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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":"  ;\u2014-\n-rr-\u2014\u2014 . ,.  j-\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 , \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 ,; -v.-.*:.\u25a0\nto\n[Defend Tachens\nAt All Costs\"\nEisenhower Considers Evacuation Aid;\nNationalists Claim 20 Red Ships Sunk\nTAIPEH, Formosa (AP)\u2014The Chinese Nationalist air\nI force blasted Red gunboats and motorized junks along the\n.China coast Friday- by way of1 backing up present official\nintent to defend the Tachens despite the fall of nearby\nYikiangshan.\n\"So far we have\/no plan to evac-\n1 uate any  of our  island  outposts,\"\n!' said a defence ministry spokesman\nafter the Nationalists admitted the\ninvading Reds had wiped out the\nlast resistance on Yikiangshan.\n\"All of them will be defended at\nall costs.\"\nReports from Washington said\nPresident Eisenhower was considering asking Congress for special\ni authority to use U. S. naval and air\npower to help evacuate some 20,000\nNationalist troops, if need be, from\nthe Tachens, 200 miles north of For-\n; mosa.\nFallen Yikiangshan is eight miles\n| north of the Tachens.\nNationalist air force headquart-\n| ers said waves of fighter-bombers\n' Friday sank more than 20 Red\nI ships, most of them motorized junks\n.\u25a0such   as   those   which  helped  put\nashore more than 5000 Red invad\ners of Yikiangshan.\n80 JUNKS ATTACKED\nThe Nationalists claimed more\nthan 80 of the junks were attacked\nnear Wenchow bay about 70 miles\nsouthwest of the Tachens and more\nthan 20 were destroyed.\n,The air force said three 250-ton\nRed gunboats were sunk near Nan-\njih island across the strait from\nFormosa.\nPeiping radio quoted the captain\nof the British freighter Edendale,\nsunk Tuesday in a Nationalist air\nraid on Swatow, as saying Nationalist raiders flew as low as 200 feet\nand kept up the attack until certain the ship went down. Another\nPeiping broadcast said Nationalist\nplanes killed more than 120 persons\nin a raid Thursday on Foochow\n130 miles northwest of northern\nFormosa.\n! Costa Rica Rebellion\nSaid All But Over\nBy CARLOS ESCUDERO\nSAN JOSE, Costa Rica  (AP) \u2014\n1 The Costa Rican command announc-\nIed Friday the capture of the last\ntwo rebel bases in the north-west\ntip of the country and said the leader of the rebellion, former president Rafael Calderon Guardia, may\nbe trapped.\nThe government also announced\ncapture of a \"very important person\" \u2014 leading to rumors that the\nVIP was Capt. Teodoro PIcado Jr.,\nson of another, exiled ex-president\nand second in the rebel high command.'\nThe general staff said a  flanking column under Col. Frank Mar-\nShall, a Costa Rican fighter of German descent, had closed a trap on'li-.ht\nremaining rebels by capturing their said.\nstronghold of La Cruz, hard by the\nNicaraguan frontier, and the nearby\nPacific harbor town of Puerto So-\nley.\nThe feeling at headquarters was\nthat the rebellion wai over.\nProvincial]\nLIBRARY\n_. \u2014 ________________________\n(yf\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: A lew clouds; a little- .\ncolder;* winds light. Low and high\nat   Cranbrook.   5   below   and   20;\nCrescent Valley; 5 above and 25.\nOutlook for Sunday: snowflurries. ..\nVol. 53\n.?<*\nTAX PLAN\nUNITY THREAT\nCo I dwell Says\nFederal Tax Should\nApply Equally\n' OTTAWA (CP) - The federal\ngovernment's tax-reduction plan for\nQuebec will be \"a serious blow to\nnational unity,\" CCF leader Cold-\nwell said'Friday night.\nHe said a departure from the\nprinciple, that federal income tax\nshould apply equally to all Canadians is \"dangerous to national\nunity.\"\n\"Just as soon as this is done in\none province, it is entirely possible\nthat for some reason it may be\ndone in another,\" Mr. Coldwell said\nin a speech on the CBC's political\nfree-time series.\nHis statements were contained in\nthe text of a speech issued to the\npress before delivery.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent announced Monday the federal government has decided on a two-year,\n10-per-cent personal income tax cut\nfor Quebec, which now has a pro\nvincial income tax and has no tax\nagreement with Ottawa. Tbe arrangement will be available to all\nother provinces if they want to impose an income tax as an alternative to existing tax rental agree'\nments.\n;<?>\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1955\nNo. 229\nB, C. Was Host to\nMillion Tourists\nOLYMPIC 8KATER Barbara Ann Scott (left) gives her French\npoodle \"Pierre\" a lesson In etiquette In her dressing-room as Gundl\nBusch, West German champion Ice star, looks on. The lesson\nseemed appropriate. Although not on the program, Pierre starred\nduring Miss Scott's number In the first scene 'as the 1966 Hollywood Ice revue opened at Madison Square Garden, New York.\nUnheralded, he walked rfcross the Ice,-shook himself and stared\nquizzically at the audience, to the general delight.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Nearly 1,000,000\ntourists poured across B. C.'s borders  by  automobiles  during   1954,\nGovernment   troops   were   re-ja   slight   drop  from   1953  figures,\nported mopping up small pockets! trade minister Ralph Chetwynd re-\nof rebels caught In the pincers.    I ported   Friday,\nOther groups were reported fleeing over the Nicaraguan frontier\nwhere they faced internment under\nan agreement negotiated by the\nOrganization of American States,\nthe peace-making organization of\nthe 21 American republics,\nLa Cruz and Puerto Soley were\noccupied   late    Thursday   against\nresistance,   the   government\n[Strijdom Would Curb Court\nPowers Over Parliament\nBy ARTHUR GAVSHON\nCAPETOWN (AP)\u2014Prime Minister Johannes Strijdoms government embarked Friday on a new\nCampaign to curb the authority of\nSouth Africa's courts over Parliament and trim the voting rights of\n60,000 colored (mixed blood) voters\nin Cape Province.\n'The gbvilmrtent'lprogram \u2014 iri-\nfcluding proposals for even tighter\nI New Licence Plates\nUnappreciated\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Directors\nIof the Vancouver Tourist Association are convinced the provincial\ngovernment has fumbled one.\nObject of their scorn is the 1955\nI. C. licence plate which replaces\n[steel tabs issued for several years.\n\u25a0The 1955 plate is an indeterminate\n\u25a0yellow, according to some members,\npacking symbol or slogan.\nR. Rowe Holland said, \"If they\nfcave to be yellow, why choose this\n\u25a0particular shade?\" He said it makes\nla man \"ashamed to put them on his\n|bar.\"\nDirectors felt the word \"wonderful\" in front of B. C. would have\nracial segregation, controls \u2014 was\ndisclosed in a speech from the\nthrone read by Governor-General\nE. G. Jansen when he opened the\nthird session of the union's 11th\nParliament. v |\nThe Nationalist parity, which Stri-1\njdom leads, has been trying for more\nthan two years to. cut the voting\nrights of the coloreds. The Nationalists have proposed the coloreds\nbe limited to sending four representatives to Parliament. Their vote\nno waffects eight seats.\nnow affects eight seats,\nthis can be accomplished constitutionally only with a two-thirds majority of the Senate and House sitting jointly\u2014a majority which Stri-\njdom's Nationalists lack.\nAt December 31, a total of 278,-\n376 traveller's vehicle permits were\nissued to long-stay U. S. visitors\nat border points, a drop of one-\npoint-nine from 1953's record-breaking 283,846 permits.\nEstimated 3.5 persons per car, the\ntotal represents an influx of almost 1,000,000 persons. This does\nnot include arrivals by bus, train,\n^ship; or plane; Jf\nThe drop was attributed to \"generally uninviting summer weather\nconditions.\"\n\"We must do our utmost in the\ncoming year,\" said Mr. Chetwynd,\n\"to increase the number of tourist\nattractions in our province which\nwill draw visitors to enjoy B. C.'s\nhospitality.\"\nFour CCFers to Vote\nAgainst Ratification\nConvicts Free Guards;\nSurrender All Weapons\nMarriage Rate Down\n'flEW YORK (AP) - The marriage rate in the United States last\nyeardropped off to the lowest point\nin 20 years, the Metropolitan Life\nInsurance Co. reports. Its statisticians figured the rate for 1954 at I\n9.1 per 1,000 population. The record\nhigh was 16.2 per 1,000 in 1946. The\nnumber of marriages during 1954\nfceen some consolation\u2014and a boost j was estimated at about 1,484,000, or\n|f.or the province. | sohie 60,000 fewer than in 1953.\nWoman Runs for\nUnion Presidency\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 A 29-year-\nold woman has set a precedent by\naccepting nomination to run for the\npresidency of the Montreal Labor.\nCouncil (CIO-CCL).\nHuguette Plamondon, who said\nin an interview she feels more at\nhorhe in turbulent male labor circles\nthan at women's tea parties, will\nbe the first woman to seek the\ncouncil's presidency. She was nominated at a council meeting Thursday night\nHer opponent in the Feb. 8 election is 32-year-old Charles Devlin.\nSince joining the labor movement in 1945, Miss Plamondon has\nserved as secretary for the United\nPackinghouse Workers of America\nand as the union's international\nrepresentative in Quebec and the\nMaritimes.\nNo Freight Rate\nHike on Grain\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The heads of\nCanada's two top labor bodies, representing about 1,000,000 workers,\nhave agreed not to press for any\nincrease in freight rates on export\ngrain moving through the West.\nThe' Canadian Farmer-Labor Economic Council, a farm-labor coordinating body, said agreement by\nlabor not to oppose the existing\nlow Crow's Nest Pass rates was\nreached at a meeting Friday.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A Quebec Pro-]\ngressiye Conservative Friday suggested that Canada is \"getting too\nbig for its breeches\" in world affairs.\nLeon Balcer, Trois-Rivieres, asked whether the government is letting itself be carriedi Sway by its\nideas of grandeur and whether this\nmight lead Jhe country._iij$q economy\u2014draining- reifc_m._dbl]it_fl_.^'':'- ^\nHe was one. of several speakers\nin the continuing Commons debate\non ratification of the Paris agreements for entry of a rearmed West\nGermany into the North Atlantic\nTreaty Organization.\nThe agreements still must be approved byf some NATO members-\nincluding Canada\u2014and West Germany before German admittance to\nthe alliance. A vote, originally expected Friday, now is not likely\nbefore next week.\nFour CCF members have said\nthey will vote against ratification.\nThey are Stanley Knowles, Winnipeg North Centre, who spoke\nThursday night; Joseph W. Noseworthy, York South; R. R. Knight,\n'Saskatoon, and H. W. Herrldge,\nKootenay West. Another member\nof the party, Alistair 8tewart,\nWinnipeg North, said he will ab\nstain.\nMUST  BE STRONG\nThe main point advanced by those\nfavoring ratification, including\nHealth Minister Martin, was that\nthe stronger the West is the better\nable it will be to bargain with the\nEast.\nMr. Martin said the Labor-Pro^\ngressive (Communist) party had issued detailed instructions to mem\nbers on how to organize a campaign\nagainst ratification. He read a num.\nber of instructions from what he\nsaid was the party's private directive to its members.\nAll Liberal, Progressive Conservative and Social Credit members\nwho entered the debate supported\nratification.\nMr. Balcer said he favors German rearmament as an additional\nguarantee of anti-Communist\nstrength but believes the government- is foisting an international\nrole on Canada which may be too\nbig for the country's resources.\nH.   W.  Herridge   (CCF-Kootenay\nWest), the fourth CCF member to J\noppose ratification, said he fears'\nWest German rearmament and that\ngiving the Germans weapons will\nincrease the danger of war. No military advantage would be gained\nbecause the Russians would simply\nincrease their armed forces.\nYOUTHSIfe\nStANb TRIAL\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) -\nA 19-year-old youth accused of\nholding a knife to the throat of a\nhouseholder in an attempt to get\nwhisky, was committed for trial on\ntwo charges of possessing an offensive weapon.\nWitnesses said James John Mcpherson brandished a knife to steal\nbeer, personal possessions and a\nradio from the home of M. L. Reser.\nA 17-year-old youth faces an\narmed robbery charge, and a third\nperson will appear on unspecified\ncharges in connection with the incident. Police say a gang of youths\nforced their way into two homes\nDec. 30.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllll\nNelson Has a\nFriend at Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A police\nmagistrate has refused to play\nwhat he called \"a dirty trick\" on\nthe city of Nelson.\n\u25a0Harry  Joyce  pleaded   guilty\nThursday before Magistrate\nThomas Dohm to a shoplifting\ncharge. He said he had a ticket\nfor   Nelson   and   asked   for   a    ,\n\"floater\"   sentence   so   that  he    !\ncould go to the Kootenay city.\nAfter being told that Joyce\nhad a lengthy record of similar   j\noffences. Magistrate Dohm said:    '\n\"That would be a dirty trick\nto play on Nelson. Two months.\"\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII\nSAYS ESKIMOS\nSHOULD BE ABLE\nTO BUY LIQUOR\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A 69-year-old\nveteran of the North Friday questioned the legal right of the federal government to forbid sale of\nliquor to Canada's 7,000 Eskimos\nin the Northwest Territories and\nurged that the restriction be removed.\nFrank Carmichael of Aklavik, an\nelected member of the N. W. T.\ncouncil who has trapped in the Territories for 35 years, said council\nshould make Eskimos eligible to\nbuy liquor. If that were done, he\nindicated, the federal government\nthen might be forced to give the\nNorth's 4,000 Indians similar privileges.\nHe agreed with other council\nmembers that Indians' and Eskimos\nshould be treated alike. But he said\nEskimos shouldn't be denied liquor\nprivileges simply because federal\nauthorities refused to relax restriction- against Jndiani.' \u25a0\n' The\" five apjJbiilfeU 'and. tout elected members of the council split\non the question of sale of liquor to\nIndians in the Territories.\nNone Hurt in 3V2-Day Siege; \"Some\nHope for Fiiture\" Sought by Prisoners\nBOSTON (AP)\u2014Four long-term convicts, who held\nfive guards hostage in Massachusetts state prison for 3.-_\u00bb\ndays in a desperate bid for freedom, surrendered meekly\nFriday to a seven-man civilian committee.\nThe committee, through its spokesman, \u2022 Erwin D.\nCanham, editor of The Christian Science Monitor, said no\n\"bargain or deal\" was made. (\nThe convicts were promised\nonly that everything will be done\nto work with state officials \"to\nget something so that these convicts would have some hope for\nthe future.\"\nThe four, who had offered to\ntrade the lives of th'eir hostages\nfor a getaway car and a clear path\nto freedom, gave up their pistols\n(PA Trans-Arctic\nService Approved\nOTTAWA (CT>) - Federal gov\nernment has approved 'an application of Canadian Pacific Airlines to\noperate a trans-Arctic service between Vancouver and Amsterdam,\nTransport Minister Marler announced Friday.\nThe minister said the formalities\npreceding start of the service should\nbe cleared away in time to let CPA\nstart operating by spring.\nThe proposed route, cutting into\nterritory north of the Arctic circle,\nwould reduce by about 1000 miles\nthe regular flying distance between\nVancouver and the European continent.\nGranting of the application will\nmake CPA the first Canadian opera\ntor over the great circle route\nacross the top of the globe,  .\nFound Guilty of\nManslaughter\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Tage Rud-\nford, 31, of Vancouver, was found\nguilty of manslaughter Friday by a\nSupreme Court jury here in the\ntraffic death of Alois Almeder, 82,\nlast Oct. 11. He was remanded for\nsentence.\nThe crown said Rudford's car,\nproceeding without lights, struck\nthe pedestrian, hurled him Into the\nair, sideswiped another auto and\ncontinued on.\nFlour Mill Workers\nShare the Wealth\nPORT COLBORNE, Ont. (CP)\u2014\nA million-dollar trust fund accum-\nmulated in two years for the benefit of company employees and their\nfamilies in pensions and profit\nshares was announced to employees\nof Robin Hood Flour Mills Hunv\nberstone mill at the annual Robin\nHood family party JFriday.\nThe figure was supplied, as ttoe\nthird year of the profit-sharing plan\nopened, by Allan Kennedy, secretary of the administrative committee of the fund. It covers the 2200\nparticipating employees of Robin\nHood and the parent firm, International Milling Co., in 23 mills\nacross Canada and the United\nStates.\n8LIM*-tfCK!NG8 *   *r \"^\nVANCOUVER (CP)-^The pickings\nwere small for holdup bandits here\nFriday night.\nOne man, believed to be oarrying\n\u25a0a toy pistol, robbed one West End\nstore of $6 and a1 pair of robbers\nescaped with $11 in a raid on a\nsuburban grocery.\nand knives and released the guards\nand six other prisoners who wer,e\nheld against their wishes in the\nsolitary cell block of the antiquated \u25a0\n150-year-old prison. None was\nharmed.\nThe men are Theodore (Teddy)\nGreen, bank robber and jail breaker; Walter Balben, robber-gunman;\nrapist Joseph Flaherty, and cop\nkiller Fritz Swenson.\nGreen  had  warned   during  the\nsiege   that for  ''every  shot fired\nat us, a guard dies.\"\nDEMANDED CAR\nThe, first day. Green demanded\nan automobile be sent to the prison\nsb that the four could escape. The\ndemand was ignored.\nThe hostages were served hot\nmeals daily with the acquiescence\nof their captors. The prisoners\nthemselves had a limited amount\nof food in the solitary cell block\nkitchen. But *as the hours wore on\nthe futility of escape hopes obviously became more apparent.\nThe siege ended just short of 82\nhours. The record for a prison uprising of this nature\u2014100, hours-\nwas set in 1952 at Jackson, Mich.\nThe outburst started early Tues*\nday when the four convicts sawed\ntheir way out of their' cells and\nseized the guards after failing to\nescape with the aid of a makeshift\nladder,\nThe rebels made things quite\ncomfortable for the committee during ' the '-iegollaiioiigr Canham f^ld\nwhen the committee members arrived at the cell block where the\nconvicts were holed, .\"We found a\nmost amazing scene\u201411 chairs in\na neat circle with a table in the\ncentre and a pad and pencils-\nfacilities for a well-organized conference.\"\n\"Peaceful Co-Exisfence\" May Be\nTheme of Prime Ministers Meet\nFisherman Rescued\nFrom Ice Floe\nSUTTON, Ont. (CP) - Between\n35 and 50 ice fishermen were rescued Friday after a 30-foot-wide\ncrack opened in Lake Simcoe ice\nand left them stranded on a huge\nfloe.'\nBoats were used by rescuers.\nSome of the trapped men managed\nto reach safety over plank bridges.\nThree automobiles were abandoned on the ice.\nThree Quints Die\nTRIVANDRUM, India (Reuters)\n\u2014Three of the quintuplets born to\n30-year-old villager here Wednesday have died.\nThe three were girls. The surviving two are a girl and a boy,\nwho is underdeveloped.\nThe quints, born at Avitam Thi-\nrunal Hospital, weighed less than\n%Vz pounds each.\nRelatives May Visit U. S.\nFlyers Held in Red Prison\nIF THE FACE of Leading Seaman C, Hamer of. Dartmouth,\nN.S., looks a little comical at the moment, no comedy is Intended.\nSeaman Hamer has Just bobbed up from the depths during a submarine escape test In the water tower at HMS Dolphin In Ports-\nmouth, England. He is one of the Canadian naval personnel taking\no course here In the escape technique. Tha man at left Is an Instructor.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 The state\ndepartment indicated Friday\u2014without definitely' saying so\u2014that the\nU.S. government will not stand in\nthe way of any Americans who want\nto visit relatives held in Communist Chinese prisons.\nA department spokesman, press\nofficer Henry Suydam, said, however, the government could not encourage the visits. He denounced\nthe Reds for thrusting a \"harrowing dilemma\" upon American families, who apparently must decide\nfor themselves whether to risk the\nlong trip behind the Iron Curtain.\nThe Red invitation, which also\nwas announced by the United Na<\ntions in New York, was extended to\nrelatives of 17 Americans captured\nduring the Korean war, including\n11 U.S. airmen recently sentenced\nto long prison terms as spies.\nThe parents of at \"least one American airman and the wife of another announced they would accept\nthe offer, but most of the other relatives interviewed held back for\none reason or another.\n\"An appallingly callous propaganda gesture\" was the way Senator Charles Potter (Rep.-Mich.) described it. Other senators expressed\nsimilar views.\nThe United Nations looked more\nfavorably on the offer, which it said\nresulted from the recent trip to\nPeiping of Secretary-General' Dag\nHamrnarskjold. Hamrnarskjold went\nthere seeking release of the Amer\nican prisoners.\nA   UN   spokesman   said   Ham\nmarskjold  \"has no  doubt about\nthe safety of those members of\nthe families wishing to visit China\nto see their men.\"\nThe Peiping announcement apparently was timed by prearrangement\nwith UN headquarters in New York\nThe defence department sent \"out1\nnotices  to  the  relatives Thursday\nnight, in time to reach them before\nthe announcement was made at 9:30\na.m. EST.\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar was unchanged at a premium of 3 17-32 per cent in terms of\nU.S. funds Friday. Pound sterling\ndown 1-32 of a cent at $2.87%.\nRICARDO ARIA8 ESPINOSA\nhas taken over the reins of government of Panama, His first act\nwbb to announce that Jose Ramon\nGuizado had been placed In \"protective custody.\" Guizado, deposed after 12 days as president,\nIs aocuBed of' complicity in the\nassassination of his predecessor,\nJose Remon.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Commonwealth\nleaders meet in London starting\nJan. 31, and it looks as though the\nvisiting statesmen are in for \"a busy\ntime.\nThe occasion is the sixth post-war\nconference of Commonwealth prime\nministers, the first full-dress gathering of its kind since December,\n1952. The leaders also met in Coronation month, 1953, but it was not\nconsidered a full meeting.\nThe ministers will discuss \"almost everything under the sun,\" a\ngovernment spokesman said Friday.\nThe opening meeting will be presided over by Prime Minister\nChurchill in his cabinet room at 10\nDowning Street.\nThe conference will be perhaps\nthe most important Commonwealth\ngathering since.the war, with emphasis on co-existence.between the\nCommunist and non- Communist\nworlds.\nPossibly the key figure will be\nPrime Minister Nehru, who has recently visited China and will go to\nRussia after the Commonwealth\ntalks. Nehru, leading a neutralist-\naligned India, is perhaps the leading exponent outside the Communist camp of what is known here as\nthe \"Asian view\" of world politics,\na. summing up often art variance\nwith Western attitudes.\nAmong the premiers, Nehru win\nprobably find a sympathetic listener in Prime Minister St. Laurent\nof Canada, who in past conferences\nhas stressed the importance of\nbuilding a bridge of understanding\nbetween East and West.\nAnd in This Corner...\nCALGARY (CP)~Officials of tha Calgary fire department think\nMrs, Daniel Warwick has everything It takes to be a fireman\t\n' When fire broke out Friday In the basement of her home she:\nprepared her four yourtg children for Immediate departure; called\nthe fire department; then fought the fire herself.\nThe fire was out when the department arrived and there was\nno damage.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A woman accused of hitting a cab driver with\nher shoe during an argument at her home over payment of a farev\nwas convicted  Friday  of common assault.\n, \"It seems that now we have to protect men out at night against\nwomen,\" Magistrate T. S. Elmore remarked as he gave Mrs. Janet\nDineen, 38, a suspended sentence. \u25a0\nLONDON (AP)-Clty of London councllmen meeting an ancient\nGuildhall ruled Friday that It is all right to smoke sausages In a\nsmokeless zone. \/\nA meat dealer had applied for a licence to alter a building In\nLovat Lane for the preparation and smoking of sausages. Councilman\nA. A. Instone protested the building was In an area being declared\na smokeless zont and suggested the city should have smokeless\nsausages.\nHis objection was overridden.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Taxi driver Ed Laffey, who got a bottle of\nliquor for a pretty girl, lost his taxi licence Thursday for three\nmonths. v\nThe girl was policewoman Ruth Neat.\nMayor Nathan Phillips told the police commission he objected to\nthe low tactics used in getting the conviction.\n\"The driver was just trying to be a nice guy.\" said the mayor\n\"If he did wrong the police inveigled him into it. They put a g\u00ab\u00ab^-\nlooking girl on his track \"\nHAMILTON, (CP)\u2014During the last year, five-year-old Gay Cct-\ntlngham of Hamilton has swallowed: three buttons, three dimes,\nthree safety pins, one thimble and one bullet. The bullet was removed\nIn an emergency operation the other day. Her distraught mother\ncommented:  \"She'll  swallow  anything.   I  don't know  what to  do.\"\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Sentimental is the word for thieves who staged\na $1500 robbery Thursday night at a drugstore in suburban Swansea.\nIn gathering up their loot, they took care to include valentines for\ntheir girl friends.\n\u25a0 -f \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 : \u25a0 : ____________i.jtl^y.:.. -\u25a0\n-\u2022'\u25a0y:ii \u2022, j-Yi^tiiifltiri\n\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\"-'-\u2022^\u25a0\u25a0jijil\n *\u2014\u2014\u2014. ,\u2014, . ,\u2014__\ni-'^mm\n,,., j\n\u2014\"\"p*\n^--NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22,1955\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Complete Shows 2:00-7:00-9:15\n&M Ova\nTAYLOR\"\t\nHut   .\nFERRER\nm\nCinemascope\nWWl* wrr_oCTni_ui.ou_n_\n\u2022\u25a0SB1*\nROUlDTULE'\nr\n\u2022HER\n75\u00abJ, 90(_, 25<\nExtra: \"MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR\" in Clnomascopo\nA MOTION PiaURE EVENT OF THE\nFIRST MAGNITUDE!\nRITA     ,   STEWART\nHAWOFWRANGER\nSALOME\nSTARTS\nMUSICLAND\nTHEATRE\nKA8LO, B.C.\nLAST  TIME  TONIGHT\nShow Starts 8:00 p.m.\n\"IVAN HOE\"\nIn Technicolor\nRobert Taylor \u2022 Iflzabeth Taylor\nPlu. COLORED CARTOON\nand 8HORT8\n75-80 Per Cent\nWater Bills Paid;\nNo Borrowing\nFrom 75 to 80 per cent et Nelson\nhouseholders have paid their water\nbills. The money from that account\nwill make It possible for the city\nto operate without borrowing until\ntax returns are in.\nCity hall cashier experienced a\nrush as householders lined up to\npay their bills while the 20 per cent\ndiscount was still obtainable.\nThere are 1800 householders In\nthe city. Bills of $27 were reduced\nto $21,60 by the discount.\nCALGARY- (CP) - Rest, adequate diet and early treatment are\nthree of the chief weapons being\nused .in the fight against arthritis,\nDr. Ovid O. Meyer told medical\nmen Friday at a one-day symposium. Dr. Meyer, a member of the\nmedical faculty at the University\nof Wisconsin, said the \"miracle drugs\nare got very helpful in treatment\nof the common types of arthritis.\"\nA   TREAT   FOR   YOU\nAND   YOUR   FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St.        Nelson\nLarge Attendance\nAt Funeral of\nD. A. Aurelio\nFuneral services tor Domenlco\nAntonio Aurelio were held Friday\nfrom the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate. A large attendance paid\ntheir last respects.\nRev. Father F. Monaghan officiated with the .pallbearers being\nL. Santor, J. __ Keegan, C. Arcura,\nA. Arcura, L. Freno and P. Defoe.\nThe rosary was recited In Thompson Funeral Home.\nInterment' was In the Roman\nCatholic plot, Nelson Memorial\nPark. Funeral honors were performed at the graveside, by officers\nof the Fraternal Order of Eagles,\nwho were in attendance.\nLions Gate Bridge\nCosts $5.9 Million\nVICTORIA (CP) - Lions Gate\nbridge, the longest suspension\nbridge In the British Empire \u2014'a\ntotal length of. 2778 feet\u2014has been\npurchased by .the British\" Columbia\ngovernment.\nPremier Bennett announced the\npurchase Friday. The price was $5,-\n959.060.\nThe big bridge spanning Burrard\ninlet -a_> the entrance to Vancouver\nharbor, was bought from the First\nNarrows Bridge Co., controlled by\nthe Gulness Interests of London,\nEngland.\nLose Low-Rent Homes\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Eviction\nnotices served this week mean the\nend of an easy-rent era for 12 homeowners in Suburban Burnaby here.\nThe houses, known as Barnet village, are on an unsubdivided block\nof land zoned for heavy industry.\nAlthough some of the better ones\nwill be moved, most will be demolished. Occupants have paid from $8\nto $20 in rent, the lowest on the\nlower mainland.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Tenders for\nconstruction of an $830,000 fisher*\nmen's wharf on False creek will\nbe called as soon as present designs are revised, it was reported\nhere Friday.\nApproval of the project, now\nplanned for 150 seine boats instead\nof the original 180, was given by\nPublic Works Minister Winters.\nSurviving Triplet\nFlown to Vancouver\n.    Hospital Staff Rigs Makeshift\nIncubator When Plane Can't Land\nOne of three triplets, believed\nthe first born at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, has been flown\nto Vancouver for special care. She\nwas reported in fair condition Friday night. The other two, o boy\nand girl, succumbed.\nIngenuity of a Nelson doctor and\nhospital staff played a large part\nin transporting the third child, a\ngirl, safely to the plane at Castlegar airport for the flight to Vancouver.\nTha triplets were born to Mr. and\nMrs. Carl Strohm, prematurely at\nnoon Thursday, Each weighed\nabout 2V_ pounds.\nA boy died shortly after birth,\na girl Friday.\nWhen a nurse with a portable\nincubator had to fly on to Cran\nbrook baoause Ralph West airport\nat Castlegar wai fog bound Friday\nmorning, Dr. G. ft, Barrett and hospital workera put together a makeshift Incubator including a heater\nand oxygen apparatus for the car\ntrip to the airport. Here the girl\nwaa transferred to tho portable Irv\ncubator which the - nurie had\nbrought back from Cranbrook on\nthe west-bound flight.\n'Arrangements for the flight v. ore\nmade by the Public Health Department. Mrs. Ernest Welsh accompanied the tot to St, Paul's.Hospital\nwhere there is a special prematura\nnursery.\nThe parents live in Upper Nelson,\nMr. Strohm ls employed at the city\ngarage. <\n' The mother was reported Friday\nnight to be doing well.\nSchool Absentees Increase to 702 . . .\nParents Urged to Keep Children\nHome From All Public Gatherings .\nOtcUn,\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nORUMHELIER DEEP SEAM\nfor Real COMFORT end SATISFACTION\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER Fuel & Transfer\nCOAL\nNew Evening Classes\nl at\nNOTRE DAME COLLEGE\n\"PERSONALITY   AND   MENTAL   HEALTH\"\n' Normalcy, problems, conflict, emotional control,\nmental ah'sorder.\nDR ROYCE \u2014 MONDAY, THURSDAY \u2014 8:2B P.M.\n\"RESTORATION   PERIOD  LITERATURE\"\nDryden, Addison, Steele, Swift, Pope, and others.\nMR. BROWN \u2014 MONDAY, THURSDAY \u2014 7 P.M.\n' SPRING  SEMESTER\nJAN., 31 TO MAY 26\nWith or without college credit. Register at first class.\nTuition $19.50 per course.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nThe following are the draws of\nthe Nelson Curling Club up to Wednesday when a new event, the Col-\nllnson Cup, will be drawn:\nMonday, 7 p.m.\u2014A. S. Horswlll\nvs H. Moore, E. Mason vs J. Teague,\nD. Cathcart vs W. Waft, J. Campbell\nvs W. Marr.\n9 p.m.\u2014H. Hinitt vs L. J. Maurer,\nH. Chandler va J. Hlngwing, A-\nRonmark vs H. Farenholt-, T. A.\nWallace vs G. Moir.\nTuesday, 7 p.m.\u2014M. B. Ryalls vs\nD. M. Sample, R. Palmer vs J. Harvey, J. Milne vs J. Leeming. A.\nWaters vs R. Carmichael, H. Bush,\nvs W. Young.\n9 p.m.\u2014R. D. Wallace vs L. McEachern, W. Kline va E. Ramsbottom, H. Horton vs W. Tozer, A. Barrett vs W. Burdenle, J. Thorn vs\nD. Meakins.\nWednesday, 7 p.m.\u2014J. E. Young\nvs spare, W. Gold vs A. B. Gilker,\nT. H. Bourque va L. G. Peerless.\nFollowing is the personnel of\nrinks for the Collinson Cup competition:\nH. Bush, E. L. Vance, N. Sardich,\nG. Olson.\nJ. E. Young, L. Long, John Milne,\nW. H. Burns.\nA. S. Horswlll, R. Hickey. G. K.\nBurns, E. Owen.\nH. B. Horton, R. Leeming, G.\nDahlstrom, \u00a5,. Cooper.\nW. Young,'R. Torman, W. Kitto.\nE. Wallbank.\nJ. Campbell, N. Lutkiwich. R.\nRiddell, H- McCardle.\nJ. Milne, V. JCilleen, A. Arcure,\nG. Sutherland.\nD. Cathcart, D. Porteous, M. Wiig,\nD. Winlaw.\nL. Peerless, G. Kalway, M. Gee,\nJ. Wallach.\nE. Mason, R. F. Wallace, W. Stern,\nA. D. Schneider.\nD. Meakins, R. M. Edwards, A. H.\nSinclair, B. Wigg.\nW. Gold, J. Sutherland, T. Hall-\nbauer, W. Wicken.\nW. Marr, A. Reid, M. Buerge, W.\nShukin.\nM. Sample, H. Ronmark, F.\nGraves, M. VanSacker.\nW. Tozer, N. Jennejohn, G. Saun-\nby, A. K. MacAdams.\nR. Palmer, J. A. Dennison. J. R.\nTaylor, H. Lange.\nH. Hinitt, R. Boates, F. Ozey.\nL. Buccl.\nE. Ramsbottom, T. Romano, G.\nBarefoot. F. Scott.\nR. D. Wallace, J. R. Bailey, Jack\nStrachan, Ozey, Jr.\nM. Ryalls, V. Davies, L. Maglio,\nH. E. Dow.\nG. Moir, S. Rogers, D. Elder, Cliff\nClark.\nL. J. Maurer, R. Nash, W. H. Riley,\nD. Coen.\nA. Ronmark, R. Denlson, Jim\nRogers, G.s Belyk.\nR. Carfnichael, J. Maber, A. Fer-\nvJbrn, G. Grant.\nA. Barrett, S. Jefferys, J. Melville,\nF. Fllleul.\nJ. Leeming, G. Clark, I. Hendrick-\neon, J. E. Bradley.\nJ. Harvey, A. C. VanSacker, L.\nWhitelock, J. McAffee.\nW. Kline, R. Bruce, W. Tickner,\nE. W. White.\nT. A. Wallace, J. R. Sinclair, N.\nCollett, T. Fox;\nJ. S. Thorn, A. Dayman, A. Ther-\nrien, T. Thompson.\nA. Waters, W. Triggs, A, Euerby,\nThe number of students absent\nfrom,Nelson public schools owing\nto the Influenza epidemic Friday\n'rose from 538 to 702.\nHealth authorities have recommended that parents keep children\nhome from all public gatherings\nskating, moving pictures, dances\nand 'parties.\nCertainly, they said,, all sick chll\ndren should be kept home from\nschool.\n\"It is\" not necessary to close our\nschools,\" Dr. H. T. Lowe, director\nof the Selkirk Health Unit said\n\"Teachers are excluding all sick\nchildren, and parents are urgently\nrequested not to send sick children\nto school so that the disease will not\nspread.\"\nChest Aids Relief\nWorkrtye Patient;\nReady Statement\nThe Nelson District Community\nCheat at Its regular monthly matting In the Chamber of Commerce\nrooms took otops to prepare for Its\nflrat financial statement and Information data' to be presented at the\nannual meetlnf In March.,\nAccording to the constitution of\nthe Chest all member agencies will\nbe asked to submit a statement of\ntheir operations for the past year\nand to present a budget tor the\nforthcoming year.\nTwo requests for'assistance were\nreceived. The Welfare Committee\nbl the Nelson Ministerial Association requested and was granted a\nfurther sum of ilOO tb help them\ncarry out their transient relief work.\nThe. .previous grant was accounted\nfor by the association in their request. Assistance In paying for\nnursing help for a patient who required an operation on the eyes was\ngiven as the result of a request from\nthe local branch of the Canadian\nInstitute for the Blind. A grant of\n$50, chargeable against the 19S5\nbudget of the institute was granted.\n8URVI.VORQ  GIG|1TED\nHONOLULU (AP)\u2014Seven survivors of a twin-engined navy amphibian forced down Wednesday\nnight in the central Pacific have\nbeen' sighted on a raft, a coa.t guard\nplane radioed Friday.\n10 Properties to Disappear When\nSouth Approach to Bridge Is Built\nThe assessed value of land and The City's property ls a small street all that portion of D.D. 303, refer'\n-\nimprovements in the South side\nof 800 and 900 blocks of Nelson\nAvenue,, which has been gazetted\nby the B.C, government as a proposed public road area for the West\nArm bridge, approximates $.0,000.\nMarket 'value of the bouses, one\nstore and property, however, has\nbeen estimated as close to $100,000\nThe area has been defined, as\nconsisting of lots one to 12 In block\n46, and lots one to eight in block 47\nThere are 10 property owners. Involved. None contacted frlday by\nThe Dally News have received official notification from the; government of any Impending transactions.   \u2022\nThe owners are J. W. filngrose.\n802 Nelson Avenue; Louis Colettl,\n338 Baker Street; Terence Douglas\nRosling and Doris Mildred Rosling,\n505 Davies Street; Margaret Bell.\n816 Nelson Avenue; John Campbell.\n904 Nelson Avenue; Carl Recardo\nLocatelli, 908 Nelson Avenue; Kate\nClerihew, R.R. No. 1, Nelson; Mike\nand Doris Hadekln. 914 Nelson Avenue; Mildred Emllie Williamson,\n1451 Second Avenue, Trail, and the\nCity of Nelson.\nMr. Rlngrose, who owns three\nlots, Is proprietor of the Avenue\nService Station, a store built In\n1930.\nSeven lots belong to Mr. Colettl.\nRed Crtiss, Community Chest Views\nGiven in Post-Debate Statements\nJamboree Fund\n\"Progressing\"\nAlthough an actual check of funds\ncoming In for the senior hockey\nclub drive has yet to be made, E.\nA. Mann, president, said Friday the\ncampaign was \"progressing.1'\nThe fund is believed over the\n$3000 mark. Since the jamboree\nmany donations, from a few dollars\nto $25, have been received by the\nexecutive.\nJimmy Boates, chairman of the\nticket sales for the Booster Club,\nreported close to $1300 has been received- from fans paying for their\nlast three contract tickets a 'Second\ntime. They originally paid for them\nat the beginning of the season.\nIt's estimated the old timers\nhockey game Thursday night would\nbring in $125. This, with individual\ndonations, ls slowly building up the\nfund.\nTonight's game will see the \"dime\na goal\" deal, organized by the\nBooster Club members with the aid\nof high school students. The students will be at the exits to the\nrink and as the fans come in, provide envelopes. Any wishing to help\nthe effort to lift the club out of the\nred are asked to deposit a dime for\nevery Nelson goal. Envelopes can\nbe dropped in boxes at the exits or\nin stores in the city and the outlying district.\nThe club'heeds $15,000 to clear\nits debts.\nThe Weather\nTEMPERATURE8\nMin. Max Prec\nNelson        25       35       .12\nKimberley      0      19       \u2014\nCrescent Valley      3      24\nKaslo         16      34       -\nT. Wiginton.\nJ. D. Hingwing, C. Mattice, C.\nSchumaker, B. Schneider.\nH. Farenholtz, J. Haines, K. Le-\nPage, D. Speers.\nL. McEachern, L. Bicknell, D.\nYost, Y. Hamakawa.\nH. Moore, J. Braybrook, J. Alexander, K. W. Dixon.\nW. Burdenie. Jack Taylor, A. S.\nLockwood, R. Brett.\nW. Wait, F. Carmichael, J. Far-\ngher, W. Ebdon.\n\u25a0A. B. Gilker, D. Benedetti, S\nLinton, J. Spencer.\nT. H. Bourque, F. Wah, A. Freeman, H. Doelle.\nR. Chandler, E. Leeming, J,\nStrachan, A. S. Cook.\nJ. Teag-ue, I. E. Kraft, W. Eckmier, E. J. podard.\nMELODY PALS\nDANCE\nTONIGHT-9:30 P.M.  .\nCIVIC CENTRE\nAdmission 50c Each\nConsiderable debate arose at the\nrecent annual meeting of Nelson\nbranch of the Canadian Red 'Cross\nSociety, as to the advlseability or\ninadviseability of the Red Cross becoming one of the agencies of the\nNelson District Community Chest.\nDuring the debate, a statement to\nthe effect that The Daily News had\nnot seen fit to publish the viewpoint of the Red Cross Association\nin this matter, was made.\nNo approach to The Daily News\nat the local level was made to obtain publication of the material in\nquestion.\nSubsequent to this The Daily\nNews felt the best thing to do in\nthe interests of the Red Cross and\nthe Community Chest would be to\nhave briefly stated the viewpoints\nof both organizations, and with this\nin mind, the presidents of tjoth ior-\nganizations were asked to submit\nmaterial, and in line with its continuous policy of attempting to do\npublic service for the community\nwhich it serves. The Daily News\nherewith publishes these statements.\nThe Red Cross statement presented by N. C. Stibbs, president, and\nsubmitted by the publicity director\nof the-B.C. Red Cross: .\n\"After nearly a century of unremitting and unselfish service in war,\npeace and disaster, to people of all\nnations and creeds, the Red \"Cross\ncannot bury its identity in a blanket\norganization of diversified philanthropic and welfare groups. This is\nthe reason why branches of the\nCanadian Red Cross Society stand\naloof from mushrooming community\nchests that would put all their\n\"begs in one askit,\" states Mrs. J.\nN. Mawer, president of the B.C.\ndivision of the society.\n\"During the past few years national bodies of both American and\nCanadian Red Cross who, by their\ncharters, have definite responsibilities to the government, have passed\nresolutions to prevent any branch\njoining in a federated campaign.\nAny weakening of national status of\nthe society could not only jeopardize its service to Canada as a nation, but could also endanger its\nposition as a unit of International\n\u25a0Red Cross.\n\"It has not proven possible for\na single campaign to raise sufficient\nfunds to satisfy budgets of all organizations which previously had\ntheir own campaigns, declares Col.\nC. A. Scott, B.C. Red Cross commissioner. Records of most cities, which\nhave tried united endeavor, show\nfinancial disappointment There can\nbe no monopoly in the field of philanthropy . . . np 'c6rnering of the\nmarket* in campaigns, he points out.\n\"Red Cross has four major responsibilities,\" states Mrs. Mawer.\n\"Its service to the soldier, as a voluntary auxiliary to the government;\nits blood transfusion service, providing free blood when needed for every citizen of Canada; its emergency\ndisaster service, ready when disaster\nstrikes at home or abroad; Its outpost hospitals, serving on the frontiers of the country.\n\"Canada has an army of half a\nmillion voluntary, workers, serving\nunder the Red Cross ; . . one of\nevery 30 people organized for any\nemergency. It is necessary to keep\nthis civilian auxiliary of the armed\nforces and civilian relief body as a\ndistinct unit, responsible only to the\ngovernment and people.\n\"Wherever the Red Cross ensign\nflies in any of t.9 nations, it brings\npromise of immediate relief. It must\nbe ready t6 assist In local or world\ndisaster and sa becomes a means\nof international .friendship and understanding, making' peace more\nsecure.\"\nFollowing is the statement from\nJ. R. Corner, Community Chest\npresident: j\n\"To deny that there has been no\ndifference on opjnion between the\nCommunity ' Chest and the Red\nCross Society would be untrue.\nThese differences, as far as the\nCommunity Chest is concerned,\nhave been confined to academic\ndiscussions as to the relative merits\nof united, as opposed to Individual,\nappeals, to the public for funds.\n\"At the inception of the Community Chest in Nelson in February\nof 1954, the Red Cross Society local\nbranch had already formulated and\nalmost completed its plans for its\ncampaign for futjds. If the membership had so wished, it was then too\nlate to apply for affiliation with\nthe Community Chest.\nBETTER UNDERSTANDING\n\"During the following months it\nbecame more and mora apparent\nthat these differences, were being\nenlarged _an<_ a very different cleavage developing in the contributors'\nranks. This was a regrettable situation. In the main it was due to a\nlack of understanding of the motives prompting the Rtd Cross Society from refraining in making application to the Community Chest.\nThis misunderstanding was harmful\nboth to the Red Cross and the Com-\nmunity'Che'st.\n\"In order that clarification could\nbe obtained, mis-conceptions cleared\nup and a better outstanding achieved, I made it my duty to attend the\nannual meeting of the local branch\nof the Society. Col. Scott, B. C.\nCommissioner and Mrs. Mawer,\nPresident of the B. C. Division, were\npresent and informed of the local\nsituation. A strong plea was made\nto enlist their support in stopping\nand preventing any breach in good\nrelationships. Both these visiting officials were most kind, also mo\u00abt\nloquacious, in explaining the Society's attitude toward united appeals and Community Chests. As\na result of this discussion, a statement was given the Nelson Dally\nNews dealing with this matter. In\naddition to the statement given,\nwas the information that, should the\nlocal branch vote to apply for affiliation to the Community Chest,\nthe charter would be taken away\nfrom the branch.\n\"With this statement and information, the directors df the Community Chest felt they had achieved\nmuch in bringing into the open,\ncontentious points that had formerly\neither gone unanswered or misunderstood in their interpretation. By\nthis means, a better understanding\nnow prevails among the directors\nand executive members of the two\norganizations.\nCONTRIBUTOR JUDGE\n\"At this time it might be as well\nto emphasize that the Community\nChest have never at any time attempted to exert pressure or influence on any organization to affiliate with them. They do feel, however, that, from both the contributors' and the recipients' point of\nview, a combined appeal ls more\ndesirable. The fact of the success\nof the Community Chest in its first\nyear ol operation in Nelson and the\nacceptance by the contributing public of its value, is proof of this contention. Affiliation is a voluntary\nmove on the part of the agencies.\nThe Community Chest's function is\nnot to impede or restrict the activities of those not desiring to associate themselves with the Chest.\n\"In the final analyst the contributor is judge as to how his charity dollar shall be distributed,\",\nKIDHEYTROUBLE?\nlly--l_r..r(._r__l_n-..r_l___lr_l..._,.i|C.\nb-ilioi_.--_t.th_i_._n_ill._.,_i.lh_.l_i__y\nl_-l_ni-r-.chlt.lIill.lt...i__-_.-.'-r.,'I.O_\n\u2022De WITT'S PILLS*\nportion of a block.\nThe North Shore approach to the\nbridge on the Southern Transpro.\nvlncial Highway has also been gazetted. A notice In the B.C. Gazette\nsays:\n\"Notice ls given, pursuant to section eight of the Highway Act, that\nence plan 647881 ol district lot 372,\nKootenay district, lying south of\nplan 647881'of district lot 372. Kootenay district G, shown outlined in\nred on a plan on file In the department of public works, under\n'road surveys 2538.' ate hereby established as a public road.''\nRosling Re-Elected President . . .\nKootenay Has More to Offer Tourist\nThan Scenery, Resort Owner Told\nT. D. Rosling has beep re-elected\npresident of the Kootenay Courts\nand Resorts Association,\n> Robert Phillips Is vice-president,\nB. B. Clark, secretary-treasurer1,\nand B. S. Woods of Kootenay Bay,\nFred Jones of Kaslo, Mrs. H. Green-\nan of New Denver, T. A. McRae of\nRossland and H. W. Robertson are\ndlreotors.\nThe president In his annual report noted a decline last year in\ntourist business, following a trend\nset In 1953 after the 1952 peak year.\nLast year's drop amounted to between 10 and 20 per cent.\nIn calling upon the 47 member\nresort operators for publicity\naction'this year, Mr. Rosling suggested that the Kootenay country\nmight woo the tourist with mope\nthan Its scenery.\n,\"Trail has tha largest, other\nthan Iron, smelter In the British\nEmpire. What have the 8locan\nand Arrow Lakes to offer? Much.\nNelson has the city-owned Civic\nCentre and the only match block\nfactory In Canada. What has\nKaslo? Bo.well has a glass house.\nWhat has Creston?\n\"Let us dig out the things that\nare unique or unusual, and tell\nthe prospective visitor about\nthem, rather than Just advertising\nbeautiful scenery and fishing?\nKootenay     communities.     Mr.\nB Proles!\nAssessments\nA total of 73 applications have\nbeen filed In Nelson and surround\nIng School District .7 tor hearings\nbefore the assessment court of revision.\n6f these 38 have been filed from\nthe city. 35 in the district.\nCourt of revision sits February 1\nto 3, hearing municipal applications,\nthen will hear district applicants.\nRosling   added,  should   consider\nentertainment of visitors.\n\"For instance, the resorts at Balfour should work out an entertainment program among themselves to\nhelp the visitors spend the evening\nhours. There is plenty to do in daylight: but many complain about the\nlack of something interesting to do\nafter dark.\"\nA Farnrers' Institute request for\nsupport in its drive for better radio\nreception and coverage, resulted In\na letter being sent to H. W. Herrldge, MP for Kootenay West.\nMr. Rosling was delegate to the\n10th annual  meeting of the Auto,\nCourts and'Resorts Association in\nVancouver.\nA resolution from the Kootenay.\nAssociation recommending that\nfishing licences should be issued to\nvisitors for a shorter period than\na year, at a fee proportionately\nlower than the present yearly licence, was withdrawn.\nIn his report on the convention,\nMr. Rosling sold the Kootenay Association should try to get support\nof local Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commerce and other groups,\nand present a new resolution to the\nB.C. game convention to be held\nIn Nelson in May.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMII\nWelcome Canadian.\nFRIENDLY\n&\nC.0\n*v\nHOTEL\nRoome With Bath (3.00   .3...\nWlth.ut Bath $2.00   S2.50\nSpokane W   213  Riverside\nSales Tax Hike\nWould Aid Schools ,\nOLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - A one\nper cent boost In the retail sales\ntax, with the entire increase earmarked for schools, was Introduced\nIn the Washington legislature Friday., by two Democrats.\nRepresentatives A. E. Edwards' of\nDeming and Ray Olsen of Seattle\nsponsored.the bill, which was one of\nfour revenue measures introduced\nin efforts to raise $41,000,000 Governor Arthur Langlie said is required to meet state needs.\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nHouse Opening on TV\n. VICTORIA (CP). - Television\ncameras will cover the opening of\nthe third session of B. C.'s 22nd\nlegislature Tuesday, for the second\ntime in history, speaker of the\nhouse Thomas Irwin announced Friday,\nOpening of the spring session last\nyear was covered by CBU-TV which\nwill televise the opening again this\nyear.\n, NELSON COMMERCIAL\nTRAINING SCHOOL    \u25a0\nDAY AND EVENING CLASSES\n701 Front 8t .    Phone 1794\nRes., 1017-X\nFORD THEATRE\nSUNDAY, 9:30 P.M. ON\nCKt-M\nLet our trained, conrteo__i, ,\nprofessional movers \"take th*\nload off your mind!\" Tour\nfinest furniture, dishes ant\nother possessions will bo\nscientifically picked and\nhandled with the utmost car*.\nPhone for- estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C\nPhone 33\nCOMMERCIAL\nREFRIGERATION\nSALES AND SERVICE\nWe are equipped to service and install commercial\nrefrigeration on any scale. See us for advice and\nestimates.\nALL WORK AND EQUIPMENT\nFULLY GUARANTEED\nWELLS SERVICE SHOP\n405 Hall St.\nPhone 1115\n R^IPPP?^!\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022\n(OOF, Rebekah\nStales In Office\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Impressive Joint\nInstallation was held for officers\nof Sullivan Lodge IOOF and Victory Rebekah Lodge here.\nInstalling officers were DDGM\nJ. O. McDonald and DDP Eileen\nBrown, DD Grand Marshals H. Andrews and Mary McKay, assisted\nby M. Hellelson, H. Bryant, A. A\n'Watkins, W. L. Mawson, D. Crowe.\nW. Robertson and Sisters G. Siple,\nA. Crossley, P. Jones, H. Mawson.\nE. Blake and E. Thompson.\nInstalled officers were:\nSullivan Lodge\u2014NB E. A. Mc-\n,Kay; VG A. K. Watson; RS C. P\nNesbitt; FS J. 0. McDonald; treasurer E. Nesbitt; warden D. Morrison; conductor L. Craig; OG S.\nBlake; IG D. Mackie; RSNG H. Andrews; LSNG T. Mawson; RSVG\nH. Bidder; LSVG P. Lye; RSS E.\nLewis; LSS D. Waites; chaplain,\nA. A. Watkins.\nVictory 61\u2014NG Roberta Skinner;\nVG Vi Schneider; RS Annie Walker; FS Hazel Duncan; treasurer\nJean Dodd; warden Ada Calles;\nconductor June Wilson; OG Lillian\nLloyd; IG Muriel Torgeson; RSNG\nDot Thomson; LSNG Ella Malcolm-\nson; RSVG Marg. Weaver; LSVG\nEdna Thompson; RSS Marg Livingstone; LSS Dale Honeyman;\nchaplain Betty Oliver; pianist Mary\nGrlswold; flag bearer, Edith Blake\nThe past noble grand's honorary\ndegree was then conferred upon\nSister Lila Bates, Jr. PNG, under\nthe direction of Sister Eileen\nBrown, PNG.\nAmong those present for the\noccasion were W. Johnson, grand\nwarden of B.C., and L. Bonnier.\nK. Mattice. S. Craig and S. DeLucca\nall of Key City Lodge of Cranbrook.\nCranbrook\n$520,323\nBuilding\nDuring r54\nFIRE DAMAGE\nAT KIMBERLEY\nDOWN IN 1954\nCRANBROOK - This city's property loss from fire in 1954 tumbled\nto 92^ cents per capita compared\nwith the black total in 1953 of $11.47\nper capita, the annual report by fire\nchief James Gordon to the City\nCouncil shows. Damage resulted\nfrom only seven of the 62 fires for\nwhreh department runs were made\nduring the year.\nTotal loss was $4624, but property\nvalue at stake in the fires which\noccurred was $92,000, with insurance carried valued at only $37,500.\nIn his report Mr. Gordon urges\nconsiderations be given by the city\nof replacement of the two fire trucks\none of which is 31 years old, and\nthe newer one 26 years old.\nOther fire department work during the year was raising in its greenhouse of 6000 nursery plants for\ncity parks, and fire hall headquarters which stores the Cranbrook District Ambulance equipment, dispatched the vehicles on 151 calls\nduring the year.\nG. H. JONG\nIchln... Herb Remedies\nFor All Ailments\n1.0   YEARS'  EXEPERI.\nENCE IN CANADA\nCorner 6th Ave. and 1st 8t n,\n,..,.,       ... Calaary\nlOnlng. Sawmill, Logftsf\nand Contract-rtf\nEquipment\nATIONAL\nACHINERY\n~! Limited\n.\nGranville   Island\nVancouver 1. _. A\nCRANBROOK - Results of residential construction In the city in\n1954 shows In all city departmental\nannual reports.\nCity building permits for new\nhousing or housing improvements\nnumbered 72 for the year, and were\nat widely scattered locations. Estimated value of their construction\nwas $354,540, and estimated value\nof the 10 permits for commercial\n.building construction of $165,783\nbrought the whole total of new\nbuildings to $520,323.\nDuring the year, city electrical\nsuperintendent George Burch reports a peak 2035 meters on the city\nsystem after a net increase for the\nyear of 119 active meters. They consumed an all-time record of 8,305,-\n800 kilowatt hours, nine per cent\nmore than in the previous record\nyear of 1953. These continuous increases will soon require additional\nfaeilities at the sub-station which is\nnOw operating beyond capacity. Also required during the year were\n28 new transformers, 168 new poles\nand wiring, and 129 new .sets of\nservice wires.  Replacement of. 599.\nstreet lights was required.\nMILE OF  SIDEWALKS\nReporting for the works department city superintendent Emil\nErickson said nearly a mile of concrete sidewalks were built under\nlocal improvements bylaws, and access streets and lanes for the newest\nhousing subdivision in the southeast\ncorner were made. Water department installed 76 new water connections during the year with excellent water supply all year.\nCity Tourist Camp revenue dropped to $14,111.09 in a slow tourist\nseason, compared to $15,579,49 the\nprevious year. City swimming pool\nlife guards rescued five persons,\nand administered first aid to 38 persons. Visiting aircraft using the\nmunicipal airport numbered\u00ab808 for\nthe year, and the new 4900-foc.t runway was surfaced during the year\nto a 150-foot width by the Department of Transport.*\nBud-Moth Control Qiven\nFor District Orchards\nCRESTON\u2014Of all the insect pests\nof tree fruits, the bud-moth would\nrank as one of the most destructive\nduring the 1954 season in the Creston Valley, J. E. Swales, district\nhorticulturist, reports.\nPractically every kind of tree\nfruit, including apple, cherry and\npear, was attacked. In a few orchards, where control sprays were\nnot applied, trees were almost completely stripped of blossom buds\nby the feeding larvae of the bud-\nmoth. At harvest time severe bud\nmoth injury on apples was noted\nin two or three orchards.\nEarly in the Spring, about the\ntime the buds begin to open, the\nhalf-grown larvae of the bud-moth,\nwhich are dark brown caterpillars\nwith black heads, emerge from their\n\"spin-ups\" on the twigs where they\nhibernate during the winter. These\ncaterpillars get into the opening\nbuds where they feed on developing leaves and blossoms. Leaves\nare often rolled up and fastened\ntogether with silken threads to\nform a nest in which the larvae\nlives for six or seven weeks. During this period, considerable damage can be done to blossoms, developing fruit and foliage.\nTowards the end of June, the\nlarvae become full-grown and\nwould be slightly less than one-\nhalf inch in length. At that time,\nthey pupate in cocoons formed in\nthe rolled up leaves. The moths\nbegin to emerge in July. They are\nash-gray moths with a broad white\nband across the front wings which\nhave an expanse of slightly over\none-half inch. Several days after\nemerging? the female moths begin\negg laying. The eggs, which are\nflat, disc-like ovals, and nearly\ntransparent, are laid either singly\nor in small clusters on the leaves.\nIn about ten days' time, the larvae\nhatch and begin feeding on the\nleaves. The larvae tend to feed on\nthe inner portions of the leaves,\ncreating a skeletonizing effect\nShould an apple be in contact with\na leaf upon which a larvae is feeding, the larvae will often chew\nsmall shallow holes in the skin of\nthe fruit. During August the larvae\nmove to the twigs where they pupate for the winter, Mr. Swales says.\nEFFECTIVE   CONTROL\nIt has been found that malathion\napplied at the pink stage of blossom development provides the most\neffective control of bud-moth on\napple and pear. Another malathion\nRILEYS'\nGROCERY\nCorner Cedar and Observatory Streets\n(Formerly  Bicker.on's)\nWill Remain Open Daily, Including Sunday, From\n8:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M.\nDelivery Service On All Large Orders and Meat Orden\nPhoned In Before 1 p.m.\nPHONE 1707\nFor a Full Line of\nGROCERIES,   CONFECTIONERY   and   MEATS.\nEMM and BILL RILEY.\nTELEVISION SERVICE\nWe have one of the most modern service shops in the\nprovince  of  B.C.   and   are   now  prepared  ta   offer\n24 HOUR SERVICE on television receivers.\n(Daily Except Sunday and Holidays)\nFor Service between 9 and 5 \u2014 PHONE 1300\nFor Evening Service \u2014 PHONE 617-X\nYour Television\nHeadquarters\n476 Baker St. Phone 1300\nOul\nspray may be required during the\nsummer after the eggs have hatched. It could be determined whethci\nor not this summer spray is necessary by frequently inspecting the\nleaves during July. If there is considerable bud-moth activity lt\nwould be advisable to spray.\nAs. malathion cannot be safely\nused on cherry trees, a dormant oil\nand dinitro creosol spray is recommended for control of bud-moth on\ncherry. This spray consists of dormant oil, two gallons of actual oil,\nand dinitro creosol (40 per cent)\n1.4 pounds in 100' gallons of water,\nfor dilute sprays. For concentrate\nsprays, dormant oil, six gallons of\nactual oil, and dinitro creosol (40\nper cent) four pounds per acre, are\nrecommended.\nAs a substitute for the dormant\nspray on cherries, a nicotine sulphate spray at 75 per cent petal\nfall may be applied to control bud\nmolh. Nicotine sulphate should be\napplied at the rate of one pound\nper 100 gallons of water with one-\nhalf pound of washing soda added\nin dilute sprays. One-half gallon\nof nicotine sulphate plus two\npounds of washing soda per acre\nis recommended for concentrate\nsprays. One weakness of nicotine\nsulphate is that this material is not\nvery effective when applied at tenr\nperatures below 70 degrees F.\nParatliion applied at 75 per cent\npetal fall has given excellent control of bud-moth on cherry but because of the high human toxicity\nrating of this material it is not\nrecommended for use on tree fruits\nin B.C.\nBud-moth does not usually become a problem on apple trees\nwhere recommended codling moth\nsprays are applied regularly.\nPYTHIANS INSTALL\nNEW OFFICERS\nAT KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 A large number\nof Knights of Pythias, Sisters and\nfriends attended the installation of\nofficers for 1955.\nInstalling officers were acting\ngrand chancellor V. Vohradsky for\nthe Knights and Pauline Burrill.\nassisted by grand manager Mary\nVohradsky and grand senior Edith\nHelland for the Sisters.\nL. Leonhardt received his past-\nchancellor commander's pin and\nSisters B. Simpson and L. Bureau\npast chiefs pins and certificates.\nInstalled were:\nKnights-CC, P. Olsen; VC, L\nBeduz; prelate, W. H. Craig; M.\nof W., C. Leonhardt; secretary, R.\nBeduz; FS, G. MacGregor; treasurer,\nJ. McKim; M. at arms, T. Leighton;\nIG, J. Hall;  OG, D. Pocock.\nSisters\u2014M. Ex. Chief, Jane Leonhardt; Ex. Sr., Marg. Thomason, Jr.;\nEx. Jr., G. Preston; secretary, M\nThomason, Sr.; treasurer, A. Clar-\nricoates; manager, L. Lang; protector, M. Pocock; OG, Mary Fisher\nMrs. J. Brookes acted as pianist\nand flower girls were Susan Oar-\nricoates, Judy Pocock and Shirley\nFairclough.\nCards and dancing completed the\nevening, refreshments being served\nby retiring officers of the Knights.\nWoman Catches\nHen-Raiding Hawk\nQUEEN'S BAY\u2014Because of the\nefforts of Mrs. J. S. Hirst of Queen's\nBay, there's one less hawk in the\ndistrict to maraud poultry farms.\nShe found a large hawk in her\nchicken-run, eating one of her hens.\nBy backing the bird against the\nwire, she managed to catch it. But\nshe took it to a neighbor for killing.\nNEW\nINTERNAL TREATMENT\nPSORIASIS\nDramatic clinical results show the\nnew internal treatment, LIPAN,\nis succesful in almost 7 out of 10\ncases. Even' stubborn lesions of\nlong standing have responded to\nLIPAN.\nAsk your druggist for LIPAN. For\nfree booklet and clinical reports,\nwrite to Greenlove Company, 21\nKing   St.   E..   Toionto,   Dept   \"B\".\n\u25a0\nCranbrook Names\nRed Cross Slate\nCRANBROOK\u2014The annual meeting ot the Cranbrook branch ot the\nCanadian Red Cross elected a number of new officers .to Its 1955 slate.\nThe honorary officers are J-- F.\nScott president, Mrs. F. B.'Miles,\nMrs. Archie Raworth and Mrs. I. J.\nBaxter vice-presidents. C. E. Page\nwas named as new president, succeeding G. T. Winchester, Mrs. Ernest Laurie vice president, and Miss\nDorothea Hayden secretary-treasurer.\nMr. Winchester will be chairman\nof the annqal spring drive for funds\nand memberships in March, and\nMrs. Vincent Liddicoat continues\nchairman of the blood donor committee.\nClinics for blood demote were\ndoubled in 1954 when the Southern\nAlberta mobile unit made May and\nSeptember visits and received nearly 600 bottles from Cranbrook donors. 1954 Spring drive for memberships and funds ended at $2432.31,\nslightly below its objective of $2500.\n\u2014r\u2014-\nm\nRossland Library\nM Record Year\nROSSLAND \u2014 An active year in\nboth circulation and book buying\nwas reported at the annual meeting\nof Rossland Library Association by\nD. T. Coon, chairman.\nTotal circulation of 21,920, is the\nsecond highest in the association's\nhistory. Total money spent on books\nduring the year was $1021, larger\nthan usual. The increase is almost\ntotally in the junior section.\nMr. Coon stressed the public recommendation of Alderman H. L.\nChristian that the library detract\nfrom the appeal of crime comics by\nputting forward the better juvenile\nbooks.\nLast year a junior membership\nof 944 accounted for a circulation of\n12,613 books. Additional shelves\nwere built for the expanding non-\nfiction section. A .book trunk was\nconstructed for the library.\n'During the year Miss Olga Oslng,\nlibrarian, has acted as custodian of\nRossland museum during library\nhours.\nThe financial report for the library showed a balance of $702.85.\nElected directors for two-year\nterms were ' Mrs. Howard Bayley,\nMrs. R. J. Armstrong and Cyril Bacon. Aid. H. L. Christian represents\ncity council on the board of directors.\nFruitvale Lepn\nSlate Installed\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Cecil Pitt of\nRossland, zone commander, installed officers of Fruitvale branch\nof the Canadian Legion and its\nLadies' Auxiliary here. Nearly 50\npersons attended, and a dinner was\nserved before the ceremony.\nDouglas Haines was installed as\npresident for this second session.\nVice-presidents are F.' M. Smith\nand Barry Robinson, and Alan John\nis secretary treasurer. Fred Lind is\nthe sergeant-at-arms, while tire executive members installed were H.\nMcCutcheon, K. McCullough, R. W.\nWoods and H. Higgins.\nThe officers of the Ladies' Auxiliary installed were Mrs. J. Campbell, president; Mrs. E. Grieve, Mrs.\nG. Metcalfe vice-presidents; Mrs.\nG. C. MacKenzie, secretary; Mrs. A.\nWagner, treasurer; Mrs. W. Grieve,\nMrs. G. Grieve, Mrs. E. Allard, Mrs.\nJ. Rothwell and Mrs. S. Walsh.\nMRS. M-cKIE\nRITES AT FERNIE\nFERNIE \u2014 Funeral service for\nMrs. Mary MacKie was conducted\nby Dr. N. L. Hughes at Knox United Church Wednesday afternoon.\nMrs. MacKie died in the Fernie\nMemorial Hospital.\nBorn in Pollokshaws, Scotland,\nSeptember 5, 1869, Mrs. MacKie\ncame to Canada in 1910. She married\nJohn MacKie, a Fernie pioneer, at\nFernie, in 1912. From 1914 to 1943\nthey made their home at Hillcrest,\nAlta. From 1943 to early 1954 they\nresided at Vancouver. They returned to Fernie early in 1954.\nSurviving are her husband, John,\nof Fernie, one son, James MacKie,\nof Calgary, two daughters, Mrs.\nAlex (Effic) Aitken, formerly of\nFernie, now residing in Auckland,\nNew Zealand, and Mrs. Sam- (Polly)\nRose, of San Diego, Calif.. 15 grandchildren, IB great grandchildren, and\none great, great granddaughter.\nBurial was in St. Margaret's Cemetery here.\nEx-Cranbrook Man,\nA. L. Piggott Dies\nWYNNDEL - Death in the Creston Valley Hospital has claimed a\nlong-time resident of Wynndel In\nthe person of Arthur Henry Piggott.\nBorn in England, he came to Canada in 1910. settling In Cranbrook\nwhere  he  was   employed   by   the\nCPR.   Enlisting   in   the   Canadian\nForestry Corps he served In France\nin the First World War, returning\nin 1918 and continuing to work (or\nthe CPR as tie Inspector. He pur-\nI chased land In Wynndel, where he\ni retired. He is survived by four chtl-\nI dren,  Mrs.  C.  Gregory,  Wynndel;\nOfficial Opening for\nKimberley Television\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Television comes\nofficially to Kimberley today as\nthree well-known residents make\ntheir debut over station KXLY-TV\nSpokane to mark the occasion.\nAppearing will,be Mayor Clifford\nSwan, who has guided civic policies\nsince incorporation; city electrical\nhead A. Watson, and George James,\npopular pioneer of the distirct.\nThey  will  be  interviewed  over\nthe Dale Starky Show and Mr.\nJames will entertain with his \"one-\nman band.\"\nStringing of coaxial cable to all\nparts s of the city is progressing\nrapidly under the supervision of\nMr. Watson. At present, only Channel 6, Spokane, is available, but by\nApril Calgary's Channel 2 should\nbe received by the rhombic antenna topping Kimberley's 5900-foot\nNorth Star hill.\nStevens Tells Trail Chamber . . .\nManagement-Labor Solution\nNecessary If Canada To Be Leader\nTRAIL\u2014Hon. H. H. Stevens, P.C.,\nLL.D., former federal minister and\npast president of the Vancouver\nBoard of Trade, was guest speaker\nat the annual meeting of the Trail\nChamber of Commerce attended by\n200 members and wives.\n\"If you can solve the problem\nof employer-employee relationships\nyou will have achieved one of the\ngreatest things possible,\" he said,\nin delivering an address entitled\n\"Canada \u2014 Past, Present and Future.\" \"Until this is solved we\nare not In a position to give the\nleadership we could to the rest\nof the world.\"\nHe gave four chief economic\nfactors in Canada's future, each\nheing vital to the other\u2014manpower,\ntechnical skill, management and investment.\nSpeaking of present, Mr. Stevens\nsaid that new frontiers are opening up every day and opportunities\nfor young men equipped to handle\nthem are greater than ever before.\n\"Canada has arrived as a nation.\nFrom an industrial standpoint, Canada has matured and is ready to\ntake her place in the forefront ol\nFernie Group\nNames Officers\nFERNIE \u2014 Bob Hainsworth, manager of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, was elected president of the\nFernie and District Boy Scout Association at its annual meeting. Ev-\naristo Naccarato was returned as\nsecretary and Jack Baker was chosen as treasurer. Harry E. Miard\nwas re-elected to the post of honorary president. Harry McKay, who\nwas appointed district commissioner a year ago, will continue in that\npost.\nThe association decided that the\nsummer camp, a feature of scouting,\nwould be held and would be of at\nleast 10 days' duration. Due to lack\nof leaders no camp has been held\nduring the past few years.\nMembers of local Scout troops are\nundergoing intensive training. Several of the boys hope to qualify\nfor attendance at the World Boy\nScout Jamboree to be held at Nia-\ngara-on-the-Lake in July. This will\nbe the first time that the World\nJamboree will b,e held in the Western hemisphere\nSALMO PYTHIAN\nSLATES INSTALLED\nSALMO\u2014For the first time in\nmany years, Salmo lodge, Knights\nof Pythias and Twin Temple Pythian Sisters held a joint installation\nof officers.\nMrs. Sue Taylor waa installed as\nPythian Sisters' chief by installing\nofficer Mrs. Hilda Drugge and past\nchief Mrs. Lila Thompson. The remaining officers, impressively arrayed in white, were presented for\noffice by grand manager Mrs. Gertrude Moore and Mrs. I. Larsen.\nIn an equally impressive ceremony, Ole Jensen was installed for\nhis second term as chancellor commander of the Knights of Pythias.\nGrand master-at-arms Otto Larsen\npresented the remaining officers\nwho were installed by Les Lund.\nA guest of the evening was the\nchief-elect of the Fruitvale Pythian\nSisters.\nThe ceremonies were followed by\na buffet supper and an evening of\ndancing.\nSLAUGHTERHOUSE\nBURNS TO GROUND\nFRUITVALE - Fire caused by\noverheated pipe totally destroyed a\nlog-constructed slaughterhouse and\nits contents on the farm of Mr. Ty-\nloe, situated north of the village.\nBeing located at the back of the\nproperty, fire got a good start be\nfore being noticed. Residents across\nthe valley first saw the. flames and\nturned in the alarm.\nShortage of hose handicapped the\nFruitvale Volunteer Fire Brigade\nbut the heavy snowfall provided\nthe means of saving the adjacent\nbuilding in which Mr. Tyloe had\nseveral  pigs.\nEstimate of loss has been placed\naround $800.\nArthur, Creston; Ernest, Nakusp,\nand Frank, Wynndel; six grandchildren and one great grandchild\nHis wife predeceased him in England.\nthe nations of the world.\"\nGlimpsing backwards, he said we\nmust not forget the great pioneers\nof the past.\nPresentation of honorary life\nmembership was made to a well-\nknown Trail barrister, Donald MacDonald.\nNcLSON DAILY N_.Wi, SA i i_-.-_>AY, JANUARY 22, .955\u20143\nSMALL LOGGING OPERATORS NEAR\nREVELSTOKE OPPOSED TO CELGAR\nREVELSTOKE\u2014A report from small logging oper-\naotrs in the Revelstoke area opposing the granting of the\npending Celgar forest management licence has been approved\nby the Board of Trade.\nThe board asked Vincent Segur, MLA, to oppose the\nlicence-\nEnglish teacher Addresses Rotary\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Guest speaker at\nthe luncheon meeting of the Kimberley Rotary Club was Miss Margaret Schley, English teacher at\nMcKim High School.\nAn exchange teacher from Chatham, Jersey, Miss Schley stressed\nthe   comparative   informality   be\ntween teacher and school board In\nCanada as compared to the United\nKingdom system. The setting of\nKimberley is lovely; and people\nare, she said, very friendly. However, she regretted the Canadian's\ntendency to belittle all things\nAmerican.\nProcter Skating\nFamily Affair\nPROCTER \u2014 This Is the third\nyear of operation of the Procter\nskating rink, and a record number\nof skaters, including whole families are enjoying the good Ice. Previously this sport was relative to\nthe condition of the edge of the\nWest Arm. If it was frozen solid\njenough, there was skating. No serious accidents occurred, but there\nwere many youngsters with wet\nfeet and many anxious parents during the brief season.\nA level surface was the most formidable detriment to the building of a rink but that was overcome\nwhen R gL. Stevenson offered free\nuse of a piece of his land half a\nmile from Procter. Work crews\nreadied the necessary space and vol\nuntary workers built a hut for the\nchanging of boots. A. Ogden gave\npoles for the rink lights, B. J.\nFitchett gave the wiring, A. A. Do-\nsenberger donated uprights and\nplank flooring, and N. Dosenberger\nprovided a heater and stove pipes.\nA skating rink club was formed\nand officials are elected yearly the\nfirst week in November. Rules were\ndrawn up and fees set at $1 per\nperson or $2 per family for the entire season. Saturday and.. Sunday\nmornings are reserved for hockey,\never-popular with the bigger boys\nEven the fathers are forming a team.\nSome of the boys show much promise in this field now that they are\nafforded more oportunity to practise \u00aband one or two are material\nfor figure skaters.\nSkating hours are set to allow\ntime for flooding and freezing, and\nthe rink must be cleared and scraped nightly. Ice makers are Roy\nStevenson, G McMullin, N. Dosenberger, and this years president, C.\nWalton.\nC. Ferguson organized a crib-\nbage party in the Procter hall to\nraise funds to defray expenses and\nbuy more firewood. Door man was\nJ. Persello and patrons made up 11\ntables of play. First prizes were\nwon by Mrs, N. MacLeod and M.\nSokoloski, and consolations by Mrs.\nM. Kirkendall and G. McMullin.\nHere's a\nBARGAIN\nFOR YOU\nA  Complete\nHome\nWorkshop\nFor\nJ365\nTAX   INCLUDED\nIncludes the Following Items:\n12\" DURO   BAND8AW\n8\" DURO TABLE SAW\n4\" DURO JOINTER\n12\" DURO DRILL PRESS\n15\" DURO JIG SAW\n6\" HOOVER  ELECTRIC      *\nGRINDER\n'\/_,\" BLACK & DECKER\nELECTRIC   DRILL\nThe\nK. W. Dixon\nCo.\n701  Front St.\nPhone   1704\nGOODBYE  TO  PUMPING\nDISSOLVES  TREE   ROOTS\nELIMINATES   DIGGING\nDISSOLVES  GREASE\nNO  MORE  ODORS\nIT'S MODERN... REVOLUTIONARY\n4o more expensive unhealthy pumping and digging\n<p of eoiipooli, icpll{ tank*, ittpag* pooh, great*\ntrapi and cloggtd linti.\nHere** the moil riliab.o ond taloit method to\nliquefy, dliiolve and taponity grtai\u00ab, tludat. hair,\ndoth and other organic lolidi\nTh!_ mo den. chomical guarantee! quick and efficient r.iulli In 12 lo 16 houn. NO SHUTDOWN\nof pool or lank ntctiiary whilo chemical U working.\n5. 10. 15, 25. 50. and 100 ID  CONTAINERS\n\u2022Boa. Canadian Pert   OH   *\u2022_.   U.S. Pol. Off. P\u00bb-.<_.\u25a0#\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST T. S. JEMSON PHONE 666\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order Extra Copies of\nKelso., iaihi, NttM\n20rh ANNUAL\nPICTORIAL\nand\nINDUSTRIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER\nOR TO THE DAILY NEWS CIRCULATION\nDEPARTMENT\nPRINT NAMES AND ADDRESSES PLAINLY IN\nBLACK PENCIL\nName \t\nAddress   \t\nCity __\t\nName _\nAddress\nCity   __\nT\nName  _\nAddress\nCity   ___\nName  _\nAddress\nCity   __\nName _\nAddress\nCity   __\nName _\nAddress\nCity   __\nYour Own Name \t\nYour Own Address\nCopy |jc and Qt Postage\nPlus 5% S.S. and M.A. Tax\nTotal of 22c per copy covers wrapping and mailing by\nus to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain\nor the United States.\nPHONE   1844\nStorm Eatlij N?itt0\n\t\n''\n'  \u25a0\n ' '.'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0:\u25a0;\u25a0 \"   :'\u25a0\n'   '      ' '*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0        '''^$$v^\"$rnn!PR\n\u2014\"\nWkwrn---;-       -   ,   ,imm^    ,    .fp^i^^\nNetemt Ba.hj Nnue\nestablished April 22. 11)02\nBritish Columbia's,\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished ever; morning except Sunday by the\nMEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n206 Baker Street,   Nelson.   British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nv     Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nSaturday, January 22, 1955\n  i\nVictoria-Ottawa\nColumbia Co-Operation\nBest for Canadians\nIt has taken a British Columbian\nspeaking in Ottawa to be the first political voice to add a touch of common\nsense, uncolored by politics, tb the\nprovincial-federal capitals' wrangling\nover Columbia River power and water\nstorage development.\nHoward Green, Vancouver Quadra,\nspeaking in the throne speech debate\non a bill designed to checkmate the\nB. C. government's deal with Kaiser\nAluminum, said the two governments\nwill have to co-operate for development of the river's potential in the best\ninterests of the Canadian people.\nWe would suggest that there is one\nstep farther to go. All Canadian governments should get together in the\ndevelopment of a national policy on\nhydro energy.\nThe Columbia Basin, which is an\noutstanding example of untapped resource, has a potential which is only\nnow beginning to be generally realized.\nIt can mean more to this and .future\ngenerations of Canadians, if properly\nhandled, than the oil fields of Alberta.\nIt can be the means of developing an\nindustrial region with accompanying\nemployment . and progress rivalling\nany in Canada.\nForty-four per cent of all the water\nthat flows down the Columbia originates in this Dominion. It has a volume in its 1200 miles almost that of\nthe St. Lawrence, but a fall nearly five\ntimes as great. It is this fall that makes\nit one of the world's greatest power\nrivers.\nThe federal government has already spent 3 million dollars on surveys and studies in this basin, which\nincludes the Kootenay. This study has\nindicated that 40 billion kilowatt hours\nof electrical energy could be produced\nannually. Only limitless imagination\ncould encompass the variety and magnitude of achievements that would result from harnessing the million horsepower available at Mica Creek, 75\nmiles North of Revelstoke. Two other\nmajor and seven more smaller power\nsites exist.\nHistory .has shown that Canada\nneed not worry about obtaining customers to consume this power. Cheap\nenergy has a way of attracting consumers; industry can be counted upon\nto take advantage of any such benefit\nif Canada makes it available.\nBritish Columbia has to weigh\nwhether it is better to obtain revenues\nfrom sale of, ipower or from sale of\nwater power, and which will spell the\ngreatest benefit for the province on\na long-range basis. This is a decision\nthat shbuld not be overshadowed by\nthe attraction of immediate prospects\nto raise provincial revenues without\ntaxation.\nIt is evident that time for such\ndecisions is available because of Ottawa's new bills to strengthen Federal\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n^__Z* M^TME\/RE a\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLottero to tho Editor on any topic of\nGenuine Int.rest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No tetter will be\nImerted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe signature and address of tho writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nModern Art\nComes From Within\nTo the Editor:\nSli>-The editorial page of the Vancouver\nSun published an article entitled \"Beauty and\nthe Beast\". It concerned the time-worn controversy between academic and modern art,\nperhaps not so modern, as in 1948 an exhibition was held in London, \"Forty Thousand\nYears oi Modern Art,\" with exhibits dating\nback to the third millennium B.C. The writer\ndeals with one of tho frenzied outbursts that\noccur when a certain type of elderly gentleman is elected to the presidency of the Royal\nAcademy. It seems that so far only excerpts of\nthe professor's denunciation have reached this\ncountry. The writer is fair, and modestly\nplaces himself among the (quote) \"many artistic illiterates who would rather rely on the\nword of the professor than on the pretensions\nof the abstractionists.\" In all fields of culture,\nas elsewhere, we find rival camps who consider their doctrine supreme.\nProfessor Richardson (the elected) has\none particular \"bee in his bonnet\"\u2014(quote)\u2014\n\"A public building without sculpture Is unthinkable.\" This seems to slam the door in the\nface of all opposition. But architects and\nsculptors think differently, each having very;\ndifferent ideas as to what kind of sculpture\nor design is best suited to the building and\nwhere the piece should be placed, but the necessary unanimity Is lacking. Although the\nRoyal Academy offers free tuition to any student, providing he or she has attained a certain degree of proficiency, its regulations were\nand probably still are akin to the laws of the\nMedes and the Persians; no toleration Is\nshown to anyone having the temerity to wander on the path of self-expression. They\nw,ould be expelled.\nAbout the middle of the last century-the\nacademicians considered they had exhausted\nthe subject of art, which appears to have\nbeen summarized as technique, but technique\nis not the be-all and end-all of art. While in\nEurope a number of artists were being born,\nincluding Gauguin (1848), Matisse (1860), who\neventually founded the Cubists, Impressionists, Fauves, and other movements. Of Cubism,\nPicasso says (quote): \"It is. neither a matter\nof seed or germination of a new art; it represents a stage in the development of original\npictorial forms.\"\nIf the professor's remarks on the comparison between idealism and realism in art implies that academic teaching aims at beauty\nand idealism, why do the critics (and they are\nplentiful and capable in England) year after\nyear practically boycott the RA exhibition,\nwhile the few who make any comments seldom\nfind more than half a dozen out of approximately seven hundred oil paintings worthy of\n. being mentioned as off the beaten track of\n\u25a0mediocrity?\nAlthough the professor does not approve\nof \"stark reality\", the term is in fact most\nappropriate to academic usage. Idealism surely postulates imagination, conception, something which originates in the mind, and these\nelements are the necessary adjuncts of modern\nart. The \"charlatans\", together with those who\nneither understand nor wish to, obviously\ndon't count; the former have no real aptitude\ncontrol over export and import of\nenergy.\nStudies such as that proposed by\nthe Associated Chambers of Commerce\nare valuable to prevent precipitate\naction on such far reaching decisions\nas involved in the development of the\nColumbia. This is our neighborhood\nand all leading organizations should\nbe informed and interested.\nHowever, the greatest good will\ncome from provincial and federal gov-\n' ernment, setting aside political considerations, getting together over the\nmaps, and graphs and statistics that\nhave been expertly compiled'to .chart\na course of action. In this way the\nbest interests of the province and of\nCanadians can be served and a proper\npolicy evolyed.\nNo moves that would prejudice the\noverall good could then result.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Names of persons\nasking questions w'll not be published.\nThere Is no charge' for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvloua\nnecesslty for privacy. .    .\nA reader, Castlegar-r-Please let me know the\nnames of car finance companies in this\ndistrict.\nIn addition to those .listed In our issue of\nThursday there is Mountain Finance Co., Ltd.,\n212 Medical Arts Building, Nelson.\nReader, Trail\u2014Can cracks in stucco be repaired? If so, how?\nAnother reader has informed us that\nthere Is a caulking compound obtainable. that\nfills this purpose and is easy to use. It ls sold\nby Wood, Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.,\n593 Baker Street, Nelson; and Hipperson Hardware Co., 396 Baker Street, Nelson. You will\nbe able to buy it in Trail also.\nJ. F.,  New  Denver\u2014Where  can  I purchase\nprints of Roland Gisslng's paintings of the\nCanadian Rockies?\nWrite to The Art Centre, Seventh Avenue,\nCalgary, Alta.; also write to the Information\nDepartment, Hudson's Bay, Eighth Avenue,\nVancouver.\nG. E. H., Rlondel\u2014Pleast let me know where\nI could purchase colored aluminum roofing?\nBurns Lumber Company, 602 Baker Street;\nLaurence   Simpson,   contractor,   Waterfront,\nNelson; T. H.Waters Company, 101 Hall Street;\nK. W. Dixon Company, 305 Baker Street\nE. S., Christina Lake\u2014To settle an argument,\nplease tell me the distance by White Pass\nand Yukon  Railway from White Horse,\nYukon Territory, to Skagway, Alaska.\nIll miles.\nJ. B., Trail\u2014Can you tell me how I might get\na copy of Life for June 4, 1954?\nYou could write direct to J. Edward King,\nGeneral' Manager, Life Magazine, 540 North\nMichigan Avenue, Chicago 11, 111. If they\nhave any back numbers they would let you\nknow and state price\u2014which may be a few\ncents higher than on publishing date.\nL. F. T, Trail\u2014How does one get a petition\npresented to the House of Commons at\nOttawa?\nA petition to the House of Commons must\nbe presented by a member, and such member\nshall be answerable that the petition does not\ncontain \"impertinent or improper matter\".\nOne person may petition the House of Com-\n\u25a0 mons. Petitions may be either written or\nprinted. Where there are three or more petitioners, the signatures of at least three shall\nbe subscribed on the sheet containing-, the\nprayer of the petition. Every petition should\ncommence with the subscription, 'To the\nHonourable House of Commons in Parliament assembled.\" Then should follow \"The\nPetition of the undersigned . . . humbly shew-\neth . . . \" The subject matter of the petition\nthen follows, in the third person thrtrughout,\nand each paragraph should commence with\nthe w,ord \"That ...\" The conclusion should\nbe the \"prayer\", briefly and clearly expressing the particular object which the petitioners have in view in coming before Parliament.\nThe petition should close.with the formal\nwords, \"And- your petitioners, as in duty\nbound, will ever pray ...\"\nand their methods are haphazard; while the\nlatter side with the academicians because they\ndislike having their pet ideas disrupted. Abstract and semi-abstract painting is not a\nmatter of chance; it is the work of combining\npattern with pictorial space. Anyone who\nfondly imagines it to be some kind of effortless pastime is living in a fool's paradise.\nModern art is based on the theory that art\ncomes from within. The practice of slavishly\ncopying from nature is not calculated to produce Idealism.\nF. MARTIN.\nBox 293,\nRobson, B. C.\nYour Horoscope\nSteady progress should be yours In the\nyear ahead, accompanied in many instances\nby public prominence and increased responsibilities. Today's child may be persistent,\nthorough and reliable; also deeply religious.\nFOR SUNDAY, JANUARY 23: Better reserve resources and be on your guard against\nattempts to mislead you; also beware of self-\ndeception. Musical and artistic abilitits are\nmost likely to be exhibited in the child born\ntoday.\nToday's Bible Thought\n1 girded thee tho thou hast not\nknown me.\u2014Is. 45:5.\nGod loves all his children. He\ngives manifold blessings to all. He\nwould do more if we would let him.\nOne Who Suffered\nVoles for German\nRearming\n^V DAVE MclNTOSH\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014It was the end\nof a long, day and evening in the\nCommons.\nExternal Affairs Minister Pearson had outlined the government's\nreasons why it believes the House\nshould ratify the Paris agreements\nfor entry of a rearmed West Germany into the North Atlantic alliance.\nHe had won support from John\nDiefenbaker, Progressive Conservative spokesman for foreign affairs,\nCCF leader Coldwell and Social\nCredit leader Low.\nOther members had spoken, with\nonly one\u2014Stanley Knowles, chief\nCCF party whip from Winnipeg\nNorth Centre\u2014saying he would\nvote against ratification.\nThen a Jewish member rose. All\nthe drama of the debate was in his\nspeech.\nLeon Crestohl, Liberal member\nfbr Montreal Cartler, said 80 of his\nrelatives had been tormented' and\nslaughtered by the Nazis;\nLE83ER OF TWO EVILS\nHe said he had to make a choice\nbetween the lesser of two evils.\nBerlin was a lesser evil than Moscow. In a firm voice, he added:\n\"I will vote for the resolution,\nbut not without an ache in my\nheart.\"\nThere was thunderous applause\nfrom al lsectlons-of the House.\nMembers rushed over to shake\nhands with Mr. Crestohl. v\nAllow Strasser\nIn Switzerland\nBERN, Switzerland (CP) \u2014 Dr.\nOtto Strasser, exiled rival of Hitler\nwho has been living in Canada\nsince 1941, will be allowed to enter\nSwitzerland conditionally, the government has announced.\nThe Swiss decision tb admit\nStrasser, presumably under a card\nof identity issued by the Canadian\ngovernment last year\u2122was made\nafter officials said that the former\nGerman political leader had promised to refrain from any political\nactivity while in Switzerland.\nThe way now appears clear for\nStrasser to return \\o Europe. He has\nbeen waiting impatiently at his\nhome ill Paradise, N. S., for his\nnew West German passport which\nhe applied for after the Bonn government restored his citizenship\nsome weeks back.\nCanadian Loggers\nReach New Zealand\nAUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP) \u2014 A\nparty of 59 Canadian lumberjacks\narrived today on the liner Orcades\nfrom Vancouver to work in New\nZealands forests\n\u25a0 Hand-picked from 3,000 applicants\nin Canada, they will work for the\nKaingaroa Logging Co. at Its Mur-\nupar'a milling centre among the big\npine plantations in the heart of\nNorth Island.\nMany of the loggers were accompanied by their wives and children. Their passages were paid by\nthe company and the men are under contract for three years.\nSeveral of the wives went shopping this afternoon In Auckland,\nand some who visited a furniture\nstore said they saw twin beds for\nthe first time.\n\"Perhaps you have them here\nbecause It's warmer,\" one of them\nsaid.\nQunL ?Cet\nI don't like to hear our preacher\ntell sad death-bed stories. If religion can't make you happy you ain't\nany better off than a sad sinner.\nResidents of the Hawaiian islands are mainly Christians, but\nthere  are  several  Buddhist  sects.\nU.K. Steel Export\nHas Banner Year\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Steel headed the list of items which made\n1954 a record year for British exports the board of trade announced.\nExports totalled $7,470,000,000 and\nre-exports added a further $283,-\n000,000.\nSteel exports accounted for $350,\n000,000 of the total. Passenger cars\nand chassis contributed $308,000,-\n000 to Britain's overseas earnings.\nAustralia continued to be Brit-\nBritain's best customer, while the\nUnited States gave up second position to \u2022 South Africa, U. S. purchases dropped by $28,000,000 from\nthe previous year. Canada also cut\nher purchases by over $56,000,000.\nThe dollar area was the main\nsupplier of imports\u2014with total purchases from the United States and\nCanada around $1,550,000,000 against\n$1,570,000,000 in 1953.\nTo Spend $25,000,000\nOn Outside Traffic\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The ci*y of\nVancouver will spend $55,000,000 in\nthe next 20 years to handle traffic\noriginating outside Us boundaries,\nit was reported.\nThe figure was given by city\ncouncil to, Vancouver's members of\nthe legislature. The city is seeking\na formula whereby the provincial\ngovernment will contribute more\ntoward the upkeep of main city\nroads connecting with the provincial highway system.\nJim VYbdmt diomsL\n-c\nNHA SMALl HOUSB DESIGNS-.\nDifferent in design, this split-level house\ncombines comfort and livability. Ths\narchitect, K. R. D. Pratt, of St Vital,\nhas planned the house to provide excellent lighting in all rooms and has\nnsed a combination of wood and brick\nsiding and a flagstone patio to create an\ninteresting exterior appearance.\nThe living section of the house It\nlocated on ground level while a high,\nwell-lighted basement is provided under\nthe sleeping quarters. The conveniently-\narranged kitchen includes a section for\nlaundry and is handy to the dining area.\nA generous supply of closet space is\nErOvided for both bedrooms while a\nnen closet is located near the bathroom.\nThe floor area of this house is 91S\nsquare feet and the cubic measurement\nis 13,700 cubic feet The exterior dimensions are 89 feet by 26 feet, six.inches.\nWorking drawings for this house, known\nas Design 701, are available from Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation\nat minimum cost\nGOV'T ASKED FOR\nBOND GUARANTEE\nON PIPELINE\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Promoters of\nthe $300,000,000 project for a natural gas pipeline from Alberta to\neastern Canada have asked the federal government to guarantee the\ncompany's bonds. .\nWhile news of the request of\nTrans - Canada Pipe Lines Ltd\nleaked out unofficially here Thursday, the government officially\nmaintained silence on its intentions\nand even on whether the application has been received.\nTrade Minister Howe, in charge\nof pipeline matters for the cabinet,\ntold a questioner in the Commons\nno action has been taken and he\nindicated there will be no announcement until there is some action.\nIt was understood, however, that\nTrans-Canada's officers made the\napplication to Mr. Howe and that\nhe has not placed formally the request tefore the cabinet.\nThe company's proposal for facilitating the financing of its proposed 2200-mile line, which would\nhave to be approved by Parliament, follows difficulties which\nTrans-Canada has met in clearing\naway' the preliminaries necessary\nto the financing.\nNautilus Makes\nFirst Test Dive\nGROTON, Conn. (AP)\u2014The nuclear submarine Nautilus slipped\nunder the heaving Atlantic Ocean\nin the first atomic-powered submarine dive In history.\nShe remained submerged for an\nhour, under the direction of Lieut.\nWilliam H. Layman, ship's diving\nofficer.\nAnnouncement of the Nautilus'\nfirst dive was not made until nearly 10 hours afterward. The terse\nannouncement gave no word as to\nhow the world's first atomic-powered submarine reacted to her first\nunderwater journey.\nShe had set out for the diving\ntrial from the Atlantic submarine\nforce headquarters here. The navy\ndeclined to say where she was\nheaded and how long she would\nstay out.\n5-Day Forecasts\nComing Soon\nSEIGNIORY CLUB, Que. (CP)-\nThe weatherman says it will be\nenly a comparatively short time\nbefore forecasts covering a five-day\nperiod are supplied to the Canadian public. Present forecasts are\nlimited to two-day, periods.\nThe immediate need is to get a\nfew more university-trained specialists into the meteorological service, said Keith T. McLeod, superintendent of the public weather\nservice in the federal transport department's meteorological division.\n\"We hope we can institute the\nservice within a year,\" said Mr.\nMcLeod in an Interview Wednesday. He is representing the department's weather division at the annual joint convention of the Dominion Marine Association and the\nLake Carriers Association of the\nUnited States.\nThe fivp-day forecast is already\nIn operation In the United States.\nSo is tlje 30-day \"outlook\"\u2014a generalization of weather prospects for\na montri\u2014not so precise as the\nspecific forecast for any day In five.\nDo It Yourself . ..\nThis Hot-Bed Is Heated\nFrom Basement Window\nA by-product of a heated basement, which home gardeners will\nfind helpful, is a hot-bed built\naround a window, through which\ncan easily be changed to fit any\nsize sash you prefer to use.\nStaft by making an excavation\nin front of the window about 6\ninches deep. Its area must be figured carefully, so that lt will hold\nbasement heat can escape to help\nplants grow.\nThis is a most convenient way\nto start seedling plants weeks before they could be grown outdoors.\nThe basement window will give\neasy access to the plants when the\nweather is still too cold for outdoor\ncomfort\nSunlight is as necessary for this\ntype ot hot-bed as for all others.\nFor sturdy plants of full transplanting size a south window is required. Temperature can be controlled by raising or lowering the sash,\nand use for it can be found throughout the year, especially in protecting plants during winter.\nThe cost of construction Is small,\nespecially if you build it yourself\nfrom the complete working drawing which accompanies this discussion. Dimensions in the drawing\nprovide for a frame covered with\ntwo standard 3x6 sash; but these\na frame fitted to your sash. As in\nthe case of other hot-beds, a plastic\nsubstitute for glass may be used if\npreferred.\nBuild a frame to fit in the excavation. The sides must slant sharply\nfrom a point above the window, almost to the ground. Fit the sash on\nShipping Industry\nAt Low Point\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014 Canada's oceangoing shipping industry will soon\ncease to exist unless measures are\ntaken to assist it, the Canadian Shipowners Association was told.\nPresident M. G. Angus of Montreal\naddressing the association's annual\nmeeting, criticized federal shipping\npolicy which he said has led to a\ndecline in the deepsea fleet- to Its\nlowest point in 35 years\u201420 ships.\n\"The disappearance of this essential feature of the Canadian economy can only \"be accounted for by\nthe lack of any constructive Canadian maritime policy,\" said Mr. Angus, who was re-elected association\npresident.\n\"As a result, opportunities for\nemployment of Canadians in the\nseafaring trades now are practically\nnon-existent, a situation which many\nCanadians must view with concern.\nthis frame, using hinges at the top\nso the sash may easily be raised for\nventilation. Earth may be banked\naround the frame to keep out th\u00bb\ncold; and the sides should be as\ntight as possible to keep out the\n-wind. The frame should be caulked\nwhere it Joins the foundation to\nprevent drafts,   ,\nHeat is supplied to- this bed by\nopening the basement window.\nAMERA\nNEWS\nBy BILL  RAMSAY\nThere Is one drawback to living\nin'Bali\u2014you'd never get to shoot\nsnow scenes. However, in our part\nof the world almost everyone gets \u25a0\na chance to work in the white\nstuff, and doesn't have to travel\nfar to get to it. For color shooting, as well as black-and-white,\nsnow is probably the most photogenic of nature's elements.\nThere   are   a   few   important\ntricks  to  shooting    winter\nscenes, however. I\nFirst  \"off,   it   is\nwise to keep\nyour  camera in\na cold place be- I\nfore use to avoid 1\ncondensation  on '\nthe lens.\nIn snow scenes you can compensate for extra light reflected\nby the stark, white'surface by\ngiving about a stop less than\nnormal exposure. You can record\nintensely blue skies with use of\na medium-yellow filter and when\nworking in color use of a Skylight filter will help to reduce\nthe excessive blueness typical of\nmost snow scenes.\nYou may or may not want to\nreduce blueness, but you likely\ndo want to reduce expenses! You\ndon't have to be a millionaire to\nenjoy the most popular hobby,\nfor RAMSAY'S CAMERAS have\ngood cameras and other photographic equipment in all price\nranges. To take' pictures, and\nwatch your pennies at the same\ntime, get all your PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT and\nSUPPLIES at\nRAMSAY'S   CAMERAS,\n497  Baker St.,  Nelson.\n\u25a0MM\n________\nV. .   ,   _[<\u201e.   u\n \\argatns -\nFOR\nALL THE FAMILY\nAT OUR\nAnniversary\nSALE\nR. ANDREW\n& CO,\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished In 1902\nRIZE QUILT\nKENTV-LLE, N.S. (CP) \u2014 Mrs\nby Fraser of nearby West Glen-\n_ont has worked 18 years to com-\nlete a quilt containing 12,000\nieces, all hand-sewn.\n\\mm\nEngagements\n... Mr. and Mrs. F. Mrkvicka ol\nBrandon. Man., wish to announce\nthe ,', marriage of their daughter,\nFrieda Agnes to Bdr. Kenneth McLeod, . son of Mrs. Archie McLeod\nof Nelson and Mr. McLeod of Ains-'\nworth! B. C. The wedding to take\nplace dn Saturday, January 22, at 7\no'clock in the First Church United,\nBrandon, Man. Reception at the\nhome of the bride, 657 16th St.\nBrandon,. Man.\nQueen's Bay Guild\nChooses Officers  >\nQUEEN'S BAY - Election of officers took place at the annua]\nmeeting of the Church Guild at tha\nhome' of Hon. Mrs. Kenneth Aylmer.\nMiss Joyce Hirst, who continues\nas president, was given a vote of\nthanks for carrying on leadership\nfor several years. Mrs. Norval German was elected secretary-treasurer. The financial report was good,\nthe Summer bazaar and teas bringing in a considerable sum.\n&t |m.r*_ Itttt^ (Mpirrlf\nStanley and Silica Streets\nMinister: Rev. G. W   Payne. S.'I M\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S   Ferguson, B.A., A.T.C.M.\nSUNDAY, Jan. 23rd:\n11:00 a.m.-\"PRIOR CLAIM\"\nCoffee served after moming worship.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"QUESTING  TIME\"\n\"THE POWER OF NEGATIVE THINKING\"\nMONDAY, Jan. 24th:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Annual Congregational Meeting\nMembers and Adherents.\n_3r.tt.tij Itt.ij.i_ ffliyarrlf\nJosephine and Silica Sts.\nMinister: REV. ALLAN DiXON. B.A., B.D\nOrganist and Music Director: Mrs. C. W. Tyler\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.-\"ARE YOU SOMETHING, OR  NOTHING?\"\n(Broadcast over  CKLN)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"DID  YOU   PRAY  ABOUT  IT?\"\n\u25a0\u25a0' >?\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0; \u25a0   \u25a0 i \u2014\nMrs. Hear\nSLATE INSTALLED\nBY FERNIE LA   \"\u25a0\nFERNIE - dificers of the Ladles'\nAuxiliary to Fernie brsmch of the\nCanadian Legion were installed in\noffice recently. .The installation Ceremony was conducted by Mrs. Amy\nErickson of Crestoh, imipedlate pejet\n\u2022president of the B. C. Prov.n.!_|l\nLadies Auxiliary to the Canadian\nLegion, At the installation ceremonies Mrs. Erickson represented\nthe Provincial Command.\nThe officers installed were: past\npresident Mrs. Howard (Del), Up:\nhill, president Mrs. Phyllis Daniel-\nson, hrst vice-president Mrs. William Vaflbuskirk, second vice-president Mrs. Mary Servello, secretary\nMrs. Ada Howarth, treasurer Mrs.\nLaura McLaren, sergeant-at-arms\nMrs. Nellie Miscovich. and executive\nmembers Mrs. Daisy Tyrhchuk, Mrs.\nNell Parsons, Mrs. Victoria Colgur,\nand Mrs. .Alfred Thompson.\n3ftrst pra_Hjti.rtatt (%.rrjt\nVictoria and Kootenay Streets\nMinister: REV. CHARLES E. BRAY\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nSubject:   \"THE   MAN   OF   GADARA\"\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Church School\nNo Evening Service\n&t. g>at_imir'H jprorCEatlfpfiral\n(ANGLICAN)\nDiaa Thomas U Leadbeater. D.D.\nEPIPHANY III\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n-_\u00bb\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning  Prayer\nSunday School as usual.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Willow  Point\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Prayer\ninto (E.iwttattt\nPastor: E. V. HANSON\n802 Baker St\nSUNDAY \u2014 9:45 a.m.\u2014SUNDAY SCHOOL\n11:00 a.m.-MORNING  WORSHIP\n.    7:30 p.m.\u2014EVENING SERVICE\nWEDNESDAY \u2014 7:30 p.m.\u2014PRAYER MEETING\nFRIDAY \u2014. 6:45 p.m.\u2014JUNIOR LEAGUE\n8:00 p.m.\u2014YOUNG PEOPLE'S\nITtrjst lapttHt\nGttjurrlj\nCottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nIlnlster: REV. K. IMAYOSHI\nr_8 Stanley St., Phone 1420-L\n3:45 a.m.\u2014Church School\nfor all ages.\n:00 a.m.\u2014FAMILY   WORSHIP\n(Trail CGIT Visitors)\n:30 p.m.\u2014THE   RELEASE   OF\nSPIRITUAL\nPOWER\nEDNESDAY, 8:15 p.m.:\nBible Study and Prayer\nRIDAY, 3:30 p.m.:\nMission Band\n_0_lj0ua_T'fl\nJ$-tttt?00_fl\neet In the Eaglet' Lodge Hall,\n641   Baker  Street\njndays and Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m.\nEducational Bible Study,\nibiect:\n'TREEDOM FROM FEAR\nIN  1955\"\nesidents of Salmo Note:\nubllc Talk at  Mrs.  M. Bush's\nat 7 p.m. this Sunday.\nU Welcome    \u2022   No Collection\n3. trat Qltjurd? at\n(EhriBi __>rirnttsi\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston. Mass-\nSunday School \u2014 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00 a.m.\n8ermon Subject:\n\"TRUTH\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8:00 p.m.\nReading Room. 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily From 3 to 5 p.m.\nAll Cordially  Welcome\n(Eititrrli of\ntifr Sroprmrr\nAnglican CFairvIew)\nCANON W J  SILVERWOOD\nMlsi Barbara Lea, Organist\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nSouth Slocan\n3:30 p.m,\nBoswell Club Seeks\nParty Line 'Phone\nBOSWELL \u2014 Boswell Women's\nClub has decided to ask the B.C.\nTelephone Company for particulars\nconcerning installation of a party\nline for this community. 'Phone\nservice came in for discussion by\nmembers.\nAt their meeting, held at the\nhome of Mrs. J. Pryke, members\nlearned that the financial statement\nshowed a small balance on hand.\nMrs. H. Bell read the Christmas\ntree statement, which showed a\nsmall deficit, which the club agreed\nto settle. Mrs. Norman Anderson\ndonated one of her woven rugs to\naid club funds.\nThieves Get Away\nWith $1500 Haul\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Thieves\nwho broke into a Super-Valu store\nin a south end district carted away\na cargo of tea, coffee and cigarets\nvalued at $1,500.\nPolice reported Friday the thieves\nused bolt cutters to cut padlocks\nfrom the doors of the store.\nOur Father's\nBusiness\nThe modern theologian, Reinhold\nNiebuhr, gives us a new emphasis on\nthe usefulness of an old problem,\nthat of suffering.\nThe common view is that suffering, disappointment, etc.\/ are the\nantitheis to happiness and joy. When\nwe have a set-back of any kind w*\nconsider it a \"fly in the ointrnent,\"\nand to the degree that it bothers u_\nwe consider ourselves hard-done-\nby, and unhappy.\nNiehbuhr points out that this Is\nerroneous thinking from a Christian point of view. In support Of his\nargument he refers to the Beatitudes: \"Blessed are the meek,\"\n\"they which do hunger and thirst,\"\n\"those who are persecuted,\" and\n\"yourselves, when men shall revile\nyou.\" A strange source-of enjoyment, indeed! But these were true\nwords, spoken by Him, \"Who, tor\nthe joy that was set before him,\nendured the Cross.\"'\nSt. Paul rejoiced in'his sufferings, because he saw that through\nthem he had a closer fellowship\nwith his Lord. Reviewing the hardships of a strenuous life of Christian witness and service, Paul found\nsatisfaction in the thought: \"The\nthings that have happened to me\nhave turned out to the furthering of\nthe Gospel\" That.should be a commentary on the biography of every\nChristian.\nThere may be a sort of shallow\nexistence achieved by some people,\nwho insulate themselves with a lot\nof the worldly comforts of these\ndays, and build a shell of indifference, to the place where they are\nself-satisfied, (\"where there's no\nsense, there's no feeling\"), but their\nhappiness is not much different\nfrom that of well-fed animals. Who\nwants to be a \"contented cow?\"\nThe example of Jesus, and that of\nhis true followers, would lead one\nto realize that the deeper joys -of\nlife are found in an all-out investment of life in the adventure of\nfollowing \"In His Steps.\"\nALLAN DIXON\nSALMO - M.r*._ Alice'\n' elected: .president of. Sali\nAid at the annual meeti\nchurch hall, succeeding\nMiddleton;-':.  \\ '      t'\nMrs. 6. P. Larsen wj\nvice-president., and _*-_.\ngaro was. again named\ntteasttter., Others are Mrs,\nbUrn,. flower fUnci secretar;\nH. John, Mrs. Milburrt 'and!\nWrang', executive committee; I\n\u25a0TH. Young; Mrs. C. Hanien. and. Mi\nMiddleton, .auditors,  and Mrs. Ci\nT^iel, scrapbook.'\nThe retiring president spoke of\nthe \"splendid spirit\" within the. Aid,\nand thanked members for their cooperation and unity,\nTJie financial statement showed\ntotal receipts-of $2047.91, and disbursements of $1424.96, a gain, of\n$361 over the previous year.\nIn a review' of church work progress, it was learned that a length\nof pipe had been purchased to corn\nplete the weli, and that some blast\ning is required. Plumbing fixtures\nfor the bathroom have been purchased. .  ,\nSending of Christmas parcels to\nold-timers of the district was a success, judging from oral and written\nwbrds of thanks. Twenty-six parcels\nwere sent, and remembrances of\nflowers and gifts, went to former\nAid members. Members donated the\ngoods for the parcels.\nH. Claire has offered to place a\nboard listing church services outside the church,' and a carpenter\nwill be engaged for the \"glasSed-In\"\nportion of the sign. \u2022\nChoir practice will be held on\nTuesday nights. The Aid plans to\nhold a World Day of Prayer service\nFebruary 25.\nMotions were made that in future\nthe president shall hold office no,\nlonger than for a two-year term;\nthat the evening circle take over\ncharge of the annual spring bazaar,\nwith the help of the Afternoon Circle; Circle I to take charge of the\nannual fall bazaar. Two members\nof Circle I, joining a committee of\nCircle II, will form the buying committee. Mrs. G, Thiel and Mrs. C.\nHansen will represent Circle, I. Mrs.\nH. Young offered to knit Indian\nsweaters and donate to funds money\nreceived for knitting.\nMAGNIFICENT GEM\nA garnet weighing 89,000 carats\n-about 42 p6unds\u2014found in Brazil\nis believed the biggest of its quality\never discovered. n\n__ aeal 74fi. With,\nTJtevrian, Wjqudih,\nSuthrran OJijurrh\nCorner Stanley and  Silica  Sts\nREV   CARL J. HENNIG\nRea, 317 Silica St. * Phone 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Worship   Service\nYou Are Cordially Invited\nTHE LUTHERAN HOUR\nCJAT 8:00 A.M.\nValuation Army\n513 Victoria Street\nLt. and Mr.. H. P. Thornhill\nSUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Directory and\nSunday School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation Meeting\n9315\nt\u201410\nAFTER .pending \u2022 month',\nleave with her parent, at Procter,\nAW1 Eleanor Henke. above, ha.\ndone to a new posting at Edgar,\nOnt. She Is the daughter ot Mr.\nand Mr.. William A. Henke.\nE. German Rule\nKills Business\nBERLIN (Reuters)\u2014Staffs o* the\nstate-owned restaurants in Com-\nmuinst East Berlin fear numerous\ndismissals now that the-East German government has made it too expensive for West Germans to eat\nand drink there.\nBusiness has slumped in the restaurants, for the prices are beyond\nthe purse of the average East Berliner.\nThe Communist government has\nruled that West Germans must pay\nin West German currency when\neating in these restaurants. The official exchange rate of East and West\nmarks is fixed at one to one, although West Berlin exchange booths\nsell four to five East marks for\none West mark.\nNO CUSTOMERS\n' Waiters look in vain for the usual\nguests from the \"capitalist\" West in\nEast Berlin's show places: The Cafe\nWarschau in Stalin Alle>, the Restaurant Budapest and the Hotel Jo-\nhannishof.\nPrivately, they say that they believe a general food shortage has\nprompted the East German government to discourage Western\nguests.\nThe East Berlin restaurants had\nbeen magnets for West Berlin gourmets who could have an excellent\nHungarian goulash, for instance,\nfor. half what I* would have cost in\nWest Berlin.\nNow, each guest has to show his\nidentity card to the waiter before\nbe, orders and anyone found to be\nfr^m the West German currency\narea is required'to pay In West\nmarks.\nMORE CARPENTERS\nBetween 1941 and 1951, the number of carpenters in Canada increased from 81,773 to 130,000.\n9_______C___#,\nd #. _tawuL Whs&hh.\nUSE REMNANTS1\nSew your cherub two new outfits \u2014 both from.ONI- pattern! Vary\nthe neckline tor party time or lesson-learning \u2014 the sleeves according to her whim! Use remnants \u2014\ncontrast fabrics and colors! She'll\nadore the high midriff-effect, the\nfull skirt!\nPattern 9315: Chlldrens Sizes 2, 4,\n8, 8, 10. Size 6 print dress takes 2Vj\nyards'35-inch gabric.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St., W..\nToronto. Ont.\nRummage\nToday\nSALVATION ARMY\nCITADEL\n1:30 P. M.\n\u2014:\u2014:\u2014\nMrs. Kirkham\nHeads Rebekahs\nThe installation of the 1999 officers of the Queen City Rebekah\nLodge was viewed by a large turnout of. members at the IOOF hall:\nDistrict deputy president Florence\nAndrews headed the installation\nteam, which included.deputy grand\nmarshal Elizabeth Hankin, deputy\ngrand treasurer Annie Nlcholls,\ndeputy, grand chaplain Winnie\nStrong, deputy grand inside guardian Gertrude Whitehead and deputy\ngrand outside guardian Ellen Mc\nAvinn.\nMrs. D. Immings, noble grand for\n1994, was presented with the past\nnoble grands Jewel and Installed as\npast noble grand for 1959. Installed\nas noble grand for the coming year\nwas Mrs. Emma Kirkham. Other\nelected officers installed were Mrs.\nEdith Wood, vice-grand; Mrs. Madge\nTaylor, recording secretary; Miss\npora Perasso, financial secretary\nand Mrs C. Hong, treasurer.\n, Mrs. Kirkham appointed the other\nofficers as follows: Mrs. E. Tickner\nas right supporter of the noble\ngrand, Mrs. H. Ozelle as left supporter of the noble grand, Mrs. E.\nBentham\" as warden, Mrs. Irene\nDickson as conductor, Mrs. Irene\nDay as chaplain, -Mrs. Edith McDonald as outside guardian, Mrs.\nJean' Taylor as inside guardian, and\nMrs. M. Clements as pianist.\nThe vice-grand then appointed\nMrs. Sadie McClelland as her right\nsu.ppor.er, and Mrs. Elsie Bereau\nas her left supporter.\nThe noble grand named the following committees: sewing committee, Mrs. Wood, _v_rs. Brown, Mrs.\nKirkham; social committee, Mrs.\nEllen McAvlnn, chairman, Mrs. H.\nOzelle, Mrs. McDonald, Mrs. Ben-\ntham; publicity, Mrs. M. Taylor;\nstaff captain, Mrs_ Tickner; visiting committee, Mrs. Wood, chairman, Mrs. Jeffs, Mrs. Immings,\nMrs. Ozelle, Mrs. Bereau, Mrs. Dickson and Mrs. Kirkham.\n. r O\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22,19SS\u20145\nJustweds Honored\nAt Wynndel Shower\nWYNNDEL \u2014 A miscellaneous\nshower was held in the Memorial\nhall honoring Mr. and Mrs. B.\nRauch, newlyweds.\nThe gift table was decorated with\nfestooned streamers in blue, pink\nand white crepe paper. Mrs, Fred\nHa^en, on behalf of the community,\npresented the couple with many useful gifts for their home. Court whist\nwas enjoyed, with high scorefgoing\nto Mrs. E. A. Hackett and B. Rauch\nand consolations to Mrs. Mannie\nHess and J. G. Abbott.\nTO IMPROVE LINER\nSOUTHAMPTON, England (AP)\n\u2014The liner Queeri Elizabeth will\nmove 'into drydock when she arrives from New Yo.k to be fitted\nwith giant stabilizer fins to lessen\nrolling in rough seas. The Cunard\nSteamship Line said the stabilizers\nwill be the largest of their kind\ninstalled in a passenger liner. The\ninstallation will lengthen the liner's\nannual overhaul period from seven\nto 10 weeks.\nMILLIONS KNOW THE\nCOUGH\nAND\nCOLD\nFIGHTING POWER OF\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nTHAT'S WHY IT IS CANADA'S FASTEST SELIINO\nCOUGH, COID, ASTHMA\nAND BRONCHITIS REMEDY.\nN-129\n. Jus. Two of Ihe Many Values In Our\nWarehouse Clearance Sale\n1   ONLY \u2014 6-P.ECE  MAHOGANY  DINING   ROOM   SUITE\nConsists of 3 side chairs, 1 armchair, china cabinet and\nlarge extension table. \u2014 Was $625.00,\n$297.83\n1 Only \u2014 COAL and WOOD STOVE.\nWas  $110.   \t\n$91.28\nJ\/UMMOtLL\nN. Z. Turns Down Prohibition\nE-y J. C. GRAHAM\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nAUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP)-Every\ntime New Zealand has an election,\nthe country also votes on whether\nliquor should be prohibited. The\nresult is always the same\u2014rejection of prohibition.\nYet the question ls reopened\nevery three years. Three questions\nare put before the voters\u2014whether\nto continue the present system of\nliquor sales by private firms: whether there should . be government\npurchase and control of liquor, or\nprohibition. To effect a change,\neither government control or prohibition must poll half the total\nvote.\nAt the recent elections which returned the National party government with a reduced majority, the\npresent system of lfquor sale was\ngiven its largest majority in history.\nSTEADY TREND\nWhen the law was first passed\nproviding for these triennial polls,\nopinion was closely divided. The\nfirst vote in 1918 gave prohibition\"\nan actual majority over continuance,  but it  narrowly  failed  to\nsecure half the total vote, so the\nexisting system was retained.\nEver since then opinion has\nturned steadily away from prohibition as a solution to the liquor\nproblem.\nIn the 1919 vote, the percentage!\nwere 44.5 for continuance of tha\nexisting system; 49.7 for prohibi-\ntio__ and 5.8 for state purchase. In\n1954, the percentages are 61.9 for\ncontinuance, 23.1 for prohibition\nand* 15 for state purchase.\nNew Zealanders have become so\naccustomed to the liquor plebiscite\naccompanying the national elections that they seldom question\nwhether it serves a useful purpose.\nProhibition supporters do not admit that the- triennial, referendum\nshould be dropped, but they now\nsuggest that different proposals for\nchanges in the liquor laws might\nbe put before the public.\nVOGUE STUDIO\n460 Ward St.     Ph. 1552\nPortrait and  Commercial\nPhotography\n\u00abUJ.__l\u00ab\u00bb*eKET\n*\nP. F. ASSORTED ffi\nADORABLE  |ABY SET\nBaby looks so cutei cuddly in this\nadorable crocheted set! Simple open-\nshell stitches make the pretty, cap,\njacket, booties.\nCrochet Pattern 612: Jacket, cap,\nbooties for infants. Use 3-ply fingering yarn. Thrifty! Jiffyl Wonderful\ngifts! '\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler.\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto, Ont\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER\nand SIZE; your NAME and AD-\nDRES8.\nINSPIRED IDEAS - Pages and\npages of novel designs In our {IEW\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalogue for 1955! Completely differeni\nand so thrilling, you'll want to order\nyour favorite patterns. Send 25 cents\nfor your' copy of this new, new\ncatalogue NOW1\nOur ^tumiusm^ dmjUMArtMsl\nSALE BEGINS TODAY\nWATCH THIS SPACE\nFOR MORE SPECIALS & \u00ab\nGREY PER8IAN LAMB COAT (Natural).      &\u00a3_C   ftft ^WtY\nRegular ,$650.00. SALE PRICE   \u00abpO-__*._\/W |-\nCENTRE BACK MUSKRAT JACKET (Dyed).     _ \\ f\\  ftft\nRegular $225.00.  SALE  PRICE    __ I V.   \\J\\J\nCHINA  MINK.CLUTCH  CAPE  (Dyed). Tift  ftft\nRegular-$235.00. SALE PRICE   _&___,U.UU\nCANADIAN SQUIRREL  CAPE 8TOLE _CA  ftft\n(Dyed 'Claret' Shade). Reg. $375. SALE PRICE 3j\\J.\\J\\J\n\"BREATH  OF 8PRING\" SHEARED\nMU8KRAT CAPE  (Dyed). 1 AA  AA\nRegular $150.00. SALE PRICE .....'.,    I -t\\J.\\J\\J\nBLACK LAMB % (Dyed). AQC  AA\nRegular $510.00. SALE PRICE  _ i. _)iUU\nBROWN LAMB % (Dyed). . _13C  A A\nRegular $450.00. SALE PRICE  f __.__..UU\nFLANK MUSKRAT COAT (Dyed 'Romance'    \"*TC  AA\nShade). Regular $285.00. SALE PRICE __ \/ _> .\\J\\J\nCENTRE BACK  MUSKRAT COAT (Dyed).    JJC  f\\f\\\nRegular $350.00. SALE PRICE   93_   .UU\nFLANK MU8KRAT (Dyed.'Starlight' Shade). \"I*TC  A A\nSize 18. Regular $285.00. SALE PRICE ... _. \/ J.UU\nGREENWOOD FURS\n580 Baker St. Phone 272\n\u25a0    1\n-\u2022':'--'  \u25a0 '-'i-i-'i\n\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0   \u25a0'-'    \u25a0 \u2022     _&__M_\n , :\t\n : ! , _._L\n pifflplp^^\n^iiPfP^.- \u25a0\u2022\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0 \u2022 \u2022 ' ^fPfl\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY.22,1951\n\u25a0% ,,\n,\".i*^*_ipN r\\** ,    . \"\"\u00b0\u00abs4_.;\n\u00bbi*_w\u00a3y\n'^ehrWkWfp- X\n.;.>\/.'\/*'.,_<.:_,.__\u00a3___-       ; vr\nLIVE HEADPIECES \u2014 Michaels Denis exhibits pets\nIhe captured during animal-filming trip In Kenya, Africa, a\nbushbaby stop h,er bead ond baby momrooso on her shoulder.\nOPENING   A   NEW   PROVINCE, IN   H 0 L L A N D _ A marine \"gallery\" Is on hand as crane closes the last\nopenlnB In Holland's dew 15-mllc dike leading to reclamation of the future 500,000-sere Znyder Zee Province.\nNO   COAL \u2014 A County Msyo, Ireland, player,hangs\ngoal post after his scoring effort was blocked by T. Shcehan of i\nNew York during Gaelic football match In New York.\nEMULATES FATHER \u2014 Donald M. Campbell will try\nnext sprint: to better the water speed record of 178.497 raph.\nBe U s son of tbe late English speed king, Sir Malcolm Campbell.\nSUBMARINE HUNTER-KILLER \u2014 Secret apparatus boused In elongated tail\nof newest Navy P2V-7 Neptune spots submarines under water so craft can attack them with\nbombs, depth charges or torpedoes. Pilots call plane Mad (for magnetic airborne detector) Bird.\nSPARKLING  TOUCH\n\u2014 These Items for evening\nwear feature s erystal rhlne-\nstone necklsce In new \"con-\nlour\" shape, rhinestono earrings and pin of unusual shape.\nFOR HEAVY TREAD\u2014A Bashl woman In the Belgian Congo shows her feet weighted down with heavy Iron\nanklets to achieve,deliberate gait of the cow, loved by her tribe.\n'CORN   TREES' \u2014 Farmers near city of Gubblo, Italy,\ntie ears of corn to trees for a clean, fast drying job in the fall\nsunlight before the long winter .months begin.\nNEW   LORD   MAYOR\n\u2014 Alderman Seymour.Howard\nlooks from the state chariot\nduring traditional procession\nmarking his installation as\nLord Mayor of London.\nLILLIAN   GISH   R E T U R N S \u2014 LUUan Glsh, who started la movies 40 years ago and\nIs returning to them after eight-year absence, chats with director Charles Laughton- and little\nactress Sail; Jane Brace during filming of \"Night of the. Hunter\" in California.\nA   TOUR   END S\u2014Vienna students Eduard Edlltsbergei\nright, and Norbert .Vijtasel. are interviewed In Bad Homburg\nGermany, at end of world motorcycle tour started April 1,1953\nCLEARING SEA LANES \u2014 u. S. Navy Lt. (j.g.) Wilfred Devlne, right, of South\nPortland, Mc,'talks with German Lt. Paul Voss aboard German -manned minesweeper, which is\naccompanied oy V. S. Navy ship in West Baltic Sea where World War II mines are still f\"\u2014\u2022'\nFOR   FASTER   FI R EF I GHTI N G _ A Kent, England, fireman carries two 16-foot lengths of lightweight plastlo\npipe during _. demonstration of high speed firefightlng.\n11   STORIES   UP \u2014 Benny Fox stands by ss wife, Betty, startles pedestrians hJ\nskipping rope on 18-inch platform atop hotel In Phoenix, Arts. She performed feat In many citlcsj\n'\n\u25a0 -   -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n__\u25a0\n \t\n'\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022'\u2022\u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n' :\t\ndangers High on Several Leafs;\nThe possibility of New York\nRangers holding a major training\nschool In Nelson next fall is in\ndoubt, although a school of some\nsort should be available, said Dennis Ball, Ranger chief talent scdlit\nfor Western Canada.\nMr. Ball, in an interview Friday\ndisclosed head man Frank Boucher\nwas well satisfied with his tieup\nwith the Leafs and the partnership\nwould carry on if Coach Charlie\nRayner was satisfied.\nThe Rangers, having made arrangements a year in advance, have\nselected South Porcupine as their\ntraining base. They expect to start\naround September 6, said Mr Ball.\n\"If arrangements can be made we\nwill hold a school in Nelson th\u00ab\nweek preceding this when some 25\ntop junior players could be made\navailable for a tryout.\"\nMA setup such as this could prove\nbeneficial to Nelson for Charlie\nRayner would then have an opportunity to pick out a crop of youngsters he could use. After they have\nattended the pro camp, those who\nfailed to turn pro would have the\nopportunity of playing in the\nQueen City. Nelson would then\nhave little dickering or scouting to\ndo for players.\n\"To gather together the material\nyou have on hand this season without the aid of the Rangers would\nhave set you back between 18 and\n20 thousand.\"\nIt is doubted that Rangers will\nplay exhibition games In this area\nnext fall. Their plans are always\nmade a year in advance and a\nschedule of games in Northern Ontario has been lined up. He thought\nthe Rangers would be playing a\nseries of exhibitions against the\nChicago Black H_jwks.\nAsked what prospects Ranger\nmaterial on this year's Leafs had\nfor next season. Mr. Ball remarked\nhe had not seen them play but\nfrom press releases and heresay he\nwas high on several. \"This lad Ray\nMikulan could easily be playing in\nthe Western Hockey League this\nseason. He is better than at least\nthree netmlnders already in pro\ncompany,\"\n\"Don McGregor, Wendy Keller,\nBruce Carmichael, Buddy MacDonald and Mikulan all have that'determined drive and the will to win,\nwhich is so important to a hockey\nplayer.\n\"It's possible Keller and MacDonald may be a year away from pro\neompany but the other three we\nfeel^have a great chance of advancing to the pro ranks. Of course,\nafter I see them in action I might\nfeel differently. When I sent them\nSpinning\nReels\n25% off\nJACK BOYCE\nMEN'S SHOP\n314 Baker St. Phone 160\nhere I predicted they wouldn't begin to roll until Christmas and from\nall reports the Leafs are Just beginning to do just that.\n\"I believe that to have veteran\nplayers like Joe Bell, Murray Parker and Herb Jeffrey on hand to\nteach these rookies is great. They\nhave been up in pro company and\ncan pass along a great deal of\nknowledge of the game to the\nyoungsters. From what I have heard\nParker has done wonders with McGregor. Having known Joe Bell, I\nknow he will aid the youngsters. He\nis hockey wise and a great fellow.\"\nAn Interesting sidelight to Keller\nis the fact he has a younger brother\nRalph playing junior for Prince\nAlbert who is one of the finest\ndefence products to come along in\nsome time.\nLIKE TOWN\n\"It is no surprise to me that Nelson has taken to their team this\nseason,\" said Ball. \"We know all\nthese lads' backgrounds and they\nare a swell bunch of clean living\nfellows. Since arriving in the city\nI have talked with them all and\nthey not only love the city but the\npeople in it. Many have expressed\nthe feelings of the fans for hockey\nand how even now they are trying\nto overcome the financial difficulties of the club.\n\"Most of these boys could easily\nhave gone to other teams when they\nfound the financial setup in poor\nshape, but instead elected to take\na cut to aid the cause themselves\nI don't think you would find another club willing to do the same\nthing, in the spirit of these boys,\"\nsaid Mr. Ball.\n\"Charlie Rayner has done a remarkable job as coach in Nelson\nand has assured us he loves the\nplace. It Is possible he will remain\nhere. He is now at the stage of a\nbrilliant career -where he must\nthink of his family and settling\ndown. To work with prospective\nyoungsters, with the hope of seeing them in the Ranger colors\nwould be a great reward to Rayner.\"\nTAKE8   TIME '\nThe process of bringing along\nplayers is a slow one, said Mr. Ball.\nIt takes years to develop a player\nto NHL standards. It's not every\nday a Gordie Howe or a Rocket\nRichard can be found. \"In fact, I\nhaven't found one yet but I'm still\nlooking.\n\"Myself, I have been In the Ranger organization but two years and\nstill have yet to see one of my\nprospects hit the big time, although'\nI have seven in the Western Hockey\nLeague and five in the Quebec\nLeague.\n\"The Rangers know it takes time\nto develop players'and for this\nreason they are happy to have the\nLeafs as an affiliated team. When\nwe get players out of junior company the majority aren't ready for\npro. It is essential we place them\nwith an amateur club in a league\nof high calibre. This league we\nknow to be one of the best in Canada.\n\"Building for championship hockey is like anything else, one must\nfirst have  a  firm  foundation.  By\nacquiring these farm clubs the\nRangers are building that foundation.    - ,\".    i.]''   \u25a0        .':\n\"It is always nice to look into\nthe future for your hockey. Who\nknows but some day in the future\nmany of these prospects, who go\nto the big time or even the lower\npro loops, on completion of their\npro careers may return to Nelson\nto play and live because they liked\nIt here in their early days and because the citizens made them feel\nthey too were citizens of their city.\nTOO HIGH\n\"Clubs across Canada are beginning to realize that salaries are too\nhigh. This will not always be so.\nA solution will be found. We maintain that future days will see players return to places like Nelson to\nlive and play just for the fun of it.\"\nIn closing the interview, we asked\nMr. Ball what he thought, of the\nDetroit Red Wing product, Ray\nKinasewich, and his only comment\nwas a sigh and a longing look as\nhe  replied  \"terrific.\"\nw\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22,1953\u20147\na\nADULT-STUDENT\nSKATING SUNDAY\n2:00-4:00 p_m.\nNELSON'S FINEST RECREATION\n25 Rinks in\nLadies Spiel\nTRAIL\u2014There are 25 rinks entered in the 17th annual Kootenay\nLadies' Bonspiel. 10 Trail rinks, 4\nNelson, 1 Salmo, 4 Kimberley, 1\nRossland, 1 Cranbrook, 3 Creston\nand 1 Trail nurses are entered.\nPlay will commence Thursday\nmorning, January _7, at 8:00 p.m.\nThe annual banquet will be held\nThursday night at 7:80 p.m. Friday\nand Saturday draws commence at\n8:00 a.m. and continue all day, with\nthe last draw at 8:30 p_ra.\nThere are two primary events, 2\nsecondary and the consolation.\nSKI CONDITIONS\nIMPROVE AT\nRED MOUNTAIN\n(Contributed)\nROSSLAND \u2014 Old Man Winter\nhas finally started to do his .ruff\nand we are happy to report that\nskiing conditions are very much\nimproved over what they were\nweekend before last Very few\nstumps and rocks are showing ex*\ncept where the \"rut runners\" have\nunthinkingly followed each other\ndown, one in exactly the lame track\nas the runner ahead of him. If they\nwould only try to turn on top of the\nhumps, the ruts would soon disappear and everyone\" could have a\nsmooth ride.\nThe ski lessons got away to a\ngood start with 42 adults and juniors\nin the class Saturday morning and\n12 adults Sunday afternoon. Anyone\nwho wishes to take lessons should\nsign up at the downstairs office\nin the lodge. TUbse who would like\nprivate lessons contact Gil Page.\nThe classes are for adults and Juniors on Saturday and for adults only\non Sunday. They last about an hour.\nLadies' Curling\nResults of play in the Nelson Ladies Curling Club over the past\nweek:\nMrs: M. L. Craig 9, Mrs. R. Little\n. Mrs. T. A. Wallace 11, Mrs. O. G.\nMacintyre 5.\nMrs. M. DeGirolamo 8, Mrs. A. J.\nHesse 5.\nMrs. T. McGovern 11, Mrs. M.\nKubin 8.\nMrs, O. G. Macintyre S, Mrs. M.\nDeGirolamo 17.\nMrs, T. McGovern 10, Mrs. T. A.\nWallace 6. .\nMrs. A. J. Hesse 13, Mrs. R. Little\n7.\nMrs. M. L. Craig 12, Mrs. M. Kubin 5.\nDraws for next week are:\nMonday: Mrs. T. A. Wallace vs\nMrs. M. L. Craig; Mrs. T. McGovern\nvs Mrs. O. G. Macintyre.\nTuesday: Mrs. A. J. Hesse vs Mrs.\nM. Kubin; Mrs. R. Little vs Mrs. M.\nDeGirolamo.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWESTERN LEAGUE   '\nNew Westminster 2, Vancouver 5\nVictoria 6, Calgary 5\nOKANAGAN SENIOR\nKelowna 3, Penticton 7\nWESTERN JUNIOR\nEdmonton 1. Regina 5\nLethbridge 6, Medicine Hat 5\nTilson Over Tiff\nBack With Flyen\nSPOKANE (AP) - Capt. Red\nTilson, who quit the Spokane hockey club last week in a huff over a\nfine, has changed his mind and will\nplay In Saturday night's game here\nagainst Kimberley.\nCoach Roy McBride, who claimed\nTilson broke training and would\nhave to pay a fine, said Friday his\ncaptain has agreed to pay and will\nrejoin the Western International\nLeague team. Tilson will not be\ncaptain ' anymore, however, McBride said.\nWANDA BEASLEY\nWOMEN'S TITLIST\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Wanda Beas-\nley, 19-year-old Toronto skater,\nFriday night won the Canadian\njunior ladies' singles figure skating championship, maintaining in\nthe free style competition a narrow lead she had built up in school\nfigures Thursday.\nDianne Williams, 16, and Marg\nCrosland, both of the Calgary Glen-\ncoe Club, were second and third\nrespectively.\nDon Jackson of Ottawa won the\nCanadian junior men's' single* figure skating championships.\nNelson Rinks\nSet for Zone\n'Spiel at Trail\nEighteen rinks froth the West\nKootenay will swing into action at\nTrail today in the Kootenay zone\nplayoffs to decide the four rinks\nto represent this area at the provincial playdowns in Kamloops\nFebruary 7.\nMany curling fans from Nelson\nwill be travelling to the smelter\ncity Sunday to witness the event\nin which five Nelson rinks are\nentered.\nNelson curlers taking part in the\n*spiel, with Bkips named first, are:\nR. Palmer, N. Jennejohn, G. Barefoot, M. Buerge.\nM. Ryalls, D. Porteous, D. Benedetti, R. Nash.\nL. Peerless, D. Meakins, L. McEachern, W. Wicken.\nJ. Harvey, R. Boates, J. Taylor,\nand lead.\nR. Maurer, F. Carmichael, L.\nBicknell, D. Winlaw.\nHockey Standings\nW ,L T F   A Pts.\nMontreal     26 12 7 147   97   59\nDetroit  27 11 5 119   89\nToronto     19 13 14 106   83\nBoston   14 17 12   99 114\nNew York   11 23 12   99 132\nChicago     8 26 10   94 149\nSIGN WITH CARDS\nST. LOUIS (AP) \u2014 Stan (The\nMan) Musial and Red Schoendienst,\nthe St. Louis Cardinals' veteran\none-two  punch   and  highest  paid\nFans Join Players in Clash as\nSmpkies Edge Dynamiters 3-2\nTRAH.\u2014Trail .-Kimberley 3:\nEvery game has its heros and its\ngoats. Friday night's WIHL fixture\nbetween the Kimberley Dynamiters\nand the Trail Smoke .Eaters was no\nexception..\nThe hero\u2014Seth Martin, the goat\n\u2014Ted Lebioda.\nMartin, playing his first game in\nthe new year -displayed the talent\nwhich has endeared him to Trail\nhockey fans since he first donned\nthe black and gold in 1953. The\nyoung Trail goalie held back the\nheavier, faster-moving Kimberley\nclub, letting only two pucks slip\nthrough his agile defence,\n\u2022 . *   *\nP W L T F  A   Pts.\nKimberley   28 14 11 1 109 103 32.69\nNelsori   35 16 18 1 152 136 30.77\nTrail   34 15 18 1 148 159 29.03\nSpokane .... 29 13 15 1 116 127 28.35\n* *        *\nOn the other hand Lebioda, with\nhis unorthodox way of proving a\npoint didn't endear himself either\nto the 2000 fans or to his teammates.\nTwelve-man hockey at Its best is\nhard on the players, but with the\nNHL BIG SEVEN\nBy The Canadian Prest\nG A Pts.\nGeoffrion, Montreal     27 23 50\nBeliveau, Montreal ..:.'....   26 24 50\nRichard, Montreal    28 19 45\nOlmstead, Montreal      7 34 41\nHowe, Detroit    SO 20 40\nSmith, Toronto _    24 15 39\nMosdell, Montreal    16 22 88\ncontracts.\nSalary terms were not revealed\nbut It was understood Musial received the same $80,000 he did last\nseason while Schoendienst's pact\ncalled for $40,000, about the same\nplayers, Friday signed their 1955 as last year.\nWorth $125\nOh, Those Arms That Sag Backwards\nNHL LEADERS\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanding: Montreal, won 26, lost\n12, tied 7; points 59;\nDetroit, won 27, lost ,13, tied 5;\npoints 59.\nPoints: Geoffrion, Montreal; Beliveau, Montreal, 50,\nGoals: Geoffrion, Montreal, 27.\nAssists: Olmstead, Montreal, 34.\nShutouts: Sawchuk, Detroit,1 9.\nPenalties: Evans, New York, 91\nminutes.\nBy W. W. W.\n\"With the Nelson and Trail old\ntimers under the impression that\nDennis Ball, Ranger scout, was at\nthe game looking for new material,\nthe youngsters of the dirty thirties\nand the plenty twenties went at it\nhammer and tongs in the hockey\ngame at the Civic Centre arena\n-Thursday night. When the noise of\nbattle rolled away there were the\nNelson lads with 7 goals and Trail\nwith 6.\nMost of the players realized top\nlate that \"more things are wrought\nby prayer than this world dreams\nof.\" And as the game progressed it\nwas more evident to them that rubber limbs, chests that heave like\nbellows and produce no fuel and\narms that sag backwards when used\nfor shooting, have become ^unique\npossessions, but are of no practical\nuse.\nTrail led all the way until the\nfatal third when Coach Stan O'Gen-\nski directing the team from Bon-\nnington (the first time a game has\nbeen coached by remote control)\nsignalled his handlers to let Bicknell loose. Len was in the curling\nrink disguised as a curler. He roared into the arena like a starved lion\ninto a den of Christians and the\nstartled Smokies never did recover.\nHe scored the winning goal with\nonly 55 seconds remaining. It was\nabout all the strength he had remaining too.\nELEVATED\nIn the earlier part of the game it\nwas Ab Cronie, Mike Buchna and\nArchdeacon Waite, who made all\nthe noise. Waite was only a Deacon\nlast year but after six assists and\nno penalties in the annual game\nhere he was elevated in the hierarchy. This trio made it plenty hot\nfor Seaby in the Nelson net and\nTrail was leading three to nothing\na. the end of the first period. Then,\neither because of lack of wind or a\ndesire to play more defensive hockey, the Nelson boys made sure they\nwere not caught up the Ice.\nBoth Jimmy Wolfe and Jesse Seaby in the nets had the fans In the\naisles with their goal tending. Their\nbrilliance was only faded by the\nsuper glow of the neutral referees\nwho succeeded In giving penalty to\nAl Euerby before the game started.\nIt was for delaying the game. Euerby was panting, that Is he was losing his pants and his dignity at the\nsame time.\nDick Malloy who broke training\nrules and was not In shape to play\nwas fined $5, and this will be paid\ndirectly to the Booster Club. The\nbriefest career of any old timer this\nyear was Wee Waite's ot Trail-\nScarce ten minute of practice had\npassed before he received a shot on\nthe foot,*breaking a bone. At this\ninformation Wally Cox of Nelson\nnodded his head sagely, \"he should\nhave started cold like I did.\"\nThe game placed the Nelson Old\nTimers'ln a unique position, so well\nare they doing financially, that they\nwill be able to declare a dividend,\nand as the Maple Leafs are the chief\nshareholders they will receive\nabout $125.   .\nIt seems that Bill Clarke, late of\nKimberley, but now of Nelson, hit\nthe nail ori'th. head with hfs comment of the game, \"I left it with a\ngood taste in my mouth.\"\nburly Kimberley rearguard sitting to flash the light for Kimberley.\nout four penalties in a row in the\nsecond period the onus was on his\nteammates to put even more effort\ninto their game.\nThe fixture Itself started out fast\nand furious with neither team able\nto break through the brilliant goal\nkeeping of Earl Betker and Martin.\nKimberley had their opportunity\nto take the lead when Kenny Cook\ntook a two-minute tripping penality\nat the half-way mark. Penalty killer\nBobby Kromm managed to keep the\npucq in motion until Smokies were\nback at full strength.\nTwo old acquaintances met in this\nperiod but Referee Curly Wheatley\nbroke up the tender meeting before\nGord Andrea and Bobby Kromm\ncould get properly set for a fracas.\nRay Hamilton broke the tie at\nthe end of the second period when\nhe caught a rebound and golfed a\nshot past Betker from the right\nhand corner. Immediately following\nthis play Hamilton took a flve-min-\nu\\e penalty along with Knlppleburg when the two settled an argument with sticks. Knippleburg\nleft the Ice with a gash across his\nforehead. Lebioda picked up a two-\nminute penalty for cross checking,\nhis fourth this frame.\nWith Trail holding a meager 1-0\nedge going into the third period\nKimberley took the ice swarming\nthe Smokie citadel. Moe Young\nmanaged to pick the puck from the\nfray and carried it single-handedly\nin a dipsy-doodle manner down the\nlength of the Ice. He faked Betker\nout of his net, then slipped the rubber In from the corner.\nNorm Larson scored first blood\nfor the Dynamiters less than a minute later when he teamed up with\nBuzz Mellor and Bell and scored on\na screen shot.\nTempers ran short and a goal by\nBud Andrews at the three-quarter\nmark did nothing to improve the\nfeeling between the two teams.\nBarre popped in a neat goal at 18:58\nThe tilt developed Into a pier six\nriot with less than two seconds to\ngo. Fletcher teed off with Mellor\nto start the donnybrook and players and fans flocked Into the fray.\nBobby Kromm, settling a difference\nwith Lebioda, caught the butt end\nof his stick and left the Ice with a\ncracked head. Lebioda went out for\na major followed by Fletcher and\nMellbr. The game ended on this\nnote.\nLineups:\nKimberley\u2014Betker, Jones, Craig,\nAndrea, Lebioda, Hockley, Barre.\nMellor, Knlppleburg, Bell, McNiven and Larson,\nTrail\u2014Martin, Hamilton, Cook,\nFletcher, McTeer, Kromm, Andrews, Penner, Trentini, Desrosiers,\nYoung and Kuzma. p\nSummary:\n1st period: No. score. Penalty-\nCook.\n2nd period: 1, Trail, Hamilton\n(Desrosiers, McTeer) 17.02. Penalties: Andrea, Lebioda (4), Knippleburg, Hamilton.\n3rd period: 2, Trail, Young 2:32;\n3, Kimberley, Larson (Mellor-Bell)\n3:10; 4, Trail, Andrews (Trentini)\n14:27; 5, Kimberley, Ban- (McNiven,\nKnlpplebprg) 18:57. Penalties:\nFletcher, Lebioda (five minutes),\nFletcher (five minutes), Mellor\n(five minutes).\nFRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal* Loans\nFor   Bills,  Fuel,   Repairs,  Cars,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. LTD.\nSulto 212,   Medical Arts Bldg.\n\u2022\u2022> PHONE 1786\nFAMILY\nSKATING\nTODAY\n10:00 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.\nIf you are looking for a\nGOOD Place to DEAL\nAnd o\nPlace to SAVE Money\nThen  Join  Our Treasure STAR  CARD   DIVIDEND  SYSTEM\nIT'8 FREE \u2014 Be Sure to Aik for a Card\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE\nYMIR ROAD\nPHONE 1648\nGILKERS' LTD. n m.\nCash Only pcwaAy  CLEARANCE\nWhile They Last\nReg. $59.50 to $77.50\nHALF PRICE\nCUidO 2 ONLY TUXEDOS!  HALF PRICE\nRegular $59.50 and $74.50\nSizes 37 and 38\nMake Room for NEW STOCK\nEsquire and Society Brand To\nRegular $42.50 to $65.00\nTOPCOATS HALF PRICE\nSALE\nSTARTS\nTODAY\nSPORT\nJACKETS\nHALF PRICE\nGILKERS LTD\n546 Baker St.\nMEN'S WEAR\nNelson\n': .    ' \u25a0::\u25a0:.-',\u25a0;\u2022,;.\u25a0.:...,',..\nMm.\n' \u2022\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' \u2022 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   '\n\u25a0\t\n  \u2014\u25a0*\u25a0* ; ^wpup \u2022\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u2122$m\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12,1955\nL\n_Jw?\u00bbSW_fswv5S\n'\t\nWW^^^^^^P'\"\"'-'r''- '\u25a0'\u25a0'''\nm$\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL_\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nt3\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nY\n_W\n_E\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nMarket Tends\nNEW VORK (AP) - Th\u00ab stock\nmarket advanced Friday and the\nvolume ot business expanded a little\nunder encouragement ot the higher\ntrend.\nCanadian stocks were generally\nhigher. International Nickel and\nHiram Walker advanced %, and\nCanadian Pacific and Distillers Seagram were up Vs. Mclntyre lost Vi.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket, strong all day, gained even\nmore ground in a final hour surge\nof buying Friday. '\n\u2022 All sections guinea and over-all\nstrength was the greatest since Jan.\n10 when prices soared in a strong\nrecovery following the sharp break\ntwo weeks ago. Low-priced mines\nwere extremely active.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The stock\nmarket was steady to fractionally\nhigher in active trading.\n\u25a0 Great Lakes, Internationa] Nickel\nand Donohue gained Vs. Up V.\nwere Abitlbl, Aluminum, BA Oil\nand Noranda. '\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The Lon\ndon stock market continued to make\ngood headway on renewed investment buying. Gilt-edged Issues\nwere again the exception, however,\nbecause of money rate uncertainties.\nPrices declined fractionally.\nCa!<_ie.rv Livestock\nCALGARY (CPT - There were\n1050 cattle and calves on offer at\nthe Calgary livestock market, including 375 head held over.\nTrade moderately active, with\ngood to choice butcher steers closing steady at week's advance; me.\ndium quality kinds easier; butcher\nheifers steady; good cows under\npressure and down 50 cents in\nspots; 'canners, cutters and bulls\nsteady.\nChoice steers $19.50 to $20.50; odd\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Many mar-\nriages end on the rocks because of\npoor \"salesmanship,\" says James\nWatson, head of a New York sales\nagency. \"It ls because the husband,\nor the wife, or both, cease selling\nthemselves,\" he told a meeting of\nthe Advertising and Sales Executives Club Wednesday.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  \t\nBralorne ....\t\nCanusa, ...' \t\nCariboo (Sold  \u201e \u201e\nEstella   ... j.\t\nGiant Mascot __\nGrandview\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG (CP)   -   W.nnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 77V4.\nBarley, No. 1 feed. 1.19ft.\nHighland Bell     \t\nPac Eastern Gold \t\nPend Oreille  _.\nPioneer Gold ___...\nPremier Border \t\nQuatsmo \t\nReeves MacDonald     1.40\n.03\n2.75\n.04\n1.03\n.11\n.52\n.25\n.43\n.12\n4.75\n2.10\n.04 V.\n.14\n.78\n4.95\n.20\n.70\n.09\n.01 _\n.03\n.50\n.171.\n.46\nSheep Creek\nSherrit Gordon  \t\nSilver Ridge _\t\nSilver Standard \t\nSurf Inlet   \t\nVanarida    _\t\nVan Hoi \t\nWestern Exploration .\nWestern Tungsten \t\nYale \t\nOIL8\nAnglo Canadian      5.00\nA P Consolidated  45\nCalgary & Ed.monton    13.75\nCanadian Anaconda  __      .16V4\nHome         8.35\nMercury    08\nOkalta Com        1.44\nPacific Pete     11.25\nPetace River Gas      7.60\nRoyalite  __    12.75\nVanalta    20.4\nVulcan   _      .35\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates      4.85\nInt Brew B      5.00\nWestern Plywood      11.50\nsales to $20.70; good $18 to $19.25;\nmedium $16.50 to $17.50.\nChoice heifers $16.50 to $17.50; odd\nones at $17.70; good $15.25 to $16.25;\nmedium $14 to $15; common $12 to\n$13.50; canners and cutters $5 to $8.\nGood bulls $10.50 to $11.50; common to medium $8 to $10.\nThe replacement cattle on offer,\nmostly medium quality, sold about\nsteady; good feeder steers $16 to\n$16.50; good stock steers $14.50 to\n$15.50; common to medium $12 to\n$14; medium to good veal $15 to\n$19.50.\n. Hogs advanced 25 cents Thursday, grade A $24.50; sows steady\nat $14.75.\nGood lambs brought $17 to $18;\ngood ewes mostly $5 to $7.50.\nTHEN VOL! SUBT-PACT\nTHE DEBTS FROM THE\nCREDITS AND\nTHAT LEAVES\nYOU-\nTELEVISION for TODAY\nSATURDAY\n12:00-Sign On\n12:30\u2014Chicago Wrestling\n1:30\u2014Sports on Parade\nIndustry on Parade\n2:00\u2014Western Roundup\n5:00\u2014Big Picture\n5:30^-Captain Midnight\n6:0O-Willie\n6:30\u2014Starlite Stairway\n7:00\u2014Corliss Archer\n7:30\u2014Beal the Clock\n8:00\u2014Jackie Gleason\n9:00\u2014Two for the Money (L)\n9:30\u2014District Attorney\n10:00\u2014My Favorite Husband\n10:30\u2014Chicago Wrestling\n11:30\u2014Late Show\nSUNDAY\n1:30\u2014Sign On\n2:00\u2014Omnibus (L)\n3:30\u2014Halls of Ivy\n4:00\u2014This Is the Life\n4:30\u2014Sunday  Matinee\n5:30\u2014Annie Oakley\n8:00\u2014You Are There\n6-30\u2014Lassie (L)\n7:00\u2014Jack Benny\n7:30\u2014Bristol Myers Playhouse\n8:00\u2014Toasl of. the Town\n9:00\u2014G.E. Theatre\n9:30\u2014Name That Tune\n10:00\u2014Father Knows Best\n10:30\u2014Late Show\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON  THE  DIAL\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nSATURDAY,\n30\u2014Morning Show\n:00\u2014 Ne^s\n05\u2014Morning Show\nlEr-'Musical  Minutes .\n:30\u2014News\n35\u2014Morning Show\n:45\u2014\u2022 Rise 'n' Shine\n:00\u2014 News\n.10\u2014Sports News\n;: 15\u2014Hits and Encores\n:30   Breakfast  Bands\n:45\u2014Wax Wagon\n':00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\ni:30\u2014Stamp Club\ni:45\u2014Sounds Fun\ni:00\u2014Musicale\ni:30\u2014Story Parade\ni:45\u2014News\ni;5_\u2014Weather\n.:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\nJANUARY 22, 1955\n2:30\u2014Songs to Grow On\n2:45\u2014Great Days In Sport\n3;00J\u2014News\n3:15\u2014An Experience of Life\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n3:45\u2014This Week\n4:00\u2014Buff Estes Sextet\n4:15\u2014Memo from UN.\n4:30\u2014Now 1 Ask You\n5:00\u2014Rhythm Pals\n5:30\u2014Journey Into Fashion\n5:35\u2014Musical\n5:45\u2014What Do You Think\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014N.H.L. Hockey\n8:00\u2014Saturday Special\n8:30\u2014W.I.H.L.\u2014Nelson\n10 00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Bill Good\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:35\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nSUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1955\n9:0O\u2014Oversea. News\n9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n10:00\u2014B.C Gardener\n10:15\u2014Just  Mary\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n11:00\u2014Trinity Church Service\n12:00\u2014N.Y   Philharmonic\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Canadian Scenes\n2:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Ask the Weathiirnan\n3:12\u2014Weather\n3:15\u2014UN on the Record\n3:30\u2014The People's Church\n3:45\u2014All Aboard tor Adventure\n4:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n4:30\u2014The Odyssey\n5:00\u2014Hour ot Jecision\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Capital Report\n6:27\u2014B. C. Weather\n6:30\u2014B C Profiles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Questing Time\n8:00\u2014Stage 55\n9:00\u2014Passing Parade\n9:80\u2014Ford Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Music  Diary\n11:00\u2014 \"NEWS\" Night Cap\nCBC   PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nSUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1955\n3:15\u2014U.N on the Record\n3:30\u2014Vancouver Symphony\nOrchestra\n4:30\u2014Odyssey\n5:00\u2014Sunday Chorale\n5:30\u2014Sonata Recital\n6:00\u2014Capital Report\n6:27\u2014Weather Report\n6.30\u2014B. C. Profile\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Little Symphony Orchestra\n8:00\u2014Stage 55\n9.00\u2014String Along\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hour\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Music Diary\n00\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n:30\u2014Sunday Morning Recital\n00\u2014BBC News\n;15\u2014Musical Memories\n:30\u2014^Harmony Harbor\n00\u2014BC   Gardner\n15\u2014Just Mary\n:30\u2014In His Service\n00\u2014Chamber Music\n:30\u2014Religious Period\n00\u2014New  York Philharmonic\nSymphony\n30\u2014Critically Speaking\n00\u2014Canadian Scenes\n:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n00\u2014 News\nUS--A      the   .Veal..errran\n:12\u2014Weather  Forecast\nMONDAY, JANUARY 24, 1955\n00\u2014Fisherman s  Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical  Minute*\nKHQ-TV\nChannel 6\nSATURDAY\n9:30\u2014Test Pattern\n9:45\u2014Color Test Program\n10:00\u2014Happy Felton\n10:30\u2014Paul Wincheli\n11:00\u2014Funny Boners\n11:30\u2014Tom Corbett\u2014Space Cadet\n12:00\u2014Pro Basketball\n2:00\u2014Western Theatre\n5:(I0\u2014Swingin' on a Rainbow\n6:30\u2014Big Town\n7:00\u2014Death Valley Days\n7:30\u2014Horace Heldt\n8:00\u2014 It's a Great Life\n8:30\u2014So This Is Hollywood\n9:00\u2014Imogene Coca\n9:30\u2014Curtain Time\n10:00\u2014George Gobel\n10:30.-Hit Parade\n11:00\u2014Double Indemnity\n12:30\u2014News Headlines\n12:35\u2014Bible Reading\n'     SUNDAY\n9:45\u2014Test Pattern\n10:00\u2014Color Test Pattern\n10:15\u2014What's Your Trouble\n10:30\u2014American Religious Townhall\nMeeting\n11:00-NBC Opera\n1:00\u2014Christopher Program\n1:30\u2014Frontiers of Faith\n2:00\u2014Alice in Wonderland\n3:30\u2014TV Theatre\n4:30\u2014Curtain Time\n5:00\u2014Hall of Fame\n5:30\u2014Background\n6:00\u2014People Are Funny\n6:30\u2014This Is Your Music\n7:00\u2014Amos 'N Andy\n7:30\u2014Mr. Peepers\n8:00\u2014Comedy Hour\n9:00\u2014TV   Playhouse\n10:00\u2014Loretta Young\n10:30\u2014Bob Cummings\n11:00\u2014Dangerous Assignment\n11:30\u2014News Headlines\n11:35\u2014Bible Reading\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n45\u2014Morning Devotions\n55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n815\u2014 Bra.Ki.si Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n900\u2014 BBC New-\n9 15\u2014Aunt liucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\nIU'IK>, Murnintr   Visil\n10:15 -The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kale Altken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten ol the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\nl2.1o   News\n14:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30   BC    -arm  Broadcast\n12:55-Five  to  One '\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n\u25a0_ .'ll\u2014Trans Canadr   Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014Share the  Wealth\n4:00\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Adventures of Robin Hood\n5:00\u2014Current and Choice\n5:15\u2014International   Commentary\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Chansonettes'\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Rovinfc  Reporter\n6:30\u2014Don Messer\n7 00\u2014 News\n7:30\u2014Conversation\n8:00\u2014National Farm Radio Forum\n8:30\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\ni un    Newi\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014Bob McMullin Show\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nGeneral Electric\nTelevision\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\n674 Baker St Phone 260\nFor\nG.E.   ULTRA VI8ION   TV\nIt's\nTHE BAY ELECTRIC\n1460 Bay Ave. Trail\nPHONE 939\nIN   CRE8TON   IT'S\nCreston Electric\nFOR   R.O A.. VICTOR   TV\nSALE8 AND 8ERVICE\nFor\nPHILCO TV\n8ALES AND SERVICE\nCall in at\nKLINE'S FURNITURE\nAND  APPLIANCES   .\n1474 Bay Ave. Trail\n3. Moslem cap\n4. Before\n5. Color   \u2022\n6. Scorches\n7. Ransorfling\n\u00bb. Gifts to\nthe poor\n9. Cut\n10. Habitual\ndrunkards\n16. Mongrel dog\n18. Little brooks\n19. Denary\n20. Dance step\n21. National\ngod\n(Tahiti)\n23. Man's\nname-\n24. Seine\n25. Before\n27.'Glrl'a\nnick,\nname,\n29. Father\n31. Follow,\ning\n\"eights\"\n32. Agreement\n33. Winglike\n34. Italian\ncoin\n' _3.Q__.i_.\nULiaa\naca-ana\n_3_.l__tI_.E-\nE_a._ii_._j\nJU'Ji-M\naunt, a\nSHUi-IB\nBam . tin hud.!\n_a__ii__iaa\na_ra_iH\n-3__l__l__l__.__l._li_!\nuaa uu    aaa\nHidE-HC!\n'_L_.__.-I__\naaoraii\naanuiH\n_a_i._s.__i\n(a__i__iai3\n,m__i'_.\nWUI^H\nYob .erdny'o   Am .Tor .\n37. A reward\n(archaic)\n39. The bill of\nan anchor\n36. Wavy (Her.)   40. Luzon nativ*\nI:\nACROSS\n1. Showy\nflower\nS. Stupid\n11. Sound\nnoisily\n12. Greeting\n13. Wearied by\ntedium\n14. Permit\nto enter\n15. Subside\n16. Tops of\n.waves\n17. Blunt\n20. Needier\n22. Hair on\nhorse's neck\n26. Incendiarism\n27. A horse who\nruns a mile\n28. District in\nLondon\n29. Indicate\n30. Knotty\n32. Pale\n35. Total\n38. Foreign\n39. A signer of\nthe Declaration of IVide.\npendence\n41. Fencing\n. position\n. 42. Musical\nstudy\n43. Rock com*\nwon along\nthe Rhine\n44. Relieved\nDOWN\n1. Pariah priest\n(Fr.)\n_. Mud (Ir.) i-i4\nDAILY CBYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\naxydlbaAxr\nIs   LONGFELLOW\nOn* letter simply stands for another. In this example _. is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos.\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nCHIGNLUVY    RUTT    JHIG    HS    N L U ft\n~2\nm\nm\nWG      LBIK V\ntJ      LH AG      UN      IK F V'N\nYHEG-.MU JDG V C.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: SPEAK IN FRENCH WHEN YOU\nCAN'T THINK OF THE ENGLISH FOR A THING\u2014\"LEWIS\nCARROLL\".\nDistribute, by King Features Syndlcato.\n'   \u25a0   '\n \t\nVf.\".,.1-.'.'.;^'' '; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.:;\"\u25a0'' \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0. :'.-;\n\u00bb>\u25a0\u25a0..<\u25a0-:;;\u25a0<.-.   - \\~~~-- : ^7^;\nm\nm$mm*m*t*>**N***il^^ \u25a0\"\u25a0\"\u25a0\"f1 \u25a0 \" m*  '*\u25a0 'fr\nxwmii^M.iidWyt^\n'J\/.vrfiVWV\nOur New Classified Phone Number Is\nBIRTHS\nSUTHERLAND - To Mr. and\nMrs. Ernest Sutherland of Vallican.\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJanuary IB. a daughter.\nSCHAEFFER - To Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Schaeffer, 613 Mill Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJanuary 18, a daughter.\nritir  WAN.ED\nWHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE\nparts and equipment salesman\nwanted to call on garages and\nindustry in Trail area. Stockroom\nor mechanical \u25a0 experience is essential. Must reside In Trail district and have 6wn car. Excellent\nproposition for right man. Reply\nto Box 1975 Daily News.\nACTUAL JOBS IN CANADA, U.S.,\nSo. Am., Europe. To $15,000. Write\nEmployment Info. Center, Room\nC-484, Green St., Boston, 14.\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER\nwith typing, bookkeeping and\nshorthand. Apply Box 1973, Nelson News.\nAPPLIANCE SALESMAN TO\nstart immediately. For interview,\nphone 700.\nWANTED EXPERIENCED MACH-\ninery salesman. Give all particulars. Apply Box 1962, Nelson News\nHELP WANTED: -FEMALE\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES\nFor the Largest\nand Most Complete\nCar Selection\nSEE\nREUBEN BUERGE\nTODAY'\nFor That New or Used Car\nNEW AUSTIN SOMERSETS\n1955 Pontiac,Sedan\n1955 Chev, 4-Door Bel-Air\n1954 Austin Sedan\nLow mileage.\n1954 Meteor Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1953 Ford Hard Top\n1953 Ford 2-Door. Radio.\n1953 Chevrolet 2-Door\n1953 Meteor Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\nLow mileage.\n1952 Ford Sedan\nWANTED: RELIABLE GIRL TO DO\nhousework and care for children\nwhile parents work. Sleep in preferred. Phone 1370-X, Trail, B.C.\nSEW OUR READY-CUT APRONS\nsparetime. Easy, profitable. Free\ndetails. A & B Enterprises, Fort\nSmith, Arkansas.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nMAN WITH PLASTIC LAMINAT-\ning press wishes to get In touch\nwith interested party. Write or enquire room 7, Queens Hotel.\nNelson.\nWANTED WORK H.T.4 CATER-\npillar shovel. Convertible to D-4\nbulldozer. Apply A. H. Shrieves.\n1018 Falls St.. Nelson, B. C.\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER\nand bookkeeper open for part\ntime or relieving work. Ph. 207-L.\nGUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP\non alteration and repairs Reasonable estimates  Ph. 434-X-2\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE,\nwith garage, North Shore, 2V_\nmiles from ferry. Phone 773-R-3\nafter 6:30 p.m.\nFOR SALE: SMALL HOUSE ON\ncorner lot Five rooms and basement Hot water heating system.\nPh. 765-X.\nFOR SALE OR RENT: 7-ROOM\nhouse on Hoover St., fireplace,\ndouble plumbing, $65. Also two\nbuilding lots. Silica St Ph. 1005-Y.\nFULLY FURNISHED ONE AND\ntwo hedroom units, automatic gas\nheat at Ken Court, 1V_ miles out\nthe Ymir Rd. 1581-L-2.\nFURNISHED ROOM, CLEAN,\nwarm sitting room and kitchenette suite. Quiet living business\ncouple or girl. Ph. 335-X.\nFOR RENT: CLEAN. COMFORT-\nable sleeping room, close in. Ph.\n488-R.\nFOR RENT: SLEEPING ROOMS\nand housekeeping room. Phone\n1194-L.\nFOR RENT: 3-ROOM SUITE, PRI\nvate entrance. . Phone 992-X or\napply 75 High St\u201e mornings.\nS-ROOM SUITE. SELF-CONTAIN-\ned. Partly furnished, 912 Vernon\nSt., apply Apt. 1.\t\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE,\nsuitable for bachelors. Apply 1019\nLatimer Street.\n\u2022 \u2022SPECIAL**\n1949 Ford Pickup\nOnly $495.00\n1951 Chev. Sedan. Radio.\n1950 Pontiac Sedan. Radio.\n1947 Chev. 2-Door. Radio.\nMANY MORE CHOICE UNITS\nINCLUDING\nAN EXCELLENT STOCK\nOF LIGHT DELIVERIES\nSPOT CASH FOR      ,\n1952 AND LATER SEDANS\nCASH     TERMS     TRADES\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\n803 Baker St.   Phnoell35\nNelson, B.C.\nThe Best\nof Nelson's\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, heated Day\nweek   monthly  rates   171   Baker\nSELF-CONTAINED, HEATED APT.\nfor two. 916 Edgewood Ave. Ph\n1233.\nS-ROOM    COTTAGE,    CENTRAL,\nsuitable for couple only. Ph. 490-Y.\nFURNISHED SUITE AND SLEEP-\ning rooms. Ph. 343-Y.\nFOR RENT: 3-ROOM APT. HEAT-\ned, unfurnished. Phone 963 or 234.\nFOR RENT: FULLY FURNISHED,\nmodern cottage. Ph. 421-R.\nFOR RENT: 2-ROOM SUITE. GAS\nheated, gas stove. 723 Silica St.\nHOUSEKEEPING CABINS. NORTH\nShore Motel   Phone-1684\nPERSONAL  \"\nTHE ALMER HOTEL. OPP C PR\nDepot Vancouver BC 100.. fire\nproof. 24 .hr Elevator Service\nClean, quiet and comfortable Reasonable rates City Centre\nDRINKING PROBLEM? IF ~Y5T)\nhave a drinking problem, men or\nwomen, contact Alcoholics Anonymous. Box 388.- Nelson. Ph.\n161-L-3\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAVER8   AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n\"TTwTWiDDOWSON is CO\"\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St  Nelson.\nP~S    ELMES    ROSSLAND    BC\nAssayer Chemist  Mine Rep\nNew Cars\n1954-Studebaker\nCommander\nSpecial In Good\nUsed Cars\n1952 Austin Somerset\nIn A-1 condition.\n1952 Studebaker Sedan\n1951 Studebaker Sedan\n1951 Hudson Sedan\n1949 Hillman Sedan\n1949 Plymouth Sedan\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\nTruck Specials\n1954 Studebaker Pickup\n1952 Thames Pickup\n1950 Mercury Pickup\nYOUR STUDEBAKER AND\nHILLMAN   DEALER\nDeFoe Service\nLTD.\n213 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1234\nENGINEERS  AND 8URVEYOR8 '\n\"BOYD C   AFFLECK, M.E.I.C.\nBC  Land Surveyor P  Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson     Phone_1238\n~ A L. PURDY. B.CX.S\"\nSui     No  8. 373 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1118   B   C.  Land Surveyor\nST V    S.HAYL..R   P.C~ 66_ \"2-J\nKimberley   Phone 54\nB C Land Surveyor Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop    Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593, 3,24 Vernon St\nSeason's Special on\nFord Products\nGIVEAWAY PRICES\n'41   Ford Tudor\n'47 Ford Pickup\n'47 Mercury Panel\n'51   Ford Panel\n'52 Monarch Hardtop\nThese vehicles are all priced\nwell under market value and\nif you wish to trade expect\nyours to be devaluated accordingly.\nCOME AND  INVESTIGATE\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\n'Continued >-\nFOR SALE: 1948 MERCURY SE-\ndan. Can be financed, See B. Monteleone, CP. Express.\nISM' AM1.N, \u00bb_.\"\"H_H_.-*'-.\nTrade or finance. Ph. 471-X-4\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nEXCELLENT BUY    '\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY\n1\u20145 Vi acres and. house at highway, Taghum. 2 - bedroom;\nbrick construction, renovated\nrecenty. Good bathroom and\n^en; $6600\nTerms:  $2000 Down  and\nBalance $40 and 6% Interest\nPer Month\nFAIRVIEW\nJ\u2014Excellent New Home: a really\nbeautiful home. Oak floors\nthroughout, double plumbing,\nupstairs and first floor. Ultramodern kitchen. Lovely living room and dining room,\nopen fireplace. Three lovely\nbadroorps. and many other\nflneje.tures.     $15,750\nHalf Cash Required\nCOMFORTABLE COTTAGE\n4\u2014Good   garden.   3   bedrooms,\nOil furnace; part   <R_4I*>flO\nbasement.  Price  . \"*\"*-vv\nSome Terms\nGOOD  INVESTMENT\n5\u20144-Apartment House. Returns\n12%. Fully modern, Large\ntotMow taxes.   $ J 5,750\nTerms: $5750 Cash and\nBalance $200 Per Month,\nROSEMONT\nFirst-Class Home\n7\u20143 bedrooms on the ground\n' floor, 1 upstairs. Attractive\nliving room and kitchen with\nenclosed porch and good utility room. 3-plece white bathroom. Good cement foundation and cement floor in basement. New furnace, hot air\nblower type system. 4 garden\nlots, 13 fruit trees. On the\nproperty is also a small cabin,\nchild's playhouse $7500\nand garage. Price\n. Some Terms.\nLIST YOUR HOUSE\nTODAY\nWe .have buyers. and_also\nnave mor.gagc\"1.acilltfi.s to\nhelp you.\nC.W.Apple-yard\n& Co. Ltd.\nEstablished  1912   \"\nReal Estate and Insurance\n' Agents\nT. C. Lambert. Office Manager\n392 BAKER ST.      PHONE 269\nP.O. Box 26 Nelson,-B.C.\n$4000\n1\u2014ALMOST NEW BUNGALOW\nin Upper Fairview. H.W. floors.\n3 B.R.S, L.R., D.R., modernistic\nkitchen and bathroom. Laundry room, first-class oil furnace. Developed grounds with\nlovely view. $12,500\nFull  pric\u00bb T       '\nSome Terms.\n2\u2014THREE BEDROOM HOUSE,\nclose in. L.R., D.R. and kitchen\non main floor. IB.R.s uostairs.\nFull basement. This is a wonderful buy\nat\nWe could help finance this one!\n3-\u00bbNOTHER REAL BUY! L.R..\nD.R.. one B.R. and bathroom\non main floor. 3 larae B.R.s\non second floor. Could be ess-\nN ilv dunlexed. Locate in 3\nlevel Fairview lots. $7000\nFor quick sal\u00bb **^\nSplendid  Terms.\n+-A LARGE 3 B.R. FAMILY\nHOME for early occupanov.\nCose to public and high\nschools. Very well nlanned and\nin first-class condition. New\nwiring and plumblns. Full\nbasement and coal stoker, \u2014\nHouse easily heated. \u2014 You\nshould see this one. Ask us\nfor price and terms.\n5\u2014LOWLY HOME in wonderful\ncondition, located In lower\nRosemont. ' Ond-sized rooms\nthrou\u00abhout. Oil heated. This\nhome has to be viewed to be\nreally jmnreclated Evervthin-t\nsnlc and soan with no rennlr\n1oV to do. Wpll located and\nlots of (r^o'inds. ImmpoMote oc-\nCllriar\"\"-.    Hoort    ,*\u2014-    to    *\u25a0*.\nsnonsible buver. tin Qrtrt\nPriced \u00bbt or.i-     *\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u00ab\"\"'\nwith T.w., r.p    tc; and HotV\n\u25a0PVK  1.   .95!.. Phone m about\nthi* one.\nHFPR.P. Arnci<\nReal Estate and Insurance\nAgencv\nPHONE 68 532 WARD ST.\notors Ltd.\nPHONE 1454\nWILL TRADE 1950 METEOR DE.\nluxe 2-door for power boat In\ngood condition. Apply Box 1932\nNelson Daily News.\n(Continued tn next column)\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\" '\n(Continued)\nFAIRVIEW\n1\u2014Small home in good location.\n1 B.R, L.R., kitchen, utility,\nroom, bath, Full basement;\nauto, oil furnace. Electric stove\nIncluded. Newly insulated roof.\nPr0ie_0Wn.terra\"'..... $5500\nDWELLING ON VA. LOTS\n2\u2014Vs basement, stoker furnace.\nCompletely re-wired, 220. New\nplumbing. Good workshop in\nbasement. Cut stone foundation. New cabinet kitchen, tile\nfloor. DlningR., Living R:, 1.\nB.R.s and 1 den down.,Upstairs: bathroom, 2 large B.\nrooms. Carpets on stairs and\nhall. Wired for TV. New hardwood floors up. All redecorated inside. Garage with out-\n\u00a3.,'.,Terma;     $12,500\nAgencies Ltd.\nAgents for WAWANESA\nMUTUAL INSURANCE\nPhone 135, or Eves., 290-Y\nWILL ACCEPT BEST OFFER FOR\n5-room house. 1180 Tamarac Ave.,\nTrail, B. C. Write J.. Hubner, .2635\n10th Ave., West, Vancouver, B.C.\nFOR.SALE: SMALL HOUSE ON\ncorner lot, 5 rooms and basement.\nHot water heating system. Phone\n765-X.\n.OR | SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE - 8-PCE. CHtSTER-\nfield, dining room table and chairs,\n4-pce: bedroom suite, 1 electric\nSinger1 Sewing Machine, almost\nnew. Apply 812 Baker St. Phone\n703-R.\nFOR SALE - 3-PC. CHESTER-\nfield, dining room table and chairs,\n4-pc. Bedroom suite, 1 electric\nSinger Sewing Machine, almost\nnew.  Phone 703-R.\n1 OVERCOAT, LIKE NEW, $10.\nAlso 2 other coats, 1 pair men's\novershoes, size 9, 4 clasps. 117\nVictoria St.\nKITCHEN OIL RANGE EQUIPPED\nwith blower and tank, like new,.\nSacrifice at $98.50. Phone 964-R\nbetween 8 and 6.\nMACHINERY\nCHAIN SAW\nSERVICE PARTS\nNow Is the time to get those\nsows overhauled and tuned\nup for the first of the year.\nWe Can Weld '\nAny of Your Broken Castings\nHave Your\nBan Reground and Grooved\nStraighten Ban\nMake This\nYour. Chain Saw Headquarters\nUSED SAWS\nYour McCulloeh Agent\nMAG'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St.      Nelson. B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1955\u20149\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News does not hold Itself responsible In the ovont\nol an error In tha following lists.\nMODEL 7 ,CAT FOR SALE OR\ntrade with bulldozer. Wanted Fork\nlift truck, 6-ton trailer, late model\ncar or planer. Apply Box 1663,\nNelson News. \"\nTJSB5 Saws PCS sal_. 2, m6d.il\n17, Homelite, new saw, guarantee,\n$230 each. 1 Maul 1 or 2-man bars,\n$90. 1 Spear and Jackson, 2-man\nbar, $80. See at 309 Nelson Ave.\nCHAJN SAWS, NEW AND OLD,\nfor rent or sale and repair. Ph.\n1728-Y.\nWANTED   'MISCELLANEOUS\nCOPPER, BRASS. ALUMINUM,\netc., Cast and Steel scrap ,wanted\nHighest .prices and prompt returns. Write for quotations. Active Trading Co.. 935 E Cordova\nSt. Vancouver 4, B. C.\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron, steel . brass, copper\nlead, etc Honest grading Prompt\npaymeri. made Atlas Iron 4 Me\ntajs Ltd, 250 Prior St.. Vancou\nvet\" B C   Rhone PAoifir B357\nWANTED\u2014PRIVATE TIMBER,\nsuitable for winter logging. Small\nlot considered. Apply Box 1968,\nNelson News.\nWANTED: USED GAS WASHER\nand cook stove In good condition\nApply J. Popow. P.O. Slocan\nPark. B. C.\nCHILDREN'S,SKIS  AND BOOTS,\nages 6-12. Phone 1067-Y.       '\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED FUR\nnlture. basement 301 Baker St\nPhone 47 \"We buy used furni\nture \"\nF5R SALE: HICKORY STEEL\nedged skis, 7 V. feet,, and table\nharness, $5. Phone 718-Y.\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-\npacity $45. while they last Active\nTrading Co., 935 E Cordova. Van\nFOR SALE: ENAMEL COAL,\nwood range. Good condition. Ph.\n455-X.\nGAS HOT WATER TANK, PRAC-\ntically new. 519 Silica St,\nFor   sale!   coal   heating\nstove in good condition. Ph. 488-R.\nU I C R O N I C HEARING AIDS -\nWrite P   O  Box 39. Nelson. B  C\nCine portraits by pettit of\nCastlegar\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nLIVESTOCK,   POULTRY   AND\nCWRTSTTNA LAKE. (.\"OTOE PPO-\nnertv at Ch'Mlna Lake for sale\n2'3 acre. 1(1.. feet of lake front,\ntwo furnished cottages with\nfridges and electricity, one with\nrunning water>Onod sandv shal\nlow beach, close to hotel, store\nand* nhnne. Aonlv Amber Dav's\nf.nrtn oak Street, Vancouver 9.'\nB.C.\n(Continued in next column!\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nGIVE   RESULTS\"\nWrite   for  our  BUYERS  GUIDE\nbefore ordering your chicks Thirty-five   years   poultry   breeding\nexperience ensures high quality.\nRO:P   Sired and Canadian  Approved   chicks   of   10   different\nbreeds and Cross breeds and B.B.\nBronze Turkey Poults. White Pc\nkin Ducklings and Toulouse Goslings.  -\nWrite for special folder on AMES\nIN-CROSS  Hybrid chicks\nOrder early and remember\u2014\"It's\nResults That Count.\"\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.. Vernon, B.C.\nORDER YOUR BABY CHICKS\nfor 1955 as early as possible Our\nchange in breeding methods show\ngreat evidence of making our\nstock much stronger and more\nhighly disease resistant Over 8000\nbreeders on our own farm In\nWhite Leghorns. White Rocks,\nNew Hampshires, .White Rock by\nWhite Leghorn cross and New\nHampshire by White Leghorn\nCross.\" Appleby Poultry Farm.\nMission City. B.C.\nN. lann latlg 2. rttiH\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertaion.\n48c line for month (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers\nlie extra. Covers any number\nof insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)  .NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc. \u2014 20c per line\nfirst insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent Insertion. '\nALL ABOVE RATES _ESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not  More Than  Listed  Here)\nBy carrier per week\nIn advance . .30\nBy carrier per year ; $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month $ 1,29\nThree months      $ 3.7S\nSix months           $ 7.50\nOne year $15.00\nMail in Canada outside Nelson\n\u2022 One month     ..    $ 1.00\nthree months-     $ 2.7S\nSix njonths    __.    $ 5.50\nOne year    _     $10.00\nFOR RENT ONLY, BEAUTY PAR-\nlor In payroll, city of Kimberley,\noh Spokane Street. Unfurnished.\nApply to Mr\u00ab-_Mary. Scott. Marysville, B. C. or phone 891-X.\nGROCERY AND CONFECTION-\ntry business for sale. Good location. Apply 1103. Hall Mines Road,\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young business man or girl\nPhone 443-L.\nRoyal Family\nDenies Report!\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A royal\nstatement Friday replied to neWs-\npaper reports that Princess Margaret would be hedged around with\nformality and needless security precautions on her coming tour of the\nWest Indies.\nThe statement < from Clarence\nHouse, where, the princess lives\nwith the Queen Mother Elizabeth,\nsaid the princess would \"of course\"\nshake hands with everybody introduced to her, and would mix with\nthe guests at gatherings.\nBLAMES PRESS\nAhe announcement spoke of \"inaccurate ' and misleading reports\nwhich have recently appeared in\nsome newspapers.\"\nIt did not name the papers. But\ntypical of several comments on the\nprincess' visit was an article in the\nDaily Sketch last Tuesday that was\nheadlined, \"Set the Princess Free.\"\nIt said she would shake hands with\nnobody, would make no speeches,\nand would stand on a dais at a\ngarden party _ instead of mingling\nwfth the guests.\nIt is extremely unusual for the\nRoyal' Family to contradict press\nreports aboul it.\nTORONTO $TOCKS\n(Closing Prloei)\nMINES, ,\nAcadia Uranium -...-  .19\nAkaitcho       .60\nAlgom Uranium  _    18.00\nAmal Larder \u2022. '.14\nAkaconLead  -       !.10\nAnglo Huronlan      13.00\nArea 60\nArjon          16\nArmistice  16\nAubelle 10\nAumaque  - \u2014      .15\nAunor      2.15\nBngamac      14\nBarymln      2.60\nBase. Metals  49V.\nBelloterra __  2.80\nBevcourt   19\nBobio    _.......      '.26\nBralornc    _.       2,60 .\nBrewls R L -      .10\nBroulan   _.     1.55\nBrunswick  _.   10.00\nBuffadison  _.       06\nBuffalo Ank 63\nBuff Can    15\nCaliffan   17\nCampbell R L _    8.85\nCan Mai _ 44\nCariboo Gold       1.03\nCastle Treth      3.05\nCentral Patricia      1.00\nCentral Pore  __ _...\u201e   . .18\nChestervllle 33\nChimo G .'.     1.58\nCochenour       67\nCons Golden Arrow 28\nCons Division ....      2.88\nCons Mining & Smelting ....   30 75\nConwest ... ...      4.05\nCons Discovery      2.80\nCroinor  23\nDelnlte _ _.,.._ 95\nDetta R L  18\nDothe _    16.75\nDonal^a ......  38\nDuvex '....'. : 21\nDyno  \u201e _    1,15\n\/East Malartic       2.87\nEast Sullivan       5.05\nEastern Metals _ 72\nElder Gold  78\nEstella  1U_\nEureka  v      128\nFalconbridge       23.50\nFed Kirk  _....      .10.4\nFrancouer 08\nFrobisher         4.25\nGeco       _....   11.25\nGianl Yel   _      7.60\nGods Lake         .70\nGold Hawk  _ 30\nGoldcrest   _ 16\nGold Easle      13   .\nGolden Manitou      1.90\nGunnar Gold  30  .\nHallnor     __     3.00\nHardrock     _. 14\nHeath  , -..       10V4\nHollinger _ _    15.85\nHomer V K \/ 15V.\nHudson Bay \u201e    53.00 \"\nLaoa, Cadltla6'\"':       -14\nLeitch  77\nLexindln               M\nLingman (new)        i23\nLittle Long Lac -. 65\nLouvicourt' . \u2014 18\nMacassa             1.80\nMacDonald       60\nMacLeod Cock _     165\nMadsen R L      1.77-\nMagnet         11.4\nMalartic G F \u2014 -     1 95\nMarcus G        11\nMclntyre Pore     70.00\nMcKenzie R L  \u2014 37\nMcMarmac  19\nMcWatters   ___ 14\nMining Corp  _    17.50 \"\nMoneta    \u2014____..._      .55\nNegus    15\nNew Alger ...   _ 24\nNew Bidalmaque  -      .38\nNew Calumet  SO .\nNew Goldvue  _ 12\nNew Kelore       23\nNew Larder U 96\nNew Rouyn Merger-        14\nNew Mylamaque ....'.        .37\nNew Thurbols  76\nNipissing     2.44\nNoranda \u2022      81.50\nNormetals        3.80\nNorth Can .  \u2014      -58\nO'Brien 63\n 10\n 29V4\n _      .48\n _ 70\n 38\nKroy\n1.36\nFruit Workers\nSeek Meet on\nUnemployment\nPENTICTON,.B. C. (CP)-A resolution calling on the provincial\ngovernment to Beek an immediate\nunemployment conference will he\npresented to the annual convention\nof the Federation of Fruit and Veg-\netable Workers' Unlort (TLC) open\ning here Thursday.\nIt calls for a conference of fed\nerai, provincial and municipal rep.\nresentatlves -to plan a program of\nassistance to meet the unemployment program.       i. \u25a0\u2022'   _\nFifty-five delegates are expected\nto attend the three-day meeting\nLabor Minister Lyle Wicks will\nattend the convention banquet Sat.\nurday.\nThe federation represents employees of practically every pacK'\ninghouse and processing plant in\nthe Okanagan Valley.\nLib Pate      8.75\nMid Cont  ., 45\nNat Pete   _ '..     1.85\nNew Pacalta  _ 04V4\nPacific Pete  _1    11.37V.\nRoyalite         13.25\nRoxana  _ 11 Vi\nUnited Oils      1.15\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibi    _     27V.\nAluminum     72\nAmer TtT  \u201e  174 .4\nBathurst Power _  60 Vi\nBeattie Bros  8\nBrazilian        ' 7%\nB C Electric  _.... 104Vi\nB C Forest      9%\nB C Packers A   17\nB C Packers B ....   t   13V.\nB C Power A     26%\nBuilding Products   44\nBurns A  __ \u201e    70\nBurns B    61\nCan Malting  i  60\nCan Packers .B _  35\nCanadian Breweries   25%\nCanadian Canners  \u201e. SOVi,\nCan Car __ Fdy A  21\nCanadian Celaneia  23%\nCanadian Collieries   9%\nCanadian Dredge   _ 16\nCan Oil  17\nCockshutt   _ 7%\nCons Mining A. Smelt   30%\nCons Paper  67\nDist  Seagram   ,.._ 32Vi\nDom Foundries   19\nDom Steel & Coal B _  17V4\nDom Stores \u201e 29Vi\nDom Tar 6. Chemical  10%\nDom Magnesium   14%\nEddy Paper __ 33_\nFamous Players   28\nFanny Farmer  26%\nFleet Air ..   185\nFord A _ 102 \u25a0\nGatineau   27%\nGatlneau'5%pfd. __   113\nGen  Steel Wares   . 10%'\nGreat  Lakes __ 31 Vi\nGypsum Lime  \u201e 54Vi\nHiram Walker  _  68\nImperial Oil  _. 37%\nImp   Tobacco     10%\nInt Nickel _  56V4\nInt  Utll    _ _  37V4\nKelvinator     21\nInspiration    \u201e... 2.10\nInt Nickel  _  56.50\nJack   Waite 11\nJellicoe  __ 14%\nJoliet   Que    57\nKayrand        .'. 11%\nKerr  Addison        __ 16.50\nKirk-Hudson Bay  49\nKirkland Lake     _ .45%\nKirk Townsite  .13\nLabrador          9.00\nLake Default  78\nLakeshore   \u25a0 6.15\nLake Wasa  _ 24\nLaura  Secord   \u201e 18\nLoblaw A _ 44Vi\nLoblaw B       _ 71\nMassey Harris   . , - ftft\nMcColl Frontenac   ' 34\nNat Steel Car  \u201e 26%\nPage Hershey     _  62%\nRuss  Industries    17\nShawinigan  _,  54\nSicks Brew      28\nSimpsons A   19%\nSteel of Canada  _ 42%\nStandard Paving __. _ 87%\nUnion Gas of Can   45\nUnited Corp B  20\nUnited Steel   14%\nWeetern Grocers A ..i.'  38%\nWeston  George     61%\nWinnipeg Gas  _ 18%\nAsk Full Markings\nOn Report Cards      ''\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia parents want school .report cards, to show exactly taw\ntheir children are progressing\/tin\nclass.\nMrs. Lyle Swain, education chairman of the B. C. Parent-Teacfler\nFederation, said Friday 8001) of 7000\nquestionaires returned by parent!\nasked that A, B, C, D, E markings\nbe used in report'cards in all grades\nabove three.   .\nShe said the questionaires, prepared by the federation and forwarded to the department pf education, show that parents are fairly\nwell satisfied with secondary school\nreport cards. However, they want\ngrades four, five and six brought\ninto line. -j\nThe parents also want report\ncards to show achievement apart\nfrom ability. 1\nOgama   ._ _\nOLeary ._.,_\t\nOsisko ' ...;i\t\nFartiour .'. :..:...\nPaymaster   \t\nPickle Crop       136\nPioneer           2.15\nPlacer Devel    \u2014    31 00\nPowell Rouyn  70\nPreston E D      6.40\nQuebec Lab  \u2014 10\nQuebec Man    75\nQuebec Nickel  \u2014     1-31\nQueenston      22\nQuemont    21.75\nRadiore     _ -       .90   .\nRaycock  _. 86\nReeves Mac -     1-41\nRoche L L  : 42\nSan Antonio  __ _    2.05\nShawkley ._         12%\nSherritt Gordon     4.95\nSigma M ._      5.30\nSilvermiller       105\nSilanco ...._ _ 13%\nSiscoe  \u2014 42\nStadacona    34\nSteep Rock  \u201e     7.80\nSudbury Cont   41%\nSurf Inlet       .11\nSylvanite       1.74\nTeck Hughes           4.40\nThompson-Lund  _ 20\nTorbrit       1.36\nTrans Cont Res  \u2014      .40\nUnion Mining  28\nUn(>ed Keno        7.10\nUpper Canada  ,__ -.     1.24\nVentures   ...'    21 25\nVlcour            08%\nViolamac  .. __ _     2.15\nWaite Amulet     12,00\nOIL8\nAnglo Can           __  5.20\nA P Consolidated  44\nB A Oil  28.50\nCalgary and Edmonton  14.50\nCdn Atlintic       6.25 .\nCentral Explorers   5,00\nChemical .Research   3.90\nCommonwealth Pete   4.05\nDecalta \" .._      . .65\nDel Rio              1.68\nFederated Pete    4.00\nHome               __  7.55\nImperial Oil  37 87%\n\"Inter Pete     v l 25.87%\nAmerada Buys Oil  {'',\nRights in Sask.\nREGINA (CP)r-Amerada Petro-.\nleums of Calgary has been granted\noil development rights on nearly\n300,000 acres of crown reserves near\nVal Marie in southwestern Saskatchewan. Resources Minister J. H.\nBrqckelbank announced Friday, i\nThe company paid $80,730 In Bonus bids for rights on three permit\nblocks. The reserves are in Aillistdn\nBasin. California Standard Oil Company paid $3952 for 98,818 acres In\nthe Yorkton area of east-central\nSaskatchewan. . \u25a0 *'\n3\nMetals Prices\nNEW YORK (CP) - Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y., 15.\nZinc, East St. Louis,,llVi.\nLONDON (CP)-The Rojjal All'\nForce has donated \u00a3100 towards a\nmemorial window in a church at\nihe Hague, Holland, bombed, acci-)\ndentally by RAF planes during the\nSecond World,War.\nz\nLAND li\n' ROVER\nThe\nGo\nAnywhere\nVehicle\n4-WHEEL DRIVE\n8 forward speeds, 2 reverse; has 2 power takeoff points, power driver.'\ncapstan winch can be'\nfitted at the front qr rear\nOptional metal or canvas\nhood. The world's most\nversatile vehicle\n\u2022    \u2022\nPHONE 18\nPhone  792-Y  Eveningi\nNELSON\nMACHINERY\nCompany Ltd.\n'If it's Machinery  Vou Need\nConsult Us First\"\n214 H-.ll St       Nelson, BC\nOpen SUNDAY\nfor GAS & OIL\nNEW ond USED CAR SALES\nDrop   In  or  Phone   1090 for a\nDemonstration\nPLYMOUTH - DODGE\nA-l SPECIALS\n1954 Plymouth Club Coup*\nLow  Mileage. Air Conditioner.\n1953 Plymouth Sector.\nOne Owner. 2-Tone Paint.\nVery Clean. Good Rubber.',\n1952 Dodge 2-Door\n111\" W.B. Immaculate Condition.\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\nSignal Lights, Air Conditioner,\n1949 Plymouth 4-Door\nReconditioned.   Sun-Visor.\n1947 Custom  Dodge 4-Door\nColor: Black. In Good Shape.\n1937 Plymouth Sedan       . ,\nPEEBLES\nGENERAL MOTORS   \"\nUSED CARS\n1949 Pontiac Sedan\n. 2-Tone.   Sun-Visor,  Heater.,\n1949 Chevrolet 2-Door\nCustom Radio. A-l  Condition.\n1948 Pontiac Coach J\n.    Radio, Sun-Vi.or,  Heater. ,\n1951  Pontiac Sedan* , .\nSpotlight, Radio, Air Conditioner.\nPEEBLES\nFORD SPECIALS      ''\n1949 Meteor 2-Door\nNew Paint. Clearance PrlM,\n1949 Monarch 4-Door\nCustom Radio,  Overdrive. t\n1953 Meteor Tudor\nOne Owner. Low Mileage.\n1939 Ford Fordor $97       i\nPEEBLES\n.\\vujm\nTRUCKS \u2014 TRUCKS\n1953 International Vi-Ton\nLow Mileage. Like New.\n1952 Fargo '\/j-Ton Express\nColor: Blue. Heater and Defroster.\n1947 International Vi-Ton,\n1946 Chevrolet Pickup\n1949 Fargo 2-Ton Flat Decjc\n1951 Mercury Panel\n1951 Mercury 3-Ton\n\u2022   Dump and  Hoist.\nPEEBLES\nPrompt Towing and Wrecker\nService. MODERN Equipment.\nPHONE DAY or NIGHT 1090\nExpert Service and  Body\nRepairs.\nCome in TODAY for a\nFREE ESTIMATE\nNo Obligation.\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS\nfCHM,SLE8.vPLYMO_UTK\nFAP.G.Q\n..._\/__\n\u25a0--'-\u25a0 \u25a0'       \u25a0    \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0^'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>j^-^\ni\n_________________________________________________________\n__________^__________________k\n -_\" --\nfb\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JAN. 22, 1955\nMore\n\/ wim**mk^wi**mmmmmMm\nTWm^^^W^''''11''     '\nMANN-STYLE\nBargains\n\u2022\" Hundreds of Cut-Out and Catering Books:\ni Reg. 25c and 35e. NOW   14*\nW 1955 Calendar Padi, Journals, Diaries:\nNow Only    '\/_ PRICE\nAir Mail Writing Pads: Reg. 35c and 25c. Now .. 140\nTable Napkins: 25c and 29c. Your for ...i. _ lie\n. Odd Size Men's Woodbury Sets:  >\/i PRICE\nM Odd Sin Ladies' Woodbury Sets: .,..._ Vi PRICE\nPink Lilac Bubble Bath:\n'\/_ PRICE\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\n. request Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nDr.   Brock    (Chiropractor).\nUnion SL Phone 644-R.\n318\n' Try chicken in the cup at WAIT'S\nNEWS DEPOT.\n\\ Fuller Brush Representative.\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phone 1339.\nMid-Winter Clearance Sale\nContinues at EBERLE'S\nThe traditional Valentine Gift ,\nFine Quality Chocolates.\nGRAY'8 CHOCOLATES\nGood selection of used occasional\nchairs. Also one used rollaway bed.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n\u2022 MIRACLE INSULATION\u2014We inn-late anything, blown or batted.\nPhone 2091 or Box 69, Castlegar.\nSTART 8AVI.NG\nInvestors'  Syndicate  of  Can. Ltd.\nJan S. M. Harts\nR.R.I  -  Phone  289-X-S  \u2014Nelson\nSave January 28th for whist in the\nW.I. hall at South Slocan. Proceeds\nfor Handicapped Children's Fund.\nGrand Prize.\nFLOWER8 FOR  EVERY\nOCCASION\nPHONE 187\nGRIZZELLES'FLORISTS\nMake   your   everyday   cleaning\neasier with a Bissell carpet sweeper.\nA few whisks over the carpet is all\nthat's needed. Two popular models.\nHIPPERSON'S\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\n-   RECORINO\nJim's Radiator Shop\n610  FRONT  8T. PHONE  0.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAlNlN*\nMedical Arte Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono 82?\n670 Baker Street\n\u25a0<K\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n.-- \"Distinctive Funeral Ssi-vlce\"\n__*    AMBULANCE SERVICE\nr:;8JS Kootenay St        Phone 361\nI\nCAMPBELL, SHANICLAND\n\u00a7 &co.\n\u25a0:'   Chartered Accountants\n676 Baker 8t . Phono 236\nAuditors\nYmir\nDancing\nEVERY\nSaturday\nNight\nMICKEY McEWEN\nAnd His Melody Makers\n,   COME   AND   MEET   YOUR\nFRIENDS IN YMIR\nDancing 9-1. \u2014 Admission 76c\nStudents Must Present Cards\nBAHA'I WORLD  FAITH\nBooks available. Phone 387-X-2\nKirsch curtain rods, adjustable\nround or flat; extensions to fit. Also\ncurtain cranes,' brass curtain rings,\ncurtain hooks, etc. HIPPERSON'S.\nHats and Handbags to clear at\nHalf-Price\nADRIAN   MILLINERY\n269 BAKER ST.\nHeavy   quality   satin   for   bedspreads,  cushions  and   comforters.\n15 beautiful shades, 54\". Yd. $1.59.\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOOD8\nJanuary Clearance of Jewellery\nStock - 1\/3 Off\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\n611 BAKER 8T.\nJust arrived \u2014 a new shipment\nof unpainted furniture. We buy and\nsell new and used furniture.\nHome Furniture Exchange\nMotors, radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh pressure Jenny Service\nSHORTY'8   REPAIR   8HOP\n714  BAKER   ST.\nWanted \u2014 Cottong rags, mutt be\nolean and of good size. No wool\nacoepted. Will pay 12c per Ib,\nNelson Dally News.\nWhist drives will resume in Bles\nsed Sacrament Hall, Fourth Street,\nFairview, Monday, Jan. 24 at 8:15.\nAdmission 50c. Refreshments.\nThe best tonic for \"the Blues\" . .\nA Bouquet of Spring Flowers\nfrom\nCOVENTRY'8 FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 962\nNOW IN STOCK\n1x3  and   1x4   C   and   better,  edge\ngrain coast fir flooring. Phone 1150.\nNELSON   WOODWORKING   00,\n'       273 Baker 8t\nI.O.O.F.\nOddfellows installation Monday,\n8 p.m.. Jan. 24. Rehearsal 7 p.m. All\nmembers attend.\nF.  H.   Lippingwell\nD.D.G.M.\nMary Maxim Northland Sweater\nWool retains natural oil. For shower\nresistant sweaters, use Mary Maxim wool, only 95c per 4-oz. skein.\nYour authorized dealer is EBERLE'S\nON BAKER ST.\nPresident A. R. Garrjj\nB. (. Growers Depute hail roard fo\nSecure Fire, Car Insurance Permit\nKELOWNA, B, C. (CP)- British\nColumbia' fruit growers, successful\nwith their hall insurance, may enter\nthe fire and automobile insurance\nfields. . ,;    .\nThe prospects arose at the closing\nsession of the three-day conference\nof the B. C. Fruit Growers Association. Delegates voted to. have the\nhail board. endeavor to secure the\nnecessary power from the proving ture, be enacted by the federal gov-\ncial legislature to permit the formation of a fire and automobile insurance company.\nEarlier in the day, A. R. Garrish\nwas unanimously re-elected president of the association.\nOne change was made in the directorate of the B. C. Fruit Proces\nsors, Ltd. Fred Stevens' of Rutland\nreplaced S. D. .Price of East Kelowna. On the B'CFGJA executive C.\nJ. McKenzie of' Summerland declined to run and was replaced by\nEric Tait. * \u25a0\nDelegates also pushed through a\nresolution asking that a national\nsystem of voluntary crop insurance\nembracing all sections of agricul-\nernment.\nDelegates also asked for federal\nassistance to irradicate mice from\nthe orchards. Dr. T. H. Anstey of\nthe Summerland experimental farm\nsaid his department, has \"reached\nthe end of its tether\" in combatting\nthe increase in mice.\nFILTER FRY \u2014 Takes the spatter\nout.of frying, catches grease, permits steam  to eschpe and  washes\nNELSON SALES __ SERVICE LTD.\n745-BAKER STREET\nViolaMac Nets\n$325,000 Profit\n;ViolaMac Mines Ltd. has announced the purchase of 1,00_;000\nshares of Lake Cinch Mines Ltd.\nand the formulation of plans for\nthe latter company to pursue a vigorous development program on its\nuranium property in the Beaver-\nlodge ' Lake district of Northern\nSaskatchewan. ' The property lies\ntwo miles Southwest of Uranium\nCity.\nArrangements are now-being completed to resume diamond drilling\non the Lake Cinch block of eight\nclaims where extensive drilling Indicated 56,000 tons of ore grading\n0.283 per cent U308 ($41.03) per. ton\nduring the summers of 1951 to 1953.\nTonnage is contained in two separate zones, about 1200 feet apart.\nThese areas are known as the River\nZone an dthe Graphitic Zone.\nThe River Zone was originally exposed in surface trenches and later\ncut in five diamond drill holes. This\nWork indicated 22,800 tons grading\n0.29 per cent over a length of 24fl\nfeet and to depth of 180 feet. Four\ndeeper holes permitted calculation\nto 500-foot depth of an additional\n35,000 tons averaging 0.08 per cent.\nThe Graphitic Zone was first located by drilling and tested for over\n700-foot length to 250-foot depth.\nOre grade material, according to\n'consulting geologist, Dr. J. W. Ambrose, appears to form two pods 100\nfeet or so in vertical dimension, 8.5\nfeet thick, and with a combined length of about 550 feet. Tonnage, after\n10 per cent dilution, is estimated at\n31,800 tons averaging 0.30 per cent\nU308  ($48.50).\nLake Cinch, which has in excess\nof $325,000 cash on hand, is planning to concentrate present drilling\non the Graphitic Zone although\nother excellent ore chances are\nknown to exist on the property.\nViolaMac's main producing, mine\nin British Columbia recorded the\nsecond most profitable year in its\nhistory in 1954, when the treatment\nof high grade material aided in offsetting the effects of the reduced\nworld metal prices. Estimated net\nprofit of $325,000 last year compared with the record 1953 year of\n\"$358,000 when approximately 4500\ntons more ore were mined and\nmilled.\nProduction grossed approximately\n$1,374,452 from 22,705 tons of ore\n-Shipped to the Western Exploration\nplant for concentration (excluding\n383 tons hand picked high grade\nore shipped to the smelter, in 1954.\nThis compared with production of\n$1,427,135 from 26,911. tons niilled\nand 336 tons of high grade shipped\ndirect to the smelter in\" the freak\nyear of 1953.\nWith the close of the year 1954,\nViolaMac Mines (B. C.) Ltd., the\nwholly-owned subsidiary former\nly operating the base metal mine\nnear Ne wDenver, is being wound\nup so that In future all operations are being conducted by\nViolaMac  Mines  Ltd.\nTry liquid Red Devil in your fuel\noil. Whether you use an oil heater,\nfurnace, or cook-stove, you will get\nmore heat and .Jess carbon, soot and\nsludge when you add Red Devil to\nthe fuel oil.\nHIPPERSON'S\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank our many\nfriends and neighbors for their kind\nexpressions of sympathy and many\nfloral and spiritual tributes received in the bereavement of our father.\nWe also wish to express special\nthanks to Dr. G. R. Barrett, nurses\nof Kootenay Lake General Hospi\ntal, the Fraternal. Order of Eagles\nand Carmen's Union of America\nLouis and John Aurelio,\nMrs. Mary Ross.\nFAILED TO REPORT ACCIDENT\nJohn J. Kazakoff of Shoreacres\npleaded guilty to failing to report\nan accident to the nearest RCMP\nstation within 48 hours in provincial court Thursday. He was charged following an accident at Rock\nCreek when his car was in collision\nwith another vehicle. About $150\ndamage was done the other vehicle.\nKazakoff was charged at Greenwood and the case was transferred\nto Nelson.\nMe was. fined $20 and costs by\nI Stipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans.\nHotelmen's Officer\nTo Visit Nelson\nThree officers of the B. C. Hote-\nmen's Association will visit Nelson\nSunday for a special meeting with\nmembers of the local Hotelmen's\nAssociation. The government's new\nliquor act as it applies to Nelson\npublic houses, will be discussed.\nJ. E. Bengert, presideiH; T. Ely,\nsecretary, and S. W. Smith, public\nrelations officer, B. C. Hotelmen's\nAssociation, all of Vancouver, will\nattend the meeting to be held in\nHume Hotel.\nJ fa, diLqkwcupL\nNo, 3, Southern Trans-Provincial\n\u2014Hope-Princeton two inches new\nsnow, plowed, aanded, carry chain's,,\nPrinceton-Osoyoos-Cascade g o o d,\nsanding. Cascade - Rossland - Trail.\nCast)egar compact snow, sanding.\nCastlegat; \u2022 Nelson - Balfour - Kootenay Bay. -. Crestpu. \u2022 Cranbropk. -.\nFe.rnie-Crow's Nest^ icy. sections,\nsanding,\nNo. 3A Trall-Salmo \u2014 compact\nsnow, sanding. ..'..\n' No. 6 \u2014 Nelway-Nelson-S o tfth\nSlocan Icy sections, sanding. South\nSlodan-Nakusp-Needles fair to good,\nsanding where necessary. Needles-\nMonashee good, plowed, sanding\nand widening. Monashee-Vernon\nfair, plowing and sanding, carry\nchains. '\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-Gol-\nden\u2014plowed, icy sections, sanded.\nBanff-Winde'rmere \u2014 goodi plowed\nand sanded. Nelson-Kaslo, Kaslo\nNew Denver, Kaslo-Lardeau, and\nLardeau-Gerrard\u2014all fair to good.\nFrench Postpone\nAfrican Debate\nPARlfe (AP) \u2014 Premier Mendes-\nFrance won a minor victory today\nwhen the National Assembly voted\n519 to 100 to postpone immediate\ndebate on North' African problems\nand get back to work on the national budget\nThe premier had urged\"\" adoption\nof the Work agenda drawn up. by\nthe steering committee, which put\ncompletion of the budget ahead of\nother business.\nIn return he promised there would\nbe a full debate on North African\nquestions 10 days <rom now. Dia*\ncussion of the budget will take fill\nnext week.\nTop Army Job for\nFormer UBC Student\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Lt.-Col. R. B.\nMcDougall, 40, of Vancouver, has\nbeen appointed director of ogran-\nization at army headquarters, the\narmy .announced. He will hold the\nacting rank of colonel in his new\npost.\nCol McDougall, a graduate of the\nUniversity of British Columbia and\nthe B C. law school, has served in\nTokyo as assistant adjutant-general\nwith the Canadian Far East military mission since 1953. He will return to take over the post, which\nhas been vacant for some time,\nin mid-February.\nNAME CPR OFFICIAL\nVICE-PRESIDENT ARAM\nCHICAGO - D. B. Wallace of\nMontreal, assistant manager of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway's department of public relations, was elected first vice-president of the Association of Railroad Advertising\nManagers at their annual meeting\nhere.\nThe Association, whose membership includes advertising managers\nand public relations heads of more\nthan 100 railroads in-Canada, the\nUnited States and Mexico, elected\nAlfred E. Greco, of the Pullman\nCompany, Chicago, as its president\nfor 1955.\nDIDN'T KNOW LICENCE\nTO DISTRIBUTE NEEDED\nCase against C.J.E. Jackman, who\nis charged with distributing a hockey hews paper without a licence,\nwas adjourned to January 24 in\ncity court Thursday while Magistrate William Brown considered the\nevidence.\nJackman appeared in City Court\nThursday testifying he did not\nknow he needed a licence to dis\ntribute a paper. He was charged\nunder a city bylaw for distributing\na hockey newspaper. The paper con\ntained an editorial, advertising and\nchance to enter a contest.\nOther witnesses who have been\nh,eard are Don Ure, assistant city\nclerk who testified Jackipan didn't\ntake out a distributing licence, J.\nW. Harris of a shoe store, Miss\nJanette McDonald, clerk in a signs\nshop and Mrs. Jane Bishop, a news\nstand operator who testified Jack-\nman had delivered hockey pamphlets at their place of business.\nNew Healing for Church of Redeemer;\nWardens Re-Elected al Annual Meet\nAnnouncement that Ii new heating system will be Installed for\n'Church of the Redeemer and its\nparish hall, was made by Frank\nPennoyer, people's warden, at the\nannual meeting, as he called for\nIncreased support for the church\nand its endeavors.\nMr. Pennoyer waB again named\npeople's warden, and John Apple-\nwhaite, vicar's warden. Jack- Hors-\nwill was elected secretary, and\nStanley Morris, treasurer. Members\nelected to tha1 church committee\nwere E. E. Hopwood, Thomas Halsey, Guy Mayo, Clarence Ward, John\nBurgess, A. C. VanSacker, W. Mel-\nneczuk, Norman Buckley, W. Ben-\nMissing Eskimos\nReturn Safely\nHALIFAX (CP) - RCAF Search\nand Rescue reported here Friday\nthat nine Eskimos, who were adrift\nin Hudson Bay for 16 days, returned safely to their villag^at Povung-\nnetuk,  Ont., late Thursday.\nThe nine men were hunting on\nthe ice when a section broke off\nand carried them away from their\nequipment. Three planes, from\nGreenwood, N.S., Torbay, Nfld.,\nand Goose Bay, Labrador, carried\nout a search for the men.\nAt the completion of Thursday's\nflights the air force announced they\nhad called off the search on the\nadvice of RCMP headquarters in\nOttawa.\nIt is almost certain that it will\nbe days before the story of their\nsurvival is known in any detail.\nThe hunters will be questioned by\nRCMP and then a\" report will be\nsent sotlth to civilization.\nThere is a possibility, too, that\nthe   Eskimos   will   make  light  of\ntheir   adventure,  figuring'it  is  a\nstory  that  doesn't  rate telling  in\nany great detail. No further information was available at RCAF headquarters and no more was expect-,\ned, now that the ______ are reported\n____.\nMoscow Recalls\n3 Key Envoys   ,\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The Soviet government has recalled to Moscow for consultations its three key\nambassadors in the Western world\n\u2014those to the United States, Britain and France.\n'Ttfe Soviet embassy here announced tonight that Jakob Malik\nwill fly to the Soviet capital Saturday.\nSergei Vinogradov, ambassador to\nFrance, went back last weekend.\nGeorgi Zarubin left Washington\nThursday night for what he described as \"routine consultations\" in\nMoscow.\nThe recall of the envoys gave\nrise to speculation in diplomatic\nquarters here that Vyacheslav Mo\nlotov, Soviet foreign minister, might\nbe planning a policy reappraisal\nMain target of Soviet diplomacy\nin Europe has for months been to\ndefeat the Western plan to rearm\nWest Germany.\n1954 Newsprint\nProduction Higher\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canadian\nnewsprint production in 1954 -totalled 5,984,207 tons, a 4.6-per cent in\ncrease over the. 1953 production of\n5,721,296 tons, it was announced.\nOf last year's produtcion, 5,549,565\ntons were exported and 420,896 tons\nconsumed domestically, compared\nwith 5,334,287 and 398,277 tons, re\nspectively, in 1953.\nShipments to the United States\u2014\nthe  biggest single  importer\u2014were\nCUT LUMBER FOR LESS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Lumber\nmills on British Columbia's coast\nwill be cutting lumber this year\nfor considerably less money .than\nthey did in 1954.\nL. L. G. Bentley, president- of\nB.C. Lumber Manufacturers Association, says \"there may be a more\noutward appearance of favorable\nmarket conditions than actually\nExists.\"\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A milkman\nwas fined $200 or a month\nin jail for bookmaking. Constable\nPhilip Humphries testified that he\nbet a total of $9 with Robert Hagen,\n39, and won $9.35. Quipped Magistrate Thomas Elmore: \"You were\ntaking the cream of his business.\"\n4,875,031 tons, against 4,861,372 the\nB. K. Arlidge was crown counsel, previous year.\n_..\nHERE IS A GENERAL VIEW of one of the acts staged by Tokyo\nfiremen as they put on their annual \"Diome Shikl,\" firemen's\nfestival, at the Imperial Palace Plaza in Tokyo.. Some 5000 firefighters and 109 fire engines, ladders and other pieces of equipment took part In the show, Acrobatlo acts of the firemen was the.\nmain event\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nMine, Mill fo\nAsk Hike In\nGold Subsidies\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Demands\nfor a higher government subsidy\nand a federal inquiry into the gold-\nmihing industry were made in resolutions adopted at the annual con\nvention here of the International\nUnion of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers (Ind.).\nIncreased' production and sale of\ngold ' would provide Canada with\nmoney to develop her own natural\nresources, said regional director\nHarvey Murphy.\nA reduction in the present subsidy, i he continued, might force\nclosure  of  some  Canadian  mines.\n\"We don't want any more ghost\ntowns,\" Murphy added, \"we. have\nplenty of them in B. C. right now.\"\nRich Harvest in\nPacific Herring\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C. (CP)'\u2014\nA fleet of 40 seiners has made a\nrich harvest of 10,000,000 pounds of\nherring worth $150,000 in two days\nof steady fishing.\nAbout 50 packers were en route\nto reduction plants Friday with\nmillions of herring caught In the\narea of Kitkatla Pass, about 35\nmiles southwest of here, and Freeman Pass, nine miles from Kitkatla.\nFishing, considered the best this\nseason by British Columbia herring\nfishermen, will continue until 2\np.m. PST today, when the area\nwill close for 48 hours by government regulation.\nThe rich run was discovered\nTuesday by the seiner Northisle\nwhile on a scouting trip. Other\nseiners rushed to the area as their\nrabUos crackled the news.\nA number of boats ran into\ntrouble as well as the large school\nof herring. Numerous vessels reported snagging and tearing their\nseine nets while fishing in the shallow water. A large seine is worth\nup to $26,000, and repairs cost as\nmuch as $3000.\nPERMITS SECOND EXTEN8ION\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The department of fisheries has authorized a\nsecond extension of 10,000 tons in\nthe herring quota-for the middle\neast coast subdivision of Vancouver\n\u2022Island.\nA. J. Whjtmore, chief supervisor\nof fisheries here, announced Friday\nthat the extension, if taken, will\nbecome effective at 2 p.m. Sunday\nin waters north* and west of Seymour Narrows. The area may be\nclosed again before the extended\nquota, is reached for conservation\npurposes, Mr. Whitmore said.\nnett, D. R. Grahame and Robert\nFoxall! The wardens will be delegates to the Synod, with Mr, Burgess and Mr. Hopwood as substitutes.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood,\nserving his 23rd year as vicar and\nhis 30th year in the diocese, pointed\ndut that the church is without wealthy supporters and does not receive legacies, but carries on only\nby voluntary offerings of its people.\nIn outlining the position of the\nparish and hopes for the future, he\nsaid \"our main concern is to serve\nthe parish and community and bear\nwitness to the need of t(ie church.\nMore support and more sacrifice\nwill help us to do this effectually.\"\nWork of the 10 organizations within the church has increased with\nthe years, and 1954 was perhaps\nthe best on record.\nCommittee meetings were held\nfairly regularly, and the spirit o.\nco-operation and comradeship left\nlittle to be desired. \"In fact,\" Canon\nSilverwood said, \"it ls a veritable\nminiature churchmen's club.\" The\nnumber of members was increased\nfrom 12 to 15.\nHe paid tribute to former treasurer Mr. Mayo, the new treasurer,\nJ. Payne, parish envelope secretary;\nformer secretary Mr. Halsey, Mr.\nHorswlll, Mr. Buckley, Miss Barbara\nLea, the wardens and Mr. Burgess.\n\"The rumor that your vicar had\nor was resigning has no foundation\nin fact. I did on one occasion suggest to the late Bishop that perhaps\na change might be desirable. He did\nnot agree and would not accept a\nresignation If tendered,\" Canon Silverwood told the meeting.\n\"I trust that with your continued\nhelp, loyalty and co-operation I\nshall be able to continue to,serve\nyou, which, of course,' is my only\nconcern.\"\nA minute's silence was observed\nin memory of Rt. Rev. F. P. Clark,\nwhose death occurred suddenly at\nCranbrook last month.\nOIL FURNACE\nResting plans were reported by\nMr. Pennoyer. An oil furnace system is considered advisable for the\nchurch.\nHe also read to the congregation\nthe vicar's proposal of holding a\n\"gift day\" February 23. Some 200\nor more people will be reached by\nspecial letter.\nReports were presented by the\ntreasurer, Mrs. VanSacker and Mrs.\nR. Taylor for the Service Clubs;\nMrs. E. S.ostrom for the Woman's\nAuxiliary; Mrs. Grahame for the\nAltar Guild, Mrs. Burgess for the\nSunday School and the Junior Auxiliary, Miss i Doreen Evans for the\nVancouver Appoints\nNew Port Manager\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Appointment\nof B. D. L. Johnson as port man\nager of Vancouver harbor was announced Friday by the national harbors board\nMr. Johnson, 54, Is in the shipping business at Vancouver. He\nsucceeds A. E. McMaster, who is\nretiring.\nMr. Johnson, a native of Vancouver, commanded navy ships dur.\ning the Second World War, serving for two years as senior officer\nof an escort group.   \u2022\nEskimo Kayak on\nNew Canadian Stamp\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014An Eskimo in\na kayak will be depicted in a new\n10-cent stamp to go on sale Feb.\n21, the post office department an\nnounced Thursday.\nThe stamp is being issued aa \"t\ntribute to the remarkable people\nof our last frontier.\" It will be\nbrown.\nPiokle Plant Planned\nCanada Packers\nBy\nCHILLIWACK, B. C. (CP) \u2014 Con\nstruction of a $25,000 pickle plant\nby Canada Packers Ltd. at its existing operations at 540 South Surras road, will begin in the spring,\nthe  company  announced.\nThe plant will open up a new\nmarket for cauliflower, cucumber\nand onions.\nBean\nBag\nJACKETS\nFor .\nSKIERS\nJust Arrived\nNew Nylon Sk! Jackets\nLight, Warm, Repellant\nALSO\n\u2022 TOW MITTS\n\u2022 DOWNHILL  SUCKS\n\u2022 SKI SOCKS\n\u2022 SKI CAPS\nat\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nGirls' Auxiliary, Mr. Burgess for\nthe choir, Mr. Hopwood for the\nbulletin, and the wardens.\nThe vicar was warmly commended for his work, his kindness and\nhis repopt\nHave tha Job Dono Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nOUR ELLISON BEST\nVITA B. FLOUR\nGives Your Home-Made Baking\nThe Flavor You Like\nAsk Your Grocer or Phone 233\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR C6. LTD.\nFront St\nQuick Relief From the\nDiscomforts of Colds\nREXALL\nCOLD CAPSULES\n60c\nBRONCHIAL SYRUP\n75e\nHOT WATER   BOTTLES\nAll Prices\nCity Drag\nCompany\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nBOX 460 PHONE 34\nFOR THE\nNELSON\nHOCKEY CLUB-\nON EACH AND EVERY NEW AND USED CAR OR\nTRUCK DEAL tor THE REMAINDER of THIS MONTH.\n1954 PONTIAC  DELUXE SEDAN\nCustom  heater,  fceat covers,  only 7000\nmiles, one owner. Rriced away down.\n1953 PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN\nCustom  heater, seat covers, one owner.\nVery low mileage. Like new.\n^^_____________________________-_______--B\n1952 BUICK CUSTOM DELUXE\nWith Dynaflow; air conditioner, radio, seat\ncovers, directional signals, one owner.\nLovely condition.\" Priced right.\n1951 PONTIAC DELUXE SEDAN POWER GLIDE\nCustom heater, seat covers, one owner. City\ndriven. Immaculate condition.\n1951 BUICK  DELUXE COACH\nCustom air conditioner, custom radio, and\nseat covers. Looks and runs like new.\nPriced right.   '\n\u00ab____________________________=___=_\n1950 PONTUC DELUXE SEDAN\nHeater, radio, seat covers, one owner,'low\nmileqge, like new.\n1949 Pontiac Deluxe Sedan\nHeater, seat covers.  Lovely condition.\nPriced to clear. *\nEVERY  UNIT WINTERED\nNEW BUICKS, PONTIACS,\nAND G.M.C. TRUCKS\nFOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nWiginton Motors\nLTD.\n2B1 Baker St.\n238 Baker Street\n__________\u25a0\n_____________\n\u25a0^__^_^1^|^^^111^^^^^1^1^1^^11^11^11^^^^^\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_01_22","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\/1.0429133","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":"1955-01-22 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":"1955-01-22 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":""}]}