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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" 105\nNelson's  Record\n1958 Days\nTraffic  Fatality Free\n-C\nVol   55\nNew Crisis\nFaces Gaillard\nBy GODFREY ANDERSON\nPARIS (AP)\u2014An angry war veterans' lobby plunged\nPremier Felix Gaillard's young government into a crisis\nTuesday within hours after a new session of the National\nAssembly convened.\nGaillard, who-had hoped to begin debate on foreign\naffairs, was forced to change tactics and demand a vote\nof confidence.\nThe vote\u2014the ninth of which he\nhas staked his government's life\nin Wi months as premier\u2014will be\ntaken in the National Assembly\nThursday.\nGaillard found himself under\nfurious attack because of his plan\nto postpone until the end of the\nyear the usual quarterly pension\npayments made to veterans and\nprisoners of the First World War.\nAlthough the sum involved was\nsmall \u2014 5,000,000,000 francs or\n$11,900,000 \u2014 it provided an explosive  issue.\nParis veterans called protest\nmeetings..\nThe protest seemed more political than economic. The payment\namounts to about 800 francs (less\nthan $2 a person for each quar\nter.\nThe issue was raised in the assembly by three deputies of par\nties that nominally support the\ngovernment.\nGaillard felt that to back down\non the veterans' pensions issue\nwould open the way for other attacks on his budget, whose broad\noutlines already have been voted,\nHe called a hurried cabinet meeting and got authority to demand\nthe confidence vote.\nJean Monnet, his special economic envoy, is in Washington\nseeking foreign credits from the\nInternational Monetary. Fund and\nthe export-import bank to help\nFrance pay its way through 1958.\nHARD-BOILED ATTITUDE\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States is reported adopting a fairly hard-boiled attitude\nCentennial Day\nAt Convention\nOTTAWA (CP) - British Columbians aren't missing a bet to\npublicize their centenary this\nyear.\nThe B.C. delegation to the national Liberal convention announced Tuesday night that today will be \"B.C. Centennial\nDay\" at this gathering of some\n2,500 Liberals.\nB.C. delegates are to distribute centennial folders, stickers,\nbuttons, posters and banners at\ntoday's opening session, along\nwith Okanagan Valley apples.\nChange in the convention restaurant will be In silver dollars\nstruck specially for the B.C. centenary.\nBulganin. Seeks\nNehru Influence\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Soviet\nPremier Bulganin has asked Prime\nMinister Nehru of India to \"use his\nInfluence\" to help the summoning\nof a world summit conference, the\nSoviet news agency Tass said\nTuesday night.\nThe agen,cy gave summaries of\nletters sent by Bulganin to the\nIndian leader, to President Nasser\nof Egypt, and to the premiers of\nIceland and Luxembourg in his\nlatest round of peace appeals to\nworld leaders.\nBulganin told Nehru he was sure\nthat \"as always you will do everything possible\" to help improve\nthe international situation.\nCLAUD W. SCHINDLER, 23,\nef Chow.hilla, Calif., Is being\nheld at the California city near\nMadera on suspicion of murder\nadmitting, police said, he became- \"frenzied\" when his 4-\nyear-old daughter, Sandra, refused to cry a. hi. command.\nMrs. Schindler la also being\nheld In connection with *he\nChild's d_ath.\u2014(AP  Wirephoto)\ntoward France's plea for emergency financial aid to help it weather an anticipated $500,000,000\ndeficit. '\nOfficials said they are ready to\nauthorize \"limited help\" but only\nafter further proof\/Premier Felix\nGaillard's government seriously\nintends to take vigorous action to\nlick inflation and curb excess\nspending. s.^\nThe 64 - country International\nMonetary Fund where the United\nStates holds a big vote, also is\nunderstood to be [ar from enthusiastic about allowing France to\ndraw the full $262,000,000 allotment she is reported to seek.\nRebalkin\nConvicted\nTORONTO (CP) - Nicholas Rebalkin, 40, was convicted of. murder Tuesday night in the shotgun\nslaying of a taxi driver Nov. 30\nand sentenced to be hanged April\n15.\nSebastien Giardetti, 58, was cut\ndown on a North Toronto street\nby a blast in the back from a\nshotgun after he refused to turn\nreceipts of $15 over to a holdup\nman. He died in hospital.\nA Supreme Court of Ontario\njury deliberated 75 minutes.\nIn a statement, Rebalkin admitted shooting Giardetti during\nan abortive holdup to get money\nto pay his rent. He said he fired\nthe shotgun only to frighten the\ndriver.\nPolice testified Rebalkin surrendered, to a patrolling constable\nthe night of the slaying. They said\nRebalkin told them he just moved\nto Toronto from western Canada\nand was desperately short of\nmoney.\nDetective-Sergeant George Sellers testified Rebalkin said he had\ntwo choices \u2014 \"shoot myself or\nmake a holdup,\"\nAsked by Chief Justice J. C.\nMcRuer whether he had anything\nto say before sentence, Rebalkin\nreplied:'\n'I want to say I still have human\nfeelings. I am not deeply concerned\nwith what will happen to me in the\nfuture. But I am deeply sorry for\nthe grief I have caused Mrs. Giardetti and her family. I feel remorse beyond words.\"\nMrs. Giardetti, wearing black,\nsat near Rebalkin during the trial.\nAn itinerant laborer, he was\nborn in Nelson, B. C, moving to\nKamsack, Sask., with his family.\nAbout 20 years ago'he left home\nto wander' through western Canada. Most recently he lived in\nVirginiatown, in northern Ontario.\nA brother still lives in Kamsack and his father and sister are\nstill living, but Rebalkin said he\ndoes not know where.\nPlanning New\nIndonesia State?\nJAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)\u2014Important political leaders were reported Tuesday to have met in\nSumatra and discussed founding a\n\"new Indonesian state\" under Mohammed Hatta, who has broken\nwith President Sukarno.\nThe Nationalist party newspaper\nSuluh Indonesia hinted the purpose was to set up a national government rivalling the central government of Sukarno. Sukarno now\nis away on an extended foreign\ntour.\nHatta, former vice-president in\nthe central government, split with\nSukarno more than a year ago. He\nobjected to Sukarno's policies of\ntaking Communists into the government and installing a vague\nsort of system called \"guided democracy.\"\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIll\nThis Gull Was\nNo Squealer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Science has lost a battle with the\nseagulls of the city dump here.\nOfficials tried to scare away\nthe birds, which drop garbage\non suburban homes on their\nflights from the dump to the\nFroser River.\nThey thought of playing a recording of the seagulls' warning\nscreech at the dump \u2014 bat the\nseagull they caught refused to\nsqueal on Its friends.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIMIllllllllllllllllltimiUlf.nl\n& il^oJycj ,\u2014,\u2014\n-^^f j \u00b0Hd OSON, B. C. CANADA-WEDNESDAY MOWING. JANUARY 15, 1958\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy today with a\nfew snowflurries, becoming intermittent wet snow or rain in the\nafternoon. Little change in temperature. Winds light rising to\nsoutherly 20. High at Cranbrook\n35, Crescent Valley 35.\nNot mora Than So Dally,  10c  Saturday\nNo. 223\nMackay Withdraws; Backs Pearson\nLengthens Lead in\nLeadership Race\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Lester B. Pearson appeared to have\nlengthened his lead in (he Liberal leadership race. Tuesday\nas Mayor Don Mackay of Calgary dropped out and announced he  will  back   the'\nNobel peace prize winner\nWith a possible early general\nelection casting its influence over\nthe 2,500 delegates, their opening\nsessions heard demands for im\nproving policies on such matters\nas federal-provincial1' relations,\nresources development, \u25a0 grain\nmarketing and social security.\nAnd they heard pointed self-\ncriticism from such speakers as\nLiberal leader Henry D. Hicks of\nNova Scotia, whose government\nwa_ topled by the Progressive\nConservatives the year before the\nfederal Liberals went down last\nJune after 22 -years in power..\nIntroduction of platform resold\ntions from provincial and other\norganizations \u2014 referred to working committees for consideration\n\u2014 and speeches by party chiefs\ntook up most of the first day of\nthe three-day convention.\nConvention was asked to affirm\nParliament\nThursday\n,   By THE CANADIAN PRESS\n(Tuesday)\nA CCF attempt to bring about\nan emergency Commons debate\non unemployment Was ruled out\nof order by Speaker Roland\nMichener.\nResources Minister Hamilton\nsaid the federal government is\nprepared to help any province\nfinance publicly - owned power\nschemes.\nHealth Minister Monteith said\nall provinces have indicated\nagreement to share pension increases announced last October.\n(Wednesday)\nThe Commons sits at IL a.m.\nto consider immigration department estimates. The Senate sits\nat 3 p.m.\nWhirlwind\nCourtship\nFor Debrq\nBEVERLY HfLLS, Calif. (API-\nMovie actress Debra Paget was\nmarried in a 10-minute ceremony\nTuesday night to singer David\nStreet.\nIt was Street's fifth marriage,\nhis second within a month.\nDebra's sister, actresses Lisa\nGaye and Teila Loring, were co-\nmatrons of honor.\nA few hours before the ceremony\nStreet,. 37, was summoned to a\ncoyrt hearing later on a failure-to-\nprovide warrant brought by his\nfirst wife, Mary F. Street.\nThe wedding climaxed what must\nbe a record for whirlwind courtships \u2014 even by Hollywood standards. Street, who has known\nDebra since 1945, has yet to have\na formal date with her. They became engaged after he showed up\nat the house last Saturday night\nto watch the late-late show on TV,\nLaunch Missile\nCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)\n\u2014 The U.S. Army launched a Redstone missile \u2014 the first stage of\nits forthcoming satellite-bearing\nspace vehicle \u2014 at 8:25 p.m. Tuesday night.\nThe largest and heaviest of the\narmy's ballistic weapons, the 69-\nfoot-long, six-feet thick Redstone\nblasted off into a starry, almost\ncloudless sky and appeared to\nmake a successful flight.\nThe Redstone will be used as the\nfirst stage of the Jupiter-C vehicle\nwith which the army plans to establish a small earth satellite in\norbit.\nLETTER OF SYMPATHY\nOTTAWA (CP)-Prime Mta-\nlster Diefenbaker has sent the\nprime minister of Ceylon a letter\nexpressing sympathy for the suffering and loss of life In severe\nfloods there and offering 38,000\ntons of flour.\nDANISH KINK IN U.K.\nLONDON (Reuters) - King\nFrederik of Denmark and his\ndaughter, Princess Benedikte, 13,\narrived here Tuesday. The princess was returning to her boarding school in Kent. Her father\nwill visit here three days.\nthe principle of more money for\nthe provinces.\nResolutions, from the: floor of\nthe convention proposed special\nfederal development programs,\nincreased tax-sharing,benefits for\nso-called have-not provinces and\nbacking for the principle of\nequalization payments under present fiscal arrangements.-   .\nDelegates were not asked im\nmediately, to vote on the resolu\ntions as they, and others from\nthe floor to come later during the\nthree:day convention, go to a 150-\nman resolutions committee Mr\nconsideration and consolidation.\nTuesday night, the 1,500 voting\ndelegates and their alternates\nheard retiring leader Louis S. St.\nLaurent's farewell to (he high\ncommand of the party he had\nheld since 1943.\nEarlier, the 75-year-old chief\nspoke only briefly to welcome, the\ndelegates and open the convention after getting ,a rousing reception as he entered the Coliseum.\nIn all, the opening sessions were\nalmost altogether lacking in the\ncustomary hoopla and color except for the garish decorations of\nthe assembly hall, parades by\nManitoba and Prince Edward Island delegations and an anti-Conservative demonstration by a half-\ndozen placard-carrying delegates\nfrom Saskatchewan.\nFAVORS VOTE\nFOR INDIANS\nOTTAWA (CP)-, Veteran parliamentarian James Gardln.f said\nTuesday he favors all Indians having the right to vote.\nThe former Liberal agriculture\nminister said some people feel the\nIndians are not ready for the franchise. He added however, that he\nhad met many people who were\nnot Indians and wondered why\nthey were entitled to vote.\nThe principle of the measure,\nintroduced by Frank Howard (CCF\nSkeena) won support from several\nmembers, including government\nsupporters. But it was debated to\nthe end of the hour devoted to private members' bills and therefore\nno vote could toe taken on its second-reading stage.\n\"I don't understand why we\ncan't find a way to give them'all\n,the vote,\" said Mr. Gardiner.\n\"They can no longer be considered any different from the rest\nof us.\"\nSATELLITE IN 30 DAYS\nRALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Maj.-\nGen. Robert J. Wood predicted\nhere Monday night that \"The\narmed forces will have a satellite\nup within 30 days.\" Gen. Wood is\ndeputy chief of the U.S. Army's\nresearch and development.\nCAPTION ACCOMPANYING this radlophoto from Communist-controlled Shanghai, China, and received In New York says\nIt shows Hugh Redmond met by his mother, Mrs, Ruth C. Redmond in a Shanghai prison on-Jan, 9, The caption described Redmond as a \"convicted U.S. special agent.\" Mrs, Redmond, of Yon-\nkars, N.Y., was one of three American mothers who flow from\nthe United States to see their.Imprisoned sons in Red China.\nSeal Off City....\nCuban Rebels in\nDaylight Rampage\nHAVANA, Cuba (AP) \u2014 Fidel,an army encampment and forced\nCastro's  rebels swept down out\nof  the mountains  Tuesday  and\nsealed off the eastern Cuban city\nof Manzanillo in a daylight rampage of pillage and plunder. Theji\nth.y slipped away at nightfall'.\nCastro's men set fire to sugar\ncane fields, smashed equipment,\nburned automobiles and buses, attacked trains and seized prisoners. It was the first'time in the\n13 months of Castro's guerrilla\nwar against the government that\nhis forces had penetrated the outskirts of Manzanillo.\nApparently Castro pulled back\nhis forces rather than risk an open\nbattle with government troops.\nThe army long has awaited a\nchance to meet the outnumbered\nCastro rebels in an open fight.\nFor hours, the rebels had the\ncity of 100,000 blockaded. They\nseized and burned cars and buses\nat the city's gates in a search for\npoliticians and army officers\nmarked by Castro as \"enemies of\nthe Cuban people.\"\nDispatches from Manzanillo said\nthe rebels controlled all the roads\nand highways leading to the city.\nRebel bands attacked passenger trains and held up buses bound\nfor Havana and Santiago de Cuba.\nTwelve miles to the southeast,\nrebel bands attacked the rural\nguard post at Yara and occupied\nthe town. At nearby Campech-\nuela another rebel group attacked\nMissing a Week...\nTownsfolk Search\nFor Small Boy\nFORT FRANCES, Ont. (CP) -\nCanadian and American residents of the border towns of Fort\nFrances and International Falls,\nMinn., have been welding together\nfor nearly a week in a common\npurpose\u2014to find a five-year-old\nboy.\nDannie Lamon of International\nFalls went out to play at 9 a.m.\nlast Wednesday but up to nightfall Tuesday had not been found.\nHis disappea.alnce touched otf\none of the most widespread\nsearches ever know in this area.\nAbout 2,000 searchers at one\ntime joined in combing the area\naround the twin paper-mil towns\non opposite sides of the Rainy\nRiver 180 miles southeast of Winnipeg. Population of Fort\nFrances is 9,000 with 6,200 in International Falls.\nTOO MUCH HELP\nAt one point, authorities said\nthey had too much help. Searchers tramped through the woods\nuntil near exaustion.\nDespite their efforts, aided by\npolice dogs, low-flying planes and\na helicopter, no clue to the boy's\nwhereabouts was uncovered.\nFort Frances and International\nFalls business men have offered\n$1,000 reward for any Informa\ntion to solve the mysterious disappearance.  This gesture illustrates the feeling which has generated through the 'two towns\nduring the last week.\nLast  week  Sheriff Ed  Anderson advanced the theory that the\nboy may have been picked up by\na car. He said Tuesday it could\nbe possible that the boy was taken\ninto Canada.\nFOOD DONATED\n\"We hope Something will break\ndurjng our routine checks,\" said\nthe sheriff.\nAs men and students from both\nsides of the border scoured the\narea last week, firms donated\ncoffee, sandwiches and doughnuts to feed the 2,000 searchers.\nWomen distributed the food from\na house near where the boy disappeared.  -\n\"I've never seen anything like\nthis,\" said Civil Air Patrol commander, Col. L. C. Griffin of Du-\nluth, Minn.\nThe two communities depend\nmainly on the two paper mills on\neither side of the river for a living, A large number of the\nsearchers were mill workers.\nMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lamon\nhave two other children, Allen, 3,\nand 18-monih-old Carol Ann. \u2022\nthe soldiers to flee.\nWANT OPEN BATTLE\nIn Havana, a government\nsource said the Cuban army wants\nCastro,and his me? to come down\nout of their Sierra Maestra hideouts to engage them in an open\nbattle.\nArmy headquarters In Havana\nand Oriente province maintained\nsilence on the rebel attack.\nThe army confirmed, meanwhile, the capture of four Castro\nlieutenants in a battle not connected with the Manzanillo raid.\nJAPANESE NAVY\nOFF TO HAWAII\nYOKOSUKA, Japan (Reuters)\nFour Japanese warships left Tuesday for' Pearl Harbor on a mission of peace and goodwill.\nThe vessels are under the command of Rear-Admiral Sadayoshi\nNakayama, who was Japanese naval attache in Washington on\nDec. 7, 19.1\u2014date of the sneak\nJapanese attack on the U.S. base.\nThe squadron will steam 7,600\nnautical miles on the first deep-\nsea- training trip by the Japanese navy since' 1940. The ships\nwill visit the wartime battlegrounds of lwo Jima and Midway and are scheduled to reach\nPearl Harbor Jan. 29.\nThe new fighting fleet is limited to ships no greater than destroyers and frigates. Japan has,\n28 of these vessels, all under 2,-\n000 tons and many provided by\nthe United States.\nJURY DISCOUNTS\nDEATH-BED STATEMENT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A coroner's jury discounted the death-bed\nstatement of a woman that she was\npushed from a hotel window and\nruled Tuesday that she\" committed\nsuicide.\nPolice testified that Mrs. Sophia\nGladstone, 40, told them before she\ndied of injuries Jan. 9 that her husband had pushed her from the\nfourth-floor window of the downtown hotel.\nPolice said there was no sign of\na struggle in the hotel room. Only\nthe bottom part of the window\nthrough which Mrs. Gladstone fell\nwas open. Police also said she had\ntried on two previous occasions to\nkill herself by slashing her wrists\nand throat.\nPARTY-CRASHERS\nARRESTED\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nhave arrested a 16-year-old boy at\nPowell River, B.C., bringing to\nnine the number of suspects to be\ncharged following a party-crashing\nbattle here Jan. 4.\nThe charges were laid after\nmembers of the Roy Callahan family battled a gang of youths who\nwere trying to force their way into\nCallahan's home while a party was\ngoing on.\nReappraise\nParty Policies\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Statt Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The race for the Liberal leadership\ntook second place Tuesday to the beginnings of a reappraisal\nof party policies as the national conventiop looked for ways\nof reviving the patty's fallen'\"\"\nfortunes.\nSupport also came from other\nquarters. J. W. Pickersgill, angry\nat an article in a convention newspaper-published by Paul Martin's\nsupporters, publicly announced he\nwas in Mr. Pearson's camp.\nTo this was added reports that\nthe Quebec delegation, which holds\nabout one-quarter of the convention's voting strength, met in caucus and indicated a strong backing\nfor the former external affairs\nminister.\nAnd it was reliably reported that\nat least 140 of the 155-member\nToronto area delegation will vote\nPearson.\nThe Martin team was calm\namid this flurry, expressing, doubt\nthat the majority of the Quebec\nvote would go to Mr. Pearson,\nSEEKS SUPPORT\nMeanwhile, the only other avowed candidate, Mayor H. Lloyd\nHenderson of Portage la Prairie,\nMan., hurried about trying to\ngather the necessary signatures of\n10 delegates before he ean file his\nnomination papers.\nThe big   development  fat  Hie]\nleadership battle came with the\nsudden announcement of Mayor\nMackay, made after he moved\nfrom the convention floor a resolution calling on the party to\nsend out teams of scouts across\nthe country to ascertain what the\npeople  really  need  and  want\nfrom the Liberals.\nThe last general election had\nseen the \"braBS get turned out to\ngrass.\" But would the party learn\nfrom this?. There, was a .widening\nbWch between the former tibe. al\ngovernment and public opinion.\nPICKERSGILL ANGRY\nLater, the 43 \u25a0 year \u2022 old mayor\ntold a reporter: \"Pearson has a\nlot of strength out West. I'm backing him publicly.\"\nMr. Pickersgill, former immi\ngration minister, hurriedly called\na press conference ot announce his\nsupport of the 60-year-old Mr.\nPearson after he glanced through\nthe first edition of Paul Martin's\nconvention daily.\nWhat caught his eye was an\nitem headed \"Pickersgill Speaking\" which appeared to indicate\nthat Mr. Pickersgill believed a\nlarge group of parliamentarians\nfavored the former health minister for the leadership. Mr. Pickersgill said he had made no such\nEffort to Thwart\nWoodsman Fails\nKIDDERMINSTER, Eng. (CP)\nOne woman's campaign to have\na woodsman spare an eta) tree\ncost, her \u00a3155 in court Tuesday.\nThe court was told that Mrs.\nMargaret Jordan, 36, a doctor's\nwife, sat in the tree with a first\naid bag in her lap and dared the\nman to cut.it down.\nThe tree was* located in a builder's plot adjoining Mrs. Jordan's\ngarden.\nShe was ordered to pay \u00a350 to\nthe building firm for trespassing\ndamages and the remainder to a\nlawyer whom she allegedly\n\"shoulder charged\" when he got\nin her way.\nMrs. Jordan left the scene with\nthe half-sawn tree.still standing.\nIt was cut down later during preparation of the court case because\nit was no longer safe.\nCREW RESCUED\nOBAN, Scotland (AP) - A frantic 17-hour search for a small\nRoyal Navy vessel ended Tuesday\nnight with the rescue of her 30-man\ncrew off the stormy west coast of\nScotland.\nSeveral seamen, weak from exposure in biting cold and spray,\nwere plucked to safety as- their\nship lay awash to the decks with\na gaping hole in her side. Others\nhad made their way to a deserted\nisland.\nstatement. The article contained\n\"misleading\u00abpropaganda.\"\n\"I am extending my support to\nMr.. Pearson because I consider\nhim incomparably the best person\navailable for the leadership.\"\nFrom a survey, it appeared\nthat Mr. Pearson had the support\nof most of the former Liberal\ncabinet with the exception of veteran James Gardiner who has publicly endorsed Mr. Martin.\n\"Mike P e a r s o n has the brass\ntied up,\" the Ottawa Citizen said\nin a front-page news story.\nMr. Martin's headquarters -oon-\nceded this but said they were relying on the back-consession delegates to back him.\nSnow Piles Up\nIn Okanagan\nKELOWNA (CP) - More than\ntwo inches of snow was dumped\non B.C.'s fruit growing areas\novernight, turning tha Okanagan\ninto a winter wonderland.\nCity streets and highways hara\nwere treacherous, although snow\nplows worked to keep the roads\nclear. No serious accidents were\nreported.\nThe heaviest snowfall in tha\narea for more than a month ar-\nrived just as SOO delegates and\nguests convened here for the opening of the annual convention of tha\nB.C. Fruit Growers Association.\nFruit growers had expressed concern over th\u00bb labl. of sadw, feting\ncold weather would damage the\ntender roots of trees.\nFrance Agrees,\nWith Stipulations\nPARTS (Reutersl-iFraBce told\nRussia Tuesday night that she\nwould accept an East-West summit conference only if it. was prepared carefully and. preceded by\na meeting of foreign ministers.\nPremier Felix Gaillard was replying to Soviet Premier Bulganin's letter of Dec. 10 calling for\na head - of - government conference. In a subsequent letter, Bulganin proposed such a meeting in\ntwo to three months.\nGaillard's 2,500 \u2022 word reply,\nhanded over in Moscow by\nFrench Ambassador Maurice De-\njean and published here, follows\nthe same lines as President Eisenhower's reply last weekend.\nEisenhower was tha first of the\nWestern leaders to answer Bulganin's shower of letters.\nThe 38 - year - old French premier adopted a cool attitude to\nan East-West pact of non-aggression unless it is allied to wider\nand more concrete agreements.\nSuccessor to\nGavin Named\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\narmy named a successor Tuesday to Lt.-Gen. James Gavin,\nwho announced his retirement\nlast week after publicly criticizing U.S. defence department policies.\nThe army's new chief of research and development will be\nLt.-Gen. Arthur Gilbert Trudeau,\nnow commander of an army corps\nin Korea. He takes over April 1,\nthe day after Gavin's retirement\nbecomes effective.\nKHRUSHCHEV TAKES REST\nMOSCOW (AP) -NikitaKhrushchev is away from Moscow for a\nrest, the foreign mlnistery said\nTuesday. A spokesman added he\nexpected the Communist party\nchief to return shortly. Khrushchev\nhas not attended diplomatic receptions in Moscow for the last 10\ndays.\nAnd in This Comer ... \u2666\nDANVILLE, 111. (AP)\u2014John Kingred got' the money to pay\na speeding fine by cracking a bank\u2014a piggy bank, that is,\nKingred, 18, dumped a sack of 500 pennies and 200, nickels\non the desk of justice of the peace George Meers'and said the\nmoney came from his piggy bank.\nMeers commended the youth for his thrift,\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP)\u2014Russell Griffin appeared In court\non a charge of causing wilful damage to property,\n\"Why did you throw a wine bottle through the unemployment\nInsurance commission office window?\" he was asked.\n\"Because the bottle was empty,\" Orlffin replied.\nHe was convicted and sentenced to three months.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. IS, 1958.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\u2014Complete Shows 7:00 - 9:13\n\"SOMETHING OF VALUE\"\nWith Rock Hudson, Dana Wyntert\nAdult Entertainment\nmakes that blackboard\njungle jump for joy\nHe's funnier than ever..\nthedbu\niiii\nA ftwmount Picture\nMARTHA M\nCIVIC\nCASTLE THEATRE\nj CASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n1 Shows Nightly Starting at 6:45\n\"KINO AND  FOUR  QUEENS\"\nCinemascope\nADULT ENTERTAINMENT\nClark Gable,  Eleanor  Parker\nPremiere  Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST TIMES'TONIGHT\n\"MOGAMBO\" (Tech,)\nClark Gable, Ava Gardner,\nGrace Kelly\nGrand Forks Jaycees Ask Nelson\nUtile Theatre lo Presenl Play\nNelson Little Theatre has been\nInvited to present its next production, \"Blithe Spirit,\" by Noel\nCoward, at Grand Forks.\nThe invitation, in the form of a\nletter from W. W. Veregin of Grand\nForks Junior Chamber of Commerce, was unanimously accepted\nat a general meeting of the Little\nTheatre at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. R. J. Petty, 10th Street,-\nDate set for the production was\nFeb. 28. It is Intended to present\nthe play in Nelson early ln March.\nA production staff was appointed\nas follows: Producer-director, Gilbert Goueher; business and publicity manager, Cliff Came; property mistresses, Abbie Pollard and.\nPhyllis Reid: lighting, Bernard\nFord. A casting meeting is to be\nheld this week.\nA letter was read from E. J. Le-\nveque tendering his resignation as\ntreasurer. Mr. Leveque explained\nthat as the B.C. Centennial would\ntake up all his time this year he\nDOROTHY  GRAY\nVa-PRIC'E SALE\nSpeolal Dry Skin Mixture\nRegular  Price  $2.50\nNew only $1.25\nLimited Time Only\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress ol Health\"\n433 Josephine 8t.     -\nPHONE 1203\nwould not be able to give full attention to the Nelson Little Theatre.\nHis resignation was accepted and\na vote of thanks given for his long\nservices.\nMary Jarvis was appointed new\ntreasurer.\nRefreshments were served by\nMrs. Petty and Mrs. J. L. Grieve,\npresident.\nJury Finds Woman\nDied of Malnutrition\nNORTH VANCOUVER (CP) -\nA coroner's jury returned a verdict of death by malnutrition Tuesday after a day-long inquest in\nthe case of Mrs. Margaret Mary\nHoward, 30, who died in hospital\nafter being placed on a diet'by\nnaturopathic physician.\nThe jury found malnutrition was\ndue to \"her failure to carry out\nto the fullest her doctor's advice,\nand attached no blame to anyone\nfor her death. Mrs. Howard, the\nmother of three children, died\nChristmas day.\nIn a rider to the verdict, the\nji. y recommended that an invest!\ngation be held to ensure that a\npatient may be treated in hospital\n\"by a doctor of his or her own\nchoice.\"\nNaturopathic physician James\nA. Boucher, who said he treated\nMrs. Howard for two months before her death, testified that\nnaturopaths are forbidden by present regulations to put patients in\nhospital.\nFIREPROOF\nHOUSEHOLD\nSTORAGE\nLong Distance Moving and Storage\nAGENTS FOR\nWILLIAMS\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS 1\n(NELSON) LTD.\n701  FRONT ST.\nLeaders Urge Return to Healthy\nClimate for Mining in Province\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two\nleaders of the B.C. Mining Industry\nTuesday_.night called for rescinding of the controversial provincial\nlegislation taxing iron ore in the\nground, to bring back \"a healthy\nclimate for mining.\"\nThey also called on the government to assure mine developers\nof \"adequate protection\" in its\nnew system of leasing mineral deposits, which replaces crown\ngrants.\nThe two leaders were Henry L.\nHill, retiring president of the B.C.\nand Yukon Chamber of. Mines, and\nits manager, Thomas Elliott, at\nthe group's annual meeting.\nThe outlook for 1958, they reported, is not too favorable.\nIn 1957, Mr. Elliott said, the\ntotal value of mineral production\nin B.C. dropped to $165,000,000 from\nthe record 1956 level of $190,000,000.\n' This year's level was expected\nto be even lower.\nThey warned that current low\nbase metal prices, the threat of\nincreased U.S. tariffs on leadrzinc\nand copper, and rising costs   of\nSyllabus for Music\nFestival Distributed\nWith distribution of the official\nsyllabus, entries are expected to\nstart coming in for the 25th annual\nKootenay Music Festival to be held\nin Nelson April 28 to May 3 inclusive.\nFor the first time, the Kiwanis\nFormer (PR\nDispatcher Dies\nAl Revelstoke\nGeorge Arthur Davidson, 71, retired CPR train dispatcher, formerly in Nelson, died in Queen Victoria\nHospital in Revelstoke.\nBorn in Eastern Canada on\nApril 15, 1886, he moved to Vancouver with his family as a young\nchild.\nIn 1900 he went to work for the\nCPR as a messenger. Five years\nlater he was transferred from Vancouver to the interior, where he\nserved as chief dispatcher at Nelson and North Bend, besides a\nstint at Medicine Hat. He went to\nRevelstoke and his travelling days\nwere over.\nWhen he retired in 1951 he had\ncompleted 50 years and four\nmonths of service for the CPR, un\nmarred by an accident of any kind.\nMr, Davidson is survived by his\nwife here.\nLEGION OFFICERS\nINSTALLED\nKIMBERLEY - The joint installation of officers of the Canadian\nLegion branch 67 was carried out\nby Zone Commander E. Gummer\nof Cranbrook. New zone president\nis A. C. Taplin, with three vice-\npresidents and executive of nine,\nwhile the new president of ladies\nauxiliary is Mrs. A. Lilley. Mem\nbers were 'piped' in by pipeband\nmember Gordon Stuart. Retiring\npresident, Mrs. M. Barr, received\nher badge.\nA social evening followed.\nClub is the sponsor. In Trail which\nis host to the festival on alternate\nyears, the event has been held under Kiwanis auspices for several\nyears.\nNorman Buckley i^ festival chairman, Russell Davis secretary and\nJ. G. Elmsley, treasurer.\nEntries are being directed to\nRoss Fleming, entry secretary.\nThe. dead line is March 15.\nThe adjudicators will be Hugh\nMcLean of Vancouver for all instrumental classes, W. H. Belyea\nof Winnipeg for all vocal and choral\nclasses, Miss Janie Stevenson of\nNelson and Vancouver, who will\nadjudicate drama and speech art\nclasses, and Miss Mary Isdale of\nVancouver for dancing.\nLiberals Hold Up\nPower Bill\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Senate's\nLiberal majority Tuesday held up\npassage of the $30,000,000 Beech\nwood power project loan despite\npleas of the Progressive Conservative government leader that he\nwas under great pressure to get\nit through swiftly.\nThe measure, passed Monday in\nthe Commons, authorizes a $30,-\n000,000 loan to the New Brunswick\ngovernment to cover costs of a\nhydro power project on the St.\nJohn River near Grand Falls. The\nLiberals voted to refer the measure\nto the Senate committee'on bank\ning and commerce.\nAwarded Legion's\nOfficer's Medal\nIn recognition of his long service\nwith the Canadian Legion, Dick\nRoberts; toll sergeant at the Nelson Bridge, has received a past\nofficer's medal.\nThe medal was given to him\nby the Lynn Valley, B.C. branch\n114, of which he was a member\nfor nine, years, eight of them on\nthe executive. The medal indicates\nthat Mr. Roberts served as first\nvice-president, second vice-presi\ndent and honorary secretary. Presentation was by the president,\nDouglas Thompson.\nMr. Roberts, a former toll collector on the First Narrows bridge\nat Vancouver, served for six years\nin World War II wilh the Royal\nCanadian Artillery light anti-aircraft. '\nTrail Sea Cadets\nCarry Out\nReorganization\nTRAIL \u2014 At the regular monthly meeting of the Trail Navy League executive committee this week,\nroutine business included a financial report by treasurer R. Aller-\nton and 'a proposed budget for 1958\nexpenditures. Mr. Allerton's report revealed that the committee\nwould end its fiscal year showing\na small surplus.\nPresident G. M. Wadds announced that Sea Cadets across the country are to be put on a quota basis.\nIt is expected that Trail will be\nlimited to 50 cadets.\nCommanding Officer A. Bush\nstated that Trail was slightly over\nstrength and to comply with the\nnew regulations, cadets not having\na good attendance and merit records may have to be struck oif. The\ncorps had a great deal to offer\nyouths of the city and the new regulation should have the effect of\nstrengthening the corps as only\nboys with good credits and attendance will be retained:\nCO. Bush announced some reorganization within the unit. Lieut.\nG. Lamont has been taken off\ntraining and will be in charge of\ndiscipline and administration of the\nband. W. Reid, who brings with\nhim a wealth of experience in band\nwork gained while in the Services,\nwill be band master.\nCadet Hanson will remain as\ndrum major and is promoted to\npetty officer in the band. Cadet\nKrause has been promoted from\nable to leading seaman. Lieut.\nScott Bryson, gunnery officer, will\nalso be in charge of training. Sub.\nLt. G. Cooper has been taken on\nstrength and will act as officer'in\ncharge of supply. The unit expressed, appreciation to Bud Comba,\nwho found it necessary to discontinue as band master owing to\nhealth reasons. \"\nA letter of thanks from the Ctiy\nof Trail was read in which the assistance given by the cadets on\nHallowe'en was acknowledged.\nmine operation may make the\nindustry a soft spot in the B. C.\neconomy. .\nMr. Hill, a mining engineer and\nmining consultant for several B.C.\nmines, said the new legislation\n\"should not exist if this industry\nis to progress in the future as it\nhas in the past.\"\nWithout a \"healthy climate in\nlegislation and taxation matters,\"\nthe industry cannot advance, he\nsaid. , - I\n\"The mining fraternity is quite\nused to the fluctuation in world\nmetal prices ahd is fully prepared\nto carry on with prospecting and\nexploration programs in readiness\nfor better days.\"\nWith restrictive laws, however,\n\"the industry cannot cope.\"\nMr. Hill also criticized the granting of mineral concessions in the\nRocky Mountain Thench to the\nWenner-Gren interests. He urged\nthe government \"not to be too\nhasty to offer inducements to investors.\n\"Concessions in the long run do\nmore harm than good.\"     (\nTurning to the threat of increased U.S. tariffs, he urged the\nU.S.- government to call \"a meeting of leading base metal producers in the free world in.an endeavor to. organize a voluntary reduction in output.\"\n, In his report Mr. Elliott said that\n1957 in comparison with 1956 \"Witnessed a serious deterioration In\nthe B.C. mining scene.\"\n\"Fewer prospectors were in the\nfield. The number of exploration\ncompanies engaged in the search\nfor new ore deposits decreased.\nClaim staking dropped by 56 per\ncent to 11,500 claims from 26,000.\nFlow of speculative capital from\neastern Canada and the U.S. has\nbeen reduced. A number of mines\nhave been forced to cease operation,\"\nThe high premium on the Canadian dollar placed an added burden\non base metal producers. In addition, he said, the industry developed \"a state of apathy and frustra\ntion due to the new mining laws.\"\nHe urged \"a concerted effort by\ngovernment, industry ahd labor\nto control costs in mining so that\nexisting mines may continue to\noperate and new mines brought\ninto production.\" It was also of the\nutmost imoprtance. \"that confidence be re-established in the min\ning laws of our province.\"\nNew president of the chamber\nis James A. Pike of the Newmont\nMining Corporation of Canada Ltd\nVice-presidents are consulting geO'\nlogist Dr. Christopher Riley and\nconsulting mining engineer ft. E,\nLegg.\nHonorary president is Mines\nMinister Kiernan. Walter B. Boucher was re-elected honorary\ntreasurer.\nG.W.G.\nIRON MAN\nPANTS\nFreshly Arrived\nGrey-Zipper Front\n'\u2022 Pre-Shrunk\n$7 50\nPair\nSizes 32 - 42\nWADE'S\nPhone   1350 350  Baker\nThe Weather\nMin Max\nNELSON   \t\n.   33    37\nHalifax  \t\n..   19    36\n.   15    30\n.   17    29\nToronto \t\n.   20    34\nNorth Bay \t\n.   20  '28\nPort Arthur\t\n6    12\nKenora  .'\t\n.. -13      8\nWinnipeg\t\n.. -12      6\nBrandon   \t\n.. -12    14\nThe Pas \t\n., -10      4\n6    25\nSaskatoon   \t\n.    4    30\nNorth Battleford ...\n.    2    20\nSwift Current \t\n..   11    29\nMedicine Hat \t\n.   10    44\nLethbridge\t\n..   24    43\nCalgary\t\n..   11    43\nEdmonton \t\n..    8    21\n.   15    31\nCrescent Valley\t\n.   31    33\n-Kaslo \t\n.   30    35\nGrand Forks \t\n.   32     36\nKamloops     j.\n.   32    37\nPenticton\t\n.   33    40\nVancouver\t\n.   40    45\nVictoria  \t\n.   43    47\nPrince ftupert .\t\n.   42    48\nPrince George \t\n.   33    38\nWhitehorse \t\n..   -2     3\nSeattle \t\n.   41    45\n.   42    44\nSan Francisco _..\n.   41    54\nLos Angeles   \t\n.   47    72\nSookane     \t\n.   28    34\nChicago\n32    41\nNew York       \t\n33    35\nPre\n.01\n.05\nRotarians See\nDocumentary Film\nA National Film B'bard documentary production, \"Country\nMagistrate\", #as shown to Nelson\nRotary Club's luncheon meeting\nTuesday in the Hume. Thomas\nWhitehead, district representative\nfor the Film Board and a Kotarian\nspoke briefly on the film before\nthe showing.\nGuest at the meeting was Art\nWarren of Penticton..\nPCs Group\nformed\nAt Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 A revived Progressive - Cpnservative Association\nfor the Castlegar - Rossland \u2022 Kin-\nnaird area was formed in Castlegar\nTuesday night. An executive comprising 12 local residents was\nelected and in a few days will\nname its own president.\nKootenay-West President Dr. C.\nH. Wright of Trail said his party\nhad gained in total vote more than\nany other party in the riding at\nlast year's election and predicted\ngreater gains in the forthcoming\nfederal contest.\n\"Since the party has taken over\nin Ottawa,\" he said, \"they have\ngiven Canada a pew inspiration\nand a new spirit which is affecting\npeople al) over the country, particularly in the manner they have\nimplemented their election promises with the greatest dispatch they\ncould.\"\nOne reason for forming an association, he said, was that \"at this\ntime in Canadian history people\nshould stand up and say what they\nare,\"\nRetiring president Dr. C. S.\nFowler noted that more than 200\npeople had voted Conservative in\nthe Castlegar area at the last election, and that only a little enthusiasm-was needed to attract a wide\nmembership.\nDr. Wright brought greetings\nfrom Mrs. Peter Dewdney of Trail,\npreident of the B.C. Women's Conservative Association, and from\nMrs. D. B. Merry, president of\nthe Trail District Women's Conservative Association. Both offices\nhe said, would be carrying out\norganizational work in the Castlegar polling division shortly.\nRetired CPR\nEmployee Dies\nChristopher (Chris) Irvine, a retired '-nadian Pacific Employee\nwith .< years.of railway service\nbehind him, died in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Monday night\nHe was 67 years old,\nBorn in Guelph, Ont., in 1880\nMr. Irvine was married in Alton.\nOnt., to Edna Beatrice Abelson.\nThey came West to Outlook, Sask.,\nwhere they lived for 25 years before coming to Nelson in 1942. Mr.\nIrvine retired from the CPR after\ncompleting 37 years in Outlook and\nNelson shops, where he worked as\na boilermaker.\nHe is survived by his'wife; two\ndaughters, Mrs. Fred Morris of\nNelson and Mable Irvine of New\nWestminster; two sons, Harry of\nTrail and Dalton of Williams Lake;\nhis mother, Mrs. James Irvine of\nBiggar, Sask.; two brothers, Clifford of Biggar and William of Calgary; one sister, Mrs. Lloyd King\nof Winnipeg; and nine grandchildren. ,\nHow Polio Fund Aids\nServices Told Kinsmen\nTrail Delegates to\nLiberal Convention\nTRAIL \u2014 Delegates from Trail\nto the Federal Liberal convention\nin Ottawa this week are William\nMcLoughlin, Liberal candidate for\n.Kootenay West, A. D. Turnbull,\nMrs. A. G. Edmonstone, president\nof the Trail Women's Association,\nand Daryl Anderson, vice-president of B. C. Liberal Association.\nNew School Locations\nUnder Board Study\nSites for new schools in Nelson\nand on the North Shore are being\nconsidered by Nelson School District 7 School Board. The additional\nclassroom space is required to relieve conditions in the city schools,\ncrowded despite the new school\nconstruction of recent years.\nThe school board discussed the\nsites at its meeting Monday night.\nTrustees had reported earlier on\nlocations that had been investigated.\nGordon Sargent of Longbeach\nwas elected chairman of the board.\nOne of his first, acts was to welcome S. R. Ward, new member\nfrom the. district.\nMotion was approved to grant\npermission to Taghum community\nmembers, to carry out improvements lo a hall located on School\nBoard property at Taghum. A request for permission was contained\nin a letter to the Board. A total of\n$500 has been raised by residents\nof the area for this purpose.\nFollowing reading of a letter informing the trustees of a conference of school principals to be\nheld at the College of Education in\nVictoria from July 14 to 26, it was\ndecided to make allowance in the\nbudget for $150 for this purpose.\nThis amount is the sum required\nto send one principal to the conference, and will cover travelling\nexpenses, board and room.\nHearty commendation was extended to the principal of the Salmo Junior-Senior High School F.\nT. Middleton. for success of his\nefforts to have the school accredited. The standard of accreditation\nhas been achieved, and the school\nis noty'ta its probationary year,\nwhich, if records of the school\nwarrant, will be extended 'for a\ntwo-year period. The L.V. Rogers\nHigh School fated commendation\nalso, having achieved the two-ye^r\naccreditation.\nA letter will be sent to the city\nasking for confirmation of a report\nthat the trans-provincial highway\nroute is to be moved from the 400\nblock on Silica Street to the same\nblock on Carbonate Street, with the\nresult that the school .would have\nthe highway on two sides \u2014 Stanley\nand Carbonate Streets. Opposition\nto the idea had been expressed at\na PTA meeting, and investigation\nwill proceed into the matter.\nWindow sashes at the South Nelson Elementary School are badly\nIn need of replacement, it was\nlearned, and A. I. Collinson, maintenance supervisor reported that\nhe is looking into the prices of bolh\nwooden a,nd metal sashes. E. K.\nEvans, school principal, was assured, that the replacement of sashes\nwould be in the budget this year.\nCorrespondence was read from\nthe president of the British Columbia Trustees' Association expressing hopes for future meetings of\ntrustees executive members and\nsecretary-treasurers.\nA' three-man committee investigated in detail! the cause of an\naccident involving a school bus at\na curve on the Blewett-City Power\nPlant road Thursday evening.\nThere had been complaints from\nparents. Mr. Sargent drove a truck\non the same curve to try to access\ndriver reactions and told the Board\nha had reached the conclusion that\nthe bus driver was not to blame\nin the accident, Ihe'road being \"in\nterrible shape\" at that particular\nspot. He thought it a miracle that\nthe driver was able to avoid the\nbus overturning, and came to the\nconclusion that only quick action\non his part had kept it upright.\nAfter being temporarily suspended, the driver was reinstated.\nThe B.C. Child Care and Polio\nFund is contributing, and has in\nthe past contributed, to voluntary\nservices, available for various\nphases of polio and child care. Participation in the forthcoming campaign is, in effect, insurance that\nthese services will continue to be\navailable when needed.\nTwo key men in ihe B.C. Child\nCare and Polio Fund campaign to\nstart in the Nelson area Feb.. 1,\nEd Turner, provincial campaign\nchairman, and Ian King, executive\nsecretary of the Fund, addressed\nKinsmen Clyb members Tuesday\nevening at a dinner meeting at the\nHume. Members of clubs from\nTrail, Warfield and New Denver\narea were present.\nBefore they spoke, Dr. G. R.\nBarrett, acting for the treasurer\nof the commifiee of the St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral, presented\nthe club with a donation to the\nfund from the children of the\nchurch. Presentation was also\nmade by the Club to the .Silver\nKing Ski Club president, Danny\nMcKay, of a cheque for $225 for\nfirst aid stations on the new ski\n'bill.\nMr. Turner gave a resume of the\nhistory fo the Kinsmen Clubs' interest in the rehabilitation of polio\npatients, from which the fund\ndeveloped. This interest had broadened to include child care in many\nfields.\nThey entered the polio field in\n1945, when Uie fund was started by\nthe Vancouver Kinsmen Club.\nAreas oi rehabilitation, treatment\nand research are now supported\nby the Fund.\nThe G. F. Strong Rehabilitation\nCentre is on land purchased by the\nKinsmen Club and the Centre\nhandles many patients sponsored\nby the Polio Fund. Other qrganiza\ntions, through the example of the\nKinsmen Club, have taken an interest in supporting this Centre.\nArthritics, cerebral palsy sufferers, and casualties brought by the\nWorkmen's Compensation Board,\nand others are treated here.\nAnother centre receiving support\nfrom the Fund is the Pearson\nchronic T.B. and Polio Pavilion in\nVancouver where chronic polio\ncases are cared for. Rehabilitation\nin homes is helped along hy sup\nplying of equipment designed for\nuse of handicapped homemakers.\nHELP RESEARCH\nIn the field of research, much\nin the way of stirring interest in\nthe development of the Salk vaccine Was accomplished by the\nPolio Fund committee. Support\nhas been provided for research at\nUBC and in the St. Paul's Hospital, where a great deal has been\naccomplished in the investigation\nof  nervous  disorders.\nChild care covers many fields.\nResearch of respiratory and heart\ndiseases of children is carried on\nin the St. Paul's clinic with the\naid of equipment provided by the\nFund. Pre-school age children who\nare hard of hearing v\/ill be treated\nthroughout the province through\nIhe mobile hard-of-hearing clinic,\nwhich will be instrumental in\npreventing loss of faculty of\nspeech through early treatment of\nchildren  with  poor hearing.\nAnother area of child care supported by the fund is the emotionally disturbed child. Through Kinsmen support, there are boys and\ngirls, emotionally disturbed, being\ntreated in two separate schools at\nthe Coast. A broader type of treatment is hoped for through experience in handling these children.\nThe Poison Cqntrol Register is\na department of child care not too\noften heard of, but is important.\nThere is a small centre in ihe\nRoyal Jubilee Hospital in Victoria,\nand his provides an immediate\nInformation service lor doctors o,i\nthe toxic content of innumerable\nitems and the antidote for them.\nIt is hoped to extend this service.\nFund executives hope to have in\nthe future a training school for\nspecialists in the field of child\ncare in conjunction with the De\npartment of Education and , th;\nUniversity  of British  Columbia.\nCases of hare lip, cleft palate,\nclub foot and other disabilities\ncome under the program of treatment provided by this Fund.\nMr. King spoke to the Kinsmen\non technicalities of the Imminent\ncampaign, urging them to ap\nproach the achievement of their\nobjective with the thought in mind\nthat they are doing a service for\nthe community in thespbnsoring\nof the Fund, and pointing out the\nultimate good to be attained by\nresidents through participation in\nthe drive.\nA. R. Defieux,\nB.C. Pioneer,\nlaid lo Rest\nFuneral services were held In\nVancouver for Albert R. Defieux,\n73, pioneer in the construction in '\ndustry of British Columbia, who\ndied suddenly at the wheel of his\ncar.\nBorn in Liverpool, England, Mr.\nDefieux was associated with the\nMurdoch Company, railway contractors, at Port Alberni from 190!)\nto 1911 and.was also with them\nfrom 1911 to 1915 in Canadian\nNational construction at Chua\nChua, north of Kamloops. He wes\noffice manager for W. P. Tierney\nCompany in the construction of\nthe Copper Mountain railroad near\nPrinceton from 1917 to 1920 and\ncontinued with them in the building of the Cascade Highway from\nRossland to Grand Forks from\n1920 to 1923.\nIn 1924, Mr. Defieux was associated with the West Kootenay\nLight and Power Company as\noffice manager during construction of two dams at Bonnington\nFalls. He joined Dominion Bridge\nCompany at Vancouver in 1929 and\nretired ap purchasing agent in'\n1946. Since his retirement he spent\nsummer months residing at Kam\nloops.\nBesides his wife, Ada, he is su.\nvived by two children, Homer,\noptometrist of New Westminster,\nand Miss Blanche Defieux, at\nhome, 2880 Oak Street; also two\nbrothers, O. T. Defieux, Camas,\nWashington, and Charles M. Defieux, White Rock; and one sister, '\nMrs. Edna Buchanan, Revelstoke. i\nAnswer False Alarm\nNelson Fire Department responded to a call it the corner of Stanley and Innes Streets Monday afternoon at 3:30. It turned out to\nbe a false alarm. Investigations\nare proceeding.\nOddments\nAt\nVi PRICE\nA Full Table of     .\nOutstanding\nValues\nin assorted\nMEN'SWEAR\nGodfreys'\n378 Boker St.\nHere's the Chance\nTo Show Your\nTALENT\nEnter the Big Contest\nto be held ot the\n,  CAPITOL THEATRE\non Friday, January 31, ot 7:30 p.m.,\nMANY PRIZES TO BE WON\nIf you are good, we want to hear you\nIf you do not know, have fun finding out.\nEntries to:   Recreation Office or Phone 1620\nSections for Tiny Tots, Elementary Sehool Children,\nJunior High Student., Senior High and  Adults\nEarly Entries Will Be Appreciated\nJ. R. JOHNSON,\nRec. Director. *\n\u25a0        '\n itrf\nCONSTRUCTION OF a large warehouse for Celgar\nLtd., is going ahead near Castlegar following clearing\nand as part of other preparatory work in connection\nwith the building of a bleached kraft pulp mill. Poole\nConstruction is the contractor. Celgar obtained a forest\nmanagement licence July 20, 1955, on condition that\nthe company start construction of a pulp mill of at least\n300 tons daily capacity before March 1, 1958, and complete the project by March 1, 1961. The year 1957 marked\nthe start.\u2014Gordon Petiitt photo.\nFormer Miner\nAl Michel Dies\nNATAL \u2014 Word was received\nhere that a former Michel resident, Abel Hampton, 82, had died\nln New Westminster.\nHe came to Michel ln 1003 where\nhe resided for more than 30 years.\nDuring these years he worked at\nthe Michel mines, leaving for the\nwest coast in 1035.\nHe is survived by his wife, three\nsons, Melvin, in New Westminster; Harold in Prince Rupert and\nBert in Burnaby. Six daughters,\nMrs. Rose Jones, Mrs. Beth Laid-\nlaw, Mrs. Dave Dearden, and Mrs.\nA. MacDonald, all of New Westminster; Mrs. Albert Bureau of\nKimberley and Mrs. William Jin-\nkinson of Vancouver, There are 23\ngrandchildren, 12 great grandchildren and nieces and nephews in\nNatal-Michel.\nFuneral services were held in\nNew Westminster. Rev. A. J. Bad-\nley officiated.\nICALL\nWEST\nTRANSFER\nCO.\n719 Baker St   \u2014   Nelson, B.C\nPhone 33\n\u00abttnm'S'%^.\nCANADA\nAlASXA . ''4HKI\n&ir, HAWAII ANOSW\n\u00ae* \\MJf_TO RICO J\nWork Pace Slack\nAt Michel Mines\nNATAL\u2014During the past week the majority of the\nMichel miners registered for unemployment insurance with\nCommission representatives from Blairmore who registered\nthe applicants at the Union Hall at Natal. The Unemployment Insurance Commission staff was available for two days.\nFor the past three weeks the Michel mines have been\nworking slack time, the miners putting in only seven shifts\nduring that period. The prospects for the immediate future\nare not known.\nThe by-product plant, however, has continued to\noperate around the clock even though the mines have continued to work on slack basis for some time.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment.\nL.A. to F.O.E.\nMeet Tonight 8 p.m.\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2-4 p.m.\nRegular meeting tonight 7:30 p.m.\nOn sale, children's snow suits.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nFisherman's  Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN\u2014BALFOUR, B.C.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC  HALL - 8 p.m.\nClear sheet plastic, 'several thicknesses. T. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.,\nPhone 156, 101 Hall St., Nelson.\nClasses in copper tooling, flower\ncraft, leather craft. Register now.\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nOn Sale\nLadies' Coats and Car Coats.\nEBERLE'S   ON   BAKER   ST.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nJust Arrived! Gloxinias and Tuberous Begonia Blubs.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nNelson W. I. meet Friday, 2:30\np.m. Mrs. White will give resume\nof the first National Convention.\nVisitors welcome.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nGoing Abroad ?\nLet us answer all your\ntravel questions and\nmake your journey\nreally carefree.\nWe will gladly\nattend to\nyour\nbookings, hotel\nreservations,\npassports, visas,\ncurrency, etc.\nIf it's a question\nof air travel\u2014see u$ first.\nFor  Information and  Reservations\n\"SEE THE VIPONDS\"\nGLOBE AGENCIES\n1146 Cedar Avenue Trail Phone 2345\nThe Only Complete Travel Agency in the Kootenays\nSki Club Meeting Thurs. night,\n7:30 W.I. Rooms, Civic.\nFor the dull days \u2014 Phone 962\nfor a bouquet of cheery Spring\nFlowers.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPre-inventory  special,   2  piece\nlounge suites, Reg. $229.50 to clear,\n25% Off\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nWOOL and FABRIC SALE\nCONTINUES\nfor a limited time only at your\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\nCasting Nelson Little Theatre\nNoel Coward's \"Blithe Spirit\", Capitol Theatre, ' Thurs. Jan. 16th 8\np.m. Prospective members welcome.\nCLAN McLEARY BURNS\"\nNIGHT BANQUET\nOddfellows Hall, Jan. 23, 7 p.m.\nTickets limited. Contact Benny\nSutherland  or  Ernie  McLachlan\nTickets $1.00.\nNelson  Funeral  Home Ltd.\nAmbulance Service, 613 Ward St.\nOxygen. Phone 53.\nA dignified, courteous service for\nevery faith. Prices all can afford.\nAgents for Bronze Plaques.\nEducational Film and Dance\nsponsored by Carpenters Local 2458\nNelson on Wednesday January\n15th, commencing at 8:30 p.m.\nEagles Hall. Music by R. Kline.\nFree Admission.\nPatients in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital can have The Daily News\nBent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844\nCirculation Department,\nDally News.\nATTENTION LIBERALS\nThe annual meeting of the Nelson\nLiberal Assoc, will be held 'in the\nCanadian Legion Hall, 'Sat., Jan.\n18th, 1958, 2 p.m. Business: General election of officers, appointment\nof delegates to B.C. Convention.\nCLEARANCE OF LADIES'\nTWEED SUITS\nVALUES TO $59.95\nSALE $29.95\nAT\nIRENE'S MILLINERY\nAND DRESS SHOP\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to extend sincere thanks\nand appreciation to our relatives,\ntrends and neighbors for many\nkindness, expressions of sympathy,\nand for the beautiful floral offerings, extended to us in the loss of\nour darling baby Dorothy Elaine.\nMr. and Mrs. Louis Maglio and\nFamily.\nSALTY AREA\nThe salt lake of Amadeus in\nsouth Australia was discovered in\n1872.\nHenry Baker\nOf Fernie Dies\nCRANBROOK - United Church\nfuneral service at Fernie Funeral\nHome by Rev. A. C. Johnstone\ntook place Tuesday for Henry\nBaker, 46 years an East Kootenay\nresident, who died at St. Eugene\nHospital Saturday.\nMr. Baker was born 87 years ago\nat Gurnsey, Channel Islands, England. In 1910 he came with his\nwife and family to Michel and\nthree years later moved to Fernie.\nHe served as plumber with the\nCrow's Nest Pass Coal Company\nuntil superannuation in 1940, after\nwhich he was on the building staft\nof Fernie Public School. He was\na   widely-known  gardener.\nMrs. Baker died at Fernie in 1954\nand in 1956 Mr. Baker moved to\nCranbrook to * join his daughter,\nMrs. Harry Dorris.\nA son, Thomas Baker, also survives him at Fernie, and three\ngrandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Burial in St. Margaret's\nCemetery at Fernie Wowed the\nfuneral service.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nTRAPPER  SNARES\nLARGE LYNX\nLA FRANCE - Vic Johnson\ncaught a large lynx on his trap\nline up Lockhart Creek.\nThe animal was one of the\nlargest of its kind he has ever\ncaught.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nFarmers' Group\nApproves Bids\nFor Land\nCRANBROOK - The Cranbrook\nFarmers' Institute at its first general meeting of 1958 approved four\napplications for land purchases in\nits district. Two of them were from\nChristian Wenger for separate land\nparcels just west of Cranbrook and\nthe others were from C. A. E.\nQuaife for a parcel north of Lum-\nberton and from G. E. Betts for\nextension of holdings northeast of\nLumberton.\nRange closure to horses scheduL\ned in Cranbrook and Fernie elee\ntoral districts February 15 to April\n16 was discussed by the meeting.\nThis is a range conservation meas'\nure in force annually for the past\n12 years, under B.C. Forest Ser\nvice enforcement. The Institute re\nviewed the applications of Mrs.\nWilliam Sissons of Cranbrook, Ken\nMiles of Marysville, Fred Pattin-\nson of Wycliffe, C. C. Grainger of\nFort Steele and V. T. Casselman\nof Bull River for permits to round\nup horses on Crown range during\nthat period. Such animals are held\nfor claim for a certain period then\ncan be disposed of as the permit-\nholder decides, The permits are\nissued by the forest ranger office.\nMore detailed information on\ncauses of accidents in highway\ncollisions between cars and livestock in this district will be sought\nby the Institute.\nThe meeting was in the Council\nchamber at the city hall, with\nnewly elected president Frank Hill\nas chairman, and E. P. Becker\nsecretary. Next Institute meeting\nis February 8.  '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 15, 1958 \u2014 3\nDoukhobors Have Part in Booklet\nOn History of B.C. Ethnic Groups\nThe Doukhobors of West Kootenay are included in a 65-page\nbooklet prepared by the provincial\narchives to help in further research and study of the history of\nethnic groups in B. C.\nTitled \"A Select Bibliography on\nEthnic Groups in British Columbia,\" the multilifh booklet was\npublished at Victoria by the B. C.\nCentennial Committee and is avail\nable at the centennial offices without charge.\nThe bibliography-jproposed by\nthe Centennial sub-committee on\nEthnic Groups and Provincial Organizations\u2014is the first completed\ninter-cultural project in connection with the centennial.\nThe booklet opens with five\npages listing general works on\nethnic groups in B. C, then covers\nMark Holes in Ice,\nClub Urges Anglers\nSALMO \u2014 Salmo Rod and Gun\nClub has expressed concern over\nwhat it terms is a \"dangerous\"\nsituation created by fishermen who\nleave unmarked or uncovered holes\nin the ice on district laker.\nMembers have suggested that\nanglers cut their holes as small\nas   possible,    approximately    12\nLions Send Blind\nMan to\necial School\nSp\nKIMBERLEY - Abe Baumbach,\noperator of a newsstand and confectionery in Kimberley, who has\nbeen blind for the past several\nyears, has left for San Rafael,\nCalif., for a month at the Guide\nDog School,\nThis is the training institution at\nwhich blind pedple and German\nshepherd dogs establish a \"seeing\neye\" relationship which.becomes\nof vital importance to both. The\ntrip is being made with assistance\nof Kimberley Lions Club.\nGray Creek Church\nFinances Sound\nGRAY CREEK-A satisfactory\nfinancial position was revealed\nwhen the annual church meeting\nwas held with Rev. William Eding-\nton in charge. All commitments\nhad been met.\nThe vicar's report showed 22 services had been held and one\nfuneral. In the whole of Kokanee\nparish there had been 193 services,\nfor which he had travelled 10,056\nmiles. He received a hearty vote\nof thanks. Thanks were also ex\ntended to Mrs. C. C. Feenie as\npianist, T. A. Lymbery as janitor\nand to the wardens, C. C. Feenie\nand Mrs. A. W. Lymbery.\nGray Creek Man\nSuffers Leg Injury\nGRAY CREEK - Horst Wirsig\nsuffered a badly crushed leg when\nhe was knocked down by a falling\nlog while unloading a load of logs\nat the Wirsig sawmill here. The\nRiondel ambulance was called and\nattendants gave first aid before\nproceeding to Creston Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Wirsig had just\ncompleted plans for a holiday\nwhich was to be spent in Europe\nwhere Mr. Wirsig's brother Claus\nis studying at Oxford University,\nNews of Ihe Day\n(Continued)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nIRVINE \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late Christopher (Chris) Irvine\nwill be held at Thompson Funeral\nHome Friday at 2 p.m. Rev. Reuben Swanson will officiate and interment will take place in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nt;\nLa France Hall\nWing Progresses\nLA FRANCE \u2014 A good showing\nhas been made on the construction\nof a new addition to the La France\nCommunity Hall. This is the community's centennial project.\nOwing to lack of space, the club\nwill be unable to hold any more\nsocial evenings until after the addition is completed.\nMODERN RELIC\nTAIPEI (AP)-A fragment of the\nStalin statue in Budapest, torn\ndown by Hungarian freedom fighters last year, now is in Formosa.\nIt was shown here by Platthy\nJeno, Hungarian poet who came to\nFormosa from a Tokyo cultural\nconference.\nFormer UBC\nProfessor\nTraffic Victim\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A retired\nphysics professor from the University of British Columbia was\nfatally injured Monday night\nwhen struck by a car on a rainswept street near his home here.\nDr. Albert Edward Hennings,\n78, professor emeritus in physics\nat the university, died four hours\najter being injured.\nBorn in Barrington, 111., Dr.\nHennings studied at Lake Forrest College in Illinois and the\nUniversity of Chicago. He taught\nschool in Houghton, Mich., and\nwent successively to Whitman\nCollege in Walla Walla, Wash.,\nthe University of Chicago and the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan before moving here in 1919 as an\nassociate professor.\nHe became a professor in 1929\nand held the position until he retired in 1948. He was a fellow\nof the American Physical Society\nand wrote 14 different publications on scientific findings.\nSurvivors included a daughter\nwith whom he lived.\ninches in diameter, and that upon\nleaving they place brush or poles\nover the holes.\nLarge holes left unmarked are\na danger\" to skaters and . pedes^\ntrians crossing the lakes, the club\nstates. .\nSection 228 of the Criminal Code\nstates in part: \"Everyone who\nmakes it or causes it to be made\nan opening in ice that is open to or\nfrequented by the public is under\na legal duty to guard in a manner\nthat is adequate to prevent persons\nfrom falling in by accident and is\nadequate to warn them that the\nopening exists.\"\nCrestonite Acts for\nCompany Official\nCRANBROOK - Bud \u25a0 Jones of\nCreston, formerly with Creston\nSawmills Ltd., has been named\nacting general manager of Crestbrook Timber Ltd., at its central\noffice at Cranbrook. He is substituting for vice-president and general-\nmanager V. C. Brown, who has left\non a holiday of six weeks to two\nmonths to British Honduras.\nall available material on each\ngroup, with the exception of native\nIndians. Material on the Indians\nwas so extensive that the bibliography had to be limited to those\ngroups not .native to the province,\nbut who entered B. C. during the\nfirst 100 yearj.\nReference listings on each ethnic group include: 1, books and\narticles; 2, newspapers; 3, unpublished material. The introduction\nalso points out that the published\nbibliography is only part of a\nmore extensive check-list which\nwas compiled as part of this project. The full check-list is available for consultation in the Provincial Archives at Victoria.\nMost extensive coverage in the\nbibliography is given to the Japanese (914 pages); the Chinese,\n(91; and the Orientals\u2014Chinese,\nJapanese and East Indians\u2014(8%).\nThere is a \u25a0separate section of\nthree pages on the East Indians.\nOther groups in the booklet include the Doukhobors, (7'A pages)\nScandinavians\u2014Danes, Finns, Icelanders, Norwegians and Swedish\n\u2014(7); the French (2); the Jews\n(2); Anglo-Saxon groups \u2014 Irish,\nEnglish, Scottish and Welsh\u2014(3);\nNegroes, Germtns, Italians, Men-\nnonites, Russians, Swiss and Uk-\nSocred Groups\nAddressed\nHARROP \u2014 Guest speaker at a\ncombined meeting of the groups of\nSocial Credit members from Har-\nrop-Longbeach, Procter and Balfour was Mrs. W. J. Van Maarion\nof Nelson, president of the Nelson-.\nCreston constituency Association,\nand president of the West Kootenay riding association. She was\naccompanied by the treasurer,\nMr. O'Genski.\nMrs. Van Maarion urged members to -keep up their unity and\nstudies of the Spcial Credit movement.\nA letter was read from Hon. W.\nD. Black regarding tickets for the\nopening of the next session of the\nLegislature.\nMr. O'Genski spoke of the campaign funds required to conduct\nthe coming election..He also spoke\non membership.\nThe group agreed to sponsor a\nBurns' Night celebration at Procter hall with David Smart as master of ceremonies. The date was\nset for Jan. 25.\nA cake, donated by Mrs. A. Russell of Nelson, was won by Mrs.\nF. Flegel, and a second cake was\nwon by Mrs. Van Maarion' who\nshared it with the runner up Miss\nAnderson of Longbeach.\nToday's insurance\nProblems\nAnswered by\nYour Insurance Advisors\nI M.-.YCK-I\nQUESTION: What is the\npurpose of a Public Official Bond ?\nANSWER: To guarantee\nfaithful performance of\nduty.\nHave you an insurance problem of your own? Come in\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nhelp you without charge or\nobligation of any kind I\nRobertson -\nHilliard,Cattell\n456 Ward St.      Ph. 1912-1913\nSays Tax Cuts Would Be Certain\nTo Assure Economic Expansion\nMONTREAL (CP)-A substantial reduction in taxes would be\none of the most efficient ways to\nassure a resumption of economic\nexpansion, Charles St. Pierre,\npresident of La Banque Cana-\ndienne Nationale (National Canadian Bank) said Tuesday at the\nbank's  annual  meeting.\n\"The income tax,\" Mr. Ste.\nPierre stated, \"often deprives\ncorporations of a part of their\nearnings needed to improve and\nmodernize their plants. It hinders more particularly the initiative of owners of smaller industries which are 10 times as numerous  as large ones.\"\n\"Stability of employment, the\nmainstay of economic prosperity,\ndemands that the manufacturing\nindustry be in a position to expand rapidly and improve its\nequipment in order to increase\nproductivity.\"\nMr. St. Pierre's comments\nwere contained in'a text made\navailable to the press in advance\nof delivery.\nMr. St. Pierre said it is impossible to foresee the repercussions\nfrom the recently - formed six-\ncountry common market in Europe or the larger free-trade !one\nwhich is being considered, but\nthere seemed no doubt that such\ndevelopments   would   require   a\nreadjustment  of \"Canada's   commercial policy.\nFREE TRADE\nReferring to free-trade proposals concerning Canada, he com-'\nmented:\n\"The suppression of tariff walls\nbetween Canada and the United\nKingdom or between Canada and\nthe United States would definitely\nrelegate Canada to the status of\na raw-material supplier and prevent the development of its manufacturing industry that provides\na livelihood for one-fifth of its\npopulation.\"\nIn regard to current economic\nconditions, Mr. Ste. Pierre said:\n\"It would be neither wise nor\nprudent to disregard the fact that\n1958 has in store many difficulties and problems arising mostly\nfrom our dependence on foreign\nmarkets.\n\"Iherefore it will be of primary importance to follow closely\nthe evolution of countries that\nconstitute our principal markets.\nAs long as this period of uncertainty prevails, the best attitude\nmight be one of preparedness for\nall contingencies.\n\"World conditions are so unsettled that one is reduced to conjecture. We are none the less\njustified in looking to the future\nwith confidence. The gloomy\nprognostications we sometimes\nhear seem to be ill-founded.\"\nFor Service\nCall...\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and Heating Service\nSalmo Curling Club\nAnnual Bonspiel\nFriday, Sat., Sun. Jan. 17, 18, 19\n* 3 Events        * Good Prizes\nENTRY FEE: $10.00 PER RINK\nEntry Deadline: 6 p.m. January, 16th.\nSubmit Entries To:\u2014\nJ. D. FORBES, Phone 16K, Salmo.\nor F. T. MIDDLETON, Phone 53L Salmo.\nHousewives and Husbands\nAll Ag\nree\nmmmm\nW 1   Northern Wyoming Coal  # f\nGives Home Heating Comfort with\nCleanliness and Economy!\nOrder W^W C.\u00abl\n... a Load of Heating\nSatisfaction. . . NOW!\nProduced by. Big Horn Coal Co. of Sheridan, Wyo,\nPHONE   889\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\n Established April 22. 11102.\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPubliahed every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Bake: Street, Nelaon, British Columbia,\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post OtJice Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER Ot   l'HE AUUl'l  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMl-MBER Ot   I-HE CANADIAN  PRESS.\n1'he Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to 1'he Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nJanuary      1958\nQetting Into the\nBritish Columbia's centennial celebrations open officially on April 27\nand though this may seem a long\ntime ahead it is never too soon to\nplan for an event of this magnitude.\nThe committee which did such a good\njob of Nelson's diamond jubilee is\nnow taking the centennial celebrations In hand. How great their success\nmay be depends very much upon\nthe amount of support given them.\nThe schools have promised to do\ntheir bit as, after all, the centennial\ncelebrations are largely for the children. They are\u00bbthe ones most likely\nto see the further progress of the province and they are the ones who put\nlife into any celebration.\nTowards the end of the school year\nthe schools are overworked, but on\nthis occasion It might be possible to\nhave a week set apart for a Festival\nof Youth. There can be no more appealing and attractive sight than youth\nIn the mass, at work or at play.\nThe city has ordered five of the\nofficial B.C. Centennial flags. This Is\nquite an attractive flag and all who\ncan should fly It.\nCentennial Spirit\nIf our city is to be attractive to\nvisitors It must be well decorated. This\ncannot be done without expense and\nplanning. Baker and Vernon Streets\nshould receive particular attention and\nindividual householders should also\nplan to make their premises attractive.\nGardens and flowers always draw\nthe eyes of visitors and it is to be\nhoped that more people than ever will\nbeautify their grounds. Our parks, too,\nwill need more money and attention\nthis year If they are to be at their\nbest.\nAdequate parking for visitors will\nbe a necessity if the number we expect attend. A committee should study\nmeans and ways of caring for those\nfrom out of town, and if possible give\nthem free parking. Parking of cars\nwill probably be the committee's greatest problem.\nThe suggestion that a calendar of\nevents should be printed and distributed far and wide is an excellent one.\nIt should not be too long deferred.\nWe nSed all the enthusiasm we\ncan muster if the year is to be a success.\nInflation\nNot Prosperity\nThe great danger in inflation is not only\nthat people may come to' feel that it is\ninevitable; the danger, rather, is that they\nmay come to think that it is a necessary\npart of prosperity. Inflationary times, they\nmight say, are buoyant times. Inflation may\nbe the less agreeable part of the buoyancy.\nYet it Is better to feel buoyant than depressed.\nIn fact, this attitude may be carried so\nfar that attempts to control inflation may\nbe looked upon with misgivings. They may\nappear to be a tampering with prosperity\u2014\na risky and unpredictable thing to do. Better,\nit might seem, to accept some degree of\ninflation, than to end by curbing inflation\nand prosperity in the one and the same\nprocess.\nWhen such ideas as this are current, it\nis important that informed and responsible\nvoices should be raised to challenge, and\ncorrect them. In his address at the. 140th\nannual meeting of the Bank of Montreal, the\nbank's .resident, Mr. Gordon R. Ball, declared firmly:\n\"The view often heard, that a gradual\ndepreciation in the purchasing nower of the\ncurrency is a form of tribute that must be\npaid as the price of progress, is to me unacceptable and repu.nant. It is reminiscent\nof olden times when defacement of coins, by\nthe dinning of their ed-es in the hands of\npott\" lhi\u00b0\u00abes. w=s regarded as unavoidable.\"\nFor the basic fact is that prosperity, if\nIt Is to be someth:\"\u00ab more than a passing\nphenomenon, must have a dependable foundation. And that foundation must he the\npreservation of lh\u00bb s'\u00bbb'e value of money.\nWhen monev Use1' js denrceiatine, the foundation of prosperity is erpfln\",\n\u2014Montreal Gazette.\nSignals Crossed by Statesmen\nStatesmen of the major nations of the\nfree world seem to have a penchant  for\nFree at University\nThe demand for higher education in Canada has never Been greater; the national\nneed for it has never been more evident.\nAnd yet every year able minds are being\nexcluded from universities by the high costs\nof fees and of living.\nThe full and obvious way to meet the\ndemand and the need is to make higher\neducation free to all students with the intellectual capacity and the aptitude for such\nstudies. There should be no fees, and where\nnecessary, living costs should also be met\nby the governments.\nThis is not a revolutionary, Utopian or\nImpractical proposal. Education up to university Is already free to all youth In Canada.\nSome forms of higher education are now\navailable to students without fees; for instance, there are no fees at Ontario Teachers'\ncolleges. A large-scale trial of free university\neducation (including living and married\nmen's allowances) was made in Canada after\nthe war with great success. Some 54,000\nveterans of World War II received university\neducation through DVA grants. The cost of\nthe scheme to the federal government was\nabout $220.000,000\u2014Toronto Star.\nSelling, Debentures\nWe agree with the city's finance director,\nMr. A. W. W. Findlay, that the sale of debentures to local residents offers no magic\nmeans of reducing Lethbridge's civic debt.\nIt is unreasonable to expect local citizens\nto purchase such debentures at a lower rate\nof interest than purchasers on the open market are charging. But there is one point\nIn favor of local sales that seems to have\nbeen overlooked: Such sales keep the money\ninvolved, including the interest paid, within\nthe community and to that extent strengthen\nthe community economically.\nWhether this advantage would offset the\ncost of the extra paper wo'rk necessitated\nby local sales we do not know, And it is\nobvious that only a very small proportion\nof the city's capital requirements could be\nobtained locally. Nevertheless, we are glad\ncity council has decided ot give the question\nfurther study.\nspeaking and, at times, even acting at cross-\npurposes. This is at the bottom of the confusion over what Prime Minister Harold\nMacmillan said In a speech recently.\nThis is all the more difficult to understand, coming so close upon the conclusion\nof the NATO conference. Member nations\nwere supposed to have drawn closely together and achieved a better understanding.\nAll too frequently it is Secretary of State\nJohn Foster Dulles who talks as though his\ncountry's allies aren't worth considering.\nAnd he certainlv has an aptitude for saying.\nor doing, one thing one day and soon after\nsaying or doing something different.\nHe is not alone in this. The Anglo-French\nattack on Egypt in the autumn of 1056 instigated. Insofar as the United Kingdom was\nconcerned, hv ex-Prime Minister Sir Anthony\nEden, was the prime exarhpla of fni'ure to\nconsult and co-onc-at e. The Anglo-U.S. shlo-\nment of arms to Tunisia, Without consulting\nFrance, was a more recent but somewhat\nless serious example.\nMr. Macmillan offered what was Interpreted as being a proposal for an E\u00bbst-W. st.\nnon-aggression pact. From Ihe words used,\nIhis interpretation was logical.\nNalurally Ihe United States was annnved.\nThe statement seemed to imnlv the Uni'-d\nKingdom was ready to assume leadership\nln mediation with Russia.    \"   \u2022\nEver since the British Foreign Office has\nbeen trying to explain Mr. Macmillan didn't\nsay what h\u00bb seemed to have said. The non-\naggression statement was not a proposal,\nonly an idea or a suggestion. And it was not\nto be done in isolation but as a comnlement\nto disarmament and other agreements\u2014or so\nIt is now said.\nThis waters down Mr. Macmillnn's\nspeech from being something Important to\nbeing a lot of nothing.\nMost statesmen have a good command of\nlanguage. Surely It is possible for them to\nsay what they mean to sa\u00ab, Th\u00b0v should\"''!\nbe making speeches and then h\u00bbve to sn\u00b0\u00abd\ndavs explaining they didn't mean what they\nsaid.\nThere would he less backing away from\nImportant statements if major statesmen of\nthe free world refrained from getting their\nsignals crossed in relation to one another.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nBy Vrmmeem Drak\u00ab\t\nLook ln th. section ln which your now, or soon, to display your ver-\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor Thursday, January 16, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 New discoveries in science\nphysics, etc. possible, under friendly Mercury and Uranus aspects.\nThis is a day to \"expect the unexpected.\" Mars' position warns\nagainst undue aggressiveness,\nhowever.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus )-\nFavorable Venus and Mercury configurations offer new incentive in\nscientific and inventive fields. If\nengaged in such fields, you should\nmake fine headway now.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nMake ready for some new developments or shifts in plans or projects.\nThere will be opportunity for you\nThe New Isolation\nThere is a great deal of soul-searching\nthese days in the United States as to why\nthe country has fallen so dangerously behind the Soviet Union in some fields of\nscience. One reason\u2014not the most important, doubtless, but nevertheless significant\n\u2014 has been suggested by Mr. Lloyd V.\nBreknerl a member of the president's scientific advisory committee.\nMr. Berkner points out that the State\nDepartment's rule forbidding citizens of\nCommunist China to enter the U.S.\u2014part\nof the general boycott of the Peking regime\n\u2014hinders the holding of major scientific\ncongresses in the United States. International scientific organizations, he explains,\nusually hove Chinese members, and naturally they do not like to convene in places\nwhere a section of their membership is\nunwelcome. They prefer lo held their meetings elsewhere, in London, Paris. Geneva,\nand perhans occasionally Moscow. New York,\nChicago. San, Francisco, pre avoided.\nMuch more is involved in this than national prestige. International congresses are\nextremely import-nt agencies for the dissemination of new ideas, net only among the\nHeleeates but. among o'h\u00b0r experts from\nthe host country who attend the sessions.\nAs a resu't of Stete Department regulations,\nAmerican scientists are being cut oif, in\nsome measure at least, from knowledge of\nnew developments abroad, and from discussions with their colleagues in olh\"r countries\nwhich can be as stimulating as the formal\nmeeting therns?!-'*r.'\nThe effect of this, over a long period of\nyears, cannot fail to b\u00b0 harmful. Science Is\nessential!\" lntern8tl',hal, and it has made\nprogress thro\"\"h Ihe co-operation o' men\nand women of roan\" rationalities, When a\ncountry isolates ifseif, its sciential research\nIs bound to become sonant. Th\" >IHM\npt-tos seer's {\u201e he sii^i\"'1 into th's kind\nef isolation threeeh its ob<\">w,',n with \"secur-\n\" ity.\"\u2014Toronto Globe and Mall,\nThey'll Do It Every Time       -\u2014.-_.-.\u00bb.       By Jimmy Hatlo\n' BURNED A HOLE\nIN THE KNEE OF\nMy BWTS. THOUGHT\nTHE WHOLE SUIT WAS\nSHOT-BUT I TOOK\nIT TO ONE OF THEM\nWE4VINO JOINTS'\nLOOK HOW THEy\nFIXED IT-VD\nNEVER KNOW\nIT\"\nTHE SOR4\/\nMy &QA NO-NEW\nSOFA.'.'QUICK!\nBEAT IT OUT\/\nWATER\/GET,,\nSOMEWATER.^Whenhewa.\nshowing his\nIS C-MNSHAW AT IT\nA<bA\\H?HE BURNED\nTHE RUG AHO THE\nPlAMO OVER Alt\nOUR HOUSE'\n' HE DOESN'T SMOKE-\nHE JUST LIGHTS UP\nAH' LAYS 'EM DOWN\nTO SAY NOTHING\nOF HOW OUR HOSTESS\nWILL BURN WHEN HE\nSAys\/'lT WON'T SHOW\nIF VOU TURN THE\nCUSHION OVER\"'\n\u25a0\u20ac\nGems of Thought\nMORAL COURAGE\nWhen you are so devoted to doing what\nis rhht that you press straight on to that\nand disregard what men are saving about\nyou, there is the triumph of moral courage.\n\u2014Phillips Brooks.\n* *   ' *\nThere is too mii\"h  animal courage ln\nsociety and not sufficient moral courage.\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* *      *\nFew persons have  courage enough  to\nappear as good as they really are.\n-J. C. Hare.\n* *     *\nCourage consists not In blindly overlooking danger, but in seeing and cin. iitI\"\"? it.\n\u2014Je\u00bbn Paul Richter.\n* *      *\nSelf control is only courage in another\nform.\u2014Samuel Smiles.\nTODAY'S BIRLE\nTHOUGHT\nIn the time of trouble he shall\nhide me In his pavilion. He shall\nset me upon a- rock. Psalm 27:5.\nWe are not-friendless. If we are\nin trouble our Heavenly parent Is\nconcerned. We are not alone.\nOimt Ml\nW%bJ\n(C rtATUItSSrsB.--.TI I\n,-r.ru. ttfi.trtt!-\"-,tvT.r>g\nV&TCHIN& THfe FIRE-\nPRONE SMOKER DOIT\nA\\-\\- pVER_4&\/llM'-\"\nSfo\u00ab AHO A HAT TIP\nfoP\/IULKREUTZ,.!..,\n_!UZ4BETH,N;iX     \/A\n__-_ -ifili-\nl've seen women proud o' their\nfine clothes, and men proud o' the\nmoney they've saved, but never in\nthe Same family.\nTo Be Wrong\nHuman\nF. B. PEARCE\nMergers Left In Abeyance\nBy Kelowna Fruit Meeting\nIt seems that Miss Mollie Cot\ntingham, the president of the\nTeachers' Federation, wrote\nletter to the press in which she\nmade some grammatical error\nThis raised a minor whirlpool of\ntrouble and the following is a\nparagraph from one correspond'\nent's letter.\n\"The English language is versa^\ntile enough to allow clear concise\nexpression. When a person with\nMiss Cottin'gham's qualifications\ndoes not uphold this fact, I think\nit is right that she should be\nbrought to task.\nYours for better English as she\nis writ or spoke.\nRalph Stokes.\"\nAs an ex-teacher my sympathies\nare with Miss Cottingham. I have\nnever met her but, I have never\nheard any member of her profession speak anything but well of\nher. Among her colleagues she is\noutstanding and highly regarded.\nI don't suppose for one minute\nthat Miss Cottingham needs my\nhelp to fight her battles, but my\nattention was caught by the\nsentence, \"When a person of Miss\nCottingham's qualification does not\nuphold this fact, I think it is right\nthat she should be brought to\ntask.\" Are you sure Mr. Stokes\nthat you don't meari that you delight to bring her to task? I know\nthere are a great many people who\nlind no greater pleasure In life\nthan counting the mistakes of\nothers.\nEven at the risk of seeming self\nrighteous I must say I do not. Of\ncourse it may be that after 45\nyears of teaching children who\nwere so seldom right I may have\nbecome tolerant, ,but on the other\nhand it may be that I question the\nright of anyone, without apology,\ntelling me I am wrong, and I will\nuphold the right of every individual\nto be wrong when he chooses. Why\nshould we go to the trouble of\nbeing always right just because\nsftme reader wants to play the part\nof school teacher.'\nHARMFUL\nI think this fear of being wrong\nis harmful to many individuals. It\nstarts in school where all the\nemphasis is on haying everything\nright, which you will say is a good\nthing, as indeed it is. Unfortunately, as mistakes are more common\nthan accuracy, the emphasis is\ntransferred from right to wrong.\nThe child is expected to get things\nright so he seldom gets praised for\nUiat, but lie does get scolded for\nbeing wrong.\nIt is small wonder, therefore,\nthat people grow up ashamed of\nbeing wrong and to the belief that\nthey are not normal when they\nmake mistakes, and of course there\nis a great number of people who\nstand ready to support them in\nthat b.li-f, which doesn't do them\nmuch Joed either.\nNowadays I don't go round\ncorrecting mistakes even if I am\nan ex-principal. I don't think I\nshould have many friends if I did\nand I am grateful to all my\nfriends who do not tell me of all '.ne\nmistakes I make In my columns.\nAnd that, I think, Is what friendship Is, accepting the faults and\nlimitations of our friends and\nliking them just the same. I don't\nfind that a very hard thing.\nWhat is our editorial policy as\nregards letters to the editor that\nthey should he brief, concise and\nof interest to everyone? You would\nbe surprised how many letters are\nhard to find room for because\nthey are too long and how many\nmore are of no great interest to\nanyone but the writer. For my part\nI feel that such letters shduld also\nbe written so as not to-hurt the\nfeelings of anyone. You simply do\nnot have to be right at the expense\nof anyone else and letters should\ngenuinely be of interest. If you\nmust talk of grammar let... it be\nentirely Impersonal. For that\nreason I am not going to talk of\nMr. Stokes' grammar and if I\nleave it like that you will wonder\nwhere he is wrong. So let's oe\nsubtle and leave it like that..\nsatility and adaptability. Be eager\nJUNE .22 to JULY 25 (Cancer)-\nA promising outlook for your talents and your various interests.\nWritings, architecture, engineer\ning, all fields of science sponsored\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leol-\nBe steadfast in purpose. Do not\nlet distractions entice you from\ntrue objectives. Step up your program with new saleable methods\nand cheery conversation.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Fine Mercury rays.\nWritten matters, study, research,\nbookkeeping, stenographic work,\nmedical science especially favored.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 A responsive day.\nYou canmake gains through your\noccupation. Keep pace with day's\nneeds.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 The position of Mars\nnow suggests that you be sensibly\nconservative. Hold emotions in\ncontrol and keep inwardly calm.\nYou can have good profits; make\njob progress, too. In free periods,\nenjoy rest.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Study, signing\nagreements (after due consideration), giving estimates among\nday's favored activities. Be careful if handling machinery, tools,\nvehicles. Don't overload yourself\nwith unnecessary tasks.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Saturn stresses sensible caution in hazardous activities \u2014 plumbing, building, railroading, etc. It is an excellent\nperiod in which to improve your\ntalents, 6tudy, further education\ngenerally.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 A new twist to an\nold routine, unique methods, even\na bit of daring now encouraged by\nUranus. Nothing can be achieved\nwithout trying. i\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Venus' friendly aspect, \u25a0\ntogether with good Uranus vibrations, offer interesting, enlivening\nprospects. Be acquisitive, enjoy\nnew friends, new things; do all\nyou can to better all situations.\nYOU BORN TODAY have the\n\"taskmaster\" Saturn as your ruling planet and are noted for intellectuality, generosity, reliability.\nYou may tend to be gloomy at\ntimes. Control this tendency lest\nit defeat your high aims. You often\nmake brilliant writers, skilled\nscientists and sound business executives. Many fine surgeons were\nalso born in this sign. Birthdate;\nRichard Savage, English poet,\nKing Features -\nKELOWNA (CP)-The contentious issue of amalgamation of\npackinghouses has been left in\nabeyance by the executive of the\nBritish Columbia Fruit Growers\nAssociation pending Dean E.D.\nMacPhee's report on the fruit industry.\nAt the opening session of the\n69th BCFGA convention Tuesday\ndelegates were lnfprmed no action had Ijeen taken on a request\nthat the executive investigate\namalgamation.\nThe executive's report stated\nthat Dean E. D. MacPhee, one-\nman royal commission who carried out a study of the fruit industry last year, is looking into\nthe matter of packinghouses. His\nreport is expected within a few\nmonths.\nAmalgamation of packing-\nhouses was hotly debated at last\nyear's convention and a resolution was passed asking the executive to study the possibility\nthat amalgamation would help\ncut shipping costs. Dean MacPhee showed considerable interests in the suggestion during\ncommission sittings in the Okanagan.\nThe executive's report noted\nthat the B.C. fruit board encountered considerable opposition\nto disclosure of records by certain packinghouses who feared\nthey would be viewed by others\nthan the fruit board. The board\nhas authority under the Natural\nProducts Marketing (B.C.) Act\nto examine the books of any\npackinghouse.\nThe executive decided to report\n\"in general terms\" on packinghouse operations until the MacPhee report is tabled.\nThe executive noted the forst\nand wind warning service provided by the department of transport  costs   the  industry  $450  a\nyear, which includes the rental\nof a car used in this service.\nIt was noted Glenmore local has\na resolution pending which suggests the service be discontinued.\nThe three-party contract expires April 1, 1959, and it was\npointed out it will be necessary\nfor the 1958 convention to authorize the appointment of a contract\ncommittee. The contract between\nthe grower, packinghouse and\nsales agency runs for three\nyears.\nIn conclusion, the executive\npaid tribute to C. A. Hayden,\nformer BCFGA secretary-treasurer and editor of Country Life,\nand to James Snowsell, B.C. Tree\nFruits president, both of whom\ndied' during the last year. For\nmore than 20 years Mr. Hayden\nwas a prominent and devoted\nworker on behalf of Ihe fruit Industry and for agriculture In\ngeneral.\nGordon Wight replaced Mr.\nSnowsell as B.C. Tree Fruits\npresident and J. J. Gerein was\nnamed to fill the vacancy on the\ncentral district council.\nDON'T PITY\nTHE\nPOOR GIRL!\nJUST TELL\nHER TO\nTAKE...\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nShe'll get split-second relief as the powerful .\nmedication in Buckley's Mixture Instantly\nspreads warming, soothing IngrBdienti\nthrough throat, chest and tubes - and stopi\nthe tickle that makes her cough. Contains no\nsyrup-safe for diabetics. 59? and 85? everywhere. That's why It Is -\nCANADA'S FASTEST-SELLING\nCOUGH\nREMEPY\/JR7\/\nMissing Vessel\nLocated Aground\nOBAN, Scotland ,fAPI\u2014Search\ners Tuesday located the missing\nRoyal Navy vessel Barcombe\naground near the entrance of the\nFirth of Lome and reported that\nsome of her crew of 30 were suffering from exposure.'\nThe 750-ton boom defence vessel had been missing for 17 hours\noff Scotland's fog bound western\ncoast.\nOne unconfirmed report said\nthe Barcombe had been abandoned. .  \"\nA search by land, sea and air\nwent on Monday night and Tuesday for the ship. The Barcombe\nreported herself aground and in\ndifficulty Monday night and then\nwas not heard from until her radio broadcast a weak, indistinct\nsignal  this afternoon.\nSearchers said the Barcombe\nhad been found ashore on the island of Garvelloch off the Argyll\ncoast, about 17 miles west-northwest of her supposed position.\nRescue vessels sped to the\nsmall bleak island and arrangements were made to take casualties to Oban hospital.\nThe report that the ship' had\nbeen abandoned came from the\nlifeboat involved in the search\nfrom the first.\nRADIO DAMAGED\nOperators ashore assumed the\nBarcombe's radio was silent for\nso long because It was damaged\nwhen she went aground and it\ntook several hours to rig an emergency transmitter.\nFog and heavy swells hampered the searchers.\nOriginally the search had centred on the tiny island of Oron-\nsay but as the day wore on naval authorities became convinced\nthe ship had gone aground a little farther north.\nIn radioing for help Monday\nnight the Bar-orrtb. gave a post\ntion that would have placed her\non the shore of Oronsay.\nthe Barcombe was heading for\nR6syth on Scotland's east coast\nfrom her west coast base at\nGreenock when she disappeared.\nSMALL BONUS\nALPHETON. England (CPI -\nJean Ashard of this Suffolk vil\nlage cut open a marrow and\nfound a penny inside.\nHold on to your\nLife Insurance\nwith both hands\nLife Insurance-is very valuable property for\nyou and your family. _,\nNever make any change in your life insurance\nwithout first talking the matter over carefully\nwith a representative of the company concerned.\nHe may save you many regrets later.\nThe faith that millions of Canadians have in\ntheir life insurance has been vindicated through\nwars, epidemics, panics and depressions.\nTheir experience proves that it is a wise course\nfor YOU to hold on to your life insurance\nwith both hands.\nTHE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA\n 00~l\ncaH\nCF%\nParents of Nelson Woman\nMarried 61 Years Today\nMr. and Mrs. William Craig\nof Vancouver, parents of a Nelson woman, today celebrate 61\nyears of marriage.\nMarried in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1897, Mr. and Mrs. Craig\ncame to Canada in 1906 and\nsettled first in Edmonton, and,\nin 1910, moved to Vancouver. Mr.\nCraig was an employee of the\nCity of Vancouver from 1911 until\nhis retirement. He also served\noverseas with the Seaforth Highlanders during the First World\nWar.\nBoth are still active and enjoy\ngood health.  Mrs. Craig cele\nbrated her 8_th birthday in\nNovember and Mr. Craig will\nbe 90 years old in May of this\nyear.\nA family reunion and open\nhouse was held last year on occasion of -heir diamond wedding\nanniversary. This year they will\ncelebrate quietly at home.\nMr. and Mrs. Craig have three\nchildren, Mrs. Irene Kerr of\nNelson, Mrs. Fred Patterson,\nLake Cowichan, and Captain\nGeorge Craig at Vancouver, six\ngrandchildren and one great\ngrandson. One grandson, Ronald\nCraig Kerr, is employed with the\nNelson Daily News.\nAbout the Town\nPHONE  1344\nBringing his family from North\nVancouver, toll sergeant Dick Roberts and Mrs. Roberts, with their\ntwo sons, Terry and Ricky, have\ntaken up residence at 206 Morgan\nStreet in Nelson.\n*  *  \u2666\nMrs. E. A. Diebel, 621 Baker\nStreet, has left to spend a week in\nVancouver. She is accompanying\nPolio Topic\nOf Address To\nNew Denver Wl\nNEW DENVER - How Kinsmen\nhave helped the fight against poliomyelitis in B.C. was the subject\nof an address given by Cpl. Stan\nKary at the January meeting of\nthe New Denver Women's Institute.\nIntroduced by Mrs. R. J. Bart-\nlett, vice-president, the speaker,\nwho is chairman of the local Kinsmen polio drive, told of his visit\nto the Rehabilitation Centre in\nVancouver where he saw polio\npatients being taught to \"live\nagain\" and of their lives being\nmade easier in many cases by rearrangement of their homes for the\nconvenience of wheel chairs.\nWhile the discovery of Salk\nvaccine has greatly affected the\npolio picture, the public must still\nremember those afflicted previously, he said..\nCpl. Kary told' of the Mobile\ni Hearing Clinic which isbpginning\n- its travels throughout B.C;' and of\nits value in the hearing field.\nAnother interesting subject was\nthe.poison registry where a great\n_many things used in housekeeping\nare being analysed for the benefit\nof those who may in some way\nhave the misfortune to consume\nany of them.\nThe chair of rehabilitation at\nUniversity of B.C. which is sending more trained personnel into the\nfield, is a gr?at advance in the\nwork, he said.\nThe meeting continued with the\nyear's program being discussed, A\ndonation of $15 was voted to further\nhelp with the furnishings for the\nInstitute ward at the Solarium at\nGordon Head, Victoria, and $10\nwas voted to be given to the polio\nfund in New Denver.\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Keith McDougal.d of Richards Street, to the. Coast.\n...\nFrom Michel, B.C., to attend the\nfuneral of Dorothy Elaine Maglio,\ncarhe the baby's maternal grandmother, Mrs. Tony DeLuca and her\naunt, Mrs. Louis DeLuca. Also in\nNelson from Spokane were the infant's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.\nJerry Skogstad. Another uncle,\nRev. A Maglio of Grand Forks was\ncelebrant at the funeral service.-\nEngagements\nMr. William P. Woykin of South\nSlocan, B.C. announces the engagement of hisi youngest daughter\nElsie to Mr. Freddie Chernoff, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. f^red Chernoff of\nHills, B.C. Wedding will take place\nJanuary 25 in the South Slocan\nCommunity hall and Jan. 26 at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nChernoff,  Hills,  B.C.\nGREAT BAY\nChedabucto Bay on the north\neast coast of Nova Scotia is 30\nmiles long with a width of 15\nmiles.\nFAST RELIEF\nFROM DISCOMFORT OF    I\nCOLDS\nWhen you havg a cold you iu ,.i\nwant relief from Ihe pain .\u25a0: II\nand discomfort and you want \u2022 \u00a7;-\u2022,-1|\nit fast... That's Aspiiin IA , >\ntablel starts disintegrating '\u2014\"\nalmost the instant you take it -\nstarts to relieve that pain almost\ninstantly!\nAlwoysAskFor \u2014_ \u25a0 svM\niflPPODUCTOF }B AYERJi\nBrazil Nufs\nAdd To Flavor\nOf Fish Fillets\nBy MARGARET CARR\nIt's a well known fact that although people like to eat a good\nfish dinner, few like to cook it.\nThose who unfailingly order fish\nin a restaurant seldom serve it at\nhome. ,\nActually, I don't know of many\nmain dishes that are easier to prepare these days than fish dishes.\nSole is a mild, delicate-textured\nfish which performs in many interesting and delicious dishes, particularly Sole Supreme. This consists of fresh fillets of sole and\ncooked green beans bound in a\nprovocative sauce containing mushrooms. Accompany it with hot buttered rolls and crisp little salads,\nor if you prefer, big steaming-hot\nbaked potatoes in their skins.\nOr you might like to broil frozen\nfillets with a sprinkling of butter\nand paprika. Then serve them in\nthe manner of great chefs with a\nbutter - lemon - sliced Brazil nut\nsauce.\nCreamy, dis'tinct-of-fl.vor Brazil\nnuts lend themselves easily to\nmain dish use. They can.be sliced\nneatly and effectively _\u00bbt use in\nbutter sauces if first boiled in\nwater about five minutes. The boiling water softens the nutmeats and\nthey \"can be sliced lengthwise with\nout breaking.\nFillets are sides of fish, cut\nlengthwise away from the backbone. Practically boneless, they\nrequire little preparation for cooking. You should allow about one-\nthird pound per person.\nSOLE SUPREME\nOne pound fresh sole fillets, 1\ncan (5 ounces) sliced mushrooms,\n3 tablespoons lemon juice, water,\n3 tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons\nflour, '\/_ teaspoon salt, ._ teaspoon\npepper, 2 egg yolks, beaten; 1\ntablespoon finely chopped onion,\n1 package frozen green beans,\ncooked (2 cups cooked).\nExamine fillets and remove any\nadhering bits of bone. Drain mushrooms, saVing liquid. Combine\nmushroom liquid with lemon juice\nand add sufficient water to make\n1% cups volume. Melt butter; blend\nin flour and seasonings. Add combined liquid gradually, and coo!;\nover low heat until sauce is smooth\nand thickened, stirring constantly.\nRemove sauce from heat. Add a\nMR. AND MRS. LUIGI AMERICO DeROSA\n\u2014Brothers Studio photo.\nDeRosa-Kraft Wedding\nVows Spoken in Trail\nTRAIL \u2014 Soft candle glow enhanced the setting for the exchange\nof marriage vows between Luigi\nAmerico DeRosa and Dolores Jean-\netta Kraft. Mr. Bruno DeRosa\nacted as best man for his cousin.  .\nOfficiating at the double-ring\nceremony were Rev. Mr. Smith,\npastor of the Trail Pentecostal\nChurch, and Rev. E. Domeij of\nNanaimo, brother-in-law of the\nbride.\nGiven in marriage by her father,\nthe radiant bride wore a floor-\nlength gown, the fitted bodice of\nChantilly lace, with Sabrina neckline and short sieves. The bouffant\nskirt was fashioned of nylon sheer\nover tissue taffeta and net. Her\nbouquet was of gardenias and\nwhite feathered carnations. The\nscalloped double veil of fine silk\nnet illusion was fingertip length,\nand held in place by a tiara of\niridescent pearls. Only ornament\nworn by the bride was a set of\naquamarine earrings sent by the\ngroom's grandmother from Italy.\nNURSES\nMiss Helen Brader, who with the\nbride, was a 1957 graduate from\nSt. Paul's School of Nursing, Vancouver, was chosen as bridesmaid.\nHer cocktail length dress was\nfashioned of red velvet, with fitted\nbodice, portrait neckline, three-\nquarter length sleeves and full\nflared skirt. She wore a feathered\nheaddress en tone. Her bouquet\nwas of white baby chrysanthemums intermingled with holly.\nBrenda Ward, the young flower-\ngirl, niece of the bride, was also\ndressed in red velvet, with full\ngathered skirt and Peter Pan\ncollar. She carried a basket of\nwhite baby chrysanthemums and\nholly.\nMr. Tony DeRosa and Mr.\nEugene Kraft ushered.\n\"Oh Perfect Love\" and \"The\nLord's Prayer\" were sung by Mr.\nMcGregor Rathjen during the signing of the register. Mrs. Einar\nDomeij supplied,the nutial music.\nCovers were laid for 65 gilests-at\nthe Kootenay Hotel banquet room.\nThe bride's table was covered with\na lace cloth, hand crocheted. The\nwedding cake, embedded in white\ntulle and flanked on either side\nby white tapers, had been decorated by Mrs. M. Brader. On the\ntable also were low planters of\nchrysanthemums and holly.\nMr. Brader proposed the toast\nto the bride, and the best man\nproposed a toast to the bridesmaid.\nDuring the reception Miss Helen\nBrader sang \"Because.\" Little\nElaine Rathjen sang \"I Love You\nTruly.\" Robert and David Domeij\ngave a rendition of \"Jolly Old\nSaint Nicholas,\" and Robert sang\na solo \"Jesus and Me.\"\nMaster of ceremonies for the\nevening was Mr. Domeij who read\ncongratulatory telegrams from\nPort Renfrew. Ont, Chicago, Penticton, Vancouver, Victoria, and\nAlliance, Ohio.\nBefore leaving for a honeymoon\nacross the border the. young couple\nplaced the bridal bouquet on the\ngrave of the groom's father. \u25a0\nFor going away the bride donned\na brown wool sheath dress with\nmatching accessories, beige velvet\npill-box hat and beige fur jacket.\nHef corsage was of Talisman\nroses.\nUpon their return the young\ncouple will take up residence at\nCastlegar.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,.WED., JAN. 15, 1958 \u2014 5\nLong-Time Residents of Nelson\nCelebrate Their Golden Wedding\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Lincoln of the\nNorth Shore celebrated their golden wedding anniversary recently\nwhile guests of their soij-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Mc-\nCathern of Spokane Valley, Washington.\nMrs. McCathern entertained in\ntheir honor at the cocktail hour followed by a buffet supper. The table\nUnprecedented Number\nOf Women Convening\nBy CAROLYN WILLETT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Liberal\nwomen have mustered their forces\nfor the party's leadership convention.\nExecutive officers of the National\nFederation of Liberal Women met\nMonday to polish resolutions to be\npresented both from the convention\nfloor and in the resolutions committee.\nIt is understood that one major\nresolution will call for the constitutional appointment of more\nwomen from the federation as ex-\nofficers on Liberal associations at\nall levels.\nMrs. Jessie Caldwell of Saskatoon, president of the NFLW, has\nemphasized the need for the women's organization to promote coordination and integration with the\nmain party association rather\nthan building up the federation as\na powerful representative of a\nminority group,\n332 WOMEN\nThe convention promises numerical evidence at least, that\nwomen are emerging from behind\nthe tea services.\nA total of 332 women are ac-\nSalmo Legion Auxiliary\nNears 10th Anniversary\nIMUadijk FASHIONS\nSAVE $15 ON SUITS\nRegular up to $64.95.\nNOW \t\nM7.95\nBLQUSES - i PRICE\nCOATS and DRESSES\nDrastically Reduced.\nSpecial Bargain Rack\nCASH ONLY\u2014NO REFUNDS\nlittle of hot sauce to beaten egg\nyolk; stir egg mixture into sauce.\nAdd chopped onion and sliced\nmushrooms. Place cooked green\nbeans in the bottom of a greased\nVh quart casserole. Place fillets\non top of beans and cover with\nthe sauce. Bake in a moderate\noven (350 degrees F.) for 20 minutes.\nBROILED FILLETS WITH\nBRAZIL NUT SAUCE\nSix fillets (about V-k pounds)\nfresh or frozen; 2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine, salt and\npaprika.\n' Wash fillets and wipe with clotli.\nPlace fish on well-greased broiler\nrack or in shallow pan. Brush with\nmelted butter, sprinkle with salt\nand paprika. Broil 2 inches from\nheat about 10 to 15 minutes, until\nbrown. Serve with Brazil Nut\nSauce. Makes 6 servings.\nBRAZIL NUT SAUCE\nOne-quarter cup butter or margarine, V_ cup sliced Brazil nuts,\n2 tablespoons lemon juice.\nMelt butter over low heat. Add\nBrazil nuts and cook slowly 5 minutes or until butter is slightly\nbrown. Add lemon juice; heat.\nSALMO \u2014 Ten years of activity\n|-will be marked by the 10th anniversary of the forming of the\nLadies' Auxiliary to Salmo Branch\nof the Canadian Legion on January\n2_; At -'the ' annual meeting, held\nin the Legion Hall, a committee of\nMrs. B. Williams, Mrs. Rudy 'Un-\ngaro \u25a0 and. Mrs. H. Mang was\nnamed to undertake arrangements\nfor an anniversary party.\nMrs. F. E. Piper, Mrs. Eugene\nCrowe and Mrs. J.. R. Foubert,\nwere, installed to membership by\nthe president,' Mrs. F. T. Middle-\nton. Mrs. A. Lovestrom resigned\nafter two years as flower convener\nas she will shortly be leaving to\nvisit Sweden.\nMrs. R. Stenson gave the Community Christmas Tree report,\nstating- the result of canvass for\nfunds, totalled $435. Nine hampers\nwere sent out at a total cost $196,54.\nCandy' costing $133.58 was bought\nfor 425 bags of candy given out\nby Santa Claus. ;'   s\nJoint installation of Branch and\nAuxiliary officers will take place\nJanuary 24th, and the Auxiliary\nwill provide the lunch. Members\ndecided to purchase a coffee percolator.\nFULFILLED OBLIGATIbNS\nMrs. Middleton, in giving a summary of the year's work, first reminded members of their obligations.as an organization and said:\n\"Our first loyalty is to the Branch\nof the Canadian Legion to which\nwe are. Auxiliary. We are pledged\nto support it in its activities. Our\nsecond duty is to the parent organization, the Ladies' Auxiliaries in\nBritish Columbia and Northwestern\nStates Command. Our third duty\nis to be of service in the community\nand to support worthy causes\nthere. My report will point out to\nyou that our organization has fulfilled these obligations.\"\nRefreshments at bingo games\nwere' served 51 times during 1957.\nThe 'group also supplied refresh-\nments'at annual meeting in February, and the annual social during\nLegion week and two other socials\nduring the year, and catered to\nthe zone executive meeting held\nin February at Salmo. Work\nparties on the Legion Hall were\nserved 47 meals at no cost to the\nBranch. Piano tuning and repairs\nwere paid by the Auxiliary which\nalso helped with plans for Decora^\ntion Day service, Remembrance\nDay service, and assisted in\nsuccessful house to house sale of\npoppies.\nThe Auxiliary presented to the\nBranch a total of $600. On behalf\nof the Branch and Auxiliary,\nChristmas parcels were sent to\neight members of the force and\ntwo to veterans in hospital. Mrs\nMiddleton then spoke of assistance\nto the Provincial and Zone efforts\nAll requirements were sent\npromptly . and the group made\ndonations to Provincial projects.\nEach Zone meeting had a representative in attendance. The charter\nwas replaced this year.\nMrs. Middleton, continuing, said;\n\"We are urged by the Command\nto support projects other than\nLegion, with our time and effort,\nrather than financially, I believe\nthe foregoing items show that we\nhave done this.\" House to house\ncanvass for the Red Cross in\nMarch, collecting $213.51; $100\nrealized through the leadership of\none member and forwarded to the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nAuxiliary mattress fund. In cooperation with the Kiwanis Hostess\nClub in Nelson, the showing of a\nfilm . on cancer was sponsored;\nhelped with TB survey and X-ray\nin the District and a civil defence\noperation exercise organized and\ncarried out in October, a window\nin a local merchant's store was\ndecorated during Legion Week.\nThe Community Christmas Tree\nand Hamper project was another.\nMeans of raising money included a\ncontest of afghan and that of\ndoilies made and donated by two\nof the members, a \"$1 doll\" contest, spring tea, with sale of work,\nPoppy Day tea and sale of home\nbaking, catering to two banquets,\nbingo game refreshments, and\ncatering to Rotary Club dinners.\nThe hall has been furnished with\ndrapes, 100 each of knives, forks,\ndessert and teaspoons, 50 salad\nbowls, salt and pepper shakers,\nand a sink, cupboard unit and\nwater had been installed in. upstairs hall.\nThe secretary, Mrs. Gradin, said\nat the close of 1957 there were 28\nmembers.\nThe treasurer, Mrs. S. Haire,\nshowed total revenue for the year\n1957 as $1212.51 with a credit\nbalance of $175.76.\nWith the election of officers, the\nslate consists of President, Mrs.\nStenson, Vice President Mrs. B.\nWilliams, second vice-president\nMrs. J. Duval, secretary, Mrs. Gradin; treasurer, Mrs. S. Haire;\nexecutive, Mrs. Mang, Mrs. J. L.\nWalton, and Mrs. Ungaro; sergeant-at-arms, Mrs. H. Faurot;\nstandard bearer, Mrs. D. Jorgen-\nson; flower convener, Mrs. Lorin\nFaurot; press, Mrs. Gradin and\nMrs. E. H. Cosnett.\nOn the nominating committee\nwere Mrs. C. Roach, Mrs. Ungaro\nand Mrs. Middleton.    .\ncredited as delegates or alternates\n\u2014 an unprecedented number and\na representation increase of more\nthan 150 per cent compared to the\n1948 convention, officials said.\nAt least one woman is to be a\nmember of each convention committee. Four women -are to sit on\nthe resolutions committee. During\nsessions \u2014 probably Thursday \u2014\nMrs. Caldwell will address the\nconvention. '\nFriday women delegates, alternates and other women convention-comers are to attend an informal federation business session.\nClosed to the press, the meeting\nhas been termed a letting-off-\nsteam gathering which will bring\ntogether Liberal women from all\nprovinces., The business session\nis to be followed by a social'\ngathering attended by the new\nleader and his wife.\nRIGHT DIRECTION\nJust how much impact the large\nwomen's representation will make\non the conference \u2014 theft is a total\nof 2452 voting delegates and alternate's \u2014 remains to be seen.\nBut the increased representation\nis seen as a step in the right direction.\nSome observers of Canadian women's political activities have said\nthat when it comes to elections,\nmen get the safe seats and women\nare left to contest \u2014 and lose\u2014the\nalready-lost or doubtful ridings.\nBut more active participation by\nwomen in nominating conventions\nand in the main party organization may counteract this trend.\nwas arranged with the centrepiece\na three-tiered wedding cake exquisitely decorated in gold and\nwhite. This was flanked by golden\ncandles. Guests were mostly old\nfriends of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln.\nTelegrams and messages of congratulation were received from\nmany other, long-time acquaintances.\n'Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln have spent\n44 of their 50 years of married life\nin the Kootenay district, Mr. Lincoln, a mining 'engineer, M.I.T.,\nbeing interested in district mining\nproperties. Mrs. Lincoln was the\nformer Ethel Ann Barr, a graduate\nnurse of Salt Lake City. They were\nmarried in Salt Lake City on New\nYear's Day, 1908. After living in\nNelson for many years, Mr. and\nMrs. Lincoln now reside at Willow\nPoint.\nDELTOX RUGS\nGrey, Green, Rustic Beige\n9' x 12'\n$29.95\nAt    '\nNEW DENVER\nCLUB STARTS\nYEAR'S WORK\nNEW DENVER - New officers\nfor 1958-59 took over when the\nWomen's Association of Turner\nMemorial United Church held its\nmonthly meeting at the home of\nMrs. George Kent. President is\nMrs. G. H. Croy.\nCommittees were formed, and\nMrs. James Minnis was named as\nbursary award representative and\nMrs. W. G. Thring, Community\nClub representative. Mrs. Croy and\nMrs. Taylor\nHeads Denver LA\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Election of\nofficers was the most important\nbusiness of the annual meeting of\nthe Slocan Community Hospital\nLadies' Auxiliary.\nThose named were Mrs. John\nTaylor, president; Mrs. T. R.\nBuckham, vice-president, and Miss\nM. H. Butlin, secretary-treasurer.\nMrs. J. A. Greer will serve on the\nbuying committee for two years\nand Mrs. A. L. Levy will continue\non this committee for one year.\nAlso chosen were Mrs. Stanley\nPedley, representative on the Hospital Board; Mrs. W. G. Thring\nand Mrs. Buckham,' membership\ncommittee, and Mrs. T. W. Clarke,\nCommunity Club representative.\nAnnual reports were presented,\nand the buyers report showed that\nmany comforts had been provided\nfor the hospital patients and staff.\nPlans were made for the Valentine dance.\nThe .president expressed the\nhope that 1958 would see an increase in membership and greater\ninterest in the Auxiliary's work.\nMrs. James Forsythe will arrange\nfor World Day of Prayer observances February 18.\nA letter was read from the WMS\nsecretaryy thanking the group for\na donation of $10. The meeting\ndecided to send $10 for Korean\nrelief and to donate $10 to the\nSunday school. All members will\nbe on the visiting committee for\nFebruary.\nRedeemer WA\nElects Officers\nThe Church of the Redeemer\nWoman's Auxiliary has elected new\nofficers, for 1958.   -\nThose chosen at the annual meeting held at the home of Rev. Canon\nW. J. Silverwood and Mrs. Silver-\nwood were:\nPresident, Mrs. C. Shayler; vice-\npresident, Mrs. W. A. Triggs;\nsecretary-treasurer, Mrs. E. Sjd-\nstrom; Dorcas secretary, Mr..\nClarence Ward; Living Message\nsecretary, Mrs. Alex Ioaninj extra-\ncent-a-day, Mrs. Lundie; prayer\npartner, Miss E, Holliday-Smith;\nJunior Auxiliary, Mrs. Silverwood,\nand Mrs. A. Furman, Little\nHelpers.\nSALMO CLUB\nENJOYS ANNUAL\nTURKEY SUPPER\nSALMO \u2014 The Salmo Past\nChief's Club helifrlts annual turkey\nsupper at the home of Mrs. O. P.\nLarsen. There were 14 members\nfrom Salmo and Mrs. H. W. Moore\nof Nelson.\nMrs. Sue Taylor, president for\n1958, acted as Santa Claus and\ngave out gifts from the varjous\nmembew and from Mrs. Iva\nLindow, a member who it at present in Phoenix, Ariz.\nA report was given on a dol\ncontest which was won by Carole\nEsche. A motion was made to\ndonate file proceeds of $60 to the\nKootenay Society for Handicapped\nChildren.\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nWant cash le fix up your home?\nJust call NIAGARA on the phone\nLOANS\nLargeit All-Canadian Lean Company\n560 Baker St. \u2014 Phone 1636\nNo more dipping into my Savings Account\nsince I started using the Royal'. Personal\nChequing Account for paying bills.\"\nTHE ROYAL BANK   2-ACCOUNT PLAN'\nprotects your savings \u2014 lets your balance\ngrow with regular deposits, phis interest.\nThat's because the plan provides a\nsecond, separate account for paying bills.\nThis Personal Chequing Account not only helps\nyou handle your household expenses\non a business-like basis but can save\nyou money on cheques, too.\nAsk your Eoyal'Bank teller to set up a\n\"2-Account Plan\" for you.\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\n%,\n \u00a3>\u00a3ibr. COP^I\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 15, 1958\nHere's tops in hearty, thrifty eating... I\nPOT ROAST\nii POTATOES\nfV-W-M-A..^\nChuck Roast\nOr Round Bone\nRoast Beef. .\n* ' -.* . *\nGrade\nA Red |b.\nSmoked Picnics\nWhole or\nshank end.\nlb 39c\nPrices Effective\nJan. 15 - 16 - 17 - 18\nFrying Steaks^ g.ade A m. 79c\nSliced Bacon \u00ab\u2022\u00ab--\u2014- 57c\nBologna\nBy the piece.\nNo. 1 quality.\nib. 29c\nGrand Forks Blue Ribbon. Good\nCookers. In Shopping Bag ....\nCheck These Values\nCRUSHED PINEAPPLE -,...,._,\u201e\t\nV-pAIY-L     iVlIA,    Brddies' Combination. Makes 2 cakes. 20 oi. pkg\t\nPEANUT BUTTER\nBeverly. Reg. or homogenized. 48 oz. tin\nPURE LARD\nNorth Star. 16 oz. ctn.\n2 >\u00ab 39\nChocolate Chip\nCOOKIES\nLb. Pkg. Special\n19\nFISH and CHIPS\nFraier Vale Frozen. 24 oz. pkg.\n50\nGEM POTATOES\n10ibs43c\nMclNTOSH APPLES n \u2014- \">\u2022 9c\nNEW CABBAGE &%<*\u2014-\u00a3- Ib. 12c\n29t FIELD TOMATOES *\u00bb \u00ab... ar lb. 25c\n29t NEW CARROTS an..*. _\u201e2 lbs. 29c\n^c BROCOLLI ash\u2014. _. ib. 23c\nTown House Fancy.\n15 oz. tin ,\t\nTaite Tell\u00bb, Choice\nAssorted. 15 oz. tin\nCream Corn\nGreen Peas\nGrapefruit Juice\nSolid White Tuna ii 2f\u00ab47c\nTown House. Sweet\nor Natural. 48 oz. tin\n4 *\u00bb 53c\n4 fcr 65c\n2 ^ 69c\nDELTA RICE\nLong grain. 2 lb. pkg ,  V \u00bb %\nWHITE BEANS .\u00ab, w\u00bb m 29<\nLARGE PRUNES Ro6etta. 2 ib. ceii0 Pkg    57<\nPICKLES   sweet Mixed. Tender, crisp. 16 o_. Jar  *\u2022'%\nPET FOODS & Wis o_ tm 4 t\u201er m\nBREEZE DETERGENT SlS|; $1.44\nFAB DETERGENTMsSX $119\nLUX TOILET SOAP ffit 2 ttr 33<\nSHORTENING jewel. u o, *. 34*\nGIANT TIDE s\u00bb..i\u201e 6m 69?!\nWESTMINSTER TISSUE        4for 39<\nChili Con Carne\nChoice Tomatoes\nLuncheon Meat\nFish Sticks &&Si\nTaste Tells\n15 oz. Tin ...\nTown House.\n20 ex. tin ...\nSwift's Prem.\n12 oz. tin .._\n\u2022 P^B-\nCanadafwWSAFEWAY\n29c   p^ anc| B8ans\n    _fc Jt I\" Tomato Sauce; 15 oz. Tin\n2 for 77c    4<\u00ab49c\n\u2014 39c  :\t\nPure Honey\nNo. 1 Alberta; 2 Lb. Tin\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n59\nEdwards Coffee\nVacuum Packed; Drip or Reg. Grind\nIb. tin 9 5\u00b0\nIce Cream\nParty Pride; Quart Garten\n45\nOrange Juice\nBel-air Frozen; 6 oz.\n41. 79'\nSolo Margarine\n16 oz. Pkg.\n3f\u00ab95\n IMIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllii\nSPORTS\nf 11111111.1. r 1111111111111111111111 \u25a0.) 111 \u25a0 [ 11 \u25a0 11111111.11111111111 i 111 _ 11111.11 [ 1111 ]:\nFirst Centennial Show\n-Big Women's Spiel\nNelson's first athletic event of\nBritish Columbia's Centennial Year\n\u2014the 20th anual Kootenay Women's\nBonspiel \u2014 will get underway\nThursday morning at Nelson Curling Club to the skirl of pipes, the\ntattoo drums and the curling prowess of Mayor Tom Shorthouse.\nSince his election, Thursday will\nmark the mayor's first official\nopening ceremony at a sporting\nevent, a scene that will become increasingly familiar to him throughout his term of office.\nTwo pipers and a drummer from\nNelson's Kiltie Band will take part\nin the opening ceremony, with a\nmajority of members of Nelson\nWomen's Curling Club due to be\non hand for the first draw at seven\na.m.\nFinals in each of five events \u2014\ntwo primaries, two secondaries and\nCanucks Edge\nFlyers 2-1\nEDMONTON   (CP) - Vancouver\nCinucks,   leading   team    in    the\nOast  division,   made  their  first\nventure ol the season to the Pral-\nres a successful one, easily oul-\njointing Edmonton Flyers 2-1 in\na Western Hockey League game\nTuesday night before 3.977 fans.\nThe   result  left  standings' un-\nlanged in both divisions.\nFlyers remain in second place\ni  the  Prairie  lop.  eight  points\nehind first-place Winnipeg War-\niors. Vancouver now leads run-\nJierup   New   Westminster   Royalty seven points.\nPhil Maloney and Jackie Mc-\nLeod scored [or Canucks. Bob\nRobinson had two assists. Denis\nOlson  tallied  for  Flyers.\nClassified Ads Bring Returns!\na tertiary \u2014 will be played Saturday afternoon.\nOf the 24 rinks entered, Trail has\nthe largest contingent, nine, Nelson\nhas six entries, Creston four, Cranbrook and Kimberley two each and\nSalmo one.  .\nOnly two rounds will be played\nThursday morning, before the women hold the annual Kootenay Women's Bonspiel Association meeting, featuring election of officers.\nLast draw of the day will begin\nat four p.m., after which a cocktail party and dinner will be held.\nDraw for the first two rounds\nThursday:\n7 a.m. \u2014 Mrs. Craig, Nelson, vs.\nMrs. Jones, Trail; Mrs. Brennan,\nTrail, vs. Mrs. Martello, Creston;\nMrs. Sutcliffe, Creston, vs. Mrs.\nMrs. Macintyre, Nelson; Mrs.\nPage, Trail, vs. Mrs. Hesse, Nelson; Mrs. Alcock, Kimberley, vs.\nMrs. Ink, Trail.\n8:45 a.m. \u2014 Mrs. Pollock, Trail\nvs. Mrs. Hanson, Kimberley; Mrs.\nLyon, Trail, vs. Mrs. Fleming, Salmo; Mrs. McGarvie, Trail, vs.\nMrs. Reid, Creston; Mrs. Morris,\nTrail, vs. Mrs. Grant, Cranbrook\nMrs. Little, Nelson, vs. Mrs. Burns,\nCreston.\nWarriors Two Points Back;.\nMay Catch Spokane Tonight\nROSSLAND \u2014 The apparently\nunmatched balance of \"Rossland\nWarriors paid off again Thursday\nnight as six players shared the\ngoal-getting in a 6-4 Western In-\ntiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiuiillii.ini\nWIHL STANDINGS\nW L   F   A Pts\nSpokane 20 13 146 121   40\nRossland   19 13 125 109   38\nTrail 14 18 122 135   28\nNelson  11 19 115 143   22\ntiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nREGALS TROUNCE\nPRAIRIE LEADERS\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Saskatoon\nSt. Paul Regals beat league-lead\ning Winnipeg Warriors 5-2 Tues\nday night in a dull Western Hockey League Prairie division game\nbefore the season's largest crowd\nof 8991.\nTwo-goal performances by Les\nColwill and Bob Kabel and\nsingle by Ray Ross ruined what\nwas otherwise a solid effort by\nWinnipeg in honoring Warrior\ncaptain Billy Mosienko.\nAll was not lost as the likeable\n36-year-old veteran scored both\nWinnipeg goals.\nLIONEL MARTINI\nSENIOR\nHOCKEY\nTonight\nCivic Arena\n8:00 p.m.\nReserved  Seat Sale\nKootenay Stationers\nTODAY\n10 a.m. - 5 p.m.\nReserved   $1.25\nAdults $1.00\nStudents 35c\nROSSLAND >s NELSON\nWARRIORS\nMAPLE LEAFS\nStrikes V Spares\nScores were generally lower last\nweek in league competition at Nelson Bowl-a-drome, with Mike Mc-\nDcrmott of Finning Bowldozer;s\nand Walt Dtibyna sharing top honors for men in five pin-play. Each\ncompeted in Men's Commercial\nLeague play, with McDermott's 315\nsingle standing tops for the week.\nDubyna copped honors with a 778\ntriple.\nChuck Symonds, however, departed from the week's normal\nwith a whopping 605 triple in 10-\npin league play, highest ever registered in official competition on\nthe local alleys. He also pounded\nthe pins for a 237 single, copping\ntop honors there, too.\nMen's Commercial League: high\nsingle \u2014 Mike McDermott, Finning\nBowldozers, 316; high aggregate \u2014\nWalt Dubyna, Civic Hotel, 778;\nteam high single \u2014 Civic Hotel\n1128; team high aggregate \u2014 Civic\nHotel 3220.     '\nSenior Women's League: high\nsingle \u2014 Lena Koehle, Lena's, 264;\nhigh aggregate \u2014 Lena Koehle,\nLena's, 616; team high single \u2014\nIsabel's, 1091; team high aggregate\n- Isabel's, 2703.\n10-pin league: high single \u2014\nChuck Symmonds, Lucky Strikes,\n237; high aggregate \u2014 Chuck Symmonds, Lucky Strikes, 605; team\nhigh single \u2014 Lucky Strikes, 900;\nteam high aggregate \u2014 Lucky\nStrikes, 2449.\nVariety club \u2014 High single \u2014\nKay Allan; Fun Spots, 276; high aggregate \u2014 Kay Allan, Fun Spots,\n621; team high single\u2014 Winds, 918;\nteam high aggregate \u2014 Five Aces,\n2356.\nJunior Women's League: high\nsingle \u2014 Maudie   Johnson,\nternational Hockey League triumph\nover Spokane Flyers at Rossland\nArena.\nWarriors, now only two points\nbehind the league-leading Flyers,\ndug from behind a 3-1 deficit to\nslice the Flyer lead. Warriors also\nhave a game in hand, the one tonight at Nelson's Civic Arena\nagainst the dormant Nelson Maple\nLeafs.\nPinoke Mclntyre, Yogi Kraiger,\nSteve Chorney, Bud Andrews,\nGeorge Ferguson and Hal Jones\ntallied for Rossland. Frank Kubasek scored twice, Tick Beattie and\nJohn Zahara once each for the\nlosers.\nLloyd Maxfield, rookie right-\nwinger, assisted on each of\/the\nveteran Kubasek's tallies, to move\nwithin three points of league-learl\ning scorer Wendy Keller of Nelson.\nMaple Leaf coach Shorty Malacko\nindicated Tuesday night that Danny\nMcDougall, former defenceman of\nSponane, will put in an appearance,\nHopes that Fritz Koehle would\nappear died early Tuesday when,\nin a dispute over salary terms,\nFritz made it known he wouldn't\nplay tonight. Leafs, riding in the\nslough of a losing streak that has\nextended over 11 games, are\nlikely to break out at any time\nagainst ahy opposition.\nWarriors need a victory tonight\nto overhaul the league-leaders. After Zahara and .Kubasek had\ncounted in the first period, the\nBoys of Mike Buckna took a brace\nand tied the score 3-3 in the second\nperiod.\nFormer Leaf Bud Andrews put\nRossland in front for the first time\nearly in the third period, but it fell\nto Ferguson to notch the eventual\nwinner later in the game. After\nKubasek's second tally had chopped the edge to one goal, Jones,\nenjoying a sophomore season far\nout of line with his unimpressive\nrookie performance potted the\nclincher with less than four minutes to play.\nSpokane \u2014 goal: Sofiak; defence:\nPlante, Hodges, Lencien, Luke;\nforwards: Kubasek, Nadeau, Maxfield, Whittal, Gordichuk, Beattie,\nGoodwin, Bodman, Zahara.\nCanadian Couple\nCop Net Matches\nPrints, 231; high aggregate \u2014 Kay\nFargher, Spartans, 589; team high\nsingle \u2014 Corner Pins, 928; team\nhigh aggregate \u2014 Corner Pins,\n2698.\nMixed Commercial League: Women's high single \u00ab\u2014 Alice Bond,\nOverwaitea, 301; women's high aggregate \u2014 Betty Stewart, Queens\nHotel, G53; men's high single \u2014\nTom Marshall, Orange Crush, 309;\nmen's high aggregate \u2014 Wilt Fahl-\nman, Orange Crush, 772; team high\nsingle \u2014 Orange Crush, 1109; team\nhigh aggregate \u2014 Bank of Montreal, 3087\/\nFriday Mixed League : women's\nhigh single \u2014 Rose Malheson, Hot\nShots, 229; women's high aggregate \u2014 Rose Matheson, Hot Shots,\n631; men's high single \u2014 Walt\nArnsdorf, Diggers. 293; men's high\naggregate \u2014 Art Bouchard, Friday\nFive, 693r team high single \u2014 Diggers, 920; team'high aggregate \u2014\nHot Shots, 2423.\nCORAL GABLES, Fla.  (CP) -\nSusan Butt of Victoria  and Ann\nMis-1 Sparling 6f Toronto won their first-\nLet It Snow - You'll Go\nWith the\nALL-WINTER\nALL-ROAD\nALL-NEW\nvr SUBURBANITES\nby GOOD\/YEAR\nNew Custom\nSUBURBANITES\nWith   V-Grip  Tread   Design\u2014is\nthe safest, surest, winter traction\ntire ever!\nGenerous Trade-In\nAllowance on your\nOld Tires\nMount New Suburbanites\nFree of Charge.\nANDY'S TIRE SHOP\nVULCANIZING \u2014 RECAPPING \u2014 BATTERIES\n323 Vernon St. Phone 1930\nround matches' Tuesday in the\nCoral Gables-University of Miami\ntennis tournament.\nMiss Butt defeated Elena Osuna\nof Mexico City 6-4, 7-5. Miss Sparling defeated Gay Miller of Coral\nGables 7-5, 6-3.\nInge Weber of Toronto lost 6-4.\n7-5 to Lois Felix of Meriden, Conn.\nRED STAR TEAM BOWS\nMANCHESTER, England (Reuters)\u2014Manchester United, English\nsoccer league champions, beat Red\nStar of Yugoslavia 2-1 Tuesday\nnight in its first leg match in the\nEuropean soccer cup quarterfinals. Red Star led 1-0 at half\ntime.\nRossland\u2014goal: Zanier; defence:\nKraiger, Lofvendahl, Fletcher. Ferguson; forwards; Jones, Demore,\nMclntyre, Turik, Lenardon, Chorney, Lucchini, Andrews, Desrosiers.\nFirst period \u2014 1. Spokane \u2014\nZahara (Hodges. Bodman) 8:45;\n2. Spokane \u2014 Kubasek (Maxfield,\nNadeau) 16:36.\nPenalties: Plante :04; Kraiger\n9:18.\nSecond period \u2014 3. Rossland \u2014\nMclntyre (Lofvendahl, Jones) 1:38;\n4. Spokane \u2014 Beattie (Lancien,\nLuke) 2:09; 5, Rossland \u2014 Kraiger\n(Lenardon, Chorney) 5:51; 6. Rossland\u2014Chorney (Lenardon, Kraiger)\n15:59.-.\nNo penalties.\nThird period \u2014 7. Rossland \u2014\nAndrews (Desrosiers, Lucchini)\n3:26; 8. Rossland \u2014 Ferguson\n(Turik) 14:09; 9. Spokane \u2014 Kuba\nsek (Maxfield) 14:21; 10. Rossland\n\u2014 Jones (Demore, Desrosiers)\n16:37.\nPenalty: Hodges 3:03.\nBusiness Women's\nCurling\nFollowing is personnel of the\nrinks to play in the second event\nof the 1957-58 season at Nelson\nBusiness Women's Curling Club:\nD. Allen, H. Moore, Luchinsky,\nE. Lacton.\nBrown, McCartney, Butler, Ca-\nhill.\nJamieson, Maras, Thomerson,\nBruils.\nLeverington, Olson, Beattie,\nScott.\nLehto, Ferguson, Freisan, Lud-\nwig.\nMacDougall, Madden, Nesbitt,\nWhitelock .\nMcGovern, Heap, Zarikoff, Cone.\nMiller, Peirson, McBride, Brader.\nAlternates: (Monday) \u2014 Lacton,\nBruels, Jack, Freisan, Brader.\nWednesday: Verigin, Thomerson, Beattie, Ludwlg.\nSpares; Horrel, Vance, Mc-\nEwan, Spence.\nFollowing is the draw for play\ntonight in Business Girls' Curling\nClub competition at Nelson Curling\nClub:\nAllan vs. Brown;\nJamieson vs Leverington;\nLehto vs. MacDougall;\nMcGovern vs. Millar.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nResults of matches Tuesday at\nNelson Curling Club:\nE. S. Batty 10, P. Haines 8.\nA VanSacker 9, H. Ronmark 5.\nJ. Sutherland 8, L, J. Maurer 4.\nE. Ramsbottom 9. L. Peerless 14.\nS. Jeffries 6, N. Sardich 7.\nD. M. Sample 8, R. Boates 8.\nH. Moore 7, D. Meakins 7.\nR. F. Wallace 7, W. Marr 10.\nW. Tozer 0, D. Porteous 1 (default).\nW. Tickner 9, N. Lutkiwich 7.\nSki Slants\nBy S1TZMARK\nAt last our upper bullwheel and\nbearings are iii place. Certainly\nthis is many weeks later than we\nhad hoped to have the job done\nEveryone was quite happy with the\nwork accomplished on Sunday.\nOur thanks goes to all the fellows who came and helped. At\ntimes the top of the hill around\nthe tower looked like war manoeuvres. There was quite a crowd of\nworkers. However, during the\ncourse of the day, everyone got\nin a good amount of work. We are\nvery grateful to everyone \u2014 particularly those who are not skiers\nand who came to help Nelson's\nCentennial Project.\nEverything went like clockwork.\nThe tower was readied for the bull-\nwheel and partly guy-wired. The\nbullwheel was set in place, all the\nsheave assemblies were placed on\nthe intermediate towers and to top\nit off, some of the crew lifted the\ncable onto the sheaves on several\nof the towers when they went down\nthe hill.\nOnly hitch of the day was when\nwe found pole number II was too\nshort. It was used as a \"gin\" pole\nwho hoist the bullwheel in place,\nand when measured was found\nshort for Tower II. This tower goes\nright in front of the bullwheel with\ntwo sets of rigid sheaves on it to\nguide the cable onto the wheel, so\nhas to be dead on.\nWe did cut another pole out of\nthe bush\u2014a 30 footer\u2014and placed\nit in the hole. By this time it was\ndark and we found it impossible to\nput on the crossarms.\nThis means we have another hike\nto the top of the hill to put up the\nguide sheaves, finish guying the\ntower and lining up the top end,\nWe hope some of the gang who\nwere out last Sunday will turn out\nagain this week so we can finish\noff at the top. Then all our remaining work will be with the bottom\nunit.\nWe are feeling very optimistic\nnow that there is a good chance\nto get the wheels turning on the\nCentennial lift in a few more\nweeks. However, this of course depends on getting the work done on\ninstalling the lower drive unit.\nI wasn't around the lower part\nof the hill- on Sunday, but during\nthe day fellows on top of the bull\nwheel could see the bottom of the\ncourse and several times remarked about the crowd of skiers.\nThey also reported the little tow\nin operation about three p.m. This\nwas later than expected, but there\nwas agreat deal of work necessary\nto put it in shape. I think the fellows and girls responsible did a\nwonderful job and now we should\nbe ready for the coming weekend.\nThere were some skiers on the\nhill Monday afternoon, and the tow\nwas running without any trouble,\nUnderstand the cabin and concession is all set up for next weekend,\ntoo.\nDon't forget the ski classes start\nnext Sunday and, more important,\nbe at the general meeting Thursday night at the Women's Institute\nrooms of the Civic Centre.\nWILLIE TOWEEL WINS\nLONDON (AP) - South African\nWillie Toweel, British Empire\nlightweight champion^ outpointed\nCuba's Orlando Zulue'ta Tuesday\nover SO rounds. Both fighters\nweighed 135 pounds.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 15, 1958 \u2014 7\nIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nHeavy Enrolment Anticipated\nFor Daily News Ski (lasses\nApplicationB for Inclusion In the Nelson Dally News\nfree ski classes for members of Nelson Silver King Ski\nClub are flocking into The Daily News office in time for\nthe opening day, Sunday, Ian. 19.\nTwo delays in two successive weeks served only\nto whet the appetites of local and district skiers for their\nopportunities. Arrangements are all but completed, and\nski officials are certain that this year's membership will\nin all probability be much larger than last year's.\nLast season, skiers, were invited to enroll at any\ntime, and the program was arranged to handle a steady\nflow of prospects. This season, with seven instructors\nalready lined up to asBlst ski director Helmuth Mayr-\nhofer, facilities are better arranged, and because the ski\nclub's development has been named Nelson's Centennial project, interest is expected to be much higher.\nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii\nWendy Still Top Marksman\nIn WIHL Despite Fall-Off\nWendy Keller, slumping along\nwith most of his Nelson Maple\nLeaf mates, retained his Western\nInternational Hockey League scoring lead over the weekend, five\npoints ahead of linemate Mickey\nMaglio and Spokane Flyers' Lloyd\n'Maxfield, currently sharing second\nspot.\nLess than three weeks ago, Keller led by nearly 10 points; now, as\nhis slump has extended along with\nLeafs' 11-game losing streak, Keller leads the league In neither\ngoals nor assists, but has remained\non top due to his astounding consistency.\nMaglio, hard-skating Leaf left\nwinger, Is about the only Leaf\nmarksmen to count with any degree of reliability in recent encounters, as he and centre Lee Hyssop,\nremain among the top four, Hyssop trailing Maxfield and Maglio\nby one point.\nHyssop leads the league in as-\nLUMLEY RECALLED\nBY BEANTOWNERS\nBOSTON (AP) - Boston Bruins\nof the National Hockey League\nTuesday called up goalie Harry\nLumley from their American\nHockey League farm team at\nSpringfield.\nThe 31-year-old goalie probably\nwill play against New York Rangers here Thursday night.\nLumley started the season with\nBuffalo, a Chicago farm, and joined Springfield a week ago but had\nnot yet played for the Indians.\nDon Simmons, the regular Boston goalie, suffered a dislocated\nshoulder in a pileup during a game\nagainst Detroit Dec. 29, and Al\nMillar has been performing in the\nBruin nets.\nWORLD RECORD BROKEN\nSYDNEY, Australia (AP)-Brlan\nWilkinson bettered a world record\nin the 110-yard butterfly swimming\nevent in the New South Wales\nchampionships Tuesday night. Wilkinson won his heat at North Sydney Olympic pool in 63.8 seconds.\nsists, with 27, while Tick Beattie of\nSpokane and Adolf Tambellini lead\nthe lamp-lighters with 23 apiece.\nKeller has 22.\nSix points out of third place before tonight's game with Rossland\nWarriors at Civic Arena, Leafs also saw one of their number drop\nfrom his previously undisputed position atop the penalty-time heap.\nGord Andre, with 90 minutes, took\nover for fiery Leaf portsider Jim\nPilla, who has 89, with, it must be\npointed out, a game in hand.\nPrior to Spokane's visit to Rossland Tuesday night, Flyer goalie\nJohn Sofiak trailed Warrior netminder Reno Zanier by .08 of a\npoint ln the goaltendlng averages.\nLeaf's Gus Adams, reducing his\nmark slowly but surely, is still last\nin the averages.\nTOP TEN\nG\nA Pts Pirn\nW. Keller (N) ....\n22\n24   46   14\nL. Maxfield (S) ..\n19\n22 41  12\nM. Maglio (N) ....\n16\n25   41   16\nL. Hyssop (N) ....\n13\n27   40    2\nA. Tambellini (T)\n23\n14   37    8\nD. Gordichuk (S)\n15\n21   36   17\nF. Kubasek IS) ..\n14\n21   35    4\nT. Beattie (S) ....\n23\n11  34    4\nG. Penner (T) ....\n11\n23   34   21\nB. Whittal (S) ....\n8\n26   34   IS\nGOALTENDING AVERAGES\nGames\nGoals   Avg.\nR. Zanier (R) ....\n30\n101     S.36\nJ. Sofiak (S) \u2022\n.1\n112      S.44\nS. Martin (T) ....\n32\n115      4.22\nG. Adams (N) ....\nSI\n143      4.61\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nNew   York   \u2014   Frankie   Ryff,\n139%, New York, outpointed Kid\nCentella, 137, Nicaragua, 10.\nNew Orleans \u2014 Ludwig Light-\nburn, 136, British Honduras, knocked out Larry Armstead, 137, New\nOrleans, 10.\nProvidence, R.I. \u2014 Bob Young,\n173, Providence, outpointed Juan\nRomare, 170, Panama, 8.\n- Beaumont, Tex. \u2014 Ray Riojas,\n135, Fort Worth, Tex., knocked out\nFloyd East 132, Lake Charles La\u201e\nYou get a new and eye-opening driving experience with\nexclusive Twin Traction. One\ndrive will show you why! On\nslippery, muddy or sandy roads,\nTwin Traction automatically\ndirects power to the rear wheel\nwith best traction\u2014powers you\nthrough with sure-footed\nstability.\nAt all speeds, Twin Traction\nenhances your safety, improves\nreadability, saves tire wear\u2014\neven on dry roads. \\A Stude-\nbaker first... Twin Traction is\navailable on all Studebaker and\nPackard cars.\nGuest-drive one, Todayl\nStudebaker-Packard\nOF   CANADA,  LIMITED\nVisit Your Studebaker-Packard Dealer Today!\nDEFOE SERVICE LTD.\n213 Baker Street\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 15, 1958\nBusiness Spotlight.\n'Houses in 1978 Will M^ke Today's\nHomes Look Like Old-Time Shacks\nBy FORBES RHUDE    '\nCanadian Press  Business Editor\nThe well-equipped household of\n20 years from now may make today's gadgetted home appear\npretty primitive.\nGwilym A. Price, chairman of\nWestinghouse Electric Corporation of the United States, recently\nadded together some of the things\nwhich he sees coming up. Some\nitems he predicts for 1978:\nAn electrostatic cleaning wand\nwhich, when waved over a dusty\nsurface, will attfact all dust\nwithin several feet and which,\nwhen it is loaded, can be washed\noff in the sink.\nPrepackaged units in bedrooms\nwhich will provide conventional\nhanging storage for suits and\ndresses and also a 'laundro-closet\nthat will clean clothing without\nagitation or tumbling.\nWhen one hangs up a suit or\ndress, moving tracks will carry\nit successively into wash, rinse\nand drying chambers. Within\nminutes the garment will be returned to the rack in the hanging closet, clean and ready to\nwear\u2014the dirt removed by ultra-\nCommercial TV\nEnters Wales\nCARDIFF, Wales (CP) - Britain's commercial television companies brought another 2,100,000\npotential viewers within range of\ntheir services Tuesday with the\nopening of a Welsh service.\nThe new company, known as\nTWW Ltd.-standing for Television for Wales an dthe West \u2014 is\nheaded by Lord Cilcennin of\nHereford and Lord Derby.\nIt is the sixth contractor\nauthorized by the United Kingdom's Independent Television Authority to provide television programs in opposition to the publicly-owned British Broadcasting\nCorporation.\nThe main studio in Cardiff is\none of the largest in Britain, rivalling that of Scottish television,\nthe commercial company headed\nby Canadian publisher Hoy Thomson. Details of Welsh programs\nwill be published weekly by\nThomson's TV guide, which already carries STV programs.\nThe company owned 'by Lords\nCilcennin and Derby won the\nWelsh contract over bids from a\nriva group, one of whose chief\nfigures was another Canadian\npublisher, Senator Rupert Davies\nof Kingston, Ont.\nYour Whole!\nFamily\nMl Enjoy\nthis healthful,\ndelicious treat.\nBuy some Wrigley's\nSpearmint Gum today.\nsonic  energy  through \u25a0 inaudible\nsound waves.\nElectric \u2022 lighting panels, no\nthicker than a pane of glass, will\nbe used'architecturally\u2014as a decoration\u2014and a turn of a dial will\nproduce light of almost any intensity or color.\nThe home entertainment centre\nwill include a hi-fi set, flat-screen\ntelevision in three dimensions, a\ntape recorder and a movie projector.     ,\nTelevision will be shown on a\nscreen resembling a framed picture, with perhaps one hanging\nfrom the wall of every room\u2014\nwith programs picked up by a\ncentral receiving unit. Viewers\nwill be able to record and play\nback any shows they choose.\nMr. Price's predictions, which\ninvolve many things still in the\nlaboratory stage, were quoted by\nGeorge L. Wilcox, president of\nCanadian Westinghouse Co. Ltd.\nin a recent address to the Niagara District Electrical Club.\nMAY BE CONSERVATIVE\nMr. Wilcox commented:\n\"In my years in the electrical\nindustry I have seen developments surpassing even the most\nuncontrolled imaginings of industrial forecasters. We are probably\nstill too conservative today in\nwhat we foresee.\"\nSome of the most important requirements to bring about the advanced electrical age, he said, are\nin the fields of metallurgy and insulation.\nIt was necessary to place new\nemphasis on research and development; keep young engineers\neager to enter the field; and to\nsustain and broaden interest in\ngrowth and service.\nCCF Fails To Bring Off Emergency\nDebate On Current Unemployment\ntried unsuccessfully to bring about | as the absolute gauge of unem\nlew Trial\nSEATTLE (AP) - Dave Beck,\noutgoing teamsters union president, today was denied a new\ntrial on his grand larceny conviction.\nJudge George H. Revelle rejected defence motions for a new\ntrial, based principally on grounds\nof jury misconduct and prejudice\nby the jury foreman, Charles\nHickling.\nThe judge indicated he will sentence Beck about Feb. 20, a few\ndays after he sentences Beck's\nson, Dave Jr., also on grand larceny.\nThe Becks were convicted last\nmonth in separate jury trials of\nembezzling $6550 from the sale\nof three union - owned Cadillacs.\nThe younger Beck's motion for\na new trial was denied by the\njudge last week.\nVictoria Removes\nCat Restrictions\nVICTORIA (CP)-Cat fanciers\nnow are free to keep as many\ncats as they want in Victoria.\nCouncil Monday removed from\na new pound bylaw all restrictions on the number of cats which\nmay be kept by any one householder.\ntlGlEYS)\nPEARMlNJi\n\"chewinsw\"\nan emergency Commons debate on\nunemplo$nent. out of order a motion by Thomas Barnett (CCF \u2014\nComox-Alberni) which would have\npostponed normal business scheduled Tuesday for the unemployment\ndebate.\nThe incident, however, produced the first formal government announcement that the\nCommons will be asked next Monday to approve a (government supply motion. Such a motion will\nprovide the new Liberal party\nleader, to be chosen Thursday,\nwith an opportunity to seek the\ndefeat of the government on a\nnon-confience. move.\nMr. Barnett st.id the \"alarming\nunemployment situation\" . was\nshown Monday by Labor Minister\nStarr.\nMr. Starr said then there were\n754,640 job applications at National Employment Service offices\nat Jan. 2, a rise of 56,487 in a\nweek. But he said' the government does not regard this figure\n_--.\u25bc_\u2666_\u2666_\u2666_\u25a0\nTELEVISION\nFOR TODAY\n\/     (Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n9:00 Good Morning\n8:10 Color Test Pattern\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n8:13 Test Pattern\n9:45 Guiding Light *\n8:25 NARTB\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n8:26 Bible Reading    j   '\n10:15 Love of Life\n8:29 Program.Previews\n8:30 Q-Toons                 \\\n10:30 As The World Turns *\n11:00 Beat the Clock *\n9:00 Tic Tac Dough \u2022\n11:30 Houseparty *\n9:30 It Could Be You *\n12:00 The Big Payoff *\n10:00 Arlene Francis Show *\n12:30 The Verdict Is Yours *\n10:30 Fun To Reduce\n1:00 Brighter Day *\n10:45 Short Subjects\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n11:00 Price Is Right *\n1:30 Edge of Night *\n11:30 Kitty Foyle *\n2:00 Garry Moore *\n12:00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n2:45 Dan Smoot\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\n3:00 Fun at Home\n1:45 Modern Romances *\n3:30 Dotto\n2:00 Dear Phoebe \u25a0*\n4:00 Early Show\n2:30 Truth or Consequences *\n5:30 Song Shop\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n6:00 News\n\"Hidden Room\"''  \u25a0\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n5:00 Five o'clock Movie\n6:30 I Love Lucy *\n\"Harrigan's Kid\"\n7:00 The Big Record \u2022\n6:30 Weatherwise\n8:00 The Millionaire *\nThe Front Page.\n8:30 I've Got a Secret *\n6:45 NBC News *\n9:00 Circle Theater\n7:00 Truth or Consequences *\n10:00 The Crusader\n7:30 Wagon Train *\n10:30 The News\n8:30 Father Knows Best *\n10:35 Show \u2014 Shock\n9:00 Harbor Command\n9:30 Highway Patrol\n10:00 This Is Your Life *\n10:30 Late Movie \"Tampico\"\nKREM-TV -\n- Channel 2\n2:S0 Liberace\n6:30 News Beat\n3:00 American Bandstand *\n7:00 Wednesday Night Fights *\n3:30 Do You Trust Your Wife \u2666\n7:50 Hank Weaver's Corner *\n4:00 American Bandstand *\n8:00 Disneyland *\n4:30 Popeve\n9:00 Tombstone Territory *\n5:00 Wild Bill Hickok \u2022\n9:30 Ozzie and Harriet *\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Club \u2666\n10:00 Date With The Angels *\n6:00 Kit Carson\n10:30 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nI\ne oi unem\nployment. The last government!\nestimate of actual unemployment\n\u2014persons without jobs and seeking work\u2014was 292,000 at mid \u2022\nNovember.\nSpeaker Michener said that although all members would agree\nthat the unemployment problem\n(s urgent, the admissibility of Mr.\nBarnett's motion depended on\nwhether it was urgent to have\ndebate now on the problem.\nHe said there has been a great\ndeal of talk so far this session\nabout unemployment \"and I am\nsure there will be a great deal\nmore without this debate.\"\nFinance minister Fleming, in\narguing against allowing the motion, gave the Commons the first\nannouncement of plans for the\nsupply motion next Monday. He\nsaid unemployment could be debated then.\nThe 25-member CCF party was\nvirtually at full strength in the\nCommons as the attempt wai\nmade to open the special debate.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC   STANDARD   TIME)\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1958\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15-WakeUpTime\n7:25\u2014Sport News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n9:30\u2014Women Today\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade\n10:00\u2014News .   ,\n10:05\u2014Story Parade\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Tex and Jinx\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Seven-Come-Eleven\n11:30\u2014Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Song Serenade\n11:55\u2014Entertainment World\n12:00\u2014Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Musicale\n3:00\u2014Hockey I\n3:30\u2014Pacific News I\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boatel   '\n4:45\u2014The Beacon Mystery\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014Silent Friends\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Musie\n6:55\u2014Bob Bowman Reports\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014-Talk\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC   8TANDARD   TIME)\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1956\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8.10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:45\u2014Food Facts\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Theme and Variation\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25-Showcase\n12:30-B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Ottawa Symphony Orch.\n2:00-B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n4:00\u2014Music by McMullin\n4:30\u2014Music From The Sea\n4:45\u2014The Beacon Mystery\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014This Man's Music\n6:30\u2014Municai Interlude\n6:35\u2014Roving ffeporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Recital ,\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vane. Chamber Orch.\n10:00-News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00\u2014Mid-night Concert\nll:57-News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n8. Workman's 24. Winter\nImplements        pend.\n0. Boy's name        ants\n7. Employ 25. Da.\n8. Far sire\n9. Hautboy ST. Time\n11, Long. gone by\nlegged birds 39. Buc-\"\n13. Rear\n15. Eager\n18. Hostels\n19. Animal's\npelt\n21. Circle\nol lie 111.\n22. Games\n23. Lipped\ni-jM.ii- -_i_ir_i-j\n[.l'.|[.k-E l-IIIF-E-j\nI_-.Q-.__   Milieu\nmm 13-311 i_ii\nr.-fflUH.]-.] _____!___\n[.111   Ml_i-    -.lltf-i\n_ii_.i_.nHi_ _\nCl._l.-L_] 1-1:111 B_3<\n..rati KHHHE-IE\nIIIJ l__H_. BSB\nHHEIHH MUL-II-IP\nWUllClfi   l_ll.lll.ff'\nni3i_.ni nnrjH\ncancer\nMorgan\n30. Slits Ttntud-y'i Answer\n31. American     37. Coin\nIndians\n32. Knocks\n34. Dicken'..\nUriah \u2014\n(Fr.)\n38. Sunshine\nState\n(abbr,)\nACROSS\n1. Head cook\n5. Dull thump\n9. Kind of oil\n10. Sahara\nwatering\nspot\n12. Adriatic\nwind\n13. Trustworthy\n14. Be in debt\n16. Troubles\n16. Toward\n17. Flags\n19. Distant\n20. Bend the\nhead\n21. Large piece\n(colloq.)\n22. Hurl\n25. Skin tumors\n26. Moccasin,\nlike shoes\n27. Friend\n28. Sash (Jap.)\n29. Queen\nVictoria's\nhouse\n33. Wealthiest\n35. Epoch\n86. Gift\n37. Small cut\n38. Guide\n39. Memorandums\n40. Descry\n41. Rumple\nDOWN\n1. Buffoon\n2. Employs\n3. Mrs. Peron\ni, Iron\n(sym.)\nDAILY CRYPTOQTJOTE \u2014Here's how to work \u00bbti\nAXYDLBAAXR\nl\u00bb LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor thi 'three L's, X for the two 0'\u00bb, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ell hints.\nBach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nNJOK FSLTNK D S Y D AXDS D9K\nFZUEXT DJJO AYN YEB SK LKTO\nJQ YHM UJJO \u2014 OJLK.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: THE WONDER OREW, THAIfi11\nONE SMALL HEAD COULD CARRY ALL HE KNHWS.W\nGOLDSMITH. ulflW\" '\u25a0'\n%\nT\n2\nT~\n1\n._.\nb\n7\n\u25a0s-\n%\ni\n1\nlo\nII\nii\n%\n13\n14\n^A\n\\t\n%\nIb\n17\n10\n^t\n19\n'i\n|\n%\n20\n%\n21\n22\n25\n24\nd\nit\n2.\n%\nn\n%\n\\^t\nl\n30\n^\n*)\njo\n31\nii\nJ}\n3.\n^(^\nII\nik\n^A\nV\n30\ni\nit\n$\n.1-\n%\n\u25a0V\nMS\nSI\nDistributed by King Features Syndic at*\nI\n m\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story \u2014 PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN  NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nHELP WANTED\nTRAIN AS A\nMEDICAL\nASSISTANT\nThere 15 a steady job with a\nfuture for you in the Royal\nCanadian Army Medical Corps\nas a Medical Assistant.\nExcellent training, good pay and\nother advantages of Army life\nmake this an excellent opportunity for physically fit young\nmen of 17-40 who meet Army\nselection requirements.\nThe numbers that can be accepted arenimited so apply now! Get\nfull details from your Army Recruiter, at the address shown\nbelow, or mail the coupon to:\nARMY  RECRUITING\nSTATION\nTHE  ARMOURIES\nNelson, B. C.\nPlease send me information,\nwithout obligation, on medical\nassistant career opportunities in\nthe Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps.\nNAME   ',..'.\t\n(Age)\nADDRESS\t\nCITY\/TOWN  :..\n(Telephone)\nPROVINCE \t\nI\nBE PROUD OF YOUPTjOB\nSell world famous Underwood\nand Remington Typewriters,\nAdding Machines, etc., as low as\n$1 down, $1 week. Full or part\ntime. High commissions. Canadian Typewriter Sales, 113 Mc-\nCormack St., Toronto 9.\nNEW PROJECTS - REQUIRE\nmen and women of all trades for\nCanada, U.S.A. and Overseas.\nHigh pay. Write to World Wide\n. Job Service, P.O. Box 374, Terminal \"A\", Toronto, Ont.\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n$100 MONTHLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. Just show North American Fashion Frocks to friends.\nNo canvassing, investment or\nexperience necessary. North\nAmerican Fashion Frocks Ltd.,\n3425 Industrial Bvld., Dept. Z-\n1959,  Montreal,  P.Q.\nSEE FOR YOURSELVES - WO-\nmen are earning $2.00 or more\nan hour representing Avon Cosmetics. Openings in Nelson, Kaslo, Slocan and districts. Write\nMiss L. Bradd, 471 Francis Ave.\nKelowna, B.C.\nWANTED YOUNG LADY FOR\nclerk typist duties in Nelson\nbusiness office. Pleasant working conditions. Apply Wood Vallance Hardware.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCONCRETOSraCWLISTSrBASE-\n>\u25a0 ments, under houses, leaking\nbasernents, crack filling. All\nkinds of cement work. Phone now\n1752-L-3. H. Zylstra and Sons.\nTOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body.\nI mile Granite Rd., or phone\n186-X-3,\n^IP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICE.\nFor cleaning, repairs, odd jobs,\nladder work, etc., phone 1229-X-l.\nFOR HIRE - TANDEM DUMP\ntruck, 10 yd. capacity. Phone\n1757-R.\t\nWANTED BABY SITTING JOB\nevenings. Phone>273-R-2\nFOR ANY ODD JOBS, P HONE\nhandyman, 256-R\nWANTED  TO  RENT\nWANTED TO  RENT  - 2 BED\nroom house. Phone 37.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   WIDDOWSON & CO\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelsfrn\nH   S   ELMES,   ROSSLAND. BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nli. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr. Ray Johnson. B.A.Sc,\n]015-8th St., Nelson. Phone 144-R.\nSays Britain\nWise fo\nMake H-Bomb\nMONTREAL (CP)-Earl Alexander of Tunis said Tuesday that if\nthe British hadn't decided to\nmake the hydrogen bomb, they\nwould have been \"on their way\nto being armed like, a second-rate\npower.\"\nThe former governor-general of\nCanada said Britain needed the\nH-bomb if the United States and\nRussia had It.\n\"The likelihood is that other\ncountries are going to have it and\nwe might as well, ask ourselves\nwhere does it end,\" said Lord\nAlexander, a former British defence minister.\nHe is in Montreal to' attend a\nmeeting of the Aluminum Company of Canada, of which he is a\ndirector.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 15, 1958 \u2014 9\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News doet not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTRAIL DISTTRICT\nRECREATIONAL   PROJECTS\nSOCIETY\nTender Re:  Memorial Centre\nLibrary\nSEALED TENDERS,. ADDRESSED TO THE UNDERSIGNED AND MARKED \"Memorial Centre Library\" will be\nreceived up to 5:00 p.m. on January 29th, 1958, for the interior\nfinishing of the library area in\nthe  Trail  Memorial  Centre.\nDrawings and form of tender\nmay be obtained on deposit of\na sum of $25.00 which will be\nrefunded to unsuccesful tenderers after award of the contract\nand upon return of drawings.\nThe Projects Society may not\nnecessarily accept the lowest\nor any tender.\nJ. C. Vipond. Secretary,\n1148 Cedar Avenue,\nTrail, B. C.\nMACHINERY\nChute Gates, Air Cylinders,\nMine Cars, Rail Frogs,\nSwitches, Shafts, Pulleys,\netc.\n.    MADE TO ORDER\nSawmill Machinery, Repair\nand Maintenance For All\nIndustries.\nA COMPLETE\nMACHINE   SHOP   AND\nWELDING  SERVICE\nReasonable prices.and service for over 40 years in\nNelson area.\nStevenson\nMACHINERY   LIMITED'\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nCHAIN SAW USERS\nTrade your old saw now for\na   better  price  and   take\nout a  new\nD44-Super 44 - D55-Super 55\nWhen you are ready to go to work\nWe have a chain to fit every\nmake and model saw.\nWe can hard-tip and regroove\nyour bar to make it like new.\nHard   Hats.   Wedges,   Files.\nPiling Tools, Special Chain\nSaw Oil.\nYour\nChain Sow Headquarters\nSee\nH    \"Fritz'   Karenholtz.\nCharlie   Ross  or   Alex   McDonald\nWELDING &  EQUIPMENT\nCO'.    LTD.\nPHONE 1402\nBOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor P Eng (CivilI\n218 Gore SI     Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W  BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n873 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work.\nAppliances. Free Estimates.\nPhone 774, 523 Cedar SI., Nelson.\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent.,554 Ward St.\nMcHardy , Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop  Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor  rewinding  Phone 5-3.\"      324 Vernon St\nWATKINS PRODUCTS\nWatkjns Quality Products,\nPhone 469-Y.\nMACK TANDEM DIESEL LOG\nging truck. D8 Cat tractor with\nangledozer. Both rebuilt. Small\ndown .payment with suitable\ncredit. Box 9469 Daily News.\nFOR SALE, ONE D-4 NARROW\ngauge blade, one HD-5 hydraulic\npump, one TD-14 control, contact W. M. Taylor, R.R. 1, Nel-\nson or ph. 23 W. Balfour.\nFOR SALE. ONE D-2 CATERP1L\nlar Diesel. Bare Cat. Apply P.O\nBox 283, Trail, B.C.\nTRAILERS\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nClearance\n1956\nFORD FAIRLANE\nFully Equipped\n1956 ,\nOLDSMOBILE '88'\n$500 off List\n1954 CHEV. SEDAN\nAutomatic\n$1,250\n1956 CHEV. 2-DOOR\nRadio.    Low,Mileage\n1952 CHEV! COUPE\nA Nice Car\n$695      .\n1950 CHEV. V2-TON\nReady to go\n$195\n-   1951\nCONSUL SEDAN\n$395\n1951\nFORD HARDTOP\n$795\nAll Other Models\n1941 to 1957\nBUERGE\nLTD.\nPhone 35 - 36\n323 Vernon St.\n. Nelson, B. C.\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\"\ntractionizing. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins. '49 to '51 Hillmans,\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Stude-\nbaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '53\nAustin. Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 1363-L-2, Box 382\n24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\t\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies   at   1777   and   save.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe, and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357\nELECTROHOME HI - FI PORT-\nable record player. Diamond\nlong play stylist. Phone Gerry,\n565-R.\nGAS PIPING AND HEATERS\nsold, installed and serviced. Licenced, bonded gas fitter. Norm\nBowcock, phone 385.\nFOR SALE, ENAMEL COOK\nstove, reasonable price. Apply\nBenny's Grocery.\t\nGENERATOR 3000 WATT, 110\nvolt for stationary lighting plant.\nPhone 1752-L-3.\nNAPHTA GAS TABLE LAMP AND\na Naphta gas iron. Ph. 1752-L-3.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening, 924 Dayies St\nGOBLIN TANK TYPE VACUUM\ncleaner. $12.00. Ph. 786.\n1 AUTOMATIC ROLLER IRONER\nas new. Phone 1992-Y.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS  -\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar.\nCOLONIAL HOTEL, SPOKANE,\nWashington. Clean, comfortable\nrooms at $2 and $4 for two. Parking 1 block. Centre ol shopping\nand theatre district at N 124 V4\nPost.\nRENTALS\nUNFURNISHED 5-RM. DUPLEX\nheated, hot water, gas stove,\nprivate entrance. Reasonable,\nadults only. Phone 335-X.\nMAIN FLOOR HOUSEKEEPING\nrm., fridge, stove, heated, priv.\nent. and parking. 171 Baker St.\nFOR RENT - SELF-CONTAINED\n3 rooms, centrally located. $40.\nPhone 933-X.\nFOR RENT - UNFURN. SELF\ncontained apt. Centrally locaied.\nPhone 933-X.\nHOUSE KEEPING ROOM, PRI-\nvate entrance. Phone ,1077-X\nafter 5.\nDOUBLE   AND  SINGLE  UNITS\nNorth Shore Motel   Ph   1684.\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM    FOR\nrent, ph.1.64-X.\n3 ROOM  APT.  ON BAKER ST\nPhone 1150 days.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nDr. Anne Steele\nStill Unconscious\nVICTORIA (CP) - Dr. Anne\nSteele, unconscious since she was\ninjured in a riding accident May\n6, 1956, was in unchanged condition in hospital Tuesday.\nDr. Steele, 38, was injured near\nOsoyoos when the horse she was\nridpng reared and fell backward\nnoon h_r. She has an ll-vear-old\ndaughter and six-year-old son.\nNotorious Jail\nTo Be Destroyed\nLONDON (CP) - To the consternation of practically nobody\nwho ever contemplated a military misdemeanor, the British\narmy's notorious \"Glasshouse\"\nprison at Aldershot is to be demolished.\nThe grim yellow-brick building,\nwhose fearsome reputation was a\nstaple item in soldier's scuttlebutt, has been derelict more than\na decade. Once it housed 200\nprisoners at a time, subjecting\nthem to what a British provost officer r'.scri^.d Tuesday as a \"very\nstrict\" routine.\nThe Canadian 1st Division,\nunder Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton,\narrived at Aldershot in December, 1949. Figures are not available here on the number of Canadian soldiers who served time in\nthe Glasshouse, but they probably were shocked by the \"punitive and deterrent\" punishment\nthe British army says was meted\nout there. Later, the Canadians\nbuilt their own detention barracks.   \u2022\n\"One or two upheavals\" took !\nplace in Ihe Glasshouse in wartime as hardened criminals were\nconscripted and found their way\ninto the two-storey prison, where\neverything was done \"at the\ndouble.\"\nThe Glasshouse, built in 1869,\nwas named for its glass roof. It\nbecame a bywo.d in allied armies, though probably a pink tea\nnarty. compared with earlier methods ot discinline.\nUp to 1870, it was common\nform for unruly soldiers to. be\nbranded on the chest \"B.C.\"\u2014\nbad character. In 1728, one unfortunate was sentenced to 12,600\nlashes 'for slaughterimg the horses\npi hi- commanding officer to sell\ntheir hides.\nMonorail May\nOust Subway\nDETROIT (CP)-If Toronto's\nbattle over new subway routes\nneeds any further complications,\nDetroit may be able to help out.\nThe argument here is: \"Why\ngo below traffic or along side\nstreets? Go above it, and save\n$12,000,000 a mile.\"\nMonorail is a subway in the\nair, suspended above street traffic. A 'sort of upside-down subway system with the wheels on\ntop, running along rails held\naloft by towers.\nActually, monorail is a misnomer for the plan proposed to\nthe city's government by the\nRapid Transit Commission.\nft proposes two rails set close\ntogether and suspended from inverted \"L\" towers erected at the\ncurb and set 100 feet apart.\n15-FOOT CLEARANCE\nCars would be suspended from\nwheels riding atop the rails.\nWith tracks suspended approximately 30 feet above the street,\nclearance of the bottoms of the\ncars would be about 15 feet\nabove street level.\nIt's no new idea. Plans for\nmonorails date back to the 1800s.\nIn 1909, a model of a system designed by Louis Brenan, an Englishman, carried 40 passengers\nin 'a 14-foot-long car along a circular track.\nGermany experimented with\nthe idea before the War, and now\n\u25a0has a system operating at Wup-\npertal.\nThe commission's report rejects subways as almost old-\nfashioned. And ,. the cost! The\ncommission says subways would\ncost the city $15,000,000 or more\na mile while a monorail system\nwould, cost $3,000,000 a mile or\nless.\nThe commission recommends\nas the most practical solution to\nFOR SALE 1953 BUICK HARD-\nlop Special. Complete with all\naccessories. Low mileage. Will\naccept older model car in trade.\nMust be seen to be appreciated.\nApply Fairview Esso Service.\nPhone 502.\nFOR SALE 1952 INTERNATIONAL\nL180, good motor, transmission\nand rear-end, 20\" wheels. Apply\n104 Douglas Rd. or phone 1133-R.\nPETS, CANARIES^ PEES\nREGISTERED- f\u00a5MALE~GER-\nman Shepherd thtee \"months o,l;d.\n$20. Mrs. L. Bird, Blueberry\nCreek.\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar, Phone 2701\nCranbrook,  Phone JU -6-2270\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nTHE ALL NEW \"REX\"\n10 ft. wide. 45 ft. long.\nMany Other Models on Display\nNi> lantt latlii Npiuh\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin  advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month        _    $ 1.25\nThree months      $ 3.50\nSix months     :_    $ 6.50\nOne year .... $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month              $ 175\nThree months      $ 500\nSix  months         $ 9 50\nOne  year ..   .        $1800\nWhere extra  postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook phone Mrs \u00bbWm  Stevely.\nIn Kimberley A   W  Brown;\nIn Trail Mrs  Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry.\nIMMEDIATE POSSESSION-\nOwner \u2022 transferred. Must sell\nmodern 3 bedroom semi-bungalow near new High School. New\nAutomatic oil furnace. Hardwood\nfloors throughout. Phone 1337-Y\nafternoons and evenings.\nBUILDING   SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 3600 E Hastings St., Vancouver. B.C.. GLen-\nburn 1500\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS    -\nFridays, ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nDENTAL PLATE SORES, WHITE\nCanker Spots quickly relieved\nwith Fletcher's Sore-Mouth Medicine! A trial will convince you.\n$1.00 at all druggists.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nbusiness man, regular hrs. Ph.\n1392-X, 501 Cedar Street.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor 2 working men, in quiet home.\nPhone 674-R.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen. Phone 1179-X.\nROOM AND BOARD. $70.00 MO.\n\u2022 210 Vernon St.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nELECTRIC POWER CEMENT\nmixer, capacity about 2>,_ cu. ft.\nPhone 1752-L-3.\n48   BASS   MODEL   FRONTALINI\naccordion. Phone 1752-L-3.\nWANTED-CHILD'S PLA*Y PEN.\nPh. 289-Y-3.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFORj SALE - 3 FRESH MILK\ncows and 3 to freshen in 2 weeks.\nPhone 64074, Rossland.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - On offer to\n11  a.m.:   cattle 1450;   calves 250.\nMonday's sales: cattle 1489, hogs\n240, calves 272, sheep 78.\nBulk of Tuesday's moderate offerings medium to good butcher\nsteers and heifers, balance of run\nabout evenly divided between replacement cattle and cows. Cattle\nmarket active.\nGood and choice butcher steers\nmeeting slightly improved demand\nfrom Canadian and American buyers at steady to strong prices. No\nstrictly choice kinds sold early\ncommon to medium grades fully\nsteady. Good and choice butcher\nheifers meeting good demand at\nstrong prices. Medium \u2022 and good\ncows meeting improved demand,\nprices strong to shade higher with\nodd sale up to 13.90. Bulls steady\nto strong. Hogs sold 15 higher Monday. Sows and sheep steady.\nChoice steers 20.50-21.50.. Good\n19-20, medium 17-18.50, common\n14-16.50. Choice heifers 18.75-19.50,\ngood 17-18.50, medium 15-16.50,\ncommon 13-15. Good cows 13-13.50,\nmedium 12.25-12.75, common 11.50-\n12; canners, cutters 7-11.50. Good\nbulls 15.50-16.75, common to medium 10-15.\nAll classes replacement cattle\nmeeting good demand at strong\nprices. Stock steer calves also\nmeeting keen demand at firm rates\nwith odd sale up to 23.50. Good\nfeeder steers 18.50-19.50. Good Stock\nsteers 17.50-18.50, common to medium 14-17. Good stock steer calves\n21-23.\nAll classes butcher calves meeting good demand at strong prices.\nGood butcherweight heifer calves\n19-21. Good to choice veal 21-23..0.\nCommon to medium 14-19.'\nHogs sold Monday 23-23.30, average 23.15 A grade. Sows 13-13.50,\naverage 13.J5 llveweight.\nGood lambs 19.50-20.80.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge .'. 12\nBralorne        4.50 .\nCanusa   02\nCariboo Gold  46\nGiant Mascot  10\nGranduc         1.17\nGrandview    05\nHamil Sil        02\nHighland   Bell       1.15\nNational Ex  20.\nPioneer Gold      1.05\nPrefier Border  04\nQuatsino       19\nSheep Creek   33\nSherritt Gordon     3.90\nSilback Premier. 04%\nSilver Ridge       02\nSilver Standard     :..      .13\nSunshine Lardeau 10%\nTaylor 13V4\nTrojan    16\nUtica 02\nWestern Exploration  20\nOILS\nAltex       .16\nA P Consolidated       36\nCalgary & Edmonton     20.00\nCharter  :     1.90\nHome  :       15.00\nNew Gas Ex     1.20\nOkalta Com      1.25\nPacific Pete    18.50\nPeace River Gas  37\nRoyalite    13.50\nSparmac '. 15\nUnited        2.55\nVanalta  17\nVantor        1.30\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers       1.35'\nAlberta Distillers Vt     1.20\nB C Forests        9.50\nB C Telephone     40.00\nCrown Zeller (Can)     14.50\nInt Brew B      4.15\nLuckv Lager          4.15\nMacM & Bloedel B     24.50\nPowell River     29.50\nMid Western      1.35\nTrans Mtn            57.00\nWestminister Paper   22.75\nWestern Plywoods           10.50\nUNLISTED Bid Ask\nAlta-Gas Trunk . 13.75\nTrans Can. Com 24.75 25.00\nTrans Mtn Unit 57.00 58.75\nWestcoast Com. 26.75 27.25\nWestcoast Trans 88,00 90.00\nBANKS\nBank of Mont. . 40.00 41.00\nCan. Bank of Com. 40.00 41.00\nImp. Bank of Can. 43.50 45.00\nRoyal Bank of Can. 56.50 57.50\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund 7.80 8.55\nCommonwealth Int. 6.31 6.93\nGrouped Income 3.17 3.40\nInvestors Mutual 9.08 9.79\nLeverage 4.23   \u2022   4.55\nTrans Can. \"C\" .     4.79       5.15\n(CloBlng Prices)\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAtlin Ruff\t\nAumacho   :\t\nBarnat  \t\nBase Metals  ..\nBaska Uranium _\t\nBroulan.\t\nBrunswick   \t\nCampbell C\t\nCan Met  i_\nCassiar\t\nChimo        .........\t\nCoin Lake\t\nConiaurum    '.-.\t\nCons Denison  .,\t\nCons. Discovery\t\nCons Halliwell  ,\nCons Howe \t\nCons Mining & Smelting ..\nCon Sub :\t\nCopper Man \t\nD'Aragon \t\nDonalda   \t\nEast Malartic\t\nFalconbridge\t\nFaraday  ,\t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco  :\nGeo. Scientific Pros\t\nGiant Yel :..\nGlen Uranium \t\nGoldale \t\nGoldcrest  \u201e..,\nGolden Manitou \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHeadway  \t\nHollinger    ,\t\nHudson Bay\t\nInspiration \t\nInt. Nickel\t\nIron Bay  .'.\t\nJoliet. Que\t\n.lonsmith     \t\nR J Jowsey\t\nKerr Addison  _\t\nLabrador  \t\nLake Lingman \t\nLakeshore\t\nLexindin  ,\nLittle Long LaC\t\nLorado   \t\nMacassa      \t\nMadsen R. L\t\nMalartic G. F\t\nManeast \t\nMaritime Mining .....,..\u201e..\u201e.\nMcLeod  \t\nMcMarmac\t\nMilliken\t\nMining Corp  \u201e \u201e\nMogul  : , _\nMulti Mins\t\nNew Alger  _ _\nNew Bidlamaque \t\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Fortune  \t\nNew Highridge   _....\nNew Harricana  \u201e\t\nNew Lund _____\nNipissing , \t\nNoranda New \t\nNorgold    _\t\nNormetals \t\nNorpax   \t\nNorth Can\t\nNorth Rankin\t\nOpemiska  _\nPreston E. D.\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Lab \t\nQuebec Lithium\t\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont \t\nRadiore ,.,\t\nRayrock  _\nSherritt Gordon _..\nSteep Rock \t\nSullivan Con _\t\nSylvanite   _.\nTeck Hughes \t\nTombill\t\nUnited Keno  .\t\nUpper Canada  \t\nVentures  \u201e...._.\nVicour \u201e,\u201e.,_,\nViolamac   __.,...\nWaite Amulet\t\nWiltsey Goglin ,\t\nWright Hargreaves ....\n14.25\n.21\n.15\n.24\n.24\n,14V.\n.56\n2.60\n4.75\n1.60\n5.50\n.47\n.11\n.26\n11.12,,\n2.40\n.29\n1.90\n18.50\n.63\n.10\n.14\n.10\n1.45\n23.00\n;.57\n1.35\n8.00\n.27\n4.30\n.11\n.16\n.07 V.\n.35\n14.62'\/,\n.47\n21.50\n43.87',.\n.49\n71.25\n1.90\n.22\n.10\n.43\n15.37%\n16.37V.\n.07\n4.00\n.04%\n1.80\n.62\n,2.43\n1.78\n1.20\n.10\n.56' \u25a0\n1.00\n.07%\n2.03\n^.25\n.48%\n.47\n.09\n.07\n,43\n.15\n- .14%\n,13\n.17\n1.20\n35.62V.\n.08\n2.70\n.27\n1.16\n.60\n6.25\n4.50\n.33\n.06V.\n6.00\n.84\n7.85\n4.63\n1.00\n4.00\n9.45\n1.86\n1.17\n1.36\n.26\nS.50\n.62\n21.50\n.04 V.\n1.35\n6.00\n.21\n1.30\nYale\nYellowknife Bear\nYukeno \t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc ....\nBanff Oils\t\nBailey Selburn .:\t\nBata Petroleum\t\nCdn Atlantic\t\nCan Decalta\t\nCentral Explorers .\nCon East Crest \t\nCons Peak \t\nHome A    \u201e..\nLiberal Pete     .\nMarigold  _      .11\nMidcon 60\nNew Continental  30\nNew Gas Expl     1.25\nOkalta      1.25\nPacific Pete     19.12%\nPetrol  54\nPonder   25   ,\nProv Gas     2.60\nRoyalite  .-.   1..12V.\nSpooner  19\nStanwell Oil 82\nTriad       4.90\nUnited Oils  :.     2.55\n.IS\n       .80\n       .04\n.23\n1.65\n8.25\n.07\n4.45\n.13V.\n2.10\n.29\n.07\n15.75\n1.16\nthe city's transit problems a\n$173,000,000 monorail system\nwith 54 miles of track on six major thoroughfares.\nDetroit, despite its near 3,000,-\n000 population, ,at present has\nonly a bus system although\nspeedways help move auto traffic quickly.\nHIGH SPEED\nThe monorail trains would\nmove between 50 proposed passenger 'stations at speeds up to\n80 miles an hour, although It\nwould be more like 30 miles an\nhour in downtown Detroit.\nAt the stations, escalators\nwould carry passengers up to\nthe level of the monorail' car\ndoors. Inside, the cars would resemble modern subway cars.\nPhiladelphia is also studying\nthe idea and Its transit commission estimates a cost of $600,000\na mile for 7% miles of track.\nOne reason for Detroit's higher-\nper-mile estimate is that it includes clearing and building 20\nparking lots for motorists who\ncould get downtown faster by\nmonorail than in packed rush-\nhour traffic.\nThe commission said lis report, made after two year's\nstudy, is only \"tentative\" and\nsubject to further revision. However it states firmly that the\nmonorail is tomorrow's public\ntransportation.\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi .   . . \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum  \u201e.,..__\t\nAtlas St. ....'.\t\nB.A. Oil _\nBell Telephone :.\t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Forest .'\t\nB.C. Packers A _\u201e..\nB.C. Power A :\t\nBurns A  ....'\t\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Celanese \t\nCan. Cement  \t\nCanadian Dredge\t\nCan Oil\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly .\nCan. Packers A\t\nCan. Packers B\t\nCockshutt  _..\nCons Gas  \t\nDist. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Steel Ord\t\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical.\nEddy Paper\t\nFamous Players\t\nFord A \u201e\nGatineau _.,.__\nGatineau 5% pfd\t\nGen. Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear  ___\nGypsum Lima ___\nImperial Oil      ,,\nImp. Tobacco _____\nInt. Pete _____\nLoglaw A  \u25a0\nLoblaw  B         .,\nMassey Harris *.: i.\nMcColl Frontenau...__\nMont. Loco  \t\nMoore Corp. .____\nPowell River _____\nPower Corp. -\nShawinigan  ;___\nSicks Brew. _____\nSimpsons  A .....____\nSoutham   .,..._\nStandard Paving\t\nSteel of Canada _\nTaylor Pearson  _.\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Steel\t\n.07\n24%\n23%\n27V.\n16%\n34%\n40%\n6%\nm\n12\n38%\n10%\n26%\n13%\n14\n25%\n16\n26\n24%\n35\n84%\n80%\n36\n24\n16%\n85%\n10%\n87%\n15\n70\n28\n103%\n78%\n141\n29%\n89%\n13\n15%\n21%\n22\n6%\n82\n15%\n64%\n29%\n65%\n24%\n22\n17%\n88\n35\n46%\n8%\n71%\n13\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nTHE\nBEST DEAL\nIs Still A\nPontiac, Buick or Vauxhall\nor a reconditioned Goodwill\nUSED CAR from\nFrom\nNELSON MOTOR\nPRODUCTS LTD.\nNelson, B.C.        Ph. 658-9\nPEEBLES\n\u20221950 AUSTIN\nA40 SEDAN\nMotor  Overhauled.  Excellent\nRubber. Beautiful Grey Finish.\nPriced Below Market\nTODAY   ONLY.\nPEEBLES\n24-Hour Towing\nService\nDay Ph. 121       Night Ph. 1413-X\nA\nComplete Line of\nExpert Service\nTUNE-UPS\nENGINE OVERHAULS\nAUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION\nOVERHAULS\nPlus:\nEXPERT BODY, FENDER\nAND PAINT WORK\nFor a Complete Estimate of\nBody Damages and Paint Come to\nlotor\nLTD.\n281  Baker St.\nNelson, B.C. Ph\n12' 2\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 1$, 1958\nHistory ond Churchill Combined\nGive Us One of the Finest Books of Today\n\"A History of\nThe English Speaking Peoples\"\nVOLUME 3 . . . THE AGE OF REVOLUTION\nBy Winston S. Churchill\n$6.50\nYou can still get your Books For Everybody catalogues\nat\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nArchbishop Disapproves\nOf Judge's Decision\nLONDON (APV -\u25a0 The Archbishop of Canterbury urged Tuesday that human procreation\nthrough artificial insemination by\ndonor should be made a criminal\neffenoe or at least ]>e rigorously\ncontrolled, \u00ab\nThe' Anglican primate recalled\n(feat a commission of the church\nwhich he appointed in 1945 held\nthat artificial insemination by\ndonor \"is wrong in principle and\ncontrary to Christian standards.\"\nThe archbishop. Most Hev.\nGeoffrey Fisher, was commenting on a ruling by a Scottish\njudge in Edinburgh last week\nthat artificial insemination does\nnot, in the present state of the\nlaw, constitute adultery.\nIn a divorce action Lord Wheat-\nley upheld the defence of Mrs.\nMargaret MacLennen against a\ncharge of adultery made by her\nhusband, Ronald G. MaoLennen\nof Glasgow. She contended that\na daughter born 16 months after\nthe couple separated was a \"test\ntube baby.\"\nDEEPLY CONCERNED\nThe archbishop, addressing th.\njoint synod of the convocation of\nCanterbury, said he was deeply\nconcerned by the ruling because\nhe said it will confuse many\npeople over the difference between crime and sin.\n\"They know that the church\nsays that adultery is a sin. Then\nthey .read that A.I.D. (artificial\ninsemination) is not adultery, and\nsome will get the quite illogical\nimpression that if aid is not adultery then it cannot be a sin either.\n\"Whether A.I.D. should be regarded by the law as adultery\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone St.\nHave The Jab Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED        *\u2022*\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nREAL HELP FOR\nYour Itching Piles\nOR NO COST\nIf Hem-Redd, an Internal pile ttttt-\nS-snt, does not quickly ease uu Itehing\nftoreness and burning pain at your piles\n\u2014 it ecata you nothing.\nGet a package of Han-Sold at any\ndrug store and use aa directed. You will\nbe pleased at bow quickly your pile\ntrouble la relieved. If you are not 100%\npleased after using Hem.Roid 2 or 3 days,\naa a test, ask tor your money back.\nRefund agreement by aU drug stores.\nfor legal purposes is a matter for\nlawyers.. Whether it is against the\ninterests of social or personal\nmorality, whether or not it is a\nsin, is a matter of great Christian concern.\n\"On the facts of this (MacLennen) case, some legislation would\nseem to be inevitable. In this\ncase it appears that the absent\nhusband knew nothing until the\nchild was born. If the law gives\nthe husband a remedy against\nadultery by his wife, it can\nhardly deny him a remedy\nagainst his wife if she bears into\nhis family a- child both out of\nwedlock and without hi. knowledge.\n\"Butlot other-and rfiofe cogent\nreasons legislation is needed. An\nhonest and moving casi tan be\nmade out for aid en compassionate grounds but it cannot be\ntreated as a private matter only.\nIt is an offence against the social and legal implications of\nmarriage and the fact that the\noffence takes place under conditions of secrecy makes it the\nmore dangerous.\nThe institution of marriage is\nmeant, among other things, to\ngive to children the security of\nknowing who their parents are\nand to give society the same security.\n\"By the device of A.I.D., practised secretly, that security is destroyed at the roots. The truth\nmust never be told to the child.\n\"The child is to be the lifelong victim of deception. Society\nis deceived also and the family\n\u2014mother, foster-father and child\n\u2014exist in a relationship which is\nnot that of nature nor that of\nopen adoption, but one of secret\nmake-believe . . . . \"\nOdds. v.\n\u00b0k Ends\n...by M.D.B.\nAuto Industry Cool\nTo UAW Plan\nI have decided a trip to the\ndentist can be a mouth-watering\nexperience \u2014 in two ways. When\nthe dentist is not syringing put.the\nore a'nd rock he has jarred loose\nwith his infernal implements .of\ntorture, I am struggling, with a\nmouthful of hardware, cotton wadding and a small syphon to get in\na good swallow. It's the oddest\nthing \u2014 my mouth can be as dry\nas a bone when I sit down in the\ndentist chair but no sooner does\nhe get'his mirror, fingers and drill\nin my mouth and you'd think he\nhad waved a thick juicy steak\nunder my nose. My saliva glands\nstep up production as if a good\nsquare meal were in the offing -.\nit's almost enough to make a dentist think twice about putting his\nfingers in my mouth.\na   *   *\nAll in all though, a trip to the\ndentist can. literally be a boring\nexperience. It's just a case of\ndrill, drill, fill, fill, bill and pill.\nBut dentists are pretty painless\nthese days, why 1 even heard of\none dentist that enclqsed a tiny J\npacket containing two aspirins with\nhis bill.\na   a   a\n\"What do you think of them\nputting bombs in theatres?\" he\nasks.\n\"Ugh,\" I reply,\n\"Yes,\" he says, \"surely now\nthey'll discover who' is responsible.\"   : '    \u25a0    \u25a0 I\n\"Ugh,\" I agree.\nGlancing out the window he remarks, \"Certainly mild weather\nwe're having.\" .  \u25a0\n\"Ugh,, ugh,\" I nod in agreement,\ntranslated' \"and how.\" ... .\nAnyway, 'I come away feeling\nlike me and my big mouth. Nevertheless it is a relief to know that\nonce again you have fended off-\nthe day when you will have to\ninvest in\" store teeth. It is a good\nthing, to realize that now you have\nno holes in your head and when\nyou inspect the cavern you call\nyour mouth you feel as though\nyou've struck it rich as far as base\nmetals go.\n*  \u00bb  *\nI didn't \u25a0 dare tell you all this\nuntil he had polished them and\ncleaned them and given me a clean\nbill of health and perhaps I am\nrash in even mentioning it now,\nfor he hasn't yet sent me my bill.\nIn which case there'll be the\ndentist to pay.\nDETROIT (CP) - Leaders of\nthe automobile industry's big\nthree \u2014 Ford, Chrysler and General Motors\u2014have greeted Walter Tteuther's profit-sharing plan\nwith sharp words that amount to\nrejection. United States government officials also are cool to the\nidea.-\nA Ford spokesman called the\nplan unrealistic. General Motors\nPresident Harlow H. Curtice said\nit was \"foreign to the concept of\nthe American free enterprise system.\" L. L. Colbert, president of\nChrysler, said it would be inflationary.\nIn Washington, government experts said that any big spread\nthrough American industry of\nplans to share profits with workers would cut deeply into federal\ntax revenue and probably,require sharp changes in taxing\npolicy.\nLOWER TAX RATE\nGovernment officials noted that\nprofits thus distributed to workers would not be taxed, as they\nare now, at the 52-per-cent corporate rate but at the much\nlower individual income rate \u2014\naround 15 per cent or less in\nauto workers' income brackets,\nallowing for deductions.\nIf the plan were adopted in the\nauto industry and spread widely\namong other industries in the\nU.S., the result could lead to reducing federal revenues by billions of dollars. Corporate income taxes now yield the. U.S.\ngovernment about $20,000,000,000\na year.\nIn turn, the government would\nhave either to reduce spending or\nto boost tax rates somewhere\nalong the line.\nAlthough Monday's announcement by Reuther did not say\nwhether Canadian car manufac-\nWrenched Back\nKeeps PM Abed\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A procession\nof secretaries with papers and\ndocuments went in and out of 24\nSussex Street Tuesday as Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker conducted\nbusiness from his bed.\nMr. Diefenbaker severely\nwrenched his back last week\nwhen he stepped off a curb onto\na stone that rolled underfoot. Doctors who have visited him a half\ndozen times since the mishap\nstrapped him with tape and have\nadvised him to take it easy.\nMr. Diefenbaker was present in\nthe Commons for about an hour\nMonday but cancelled his appointments later in the day because\nof. continuing discomfort.\nHFC solves over Vi million\nmoney problems a year\nMore people borrow from\nHFC than any other consumer finance company.\nReason: HFC has an 80-\nyear reputation for helpful\nMR* advice on money management and prompt, friendly\nservice on loans. You can\nborrow up to $1,000 from\nModem money lenice backed ;HFC with repayment terms\nby 80 year, of experience     yon choose.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\n-. G. Bernard, Manager\n60S Baker Sire* Telephone 1890\nNELSON\nGaillard Gov't.\nFaces Crisis\nPARIS (AP) - Premier Felix\nGaillard's govern ment was\nplunged into a crisis over war\nveterans pensions Tuesday within\nan hour after the National Assembly opened its 1958 session.\nThe cabinet authorized Gaillard\nto demand a vote of confidence.\nThe vote may come Wednesday\nand may prove dangerous to his\ngovernment, formed 2'A months\nago, unless he can rally support\ninside his own coalition.\n\u201e The storm blew up when several deputies tried to raise questions ahout war veterans' pensions. The deputies all were from\nparties nominally a part of Gaillard's coalition.\nThe deputies were protesting a\nmeasure in the 1958 budget allowing' the government to postpone\nuntil the end of the year the usual quarterly payments to veterans and prisoners of the First\nWorld War.\nGaillard refused to reconsider\nany of the budget decisions taken\nlate in December in austerity\nmoves and the session was suspended.\nTo Televise\nMoon's Olf-Side\nMOSCOW (AP) - \"I think we\nwill see what's on the other side\nof the moon very soon,\" Professor G. A. Chebotarev of the Leningrad Institute of TheoreticalnAs-\ntronomy said Tuesday.\n\"This year will bring us closer\nto turning purely theoretical calculations into reality,\" the professor added in an interview published in the newspaper Soviet\nRussia.\nHe predicted that Russian scientists will first send an unmanned rocket to the moon which\nwould explode on hitting the\nmoon's surface. He said this\nwould provide valuable information about the surface of the\nmoon.\nThis would.be followed by a\nrocket that would shoot around\nboth the earth and moon in a cigar-shaped orbit and provide information on the moon's surface\nby television.\nESTABLISHED GROUP\nFirst public exhibition by (he\nRoyal Academy ot Arte ta London was held in 1760.\nturers would be asked to join the\nplan, it is assumed that whatever is done in the U.S. will be\nasked for the union in Canada.\nGeorge Burt of Windsor, Ont.,\nthe UAW's Canadian director,\nshared in the Detroit discussions\nwhich produced the plan which\nReuther said the union will push\nin its mid-year bargaining.\nReuther's plan, announced after sessions with the UAW's 200-\nman steering committee, would\ngive employees 25 per cent of a\ncompany's profits above 10 per\ncent of net capital before taxes.\nAnother 25 per cent would go to\ncar buyers in the form of rebates. The rest \u2014 50 per cent \u2014\nwould be kept by the company.\nWAGE INCREASES, TOO\nReuther said wage increases-\nhe named no figure\u2014also will be\nsought at bargaining sessions\nscheduled to start about April 1.\nAssembly plant workers in the\nU.S. now average about $2.50 an\nhour.\nUNION OPPOSITIONS\nReuther may be headed for opposition from within his own\nunion, however.\nThe reason, says Carl Stellato,\na UAW \"minority\" leader, is that\nReuther turned his back on demanding a shorter work week in\nfavor of trying for the profit-\nsharing plan in this summer's\nbargaining.\nStellato, president of Ford\nLocal 600, largest in the UAW,\nsaid:\n\"You  can  bet there  will  be\nplenty of opposition to the idea\non Uie floor of the convention-\nand I'll. be right there.\"'\nThe union will convene Jan. 22\nto give formal approval to the\nunion's goals in 1958 bargaining\nsessions.\nDiamond King's Kelowna\nBrother Reaches Mine\nDAR - ES - SALAAM, Tanganyika (Reuters) \u2014 Percy Williamson, brother of Dr. John Williamson, multi - millionaire Canadian\ndiamond magnate who died last\nweek, arrived at his brother's\nmine from Kelowna, B.C. Tuesday.\nPercy Williamson, a substantial\nshareholder in the mine, will take\npart in negotiations on his brother's will. _,C. Chopra, John Williamson's former legal adviser\nand a shareholder in the mine,\nis already at Mwadui, where the\nmine is located.\nSchool Board\nChairman\nFavors Strap\nTORONTO (CP)-Another suburban school board chairman has\ncome out in favor of strapping in\nschool and increased homework\nfor children.\nJohn McAlister, newly - elected\nchairman of East York board of\neducation, said Monday night\nin schools \"in small doses\" would\ndo no harm. He advocated increased homework because \"it is\nthe weapon to counter too much\ntelevision as well as to improve\nstandards.\"\n\"A lot ot time children spend\nwatching TV westerns could be\nspent on homework.\"\nRonald Hastings, North York's\neducation board chairman who recently recommended the more\nfrequent use of the strap in the\nschools, said his views were exaggerated.    .\u2022\n,\"I -favor the use of the strap\nonly when absolutely necessary\nand increased homework only\nwhen students fall behind in their\nwork.\"\nChopra has refused to comment\non the mine's future but has denied it will be taken over by the\nBritish and Tanganyikan governments.\nJohn Williamson died at Mwadui Jan. 7 at the age of 52\u2014a\nbachelor and a recluse.\nThe only man in the world to\nown his own diamond mine, his\nfortune has never been' authoritatively estimated.\nIn London, Tanganyika officials have said that sterling-area\nrestrictions should not have too\nmuch effect on any Canadian individuals or institutions who may\nultimately share in Williamson's\nmulti - million estate. They said\nthat \"generally speaking most\ncontrols are favorably disposed\ntowards bequests.\"\nSays Congress\nGot War Budget\nMOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet\npress said Tuesday President Eisenhower submitted a war budget\nto the U.S. Congress.\nPravda, Izvestia and other\nMoscow morning newspapers gave\nprompt reaction to the budget\nmessage under the headlines:\n\"Another arms race budget.\"\nPravda carried a Tass news\nagency dispatch from Washington\nstressing military expenditures.\nIt said individual taxpayers must\nmeet 52 per cent of the budget\n\"while corporations who profit\nmost pay only 27 per cent.\"\nIn a dispatch from its Washington correspondent, Izvestia said\nthat \"though.the budget message\nweighed four pounds it can be\nsummed up in two words, 'war\nbudget.'\"\nShiffer-Hillman\nlOjo\nMade-to-Measure\nSuit\nSale\nTake advantage of this\nsaving on a made - to\nmeasure suit tailored by\none of Canada's leading\nclothes houses, A wide selection of English and\nScotch Worsteds and\nTweed.\nEM\u00b0*Y'S\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPat - A - Creme\nBy. ELIZABETH ARDEN\nPerfect All-Day Foundation.\nNew Compact, New Formula,\nNew Fragrance\nPrice $2.00\nSheer Gold With 24 Kt. Gold\n$2.50\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nEdsel Citation 2-Door Hardtop\nThe one car that is really new...\n1958\nEDSEL\nYou will recognize it instantly-anywhere\nYou don't get a revised edition when you buy\na 1958 Edsel. You get the only car that is ail\nnew\u2014from name plate to tail-lights. And\nevery comparison proves it!\nDrive the Edsel and you'll find all kinds of\nroads lead to one conclusion\u2014the Edsel ride\nis like owning a luxurious private cloud.\nYou will find many other things which are\ndifferent\u2014and better. >\nYou can drive your Edsel\u2014park it\u2014reverse\nit\u2014rock it in snow\u2014without lifting a hand\nfrom the wheel, when you have Edsel's\nexclusive Teletouch Drive.\nYour big Edsel engine is the newest V-8 in the\nworld. Compare the performance\u2014you've\nnever handled so much usable power before.\nYour big, safe Edsel brakes adjust themselves automatically in the course of your\neveryday driving.\nOnly 1958 Edsel offers you all these important\nadvances\u2014and more. Compare Edsel\u2014you\nwill agree: the Edsel, new member of the Ford\nfamily of fine cars, is 1958's one really new car.\nEasel's exclusive Teletouch Drive\nputs shifting where it belongs!\nThe Edsel's 17 elegant models In 4 series are priced from Just\nabove th* low-priced field to Just below tha high-priced field\nSee your\nenan\nEDSEL\ndealer\u2014drive it!\nCertain features illustrated or mentioned are \"Staniati\" en tome, models, optional at extra cost on others.\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\n601 Vernon St.\nPhone 1744\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_1958_01_15","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\/1.0430729","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":"1958-01-15 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":"1958-01-15 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":""}]}