrs. Harry Clements,\n717 Mill Street, Wednesday night,\n14 members attending. Later a\ngame of bingo was enjoyed: Co-\nhostesses were Mrs. L. Bealby,\nMrs. Elsie Bereau and Mrs. Alice\nBlunt.\nSlippers\nWinter Time\nIs\nSlipper Time\nSee Our Fine Selection\nof\nLINED OR UNLINED\nMOCCASINS,\nCushioned Soled\nSLIPPERS\nAll colors, all sizes. For men,\nwomen and children.\nPriced From\n$1.85 to $6.95\n441   BAKER  ST.\nPHONE 1114\nSwears Not To Wed\nSame Man Again'\nINDIANAPOLIS (AP) \u2014 Mrs.\nClarissa Lewis, granted a divorce\nfrom Herman Lewis for the third\ntime, held up her hand in court\nand vowed she wouldn't marry\nhim again. Judge John L. Niblack\ninsisted on the oath before granting the decree to the 31-year-old\nmother of four children. Mrs. Lewis said her 40-year-old husband\n\"never came home until after the\ntaverns closed.\" They were first\ndivorced in 1943, remarried in\n1946, divorced again In 1951, and\nmarried again a month after the\nsecond divorce.\nNEW TIE FOR AIRMEN\nOTTAWA (CP) '\u2014 Off-duty airmen and officers of the RCAF's\nEuropean command are sporting\na colorful new service tie. The\ndark blue tie, adorned by eagles\nin combat, has been officially\nadopted by the RCAF's No. 1 Air\nDivision in Europe, air force headquarters announced here Thursday.\n|fe Whon children's\n;feqesarebigger\nthan their\nstomachs\nThere Ib no noed now\nto administer drastic.\nold-fashioned laxatives\nwhich may shock a\nf child's system Snd leave\nthem feeling weak and\nlistless. Try tho new modern help\u2014\nChildren'* Own Tableta\u2014made especially\nfor children, from 3 to 15 years, by the\nmakers of Baby's Own Tableta\u2014your\nassurance of a reliable product. They go to\nwork at once to help nweeten the stomach,\nrelievo distress and bring about a thorough\nperformance of the bowols in a gentle\nmanner. Get a package today at your\ndruggist.\nheld In place her jCinger-tip veil\nof nylon tulle edged with Chantilly lace,\nA single strand of pearls, the\ngift of the groom, was the bride's\nonly ornament and she carried\nher mother's white satin-covered\nBible, on which rfested red baby\nrosebuds with white streamers,\nrosebuds entwined.      '\nMatron of honor Mrs. Effie Venables and -bridesmaids Misses\nMary Wilson, Dorothy Harry,\ncousin of the bride, and Pearl\nLypchuk, wore identical gowns of\nblue, yellow, pink and mauve respectively. Their dresses were\nfashioned in rows of shirred net\nover taffeta, in floor length. The\nlace bodices were topped with\nmatching jackets and their headdresses were of shattered carnations in shades matching 'their\ngowns. They carried cascade bouquets of gold chrysanthemums.\nFlower girl was Linda Rebelato,\nwho carried a basket of gold baby\nchrysanthemums. Her dress was\nblue and her headdress was in\nmatching shade.\nBest man for the groom was\nMr. Robert Smedbol, and Mr.\nTommy Mclntyre, Mr. Fred Boates\nand Mr. Reg Exner acted as ushers.\nThe parents of the bride and\ngroom received the guests with\nthe bridal party at the reception\nin the East Trail Guide hall, which\nwas suitably decorated with pink\nand white streamers. Mrs. McNerlin wore a navy blue dress\ntrimmed in pink, matching blue\nhat, pink gloves and pink carnations en corsage.. The groom's\nmother chose navy ahd frhite fbr\nher dress with, navy accessories\nand corsage of pink carnations..\nThe bride's table was covered\nwith a hand-embroidered linen\ncloth sent from northern Ireland\nand was centred with a three-\ntiered wedding cake, embedded in\npink tulle and scattered rose\npetals. White tapers in crystal\nholders flanked the cake which\nwas topped with a white bell and\nlily-of-the-valley. The toast to the\nbride was proposed by Mr. Mclntyre, cousin of the bride.\nThe best man gave a toast to the\nbride's attendants. The cake was\ncut by the bride followed by Mrs.\nFrank  Mclntyre   and   served  by\nj Mrs. T. Mclntyre, Mrs. P. Mclntyre\n: and Mrs. L. Pasacreta.\nj TELEGRAMS READ 4\nTelegrams were read from New\nJersey   and   Ottawa   and   out-of-\n| town guests included Mr. and Mrs.\n; L. Schneider, parents of the groom,\nI Mr.  and Mrs. B. Schneider, Mr.\n; and Mrs. A. Schneider, Mr.  and\ni Mrs. M. Balahura, Mr. and Mrs.\n, M. Bouilliet, Mr. and Mrs. J. Tay-\nI lor, Mr. and Mrs. H. Wilton, Mr.\ntnd Mrs. A. MacDonald, all from\n'\"elson.\nFor her wedding trip to Cali-\n'ornia and Nevada the bride\n\u2022hanged to a navy blue suit, in\n!>ox style with navy accessories\nand pink hat, blouse and gloves\nand pink carnations en corsage.\nFollowing a two-week honeymoon Mr. and Mrs. Schneider will\nreside in Trail.\nCOLVILLE AND SPOKANE were on the honeymoon Itinerary\nof Mr. and Mrs. Loren Alexander Bay, who were married In 8t.\nPaul'i United Church. The bride Is the former Betty Helen Purlch,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Purlch, and the aroom It the\nion of Mn. Wllltta Bay. Rev. G. W. Payne performed the ceremony. \u2014Renwick photo.\nGAY CASTLEGAR\nBAZAAR HERALDS\nYULE SEASON\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The approaching Christmas season was emphasized in the gay decorations at the\nTwin Rivers Hall in Castlegar,\nwhen the Pythian Sisters of Kootenay temple held their recent\nbazaar,   \u2022_.\nA great attraction was the\nChristmas tree with gifts for theifor agriculture\nchildren, presided over by Mrs.\nG. Santano. Pouring at the daintily appointed tea table were Mrs,\nOtto Walker, Mrs. Harry Sommers,\nMrs. James Gemmill and Mrs.\nJohn Sherbiko, while thofce serving at the tables were Mrs. A.\nSaunders and Mrs. V. Sorensen,\nassisted by Elaine Roberton and\nJoan Lightle.\nThe sewing table was handled\nby Mrs. Gerry Wanless and Mrs.\nVic. Jones, with Mrs. L. Grunerud\nand Mrs. M. Blaihut in charge of\nthe bake table, and Mrs. Joe Thiel\ntaking care of the candy booth.\nMrs.   u.   Lightle   greeted   the\nCrawford Bay Wl\nElects Officers\nCRAWFORD BAY \u2014 Officers\nof the Crawford Bay. Women's\nInstitute for the coming year are\nMrs. Pauline Adam's, president:\nMrs. M. Haverstock, vice-president; Mrs. E Reilly, secretary-\ntreasurer, and Miss Lorna Lytle\nand Mrs, Eva Vance, directors.\nThey Were elected at the annual\nmeeting in the Community Hall.\nA donation of $5 was voted to\nthe Salvation Army. The Christ\nmas party given by the Wl for\nchildren of Crawford Bay and\nKootenay Bay is to be held\nDecember 20. Mrs. W. Fraser\nagreed to be convener for the\nsupper and Mrs. Vance to look\nafter the Christmas tree. Mrs.\nHaverstock. Brown Owl of the\nBrownie Pack, promised an entertainment by the Brownies.\nThe members were ln favor of\nwriting to the highway department urging further action be\ntaken ln dredging Crawford Creek\nas what has been done is \"inadequate\" to prevent further flooding.\nA resume of the year's work\nwas given, every: appeal for help\nfrom charitable organizations having been met.\nWindermere Wl\nConveners Named\nINVERMERE \u2014 Conveners were\nappointed at the first executive\nmeeting of the new officers for\nIhe Windermere District Womens'\nInstitute. Conveners are Mrs. J.\nA. Laird for citizenship, Mrs. Oswald -Young for home economics,\nMrs. Wayne Lacy for social welfare, Mrs. Ralph Stick for cultural\nactivities, and Mrs. E. J. Lambert\nguests at the \"door. The turkey\nraffle, which was handled by Mrs.\nE. Bradford was won' by Mrs.\nGrunerud. Those in charge of\nkitchen arrangements were Mrs.\nJ. Randall, Mrs. V. Nelson ahd\nMrs. O. Proud. General convenors\n(or Christmas bazaar were Mrs.\nH. Sommers, Mrs. J. Sherbiko, and\nMrs. A. Saunders.\nConvener for the annual Christmas party for district children is\nMrs. Charles Osterloh. The party\nwill be held in the Lake Windermere Memorial Community Centre\nshortly before Christmas.\nMontreal Woman\nHeads Hadassah\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014Mrs. William\nRiven of Montreal was elected\nnational president of Canadian\nHadassah at the closing meeting of\nits 16th biennial convention Thursday. She succeeds Mrs. D. P. Got-\nlieb of Winnipeg.\nThe Hadassah decided to investigate the possibility of sending\nCanadian surplus food to Israel.\nA suggestion that Hadassah send\na petition to the Canadian government to encourage the sale of\narms to Israel was rejected.\n\u00ab_i6*\u00ab\u00ab_msr\u00ab:\u00ab_,.\u00ab:\u00ab:\u00abtq'-\u00a3t(_'<_\u00ab:itw_i-ti;\nSPECIAL\nTODAY AND\nSATURDAY\nONLY\nDUNLOP\nFoam Rubber\nMattress\nand Matching\nBox Spring\n*I29S0\nFOAM RUBBER PILLOW8\nPair $13.50\nWE WILL BE OPEN UNTIL\n9:00 P.M. SATURDAY\nPOETIC CLERGYMAN\nThomas Parnell, Irish poet who\ndied in 1718, was Vicar of Finglas\nand Archdeacon of Clocher.\n\"wtwwpFgiwist\nFairview (WL\nTea a Success\nThe annual Fall tea and dale of\nthe Fairview Catholic Women's\nLeague, held Wednesday afternoon\nin the basement of the Church oj\nthe Blessed Sacrament, was well-\nattended and proved a success.\nMrs. A. L. Gustafson, president,\nwas convener, and various conveners were Mrs. A. W. Stubbs, sewing table; Mrs. S. A. Moisey, bake\ntable; Mrs. Mary DeFerro, kitchen.\nMrs. A. Ludovicci poured tea, the\ntable being decorated with chrysanthemums and candles. Miss\nHelen Stubbs was the cashier, and\nMiss Jean Fornelli was in charge\nof the contest\nBOY COOKS\nCooking lessons for boys tre\npart of the regular public school\ncurriculum at Oslo, Norway.\nBuy. Sell, T-atle With Want Ads\nTASTE BEST WHENTHEY^\n-ARE MADE WITH\nPACIFIC MILK\nPacific Evaporated Milk has the\nrich crcaminess ... the fresh,\nsjveet flavor that really counts\nin cooking. When a recipe calls\nfor milk, use Pacific Milk and\ntaste the wonderful difference.\nThe only evaporated milk processed rB,^\nl\/vcitumThdd\nBring the\nChildren...\nOn your visits to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the heart pf\nthe Inland Empire . . .\nthey're welcome-, too!\n\u2022 Parting gf our Front\nDoor\/\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSiiver Grill.\nSEWING\nNEWS\nBy MARGARET PYE\nThe sewing machine you select will be a treasured tool for\nmany years. The ordinary machine you will see is the lockstitch machine which has been\nessentially unchanged since\n1900. A recent development has\nbeen THE ZIG ZAG MACHINE\nwhich was adapted from industrial machinery.\nTHE ZIG ZAG MACHINE,\nfirst introduced in Europe, in\naddition to doing ordinary jobs\nthat a sewing machine is called\nupon to do, can perform a\nvariety of other operations,\nsuch as sewing on buttons and\nembroidering. It operates with\na needle which moves from\nside to side. This makes it possible to do not only the ordinary sewing jobs but many operations which must usually be\ndone by hand. By moving the\nlever which regulates the side-\nwise length of the stitch, and\nthe lever which regulates the\nlength of the stitch, TH* ZIG\nZAG MACHINE may be made\nto create a wide variety of\ndecorative stitches, sew on buttons, make button holes of any\nlength, do blind stitching, hemstitching, monogrammlng and\napplique sewing without attachments.\nCall at THE OUSTOM SEWING CENTRE and see these\namazing machines, priced from\n$59.50.\nSPECIAL THI8 WEEKEND\nIs the new '^DURASUEDE\". \u2014\nThis looks like felt and requires\nalmost no ironing. Suitable for\nshorty housecoats, skirts, etc.\nSPECIAL PRICE, $1.19 YD.\nMake THE CUSTOM SEW-\nING CENTRE headquarters for\nall your sewing requirements.\nTHE NATIONALLY ADVERTISED SLIPPER.\nAN IDEAL CHRISTMAS PRESENT.\nIn  AA-B  Widths.\n$3.95  $4.95  $5.95\nR. Andrew & Co.\nHow  Christian   Science  Heals\n\"THE\nRIGHT KIND\nOF FAITH\"\nCKLN, 1240 ke, Frl, 6:15 p.m.\nLeaders In  Footfashlon\nEstablished 1902\ny_tfl^\u00bb_^a_a\u00bb^_\u00ab^>fe^^i_t_^_^aa^_<\u00bb\u00bbl\u00bb_^_>tal^l^ll.^l^l>>l^l>Jl>l^^>l^l^|>l^^>,\nm Novelty Jewellery J\n\u25a0 Silver and Copper\nA Hand-Made J\n2 Pull-Apart Bead Chokers r\na and Earrings \u25a0\n^p Cook  and   Sequin ^L\n^ Tie Clips for the \u25bc\n1 Sportsman \u25a0\n% Rle-Rac Earrln0\u00bb ^\n< Hobby Shop \"\ngo through\nfaster\nwhen you\ncall by number^\nLong Distance is fast\u2014often twice as fast\u2014when\nyou call by NUMBER. Here's why. By giving the\noperator the out-of-town NUMBER\u2014rather than\njust the name and address\u2014you won't\nhave to wait while she gets the\nnumber from \"Information\" in\nthe town or city you're calling.      \/0\"P'\u00b0tt0iT\/ill\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANY\n yyiy?-^: . .,VT-.---.:-vy\\-y-;-y ' . \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-  \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0      i      ~ \u2014\u2014\u2014  ,.  ,..:'\u25a0\u25a0'!,,,'\u25a0.\u25a0   .. '..-':\u25a0\u25a0:   ,.!'. \u2014 ,       ... . .... \u25a0\u25a0 ' '... ,IH!|,.\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25,1955\n[Many New Features\nIn Remodelled\nBank of Montreal\nThe hammering has stopped, the\n! painting ls finished, and the last\n' workman has left the local Bank\nof Montreal office. Now Nelson's\nB of M is back to normal, but ls\nI much larger, brighter and more\nI modern premises.\nj On Monday morning, the results\n| of the past few month's work will\n! present pleasant surroundings to\n1 customers and bank employees\ni alike.\n\u2022    Of the additions to the banking\nroom, the  most  prominent is  a\n) streamlined,  golden-oak  counter-\n! line, with six tellers' tickets set\n| behind   low   bronze   and   glass\nI screens. This counter, 27 feet longer than the previous one, provides\nj room for three more tellers. For\n. the convenience of safety-deposlt-\n! box customers, an extra coupon\nbooth \u2014 making a total of three \u2014\n', is located close to the safe-deposit\nvault. A second steel-and-reinforc-\ned-concrete vault has been added,\nj at the rear of the main floor, and\ntwo fireproof storage rooms are\ninstalled in the basement.\nThe extension, 30 feet by 80 feet,\nat the rear of the building, almost\ndoubles the size of the office, and\nallows for the incorporation of\nmany new features. These include\na new assistant manager's office,\nand a mezzanine floor, removing\nmuch of the machinery from the\nmain office and permitting more\nspace, for customers.\nRedecoratlon of the office has\nbeen extensive. 3The fine oak wall\npanelling has been carried over\nto the extension, and new recessed\nfluorescent lighting installed.\nAcoustic-tile ceiling and non-skid\nrubber-tile flooring are other improvements.\nA new parking lot at the rear of\nthe building, provides Iccommoda-\ntion for five cars. A second entrance on Kootenay street, designed to keep traffic running smoothly in the main banking room, is\nparticularly convenient to the\nparking lot.\nCompliments to the\nBANK OF\nMONTREAL\nOn The Completion of\nTheir Improved Premises\nINTERIOR\nSHEET METAL\nTRAIL, B.C.\nBEST WISHES\nto the\nBank of Montreal\nWe Are Proud\nTo Have Played a Part in\nThe Remodelling of Their Premises\nSMITH ELECTRIC\nRED KOEHLE, (Prop.)\nWe Take This\nOpportunity to Congratulate the\nBANK of MONTREAL\nfor Providing a Better Service\nfor the People of Nelson and District\nKOOTENAY DECORATORS\nSTEAM CLEANERS \u2014 Shoreacres, B.C.\nWe Would Like To Take This Opportunity\nTo Extend\nBest Wishes\nTo the\nBANK of MONTREAL\nCompliments of\nVIC GRAVES Ltd\nPhone 815\nMASTER PLUMBERS\nNelson, B.C.\n702 Baker St.\nCongratulations\nto the\nBank of Montreal\non the occasion of the opening\nof their renovated premises\nA. MATHISEN\nPainter and Decorator\nFaith in the Future of Nelson\nand District\nHas Prompted The\nBank of Montreal\nTo Enlarge and Improve\nTheir, Premises\nTHE\nT.H. WATERS Co. Ltd.\nIs Proud to Have Had\nthe Opportunity of\nCarrying Out the Extention\nand Improvements to the\nBANK of\nMONTREAL\nAS GENERAL CONTRACTORS\non This Project\nWe Take This Opportunity\nto Express Our\nBest Wishes\n_____\n .' - \u25a0 \u25a0 - . . ,, ;       _\u2014^^\u2014-\nfr ..      '\"\u2022 \u2022 \u2022- . \u25a0 .    3)0(^3\nNELSOfrl DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. IS, 1933 \u20147\nYou are cordially invited to the official opening of the\nNewly Renovated Premises\nof the\nof\n^ 3-ffw^wy\"tii_f*^i^w\"^'\" \"~      < \u2022 i<   i'^\u00bb-.\"\n\u25a0\u25a0*.yyy*~yyyr\"7i*yyy'syri\nSpeed . . . convenience . . . comfort \u2014 you are\nassured of all three at the Bank of Montreal's remodelled and enlarged Nelson office. There's lots\nmore space all round . . . more for customers and\nmore for staff. And a second entrance on Kootenay\nStreet, close to a special parking lot for B of M\ncustomers, ensures a free flow of traffic . . . avoids\ncongestion on busy days.\nNow, six tellers, in modern wickets set in a\nstreamlined counter-line, are at your service in place\nof the previous three. For safe-deposit customers, three\ncomfortable and private coupon booths have been\nInstalled close to our fireproof vault containing safety\ndeposit boxes. Add to these new features fluorescent\nlighting \u2014 rubber-tile flooring \u2014 an acoustic-tile ceiling \u2014 complete redecoration throughout . . . and you\nget the last word in banking service in the most\nattractive surroundings.\nSATURDAY\nPREVIEW\nBut why not come and see\nfor yourself? We are asking our\ncustomers to drop in tomorrow\nafternoon between 2:30 and 5\no'clock for a preview of our\noffice with its many modern\nfeatures. We sincerely hope that\nyou will find time to pay us a\nvisit.\nLOAN   DEPARTMENT\nMri.  Marjorie  Pollard,  Mrt.  Ruth  McSorley\nACCOUNTANTS  DEPARTMENT\nA. J, Kluck,. Mrs. Betty Cone,  Ernie Gare\nCURRENT   ACCOUNT8   DEPARTMENT\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nMrs. Joan Bennett, Miss Sylvia Daloise, Mrs. Maxine Malacko, Mlia Donna 8ml.h, Mrs. Madelalne Tlllbury, Mrs. Stella Koenlj\nMiss Jackie Barrett\nSTENOGRAPHERS\nMin Dolly Fife, Mn. Florence Melville, Mist Tillie Chernoff\nSUB-AGENCY   PERSONNEL\nRon C, Brown, Donald Andersen\nCURRENT   ACCOUNT   TELLER8\nMrs. Tiny Wlgg,  Miss  Doreen  Allan, Mrs.  Lorraine  May\nJoseph Gillis, Janitor; Eugene Hy.tznk, Messenger\n  ,_.\n\u2014^~\n^W[ \u25a0 \u2022_\u2022'    ^swi\u00abw^^^ ,. ..,\u2022'.\u25a0 mm\nt   \u25a0\nFEATURED AT LIBERTY\nDETERGENT\nwith Lanolin\nReg. 85c - 20% OFF\n65'\n44'\n24 OUNCES\n12 OUNCES\nMAPLE LEAF\njumbo   97c\nGIANT    75c\nLARGE    34C\nMAPLE LEAF\nBeauty\nSoap\nBath Size\n2 bars X5(\nWeston's Fresh\nCHOCOLATES\n3 lb. assortment\nSTOP FALLING!\n5\\, 47'\nCALCIUM CHLORIDE:\nFor Icy Walks; \t\nlbs.\n10 Ibs. 89<S\nSolo Margarine:     2 Ibs. 59c\nGood Luck Margarine:   2 Ibs. 73c\nChristmas Party: To clubs, teachers,\nindividuals, or dances ... let LIBERTY\nhelp you in prizes, presents, etc. Special\neffort in our Variety Dept. to. help you\n-elect and plan. Gift wrapped too.\nCIDDIES ...\nSANTA In Toylond\nFRIDAY,\u2014 6;30 to 7:30.\n8ATURDAY\n10-12 and 1:30 to 5:00\nVariety Store Open\nSATURDAY EVENING\nTIL 8100 P.M.\nFood Store Open\nFRIDAY EVENING\nTIL 9:00 P.M.\nIt's ot reliable at a certified check. Liberty's meat\nis guaranteed tender, juicy,\nflavorful, or your mOnev\nback . . . Buy LIBERTY'S\nSuperior Quality Meats.\nFresh\nPORK\nShoulders\nPicnic style.\nib. 29<\n'   Sliced Layer\nBACON\nLean, not salty.\nib. 49c\nSMOKED\nPICNICS\n.b. 35<\nLeon\nCORNED\nBEEF\nServe with cabbage.\nib 49\u00b0\nVEAL\nPATTIES\nDelicious flavor.\nib 49c\nBOLOGNA\nBy the piece.\nib. 25c\nBANANAS\nGolden Ripe\nBest for baby and dessert.\n2,bs4r\nDELICIOUS\nAPPLES\nFancy    \u2022\n4 Jb. bag49\nPOTATOES\nU.S. No. 1. Grand cookers.\n25 lb., bag 95\nBRUSSEL\nSPROUTS\nGreen, firm. ^C\u00ab\n12 oz. pkfl.   \u201e UJ\nPALM ICE CREAM\nProduced right here in Nelson with the (Utmost care.\nTry the new smoothness of Palm Ice Cream.\nPint bricks.\n2 for .......\nAny flavor.       03^\nVi gallon. ...__ g 3\nBulk pack.        ynff\nQt TP\/\nBulk pack.  $1   flA\nGallon  ._._.    I.OU\n5 LB. PKG. .....  $ .37\n24 LB. BAG     1.75\n49 LB. BAG     3.45\n98 LB. BAG    6.45\nNew Low Price ... Malkin's\nCOFFEE\nAll new pack and blend.\n94Vb\nRed Label\nCOFFEE\nNew low. price. ,.\nGround fresh. Lb\n, Blue Label\nCOFFEE\nFresh beans.\nLb \t\n99*\n97*\nNabob Tea\n1.49\n125'*.      .\n2 cup size\nChristmas Baking Features\nShelled Walnuts: Pieces. 8 oz. pkg.   35c\nRed Glace Cherries: Ayfmer.   30c\nGlace Pineapple: 8 oz. pkg. _. -i~ 35c\nRaisins: Australian Sultanas. 4 Ibs   77c\n\"A\" Medium Eggs: Guaranteed fresh. Doz.  65c\n< \"~ (Cartons Extra)\nPitted Dates: Sair. 2 Ib. cello  44c\nPlant Now for\nChrl-tmat\nChinese\nWater\nLilies\nGIANT BULBS\nUse Only Water\nand  Pebbles\n39c Each\n2 for 75c\nApproximately 1 '\/_> lbs. \/CO^\nOnly  _ _  - V7\nToastmaster Bread\nKeeps Fresher Longer. \u2014 Baked right hero\nin Nelson's 4X plant.\nBrown \u25a0 Sandwich \u25a0 White \u25a0 Whole Wheat\n2 ^ 33c\nGerber's Baby Food\nand Junior Foods\n3 Tins 28*\nDoz. $1.10\nGerber's Baby Cereal\n8 oz.\n2 for 45*\nSave 10c.\nBlue Cheer: Gt. pkg.       73c\nFor whiter washday.\nGuest Ivory Soap: 4 for 23c\n\u00a3ra_______i\nr-n    Situ I _-____.\n:.-.,,.\u25a0...^:vr..-..,,.:..-..-,.v-.' \u25a0   .-'\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0 .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ,_\u25a0.-. v....:.  \u25a0    \u25a0. \u25a0 ,     ' -,    v.,  \u25a0 \u25a0-    .; \u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0\n____\u00ab__\u25a0_!______________________\u2022\n -\u2014\u2014\u2014\n ,  :      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. :\u25a0\u25a0,   \u25a0\u201e \t\nWings, Rangers\nVictors in NHL Play\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nDetroit Red Wings turned bad-\nMontreal Canadiens 3-2 Thursday\nnight, snapping the pace setting\nCanadiens' unbeaten National\nHockey League streak at 11 games\nin a row.\nNew York Rangers blanked Boston Bruins 5-0 and Chicago Black\nHawks edged Toronto Maple Leafs\n3-S in the night's other encounters.\nDutch 'Reibel and Red Kelly\ncashed third-period goals to give\nthe Wings their victory before 14,-\n177 Detroit fans. Captain Ted\nLindsay paced the Red Wings,\nscoring their first goal and assisted on the other two.\nIt was only the fourth defeat for\nMontreal in 22 games while it was\nDetroit's fifth triumph, in 21 starts.\nLindsay's goal, his'12th of the\nseason, came when he deflected in\nReibel's long drive In the opener.\nJean Beliveau canned Claude Provost's pass and defenceman Doug\nHarvey fired homfc Floyd Curry's\nrebound in the second period.\nReibel socked in Lindsay's pass-\nout early in the finale and Kelly\nfollowed with the clincher, batting ln Lindsay's rebound through\nthe legs of goalie Jacques P'-nte.\nWally Hergesheimer sparked the\nBlueshirts to victory at Boston\nwith three goals. It w\u00bbs goalie\nLorne Worsley's second shutout in\n24 hours over the Bruins. Herge-\nsheimer's markers brought his season total to 10.\nTeammates Dean Prentice and\nDave Creighton, who played a big\npart in New York's 4-0 win over\nBoston Wednesday night, each\nscored again Thursday night.\nWorsley turned in another acrobatic performance as he turned\naside 36 Boston shots. The offensively weak Bruins now have\nbeen shut out six times in 20 games\nthis season. They have scored only\nfour goals in their last six games.\nFIRES WINNER\nHec Lalande's goal late in the\nfinal period gave the Black Hawks\ntheir victory over the cellar-dwelling Leafs at Chicago. The night's\ngame left the resurgent Hawks In\nthird place, one point ahead of Detroit. Boston dropped to fifth place,\none point behind Detroit.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWESTERN  LEAGUE\nCalgary 3, Saskatoon 0\nWE8TERN JUNIOR\nLethbridge 7, Medicine Hat 4\nMcGovern Rink\nWins Women's\nKnockout Event\nMrs. T. McGovern skipped .her\nrink to victory ln Nelson Women's Curling Club Knockout\nCompetition, defeating Mrs. M,\nDeGirolamo 9-8. The club swings\ninto the Collinson Competition today.\nCurling with Mrs. McGovern\nwere Mrs. R. Bush, Mrs. L, Bick-\nnell and Mrs. F. Morris, while.on\nMrs. DeGirolamo's rink were Mrs.\n0. Macintyre. Mrs. P. Kuntz and\nsnd Mrs, & Eckmier.\nOther results:\nMrs. McGovern 8, Mrs. M.\nKubin \u00ab.\nMrs. M. Craig 12, Mrs. A. J.\nHesse 2.\nMrs, McGovern 9, Mrs. Craig 0.\nMrs. DeGirolamo 13, Mrs. R.\nLittle 7.\nPersonnel of rinks in Collinson\nplay, in order of skips, thirds,\nseconds and leads:\nMrs. A. J. Hesse, Mrs. A. Barrett, Mrs. L. McEachern, and Mrs.\nL. Bicknell.\nMrs R. Little, Mrs. R. Bush, Mrs.\nJ. Nuyens and Mrs. M DeFerro.\nMrs. M. Craig, Mrs. E. Open-\nshaw, Mrs Hadden and Mrs. F,\nMorris. j\nMrs. M. Kubin, Mrs. O. Macin-1\ntyre, Mrs. F. Falkoski and,Mrs. J.\nEckmier. |\nMrs. T. McGovern, Mrs. R. I\nChandler, Mrs. P. Kuntz and Mrs. j\nW. Eckmier. j\nMrs.   M.   DeGirolamo.   Mrs.   B.I\nThere Is a busy weekend ln\nstore for Maple Leaf wingman\nWendy Keller. Tonight he will be\nskating on Lee Hyssop's right\nwing during the game with 'Kel\nowna, and Saturday night he will\nwalk dqwn the aisle with Nelson\nbelle, Doreen Ozey. And then its\noff to 9pokane for the honeymoon.\nGray, Mrs. B, Hille and Mrs. J.\nSteadman\nThe draw:      '\nFriday \u2014 Hesse vs Little.\nMonday \u2014 Craig vs Kubin.\nTuesday \u2014 DeGirolamo vs. McGovern.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nI\nIP\nh_i\n4fe\nm in\nHi\nIP\n\u25a0     ,l\n\u2014 h\n\"VJS W\nmm pi m\n'\u25a0^ hi 3WI\n-\u25a0\u25a0 K*l *rfl\n\u25a0a s$ ?\u00bb&i\n11 w\t\n-1\nf* 't'*l\n9 PI\nin\n11\n1      \u25a0\nHP\nvM\nif ,      ; mmi    '\nSf    Is\n* ,f    W\nm\n9.M\ni\nmi\nHow would yon liko to pock, Into 3 short years the satisfaction of Important\nwork ... the excitement of adventure, comradeship, now training and\nexperience? You can, if you come in now for 3 great yean ln the Army I\nMake your next 3 yean a highlight of your life. Share an exciting way\nof life with your kind of man \u2014 young, enthusiastic, and a cut above average.\nArmy service means unusual experiences through travel in Canada and\npossibly tn other countries. Make friends of a lifetime. Train to be a leader.\nThe Army con help you to achieve alertness and self-confidence. Army\ntraining and sports develop strength, stamina and steadiness to keep you\nIn topnotch physical condition. Above all, here's a job to be proud of \u2014\nhelping to keep Canada strong and free.\nAnd when these 3 great years are over you may return te civilian life\na better man \u2014 with newly acquired skills, new trades. Or,' you may maki'\nthe Army a fifetlme career with its outstanding opportunities for promotion,\ngood pay and excellent pension plans.\n<$$$&*.    $\u00a3$5   8\u00a3_^?\\_$$S_*\n11 111 111 iff \"111\n'\n7*\ny nil\n_ sy*i\nTa be t\/fgfb\/e you mvst be 77 to 40\nyean of age, skilled tradesman to\n45; of reliable character and stability, able to past special Army tests.\nWrite, 'phone or visit your nearest\nArmy Recruiting Officer today.\nAsk for all the details.\nNo. 11  Penonnel  Depot,\n4201 Wftot 3rd Avenue,\nVihcouver, B.C.\u2014Telephone CHerry 2111\nCanadian  Army  Information Centre,\n547 Seymour Street,\nVancouver, B.C\u2014Telephone PAclflc 6046\nor\nThe Army Recruiting Station or\nMilitia Armoury nearest your home.\nHan't mfu \"Oatntfao . . .\" the Melting TV Serbs\novary other Friday nlghf.\nTrail Kelowna Win\nIn Inter-League Play\nNel-min dors Shine\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Moe Young's\nKelowna Packers', with a display\nof typical!p1ayoM hockey of concentrated forecheclijng and back-\nchecking, outskated and outshot\nKimberley Dynamiters while registering a 4-2 victory before 1000\nappreciative fans here Thursday\nnight.\nReferees George Cullen and\nTommy Dunn served strict notice\nin the early stages of the contest\nwhich developed into a clean,\nhard-checking well-played game\nthat saw goaltendera Dave Gatherum and Earl Betker rise to\nspectacular heights.\nFirst period of play, which, saw\nfive penalties issued, resulted with\nPackers skating off, leading by a\n2-1 score, while Dynamiters scored\nthe lone second period goal, tying\nthe score, which was followed by\ntwo unanswered Kelowna third\nperiod tallies.\nThe Packer goals were well distributed with single tallies being\nregistered by Bill Jones, Brian\nRoche, Joe Kaiser, and playing\ncoach Moe. Young. Dynamiter\ngoals were registered by Claud\nBell and playing coach Norm Larson.\nAfter a close-checking 10 minutes of first period play, Kelowna's\nBill Jones opened the scoring, answered by Claud Bell tipping in\nNorm Knippleburg's relay, *while\nPackers player two men short.\nBrian Roche, slapping In Jack\nKirk's blueline pass, closed the\nfirst period scoring.\nNorm Larson, on a picture goal\nwith Buzz Mellor and Ted Lebioda\ntied the score on the only goal of\nthe second period.\nThe third period opened with\nJoe Kaiser brilliantly stickhand-\nling and scoring on a hard, on-\nthe-ice shot that caught the inside\npost, and with both teams missing\nseveral scoring opportunities, was\nclimaxed by Moe Young's spectacular, unassisted tally at 18:30.\nThe win for Packers, second ln\ntheir four-games, WIHL tour, was\nmarred with.the loss of the services of starry forward Mike Durban, whs suffered a broken finger\nand partial shoulder dislocation,\nresulting from a late third period\ncheck by Ted Lebioda.\nLineups:\nKimberley \u2014 Goal, Betker; defence, Jonees. Craig, Andre, Lebioda; forwards. Hockley, Barre,\nMellor, Knippleburg, Bell, McTeer, McNiven, Larson.\nKelowna \u2014 Goal, Gatherum;\ndefence, Schai, Kirk, Yyett, Hanson; forwards, Jablonski, Young,\nRoche, Swarbrick, Durban, Middleton, Jone, Kaiser.\nF^sf. period sr- I. Kelowna, Jone\n(Schai. 10:23; 2. Kimberley, Bell\n(Knippleburg) 12:54; 3. Kelowna,\nRoche  (Kirk, Middleton)   15:58.\nPenalties: Schai 5:03, McTeer\n8:07, Young 11:08, Kirk 11:28, Lebioda 17:25.\nSecond period \u2014 4. Klmbereley,\nLarson (Lebioda, Mellor) 13:11.\nPenalties: Lebioda 15:03, Bell 15:08.\nThird period \u2014 5. Kelowna,\nKaiser (Schai) 2:33; 6. Kelowna,\nYoung 18:30. Penalty: Jone 10:53.\nLast Gome of Swing\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Led\nby the tremendous two-way playing of forward Norm Lenardon,\nTrail Smoke Eaters > Thursday\nnigh^ posted a.3-2 victory over the\nPenticton V's to round out their\nfour-game Okanagan swing with\ntheir second successive victory.\nThe hosting Okanagan Senior\nLeague club never threatened,\nwas autskated and outplayed by\nthe Western International Trail\nclub in all periods.\nLenardon notched his first of\ntwo goals at 8:18 of the first period. Grant Warwick tied it up,\nbut Smith sent Trail into a 2-1\nlead while the V's were short-\nhanded in the dying minutes of the\nopener, a lead which lasted until\nwell into the second session. Jack\nMacDonald tied it all up again at\n17:10 while Trail was short a man.\nThe winning goal was potted\nby Lenardon when he stole the\npuck in his own end, broke away\nfast and let fly into the upper\nright corner of the V's net.\nfrail-Goal: -Marim; defence:\nSmith,' Kraiger, Fletcher, Conn;\nforwards: Kromm, Birukow, Shabaga, Turik, Demore, Penner, Saplywy, Lenardon.\nPenticton-Goal: McLelland; defence: Mascotto, Tarala, Taggart,\nMclntyre; forwards: Rucks, MacDonald, Kilburn, D. Warwick, B.\nWarwick, Fairburn, G. Warwick,\nMadigan.\n8ummary\nFirst period: 1. Trail, Lenardon\n(Smith, Shabaga) 8:18; 2. Penticton, G. Warwick (B. Warwick,\nMacDonald) 15:25; 3. Trail, Smith\n(Shabaga, Lenardon) 17:00. Penalties: Kromm 4:10, Madigan Si-\nOS, Conn 5:55, Mclntyre 10:40, B.\nWarwick 16:40.\nSecond period: 4. Penticton,\nMacDonald (Tarala, Mclntyre)\n17:10. Penalties: Rucks 4:53, Turik\n10:20, Smith 16:45.\nThird period: 5. Trail, Lenardon,\n:56. Penalties: Kraiger :32. B.\nWarwick (match penalty) 8:26,\nSmith (minor, misconduct)  10:02.\nGrey (up\nSpirit Runs High\nBy JIM  PEACOCK\nCanadfan Prew Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Grey\nCup visitors poured into Vancouver 0n Thursday while the rain\npoured down.\nBut the weather forecaster kicked off a prediction that the present disturbance will pass forward\nand another will hit the coastline,\nbringing drier air before game\ntime Saturday afternoon.\nIn a special forecast for the\nfootball classic between Edmonton\nEskimos and Montreal Alouettes,\nwho arrived here Thursday after\nan overnight delay at Winnipeg,\nthe weather office said the game-\ntime picture should shape up like\nthis:\nCloudy and mild with little precipitation and a temperature of\nabout 45 degrees.\nIn the meantime, while two\nweather disturbances move toward\nthis football-crazed city, rain that\nhas fallen almost steadily for three\ndays is expected to continue until\nearly Saturday.\nThe wet weather hasn't dampened the spirits of Vancouverltes\nSail Lake City\nIcelanders Play\nHere Saturday\nA sample of the European style\nof hockey will be available to\nNelson hockey fans Saturday night\nwhen the Nelson Queens host Salt\nLake City's cosmopolitan senior\nhockey club, the Icelanders.\nThe Icelanders top line is comprised of Wilf Niederhauser and\nWilf,- Lieber, both natives of\nSwitzerland, and Rune Wallin of\nSweden.\nNiederhauser was a member-of\nthe Swiss entry in the 1948 world\nhockey championships. Lieber and\nWallin are also products of European hockey in which speed and\nstick handling are the criterion of\na player's a&ility and rough checking is frowned upon.\nDave Morrow, Icelander's goalie\nand one of several Canadians on\nthe team is no stranger to the Kootenays, having played his minor\nhockey in the Crow's Nest Pass\nregion.\nTonight the Icelanders will play\na return match against the Creston\nDel-Macs. The Nelson Queen's\nplan a trip to Salt Lake City in\nJanuary.\nMany District Fans\nTo See Grey Cup Play\nTrains and buses travelling west\nthrough Nelson Wednesday and\nThursday were loaded to capacity\nmostly with football fans from\nNelson District and eastern points\nJourneying to attend the Grey Cup\ngame to be played in Vancouver\nSaturday.\nThe sudden increases were also\ndue to the heavy snowfall which\ngrounded all aircraft and made\nauto travel almost impossible.\nCPR and Greyhound officials\nreport that they were able to\nhandle the increased number of\npassengers.\nand visitors, who are arriving in\ndroves by plane, train, car and\nboat to join in the pre-game entertainment that rolled along in\nhotels, in the streets\u2014everywhere.\nFarenholtz Rink\nMoves to Semis\nBy  EROS  PA8UTTI\nCanadian Preai Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A scramble for grand aggregate honors\nappeared certain Thursday as two\ncurling rinks had their victory\nstreaks snapped in the $11,500 Grey\nCup Totem bonspiel here.\nSuffering their first defeats In\nfive days were E. C. (Bung) Cart-\nmell of Vancouver, a former provincial champion and Garnet Campbell of Avonlea, Sask., 1955 Canadian titlist.\nThe rinks, only ones of the original 148 entries to enter Thursday's play without a. loss, dropped\n' their first games in the eights of\nthe Totem primary event.\nCartmell was edged 9-8 by Victoria's Gerry Lauder foursome in\nan extra-end game, while Campbell fell 10-8 to Roy Forsythe of\nWinnipeg, a former Manitoba\nchamp who picked up his seventh\nwin in nine starts. ,\nSTILL IN BEST SPOT\nDespite his loss, Cartmell  was\nstill in the best position to win\nthe grand aggregate, having four\npossible games left and a won-log\nrecord of 9-1. Next in line were\nLauder, with nine victories, one\ndefeat and two possible draws remaining, and Campbell, with 8-1\nand three possibles.\nLauder's win over Cartmell advanced the Vancouver island rink\nto the semi-finals of the Totem\nevent, one of eight competitions\nin the bonspiel, held in conjunction with the Grey Cup football\nclassic Saturday.\nLauder's opponent in the'semifinals will be Fritz Farenholtz of\nNelson, B. C, who edged the J.\nDavidson rink from Revelstoke,\nB. C, 10-9, Thursday to move into\nthe playoff bracket.\nThe Farenholtz rink beat Coates\nof Parksville 11-7 in the Vancouver secondary event; Davidson of\nRevelstoke 10-9 in totem primary\neights and Berner of Vancouver\n11-4 in Vancouver secondary 16s.\nCHUCK RAYNER\n... big and fast enough to look after two goal nets.\n-VOGUE PHOTO\nRayner in Goal Tonight\nAnswer to Packer Shots!\nWith  only  three  defencemen\navailable    for   tonight's    same\nwith the Kelowna Packers, Nelson    Maple    Leaf    coach    and\ngoalie phuck Rayner stands as\nthe biggest obstacle between the\nPackers and their third straight\nwin In tho WIHL.\nBut if size and past performance stand for anything, Rayner\nwill  probably  fill  the  bill.  The\nveteran of eight years NHL goal-\ntending and one-time winner of\nthe $HL's most valuable player\naward, the Hart Trophy, has been\nworking out twice daily all this\nweek   and   has   looked   big   and\nfast enough to look after two goal\nnets.\nLeaf defencemen Sid White\nand ^lc Lofvendahl are both\nslateiPto alt out tonight's contest White suffered a burned\nhand at work this week and\ninfectien has set In. Lofvendahl\nwas hit In the ankle with a\n. stray puck last Saturday night\nand will, bt able to offer only\nmoral support to his team unless\na miraculous healing takes place\ntoday,\nA familiar figure but wearing\nstrange colors will be Packer\nplaying-coach Moe Young, former\ncaptain and coach of the Trail\nSmoke Eaters. The spirited left\nwinger left the Smokies this\nseason to coach the Packers.\nAlthough sitting on the bottom\nrung of the OSHL ladder, the\nPackers have ta'ken both games\nplayed in the WIHL this week.\nThey edged the Spokane Flyers\n4-3 Wednesday and the Kimberley\nDynamiters 4-2 last night.\nPacker goal-tender, 22 year old\nDave  Gatherum,   also lists some\nNHL experience   on his   record.\nTwo years ago he played several^\ngames with the Detroit Red Wings,\nand shut out the Toronto Maple.\nLeafs in one game. t\nBig man on the Packer blue line\nis Black Jack Kirk, arch foe oft\nPenticton's Warwick brothers.\"\nHigh   on   the   Kelowna   scoring\nparade  are   Jim  Middleton,   Joe1\nKaiser, and Bill Jones. Kaiser and\nJones are rated as two of the most;\ndeceptive  stick  handlers  in   the.\nOSHL. jj\nKelowna - Goal: Dave Gatherum;\ndefence: Garnet Schai, Jim Han-':\nson, Jack Kirk, Alf Pyett; forwards: Greg Jablonski, Moe\nYoung, Brian Roche, Bill Swa-;\nbrick, Mike Durban. Jim Middle- \u25a0\nton. Bill Jones, Joe Kaiser.\nNelson - Goal: Chuck Raynerjjf\ndefence: Don McGregor, Murrayr.\nParker, Ernie Gare: forwards: Lee\"!\nHyssop, Wendy Keller, Fritx.;\nKoehle, Herb Jeffrey, Vic Howe.j\nFrank Wappel, feed Koehle,\"\nMickey Maglio. j\nWhy Travel for Pleasure?\nBRING  YOUR  QUEEN\nTO THE\nKING'S\nDANCE\nFriday Night\nEagles  Hall\nADMISSION: 50c EACH\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nSENIOR\nHOCKEY\nTON!GHT-8_00 p.m.\nKelowna vs Nelson\nTickets On Sale Today\nAt Kootenay Stationers 10:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nCivic Centre 7 p.m...   i\nHOCKEY\nSATURDAY\nSalt Lake City, Utah\nvs.\nThe Queen's Hotel\n!\n8:00 p.m.\nAdmission: Adults 50c       Children 25c\n__\u25a0____\u25a0\n \u25a03WPTJH.\n: ' y{ fSStfJfja\n . _. \u2014\nllj) \u2014 NEISON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25,1955\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Nows does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nef In error In the following lists  .,\u00ab\u25a0       '.,.,,.\nLorado \u2014.'. \u25a0.     1.38\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nQuotation Hit's from' .th*\nCanadian stock markets are \"\ncompiled end published by the\nDally News es e service to -\nsubscribers.. The lists ere added to or revised constantly,\nStocks In which there Is particular Interest end net now\nquoted, can be added at the\nthe request of readers.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prloes)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium'...,       .151,4\nAlgom Uranium    15.50\nAnacon Leaa  ___     3.20\nAnglo Rouen      1.58\nAubelle 08'A\nAumacho      '.33\nAunor : _    2.35\nBafnat  .\". ,      1.00\nBaska Uranium  31\nBase Metals   73\nBibis Yukon 11 ..\nBobjo  __ 48\nBrilund      1.84\nBroulan         1.74\nBrunswick      13.00\nLbuvacourt\nMacassa\t\nMacfie Expolratibn .\nMackeno     \t\nMadsen R L \t\nMalartic 0 F\t\nManeast    \t\nMart McNeely\t\nMcMarmac     \t\nMining Corp \t\nMogul\n.27\n2.03\n.36\n.42\n2.60\n1.85\n.35\nMVt\n.19V4\n22.50\n3.05\nMUltl Mins       1.50\nBuff Can\nBulldog \t\nCallinan . .   \t\nCanadian Lithium\nCampbell C \t\nCan Met\n.14\n.14\n\u25a0 .27\n1.65\n15.25\n2.58\nCassiar A_.bes.os      7.85\nCentral Patricia   87\nChimo            1.32\nCoin Lake      _. 12.4\nCons Denison ....'\u25a0 1     9.85\nCons M St S   _i.    36.75\nCons Orlac    15Vi\nConwest        6.15\nCons Sub   4.90\nConsrHowe _     4.15\nD'Aragon    28\nDetta M  18\nDonalda  39   -\nDyno    -__      1.02\nEast Malartic       2.25\nEast Sullivan       6.10\nElder Gold      60\nFalconbridge  _    28.67V4\nFaraday           1.91\nFrobisher      4.40\nGeco     17.00\nGiant Yel _     6.00\nGod's Lake  60\nGoldale  35\nGoldcrest   .31\nGolden Manitou  \u00ab...    3.30\nGold Hawk      _ 25\nGoldora  15\nGrandine         \/. 26\nGunnar Gold     10.50\nHarricana  _      1.42\nHeadway           1-42\nHollinger          19.82^\nHudson Bay     61.50\nInspiration        138\nTnt Nickel       79.00\nJoliet Que             100\n.Tonsmith  28\ni Kerr Addison     17.75\nI Keyboycon\n] Kristtna\n. Larbarlor\n' T.ake Lingman\n' Lakeshore .    .\nT.eitch     \t\nT.<:xindin\ntittle Lois\nNew Alger .\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Delhi\nNew Harricana\t\nNew Highrldge\t\nNew Jason     \t\nNew Uund \t\nN6w Thurbois .\n.22\n.28\n.16\n.491,4\n.23\nNoranda       51.50\n.24\n7.20\n.60\n.46B\n.041,4\n.50\n.75\n1.35\n16.821,4\n.23%\nNorgold\nNormetals  ....\nNorth Can ...\nNorpax\t\nOmnitrans  ...\nOsisko  -\t\nPardee   \t\nPickle Crow\nPuacer Devel\nPurdy M .\nPreston E. D.        7.25\nQuebec Copper     3.20\nQuebec Lab       09\nQuebec Lithium     l'.OO\nQuebec Nickel   _      2.25\nQuemont      21821,4\nRadiore         1.47\nRayrock    ...\u00bb      1.72\nSan Antonio          1.31\nSherritt Gordon      7.70\nStadacona    27%\nSteep Rock       13.6214\nSilver Miller       1.00\nSylvanite          131\nSullivan Van Roi  '\u00bb\nTeck Hughes      2.70\nTOhibill       M\nThomo-Lund       1.80\nUnited Keno    __    '.*.\u00ab)\nTToper Canada       too\nVentures     39.00\nVlcour        ^\nViotamac      ,._      '\"I\nWaite  Amulet            1\"1.\nWright Hargreaves       2.\"i\nYa'e\nYr'^wknife Bear\nOILS\nAmer. Leduc         S '0\n*n?lo Can.\nTV A. Oil\nCMgarv and Edmonton\nCdn Atlantic\t\nCanadian Collieries \t\nCan pecalta \t\nCentral Leduc       \t\nCentral  Explorers   \t\nCons Peak \t\nEastcrest   .   \u2014\t\nDuvex \t\nFederated Pete \t\nHome   \t\nKroy _\t\nMid  Cont.\n19\n5.30\n3000\n1=75\n700\n13 00\n.70\n7.1.5\n6.15\n.121,4\n.75\n.20\n4.05\n8.30\n1.10\n\u202272\nNat. Pete      3.00\nOkalta              1-97\nPacific  Pete      13.00\nPathfinder    85\nPetrol        \u2014      2.87\nRoyalite       1350\nTriad -     5.85\nUnited Oils  .... _      142\nYank  C  19\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  ,    35'\/\u00ab\nAlgoma Steel _    87\nI Aluminum     108 V*\nArgus    23%\nAtlas St \u2014    \" ,\nBeattie Bros     73,i\nBell Telephone     497\/\u00ab\nBrazilian      .,    \u2014     6%\nETC. Etectric'<4s     ':    97\nB.C. Electric 43\/.s   105\nB.C. Forest     IS5!\nB.C. Packers B  _    14%\nB.C. Power A    31V.\nBrown Co    16!4\nBuns A     12-\nBurrard A         9\nCan. Cement     3RJ\/i\nCan. Malting       ITi\nCan. Packers B . .....' S4\nCan Steamships    32V*\nCanadian Bakeries         8\nCanadian Breweries            30I4\nCanadian Canners .\nCanadian Celanese\nCan Chem Co\nCanadian Dredge\nCanadian Ind Alcohol\nCan Oil _.\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCocKshutt       7V\u00bb\n35i41\n22%\n10\n21\n22\n19%\n32%\nCons. Gas      22%\nDist. Seagram  40\nDom. Foundries  _.  29%\nDom Magnesium         19%\nDom. Steel & Coal B   17%\nDom. Stores     ...           \u2022 34V4\nDom, Tar (: Chemical  ,  12%\nDom. Textiles     8%\nEddy Paoer          83%\nFamous Players   23\nFord A    '143\nGatineau  32(4\nGatin\u00b0au 5% pfd  _ 10414\nGen. Steel Wares   9%\nGoodyear             52%\nGreat Lakes       41%\nHiram- Walker    69%\nImperial Oil    __  38%\nImo. Tobacco   U'ft\nInt. Metals      35V4\nInt. Pete                    _  29\nInternational Utilities   40%\nLoblaw A               45V<\nMas.ev Harris         10\nDividends\nBy The Canadian- Press\nCanadian Vickers Ltd.. 3714\ncents, Jan., 18, record Dec. 31.\nThe Southam Co. Ltd., 45 cents,\nDec. 28, record Dec, 14. \\\nIndustrial Acceptance Corp. Ltd.\ncom., 62% cents; 4Vt per cent pfd.\n$1.12, Dec. 27, record Dec. 1.\nDominion Scottish Investments\nLtd., Co. 75 cents, Dec. 30, record\nDec. 12.\nMuch Thanksgiving\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014The spirit of\nThanksgiving was evident in\nJudge Human Feldman's court\nWednesday as he faced 270 men\nfrom the skid road district. Judge\nFeldman freed the men of drunk\ncharges. Then each man was given\na ticket for a Thanksgiving Day\ndinner Thursday at the Salvation\nArmy headquarters.\nWinnipeg Grain\nMcColl Frontenae     42(4     WINNIPEG  (CP)  \u2014 Winnipeg\n_. .. n d..__. ...     cash grain pri(,es.\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed. .72%.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.01%.\nM & O Paper  63\nMont. Locn      __  17%\nNat. Steel Car  29\nOgilvie Flour   SOVi\nPage Hershey   77\nPowell River ___  5*\nShawinigan   67\nSicks Brew  28\nSimDsons A   17(4\nSoutham        48(4\nStandard Paving  36\nSteel of Canada  58(4\nUnion Gas of Can   49(4\nWestern Grocers A  _ 411\/4\nWeston George   104\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0By Frances Drake-\nsmooth   _\nchewing ^Ja\nwakes\nup your\nsmile-while it helps to keep\nyour mouth fresh andclean!\nSPEARMINT\nCHEWINGGU*\nEnjoy chewing Wrigley's Spearmint every day!\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFOR SATURDAY, NOV. 26, 1955\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014A good day for social functions,\naf\/airs to realize funds for charitable organizations. Artistic and\nskilled professions are also sponsored.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 20 (Taurus)\n\u2014Matters pertaining to the home,\nthe table, personal adornment,\npainting, sculpture, teaching, study\nand research are among the day's\nmost favored activities. Financial\ninterests also sponsored. Good rays\ngenerally.\nMAY 21 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nMixed influences. For the most\npart, the day favors activities pertinent to leisure, the arts, science,\nvisiting museums and historical\nplaces. Wholesome pleasures and\nnecessary tasks favored.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nYour Moon's position suggests that\nyou forget little annoyances, needless worries. You can enjoy and\nprofit today if you go ahead with\nyour 'schedule in your cheerful,\nhelpful way.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 22 (Leo)\u2014\nYou will probably get more benefit and actual gain by working\nwith, and through, matters connected with your community rather than by sticking to interests\nthat may be essentially diverting.\nAUGUST 23 to SEPTEMBER 23\nt (Virgo)\u2014Don't tie yourself to a\nI one-track system. Diversified activities, matters for which you\nhave special talent can give you\nand others scope for new accomplishment. Take some rest, too.\n| SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra)\u2014Keep in a frame of\n; mind conducive to attainment. The\nday has good advantages for skill\nand Intelligent management, but\nwarns against peevishness, selfish\nmotives.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\nScorpio) \u2014 Work and play are\nsponsored, and both in their proper places. Don't overdo at work\nor neglect necessary duties for\nsocial or pleasure activities. A\ngood day if you help keep it so.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n22 (Sagittarius)\u2014you can get on\nthe efficiency road quickly with\nyour Jupiter and Venus both In\nauspicious aspects. A splendid day\nfor personal gain, healthy pleasures; also essential work.\nDECEMBER 23 to JAUNARY 21\n(Capricorn)\u2014Dealing In necessary\ncommodities, attending charitable\nand social functions, improving an\nartistic talent or hobby among the\nday's favored activities. A tendency to strain should be curbed.\nJANUARY 22 to FEBRUARY 20\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Sensible caution is\nneeded in expenditures, in making\npromises, agreements. However,\nthe day is stimulating and can be\nproductive for many varied interests and occupations.\nFEBRUARY 21 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces)\u2014Don't permit doubt, fear\nor lack of confidence to interfere\nwith the achievement you can\nhave now. Your innate artistry,\nintuition and keen imagination are\nstrongly favored.\nYOU BORN TODAY are bright,\nengaging in personality, ^nd have\nmany attributes which, properly,\ndeveloped and used daily, can\nbring sound success and true happiness. You have good business\nacumen, can succeed as a leader in\nany worthy field of endeavor. You\nare innately an enthusiastic, efficient worker. Go forward with\nfaith.\nCopyright, 1955, King Features.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV- Channel 4\n:45\u2014Sign On\n: 15\u2014Love of Life \u2022\n:30\u2014 Love Story\n:00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n:30\u2014Houseparty\n:00\u2014Big Payoff\n:30\u2014\u2022_. ob Crosby\n:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n:00\u2014Brighter Day\n:15\u2014Secret Storm\n:30\u2014 On Your Account\n:00\u2014Variety Hour\n:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n:45\u2014Guiding Light\n:0O-Vallent Lady\n;: 15\u2014TBA\n:30\u2014Garry  Moore\n:0O\u2014What's Cookin'\n:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n00\u2014Baulah\n30\u2014Andy's Gang\n;00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Weather Vane\n:I5\u2014Dong Edwards\n:30\u2014Corliss Archer\n;0O\u2014Navy Log\n:30\u2014 Musical Merry go Round\n::00\u2014Great Glidersieave\n30\u2014Our Miss Brooks\n00\u2014The Crusoders\n30\u2014Science Fiction Theatre\n00\u2014The Line Up\n30\u2014A.A.U. Boxing\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Story Theatre\nKHQ TV - Channel 8\n8:40-Test Pattern\n8:45\u2014Color Test Program\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading\n9:00\u2014 Tan.. Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n10:00\u2014Dig Dong School\n10:30\u2014Search tor Beauty\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Women\n1:30\u2014Short Subjects\n1:45\u2014Mod. Romances\n2:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n2:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n3:30\u2014Matinee on 6\n4:00\u2014Mr. Engineer\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Rounoup\n5:00\u2014Bar 6 Corral\n6:00\u2014 Suparman\n6:30\u2014Bar 6 Bunkhouse\n6:45\u2014Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014 Cavalcade of Sports\n7:45\u2014News Cainan\n8:00\u2014Truth or Consequences\n8:30\u2014Life of Riley\n9:00\u2014Big Story\n9:30\u2014Stage Star\n10:04\u2014Star & Storv\n10:30\u2014Race to Rosebowl\n11:30\u2014Firelight Playhouse\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n2:45\u2014Test Pattern\n3:00\u2014 Movietime on 2\n4:15\u2014Krem's Kolor Kast\n4:30\u2014Story Land\n4:45\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00\u2014Touchdown\n6:30\u2014Autry-Hogers Western\n7:25\u2014News\n7:30-Rin Tin Tin\n8:00\u2014Ozzie & Harriet\n8:30\u2014Ragal Theatre\n9:00\u2014Ethel and Albert\n9:30\u2014The Vise\n10:00\u2014Dollar a Second\n10:30\u2014News\n10:30\u2014Million Dollar Theatre\nIPrograms sub)ect to change  by stations without  notice I\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m   to 6 p.m.\u2014 Phone 1300\nEvening!\u2014Phone 1033 R\nDaily Except Sundays\nait   H->lidav\u00bb\nMc & Me\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nACROSS\nI. Satan\"\n(Arabian\nRelig.)\n6. Biblical\nname\n(poss.)\n11. Girl's name\n12. A trick\n13. Blundered\n14. Scope\n15. Inlet\n(Shet. Is.)\n16. Not married\n17. Whirling\nin eddies\n!0. Permit\n21. Sodium\n(sym.)\n12. Openings\n13. Minus\n24. Paid in\nadvance\n!6. Unadorned\n28. Professional\ngolfer\n(shortened)\n29. Behold!'\n31. Variant of\nUbi, a yam\nof P. I.\n62. Skull caps\n(slang)\n34. Paused\n,36. Man's\nnickname\nS7. Sluggish      ,\n38. Century\nplant\n10. Girl's name\nII. Fabric made\nfrom flax\n12. Diminutive\nof I-ctitia\n13. Pay out,\nas money\nDOWN\n1. Football\nteam\n2. Native\nstate\n(India)\n3. Enticed\n4. Anger\n5. Unhappy\n6. A small\nspray of\nflowers\n7. Biblical\nname (D.)\n8. Crushed\n8. Fireplaces\n(Scot.)\n10. Trapshoot-\nIng (poss.)\n16. Cracked\n18. In time long\npast (obs.)   i\n19. Wrath\n33. King\nof\nthe\nbeasts\n-.4. A gift\n25. Constellation\n26. The act\nof\nburying\n27. Exact\nsatisfaction\nfor,\n29. Yeast\n30. Seaport\n(Belg.)\n32. Girl's\nnickname\n33. Silly\nam\n7 G U R \u00a3\ncaaia aaw waa\nan anciBE\nHUBHEiH   HH0B\nHKIBB   HHCIKHia\nHliiaaiil   Hi!\nhhe caBtsi ana\nHHlSai-l   HHBiHH\nHauia mam\n\"eilerday's Acmes\n35. Allowance\nfor waste\n38. Island, off\nEast coast\nof South\nJutland\n39. To cheat\n(var.)\n1\n2.\n1\n4-\nf\nl\nb\n1\n0\n9\nIO\nII\n1\n12.\nIi\n^\n14-\n15\n%\n%\nIb\n11\n18\n19\n^\/A\nZO\nIt\n%\n22\n%\nZi\n^A\n%\n\u00a34\n25\n^\n\u00a5\/\/<\n2b\nVt\n%\nlis\n^\nV.\n30\n31\n'fa\nll\n33\n34\n35\n'^\n%\n3b\nVI\n\u201e\nf\n36\n19\n40\n^\n41\n42\nV\/,\n43\n11-15\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOXE\u2014Here's how to work Itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nU   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ls used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apo*\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints\nBach day the code lettera are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOAPH   SEPMY   HPVCE   KMMVYV\nOPACE HYQQKOQVPVM MCAV.HM-\nHKQCPT.\nYesterday's pryptoquotc: WHEN SHALL WE THREE MEET\nAGAIN, IN THUNDER, LIGHTNING, OR IN RAIN?\u2014\nSHAKESPEARE.\nDistributed by King futurti Syndicate\n '\u2022'-.\u25a0:':.'\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0   '\u2022\u25a0\u25a0      :-\u25a0    \u25a0 ' \"^\n .,        .    ......   ......   ,'- -T^~\nSMALL INVESTMENT - LARGE\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE 1844\nHELP WANTED\nTYPIST\n$140 to $150 per month starting salary for qualified clerk-\ntypist. Previous experience in\nhandling cash and general\noffice routine is essential but\nshorthand not required. Applicant must be under 36 years\nof age, accustomed to and\nskilled in meeting the public.\nThis is a permanent position\nwith a national company offering exceptional job-security\nand opportunity for advancement. Personal Interviews arranged on receipt of application, in or out of usual\nbusiness hours, for qualified\napplicants. Reply stating experience, present employment,\nage and phone number to\nBox 3794. Daily News. All\nreplies held in strict confidence. Our employees know\nof. this ad.\nSALESMAN OR SALESWOMAN\nwanted-Excellent opportunity\nIn Nelson's most wanted, popular line. Earning capacity limit\ned only by individual effort\nDriver's licence essential. Car\nsupplied. Pleasant dignified\nwork steady year-round. Sales,\naids and training furnished Apply In own handwriting. State\npfevious sales experience ot\nother details. For interview,\nwrite Box 9069, Dally News.\nRADIO ANNOUNCER. WRITE\ngiving details of education and\njustness background, if anj\nA. R. Ramsden, Manager, Radio\nStation CKLN.      \t\nWANTED \u2014 BOY ABOUT 16-\nyears to assist In shipping department. Apply Taylor and\nWilton Sales, 511 Vernon St.\t\nWANTED \u2014  DOMESTIC  HELP\nBox 363. or Phone 1831\t\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWANTED -MIDDLE-AGED WO-\nman, no children, for light\nhousework. One boy, school age\nto look after. J. Wallsh, South\nSlocan.\t\nWANTED -HOUSEKEEPER FOR\nelderly couple. 612 Carbonate.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCARPENTER WORK AND ODD\njobs. Reasonable rates. Phone\n1282-L evenings.\nANY KIND OF ODD J6b:S. PS.\nI-X-3.\nRENTALS\nCABINS FOR WINTER ACCOM\nmodation up till June. Complete\nwith bedding, kitchen utensils\nor without. Complete self-contained Individually heated by\nPropane gas. From 1 up to 4\nrooms. Apply 805 Nelson Ave\nPhone   864\nFOR RENT \u2014 2-BEDROOM NI_W\nmodern bungalow across the\nlake opposite ferry. Reasonable\nrent for right tenants. P. E. Poulin, 582 Ward St., Phone 70.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that an\napplication will be made to the\nLegislative Assembly of the Province of British Columbia at its\nnext session on behalf of Canadian\nPacific Railway Company for an\nAct vesting in lt the assets, powers, rights, privileges, franchises,\neffects and properties of the railway companies listed In the First\nSchedule hereto (all wholly owned\nsubsidiaries of Canadian Pacific\nRailway Company) on assumption\nby Canadian Pacific Railway Company of all the respective debts,\nliabilities, obligations and duties\nof the said comoanies and thereupon to have dissolved the companies listed in the Second Schedule and to repeal the Acts listed in\nthe Third Schedule.\nDATED at Vancouver, B. C this\n21st day of November, A.D., 1955.\nF. H. BRITTON,\nSolicitor for the\nApplicant.\nRoom 320, C.P.R. Station,\nVancouver, B. C.\nFIRST SCHEDULE:\nThe Vancouver and Lulu Island\nRailway Company.\nThe   Columbia   and   Kootenay\nRailway and Navigation  Company.\nThe Kettle Valley Railway Company.\nThe Kootenay Central Railway\nCompany.\nSECOND SCHEDULE:\nThe Vancouver and Lulu Island\nRailway Company.\nThe   Columbia   and   Kootenay\nRailway and Navigation Company.\nTHIRD SCHEDULE:\nColumbia   and  Kootenay  Railway and  Navigation   Company\nAct,   1889\u2014Statutes   of   British\nColumbia (1889) Ch. 35.\nKootenay Central Railway Company Act, 1903\u2014'Statutes of British Columbia (1903) Ch. 35.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nROOMS, fully furnished. Day.\nweek, or monthly rates 171 Baker\nfOR fttttf - J*A\u00abt> APt.\nwith two bedrooms, living room,\nkitchen and bathroom. Phone\n815.      \t\nFOR RENT - NEWLY MODERN-\nized large office space, convenient entrance, good parking facilities   Call  77 for details.\nLAND ACT\nNotice of Intention to Apply\nto Lease Land.\nIn Land Recording District of\nKaslo and situate on the East side\nof Slocan Lake near Rosebery.\nBritish Columbia.\nTake notice that Rosebery Lumber Company Limited of Nakusp,\nBritish Columbia, occupation a\nlogging and lumber company, intends to apply for a lease of the\nfollowing described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted\nat the- Southwest corner of the,\nRosebery Townsite on the shore\nof Slocan Lake; thence Easterly\nfollowing the shore of Slocan Lake\nto a point distant 1320 feet from\nthe point of commencement measured along the centre line of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway; thence\n200 feet Southwesterly and at right\nangles to the said centre line;\nthence. Westerly and parallel to\nthe said centre line to a point\nSouth of the point of commencement; thence Northerly 200 feet\nmore or less to the point of commencement for the purpose of a\nsawmill site and booming area.\nDate of Staking: November 8th,\n1955.\nROSEBERY LUMBER\nCOMPANY.  LIMITED\nper, \"Roy Yamada\"\n(Agent).\nDated\nNovember 21st. 1955.\nFURNISHED CABINS, CRES-\ncent Beach Auto Court, $30 and\n$35 per month. Call at Court or\nphone 471-Y-l for particulars.\nFOR RENT\u2014BASEMENT STOR-\nage space, central location Baker St. Apply Box 8142. D. News.\nWANTED \u2014 2-BEDROOM UN-\nfurnlshed apartment. State rent\nto  Box 9115 Daily News\nHEATED BEDROOM. GENTLE-\nman preferred. Apply 410 Victoria Street.\nFOR RENT \u2014 FURBISHED\nrooms, week or monthly rates\nreasonable. Phone 686.\nTHREE-ROOM COTTAGE. $30\nmonthly. Phone 46. Apply 1022\nBeatty Avenue.\nFOR RENT\u20142 ROOM FURNISH\ned suite at 140 Baker or Phone\n491-L.\nFOR RENT\u2014SUITE 2 BLOCKS\nfrom Baker, $40 monthly. Phone\n1718-R. '\nFOR   RENT - HEATED -HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 405-L.\n'ROOM FOR RENT. DOWNTOWN\nPhone 934-R.\nWARM   FURN.   3-ROOM   SUITE.\nPhone 697-X before 3 p.m.\nFOR   RENT   -   UNFURNISHED\n2-Room Suite. Phone 1652-X.\nFOR RENT - 4-ROOM APART-\nment. Call at 606 Front St.\nTOR RENT -  3-ROOM SUITE.\nPhone 651-R\n\u00a56r 'rent - j-rSoM __\u00ab\u25a0_*\n614 Victoria Street.\nF6R RENT \u2014 1 ROOM COTTAGE\nno bachelors. Phone 484-R-l.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\nyoung men. good family homey\nPhone 622-L.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nClassified   Ads   Get   Results\nMACHINERY\n'53 FORD\n3-Ton. 172\" Wheelbase.\n13,opo Miles.\n\u202250 WHITE .WB-22\n10.00x20 Tires. Air Brakes\n49 INTERNATIONAL KBS-7\n197\"  Wheelbase.\nSteel Lumber Roller Deck.\n'47 INTERNATIONAL K7\n176\"  Wheelbase.\n'52 STUDEBAKER\n%-Ton Pickup.\n'55 INTERNATIONAL\n14-Ton Pickup.\nALSO\nINTERNATIONAL TD-14\nCrawler Tractor\nWith Doier and Winch.\nINTERNATIONAL TD-6\nCrawler Tractor\nWith Cable Blade.\n& Equipment Co. Ltd\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1400   Nelson, B.C.\nDEPARTMENT  OF   HIGHWAYS\nKASLO-SLOCAN\nUpper Arrow   Lakes  Ferry\n(M.V. Arrow Park)\nSchedule   in   effect   immediately.\n(Every day except Tuesday)\nA.M.\nLeaves Beaton     7:30\nArrives Arrowread   8:30\nLeaves Arrowhead   9:00\nP.M.\nArrives Nakusp  1:00\n(And Way Points)\nLeaves Nakusp      1:30\nArrives Arrowhead        .   5:30\n(And Way Points)\nLeaves Arrowhead   6:00\nArrives Beaton  7:00\nTuesday reserved for transportation of dangerous cargoes\nonly.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   WIDDOWSON \u00ab_ CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St   Nelson\nII    S    ELMES   ROSSLAND   B \u00b0\nAssayer   Chemist   Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nG  W   BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34. Frutvale. B.C\nSuccessor to the late A   L   Purd;\nBOYD C   AFFLECK  M.E.1C\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil\n218 Goro St    Nelson   Phone 1238\nKimberley, Ludlow 2-2136.\nBC  Land Survevoi   frnaineei\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding   motor  rewind\nPhone   5H3   Ml   Vfrn.m   Si\nTIM__ER~CRUISEH\nEUGENE   H    HIRD\nSlocan City  B C\nConfidential estimates\n\u2022 SHAFTING\n\u2022k V J>ULLEYS\n\u2022 BEARINGS\n\u25a0k COUPLINGS\nir STEEL BARS\n\u2022 BRONZE BUSHINGS\n\u2022k BABBITT\nif ALLOY STEEL\nStei\njvenson s\nMachine Shop Ltd.\n708   Vernon  St\nPHONE 98\n(Continued In Next Column)\nMACHINERY\nPUMPS\nSee or Write Us About\nThe New\nSUBMERGED\nWATER PUMP\nElectric driven, fbr private\nor industrial use, no lubrication, no freeze-ups, no\nmaintenance.\nALSO\nAny Other Type of Pump\nThat You Can Think Of.\nSee\nH.   \"Fritz\"  Farenhpltz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n614 Railway St Nelson. B.C.\nPHONJ 1402\nJUNKERS\nFREE  PISTON\nDIESEL\nCOMPRESSORS\nStationary or Mobile.\nThe most Inexpensive compressed\nair possible.\nHie   only   Djesel    driven   compressor known that has so few\nsources for trouble, as there are:\nNO CRANKSHAFTS\nNO CONNECTING RODS\nNO VALVES\nNO LOADED BEARINGS\nNO FLYWHEELS\nNO COUPLINGS\nWrite or Phone\nBennetts Ltd.\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson, B. C.\n\t\nPROPERTY, HO'SES,\n,   FARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\n\u2014\t\n!\u25a0\u2022'.': :*-\u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 -;\u25a0\u2014~\u2014\"\n . \u2022'   \u25a0   \u25a0' \u25a0  \u25a0:\n3\u00abp1\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25, 1955 \u2014 1 ii\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\ntoggirfe supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe- and: fittings\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 230\nPrior St.. Vancouver BC. Ph\nPAclflc 6357\nFOR SALE - THREE-BURNER\ngas range, coal heater, garbage\nburner, bed and springs, 3 day\nbefis, stools, chairs, dishes, meat\nslicer. Meat display case. Equipment to start confectionery store\nPhone 127.\nSHIP US'.' YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals. copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt pay.-\nment Active Trading. 935 E\nCordova. Vancouver\n-f-\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement, 301 Bakei\nSt Phbria 47 \"We buy used fur'\nniture.\"\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-\npaclty. (43, while they last Ac-\ntlyo Trading Co.. 935 E. Cordova.\nVsHcpuver.\nBELTONE HEARING AID, SAC-\nrlfice price, little used, $60. Can\nbe seen at Johnson's Shoe Repair\nMO Josephine Street.\nF06 SALE \u2014 SUPERFEX OIL\nheater with pipe and pump. $30.\nPhone: 1487-Y.\nBlbfc-A-BEb    FOAM,    FRIEZE.\nPhone 1244-L. t\n8 STRAP-ON TIRE CHAINS AS\nnew }10- Phone 82S-L.\nOIL HEATER, LIKE NEW. WILL\nsell halt price. Phone 187B-L.\n1953 MALL CHAIN SAW. $160.\nGood condition. Phone 816-L-2.\nClrculaiton 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   ....r    $ 3.50\nSix monthi       $ 6.50\nOne year '.     $12.00\nBy Mali to United Kingdom\nor the 'United States\nOne month    $ 1.73\nThree  months       $ 5.00\nSix months      $ 6.50\nOne year           $18.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nUrgently\nListings*\nOn 2 \u00ab>r 3 bedroom homes\nin Fairview District. Bungalow type preferred, but not\nabsolutely necessary if\nproperty is suitable. Clients\n.prepared to pay all Cash if\nsatisfied. Early occupancy\nrequested.\nHerb\nPHONE 68\nReal Estate and Insurance\nAgency\n532 WARD ST.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nPROPERTY   HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\n\u2022 Continued\nYour Choice . . .\nTWO LARGE\nOLDER STYLE\nDWELLINGS\n1\u2014Two-storey. Seven rooms,\nfull basement, concrete foundation and floor. Hot water\nheat piped to both floors.\nHoover Street, just outside\ncity limits. Lot 75x120, Needs\nrepairs but priced C^Q^ft\nfor quick sale \u00abP*a*JU\nWith terms  to  be  arranged.\n2\u2014Two-storey. Seven rooms,\nstone and concrete foundation. Under-floor style oil\nfurnace. Houston Street, in\ncity limits. Needs finishing\nupstairs. Can be purchased\nwith m front-     $53Q0\n* with 75' front- $3800\nWith $2000 down.\nBuy lots now and build next\nyear.  See  our  selection.\nT.D.\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward St. Phone 717\nINTERESTED IN PRODUCING\neggs? Then why wait for baby\nchicks to grow? Buy right now.\nraised pullets of good breeding\nfrom our farm. Thirty years'\nexperiepce with poultry is your\nassurance we ha Ve the stock for\nhigh production and low mortality. Leghorns still available.\nFor'information apply our agent\nNelson Farmers' Supply Ltd.,\nNelson, or write\/ direct to New\nSiberia Farms, N. Balakshln,\nRR 3, Chilliwack, B. C.\nFOR SALE - AT CRAWFORD\nBay, five 2-year-old Holsteln\nHeifers, and five 1-year-old\nheifers. H. Harrop, Phone 1278.\nFOR SALE\u2014EIGHT WEEK OLD\npigs, $14 \u00a3ach. Shorty's Repair\nShop, 714 Baker Street.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS     ANONYMOUS\nBox 368     Ph. 161-L-J or 366-R.\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nPHONE   1844  FOR   CLA88IFIED\nWANTED FOR CASH \u2014 Business  lot  or  revenue   property\nBox 9116 Nelson Daily News.\nPhone  1494-R.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\n[Continued)\nBEACON'S ~\nETTER A'\nUYS     \"      8\nuTotfe used cms .mins wuwunBO   i*\nw it m-i-ioV tin .uiiowii. si i *\u00ab\u00abu\u00ab\nDCjuia i> m_imniD 5utis.ci._uoi i\u00abiask*   I\nH___. 11. \u201e,.\u2022\u00bb>.[. <&,\u00bb.*\u00ab' n.um .____\/\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap Iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper. Used parts for\ncars and trucks for sale.\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132. Granite Road, Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 189-R-4.\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nind cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products, Box 456, Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 3796\nNelson Daily News.\nWE BUY SCRAP METAL. PHONE\n082-Y for honest deal. Warehouse 419H Latimer St.. City\nIndependent Trader.\nELECTRIC TRAlfr Sfef HESBOT\nPhone 1494-R.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n2 LOTS TO SEIVE ^YOU\n316 Vernon St. \u2014 Phone 1838\n1955 FORD FAIRLANE TUDOR\nRadio, Seat Covers,  Undercoatod\t\n$2795\n1953 FORD FORDOR\nA very clean car for _\t\n$1645\n1954 CHEVROLET TUDOR\nSpotless Condition.     '... $1745\n1954 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\nHy-Drive. One Owner  .. $ ' 9\u00b05\n' \t\n1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nA Very Clean Car. t  $ ' \u00ab95\n1951 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nTorpedo Styling         \u00abp9S5\n2\u20141953 FORD 2 DOOR\n$1495\n1955 CHEVROLET COACH\nV-8. Low Mileage.    $2095\n1954 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nRadio, Seat Covers.\n$1945\n1953 HENRY J\n$995\n1954 FORD TUDOR\nRadio,  Very Low Mileage. One Owner\t\n$1995\nPhone 1744 \u2014 608 Vernon St.\n1951 DODGE SEDAN\nOne Owner. $1095\n1948 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n$495\n1948 PONTIAC TORPEDO\nSedan Coupe      $495\n' PICKUPS\n1952 Chevrolet Pickup:  $1095\nA Real Beauty.\n1954 Ford Pickup: .__.\n1625\n1950 GMC Pickup:       495\n1 Good Tires. Good Motor.\n1952Merecury Pickup:\n995\n1949 Mercury 1 Ton:       595\nENGLISH' CARS\n1954 AUSTIN SEDAN $1395\n1953 CONSUL SEDAN $1195\n1952 AUSTIN SEDAN $795\nBrand New 1955 Zephyr\n1955 CONSUL\nOnly 300 Miles. New Car Guarantee.   \t\n$300\nOFF\n1953 METEOR 2 DOOR,\nFully Equipped\n$1695\n1951, AUSTIN SEDAN $395\n1951  PREFECT $295\nSTEALS\n1941 FORD COACH $150\n1939 MERCURY FORDOR $95\nCOMPLETE SELECTION OF NEW 1956 FORDS AND'MONARCHS\nTERMS AND TRADES \u2014 Immediate Delivery\nSalesmen: Norman Best, Frank Vernerey \u2014 308 Vernon St. Mel Buerge, George Nedelec \u2014 608 Vernon St.\nMel Emerge Motors Li\n Drop In ot\nReuben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\nToday\nAnd Deal With Confidence\n^ith the Largest\nAutomotive Dealer\nIn the Interior of B.C.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Austin Sedans\n1956 Meteor Hardtop\n1956 Dodge Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1955 Ford Sedan\nV*   \u2022   *\nATTENTION!!\nUsed car buyers . . . before\nyou buy that next used car,\ncompare our prices first.\nWe have the largest and\nmost complete car selection in the Interior of B.C.\nPrices have never been\nlower.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDon't Forget To Have Your\nTires Tractionized.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nSeiberling Tires at wholesale prices. Lifetime guarantee against all road\nhazards.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1956 Meteor Country\nSedan\n1955 Chevrolet Special\nPickup\n1952 G.M.C. Pickup\n1951  G.M.C. Pickup\n1951   Mercury Pickup\n1949 Chevrolet Pickup\nWe Pay Spot Cash for\nLATE MODEL CARS\nNEW\nMeteor\nMercury    c|\nCARS'\nand Trucks\nIN STOCK\nAlso, the Finest in    \u2022 ^\n\"SAFE BUY\nUSED CARS\"\nWINTERIZED,    .\nREADY TO GO.\n.i\n1954 Meteor Fordor c\n1953 Monarch Fordor        -,\n1953 Meteor Tudor\n1952 Meteor Fordor \"4.\n1951 Plymouth Fordor\n1950 Ford Fordor\n1953 Austin Somerset\n1953 Zephyr Sedan\n1951 Vanguard Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Sedan Dl'vy\n1949 Austin ;\n1950 Prefect 1\"\n1953 Ford Half Ton\n1951 Ford Half Ton\nLowest Prices In Town'\nforthe\nBest Cars in Town\nBeacon\notors\n701 Baker St.    Nelson, B.C\nPhones 578-579\nEVENINGS 103&-X\nFor Sales Appointments       '\nFOR SALE \u2014 1950 PONTIAC,\n\u2022porta coupe, A-l condition.\nWhat offers? Phone 1035-R.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nNelson     ..,\nREABY'MIX\nConcrete Ltd.;,\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered in Nelson\nSAVE TIME - SAVE MONET\"'\n\"Do  It  the Easy  Way\"\notors Ltd.\n803 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 1135 and 1843\n(Continued tn Next Column)\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK \u2014 Mock Exchange\nclosed (or Thanksgiving Day.      t\\\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014With ttu New1\nYork market closed tor Thank*-\ngiving, lack oi leadership had *\ndampening effect on Toronto stock\nexchange activity Thursday. Trei*J-\nof the market was slightly lower.\nIndustrials moved sluggishly\nwith only a teyr price changes extending to a point or more. Bulk of\nihe trading Interest waa tn mining\nissues with favorable property r\u00bb-\nporta sparking \u00bb few good advances.\nST\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014The prfcwf\ndrifted irregularly loww at thft\nclose of sluggislj trading on the\nstock market Thursday. Mines and\nestern   oils   were   mixed   in   \u00bb*\npenny range.\nBase metals and utilities lost\nground, and the pulp and papeft\nsection had a majority of declines.\nSenior oils and carriers were un-i\nchanged to minor fractions firmer\nwhile steels, miscellaneous industrials and banks were' narrowly\nmixed. Beverages were mainly unchanged.\nNONE\nBETTER\nTHE   5 0 LEX   COMPANY\n PfglP^m^^  >\u25a0> l        ^.fPPWP\n\u25a0 ,\n\t\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 25,1955\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00abl6!518'St\u00abt\u20acl\u00ab\u00abtIWm6l8t\u00abl(IWt\u00abWtel8'\u00ab\u00ab\u00abtSW\u00abHt\u00ab\u00abC\u00ab\u00abl\u00abltt51filM18*tSt\u20ac'!t^\nYes\nNews of, the J)ay\nRATES: 30c line, 40o line Black taco typo; larger type rates oh\nrequest.  Minimum two lines.  10% discount for prompt payment\nA beautifullv wrapped gift at Christmas time does\nshow the thought and care that went into the giving.\nFOR\nRibbon .   Tissue Paper\nQiftwrap     Seals\nQift Cards\nAnd All the Necessities of Christmas\nBe Sure To Shop at\nC-\u00abvCt\u00a3_-_n\n-JJJJ\u2014t\u00bbC~4a.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nWhist Tonight Sacred Heart Hall\nHaU Mines Road at 8 p.m.\n|    Border   stripping   for    plastic\n! windows. $1,69 a roll.\nColumBia Trading Co.\nDress up your fireplace with a\nnew screen. We have models from\n$8.50 to $31.95.     HIPPERSON'S.\nHurry, knit that Indian sweater\nfor him for Christmas. All requirements. Tot-n-Teen Shop.\nSee our used daveno and chesterfield suites. Reduced to clear.\nSterling Home FurrilsheM.\nPythian Sisters please attend\nbanquet 6 p.m. tonight, in honor\nof Grand Chiefs visit.\nRebekah tea and bake sale Nov.\n26, 2:30 to 5 p.m., IOOF Hall. Door\nprize. Admission 25c.\nCalgary livestock\n. CALGARY (CP)\u2014Trade slackened on the livestock market\nThursday on offerings of 1904\ncattle and 800 calves up to 11 a.m.\nThe bulk of offerings, which included 2400 head held over from\nWednesday, were medium quality\nItocker and feeder steers and stock\nsteer calves of medium quality\nand down.\n'. Good butcher steers were off 50\ncents or more for the week, com-\njnon to medium grades 50 to 75\ncents lower; good and choice\nbuteher heifers 50 cents or more\nlower; common and medium\ngrades showed a similar decline;\nall grades of cows hi good demand\nat steady prices; bulls steady to\nweak.\nGood steers $17.50 to $19; medium $15 to $16:50; common $10 to\n$14.00.\n. ChoieG heifers $17 to $18; good\n$15 to $16.50; medium $12.90 to\n$14.50;. common $10 to $12.\nGood cows $8.75 to $9.50; medium $8.25 to $8.50; common $7.50 to\n$8; canners and cutters $5 to $7.\nGood hulls $8.50 to $9.50; common to medium $7 to $8.\nGood feeder steers $15 to $16.50;\ngood stock steers $15 to $17; common to medium $10 to $14.\nGood stock steer calves $16 to\n$17.50; common to medium $10 to\n$15.50.\nButcher weight calves down 50\ncents to $1 for the week; veal\ncalves scarce at about steady\nprices.\nGood and choice veal $16 to $18;\ncommon to medium $10 to $15.\nGood   butcher   weigh t   heifer\nVancouver Stocks\nClosing prices\nMINES\nBeaver  Lodge   \t\nBralorne \t\nCanusa      \t\nCariboo Gold\t\nEstella ._\t\nGiant Mascot\t\nGranduc  \t\nGrandview \t\nHamil Sil _   \t\nHighland Bell \t\nJackson Basin\nKootenay Base Metals\nNational Ex \t\nPac Eastern Gold\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold  \t\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned.\nPounder's Chimney  Service\nPhone 1541-L.....\nROBT. NOLTE, MASTER TAILOR\n253 Baker Street\nSuits made on the premises\nAlso alterations and repairs\n'    Guaranteed Radio and\nTelevision Service\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\n.45\n5.85\n.03\n.65\n.48\n.75\n6.90\n.21\n.05\n.58\n.23\n.02 V4\n.70\n.13\n4.40\n1.95\n.05%\n.36\nReeves MacDonald       2.15\nRexspar    43\nRix-Athabaska Uran ...._      .85\nSheep Creek            1.30\nSherritt Gordon        7.50\nSilback Premier  10\nSilver Ridge           .29\nSilver  Standard          .47\nSunshine Lardeau  _  .   .35\nTaylor _  ik.24Vt\nWestern Exploration  48\nVan Roi 18\nWestern Mines         .55\nWestern Potash           .66\nWestern Tungsten  30\nWoodbury    _      .11\nOIL8\nAltex     .*_*     _2B\nAnglo Canadian       5.25\nA P Consolidated 30\nCalgary & Edmonton    17.50\nCanadian Anaconda    2fl\nCharter           2.00\nStandard size Doors and Frames.\nSpecial sizes made to order.\nT. H. WATERS & GO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.    Nelson\nCannon Towels of superior quality and large size, 24\"x48\" ln beautiful shades.\nTAYLOR'S DRYGOOD8\nGift From Bulganin\nLOS ANGELES (AP) \u2014 An 11.\nyear-old Los Angeles girl has\nwangled a Russian doll from Premier Bulganin of the Soviet Union. Ann Latman's letter apparently caught Bulganin in a receptive mood. Her earlier letters to\nhis predecessor. Georgi Malenkov,\nwere never answered. Bulganin's\ngift, an 11-inch doll, is dressed in\nthe costume of a Russian peasant woman.\nSmallwood, Cabinet,\nSue Newspaper\nST. JOHN'S Nfld. (CP)-A writ\nhas been issued against the St.\nJohn's Evening Telegram on behalf of Premier Smallwood and\nhis cabinet. Damages of $150,000\nare sought in connection with two\nvice stories.\ncalves $12.90 to $14, with few sales\nover $13.\nHogs steady Wednesday. $20, A j\ngrade; sows $10.50 to $12, live\nweight.\nGood lambs $16 to $16.50.\nCORBY'S\n2.00\n1.75\n15.37%\n33.75\nVantor\nVulcan\nYankee Princess \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\t\nB C Power       \t\nB C Telephone     49.75\nInt Brew B             5.10\nInland Nat Gas       3.95\nLucky Lager      5.00\nMacM & Blnedel B     42.50\nMid Western       3.65\n1 Powell River     54.00\nTrans Mtn     38.00\n_ _   \u25a0 Western Plywoods         21.50\n,or Corttrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia j Westminster Paper _..        30.50\nj Special\nSelected\nChamberlain    34\nDel Rio       1.55\nGas Exp       2.08\nHome          8.10\nNational  Pete   _      3.00\nOkalta Com        1.90\nPacific Pete     _     9.75\nPeace River Gas     12.82V4\nRoyalite    \u201e    13.00\nSparmac 36\nUnited        1.40\nBest materials only used on ypur\nshoes nt TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nFlowers for every and' all oi\ncuslons.   \u25a0.     ..   .   i, '\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\n; 346 Baker St Phone 910\nFor Indian Svy<!8terp;\nSportsmen 80c\u2014Mary'Haxlm 95c\nPolar Y&rn 69c , . .\nPatterns free with wool'order\nAt EBERLE'S\nR. TARLINQ, TAILOR\nCleaning,- alterations,   pressing,\nhats cleaned and blocked. Room\n207 Johnstone Block\/ Ph'oni 1256,\n576 Baker Street.\nChristmas gift wrapping, Christmas  ribbon,   angel  hair,   icicles,\ntoys and Lionel electee trains.\nKOOTENAY 8TATIONERS\nAND SPORT SHOP\nAll sizes and styles of C. C. M.\nbicycles for boys aijd girls. Gladden your youngster af Christmas\nand for years to come with a new\nbike from HIPPERSON'S.\nFollowing used items for sale:\n1 piano, 1 complete bedroom suite\n1 plaster paris fireplace.\nWE BUY AND SELL NEW\nAND   USED   FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nThe Lancaster Theatre Company will present \"Julius Caesar\"\nat the Nelson Junior High School,\nTuesday, November 29, at 8:00 p m.\nAdults $1.00, Students 50c. Tickets available at Mann's Drug Store'.\nChooie your Christmas Gifts\nnow. Handbags, gloves, scarves,\namong many other items to choose\nfrom. Gifts wrapped free of\ncharge,\nADRIAN MILLINERY\n269 BAKER 8TREET\nSET\nUP  FOR   BURNING \u2014 Towering effigies of figure* from clttsslo Indian myth,\nology are prepared tor burning at the end of a ten-day festival In ftew Delhi\nDressing\nGowns\nThere is nothing nicer than\na smartly tailored gown\nfor a Christmas gift. See\nour fall stock of\n\u2022 Plain Flannels\n\u2022 Plain With\nFancy Trim\n\u2022 Check   Flannels\n\u2022 Satins\nWe will be glad to put one\naside for you.\nEM\u00b0FS \u2022\n\"THE\nLTD.\nMAN'S  STORE\"\nBox  100\nDoctors Want Health\nList Examined\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The number o^persons listed as patients of\nLondon doctors under Britain's\nnational health plan exceeds the\ntotal population of the capital by\nmore than 8400.'The London exec-\nWork for Free\nFlow of News\nHOBART, Tasmania (Reuters)\u2014\n\u2014Editors   of  the  Commonwealth\nPress   Union   passed   resolutions\nutive council of the health service,; here  Thursday  in  support  Of  a\nrevealing this figure, called on the\nMinistry of Health to overhaul the\nregistration system to ensure that\nno patient appears on more than\none doctor's list.\nFUNERAL NOTICE    .\nPIOTNIKOFF-Funeral service\nfor the late Mrs. Mary Plotnikoff\nfa the D^ WiU be hdd Sunday\nPar     Iniar-Y^^    i mi . CaStlfi\" ,  HUW    IS    WUrill    X.JUUU    DUL   me    (JUIU-\nBrilliant P'aCe at'mitl\u00abe in chkrge hasn't yet found\nCAUTIOUS APPROACH\nAMPTHILL, England (CP)-\nTwelve years ago \u00a31000 was\nraised for a community hall in\nthis Bedfordshire town. The fund\nnow is worth \u00a33000 but the com-\nI a site for the building.\n1.10\n.45\n.85\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liqu |\nIdeal for\nGIVING\nToboggans     I Chalet Skis\nFun for the whole family.\n4' Size: $5.95\n5' Size: $7.95\n6' Size: $9.50\n| A size for.the toddler 2\n* to the expert. J\nI        $2.95 to $26.95        j\n8*_\u00bb*_k__*\u00bb_\u00bb_\u00bbs*_\u00bb\u00bb_n-(f-Wi_t_si\u00bb*_n_\u00bbi_\u00bb_^_>*S\nSW<_*\u00ab<\u00ab\u00abWHSU\u00ab_!(W[a\u00abl\u00ab<H\u00ab\u00ab<f\"5i\u20act6t\u00abt?\nWAGONS\nSturdy construction\nfor years of fun.\nI        $3.10 to $16.95\nttsi_\u00bbitui_B_^-_.g.>i\u00bbi\u00bbi>1\u00bbs^_a?i_fr8i\u00bbi\"\u00bb\u00bb.\u00bbni_\u00bb\u00bbmg\nSLEIGHS\nMake it a happy Christmas\n| with the perfect gift of a sleigh.\nI $5.55 to $7.15\n6\u00bb_h>nni>ui\u00bbni_nmsi_\u00bbni\u00bbnm\u00bbiii_>i\u00bbmii_\u00bbi\u00bbiS\nTOYS \u2014TOYS\nEverything For the Youngsters In\nGames, Mechanical Toys, Pull Toys, Educational Toys.\nMARSHALL-WELLS STORE\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n395 BAKER ST.\nl>_M_tl\u00bb2l!.<Ml_H3> _ta.St_fc.K__ k_fcS)_\u00bbi__iMi:t___M\nTOYS\nLOOK\/ Santa is\n&0L\nTOYLAND\nat the Bay TODAY\nfrom 2 p.m.\nto 3 p.m.\nMOTHERS'! Bring\nthe children in for a\npersonal visit with\nSanta who has a gift\nof candy for each\nchild.   .\nDELUXE HOCKEY GAMES\nBig 36\" x 24\" playing surface, 2\"\ntrolled to make exciting moves,\nfor both young and old\t\nmetal players hand con-\nThe game        Q  OO\nfreer flow of news throughout the\nworld and joint action by newspapers of the ifree world to safeguard freedom of the press.\nDelegates attending the final\nbusiness session of the CPU, which\nmet in conference in Canberra\nearlier this month, also urged a\nco-ordinated effort to remove limitations on press freedom experienced in some British colonial territories.\nTO  PROTECT PRE88\nHugh Astor of The Times of\nLondon and Charles H. Peters of\nthe Montreal Gazette moved, the\nresolutions calling on. editors in\nthe free world'to join the CPU in\nan exchange of information enabling steps to be taken against i printing plant were left homeless,\nany threatened or actual encroachment 'of press freedom. i\nIn reply to greetings from the !\nInter-American Press Association,!\nthe conference decided to send a j\nmessage of congratulations to the\nIAPA on the work of that assort-\natlon for press freedom in the\nweslfrn hemisphere.\nFire Almost Wipes\nOut Small Town\nHAMIOT4, Man. (CP) \u2014 The\nmain street business section of this\ntown was almost wiped out when\nfire, backed by a strong sub-zero\nwind, destroyed six business establishments and left two families\nhomeless.\nNo one was injured in the blaze,\nbrought under control after two\nhours by volunteer firemen who\nhad been rushed in from nearby\nShoal Lake, Rivers and Kenton to\naid the Hamiota fire department.\nMayor E. P. Venables said damage\nmay run as high as $200,000.\n. Hamiota is a town of 600 persons about 40 miles northwest of\nBrandon.\nFIVE PERSON8 HOMELES8\nDestroyed by the blaze were a\nfuneral parlor, a meat market,\njewelry store, an electrical shop,\nand the offices and plant of the\nEcho Printing Co., which pub- j\nlishes a weekly newspaper. Five\npersons in two families living over\nthe Jasper Electrical Shop and the\nTo Charge For Visit\nTo Palace Staples\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The number of places where the tourist can\nget a free peep of royal activity\nhas been whittled down. Bucking- ,\nham Palace says a charge of ona\nshilling for adults and sixpence\nfor children will be levied after\nFeb. 1, 1956, on all visitors to tho\nRoyal Mews.\nGardiner Clarifies      _\nGrey Cup Question\nVERNON, B. C. (CP)\u2014Canada't\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner haa\nsettled the question of whether ha\ncame out to British ColumBia to\nattend the B. C. Federation of Agriculture annual meeting or to seef\nthe Grey Cup game. I\n\"I came out, not to see the game,\nbut to attend this meeting. 'But\nwhile I am out here,\" he told the\nfarmers' convention, \"I am also\ngoing to see the game, I hope.\"\nHave The Job Done Right\nWlC   GRAVEC\nLIMITED J\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St Phono 235\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono  327\n576 Baker Street\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   and   REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front 8t. Phone 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nClassified  Ads  Get  Results\nANCIENT REMINDER\nBURY ST. EDMUNDS, England\n(CP)\u2014There was a skeleton in Utf\ncupboard of a house in this Suffolk town. Workmen on a new\nhousing estate unearthed the remains of a sixth-century soldier.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makes  Excellent\nHome-Made   Bread.\nELLISON MILLING\n__. ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPHONE 238 i\nSPECIAL VALUES\nCUTEX HAND CREAM\n2 Jart \u2014 Reg. 98c, NOW 89o\nREVLON POLISH   REMOVER\n4 oz. bottle\u2014Reg. $1, NOW 49c\nH. H. AYER \"FORMULAYER\"\nReg. $2.50, NOW $1.25\nTU88Y \"ANTI-BLEMISH\" KIT\nReg. $3.00, NOW $2.76\nCity Drug\n23-PIECE\nELECTRIC TRAIN SET\nSet contains electrlo engine, tender, covereS car, open car,\ntank car, conductor's car, 8 curved, track,-8 straight track,\nplus the transformer. A 23-piece set that's ia OO\nhard to beat for price or value    I* .7 7\nSATURDAY\nFamily Shopping at The \"Bay\"\nSATURDAY NIGHT TILL'9 P.M.\nHOUR\nUp-to-Date\nWrecker Service\nTHIS SERVICE IS YOURS\nPHONE\n35\nThe  latost and\nmounted on\nmost  modern  towing  and  wrecker equipment\nmodorn heavy duty Chevrolet truck chassis. \u2014\nThis, assures  you  of  expert  service  whether  you requirt  a\nmlnoC tow Job-or a major power wrecker service.\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\n\/THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETELY EQUIPPED\n' GARAGE IN THE INTERIOR OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n_____\n_______________\n______\n'\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1955_11_25","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0429110","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":"1955-11-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1955-11-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}