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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" ,, Nelson's Record\n1966 Days\nTraffic Fatality Free\n^B!l\nWEATHER  FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Extensive areas\nof low cloud over the larger lakes\notherwise a few clouds. Little\nchage in temperature. Light\nwinds. Lo*-high at Cranbrook 15\nand 30, Crescent Valley 20 and 35.\nro\nVol  55\nMideast Neutral\nZone, Russ Proposal\n\"Good Neighborliness Strip\" Would\nCut Across Baghdad Pact Countries\nBy VINCENT BUIST\nMOSCOW (Reuters)\u2014Russia Tuesday night proposed\na zone lree of nuclear and rocket weapons throughout the\nMiddle East and Baghdad Pact territory.\nThe proposal came as committees of the Baghdad'\nDefence Pact met in Ankara, Turkey, to prepare for a full\npact conference starting there\nMonday.\nAn \"authorized\" statement dis\nIributed by the official Soviet\nnews agency Tass said the United\nStates hopes to use the conference\nto obtain agreement on nuclear\nand rocket bases in pact countries.\nIt said State Secretary Dulles,\nwho leaves Washington today for\nthe conference, also will seek to\nunite the Baghdad Pact, NATO\nand the Southeast Asia Defence\nOrganization \"under the same\nroof.\"\nTass declared:\n\"The Near, Middle East must\nbecome and can become a zone of\npeace where there are no, and\nought not to be, nuclear and rocket weapons \u2014 a zone of good\nneighborliness and friendly cooperation between the states.\"\nBaghdad   Pact   members   are\nTurkey, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and\nBritain.^ The United States belongs to the pact's economic, mil\nitary and counter-subversion committee but is not a full member.\nSIMILAR TIMING\nLondon quarters noted that the\nMoscow proposal was similar in\ncontent and timing to a Soviet\nproposal for an atom-free zone in\nCentral Europe made almost on\nthe eve of the NATO Paris conference last month. \u2022\nThe statement warned Turkey\nthat missile bases on her soil\nwould be a \"great danger to all\ncountries of the Middle East.\"\nThe statement also accused Dulles of going to Ankara as \"a representative of oil monopolies to\ndefend every cent of the fabulous\nprofits which U.S. monopolies are\ncoining . , .\"\nWorld News Briefly\nJOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -\nThe prosecution Tuesday completed its case in the preliminary hearing of treason charges against 95\nSouth Africans.\nThe defence said it will call no\nevidence and will move that the\ncharges be dismissed.\nOTTAWA (CP) - George Hahn\n(SC\u2014New Westminster) said in the\nCommons that money lenders are\ncharging huge discount rates to\npersons borrowing money for down\npayments on Homes.\nMr. Hahn said home - buyers\nsometimes are charged as much\nas \"a 30-per-cent discount rate''\nby money lenders.      >\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\nWorks Minister Green, minister\nin charge of federal housing legislation, said he will look into the\nsituation.\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) \u2014\nMurder, gunplay and violent political meetings returned Tuesday to this Mediterranean Island\nafter 10 months of uneasy peace.\nTwo Greek-Cyprlots were shot\nto death and three others were\nwounded ln two separate attacks\nby masked gunmen in Cyprus\nvillages.\nNASSAU, Bahamas (Reuters) \u2014\nTwo hundred workers were thrown\nout of work in this strike-paralyzed\nresort city when the local contractors association Tuesday night\nsuspended work on all new projects.\nAt the same time, it was reported unofficially that intensive\nnegotiations between trade union\nleaders and employers were making some progress towards ending the 10-day general strike.\nHAMILTON (CP)-Members of\nLocal 18,- United Brotherhood of\nCarpenters and Joiners (CLC),\nlocked out Monday by the 25-firm\nHamilton Construction Association,\nTuesday night agreed to accept a\ncompany wage offer.\nThey accepted an offer of a 25-\ncent-an-hour raise immediate and\na further five-cent-an-hour increase next May. The union had\nasked for an increase of 45 cents.\nThe association locked out the\ncarpenters after issuing an ultimatum to the union to sign a contract or be closed out of the jobs.\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Reports\nreaching Washington said 20 persons were killed and 100 Injured\nwhen null \u2022 government street\n, riots broke out Tuesday In Caracas, Venezuela.\nThe reports said the rioting,\nwith cars and buses being overturned, took place ln a workers'\narea in an old section of the\ncapital.\nLONDON (Reuters)-A tribunal\nconcluded Tuesday that there was\nno foundation for rumors that\nBritain's decision last fall to -increase the bank rate to seven per\ncent (rom five was improperly\nleaked in advance.\n^_\u00bb\u00abg\/2f    \u00b0'l'l B. C, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY\n22, 1958\nNot  more   Than  6c  Dally    10c   Saturday\nNo. 229\ni.i.iiiiii.iiiiiiii.iii.iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nIf the Cap Fits ...\nVICTORIA (CP) - The ceremonial hat destined to grace\nMr. Speaker's head will fit\nonly where it touches.\nLome Hugh Shantz (SC\u2014\n. North Okanagan), who will be\nelected speaker of the British\nColumbia legislature when it\nopens Thursday, will wear a\ntri-cornered headpiece that\ndoesn't sit right.\n\"My head's egg-shaped and\nthe hat is round,\" he says,\n\"and it's too heavy. I've or;\ndered another, but it isn't likely\nto arrive until late in the session.\"\nMr. Shantz is B.C.'s youngest speaker. He succeeds Tom\nIrwin, now Social Credit MP\nfor Burnaby-Richmond.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nEffort To Find\nMolotov Fails\nSPOKANE (AP) - The Spokesman-Review tried again Monday\nto telephone V. M. Molotov in Outer\nMongolia but said a woman employee in the Russian embassy\nthere reported\n\"We don't know where he is and\nhave no information on him.\nReporter George Cheek, who\nplaced the call, said he then asked\nthrough the telephone operator in\nMoscow if Molotov might be reached in five or 10 days. He said word\ncame back:\nIt will do no good to keep trying. He is not in Mongolia and we\nhave no knowledge of him.\"\nMolotov, the former Russian foreign minister who was deposed\nand sent to Outer Mongolia as ambassador last year, was sought\nSaturday for a telephone interview.\nCheek said he thought the telephone company had made arrangements for an appointment call then\nbut that someone in Moscow refused to put it through at the last\nminute.\nHALT URANIUM BUYING\nWASHINGTON (API-Atomic\nEnergy Commission officials\nagreed Monday to make no new\npurchases of foreign uranium\nuntil a study is made of economic conditions in the domestic\nuranium industry. Meeting with a\nSenate-House of Representatives\natomic energy subcommittee,\nAEC Deputy General Manager\nR. W. Cook said the commission\nwould submit a report on its\nstudy to the legislators not later\nthan March 15.\nFree from the confines of a Hollywood, Cal\u201e jail, actress Sarah\nChurchill, daughter of Sir Winston, performs In a television show\nwith John Abbott, Critics were unanimous In praising her performance, which gave no hint of the emotional turmoil she was\nbelieved to be in when she was arrested by police. They accused\nher of using unladylike language and of being drunk.\nPOPE SCORES\nBIRTH CONTROL\nBy HORACE CASTELL\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters)\u2014The\nPope, in a speech denouncing birth\ncontrol, says the world's \"so-called\noverpopulation problem\" can be\nsolved by newly-tapped resources\nof the earth for a long time to\ncome.\nAnd in a reference to space exploration, he said: \"Who can foresee .. . what surprises outside\nour planet are perhaps in store\ntor us, tiiYmgh the wonderful\nachievements of science which\nhave only just begun?\"\nThe pontiff told the Italian Association of Large Families, which\nhe received in audience Monday,\nthat birth control is one of the\nmost deplorable aspects of modern society.\nSocreds To  Prepare\nFor Federal  Election\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Social\nCredit officials of Alberta and\nBritish Columbia will meet here\nFeb. 14 and 15 to prepare a federal\nelection program, president -Noel\nMurphy of the B.C. Social Credit\nLeague announced Monday.\nThe conference is one of five\nregional meetings being held\nacross Canada to prepare for a\nnational convention of the party.\nIn Edmonton, organizer Orvis\nKennedy announced that national\nSocial Credit leader Solon Low\nwill attend the B.C.-Alberta conference.\nCAN'T SPEND MONEY\nST. CATHARINES, Ont. (CP>-\nA thief stole more than $1,000 in\ncash Sunday from the farm home\nof C. T. Carr but he'll have a\nhard time spending .it. He took\n1,000 old coins, valued at $1,000,\nand two old - style large dollar\nbills.\nJOHN SARIS, 27, raises a cross from the freezing waters of the\nHudson river in New York after he retrieved it in the annual\nceremony of the Greek Orthodox Church. The mercury stood at a\nbone-chilling 22 degrees as Saris and another diver, clad only in\ntrunks, plunged into the icy waters.\nHerridge Urges\nRetaliatory Action\nOTTAWA   (CP)   \u2014 H. W. Her- from a huge stockpile of lead and\nridge, CCF Commons member for\nKootenay West, B.C., a big base\nmetals producing area, Tuesday\nnight called for \"some retaliatory\naction\" of proposed United States\ntariffs on Canadian lead and zinc\ngo through.\nMr. Herridge, speaking in the\nCommons, said retaliation should\nbe taken with respect to nickel,\nasbestos and other metals that\nCanada holds in great quantities,\nHowever, he did not elaborate\non the type of \"retaliatory action\" he would propose, but pre-\nquotas for nickel and asbestos or\nsimilar governmental action.\nEarlier in the debate, James\nByrne (L-Kootenay East), a former mine worker, said that some\nyears ago he proposed such retaliatory action against a threat\nthen of tariffs on Canadian base\nmetals, but he doubted this proposition was valid.\nHe said that if Canada cut off\nshipments of Canadian lead and\nzinc to the U.S., it would mean\nmore than half the American supply of those two metals would be\neliminated.\nFor a time, he said, American\nproducers could draw their  needs\nWeather Delays\nNorthern Survey\nVICTORIA (CP) - Mild weather in the Peace River country is\ncomplicating progress on Wenner-\nGren surveys as to the area's\npower potential, lands and forest\nminister Ray Williston said Tuesday.\nHe said the Peace River normally is frozen solid at this time\nof year, but isn't this year. This\nhas made it difficult in test drilling for dam sites.\n\"This has been the most open\nwinter we've had for years,\" the\nminister said at a luncheon.\nHe said work was proceeding,\nhowever, and that the overall preliminary surveys on the vast project, which covers 40,000 square\nmiles, are expected to be completed within 18 months to two\nyears.\nMAGAZINE DEALERS\nWARNED TO CLEAN UP\nEUGENE, Ore. (AP) - Magazine dealers here have been given\n10 days to remove \"indecent and\nlewd\" publications from - their\nnewstands.\nIf they fail to do so, they face\npossible prosecution, said the district attorney's office, which announced the deadline.\nzinc in the U.S.\nU.S. tariffs, on lead and zinc\nwould harm Canadian production\nat a time of economic unrest and\ndamage future defence requirements.\nBREAK BARRIERS\nMr. Byrne said some U.S. senators are preparing a bill to impose tariffs if President Eisenhower vetoes an order from the\nU.S. tariff commission for a\nduty on lead and zinc. They were\nalso preparing a bill imposing a\ntariff on Canadian copper.\nBase metals supplies, he said,\ncannot be turned on and off like\na tap. The only way to expand\nmining operations was to break\ndown tariff barriers.\nWorks Minister Howard .Green\nsaid the government is taking\nevery possible step to persuade\nthe U.S. administration that it\nshould not impose higher tariffs on\nCanadian lead and zinc imports,\nFISHER CRITICAL\nOF RESTAURANTS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - John\nFisher, chief of the Canadian Tourist Association, Tuesday criticized\ncity restaurants.\n\"Memory of a beautiful mountain will soon be forgotten if the\nmemory of a bad meal is stronger,\" he told the Vancouver Board\nDf Trade.\nPhilip Edgcumbe, secretary of\nthe B.C. region of the Canadian\nRestaurants Association, endorsed\nMr. Fisher's remarks. \"Perhaps\nsome of them (restaurants) will\nbe shamed to improving,\" he said.\nSays Denmark\nMust Watch Step\nCOPENHAGEN (Reuters) -\nPrime Minister Hans Hansen Tuesday said it is essential that Denmark \"should avoid measures\nwhich, even unjustifiably, might\nbe construed as provocative.\"\nHe told parliament that the\ngovernment's refusal to accept\natomic warheads or launching\ndevices for rockets was not an\nexpression of lack of confidence\nin NATO.\n\"We dare not base our policy\nmerely on hopes that negotiations\nmay lead to a genuine relaxation\nof tension. Until the international\nsituation improves, the Western\nworld must maintain its defence\npreparations.\"\nHansen thought a non-aggression\npact merited serious consideration\nas it might pave the way for\nagreement on other questions.\nUN Place for Solving Arms\nQuestion Savs Hammarskjold\nFine Youth $900\nIn  Mischief Charge\nPENTICTON (CP) - A Penticton youth, Garvin B. Nyen, Tuesday was fined a total of $000 and\ngiven a two-year suspension of his\ndrivers licence when he appeared\nbefore Magistrate H. J. Jennings\non three counts.\nNyen was fined $500 fine on a\ncharge of public mischief arising\nwhen he reported his car stolen\nwhen it wasn't, a further fine of\n$300 on a charge of leaving the\nseen\" of an accident and a further\n$100 fine on a charge of driving\nwithout due care and attention.\nAlternate sentence was six\nmonths. The fines were paid.   '\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)\n\u2014 Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold said Tuesday, that the\nUnited Nations, will remain \"in\none way or another\" the main\narena for breaking the East-West\ndeadlock on disarmament.\nHe indicated he is considering a\ntrip to Moscow for talks with the\nRussians, who have announced\nthey will boycott any negotiations\nin the newly-enlarged UN disarmament commission.\nAsked whether a trip to Moscow is in the works, Hammarskjold said he plans to attend a UN\nmeeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaya, in early March, and that his\nroute \"may well take me to this\nor that capital which comes now\nheavily into the picture politically.\"\nHammarskjold made his views\nknown at a press, conference \u2014 his\nfirst since he returned from talks\nin London with Foreign Secretary\nSelwyn Lloyd. He also has met\nsince the first of the year with\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles and\nFrench Foreign Minister Christian Pineau.\nThe secretary-general said the\nUN remains the main framework for disarmament talks, and\nthat he knows of no government\nwhich has taken an apposite view.\nHe said there are four ways in\nwhicfi UN machinery could be used in the disarmament picture.\nHe listed them as his own office,\nthe Security Council, the General\nAssembly and the disarmament\ncommission.\nGov't Survives Two\nNo-Confidence Votes\niiiiiiimuiiniiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nEven Bees Fooled\nSOOKE, B.C. (CP) - Winter\nhas been so summery in this\nVancouver Island garden spot\nthat it has fooled not only the\nflowers and the birds but the\nbees too.\nMr. and Mrs. Denis Lavender were inspecting the mauve\n\u25a0blooms on their daphne shrubs\nthis week when they met a\nking-sized bee buzzling lazily\naround their garden.\nFor a moment Mrs. Lavender\ncould have been blowed over\nby a swish of her favorite\nbloom but she finally commented: \"That bee most have\ntorn too many pages off the\ncalendar.\"\nRoses are abloom all over\nthis district, untouched by anything resembling winter\nweather. Primroses, Wanda\n'clusters and green shrubbery\nalso provide a rare sight for\nthe sore eyes of visitors from\n, less-fortunate regions.\niiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiliiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nFernie Officials\nTo Meet Cabinet\nVICTORIA (CP) - A delegation\nfrom Fernie will meet with the\ncabinet Friday in an effort to prevent closure of the Elk River mine\nat Fernie.\nThe mine is operated by the\nCrow's Nest Pass Coal Co. The\ncompany said it would have to\nclose because of loss of money\nand markets.\nThe delegation includes Mayor\nJames White and Alderman Mike\nNee of Fernie and two Calgary\nofficials of the United Mine Workers of America.\nThey estimate that direct and\nindirect layoffs would cut the city's\ntax roll in half.\nSeattle's Curfew\nProves Successful\nSEATTLE (AP) - Seattle's new\ncurfew, aimed at preventing juvenile misbehavior, was quietly effective in its first operation Monday night.\nPolice were out in force at the\ncurfew hour of 10 p.m. but youngsters were off the streets.\nThere were no accidents and\nonly one report of juveniles being\nstopped by police. Patrolmen halted one automobile carrying four\nboys and two girls returning from\na playfield and permitted them to\nproceed.\nThe order from police chief H. J.\nLawrence requires all children\nunder 15 to be home by 10 p.m,\nThose 15 to 18 were told not to\nloiter on the streets.\nJuvenile officer Ralph Palmer\nsaid he was amazed by absence of\njuveniles from the streets Monday\nnight.\n'The juveniles and their parents,\" he said, \"deserve a vote\nof thanks for their cooperation.\"\nThe curfew is the first ordered\nhere since the Second World War,\nThis transparent plastic attachment is the invention of Joel\nB a r g, Montreal commercial\nartist-inventor, who is here demonstrating how It works.' He-\ndesigned the apparatus to help\na little girl crippled with polio\nwho could not move her hands\nand who had become moody and\nmorose. With this attachment\non her head site is able to write\nand draw. \"Bar g made the\ngadget out of a light, transparent\nplastic X   '\nCCF Motions; Election Deferred\nOpposition Split on Liberal,\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Two motions of non-confidence in\nthe government, both doomed by splits among the three\nopposition groups, were defeated Tuesday night in the\nCommons.\nThe minority Progressive Conservative government\nwas upheld by votes of 221 to 24 and ISO to 95, and thua-\nwas not forced into an election.\nFollowing the votes Prime Minister Diefenbaker gave no sign of\nwillingness to act on his own in\nhaving Parliament dissolved for\nan immediate election. Earlier,\nFinance Minister Donald Fleming\nmade clear the government had no\nsuch intention.\nDespite the advance certainty\nthat the non-confidence motions\nwould not defeat the government,\nthe public galleries were jammed\nand there was an air of excitement and turbulence among\nmembers themselves.\nBut only the 95 members present of the 106 - member Liberal\ngroup voted for that party's motion which called, in effect, for\nthe Conservatives to resign and\nmake way for a Liberal administration without an election.\nWINDS UP ATTACK\nThe new opposition leader, Lester B. Pearson, had said an election now would not help unemployment.\nBut Justice Minister Davie Fulton, winding up a two-day debate\non the non - confidence motions,\nParliament\nTuesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nFinance Minister Donald Fleming said he will budget for a deficit in the next fiscal year if this\nis necessary to provide jobs to the\nunemployed through public works.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\ngave qualified approval to an East-\nWest summit conference and suggested indirectly that -it be held\nin Canada.\nTransport Minister George Hees\nindicated the government has no\npresent intention of establishing\na U.S.-type coast guard service.\nThe Senate gave second reading \u2014 approval in principle \u2014 to a\ngovernment bill enabling federal\naid for thermal power development in the Maritimes.\nCAR INSURANCE UP\nOLYMPIA, Wash. (AP)\u2014Boosts\nin Washington State automobile insurance rates up to 46.6 per cent\nwere announced by two national\ninsurance organizations Tuesday.\nTuesday night continued the government's scathing attack on the\nLiberal position.\nHe called the motion a \"weak,\nreedy, half - baked, ramshackle\ncontraption of compromise and\nconfusion.\"\nAnd on the vote there were 150\nmembers against the Liberal proposal: 107 of the 113 Conservatives, 24 of the 25 CCF members,\n17 of the 19 Social Crediters, and\ntwo independents.\nIt was about ag close to full\nattendance  as  the  265-mcmber\nCommons ever comes.\nThe vote of 221 to 24 was against\na CCF non-confidence motion calling for consideration of Britain's\nfree-trade proposal and redirection\nof investment into a wide program\nof public  development.  On  that\nvote the Liberals sided with the\ngovernment \u2014 they had said it\nsmacked   of    nationalization   of\nbanks.\nNOIST SESSION\nOn both votes the non - confidence motions found support only\nfrom the ranks of its sponsoring\nparty.\nMr. Fulton, with only about five\nminutes to speak before the votes,\ncould hardly get a word in edgewise as the Commons kept up a\ncontinuous clamor.\nHe said the \"ruin and catastrophe\" of the Liberals must be\nborne equally by the party and\nits leader. The Liberals were\nafraid not only to face the Commons but the Canadian people too.\nAs he ended, the Conservative\nmembers were chanting \"we want\nPaul,\" a reference to Paul Martin, unsuccessful contestant for\nthe Liberal leadership last week.\nEarlier in Tuesday's debate,\nLionel Chevrier, former Liberal\ntransport minister, charged the\ngovernment with seeking a Commons defeat and an early election\n\"to escape the responsibility of\ndealing with urgent problems.\"\nNO FEAR\nMr. Fleming replied that tha\nConservatives have no fear of an\nelection, if the Liberals want to\nchallenge them. But he made\nclear the government did not consider the Liberal motion that kind\nof a challenge.\n\"These Liberals just can't stand\nthe sight of ballot boxes,\" he said.\n\"... If we get them there it\nwill only be by dragging them\nkicking and screaming to the\npolls.\"\nSons of Freedom Leave\nMoscow For Interior\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Canada's\nvisiting delegation of Sons of\nFreedom Doukhobors left Tuesday\non a week'sr train trip to the Soviet interior! The four men refused to divulge their destination\nbut it, is believed they will be\nshown settlement sites by Russian\nauthorities.\nThe men, negotiating a mass\nmigration of their splinter group\nfrom B.C. to Russia, said last\nweek after their arrival here that\nthe Soviet government has been\n\"very sympathetic\" to their proposal.\nThe delegation has said that\nsome 2500 Sons of Freedom have\nindicated they wish to migrate to\nRussia. They fled from oppression in Czarist Russia more than\n50 years ago but have clashed repeatedly with Canadian authorities over their resistance to compulsory education, military ser-\nvise and other matters.\nThe visiting sons, led by Bill\nMoojelsky of Shoreacres, B.C., said\nTuesday that \"we are going by\ntrain because we want to see the\ncountryside. We hope to make a\nfull statement in due time.\"\nOther delegation members are\nJoe Podovinikoff of Hilliers, B.C.,\nJohn Chernoff, Grand Forks, B.C.\nand Nick Kanigan, Perry's Siding,\nB.C.\nThe Sons split with Orthodox\nDoukhobors, about 25,000 of whom\nlive in Canada. The orthodox\nDoukhobors are not involved in\nthe migration plans.\nAnd in This Comer \u2666 \u2666. \u2666\nWALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP)\u2014Haste and the machine age\nput a wedding party Into a tizzy here Monday.\nHere's what happened at the reception following the wedding\nof Pauline Basta of Walla Walla and Franklin Bauman of Kellogg,\nIdaho.\nOne of the guests, Gene Neary of Bonneville, Ore., was sent\nout to get eome Ice for the punch. He went to a nearby Ice and\nfuel establishment where there are several coin-operated dispensing\nmachines.\nNeary, who explained later he had \"never used one of those\ngadgets before,\" quickly chunked In four coins, got four sealed\npaper bags, hustled back to the party.\nAn Impatient cluster was around the punch bowl when Neary\nhurried In waving the bags triumphantly. The host ripped one open.\nCracked ice? Nope, cracked coal.\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014A Long Island real estate man Tuesday\nwas proclaimed New York's champion scofflaw. He gulped, but\npaid a $6550 fine.\nJ. Philip Cahill, 54, pleaded guilty to ignoring 131 traffic tickets.\nMagistrate John Murtagh had given him until Jan. 28 to pay\nthe record fine, figured at the maximum of $50 a ticket. The\nalternative was 393 days in jail.\nCahill, freed on $3000 bail, returned to court later Tuesday\nwith a $5000 certified cheque, a $1000 cheque, five $100 bills and\na $50 personal cheque.\nHis record includes about 70 overtime parking tickets, and just\nabout every other traffic violation\u2014parking too far from the curb,\ntoo near fire hydrants, iii a bus stop, in a taxi stand, in driveways,\nand even on the sidewalk. Although his licence was suspended,\nhe still drove. A traffic cop nabbed him Monday night\n 2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 22, 1958\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\u2014Complete shows 7:09, 9:00\nVictor Mature, Anita Ekberg\n\"PICKUP ALLEY\"\n A story obout dope.\nThe I\nThreS\nFaces\nor\nEve\nCINemaScoPE:\nPLEASE ... It\nfrom the beginning\nNO ONE SEATED DURINO\nTHE SENSATIONAL. ENDINOI\nJOANNE WOODWARDDAVTOWAYNELEE J. COBB\nCIVIC\nPremiere  Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nTonight and Thursday\n\"LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME\"\n(Tech - Cinemascope)\nDoris Day, James Cagney\nMrs. P. Wallach\nPasses af 83\nNelson pioneer Mrs. Paul (Mary)\nWallach, who had lived on Granite\nRoad prior to taking up residence,\nat Mount St. Francis in 1956, died\nat the Mount Monday evening at\nthe age of 83.\nBorn in Poland in 1874, she married Mr. Wallach there in 1899.\nThe family migrated to Nelson in\n1907, living in Nelson since, except\nfor a brief period spent near Salmo. Mr. Wallach worked as a\nfoundry, man until his death In\n1925.\nMrs. Wallach is survived by two\nions, John and Theodore of South\nSlocan, and four daughters Mrs.\nJ. (Eve) Ostlin, Corra Linn; Mrs.\nA. (Mary) Porterfield, New Westminster; Mrs. J. (Anne) Lewis of\nNelson and Mrs. L. E. (Helen)\nPettit, Vancouver;' 12 grandchildren and eight great grandchildren.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR. B.C.\nTONIGHT and THURSDAY\nStarts 7:15 a.m.)\n(One show each evening.\n\"GIANT\" (Tech.)\nRock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor,\nJames Dean\nCartoon-News\nTV OFF AIR\nTelevision screens were dark\nthroughout Nelson Tuesday night.\nA power loss at the^antennae site\nsouth of Nelson caused the trouble\nMcLennan, McFeely & Prior Ltd.\nofficials explained. They expected\nthat power would be restored Wednesday.\nWith Stone\nand Besom\nTUESDAY\nL. J. Maurer 8, F. Carmichael 8,\nD. Porteous 6, H. Farenholtz 8.\nR. Chandler 10, H. Moore 8.\nA. Ferworn 9, D. Meakins 7.\nE. C. Hunt 7, J. R. Bailey 9.\nJ. Milne 14, R. Bruce 4.\nJ. Harvey 8, M. B. Ryalls 7.\nA. Ronmark 10, E, Ramsbottom\n6.\nJ. Haines 6, R. F. Wallace 5.\nA. Waters 8, L. Peerless 7.\nMONDAY\nN. Lutkiwich 10, S. Jefferies 8.\nD. M. Sample 7, W. Duckworth\n7.\nR. Carmichael 9, H. Farenholtz\n8.\nW. Tozer 9, A. Reid 8.\nD. Cathcart 8, J. Thorn 6.\nW. Triggs 5, W. Wait 8.\nW. Tickner 8, N. R. Sardich 6.\nA. VanSacker 6, W. Marr 8.\nR. Boates 9, J. Sutherland 9.\nH. Ronmark 6, E. S. W. Batty 11.\nFor Your Child's\nWell.Being\nGiVe\nOSTOMUL\nMulti-Vitamin\nSupplement\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\nRotarians Hear\nTalk on Magazine\nA talk on \"The Rotarians,\" official publication of Rotary International, was given at Tuesday's\nluncheon meeting of Rotary Club\nby H. D. Harrison.\nThe magazine has become influential both in keeping informed\nthe Rotary clubs of 108 countries\nand by leading magazines and\nnewspapers reprinting its articles,\nhe said. Operation is on an annual\nbudget of $1,000,000,\nIt was announced that Dr. N. R,\nJennijohn and J. P. Riley will be\nthe club's representatives on the\nNelson unit of the Cancer Society.\nNelson Allen urged sponsorship\nof a performance here May 23 by\nthe UBC Players' Club.\nWILLIAMS\nMOVING\nAnd\nSTORAGE\nPHONE\nOdd;\n\u00b0* Ends\n...by HD. B.\nIsn't it odd the way, when you\nare passing a house you once\ncalled home, old memories and\nthose particular years of your\nexistence leap to mind?\nThis happened to me the other\nday as I passed a house in which I\nlived when I was about five years\n\u25a0 'd. Beside this house was a\n\"wood\" \u2014 in those days a few\ntrees and bushes made a wood \u2014\nwhere grew thimble berry bushes\nand trees with red glossy berries.\nI loved the place and can still\ncapture the feeling of the sunlight\nfiltering through branches, bare,\nsave for a few yellow leaves,\nwhile the ground underneath was\ncarpeted in gold.\nAnd there used to be the frosty\nboard sidewalk where I lost the\ntiny mouth organ someone gave\nme at a church picnic. At the\nback of the house grew the ribbon\ngrass I used to soak in water to\nsee the green come out and into\nwhich I used to mix flour or a\npiece of dough from the batch of\nbread a-baking. It made an unsightly brew.\n* #   *\nAs I passed the house I noted\nthe \"wood\" had been cleared and\nrealized its miniature proportions\nas I measured where it had been.\nThe board sidewalk is replaced\nwith cement, but I believe if I\nwalked there some morning in late\nOctober the feel of it all would\ncome back.\n* *   *\nYes, it is odd, finis feeling for a\nhouse \u2014 an inanimate thing of\nwood, plaster and such. You find\nyourself wondering if you went in\nand closed your eyes tightly you\nmight hear a peal of your own\nlaughter left there from long ago,\nor see the youngster you were,\ntraversing the familiar rooms.\nMaybe the big white cat would\nslip out from behind the stove to\nplay wilh your shoe laces or you'd\nsee the odd giow of sunlight\nstreaming through the papered\npantry window.\n* \u2022   *\nYou'd listen and hear dear\nfamiliar voices \u2014 young then \u2014\ntalking about ordinary everyday\nthings that made up the fabric of\nthat distant existence. All these\nthings captured in four walls \u2014 it\nis this that brings the realization\nthat a house is not just wood and\nplaster and you wonder if people\nwho have lived in it since have\nbeen good to it, leaving loving and\nlaughter for the house to draw\ninto its walls for warmth. You\nfind yourself hoping that such is\nGood Revenue Position\nUrgent Hospitals Told\nThere was no indication additional funds would be available to\nhospitals in British Columbia in\n1958, the Board of Directors. Kootenay Lake General Hospital has\nbeen informed by a letter from\nHon.' Eric Martin, minister of\nhealth.\nThe letter, read at last night's\nboard meeting, said \"those hospitals that add to operating expenditures, should make certain\nthey have additional revenuees,\nentirely apart from Hospital Insurance Service payments.\n\"If not, they will be confronted\nwith the necessity of reducing\nother, expenditures by a like\namount, which could involve personnel reductions.\"\nThe minister pointed to instances\nwhere hospitals had undertaken\nincreased obligations for 1958. \"I\nhope such hospitals have made\ncertain they have such additional\nrevenues.\"\nLabor Relations Committee,\nchaired by J. H. Coventry, reported on negotiations with two\nunions, which have been under\nway since mid-November. Contracts with both the International\nUnion of Operating Engineers, Local 882, and the Hospital Employees Unions, Local 180, were near\nthe signing stage, he said. Actual\nagreement had been reached on\nthe engineering contract, but the\nemployees union contract had not\nreceived its final review. Details\nof the contracts will be reported\nto the February board meeting.\nBoard members remarked on\ntheir peculiar position on being\nrequired under labor relations\nlaws to negbtiate and yet facing\nadvice tha'. added funds would not\nnecessarily be available. \"We\nare doing our best to maintain\nan economical operation,\" acting\nchairman H. D. Harrison, said,\nwhile finance chairman A. K.\nMcAdams said that directors\ncould hardly be expected to appreciate the situation they faced,\nwith rising cosrs and labor demands on one hand, and warnings\nof uncertain financial resources on\nthe other.\nSEEK TO BE FAIR\nHe was supported in this by C.\nH. Bland, chairman of the Kootenay Valley Hospital Improvement\nDistrict and acting chairman of\nthe new hospital planning committee. Mr. Coventry said that\ncontract negotiations had been\ncarried on since early Fall  and\nthe case. You want this place that\nmeant much to you to go on being\nloved, for there is nothing more\npitiable than a house that looks\nforlorn and forgotten.\n\"they had not been easy negotiations; there were vigorous efforts\nto be fair to all parties and in\naddition to protect the taxpayers\ndollars.\"\nDirectors pointed out that in 1956\na two-year contract for 1957 and\n1958 had been written with the\nRegistered Nurses Association and\nfor this reason alone, increased\ncosts were inescapable. The cost\nof living changes and contracts the\ngovernment branches had written\nwith their own employees necessarily influenced negotiations, J. A.\nCullinane, executive member, and\nMr. Coventry pointed out.\nPayroll committments cquld\namount to in excess of an additional $8800.\nThe hospital's finances had been\nimproved by $6000 from a $10,177\ndeficit position in June, the finance\ncommittee reported. In 1957 a total\nof $1221 had been spent for the\nhospital employees medical services' coverage. Receipts had exceeded expenditures by $529, despite a deficit position which was\nstill subject to audit adjustment.\nDifficulty in the collection of\nroom differentials, difficulty wilh\nout-of-province patients' accounts\n\u2014the refugee accounts uncollected\nalone exceeded $1000\u2014had cut collections. The government was not\nresponsible for these accounts once\nIhe new citizen becomes employed\nthe report said. Pipeline staffs\nfrom Alberta and U.S.A. have also\nadded to the transient patient load.\nHeavy costs for X-ray tube burnouts ($1570) and for roof repairs,\n($415) and heavy dietary costs\nj contributed to the year-end picture.\nH.I.S. accounts receivable totalled $32,619 while the liability due\nto H.I.S. advances was only $19,-\n122, which provided a $13,000 cash\nasset. The working capital situation improved over last year.\nAccounts payable for December\nwere $9359 as against $6057 inDe-\ncember 1956. Payroll was $25,552\nagainst $22,486.\nBUILDING PROGRESSES\nProblems related to excavations,\nsewer line and drainage trenchings\nand water mains kept the planning\ncommittee in practically continuous activity since the December\nmeeting. Six formal meetings have\nbeen held since January, two with\nCity Council committees, and a\nnumber of informal discussions,\nthe object of which have been to\nkeep the project moving steadily\nforward, to avoid arbitration delays, to protect the taxpayers\nfunds, and to establish a working\nliaison between the general con\ntractors and municipal and other\nbodies with which they work, Mr.\nBland reported.\nThe co-operation of city officials\nhad been extended on every occasion in these matters when requested, he said. Reporting the\ncontractors maintained the view\nthe building will be completed in\nthe fall of 1958.\nThe sixth progress claim was\npaid to the general contractors in\nthe amount of $55,139. To date\nsome $454,136 has been paid for\nwork on the building. The total\ncontract is- for $1,892,180.\nThe equipment program was going ahead with the laboratory and\nkitchen matters largely dealt with.\nThere was still some negotiating to\ndo related to x-ray equipment\ngrants and laundry equipment was\nexpected to be ordered in February, Mr. Bland told the Board.\nNew communications building progresses.\n-Daily News photo.\nNew CPR Telegraphs Building\nProvides for Future Expansion\nPIPE ORGAN EXPERT S. E. Haddon is shown at\nwork on old St. Paul's United Church organ, now being\ntransferred to the new Fairview United Chureh by Mr.\nHaddon, Hector Viens and Hugo Spilker, all of Vancouver. The 1915 organ contains 1280 pipes ranging from\nfour inches to 16 feet in length. \u2014 Daily News photo.\nNeed for adequate accomodation of Canadian Pacific's communications equipment and provision\nfor future expansion of the company's telecommunications service here were first considerations\nin construction of the new CPR\ncommunications and freight traffic building now nearing completion at Nelson.\nCompany officials said the $75,-\n000 structure is expected   to   be\nTO ADDRESS\nCHAMBER\nFIREMEN WIN\nCURLING TITLE\nNelson Fire Department members were victors in the centennial\nannual \"Kootenay curling firemen's\nchampionship match held in Trail\nTuesday and brought home the\ntrophy for the second consecutive\nyear. Entertained by the Trail Fire\nDepartment men, who were their\ncompetitors, Nelson men Fred\nWah, Bill Eckmier, Jack Bailey\nand Fire Chief E. S. Owens marked a 10-4 victory.\n\"Quite an audience\" observed\nthe game and the firemen had\nIheir pictures taken. Trail Fire Department served refreshments to\nthe visitors.\nThe Weather\nNELSON     28 36 -\nMontreal      -4 13 \u2014\nOttawa     10 14 -\nToronto       23 30 .01\nNorth Bay     15 21 .09\nKenora      -2 12 \u2014\nBrandon       11 28 \u2014\nAnnual Meeting 1958\u2014\nNELSON AND DISTRICT\nBOY SCOUTS ASSOCIATION\n-.;-,,'.   8 p.m. Nelson Scout Hall\nParents of Scouts and Cults Welcome\nDISTRICT EXECUTIVE COUNCIL\nGROUP COMMITTEES\nSCOUTERS\nMOTHERS AUXILIARIES,  URGED TO ATTEND\nPresident\nR. H. PROCTER\nDR.  A.  D.  SCOTT\n\"British Columbia's Economic\nProspects\" will be the title of an\naddress which will be given by\nDr. Anthony Dalton Scott, assistant professor of economics of University of B.C., at Nelson Chamber of Commerce annual meeting\nThursday.\nHe will be replacing Professor\nG. J. Wong of U.B.C.\nAfter graduating from U.B.C,\nDr. Scott went on to Harvard from\nwhich he received his master of\narts degree in 1949 and London\nSchool of Economics where he received his doctorate in 1953. He\nwas on the staff of the Royal Commission on Canada's economic prospects in 1955-S..\nCHURCH FILLED\nAT LAST RITES\nFOR M. SPENCE\nFriends and' fellow-workers almost filled St. Paul's - Trinity\nUnited Church Tuesday morning\nto pay tribute to Munroe Karl\nSpence, B.C. Telephone Company\nemployee for many years in Trail,\nCranbrook and Nelson, who died\nin Vancouver Friday at the age of\n44 years. Funeral service was conducted by Rev. E. Donovan Jones.\nA profusion of flowers filled the\nfront of the church.\nHymns sung were \"Guide Me,\nO Thou Great Jehova\" and \"Onward Christian Soldiers\", with\nMerlin R. Bunt as organist.\nPallbearers were telephone company employees E. Wintemute, H.\nLake, W. Woodall, J. Smith, J.\nMcLean and A. Dayman. Interment was in Nelson Memorial\nPark.\ncompleted by April and premises\nwill then be shared by the railway's communications and district\nfreight traffic departments. The\nbuilding will also provide new\nquarters for the installation of a\nmodern repeater station.\nTelegraph office will remain uptown along with the CPR ticket office.\nFoundations of the fire-proof\nbuildings are of reinforced concrete and walls are constructed of\nconcrete block with Norman brick\nfacing.\nSpecifications for the one-storey\nfull finished basement structure\nwere prepared by Canadian Pacific architects and construclion has\nbeen in the hands of Louis Maglio,\ncontractor. Sub-contractors include   Kootenay   Plumbing    and\nRev. E. D. Jones\nRev. E. D. Jones was elected\npresident Monday night of a\n\"Men's Own\" organization at St.\nPaul's-Trinity United Church. Secretary is Lome Craig and treasurer\nJames Christie.\nAbout 25 men attended the inaugural meeting, which consisted\nof a recreational period during\nwhich chess, darts and other\ngames were played, short business\nsession, showing of movies taken\nby H. H. Hinitt during a two-\nmonth hunting trip into the Pur-\ncell Range, with narration by Mr.\nHinitt and assistance by A. R.\nRamsden, and refreeshments.\nMeetings are planned for the\nthird Monday of every month, and\nnext month's feature will be a\n\"Mock Parliament,\" with \"prime\nminister\" R. B. Morris and \"leader\nof the opposition\" Malcolm Brandon.\nThe men were divided into\nmembership recruiting teams\nunder Donald Appleton, Dr. H. G.\nSteed and Mr. Morris. Tile two\nlosing teams will host the winners\nat a closing banquet in the Spring.\nHeating,   Betts  Electric   and  A.\nRingrose of Nelson.\nLODGE RITES\nGIVEN FOR\nW. J. SMILEY\nA large attendance of relatives,\nfriends and lodge members paid\ntheir last respects Tuesday to William James Smiley, former Norlli\nShore rancher, who died in Nelson\nSaturday at the age of 58 years.\nFuneral service was conducted at\nthe Thompson Funeral Home by\nRev. E. Donovan Jones,\nMany members of the Eaglef;'\nLodge and the Ladies' Auxiliary In\nihe Eagles were present and ther.\nwas a profusion of floral offering:..\nHymns sung were \"Beneath the\nCross of Jesus\" and \"O Love Th;t\nWilt Not Let Me Go\", with Mrs,\nW. A. Manson as organist.\nLodge brothers and Ladies' Auxiliary members formed a guard o'\nhonor at the ehapel. Pallbearers\nwere J. A. Wilson, F. H. Johnsoi,\nArt Anderson, F. W. Koehle, M.\nE. Anderson and C. L. Nowlin.\nRites of the F.O.E. Aerie No. 22\nwere conducted at the Chapel and\nMemorial Park by president Steve\nMaco and chaplain J. Perasso..\nInterment was in the Nelson Memorial Park.\nfor your       ,\nsleeping comfort\n\u2022 BROADCLOTH\nPAJAMAS by Arrow\n\u2022 FLANNELETTE\nPAJAMAS   by\nPrincely\nSanforized \u2014\nPriced Right\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\nNELSON  HOCKEY BOOSTER CLUB  HONORARY\nMEMBERSHIP AWARD\nMade Saturday Night, Jan. 18.\nMembership Awards as Follows:\nFirst, No. 510\u2014LEO HOUDE\nSecond, No. 4494\u2014MAUREEN ARGATOFF\nThird, No. 389\u2014MRS. H. N. WADE\nFourth, No. 2539\u2014RED KOEHLE\nFifth, No. 410\u2014R. L. BRUCE\nThe Booster Club would like to thank the Nelson hockey\nsupporters for their terrific effort in this last membership\ndrive.\nWe would like to announce Saturday, Jan. 25,\nRossland Vs Nelson as\nERNIE GARE NIGHT\n^f!^t^^^f!iKmaammimm.iumviniiimmmsimmmmmts^i^mmmmm\nSMOKE FROM MOTOR\nCAUSES  FIRE  CALL\nExtensive smoke caused by a\nburned-out motor in an air-condi-\nlioner at the home of Kcrby Gren-\nfatl, 818 Vernon Street, brought the\nNelson Fire Department out at 3:30\nMonday afternoon. The motor and\nair-conditioner were removed from\nthe house and smoke damage was\nkept to a minimum.\nFor a Load of\ninfer Long\u2014USE\nKUZNBURN\nf 1   Northern Wyoming Coal  # \u00bb\n>ro-\n\u2022  GENTLE\nwl** ^\u00b0 Jo on\"0*'\ncWnVers.^\nm 9ase$\nProduced by Big Horn Coal Co. of Sheridan, Wyo.\nPHONE   889\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\n<\u2122\u00bb\u00bb\"-\"'\"\"\"\u00bb\u2122\u00bbct\"---\u00bb------_----------_-_--_\u00bb---m_---_-__i\n LANDMARK of the Windermere district and a point of interest to tourists, the David\nThompson Memorial Fort has been sold. It was built in 1922 jointly by the Hudson's\nBay Company and the CPR, which in 1933 turned it over to the Village of Invermere\nfor community purposes. As local people were unable to obtain the land title, they\nwere unable to raise money to maintain the building and it fell into disrepair. The\nland belonged to the Columbia Valley Irrigated Fruit Lands, which has now sold the\nproperty to two calgary men, D. C. Sinclair and C. S. Smith.\u2014\/. M. McLeod photo.\nAubrey Kemp President\nOf Creston Board of Trade\nB*G Centennial Hag\nPresented at Trail\nCRESTON \u2014 W. Aubrey Kemp\nwas elected president of the Creston Board of Trade for 1958 at the\nannual meeting held in the Legion\nHall Tuesday night.\nKEMP\nToday's  Insurance\nProblems\nAnswered by\nYour Insurance Advisors\n99\nQUESTION: What is the\noldest form of insurance\nin the world ?\nANSWER: Marine insurance, in some form, is\nthe oldest.\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 !\nRobertson -\nHilliard.CaHell\n456 Ward St.      Ph. 1912-1913\nOther officers elected were Hon.\nW. D. Black, honorary president;\nJ. Salvador jr., vice-president.\nCommittee chairman are:\nGuy Constable, national affairs;\nD. K. Archibald, agriculture; B. A.\nFowlie, hospital and education; A.\n0. Carruthers, highways; Theo\nGreyell, membership; Dr. W. N.\nFraser, municipal; H. K. Legg,\npublicity; R. Hood, entertainment;\nP. R. Robinson, industry; Dr. J.\nS. Miller, resources and development; F. C. Rodgers, Indian affaires; D. W. Taylor, public relations; R. McL. Cooper, Junior\nChamber of Commerce representative; E. E. Mason, gas; V. L.\nMosher, Dewdney trail; and E.\nSalvador,   tourism.\nMr. Mosher, retiring president,\nintroduced a number of guests at\nthe well attended meeting, including the speaker, Dr. Anthony Scott\nof the faculty of the University of\nB.C., who spoke on \"The Economic Prospects for British Columbia.\"\nDr. Scott, who was a staff member of the Gordon Economics Report Commission, presented his\nown views on the prospects for\npopulation growth and economic\nfuture of the province. He also\nspoke on the current UBC campaign for funds.\nRetiring president Mr. Mosher\nreported on the past year, which\nhad been a busy one for the board.\nA major task was the effort of the\nboard in encouraging Interior\nBreweries Ltd. to build a new plant\nhere. The work began under the\nprevious president, Dave Taylor,\nand saw completion last year.\nHe also traced the board's efforts on Kootenay Lake road improvements, Sanca bridge contract, Dewdney trail, and the\nbridge over the old Kootenay chan-\nTRAIL \u2014 The B.C. Centennial\nflag was presented Monday night\nto City Council on behalf of the\ncommittee at Victoria and on behalf of the local committee. Frank\nSindell and Mel Monkhouse, president and vice-president of the local\ncommittee made the presentation.\nMr. Sindell asked that the flag be\nflown \"for while it may only be a\npiece of colored fabric, the birth\n'pangs and the growing pains, the\nadolescence and the maturity, the\ndreams and the deeds of our great\nterritory are its very substance to\nwhich 1958 is joyfully dedicated.\"\nThe Centennial executive then\nproceeded to the Village of War-\nfield .to make a similar presentation to the Board of Commissioners\nat that community.\nT. F. Kelley spoKe tor a delegation from Mountain Street, four\nof whom accompanied him to the\nCouncil meeting. Condition of the\n,road was very bad, and on account\nof a blind spot near the top of the\nhill, was dangerous, he said. Work\nhad been scheduled, but so far\nnothing had been done. Aid. H. S.\nDixon, chairman of board of\nworks said the committee was\naware, of the necessity of stabiliza\ntion of surfaces which was a question of fitting it to budgets.\nJanuary 25 to February 1 will be\nMinor Hockey Week in Trail and\n\u25a0was officially declared so by City\nCouncil following a presentation of\na proposed program_by the committee in charge.\nA communication from R. Bow-\nering, director; public health engineering, pointed out danger and\ncosts involved in creating a recreational area in the Violin Lake\nwatershed.\nAlderman Dixon said that in\naddition to filtering equipment it\nwould be necessary to install a\nconsiderable amount-of pipe from\nthe lake to the intake. Council has\nbeen in correspondence with\nrecreation and conservation minister Westwood on this matter and\nexpects to meet him at some future\ndate.\nLATEST DEVELOPMENTS\nA letter from the minister of\nhighways said that the department\nwas working closely with Trail\ncity consultants Cave and Ober-\nlander  concerning  the West end\nentrance and'the new bridge. Said\nMr. Gaglardi: \"The consultants\nrecommendations would have an\ninfluence on the choice of road\nthrough the city from the West and\nwill determine design of new river\ncrossing. Several alternate designs\nof bridge have been drawn up, one\nof which will be adapted to the\nfinal approved plan.\"\nHe wrote: \"My deputy and chief\nengineer will be in touch with you\nand I look forward to the day when\nI may meet with you personally\nand finalize arrangements. \"Council moved to get in touch with the\nconsultants to be brought up to\ndate on latest developments.\nA reply was received from H.\nW. Herridge to Council's telegram\nurging action to the proposed\nAmerican tariff on lead and zinc.\nMr. Herridge said he found the\naction of Council \"most helpful'\nin continuing representations to\nthe government on this matter,\nA preliminary report on revenue\nand expenditure for 1957 was released by finance chairman S. N.\nMitchell subject to possible correction due to such items as stores on\nhand, etc. Revenue for 1957 was\n$1,117,785, and expenditure for the\nsame period, $1,119,862, leaving a\nsmall deficit of $2077. Mayor L. A.\nRead congratulated Councillors on\nthe balance.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 22, 1859 \u2014 3\nPRESIDENT of the B. C.\nHistorical Society is Mrs.\nRupert W. Haggen, above,\nof Grand Forks, MLA for\nGrand Forks-Greenwood,\nwho was chosen by the Society's council which convened Saturday in Nanaimo following the annual\ngeneral meeting of representatives of historical\ngroups from many parts of\nthe province. She succeeds\nDr. W. N. Sage of Vancouver. A Rossland man, Fred\nEthridge, was elected second vice-president.\nMining Laws Blamed\nFor Mollie Mac Tieup\n'The British Columbia government has made it virtually impossible to obtain the necessary\nfinancing to carry out further\ndevelopment,\" the annual meeting\nof Mollie Mac Mines was informed\nJoint Meeting Planned ...   *\nCranbrook Teachers\nReject Board's Offer\nCRANBROOK -Cranbrook\nTeachers' Association salary committee has rejected in writing the\nCranbrook District School Board\ncontract counter-proposals for their\n1958 agreement and has requested\na meeting with the board at an\nunstated date. Renewal of the contract was due January 1, but the\nboard found the Association proposal of terms unacceptable.\nTerms of the final settlement will\nbe retroactive to that date.\nThe board at its first 1958 meeting has named as new chairman\nArthur Draper. Appointments to\nthe various standing committees\nof the board for the year are:\nTeachers, Eric MacKinnon, Ronald\nDale and Dr. J. M. Mugan; buildings, Mr. Dale, Mr. MacKinnon\nand Per Williams; insurance, Dr.\nMugan and Vincent Downey; rural\nschools, Mr. Williams and Frank\nHill; public health representative,\nMr. Downey; transportation, Mr.\nDraper and Mr. MacKinnon; supplies, Mr. Williams and Dr.\nMugan; athletics, Mr. Downey and\nMr. Dale; and finance, Mr. Hill\nand Mr. Dale.\nStart of night school classes by\nMount Baker School staff physical\ntraining instructor Bob Folk in\nadult men's basketball was authorized at the school.\nResignation of rural school representative for Moyie W. W. Wiley\nwas accepted and a recommenda\nFor Information and Reservations\n\"SEE THE VIPONDS\"\nGLOBE AGENCIES\n1146 Cedar Avenue      . Trail Phone 2345\nThe Only Complete Travel Agency in the Kootenays\ntion of his successor will be made\nto the Department of Education by\nthe board. Mr. Willey has sold his\nresort property and is leaving the\ndistrict.\nBoard work will start immediately on preparation of the school\ndistrict's 1958 operating budget,\nwhich must be submitted to the\nCity Council by February 14.\nAttention of the board was called\nto the special meeting set by\nMount Baker School Principal L.\nG. Truscott at the school audi\ntorium to explain to parents of\nstudents and the public academic\nstandards and the basic system of\nstudent promotion from grade to\ngrade.\nnel, all of which are now under\nway.\nMr. Kemp, in accepting the gavel, stated he was proud to accept\nthe presidency. He looked upon it\nas an opportunity to \"partly repay his debt to the valley.\" He\nhad enjoyed everything the valley\nhad to offer.\nMORE AUTOS\nUSE FERRY\nAT CASTLEGAR\n. CASTLEGAR\u2014Automobile traffic\non the Castlegar ferry increased\nin December over that of the same\nmonth in 1956.\nComparative figures for the two\nmonths follow:\n1956\nNo.  of round trips    3,678\nAutomobiles (and\ndrivers)      24,221   25,931\nPassengers (not\ndrivers)       58,348\nTrucks, all types   ..   11,015\nTrailers and semitrailers  \u25a0         52\nMotor buses        691\nLivestock           9\n1957\n3,507\n59,745\n10,910\nCoal Production Off\n25 Per Cent Last Year\nFERNIE \u2014 The Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Company Ltd. reports\ndecreased production of coal and\ncoke during 1957 according to tonnage figures covering operations\nat Elk River and Michel collieries.\nThe two collieries produced 795,-\n562 tons of coal. This was a de-\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\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.\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2-4 p.m.\nTwilight\nat 7:30.\nClub  meeting  tonight\nFisherman's Headquarters\nTILLICUM _NN-BALF\u00bbUR, B.C.\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS\nScottish Heather, imported pottery\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nMary Maxim Sweater Wools.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC  HALL \u2014 8  P.M.\nGlass Shelves and Brackets\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.    Nelson\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nOn Sale\nLadies' Coats and Car Coats\nEBERLE'S  ON  BAKEN  ST.\nKeep this date open, Sat., Feb;\n1st, tea, home baking and apron\nsale. 2:30 to 5 at Salvation Army.\nANNUAL MEETING\nNelson and District Boy Scouts\nAssociation tonight, 8 p.m., Nelson\nScout Hall. Everyone welcome.\nPRE-INVENTORY SPECIAL - 2-\nPIECE LOUNGE SUITES, REG.\n$229.50, TO CLEAR, 25% OFF.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nNelson Funeral Home Lid..\nAmbulance Service, 613 Ward St.\nOxygen. Phone 53.\nA dignified, courteous service for\nevery faith. Prices all can afford.\nAgents for Bronze Plaques.\nKary Again\nLeads Legion\nk\\ Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A membership\nincrease was reported for 1957 at\nthe annual meeting of Cranbrook\nbranch of the Canadian Legion.\nContributions of the Branch during the year to the Dr. F. W. Green\nMemorial Home Society, originally\nsponsored by the Branch, brought\nto $12,000 the amount so far subscribed, 'about one-fourth of the\nlocally raised total.\nBuilding improvements at the\nclubhouse during the year in reconstruction of the ground floor\nbar and floor improvements\nthrough the building were carried\nout at a cost of about $5500.\nLargest undertaking by the\nBranch during the year was\narrangement for the biennial Provincial Command meeting which\nwas held in Cranbrook in the\nspring. Cranbrook will be host to\nthe East Kootenay zone quarterly\nmeeting set, for April.\nHonorary officers president Alan\nGraham, Q.C., and vice-presidents\nMayor R. E. Sang, A. J. Balment,\nDr. G. E. L. MacKinnon, Dr. W.\nO. Green and Dr. T. J. Sullivan,\nwere unanimously re-elected. Balloting for 1958 active officers returned Archie Kary as president\nand elected as vice-presidents\nFrank Jones, George Jewell and\nA. J. Weir; directors John Gierl,\nIng Grant, Charles Sweet, Steve\nAgasse, Reg Watson and Kelly\nNelson. The executive at their first\nmeeting this week will appoint\nfrom the membership the three\nadditional directors required, and\nwill also appoint a new full-time\nsecretary-manager from 12 applications on file for the post. Ted\nTerry was elected sergeant-at-\narms.\nSooial meeting of the Branch-and\nits Ladies' Auxiliary has been set\nfor January 31 when the new slates\nof officers of both organizations\nwill be installed for 1958.\ncrease of 267,785 tons or about 25\nper cent less than production of\n1956. Elk River showed a decline\nof 53,780 tons and Michel 214,005\ntons.\nCoke produced at the Michel byproduct plant during 1957 amounted\nto 153,494 tons, compared with\n189,212 tons in 1956. This was a\ndecrease of 35,718 tons or approximately 19 per cent. Complete tonnage figures are shown in the\nfollowing tables:\nCOAL PRODUCTION (In tons)\nElk\nRiver Michel 1957 1956\nJan. 18,376 46,636 65,012 97,917\nFeb. 24,693 59,636 84,329 89,731\nMar. 19,993 44,486 64,479 99,210\nApr. 23,235 50,504 73,739 89,217\nMay 19,367 50,437 69,804 97,094\nJune 12,918 44,120 57,038 85,940\nJuly 17,092 31,876 48,968 80,225\nAug. 8,195 46,198 54,393 87,236\nSept. 16,792 44,700 61,492 70,210\nOct. 20,449 65,900 86,349 94,744\nNov. 17,356 51,145 68,501 92,060\nDec.    16,218   45,140   61,358   79,663\n1957 total 214,684, 580,778, 795,462;\n1956 total 269,464; 794,783; 1,063,-\n247; 1,063,247;\nDecrease 53,780, 214,005, 267,785.\nCOKE PRODUCTION (in tons)\n(All at Michel by-product plant)\nBy-product Breeze  1957    1956\nActive Year\nReviewed by\nTrail Legion\nTRAIL \u2014 The Canadian Legion\nheld its annual meeting and installation of officers Monday evening and heard reports from the\nfloor.\nPast president J. C. Russell in\nmaking his annual report said\nthat the committees had been active during the year, had furthered the aims and objects of the\nCanadian Legion, and an increase\nin membership had been recorded.\nThe policy of economy adopted\nat the beginning of the year precluded the possibility of any major alterations to the building, but\nall necessary maintenance had\nbeen carried out.\nThe welfare committee and the\npensions committee had a busy\nyear.\nDuring 1957 Uie branch continued\nits efforts to better the lot of veterans and took an active part in\nall zone conventions. Three delegates attended the provincial convention in Cranbrook in May and\ngained valuable knowledge. Resolutions were sent to the government. It is only with \"incessant\nhammering\" that it is possible to\nkeep vets' pensions anywhere in\nline with living costs, it was\nstated.\nThe branch had been able to\nhave the cenotaph floodlit. The\nRed Cross blood clinic received\nthe active support of the branch.\nPoppy Day was one of the most\nsuccessful and the public's gen\nerosity on this occasion, Remem-\nbrace Day, \"was a sign of es\nteem they held for the branch.\"-\nby W. R. Wheeler, president. This\nis reported by The Northern Miner.\nHe told the meeting that the\n\"disastrous results of the passage\nof Bills 87 and 91 had 'warned'\ncapital to keep out of British\nColumbia.\"\nLast winter, the president said,\nBunker Hill and Sullivan Mining\nand Concentrating Company had\nshown a keen interest in the Mollie\nMac lead deposit in the Lardeau\ndistrict and a deal, satisfactory to\nall parties, was in a state of advanced negotiation when the ill-\nconceived and ill-timed measures\nwere made known to the public.\nHe added that eight major exploration companies have been\ninterested in the Mollie Mac mine\nbut all are afraid to invest solid\nmoney in a province so hostile to\nthe development of mining, The\nNorthern Miner report continues.\nThe meeting was assured that\nevery precaution was being taken\nto protecttthe shareholders' interest. All important claims were\nbeing maintained in good standing\nand proper inspection was being\nmade to see the camp buildings\ndid not depreciate unduly.\nSix of the seven directors, G. E\nMcCuaig, W. R. Wheeler, R. T. Col-\nquhoun, J .J. Murphy, H. L. Jest-\nley, and F. Read, were re-elected,\nA. Ainsworth was elected a director and later became the company\nsecretary.\nPatients tn Kootenay Lake General\nHospital can have the Dally News\nsent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844\nCirculation Department,\nDaily News.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nWALLACH \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Mrs. Mary Wallach\nwill be held at the Thompson\nFuneral Home, Saturday at 2 p.m.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig will officiate\nand interment will take place in\nNelson  Memorial  Park.\nJan.\nFeb.\nMar.\nApril\nMay\nJune\nJuly\nAug.\nSept.\nOct.\nNov.\nDec.\n12,759\n12,492\n14,783\n12,764\n11,110\n11,778\n11,299\n10,017\n9,839\n10,364\n11,126\n11,429\n1,421\n1,401\n1,350\n1,225\n1,065\n1,160\n1,220\n903\n938\n975\n1,025\n1,050\n14,180\n13,893\n16,133\n13,989\n12,175\n12,938\n12,519\n10,920\n10,777\n11,339\n12,151\n12,479\n14,975\n13,161\n14,818\n15,579\n15,971\n16,565\n17,832\n17,651\n17,137\n16,815\n14,269\n14,439\nMore Grants\nAnnounced\nFor Projects\nApproval of more grants for community celebrations and permanent projects in the Kootenays have\nbeen announced by the B.C. Centennial Committee.\nLarge grants include $5838 for\nNelson for construction of a T-bar\nski lift at the Silver King ski hill.\nSalmo will use its grant of $1572\nfor the development of its community centennial park.\nWynndel receives $685.20 for hall\nredecoration, and Galloway $526.20\nfor construction of a community\nhall.\n'57 tot 139,760 13,733 153,493\n'56 tot 172,635 16,577 189,212\nDec.     32,875   2,844   35,719\nSkating Schedule\nSet At Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE - At the advisory\ncouncil meeting of the Fruitvale\nRecreation Commission, the skating schedule as proposed by the\nCommissioners was approved and\nMiss M. Durrant informed the\nmeeting that each school pupil\nwould receive one. H. Krueger was\nappointed to locate a caretaker for\nthe rink.\nDate of the annual meeting was\nannounced as February 13, at\nwhich time the constitution and\nbylaws will be reviewed, and three\nofficers elected, two for a two-year\nterm and one for a half term to\nfill a vacancy.\nBURNING PLANE LANDS\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014An American\nAirlines pilot Monday landed his\ntransport, with one of its four engines aflame without panic or injury among the 59 passengers and\nfive crew members. Pilot R. W.\nDitfurth said he noticed flames\nburst from the No. 1 engine of\nhis DC-7 as it approached Chicago Midway Airport for a landing. After the landing passengers\nleft through the pilot's exit and\nground crews put out the blaze.\nICALL\nWEST\nTRANSFER\nCO.\n719 Baker St.   \u2014   Nelson, B.C\nPhone 33\nFor Service\nCall....\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing ond Heating Service\nLIFE NOT\nWORTH LIVING?\nThen, wake up the liverl\nYou know that sour, sunk, constipated feeling?\nIt may be caused by the liver. If your liver\ndoesn't pour out up to two pinla of bile a day\nyour food may not digest properly, gas bloats\nup your stomach and you fee) that life's just\nnot worth living. That's when the liver needs\nmild gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills, These\nfamous vegetable pills help stimulate the flow\nof liver bile. Soon your digestion starts functioning properly and you feel that happy days art\nhere againl Don't mi stay sunk. Always keep\nCarter's Little Livor Pills on hand.\nMODERN HOMES NEED\nextra phones\nONLY 95c PER MONTH\nW3     BRITISH COLOMBIA TELEPHOHC COMPANY\n. iii'WjWft\ni..rfraVnij,\n Established April 22, 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Clasj Mall, Post Oftlce Department. Ottawa.\nMEMBER 01 THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repuBllcatlon of all news\ndispatches credited to It or lo The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published'thereln.\nWednesday, January 22, 1958\t\nCommission Faces Complex Subject\nThe provincial government has\nnamed a royal commission to examine\nBritish Columbia's educational system\nto see if It can be improved, Members\nof the commission are Dean A. N. F.\nChant, dean of the faculty of arts and\nscience at UBC; John E. Llerch, executive vice-president of the Powell Hlver\nCompany, and Riley P. Walrad, general manager of B.C. Fruits Processors\nLtd., and of B.C. Tree Fruits Ltd.\nThe commission will Inquire into\nthe state of the educational system\nwith specific attention to school discipline and to the possibility of increasing school hours and lengthening the\nschool day.\nThe composition of the commission,\nconsisting as It does of an eminent\nuniversity professor and two high\nranking businessmen, should meet\nwith general approval. With its limitation to three members It should be able\nlo reach decisions quickly, though we\nshall be much surprised If the commission does not find that Its subjects\nof enquiry are much more complex\nand difficult to assess than a superficial examination would suggest.\nSchool discipline, for example, Is\nnot the simple matter of obeying or\ndisobeying orders. It is bound up with\n' many other things including the home\nand the community. Nevertheless, the\ncommission will be able to enlighten\nthe general public on the matter with\nconsiderable benefit to It. It Is quite\npossible that the commission will find\nthat the amount of indiscipline has\nbeen exaggerated, but It may be able\nto suggest ways of strengthening the\nhands of the teachers.\nFor years parents have been complaining bitterly of the inflexibility of\na school system which arbitrarily decides the age at which children should\nattend school. They see no reason why\nchildren should have to wait until they\nare nearly seven before they can begin to learn.\nIt is doubtful If the school year can\nbe lengthened. Climatic conditions\nhave much to do with the long summer\nholiday and without air conditioning\nclass rooms in summer would be unbearably hot, but quite possibly the\nschool day can be lengthened with\nadvantage.\nThe appointment of the commission\nat this time will go far to reassure the\npeople of B.C. that the education\ndepartment is not a hidebound institution, that it is not adverse to criticism\nand that it sincerely wishes to be as\nefficient as possible. In a democracy\nthat is Important.\nBack to the Mind\nSeveral years ago a history professor at\nth* University of Saskatchewan, Dr. Hilda\nNeatby, wrote a book called \"So Little for\nthe Mind\". It was a caustic attack on Canadian education at the elementary and high\nschool level. And it received an almost unanimously hostile reception from Canadian educational Officials and administrators.\nWhere Dr. Neatby failed (though we suspect the reaction to her indictment was not\nentirely negative) the Russians and their\nSputniks now appear to be succeeding. Ontario's minister of education, Hon. W. J.\nDunlop, disclosed the other day that he Is\nworking on new regulations to reintroduce\ncompetition Into Ontario schools and return\nto fundamentals in elementary and secondary\nschools.\nMr. Dunlop Implied that he himself had\nwanted to do this for a long time. But he\ngave the Sputniks and the post-Sputnik stories\nabout Soviet education credit for enabling\nhim ,to convince \"some people\" (was he referring to members of the Ontario College of\nEducation faculty?) that hard work and fundamentals are Important.\nThe minister's revolution Includes giving\nmarks to students and telling them where\nthey stand in their class because \"they have\nto meet competition In adult life\". Mathematics. English and the sciences will be\nstressed at the expense of some options. Elementary pupils will hear more about reading,\nwriting, arithmetic, spelling and composition.\nIn other words, Ontario -schools are going to start giving children something which\nwill train, stimulate and challenge their\nminds, instead of worrying about turning out\n\"socially adjusted\" human beings. There will\nbe fervent \"hurrahs\" on all sides from peode\nwho have themselves been worrying at the\nextent to which public education had lost its\nsense of direction.\nWe cannot help but ask a rather blunt\nbut not unimportant ouestion raised by Mr.\nDunlop's statement. What ritfit have educationalists to call themselves by that name if\nthey ignore reason and the lessons of history\nand can only be convince-! by concrete and\nfrightening evidence that their theories have\nbeen wrong?\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nEncouraging Industries\nIn a Growing, Community\nThere are certain Intangibles that influence industries to a community. They are\nthings that a decade ago, a large corporation\nseeking to locate a branch or a main industry\ndid not consider of first Importance.\nToday the situation Is a matter of climate, not the degree of heat or cold, or the\nmean temperature of the area, but is the climate of a friendly one to industry. A friendly\nclimate is one where the people already resident ln the community will welcome a newcomer. Will the business men look with favor\non a new Industry, it may be competitive\u2014or\nwill there be an attitude of come if you want\nto, but you are on your own?\nIs this sentiment reflected in the potential labor to be employed? Is there the attitude that a new industry should not be assisted to locate by the city, the board of\ntrade, but as it Is free enterprise and capitalistic it does not nee dhelp or even a welcome?\nThis Is a mighty Important question to the\nindustrialist seeking a location. But there are\nother matters which he weighs carefully.\nWhat are the recreational facilities? How is\nthe community equipped for schooling, hospitals, housing, water supply?\nNone of these things have a direct bearing on production from the plant, but they\nhave a tremendous influence on the people\nwho will be employed. If they are happy, the\nproduction of the plant will benefit.\nStability In civic leaders and the community spirit among residents help to make\na community attractive.\nExperience, shows that labor trouble is\nInherent, in a community which does not have\nthese things to offer.\nThese are the things which must be\nwatched by those who seek to develop a community. They must recognize that they are\na challenge to them and if they do not exist\nand cannot be used to \"sell\" Ihe city to Ihe\nindividual, the company or the corporation,\nthen what other assets can be put forward to\ncounterbalance these deficiencies? They will\nhave to be good, for the matters listed are\nranking high with those who seek locations.\nIt is the local spirit, the friendliness and\nthe desire to help not only the newcomer\nbut the entire community that is weighed\nseriously.\u2014Kelowna Courier.\nOntar\nno Town\nVot\nes\nT\no Retain Fluoridation\nThorold, Ontario, has made a record.\nWhile Nanaimo, Vancouver and other centres\nin British Columbia were taking a plebiscite\nvote on the introduction of fluoridated water,\nthe Ontario City was also taking a fluoridation vote. It was unique in Canada, in that it\nwas the first instance on record where an\neffort was made to have the fluoridation\nscheme abandoned several years after it had\nbeen Introduced. Supporters of the treatment\nof the water supply in the interests of minimizing tooth decay must have been truly\ngratified at the two-to-one vote In favor of\ncontinued fluoridation of the community\nwater supply.\nA vigorous campaign was waged in Thorold by both sides. Director of the Welland\nand district health unit there was able to\npoint to progressive gains in the condition\nof the teelh of Thorold children since 1952,\nwhen fluoridation was launched.\nIt is now history that Nanaimo ratepayers turned thumbs down on the question of\nfluoridation this past fall. It is refreshing for\nthose who favored fluoridation here to learn\nthat the Ontario voters thought enough of the\ngood results from fluoridation after five years\nto vote overwhelmingly for its retention.\nThorold's action will now lead the way\nfor adoption ol fluoridation in Ihe water supplies of other centres in that Ontario section.\n\u2014Nanaimo Free Press.\n i\t\nIt's Been Said\nEpicurus says, \"Gratitude is a virtue that\nhas commonly profit annexed to it.\" And\nwhere is the virtue that has not? But still the\nvirtue is to be valued for itself, and not for\nthe profit that attends it.-Seneca.\nPress Comment\nEMBARGO ON OIL!\nIt is curious how changed circumstances\ncan change convictions. Western Canada tor\ndecades produced the advocates of free trade.\nTheir argument was simple, and logical.\nFarmers had to sell in the unprotected\n(for their produce) home market and had to\ncompete in free world markets. Yet they had\nto buy goods produced in the home market\nby protected industries.\nNow we have the Calgary Herald proposing an absolute ban on imports of Venezuelan\noil. This would enable Canadian oil to get into\nthe Montreal market, where imported oil\nnow is cheaper.\nIt admits this might result in higher\nprices for petroleum products in Eastern\nCanada. It excuses this probability by saying: \"It must be remembered Westerners\nhave been paying heavy tariffs and freight\nrates for years for the benefit of Eastern\nindustry. It is time now for the debt to be\nrepaid.\"\nIn other words, Westerners aren't averse\nto tariffs, or even absolute embargoes, if\nthese be to their advantage. They only object\nto tariffs where they seem to be to their disadvantage.\u2014Windsor Star.\nGENERALLY TRUE\nIt is expensive to train and equip and\nmaintain a police officer, and it's hard enou .h\nto get and keep good ones. Why not make\nmaximum use of their skill, courage, judgment, responsibility? Milwaukee has 5800\nparking meters; tending them is a big but\npurely mechanical chore. Wasting trained officers on such work just doesn't seem efficient.\u2014Milwaukee Journal.\nAT SNAIL'S PACE\nFrom East Grlnstead, England, comes a\nreport that a damaged postcard was delivered in that Sussex town with the notation by\nthe post office: \"Eat\u00bbn by snails in rural\npostbox.\" Apparently it is not only on this\nside of the Atlantic th\u00bbt mall moves at a\nsnail's pace, upon occasion.\u2014Belleville Intelligencer.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n By FraacM Drake-\u2014\u2014\nWRY DHINK\nBar tenders Ii Washington will now mix\na sputnik cocktail-it's a wry drl\"k.\n.. \u25a0 ' \u2014Peterborough Examiner.\nLook In the section In which your\nbirthday comes and find what\nyour outlook is, according to the\nstars,\nFor Thursday, January 23, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aires)\n\u2014 Mixed influences, attend to\nurgent matters first, then take\nlesser tilings in the order of their\nimportance. You can have a good\nday. '\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Your Venus favorably situated.\nDay, on the whole, can be profitable, progressive. You should\nmake good headway now. Don't\nstrain but keep usefully busy.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 20 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Some bright prospects, especially for familiar matters, finishing Incompleted tasks. New undertakings can also prove beneficial, if handled smartly, efficiently.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 This can be a prosperous day,\nwith many planets in stimulating,\nbenefic positions. Give full rein\nto your progressive ideas and ingenuity.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Some self-control needed now.\nDon't heed bad advice. Use common sense; maintain good humor.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 A happy, prosperous outlook. All activities requiring keen mentality and discernment are sponsored, encouraged.\nBe of good cheer; have confidence\nthat you will gain objectives if\nyou try.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Many advantages\nindicated for sincere efforts and\nfaithful devotion to duty. Once\nyou have delib_rated as to what\ncourse to pursue, get on the path\nand stay on it.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 A day for conservative action, sensible planning.\nYou will attain more by taking\ntime at the beginning of the day\nto allocate efficiently.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Favorable influences! Take a little extra time\nto plot and.plan the day's doings\nand in the end it will benefit you\nall round. Hard work, difficult\nproblems should be handled easily.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20  (Capricorn) \u2014 Read Scorpio.\nPOSITIVELY WRONG\nNo one is ouite so positive he is rleht as\nthe fellow who Is wrong.\u2014Calgary Herald.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nTHEVRE S\/0.V.W6 TH\/*T\nMUSEUM PIECE ID PRESENT\nTO CORMATT WHEN HE\nRETIRES-IF THEy DON'T\nHAVE TO SHOOT HIM\nWntrh Your l.nnnuoce\nREDOUND (re-DOUND): Verb, intransitive\u2014To rise or surge; especially, to flow\nback as a consequence. Origin: Latin\u2014re,\nagain, plus undare, to rise in waves.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nWe know that whatsoever God\ndoeth, It shall be forever; nothing\ncan be put to It, nor any thing\ntaken away from it. Eccleslastcs\n3:14.\nLife is filled with uncertainties\nand confusion. It is good to know\nthere Is something eternal and unchangeable, something we can hold\nto with safety and complete assurance.\nYou have a llmllar outlook. Don't\ndally where, things should be\nstarted early; a well alloted and\nbalanced schedule brings returns.\nGood raysl\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n1? (Aquarius) \u2014 It is Important\nthat you put forth consistent effort and .that you speed up in\nplaces where needed. Influences\nare promising for your endeavors\nand personal Interests IF you\nwork with them.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You may not be able\nto finish all you wish now, but\nyou surely need not have a dull\ntime. Try to Increase your knowledge wherever possible.\nYOU BORN TODAY: Honesty,\nkind-heartedness and a healthy\ndesire for knowledge are strong\nIn this sector. You have a tendency to be moody at times; curb\nthis. You have much talent and\ncapability to develop and nourish,\nso don't waste time on harmful\nfailings or habits. It is within your\npower to correct your faults and\nstrive to better your way of life.\nKing Features.\nDakota Oil Find\nDENVER (AP) - American oil\nmen are giving considerable attention to what some can the\nmost important development in\nthe Williston Basin in several\nmonths \u2014 Amerada Petroleum's\nNo. 1 Shelvik well in North Da-\nkola's Fancy Buttes field.\nThe basin extends across Montana and North Dakota,\nPetroleum Information says the\nwell is an anparent discovery in\nIhe Silurian Foundationand\n\"there has been no promise of\nSilurian production in previous\ndrilling this far north.\"\nAmerada is drilling below 12,-\n023 feet at the well after getting\n1,755. feet of free oil in a drill-\nstem test at 12,622-70 feet.\nIn Montana, Phillips Petroleum\nis pumping 62 barrels of oil and\n16 barrels of water a day at the\nNo. 1 Kropp, a Maiiison discovery. Production is from 1,916-30\nfeet.\n!\nTo Eat Fruit\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canadians eat only 60 per cent of the\nfresh fruit and vegetables they\nneed for good health, president\nR. D. Wolfe Monday told the Canadian Fruit .Wholesalers Association.\nMr. Wolfe told the association's\nannual convention fresh fruit and\nveg.t. b!. sales in Canada amount\nto $300,000,000 a year, but Canadians are getting only 345 pounds\neach on an average basis instead\nof 537 pounds recommended by\nthe department of health.\n\"It Is almost Incredible that we\nshould be so far from our goal,\"\nhe told delegates representing\nwholesalers from coast to coast.\"\nHe said the recent plea of the\nCanadian Horticultural council\nfor increased tariff protection\nfrom import competition showed\nthe serious condition of Canadian\nfresh fruit and vegetable sales\nbut tariffs will not provide permanent solutions to the industry's\nproblems. >\nMr. Wolfe said fresh produce\nis getting smaller and smaller\nspace in Canadian supermarkets\nwhile increased prominence is\ngiven to frozen food displays.\nGang Ties Up Bank\nManager and Family\nt2unL ML\nWhen I smell a fresh-lil cigar or\ncigarette, I almost wish I smoked;\nbut when I smell a left-over ash\ntray, I thank Heaven I don't.\n$\ntmm of Death\nGENEVA (Reuters)\u2014A 24-year-\nold Swiss was killed by a child's\nsnowball while skiing in the Jura\nMountains, it was learned here\ntoday.\nMartial Etienne was skiing with\nhis fiance Monday when children\nplaying higher up the slope let a\nsnowball roll downhill.\nBy the time it hit Etienne it\nwas a giant some eight {eet in\ndiameter. It picked him up and\ncarried him away a_ it sped down\nthe hill.\nEtienne was dead from suffocation by the time rescuers dug him\nout of the mass of snow.\nSTOP\nrUr\\i\nHEADACHE\nWhen you suffer from pain of (j J\nHeadache, Neuralgia or I.-: 11\nMuscular aches you want to 1\";';., 11\nslop thai pain fast... So \" *' 'I\ntake Aspirin IA tablet starts L\u2014'\ndisintegrating almost the inslanl you\ntake It\u2014starts, to relieve that pain\nalmost instantly!\nSOUTH MOUNTAIN, Ont. (CP)\nA gang of at least four masked\nmen Monday night trussed up a\nbank manager's family, forced\nthe manager to take them to his\nbank and then escaped with\nsafety-deposit-box loot alter a\nlookout pistol-whipped a passerby.\nPolice and manager Ivan Keays\nof the Bank of Nova Scotia\nbranch in this village 30 miles\nsouth of Ottawa, said it would\ntake time to evaluate the loss,\nThe number of boxes rifled was\nnot disclosed, but reports varied\nbetween nine and 16, of 78 in the\nbranch's strongroom.\nThe gang's efforts to force Mr.\nKeays to open the branch's vault\nfailed when he said the numbers\nto open its split-combination lock\nweft divided between him and\nanother employee.\nThree men, with women's silk\nstockings covering their heads\nand faces, had arrived at the\nKeays home at 9 p.m. and herded\nMrs. Keays, their son Harry, 7,\nand Mrs. Bertha Merkley, 70-\nMrs. Keays' mother \u2014 into the\nliving-room.\nMr. Keays was at a church\nmeeting and the trio watched\ntelevision with the family to while\naway the time until his return.\nMrs. Keays said pistols kept the\nfamily covered throughout.\n\"They  were  very  polite  and\nthey kept joking, apparently to\nkeep us calm,\" she said.\nORDERED TO BANK\nJust after 11 p.m. the 50-year-\nold bank manager returned home\nand was ordered at pistol-point to\ntake the group to the bank\u2014100\nyards distant and on the opposite\nside of the street.\nFoiled of entry into the vault,\nthe men ordered Mr. Keays to\nopen the strong-room. Two more\nmen then entered with electric\ndrill equipment, he said, and took\n40 minutes to open the undisclosed number of deposit boxes.\nMeanwhile, Andrew Kenney of\nnearby Winchester, Ont., was undergoing the second of two pistol-\nwhippings by a lookout.\nMr. Kenney, driving through\nthe village en route home, noticed the man, who appeared\nmuffled against the cold.\nThe stranger refused an offer\nof help.\nSuspicious, Mr. Kenney drove\naround the block. As he neared\nthe bank a second time a 1952\nautomobile pulled out and cut him\noff.\nA masked man left the car, ordered Kenney from his car and\nwhacked him over the head several times with the pistol.\nMr. Kenney staggered to a tele\nphone pole, to which he clung for\nsupport, and the man went over\nand again beat him over the\nhead, sending him to the ground,\nsemi-conscious.\nApparently the lookout party\nsignalled to those Inside the bank\nwho roped up Mr. Keays and fled\nwith their loot, leaving their drilling eq.lpnii ui behind.\nMr. Keays freed'himself within\n10 minutes.\nMr. Keays found his family unharmed.\nHammarskjold\nMay Visit Russ\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)\nUN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold Indicated Tuesday that\nhe is considering a visit to Moscow lo discuss world problems.\nThis would Include disarmament.\nHammarskjold already has had\nprivate talks wilh U.S. State Secretary Dulles, British Foreign\nSecretary Selwyn Lloyd and\nFrench Foreign Minister Christian Plneau.\nAsked at a press conference\nwhether he has plans to visit\nMoscow soon, Hammarskjold said\nhe is going to Kuala Lumpur, Malaya, early in March for a meeting and hopes to visit several\ncapitals on his way to and from\nMalaya. So far, he said, there is\nno definite decision as to which\ncountries he will visit.\nThe secretary-general said the\ndisarmament problem still Is primarily a matter for the UN and\nhe knows of no government which\nwants to change this. He acknowledged, however, that it could be\nhandled both inside and outside\nthe world organi.atlon.\nDON\nT PITY\nTHE\nPOOR GIRL!\nJUST TELL\nHER TO\nTAKE. . .\nBUCKLEYS MIXTURE\nShe'll >>t split-second relief as the powerful\nmedication In Buckley's Mixture Instantly spreide\nwarming, soothing Ingredients through throat.\nchest and tubas - and stops the tickle that\nmakes her cough. Contslns no syrup - sefe for\ndiabetics. 50\u00ab and 8S\u00ab everywhere. Thet's why It Is -\nCANADA! FASTEST-SEL-IN-\nLet these help you to Planned Saving\nUse our Personal Chequing Account and our Regular\nSavings Account together.\n1     Pay all bills by cheque on a Personal Chequing Accouty. A\nX    quarterly statement will help you keep your records straight.\nThe low service charges are prepaid. Your cancelled cheques\nare on file if you need them. >\n9    Keep your Savings Account for saving. Add to it from every\npay. As your balance grows, you'll gain peace of mind.\nPlanned Saving Booklet\nBrief and deer - with\ncolored charts - this 12\npage folder gives you\nvaluable pointers on\nPlanned Sevlng, Ask\nour nearest branch\ntor your copy of the\n\".-Account Plan\".\nStart Planned Saving at our nearest branch now.\nTHE CANADIAN\nBANK OF COMMERCE\n770 BRANCHES ACROSS CANADA READY TO SERVE YOU\nNelson Branch\u2014K, CAMPBELL, Manager.\n ^\nAbout the Town\nPHONE 1844\nAt ,a table centred with golden\nand niauve flowers, Lady Lions\nenjoyed a dinner at the Lord Nelson dining room. Following the\ndinner, members gathered at the\nhome of Mrs. D. M, Sample on\nJosephine Street where a meeting\nwas conducted. Mrs. R. L. Dun\ncan reported  that baby  nighties\nBeef Slew,\nA Man's Dish\nBy MARGARET CARR\nRich, hearty and delicious, beef\nstew and dumplings Is a favorite\nman's dish. And, of course, the\nwhole family enjoys this hearty\nold-fashioned dish.\nAny 'cut of lean stew meat is\nthe beginning of a fragrant stew\nWhen you have browned your meat\nand simmered It gentlv toward\ntenderness, bring on the fresh\nvegetables. Carrots, onions and\npotatoes are the traditional choice,\nbut you can add to the list to suit\nyour fancy, and whatever is\ncurrently plentiful.\nHerb dumplings are the crowning glory. A fluffy dumpling, delightful in Itself, gets an air of\ndistinction when herbs are added.\nHerb-flavored dumplings lend an\nadditional aroma to the whole\nstew, and It's well to know that\nstew and herbs have always been\non the most pleasant terms.\nWhen you have mixed your\ndumplings, drop the batter carefully by spoonfuls on top of the\nstew so that it will steam but not\nget its feet wet.\" The new look in\ndumplings, incidentally, can be\nachieved by steaming first without\na lid on the pot, and then with it\ncovered, Leaving the dumplings\nuncovered for the first half of\ncooking and covering the last half,\npermits them to emerge from the\npot with a maximum of lightness.\nBEEF STEW WITH\nHERB DUMPLINGS\nOne and one-half teaspoons ^lt.\ndivided; Vt teaspoon pepper, 3\ntablespoons flour, Hi pounds beef\nstew meat, cut in Hi-inch pieces;\n3 tablespoons fat, 1 quart water,\nVi teaspoon Tabasco, 12 small\nwhite onions, peeled; 6 medium\n\u00ab carrot., scraped and quartered.\nDumplings\nTwo cups sifted pastry flour, 4'\nteaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspoon salt,, Vi teaspoon powdered\nthyme, 2 tablespoons finely chopped parsley (optional), 1 cup milk.\nBlend together Vi teaspoon of\nthe salt, pepper and flour; roll\npieces of meat in blended mixture.\nMelt fat in heavy kettle; add beef\nand brown on all sides. Add water,\nVi teaspoon of the salt and Tabasco. Cover: simmer two to 2Vi\nhours until meat is almost tender.\nAdd remaining Vi teaspoon salt,\nonions and carrots; cover and\ncook until vegetables are tender.\nFor dumplings, sift together\nflour, baking powder, salt and\nthyme. Stir in parsley. Add milk;\nmix only enough to moisten ingredients. Drop by spoonfuls\n(about 12) on top of a piece of\nmeat or vegetable ln gently boiling stew. Cook uncovered 10 min-\n,utes; cover tightly and cook 10\nminutes longer. Makes four to six\nservings.\nHOW TO HELP YOUR\nSore, Painful Piles\nIf you ar. discouraged about letting\nrid of the itching eoroneu end burning\npnin of your pilei a grand lurprile awaiu\nyou when you try H.m-Roid, an Internal\npile treatment,\nOet a pec-ego of Hem-Roid at any\ndrug itore and uie ea directed. You will\nbe pleaeed et how quickly your pile\ntrouble ia relieved. If you ar* not 100%\npleated after using Hem-Roid 2 or 3\ndeyi ae a teit, aik for your money bad-\nRefund agreement by all drug atoree.\nmade by members had been delivered to the hospital, and plans\nwere discussed for a Valentine\npotluck supper to be held at the\nhome of Mrs. Frank Beresford on\nfaelson Avenue. At the dinner,\nPresident Mrs. R. A. Phillips, was\npresented with a corsage.\n* *  \u2022\nA month's holiday In Edmonton,\nLethbridge, Warner and Fort\nMacleod has been enjoyed by Aid.\nGeorge Eckmier, who returned\nMonday evening to his home on\nNelson Avenue.\n* *   *\nRelatives in Nelson to attend the\nfuneral of Munroe Karl Spence\nTuesday were Mrs. Bruce Perrin\nand Mrs. Bill Motek of Kimberley; Bill and Bert McDonald, Bill\nSpence and Rolph Spence of\nCranbrook; E. R. Spence of Salmon Arm; and from Grand Forks\na close friend of the family, Mrs.\nJ. H. Mathews.\nNew  Denver Group\nI. coins Year's Work\nNEW DENVER - St. Stephen's\nAnglican Church Helpers have\nstarted their 1958 work with their\nJanuary meeting at the home of\nMrs. F. H. Angrignon.   ,\nOfficers are Mrs. Stanley Ped-\nley, president; Mrs. Kenneth\nSmith, vice-president, and Mrs. J.\nL.'Irwin, secretary-treasurer. Mrs\nA. L. Harris was welcomed as a\nnew member and Miss Erna Mein\nardus as a visitor,\n(Dmal llfL With.\nPrinted Pattern\n\"SISSY\" FRONT\nThe \"sissy\" front dress\u2014spans\nthe seasons so beautifully in\nmost any fabric! Two necklines,\ntwo sleeve versions in our Printed\nPatern make it ideal all year.\nTucked bodice, flaring skirt easy\nto sew!\nPrinted Pattern 9240: Misses'\nSizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16\ntakes 4% yards 39-inch.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c) in\ncoints (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W,\nToronto, Ont.\nNOW . . . LOOK YOUNGER\nPUT COLOR IN YOUR LIFE WITH\nSCOTT'S ANXI.ORAY HAIR TONE\nIMPARTS NATURAL LOOKING\nCOLOR AND LUSTRE TO GRAY\nSTREAKED AND FADED HAIR\n\u2022 For both men and women     \u2022 Condition! the Hair\n\u2022 Greaseless white cream for all shades of hair\n\u2022 Money back guarantee\nUse   at  directed\nNOT A TINT  f.y^week.    ^^ ^w QUT\nrequired\nSMALL SIZE\n$3\nLARGE TRIPLE SIZE\n$6\nAt MANN DRUGS - Nelson '\u00ab\nKIMBERLEY DRUG & BOOK CO. LTD.-Klmberley\nSCOTT'S DRUG STORE - Cranbrook\nCHILL'WEATHER and wintry winds don't deter\nMamie Eisenhower, the first lady of the United States.\nShe wears a pleased smile and new spring hat\u2014composed of yellow blossoms with a white feather trim\u2014\nas she models the creation at the White House for the\nbenefit of photographers.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nFruitvale United Church\nWA Hears Good Reports\nFRUITVALE-Gralifying reports\non the year's work were given at\nthe monthly meeting of St. Paul's\nUnited Church Women's Association. These were* given by the\nleaders of the CGIT and Explorers\ngroups as well as from committee\nconveners.\nMrs. J. Wood of Circle 5 conducted the devotional, reading\n\"Our Debt to Missions\" from the\nbook \"Walking With God.\" The\nprogram on missionary work in\nJapan was given by Mrs. L. C.\nHooper.\nA sale of baking and needlework\nwas planned, and will be held some\ntime in May.\nConveners were appointed for the\ncoming year as follows: circle 1,\nMrs. F. E. Haines; circle 2, Mrs.\nD. Haines; circle 3, Mrs. F. Gor-\nden; circle 4, Mrs. A. Paterson;\ncircle 5, Mrs. J. Wood; girls' work,\nMrs. Fred Haines; manse, Mrs. F.\nCullen; flowers, Mrs. S. Jefferson;\nprogram, Mrs. Hooper; sewing,\nMrs. F. Halifax; visiting, Mrs. W.\nDunca; mission supply, Mrs. Jefferson and Mrs. Paterson; Christian education, Mrs. W. Veitch\nstewardship, Mrs. Jefferson; rep\nresentative to the official board,\nMrs. Fred Peitzsche.\nMeetings are held the second\nWednesday of each month and\nnew members and adherents are\nwelcome to attend.\nCambridge University received\nits royal charter in 1231, Oxford\nin 1248,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 22, 1958\nPorcelain Display Much Admired\nAt Circle's Anniversary Tea\nA pretty yellow anniversary arch\nover a colorful centrepiece of fruit,\nflanked by yellow tapers, decorated\nthe tea table at the Martha and\nMary Circle's 20th anniversary tea\nheld ln the Memorial Hall of St.\nSaviour's Pro-Cathedral Monday\nafternoon.\nWell-attended,   the   event   was\nTOP ATHLETES\nTO BE MARRIED\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two of\nBritish Columbia's top athletes\nwill be married May 22.\nThe engagement of Ted Hunt,\nhigh-scoring halfback with British\nColumbia Lions, and swimming\nace Helen Stewart was disclosed\nMonday night as Hunt was presented with a trophy as athlete of\nthe year ln a newspaper poll. Miss\nStewart won the same title in 1955.\nHunt, 24, starred in skiing,\nrugby and lacrosse before switching to professional football. Miss\nStewart represented Canada in\nfreestyle swimming events at the\n1954 British Empire Games, the\n1955 Pan-American Games and\nthe 1956 Olympics. She set a\nworld's record for women In the\n100-yard freestyle in 1956 and\nholds several'Canadian marks.\nMrs. DeBruyn Heads\nFruitvale Club\nFRUITVALE - The Friendly\nCUib has elected Mrs. S. D. Mac-\nIsaac as president for the coming\nyear. Mrs. Jack DeBruyn was\nelected as vice-president and Mrs.\nLillian Robinson, secretary treasurer. The meeting was held at Mrs.\nRobinson's and a guest, Mrs. Floyd\nNixon of Rossland, a former men>\nber, was In attendance.\nA review of 1957 was made and\nit was decided to renew membership in the Kootenay Society for\nHandicapped Children.\nFLOWER   ARTIST   FUNERAL\nTORONTO (CPI-Private funeral services were held Monday\nfor Clara Sophia Hagarty, an\nartist famed for her studies of\nflowers. She died Saturday. iShe\nstudied under Sir Wyly Grier and\nSydney Tully, with William M.\nChase in New York, and later in\nParis and Holland.\nopened with a blessing by Rev.\nCanon G. W. Lang.\nDisplayed on a long table was a\ncollection of antique china and\npottery, a feature of the tea. Exhibited pieces were from many\nNelson homes and most had interesting histories.\nOne of the earliest pieces was a\ntrinket box of charcoal hue with a\ndistinctive .Greek design. Leeds and\nDelft china were placed near a\nwhile Staffordshire bowl which\nhad been presented to the owner's\nmother as a christening present,\nand a. Staffordshire onion plate. A\ndouble basket compote and an\nEnglish Davenport compote were\nadjacent to bowls from Austria\nand Germany, the latter being\nshell-shaped. Porcelain from Cologne, Limoges and Tivoll surrounded a clover-shaped cup from\nFrance, a Dresden cup and saucer\nbrought from India to Nelson, a\nhandleless cup from Dresden, and\ntwo beautiful little snuff boxes\nfrom Sevres and Lllla, France.\nThere was an old Chinese lustre\nbowl brought to Cape Cod on a\nsailing ship in 1800,\nMIXED COMPANY\nA Royal Doulton bowl and jug,\ndates unknown, had for company\na pair of virgin lamps from\nFrance and vases of Japanese\nNartaki ware. The Royal Doulton\njug had inscribed on its sides:\n\"May we never break a joke to\ncrack a reputation.\"\nAn American milk glass plate, a\nChinese potpourri urn, two Japanese chocolate pots, one of porcelain with gold trim appllqued and\none hand-painted, two jardinieres\nan Italian water jug of pottery, a\npink water jug brought from Trinidad in 1892, hand-painted, a number of pieces of Sunderland pottery, pieces from Portobella, commemorating the Battle of Balaclava In 1834, ironstone plates, one\nof which has a green design with\nsilver Inlay, and a French china\neight-day clock which is nearly 100\nyears old \u2014 all these spread out\nin a provocative manner attracted\nmuch attention.\nPouring for the tea were Mrs.\nVincent Fink, Mrs. Harry Lake,\nMrs. S. C. Latornell and Mrs. C.\nM. Beltner. The many guests were\nreceived by Mrs. Lang and Mrs.\nW. B. Christie. The porcelain dis\nplay was arranged by Mrs. R, H.\nDill.\nOwing to the popularity of the\ndisplay, the Martha and Mary\nCircle Is planning to hold displays\nof crystal and glass, silver, and\nbrass and copper.\nHEIRLOOM STITCHERY\nThe beloved words of \"The 23rd\nPsalm,\" beautifully shown on this\nwall panel. Embroidered in rich,\nglowing colors \u2014 it's an heirloom\nto treasure!\nPattern 553: Transfer of picture\n12 x 16 inches; color chart, illustrations of stitches used.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and AD\nDRESS.\nOur gift to- you\u2014two wonderful\nT.V. LAMPS\n$7.95 to $13.95\npattrens for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book, plus dozens of\nother new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery, Iron\nons, novelties. Send 29 cents for\nyour copy of this book NOW \u2014\nwith gift pattern printed in ltl\nRiddles lust Invo th. wild cherry flavor\n... and It soothes, relieves so fast.\nMi.\nTHE CHILDREN'S OWN\nCOUGH SYRUP\nWith V.famin C\nTWO BUCKLEY PRODUCTS\nREDUCED FIRST TIME EVER! Secdu\nSMOOTH TOP #\nMADE BY THE MAKERS OF THE $79.50 Scalq POSTUREPEDIC\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\n441  Baker St. Phone 553\nHOME FURNITURE LTD.\n640 Baker St.\n^     \"v\\.\nPhone 1032\nY\u00a5\n NELSQN DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 22, 1958\nFuck's Triumph Hailed\nAs History In Making\nOH, DEM?! 1 HOPE I HAVEN'T GIVEN VOU\nTHE WROHS IMPRESSION! 1WI0NLYAW01F\nBY MARRIAGE. MY MAIPEN NAME IS DIANA\nLAMB. SO I'M ACTUAUV A IAMB, l\nMR. SAWYER. DO ,       7~i>\nI >\nBy ED SIMON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP)-Banner headlines proclaimed the event. The\nadvertising columns were filled\nwith congratulatory messages\nfrom watchmakers, meat canners\nand manufacturers of special\nlacquer and adhesives.\nAs far as London's newspapers\nwere, concerned, the arrival of\nDr. Vivian Fuchs at the South\nPole was history in the making.\nIt was the culmination of months\nof day-by-day accounts of the\nBritish party's painful progress\ntoward its objective.\nIn spite of themselves, Fuchs\nand his companions had cased to\nbe a modest party of scientists\nengaged in an International Geophysical Year project and had\nbecome the central figures in an\nepic of high adventure, dear to\nthe heart of every Fleet Street\ncirculation manager.\nPAST EXPEDITIONS\nFuchs, a methodical, 50-year-\nold geologist, is the fourth man\nto lead an overland expedition to\nthe pole. Norway's Roald Amundsen reached it in  1911.  Captain\nBank Directors\nExonerated\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A tribunal\nagreed unanimously Tuesday that\nthere was no justification for allegations that there was a leakage of advance information in\nlast fall's bank rate increase.\nThe tribunal held a lengthy inquiry into charges that persons\nwith inside information'made big\nstock market gains when the\ngovernment put up the bank rate\nby two points to seven per cent\nlast Sept. 19.\nThe report said:\n\"We have u n h e s i t a tingly\nreached the unanimous conclusion\nthat there is no justification for\nallegations that information about\nthe raising of the bank rate was\nimproperly disclosed to any person.\"\nThe tribunal, found that two\nBank of'England directors who\nfigured prominently in the inquiry\nhad neither intentionally nor unintentionally disclosed any information that the bank rate was\nabout to be raised. Neither did\nthey use their information for private gain.\nThe directors were Lord Kind-\nersley, chairman of many big\nconcerns, and William Johnston\nKeswick, chairman of Matheson\nand Company Limited.      ,\nRobert Falcon Scott got there in\nthe following year and died of\nexposure on the return journey.\nSir Edmund Hillary, leading a\nNew Zealand adjunct to the\nFuchs party, arrived at the pole\n17 days ago.\nPerhaps the biggest impetus to\nBritain's imagination was the\nvivid record of the ill-fated Scott\nexpedition. Diaries left by Scott\nand his party gave a graphic\naccount of the hardships they suffered. Fuchs and his 11 companions were the first Englishmen to follow him.\nHillary and his New Zealand-\ners have helped to ease Fuchs's\npath on the home stretch. In\ntheir trek from Scott base, on the\nNew Zealand side of Antarctica,\nthey set up bases and marked\noff danger areas for his guidance. .Additional help is offered\nby the party of United States scientists who flew to the pole at\nthe start of the geophysical year\nto establish a permanent base.\nRadio proved a mixed blessing\nto the Fuchs party two weeks\nago, when the press intercepted\na confidential message from Hillary to his leader recommending\nthat Fuchs cut short his journey\nat the pole because of the hazards of the approaching Antarctic winter.\nNewspaper accounts built up\nthe incident into a virtual mutiny\nby the New Zealander, who is\nscheduled to escort Fuchs on the\nremainder of his trip, especially\nwhen Fuchs made public his intention to disregard Hillary's advice.\nIn the end, Hillary made it\nplain that he accepted the decision and that his confidential\nmessage had been misinterpreted. The meeting of the two\nmen at the pole was friendly.\nSCIENCE TRUE WORK\nPress dispatches still herald\nFuchs's homeward trek as \"the\nmost dramatic episode of this exciting saga.\"\nBut the true significance of the\nexpedition remains the plodding\nwork of the scientists. Their periodic dynamite explosions, deep\nin the ice, are picked up by\nmicrophones placed at measured\ndistances and recorded by electronic pens on tracing paper to\ndetermine the thickness, hardness and texture of the rock beneath the ice.\nThey examine the signs of alternate melting and refreezing of\nthe ice to calculate its age and\npick up rock specimens for evidence of fossilization, magnetic\nqualities and volcanic content.\nMining prospectors, airline\ncompanies and meteorologists are among those who will\nbenefit from the party's findings.\nAsks Victoria\nTo Investigate\nBrannan Lake\nNANAIMO (CP) - Nanaimo\nCity Council will ask provincial\ngovernment intervention to prevent recurring escapes from the\nBrannan Lake Boys' Industrial\nschool whose honor system one\nalderman described as \"the biggest joke in the country.\"\nAlderman Phil Piper told the\ncouncil Monday night Nanaimo\nresidents \"live in constant fear\"\nbecause of escapes of \"juvenile\nthugs.\" He suggested \"the honor\nsystem be abandoned and a 12-\nfoot 'loaded' fence be erected\naround Brannan Lake.\"\nAlderman Bill McGregor said\ndelinquency charges would be\ndown 90 per cent in Nanaimo \"if\nit were not for these boys.\" He\nproposed Victoria be asked to investigate. Other council members supported him.'\nOLD SETTLEMENT\nLongeuil Parish, across the St.\nLawrence from Montreal, was first\nsettled in 1657.\nReport Not Ready\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Dean Angus MacPhee said Monday he 1^\ndoes not expect the report ot his\none-man royal commission investigation will be ready until\nnext fall. The dean,,head of the\ncommerce faculty at University\nof B.C., was appointed commissioner to examine the industry's\nproblems in December, 1956.\nAussies Abolish\nDictation Test\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 Australia's notorious dictation test\nfor unwanted immigrants is to be\nabolished, Immigration Minister\nAthol Townley anounced Tuesday.\nThe test, which may be given\nin any language selected by the\ndepartment of immigration, can\nbe used to debar any immigrant\non the grounds of \"education ineligibility.\"\nTownley told the Australian Citizenship Convention that the dictation test will be replaced by a\nsystem of simple entry permits.\nIf a person is to be kept out of\nthe country an official stamp will\nbe withheld from his permit.\nM   Chewing Wrigley's   \u00bb\nM     Spearmint Gum    \/L\nliplnn tn Ifp-pn -      M\nSpearmint Gum\nJw      helps to keep '\nI Your Teeth 1\nAcquit Technician\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Alex\nBeaumont, a dental technician,\nwas acquitted Monday on a\ncharge of illegally practicing dentistry.\nBeaumont was charged with\nmaking an impression of the jaw\nof a person for a fee. Magistrate\nOscar Orr found he did not receive any payment.\nLONG HISTORY\nAberdeen in Scotland was granted a charter by William the Lion\nin 1179.\n| Attractive |\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice,)\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n9:00 Good Morning\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow '\n9:45 Guiding Light *\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n10:15 Love of Life\n10:30 As The World Turns \u00ab\n11:00 Beat the Clock * -\n11:30 Houseparty *\n12:00 The Big Payoff \u00bb\n12:30 The Verdict Is Yours \u2022\n1:00 Brighter Day *\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edge of Night *\n2:00 Garry Moore \u2022\n2:45 Dan Smoot\n3:00 Fun at Home\n3:30 Dotto\n4:00 Early Show\n5:30 Song Shop\n6:00 News\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 I Love Lucy *\n7:00 The Big Record *\n8:00 The Millionaire *\n8:30 I've Got a Secret \u2022\n9:00 Circle Theater\n10:00 The Crusader\n10:30 The News\n10:35 Show \u2014 Shock\nKHQ-TV - Channel 0\n10 Color Test Pattern\n13 Test Pattern\n25 NARTB\n26 Bible Reading\n29 Program Previews\n30 Q Tunes\n00 Tic Tac Dough *\n30 It Could Be You *\n00 Arlene Francis Show *\n30 Fun To Reduce *\n00 Price Is Right \u2022\n30 Kitty Foyle *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) \u2666\n00 Queen For a Day.*\n45 Modern Romances *\n00 Dear Phoebe *\n30 Truth or Consequences *\n00 Matinee On Six\n\"Nancy Steel Is Missing\"\n:00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"Fast Life\"\n:30 Weatherwise\nThe FrontPage\n:45 NBC News *\n:00 Truth or Consequences *\n:30 Wagon Train *\n:30 Father Knows Best *\n:00 Harbor Command *\n:30 Highway Patrol *\n:O0 This Is Your Life *\n:30 Late Movie\n\"While New York Sleeps\"\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel t\n2:30 Liberace\n3:00 American Bandstand \u2022\n3:30 Do You Trust Your Wife \u2022\n4:00 American Bandstand *\n4:30 Popeye\n5:00 Wild Bill Hickok \u2022\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Club *\n.6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 News Beat\n7:00 Wednesday Night Fights\n7:50 Hank Weaver's Corner *\n8:00 Disneyland *\n9:00 Tombstone Territory *\n9:30 Ozzie and Harriet \u2022\n10:00 Date With The Angels *\n10:30 Channel 2 Theatre\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC  STANDARD  TIME)\nWEDNESDAY,\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sport News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake 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-Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\nJANUARY 22, 1958\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2.30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boates\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 Music\n6:55\u2014Bob Bowman Reporti\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC  8TAN1.ARD  TIME)\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1958\n00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical  Minutes\n40\u2014Morning Devotions\n55\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-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Ottawa Symphony Orch.\n2:00\u2014B.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 Mysterj\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014This Man's Miisi\u00ab\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vane. Chamber Orch.\n10:0O-News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00\u2014Mid-night Concert\nll:57-News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Largest\ncontinent\n3. Tattered\ncloth\n4. Gold (her.)\n5. The shore\n6. Tried      .'\n7. Fate\n8: Away from\nthe coast\n11. Unadorn\n12. Wealthy\n13. Concludes\n16. Avoid\n18. Famous\nmovie dog\n19. Food tor\nhorses\n21. Touch\n24. Fruit\ndrinks\n25. Float.\nIng\nmass\nof\nice\n26. Hard,\nened\n(var.)\n27. Man's\nname\n28. Morose\n29. Sacred\nbull\n31. Locations\n35. Comfort\nYelterdty'l Answer\n37.Mctalllo\nrock\n38. Theater\nsuocess\n40. Burmese\nnative\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROS8\nL Game or\nchanSe\n5. Island off\nJava\n9. Glacial\nridges\n10. Famous\nschool\n(Eng.)\n11. Ship's prison\n12. Shake\n14. Wine vessel\n15. Vermin\n16. indefinite\narticle\n17. Radium\n(sym.)\n18. Capital\n(Va.)\n20. PIxlelIke\n22. Trudges\n23. Half ems\n24. Coin (Slam.)\n25. Source of\nsugar\n27. Russian\nseaport\n30. Entered\nmilitary\nservice\n32. Overhead\n33. Regret\n(dial.)\n34. Lice eggs\n35. High priest\n86. A cave\n38. Dutch\npainter\n39. New York\ncanal\n40. Sagacious\n41. Lairs\n42. Solar disk\nDOWN\n1. Ceremonial\nDAILY CRITTOQUOTE - Here's how to work itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nla LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply standi for another. In this sample A il used\nfor the three L's, X for tha two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*,\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nZQE  AEFO YQO  HENFEW R'FEP-\nPWFF, TEO COX CNQA DO\u2014AREMWRA.\nYesterday'* Cryptoquote: EVERY MAN IS HIS OWM\nDOCTOR OF DIVINITY, IN THE LAST RESORT \u2014 STEV.\nENSON.\nDistributed b. Kmj Futures Brnticete\n1\n'\n2\n_\n4\n%\nf\n6\n7\ne\n1\n%\n.\n%\n10\n|\nII\n%\n1%\ni-\ni4\nP\nit.\n'^\n10\n17\n%\n19\n_<J\n31\n%\n32.\n%\nk\n23\n%\n24\n%\n%\n25\nM>\n%\n17\n28\n39\n30\n31\n'^\n32\n33\n%\n34\nd\n35\n3k\n-7\n%\n70\n1\n3?\n%\nAO\n1\n|\nA\\\n^\/)\nAT.\n^\n1-22.\n SMALL INVESTMENT  -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE  1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\n)AIL\\\nn^\nBIRTHS\n.JOHNSON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRaymond Johnson, 1015 Eighth\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, on Jan. 20, a son.\nOSTOFOROFF - To Mr. and\nMrs. Walter Ostoforoft ot Salmo,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hos-\npital January 18, a daughter.\nHfcLP  WAN. ED\nfor~extra~~cash \"income -\nwrite for details about easy\nstarting plans for selling Raw-\nleigh's famous line of household\nnecessities. Full time city districts and rural localities also\navailable W. T. Rawleigh Co.\nLtd, Dept.  KK-153,  589 Henry\nAve., Winnipeg 2, Man.\t\nSALESMAN WANTED - SHOULD\nhave automotive or heavy equipment sales experience. Car essential. Good income for a .ard\nworker. All replies confidential\nState experience, etc., to Box\n9457, Daily News.\nHELP   WAN I JJ\u2014,-tMALt\n\u00bb23 WEEKLY 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 Blvd., Dept.\nZ-2502, Montreal. P^Q\n| $ $ CAN BE YOURS. A REAL\nopportunity for willing workers\nwith Avon Cosmetics. Territories\nin Nelson, Kaslo, Kimberley and\ndistricts. Write Miss L. Bradd,\n471 Francis Ave., Kelowna, B.C.\nSTENOGRAPHER WANTED FOK\nlocal law office. Phone 51\nSi sUA I IONS WANTED\nCONCRETE SPECIALISTS, BASE-\nments under houses, leaking\nbasements, crack filling. All\nkinds of cement work. Phone now\n1752-L-3. H. Zylstra and Sons\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT-\nting, oil burners serviced.\nNorm Bowcock, Bonded Licenced\nGas Fitter, 385.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd., or phone,\n186-X-3.\nYOUNG GIRL DESIRES Position as typist or filing clerk. Apply 952 Nelson Ave., Trail, or\nphone 1113-L.\t\nTIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICE.\nFor cleaning, repairs, odd jobs,\nladder work, etc., phone 1229-X-l.\nFOR HIRE, TANDEM TRUCKS.\nDay, week or contract. Appi.\nBoxJ!781 or ph. 1757-R.\nDAY CARE FOR CHILD IN\" MY\nown home. Ph. 1572-Y.\nMACHINERY\nSee The New\nMILLER 180 AMP. A.C.\nfor '\nGARAGE\nFARM\nHOME WORKSHOP\nf.o.b. Nelson\nIncludes Accessories and 10 Lbs.\nol Electrodes\nStevenson\nMachinery   Ltd.\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nDON'T\nGo Back to the Woods\nWithout a\nMcCiilloch\nD44 or Super 44\nChain Sow\nThe Most Reliable Saw\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING &  EQUIPMENT\nCO.    LTD.\nPHONE 1402\nMACK TANDEM DIESEL LOG-\nging truck; D8 Cat tractor with\nangledozer. Both rebuilt. Small\ndown payment. Wanted, tandem\nlog trailer. Box 9469 Daily News.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS\nFridays, ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nUSE LLOYD'S CORN AND CAL-\nlous Salve and Pads for painful\ncorns and callouses \u2014 prompt\nrelief. Salve 50c. Pads 25c at\nFleury's Pharmacy, Nelson\nSalmo Drugs, Salmo, and all\ndruggists.\nWATCH\nTHIS\nSPACF\u00ab\ni,*\u00aby^i\nfytLus\n^^vu^\nWATCH\nFHIS\n.SPACE.'\n.\u25a0~*--*<-Si^;-.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n1958 Court of Revision for\nNelson   Slocan   Provincial\nAssessment District\nNOTICE is hereby given that\nthe Court of Revision under the\nprovisions of the \"Assessment\nEqualization Act\" respecting the\n1958 Provincial Assessment Roll\nfor the Nelson Slocan Assessment District will be held as\nfollows:\nFor property within School\nDistrict No. 7, Nelson at Nelson\nB.C., on Wednesday, February\n5, 1958, at 10:00 o'clock in the\nforenoon in the Courthouse.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 9th\nday of January, 1958.\nB. K. Arlidge,\nChairman, Court of Revision\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nChevrolets\nand\nOldsmobiles\nNow on\nDisplay\nG.M.\nParts and Accessories\nfor\nComplete  Body,\nFender  and   Paint\nSee\nReuben   Buerge\nMotors  Ltd.\nPhone 35 and 36\nFactory Trained\nMechanics\nfor all your\nMechanical  Work\nJanuary\nSPECIAL!\n1954 Meteor\nRanch Wagon\n$1595\nFor the  Best\nin\nNew and  Used\nCars\nSee\nBUERGE\nLTD.\nPhone 35 - 36\n323 Vernon St.,\nNelson,  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.\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.\nWANTED FOR CASH - '52, '53\nor '54 car or station wagon\nPhone 2028-R.\nTRAILERS\nKQQT'NEE\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar,  Phone 2701\nCranbrook,  Phone JU-6-2270\nFor the Best in Mobile Homes\nSee These:\u2014\n* PATHFINDER      * REX\nit MERRIMAN      * A.B.C\n\u2022k MARATHpN\nAlso a Good Selection of\nUsed Cars.\nBuy ond SeU With Classified!\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nIDEAL 4 BR. FAMILY HOME,\ncompletely furnished and wonderfully located. A brick house\non stone and concrete foundation, situated on two landscaped\nlots. Price $10,500. Terms. P. E.\nPoulin. Real Estate and Insur-\nance, 582 Ward St.. phone 70.\nHOUSE FOR SALE IN DESIR-\nable location in Fairview. Six\nrooms and bath, full basement.\n220 wiring, gas piped in, new\noil furnace, storm windows and\nscreens, garage on two lots, fruit\ntrees and nice garden. By owners. Phone 407-X.\nRENTALS\nLARGE 5 ROOM APARTMENT.\nHeated electric stove, furnished\nor unfurnished. Private entrance.\n1 mile on North Shore. Ph.\n1627-R-l.\nUNFURNISHED 5-RM. DUPLEX\nheated, hot water, gas stove,\nprivate entrance. Reasonable,\nadults Only. Phone, 335-X.\nBAKER ST.\" - 2 HOUSEKEEP-\ning rooms, unfurnished, piped for\ngas. Apply Box 2209, Nelson\nNews.\nNEW HOUSE FOR RENT, TS\\W-\nroom, gas furnace, lovely ,n-\nterior. Phone Bennie's Grocery,\n1236.\nMAIN FLOOR\" HOUSEKEEPING\nrm., fridge, stove, heated, priv\nent. and parking. 171 Baker St\nFOR RENT, UNFURN. SELF-\ncontained 3 rooms, centrally located. $40.  Phono 933-X.\nFOR RENT - UNFUHN SELF-\ncontained apt. Centrally located.\nPhone 933-X.\nDouble and single units\nNorth Shore Motel   Ph   1684.\n2 BEDROOM  HOUSE, FURN., 2\nblks. from Baker. Ph. 476-L-4.\nLarge   i   bedroom   apt.\nfridge, and stove. Ph. 542-R.\nFEB. 1ST, FURN. ROOM. GOOD\nlocation.  Ph.  1688-R eves.\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 726-X.\n1  ROOM  FOR  RENT.  620  Victoria. Ph. 450-Y.\nROOM FOR RENT - PHONE\n547-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM - PRI-\nvate entrance. Phone 1077-X.\n4 ROOM APT., UNFURN. 915 OB-\nservatory. Phone 763-R.\nLOST   AND  FOUND\nLOST-WHITE CAT WITH BLACK\ntaiUand 2 black spots on back.\nAnswers to name Felix. Finder\ncontact C.P.R. Extra Gang.\nLOST - BROWN WALLET DUR-\ning first part of week. Reward.\nPhone 183-Y.\nBUILDING  SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD.\nfor. all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 36011 E Hastings St., Vancouver, B C. GLen\nbum 1500\n\u25a0on 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\nTALL SKIERS ATTENTION -\nFor sale, new unused set High\nGrade 7' 6\" skis complete with\ncable type binding. Or will exchange for 6.4' pair. Also 1 pair\nDodds Chalet 4' skis, nearly new,\nwith Chalet Junior bindings.\nPhone 866.\nNEW WESTINGHOUSE DRYER,\n$50 less new price. Philco combination radio and phonograph,\nexcellent condition, $120. Size 18\nfur coal, like new. Phone 1282-L.\nFUt\u00a3 SET OF CARPENTER\ntools with box. Cheap. Apply\nSunnyside Trailer Court\nEASY SPIN-DRY WASHING MA-\nchine, good working condition.\nPhone 1107.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nOIL STOVE WITH DRUM, STAND\nand cemcht blocks. Phone 946-Y\n3 PIECE CHESTERFIELD. GOOD\ncondition, reasonable. Ph. 683-X\nGE ENAMEL 3 BURNER ELEC\ntrie stove, $60. Phone 733-L.\n250-GAL.  PROPANE GAS STOR\n_age^ank. Phone 1759-R.\nOIL   HEATER- 2   YRS.   OLD\ncheap. Phone 385.\nGOOD SIZED FESS OIL HEATER\n$45.  Ph. 2074-L.\nBABY   PLAY   PEN\n596-X.\n1.00.    PH\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - The stock\nmarket went through a mixed session Tuesday with most changes\nnarrow.\nThe blue chips performed indifferently, but a host of the lesser-\nknown and cheaper issues got some\nplay and moved ahead as trading\ninterest spread to them.\nOf 1144 issues traded, 548 rose\nand 352 fell. Highs for 1957-58\ntotalled 28. There were three lows.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks was off 40 cents at $160.60\nwith industrials down 20 cents, rails\nWANTED TO RENT\nWaWeBI'OI.ENT - 2 OR 3 BR.\nhouse for new  family  arriving\nin Nelson Jan. 26. Box 9055, Daily\nNews, Nelson, B.C.\nHOUSE ON NORTH SHORE ON\noption  to purchase agreement.\nApply Box 2184 Daily News.\nTWO    BEDROOM    HOUSE    ON\nNorth Shore. Phone 307-L.\nWANTED TO  RENT  - 2 BED-\nroom house. Phone 37.\t\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nv servations 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.\t\nCOLONIAL HOTEL, SPOKANE,\nWashington. Clean, comfortable\nrooms at $2 and $4 for two. Parking 1 block. Centre of shopping\nand theatre district at N 124 V.\nPost.\t\nROOM ANV)  eOARD\nROOM AND B07RDlTOirirELI)~\nerly gentlemen or couple. Live\nwith quiet couple on lake. Some\ncare if needed. Write Mrs. F.\nDoiron, Needles, B.C.\t\nWANTED, ROOM AND BOARD\nor small apt. Ph. 1880 or 673-L.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen. Phone U79-X.\nNrlsnut lathi JJprua\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rales\nBy Carrier per week\nin  advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson.\nOne month            $ 1 25\nThree months      $ 3.50\nSix months   \u00bb  $ 6 50\nOne year ...       $12 00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne- month            $ 175\nThree months       $ 5 00\nSix  months     $ 9 50\nOne  year        . ... $18 00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook phone Mrs  Wm  Stevely.\nIn Kimberley A  w  Brown:\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs   Ross Saundrv\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   WIDDOWSON & CO\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES,   ROSSLAND. BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENOINEEgg  AND SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys.\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr. Ray Johnson,. B.A.Sc,\nIQIS-Bth St.. Nelson. Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civill\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG. B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker SI    Nelson   Phone 1118\n    HEATING\t\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances, Free Estimates.\nPhone 774, 523 Ced__r St., Nelson.\n INSURANCE\t\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd,\n MACHINISTS\t\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop  Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewind\ning   Phone 593       324 Vernon Si\n     \\\nWATKINS PRODUCTS \u25a0\t\n. Watkins Quality Products,\nPhone 489-Y.\ndown 90 cents and utilities down 20\ncents.\nThe Dow Jones industrial aver\nage dropped .65 to 446.64 and Stan\ndard and Poor's 500-stock index\nwas down .05 to 41.3.\nVolume slipped to 2,160,000 Mon\nday.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock market Tuesday squeezed out its 10th\nadvance in 14 sessions as speculative mines again featured trading.\nMore issues were active Tuesday\ninstead of the few mines that\naccounted for more than half of\nMonday's sales.\nNew Mylamaque, a 1,000,000'\nshare trader in the previous session, was hit by profit-taking and\ndipped six cents to-30 with a volume of 657,750 shares. Kenville\nwas another active penny mine,\ntrading 249,000 shares and easing\nVt cent to six cents.\nMONTREAL ,(CP) - The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges\nmoved forward Tuesday. Changes\nwere mostly fractional. Trading\nwas moderate in the industrial and\nheavy in the mines and oils.\nBase metals, banks, newsprints\nand beverages were fractionally\nfirmer. Consolidated Smelters\ngained % at 18%, Banque Cana-\ndienne Nationale V_ at 38V_, Consolidated Paper Vi at 31'\/., and\nHiram Walker V4 at 26.\nVictoria Man\nTo Lead\nBisley Team\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Maj.\nA. M. Taylor Spittal of Victoria\nhas been appointed commandant\nof the Canadian Bisley rifle team,\nthe British Columbia Rifle Association has announced.\nMaj: Spittal, a five-time qualifier for the team, has won major provincial awards and previously has headed B.C.'s team to\nDominion of Canada Rifle Association meetings at Ottawa. The\nteam leaves from Montreal June\n13 for England.\nUnfit For Trial\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Ont.\n(CPi\u2014A 15-year-old boy who told\npsychiatrists he satisfied his urge\nto kill in the past, by killing cats\nor chickens has been found unfit\nto stand* trial for the murder of\nhis mother.\nThe verdict for Anthony James\nMumpfort was returned Monday\nby an Assize jury after the court\nheard two provincial psychiatrists\nsay they believed the youth lived\nin a world of fantasy.\nMumpfort was arrested last\nNov. 5 after his mother, Mrs,\nPatricia Murphy, 33, was found\ndead of a beating and stab\nwounds, and his three-year-old\nsister Rosalie had died in hospital after being beaten with a blunt\ninstrument.\nTheir bodies were found by\nMrs. Murphy's husband. Gordon\nMurphy, 32, as he returned from\na hunting trip. Another child, 10-\nmonth-old Linda, was sleeping\nand unharmed.\nMr. Justice Leo Landreville of\nthe Supreme Court of Ontario\nsaid the boy will be placed under\nsupervision in  an institution.\nThe court heard testimony by\nDr. Walter Weber and Dr. Kenneth W. Runnals of tie Ontario\nHospital at North Bay. Included\nwas the youth's 'statement he had\nan urge to kill, for Ihe last two\nyears or so, but htd been able\nto satisfy it by killing animals,\nsuch as cats or clypkens.,\nDr. Runnals said the boy was\nof above-average intelligence, but\n\"was busy making, up stories of\nthe gangster type in which he\nplays the leader. . . He told me\na week ago he wojld like to be\ncredited with a _ii\"iber of murders .ims-'f 'h't would make\nhim a kind of hero \"   \u2022\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newt doei not hold  Itself responsible In tha event\nof an error in the following Hits.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\n.07\n13.75\nAmal Larder\t\n.12\nAnacon Lead \t\n.50\nAnglo Rouen \t\n.34\nAtlin  Ruff  \t\n.20\n2.02\n,1\u00bbV_\n.25\n.15\n.13\n.54\n2.70\n.78\nBuff Red Lake  ....\n.07%\nCampbell  C  \t\n4.80\nCan Met \t\n1.61\n6.75\n.72\n.48\n.13%\nCons   Denison   \t\n11.37 V.\nCons.  Discovery \t\n2.50\nCons Halliwell \t\n.29\nCons Howe \t\n1.80\nCons Mining & Smelting\n18.50\nCons Red Pop \t\n.10\nCon  Sanorm  \t\n.08 Vi\n.69\n2.40\n.24\n.11\n.14\nDonalda  \t\n.10\nEast  Amphl   \t\n.07\n1.44\n1.75\nElder Gold \t\n.34\nFalconbridge  \t\n22,62%\nFaraday   \t\n1.65\nFrobisher \t\n1.36\n8.00\nGiant  Yel\t\n4.50\nGlen Uranium\t\n.12\nGoldale \t\n.19\nGolden Manitou\t\n.35\n14.62V.\nHarminerals   \t\n.11V4\nHeadway  \t\n.51\nHollinger  \t\n22.00\nHudson Bay \t\n44.00\n.50\nInt. Nickel \t\n70.75\nJoliet Que\t\n.25%\nR J Jowsey \t\n.47\nMontreal Makes\nChanges In\nMargins Rule\nMONTREAL (CP)-The Montreal and Canadian Stock Exchanges l\\londay announced a\nmodified ruling in regard to margin requirements on stocks selling under $1 a share.\nThe exchanges announced no\nchange in the basic margin requirement of 50 per cent, on all\nshares selling at $1 a share or\nover. No margin is permitted on\nshares selling under $1.\nBut under the modified ruling,\nshares which previously sold at\n$1 a share or more and subsequently dropped below $1 may\nstill be carried on margin.\nThe action followed a similar\nruling on the Toronto Stock Exchange.\nSheepdog Sets\nFor Canada\nLIVERPOOL, England (CP>-\nMoss, a 19 - months - old sheep\ndog, left Britain Tuesday on Ihe\nstart of a 6,000-mile sea and rail\njourney to British Columbia.\nThe black and white collie\nsailed aboard the Canadian Pacific liner Empress of France,\nconsigned to sheep rancher John\nArnold of Cecil Lake, B.C.\nChief item of personal luggage:\nA big bag of dog biscuits.\nSays fast-West\nGap Narrowing\nVANCOUVER (CP)-An Asian\nexpert says the wide gap between\nthe living standards of the east\nand west could shark an atomic\nworld war.\nDonald P. Dore, assistant professor of Asian studies , at the\nUniversity of Britisli' Columbia,\ntold the Vancouver Civic'.Unity\nAssociation Monday nighl that\nthe world is growing smaller'and\nAsians are learning the \"differ\nence: between1 the hilv.fe'.ii.rid the\nhave iNOT nations.\"  'W\"\" ,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 22, 1958 \u2014 7\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge      .12\nBralorne     4.60\nCanusa     _ 03\nCariboo Gold  :   50\nGiant Mascot  09\nGranduc          :._....    1.11\nHighland Bell     1.05\nNational Ex  22\nPioneer Gold     1.10\nPremier Border  ___ 05%\nQuatsino  _ 17\nSheep Creek 33\nSilback Premier       .05\nSilver Ridge      _     .02\nSilver Standard    14\nSunshine Lardeau 10\nTaylor ..'      .13\nTrojan 12%\nOILS\nA P Consolidated 35\nCalgary & Edmonton   19.25\nCharter      2.00\nHome     15.50\nNew Gas Ex     1.25\nOkalta Com     1.20\nPacific Pete    19.50\nPeace River Gas      .38\nRoyalite   13.37%\nRoyal Can 24\nSparmac 15\nUnited     -.42\nVanalta 17\nVantor     1.33\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers         ..50\nAlberta Distillers Vt      1.30\nBC Forests     9.87%\nB C .Telephone    40.00\nCrown Zeller (Can)    14.50\nInt Brew B        4.25\nInland Nat Gas     6.75\nLucky Lager      4.25\nMacM & Bloedel B   24.00\nMid Western      1.40\nPowell River    J1.00\nTrans Mtn .       68.00\nWestminster Paper   22.75\nWestern Plywoods    10.50\nUNLISTED Bid    Ask\nAlta Gas Trunk   13.25   13.75\nTrans Can Com    25.00  25.50\nWest Coast Com   37.00  27.90\nWest Coast Trans   88.50  90.00\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal ....  41.00  42.00\nCan. Bank of Com   40.50  41.50\nImp. Bank o( Can .... 45.00 47:00\nRoyal Bank of Can .... 56.50 59.50\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund     7.82    8.58\nCommonwealth Int. ..    6.40    7.30\nGrouped Income      4.19    4.58\nInvestors Mutual  9.13    9.89\nLeverage'     4.86    4.79\nTrans Can \"C\"      4.7S 8.15\nKenville   \t\nKerr Addison \t\nLabrador  \t\nLexipdin   \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLorado    \u25a0'\u25a0\t\nLouvic't\t\nMacassa   \t\nMacDonald  \t\nMadsen R. L -\t\nManeast\t\nMaritime Mining \t\nMart McNeely  v..\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMilliken   \t\nMining Corp\t\nMogul\t\nNew Alger \t\nNew Delhi ......\nNew Fortune\t\nNew Harricana \t\nNew Jason \t\nNew Lund \t\nNipissing  \t\nNisto     \t\nNoranda  New  \t\nNorgold    \t\nNorrnetals   \t\nNor'pex   -\t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska   \t\nPickle Crow \t\nPlacer Devel \t\nPreston E. D,\t\nQuebec  Lab\nQuebec  Lithium  \t\nQuebec Metallurgical ..\nQuemont\t\nRadiore \t\nRainville\t\nRayrock    _.\nSan  Antonio\t\nSherritt Gordon  \u2014\nSilver TWiller \t\nStadacona ._\t\nSheep   Rock    \t\nSullivan Con  ....\nSylvanite\t\nTeck Hughes \t\nTemagami  \t\nThomp-Lund   \t\nTombill   \t\nUnited Keno  \t\nVentures    \u2014.-.\nVicour    _.\nViolamac   \t\nWaite  Amulet   \t\nWiltsey Goglln \t\nWright Hargreaves \t\nYale  \t\nYeliowknife Bear \t\nYukeno \t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc \t\nBanff  Oils  \t\nBailey Selburn \t\nBata Petroleum  \u201e\nCanadian Devonian \t\nCentral Explorers\t\nDuVex ,. \u2014\nHome  A  ,'\t\nLiberal Pete  \t\nLong Island Pete -.\nMarigold   :\t\nMidcon     \t\nNat.   Pete   \t\nNew Continental \t\nNew Gas Expl \t\nOkalta  -.\nPacific Pete \t\nPetrol   \t\nPonder   \t\nProv  Gas  \t\nRoyalite   \t\nSpooner      \t\nSlanwell Oil\t\nTriad\t\nUnited Oils\t\nYank Canuck \t\nWestern Pacific\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     \t\nAluminum       \t\nArgus 2nd pfd\t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A.   Oil      \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazillian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s \t\nB.C.  Electric' 4.4s \t\nB.C. Forest\t\nB.C. Power A \t\nBurns  A     \t\nCanadian  Breweries  .\nCanadian  Canners  \t\nCanadian Celanese \t\nCan.\" Cement \t\nCan Chem Co \t\nCan   Oil      \t\nCanadian Pacific Rly .\nCan. Packers A\t\nCons Gas\t\nDist.  Seagram  ...:\t\nDom. Foundries\t\nDom.  Steel  Ord  \t\nDom.  Stores  \t\nDom. Tar & Chemical.\nFamous Players \t\n.06\n16.12%\n16.50\n.06\n1.75\n.63\n.14V.\n2.50\n.32\n1.84\n1.12\n.10V4\n.55\n.11\n2.03\n9.75\n.45\n.09\n.52\n.14V4\n.15%\n.07'\/!\n.20\n1.27\n.07\n86.37 V.\n.09\n2.55\n.30\n.60\n6.25\n1.04\n8.45\n5.25\n.09V.\n5.80\n.96\n7.65\n.47\n.30\n1.00\n.49\n4.05\n.34\n.18\n10.00\n1.89 \u00ab\n1.18\n1.47\n1.24\n.88\n.27\n3.50\n23.75\n.05\n1.34\n6.05\n.19\n1.27\n.13V.\n.78\n.05\n.34\n1.75\n9.05\n.07V.\n5.85\n2.05\n.08 V4\n16.50\n1.25\n\"   .10%\n.11\n.66\n2.05\n.34\n1.30\n1.25\n19.75\n,65\n.34\n2.65\n13.75\n.21\n.87\n4.85\n2.40.\n.07%\n25%\n28 V.\n48%\n16%\n36\n40%\n6%\n78\n' 91.\n10.\n38\n10%\n26%\n13Y4\n14\n26Vi\n5V_\nlOVi\n25\n35 Vb\n30%\n26'i\n24%\n18'i\n51.\u00ab\n10%\n4%\nPEEBLEi\n1950 Ford Deluxe\n6 Passenger 2-Door\nBeautifully finished in shiny\nblack. An exceptionally good\ncar.\nBfMS\nFanny Farmer\nFord A\nGatineau  \t\nGatineau 5% pfd ....\nGen. Steel Wares ....\nGoodyear   ~\nHoward Smith ...-_\nImperial OH \t\nImp. Tobacco .___\nInt. Pete  __\u201e\nLaura Secord ..._._..\nLoblaw A ......\nLoblaw B  _\nMassey Harris\t\nMcColl Frontena\u00ab\nMoore Corp. \t\nPage Hershey _\nPowell River . \u201e..-\nPower Corp.   , \u201e\u2014\nSicks  Brew.   _i\t\nSimpsons  A   _.\nStandard Paving ....\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel \t\n18\n72\nS0V4\n5%\n5%\n139\n27\n89V4\n12%\n86\n20\n22V.\n21%\n(0%\n65\n109%\n31%\n84%\n22\n17%\n87\n49\n72%\n13%\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\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\nNelson\nMotor\nLTD\n28)   Baker St!\nNelson, B C. Ph\n12\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 22, 1958\nUGLY WARTS NEED\n0sdqkbfiL\nWART REMOVER\nHerbal, Non-Toxic\n$1.00\nWhen used properly should rid you ef them\nin two to five weeks.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nPlayers, Owners to Meet\nIn Search for Settlement\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Doug Harvey,\nvice-president of the National\nHockey League Players Association, said Tuesday league team\nowners have agreed to meet\nplayer representatives in Florida\nnext month in an attempt to settle\nthe differences.\nHarvey, all - star defenceman\nwith Montreal Canadiens here for\n\u25a0 game tonight against Toronto\nMaple Leafs, said owners agreed\nlast week to the Feb. 4 meeting.\n\u25a0 Harvey said Senator Hartland\nMolson, new owner of Canadiens,\nled the move to arrange the meeting.\n\"Senator'Molson met with Canadiens players and we presented\na list of- 24 demands,\" Harvey\nsaid. \"He said a couple of them\nseemed a little unreasonable but\nnothing that couldn't be discussed.\" .\nHarvey said owners agreed to\nHow to KEEP\nFIT after 50\nIn the old deys fifty seemed the signal to\nclow down\u2014take things easy-watch your\ndiet-get more rest. It's still good advice.\nBut these deys you can fice fifty with many\ninteresting and attire years ahead, -active,\nthat is, if you can avoid backache and the\n\"tired-out' feeling, due to kidney and\nbladder disorders, that. often develop\naround that age. For more than 60 years\nDodd's Kidney Pills hare been helping men\nand women of all ages to keep kidneys and\nbladder in good order,\u2014helping them to\nfeel better, to work better, and get more\nfun out of life, If you are approaching fifty,\ner past it, Dodd's Kidney Pills may help\n' you, loo. You can depend on Dodd's.     04\nbring player representatives to\nFlorida, where many club officials\nare vacationing. He did not mention a specific site for the gathering.\nBusiness Women's\nCurling\nResults of matches in Nelson\nBusiness Women's Curling \u2022 Club\ncompetition:\nWednesday:\nMcGovern 10, Miller 5;\nBrown 10, Allen 6;\nMcDougall 8, Lehto 1:\nLeverington 10, Jamieson 3.\nMonday:\nMiller 10, Allen 6;\nMcDougall 9, Jamieson 8;\nLehto 9, McGovern 5;\nLeverington 6; Brown 5.\nDraw for tomorrow's games:\nLehto vs Brown;\nMcGovern vs Allen;\nJamieson vs Miller;\nLeverington vs McDougall.\nEXPLAIN NATO\nPARIS (AP)\u2014A week \u2022 long\nconference to explain the workings of the North Atlantic Treaty\nOrganization to 37 educational\nand public opinion experts from\n14 countries opened Monday at\nthe Palais de Chaillot. Most of\nthose present are university professors, historians, journalists or\npublic education officials. In selecting the group, NATO officials\nmade an effort to find people\nwith wide influence in their respective fields, capable of spreading knowledge about NATO.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nHFC solves over Vi million\nmoney problems a year\nMore peeple borrow from\nHFC than any other consumer finance company.\nReason: HFC has an 80-\n' year reputation for helpful\nMRS advice on money management and prompt, friendly\nservice on loans. You can\nborrow up to $1,000 from\nModern money tervtce backed HFC with repayment terms\nby SO year, of experience     you ^ogg,\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nCor\/xnadon ofr Canada\nI. G. Bernard, Manager\n608 Boker Street Telephone 1890      .\nNELSON\nIII1 It 111 _ 1111111 III I \u25a0\u25a0 111III IT\u00bbI_ 11) 111 III 111 r int 11111 DIM II IT _ t IIII til 1111III111111 \u25a0 1. 11!\nSPORTS\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMarauding Montrealers\nMaintain Monopolies\nMONTREAL (CP) - Despite the\ntemporary loss of one of their\nnumber Montreal Canadiens' high-\nscoring trio last week continued to\nmake the scramble for the National Hockey League scoring leadership a rousing family affair.\nDickie Moore and Bernie (Boom\nBoom) Geoffrion each picked up\nfive points in three games and\nHenri (Pocket Rocket) Richard,\nsidelined for two games because\nof an injury, nevertheless gathered in three points to hang on to\nthe runner-up spot behind Moore.\nMoore and Geoffrion each clicked for three goals and two assists.\nMoore's five points boosted his\ntotal to 56. The Little Rocket with\na goal and two assists in his single\ngame, follows with 52, Geoffrion\nis third with 49. His 26 goals top\nthe league's scorers.\nGordie Howe of Detroit Red\nWings failed to score but picked\nup two assists. He remains in a\nfourth-place tie at 45 points with\nBronco Horvath of Boston Bruins,-\nwho had a one-one count.\nRANGERS BEST\nNew York Rangers was the only team with a perfect record last\nweek, winning all three starts and\nregaining second place. Canadiens had one loss and two wins\nand head the parade with 63\npoints to New York's 46. All the\nother clubs posted one win against\ntwo losses.\nDetroit Red Wings are third\nwith 43 . points,  four more than\nDetroit Manager\nBuys Greaves\nPITTSBURGH (AP)-Mrs. Julia\nMintz, manager of middleweight\nWilf Greaves the past six months,\nannounced Monday night that she\nhas sold the fighter's contract to\nTony Ross, a Detroit manager.\nGreaves, a native of Edmonton\nwho has been fighting out of Pittsburgh, signed a three-year contract\nwith Mrs. Mintz last year.\nShe is the widow of Jake Mintz,\nwho discovered Greaves in Edmonton in 1955. Under Mrs. Mintz's\nmanagement, Greaves compiled a\nrecord of two victories and three\nToronto and Boston and 10 more\nthan Chicago Black Hawks.\nThe leaders:\nG A PFim\nMoore,   Mtl    .'.... 24 32 56 42\nH. Richard, Mtl   20 32 52 24\nGeoffrion,  Mtl    26 23 49 39\nHowe,  Detroit    22 23 45 26\nHorvath, Boston .... 18 27 45 35\nBathgate,  NYk    16 27 43 21\nHenry,  NY    24 15 39  2\nStasiuk, Boston    16 23 39 38\nBeliveau,   Mtl     13 22 35 40\nHarris, Toronto   13 21 34 20\nBucyk, Boston   13 21 34 43\nDelvecchio, Det  9 25 34 18\nROSSLAND \u2014 Trail's rollicking\nSmoke Eaters caught Rossland\nWarrior goalie Reno Zanier in one\n1 of his increasingly-rare off-nights\nhere Tuesday night and pumped\nsix goals past him in only 23 shots\nfor a 6-5 victory in a Western International Hockey League encounter.\nDown 4-0 in the first period almost before they turned around,\nSmokies battled back, but still\ntrailed 5-2 after the second stanza.\nMike Buckna's well-coached crew\ncannot fie said to have faltered\nunder pressure,  as  Zanier only\nAkins Batters\nTony DeMarco\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014Virgil Akins\nknocked weary Tony.DeMarco into\nvirtual fistic obscurity Tuesday\nwith a 12th-round technical knock'\nout in a brutal rematch of welterweights at Boston Garden.\nBoth weighed 147 for the sched-\nuled- 15-round event.\nAkins, the church deacon from\nSt. Louis who waited for the Boston battler to punch himself. out,\nfinished the bout with a jarring\nright uppercut and referee Eddie\nBradley stepped in to call a halt\nat 1:53.\nDeMarco had been down once in\nthe eighth round and twice in the\n11th.\nThe victory in this Massachusetts version of the welterweight\nchampionship, which Akins had\nwon in the same ring last October,\npht Virgil in the National Boxing\nAssociation welter plans.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nSan Francisco \u2014 Spider Webb,\n158V_, Chicago, knocked out Rory\nCalhoun, 160, White Plains, N.Y.,\n4.\nNew York\u2014Harold Gomes, 131%\nProvidence, R.I., knocked out Har\nold Smith, 133V.,. Washington, 7.\nHolyoke, Mass. \u2014 Stefan Red!\n146%, Newark, N.J., knocked out\nWillie Moore, 147, Philadelphia, 4.\nJAe.\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN  SHORT\nSpffdi, \u00a3diiefL\nNow listen, Mabel. Don't get, excited. They're not\ngoing to hang that nice little Malacko boy. They ain't even\nmad at him, but somebody decided they must have been.\nBecause that defenceman Severyn quit, somebody who\nisn't too close to the club figured they were alter Shorty's\nneck. \u25a0\nDoesn't seem like anybody should get hurt from this\nhere deal. The hockey club wants Marsh Severyn for a\ncertain amount of money; Severyn 'wants the hockey club,\nbut for a certain amount of money, a little bigger than the\nhockey club figures on paying..\nYou know, before the team starts in the league, it's\nsort of a game. The players want more than they're worth,\nand the hockey club wants to pay less than the player is\nworth, and all in all it's lots of fun. 'Specially fer those\nguys who don't make the club. They aren't gonna get paid,\nand they know it, so they don't lose any sleep over it.\nAnd some of them gripe all the time; some of them\ndon't. You know how hockey'\nplayers is.\nMarsh Severyn is one of the\nkind of guys I mean. He don't\ngripe; he likes the game, and he\nlove, his family \u2014 four boys, he's\ngot. He had the game first, though,\nand it kind of sticks with you.\nIt's a game, first, last and always. When fellows forget that,\nthey're in trouble. But it's a business, too, and unless it's run like\na business, there's, other kinds of\ntrouble, \u2014 you know, with. bankers and creditors and such. \u25a0\nMarsh Severyn quit the hockey\nclub the other day. He .said he\nwanted more money, but he. didn't\nsay any more. He's like that, kind\nof quiet. He don't talk much; he\nleaves talking to sports editors\nand politicians and that kind of\nguy. Generally, he's better off\nwith his mouth shut; flies don't\nalways taste so good. In fact,\nfrom where I sit, they never taste\nso good.\nIt's funny, though, Mabel.\nThere's a whole bunch of guys\nwho play their best hockey with\ntheir teeth. They're always standing around talking, catching flies,\nor something. And they don't do\nnobody any good. They only show\nthe people they're talking to what\nkind of people they are.\nYou know, it', like uncle Henry\nalways said, but then Uncle Henry\nalways said lots of things,\nmember. What he always said\nmost of the time was: \"If you\nain't got nothing to say, keep\nyour mouth shut, leave the flies\nfor them that's hungry.\"\nMost of the guys around here\nknow that. And if they don't know\nit. those who do know should try\nand teach them. Uncle Henry can't\ndo anybody any good. He's dead\nnow. Died catching flies.\nBut anyway, I hope Severyn and\nthe hockey club can get together.\nHe's not great, but the hockey\nclub can use him. He don't have\nto be great, this isn't a great league.\nHe's good enough to play in this\nleague, and he isn't shopping\naround for a better deal someplace else. He wants to play, like\nI said, and I kind of hope something ca'n be'worked out.\nM*ybe: he tfeould play for the\nsalary hi,glgniri'Wi but somehow\nthat don't seeM fair. You know,\nMabel, if 'Tmx pot something over\non a guy end you get away with\nil, maybe feat's all right.\nBtt If yott.to't get away with\nit. maybe ymi ihould pay up. You\ngot to be.\u00bb jjood sport, even if\nyon'M not. It the way I always\nfigured _t Bat Uncle Henry said\nit first.\nSmart man, that Uncle Henry.\nSmoke Eaters Trip Warriors\nDespite Early 4-0 Deficit\nSki Slants\n,        By  SITZMARK\nSnow conditions were perfect on\nthe ski hill over the weekend, both\nfor the experts and for beginners\ntaking their first lessons under the\nNelson Daily News free ski classes.\nBetween 60 and 70 beginners\nlearned how to walk on skis and\nbegin to control their skis on gentle\nslopes.\nThe only disappointment of the\nday was the operation of the small\nlift, which gave considerable\ntrouble and finally flipped both\nsides of the cable and had to be\nshut down altogether. We hope all\nskiers will realize the problems\nthe few workers\u2014who try to make\nskiing easy for the majority\u2014are\nup against.\nIt seems only a small percen\ntage of skiers are willing to put\nin time when there is work to be\ndone. Those who do work spend\nmany nights and most of their\ndays when they could be skiing,\nworking on the tow.\nSkiers are asked to remember\nthey are only supposed to get off\nthe lift halfway up and again at\nthe extreme top. If they do jump\noff between the towers the bars\nswing around and bounce madly\nuntil they either jump the wire\noff the sheaves or catch on a pole.\nThis is exactly what happened Sunday. Someone got off just before\nthe top tower, and the lift was\nfinished for the day.\nAgain a crew was working on\nthe big lift. The work party started\nup the hill at nine Sunday morning and did not get back down\nuntil dark. The bullwheel was lined\nup with the other towers and pole\nNo. 11 set in place to guide the\ncable onto the wheel.\nThe top tower was guyed back\nto trees and now all that remains\nto be done |s to set the guide\nsheaves on No. 11 and anchor down\nthe bullwheel. Then the cable can\nbe put around the wheel and also\non towers 11, 10 and nine.\nThere was also a crew of fellows\nwith cutting torch and two big\ntanks, who started from the top\nand cut the corners off all the\ncross-arms, so the sheaves would\nnot rub. If you know the size and\nweight of these acetylene tanks\nyou can realize this was no easy\njob.\nAnother group came behind these\nfellows, greasing and putting on\nthe centre idler wheels and hanging the cable.\nAll these jobs take a lot of time\nand effort. Some of the, workers\nare not skiers, but are willing to\nsacrifice their Sundays for Nelson's\ncentennial project. Others are\nskiers who so far this year have\nnot had their ski-clothes on. These\nare the fellows I want you to\nremember when you are asked to\ntake 15 minutes or a half-hour from\nyour skiing time to lend a hand\nwhen needed.\nMany of us were quite surprised\nto find skiing conditions so good\non the hill this past week. We are\ninclined to judge snow conditions\nby those downtown. The hill is\nmuch higher than Baker St. and\nusually will have much drier snow.\n' See you out there on the weekend!\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nSaskatoon-St. Paul 3 Winnipeg 4\nOHA-NOHA\nChatham 3 Kitchener 4\nSudbury 2 North Bay 1\nSoo 3 Windsor 7 '\nQUEBEC   LEAGUE\nShawinigan Falls 6 Chicoutimi 2\nMontreal 4 Quebec 5\nONTARIO SENIOR A\nKingston 4 Belleville 9\nOttawa-Hull 3 Pembroke 8\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nGuelph 3 St. Catharines 4\nstopped 17 shots, just three of those\nin the third period. '\nA pair of veterans teamed up\nfor the winning goal, with Cal\nHockley taking Joe Conn's- pass in\nclose, cutting across in front of\nthe net and firing into the corner\npast Reno, whose opposition, Seth\nMartin, kicked out 33 shots, many\nof them tough.\nGarth Hayes, Gerry Penner,\nLaurie Bursaw, Gord Andre and\nJohnny Rypien each scored once\nfor Trail, which advanced to six\npoints in front of the cellar-dwelling Nelson Maple Leafs. Rossland\nstill leads Trail by four points.\nTiny Pinoke Mclntyre scored\ntwice, Vic Lofvendahl, Yogi Kraiger and Frank Turik once each\nfor Rossland, as Hal Jones, sophomore centre, drew three assists.\nOf seven penalties assessed by\nofficials Bing J u c k e s and Al\nToikko, four went to Trail, includ-\niiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif\nWIHL STANDINGS\nW\nL\nGF\nGAPts\nSpokane\n22\n13\n115\n120\n44\nRossland\n18\n16\n128\n121\n36\nTrail\n16\n20\n140\n153\n32\nNELSON\n13\n20\n130\n154\n26\n'.fiiiiiiiiiHiiiimMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir\ning a major to Warren Hicks in\nthe third period for his part in an\nabortive battle with Rossland de\nfenceman George Ferguson. Fer-\nguson also picked up a five-minute\nsentence.\nTrail \u2014 Goal: Martin; defence\nRobertson, Andre, Hamilton, Conn\nforwards: Hayes, Godfrey, Hicks,\nKromm, Hockley, Rypien, Penner,\nTambellini, Bursaw.\nRossland \u2014 Goal: Zanier; defence: Kraiger, Fletcher, Ferguson, Lofvendahl; forwards: Andrews, Desrosiers, Jones. Lucchini, Birukow, Demore, Chorney,\nMclntyre, Turik.\nFirst period\u20141. Rossland, Mclntyre (Jones) 1:57;, 2. Rossland,\nLofvendahl (Jones) 9:33; 3. Rossland, Kraiger (Turik, Desrosiers)\nStrikes V Spares\nBruce Malcolm of Hume Hotel\ncollared every honor he could possibly win last week in Mixed Commercial League competition at the\nNelson Bowladrome. Rattling the\npins for an 837 aggregate, Mai\ncolm's 335 single was nine pins\nbetter than the 326 posted by Paul\nKretlow of Civic Hotel.\nSecond to Malcolm, with a 730\naggregate, was Bill Postleleth-\nwaite of Hot Shots. Postlethwaite\nWas a double winner, too, registering a 256 single in Friday Mixed\nLeague competition.\nMen's Commercial League: high\nsingle\u2014Paul Kretlow, Civic Hotel\n326; high aggregate\u2014Brian Hughes\nBurns Lumber, 681; team high\nsingle\u2014Burns Lumber, 1104; team\nhigh aggregate\u2014 Burns Lumber,\n3095.\nSenior Women's League: high\nsingle\u2014Dot Waterer, Dot's, 269;\nhigh aggregate\u2014Verna Hendrick-\nson, Fern's, 756; team high single\n\u2014Fern's, 1016; team high aggregate\u2014Isabel's, 2852.\n10-Pin League: high single\u2014Ken\nWhite, Four-A's, 215; high aggregate\u2014Jack Henton, Lucky Strikes,\n510; team high single\u2014Roily Pollys\n818; team high -aggregate\u2014Lucky\nStrikes, 2319.\nVariety Club: high single-Jean\nButler, Hot Shots, 251; high aggregate\u2014Jean Butler, Hot Shots, 607;\nteam high single\u2014Hot Shots, 836;\nteam high aggregate\u2014Hot Shots,\n2415. . ,    -\nJunior Women's League: high\nsingle\u2014Sophie Burbeck, Spartans\n263; high aggregate\u2014Sophie Bur-\nbeck, Spartans, 658; team high\nsingle\u2014Spartans, 917; team high\naggregate\u2014Spartans, 2663.\nMixed Commercial League:\nwomen's high single\u2014Anite Warner, Bank of Montreal, 254; women's high aggregate\u2014Billie Moore,\nOverwaitea, 664; men's high single\n\u2014 Bruce Malcolm, Hume Hotel,\n335; men's high aggregate\u2014Bruce\nMaicolm, Hume Hotel, 837; team\nhigh single\u2014Hume Hotel, 1079;\nteam high aggregate \u2014 Queen's\nHotel, 3151.\nFriday Mixed League: women's\nhigh single\u2014Lil Anderson, Raindrops, 235; women's high aggre\ngate \u2014 Lil Anderson, Raindrops,\n584; men's high single\u2014Bill Pos-\nthlethwaite, Hot Shots, 256; men's\nhigh aggregate\u2014Bill Postlethwaite,\nHot Shots, 730; team high single-\nFriday Five, 916; team high ag\ngregate\u2014Friday Five, 2599.\nGosselin, Lamirande Chosen\nTo Assist Oslo-Bound Dunlops\nMONTREAL (CP) - Defence-\nman Jean Paul Lamirande, 34, of\nQuebec Aces-said Tuesday he will\nreport Sunday to Whitby to accompany the club to the world\nhockey championships at Oslo.\nIn return, the Quebec Hockey\nLeague club will get two players\nfrom Springfield of the American\nHockey League, defencemen Bud\nHillman and Bob Duncan,\nLamirande, who once played\nwith New York Rangers in the\nNHL, said he will'be re-instated\nas'an amateur and revert to pro-\nI\nfessional status  after   the   Oslo\ntournament.\nCoach Joe Crozier of the Quebec Aces called him an \"ideal\"\nchoice, fast, a pin - point passer\nand adept at playing the puck\nrather than the man.\nWHITBY, Ont. (CP) \u2014 George\n(Goose) Gosselin, two-way left-\nwinger for North Bay Trappers\nof the OHA-NOHA Senior A\nseries, will join Whitby Dunlops\nbefore they represent Canada In\nthe world hockey championships,\nIt was announced Tuesday.\n15:14; 4. Rossland, Mclntyre\n(Fletcher, Jones) 15:48.\nPenalties \u2014 Kromm, :28; Andrews, 5:58; Rypien, 13:03.\nSecond period\u20145. Trail, Andre\n(Tambellini, Penner) 3:18; 6. Trail,\nRypien (Conn, Bursaw) 11:33; 7.\nRossland, Turik (Chorney, Desrosiers) 13:45.\nPenalty\u2014Andre, 7:45.\nThird period\u20148. Trail, Penner\n(Hamilton, Hockley) 8:30; 9. Trail,\nHayes (Hicks, Hamilton) 12:57; 10.\nTrail, Bursaw (Robertson, Rypien)\n15:26; 11. Trail, Hockley (Conn)\n17:49.\nPenalties\u2014Hicks (five minutes,\nfighting) 7:03; Ferguson (five minutes, fighting) 7:03; Birukow,\n11:23.\nSport Shirt\nSALE\nIn Small Sizes\nYour choice of 60 top\nname brand sport shirts.\nGabardines, hunter checks,\nstripes ond fancy' patterns.\nRegular $6.95 and up.\nSelling Now for\n-PO.yj or\n2 for $7.50\nVMORTQ\nJL>\nCheap Cars Keep\nIndex Costs  Low\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\ngovernment reported Tuesday that\na decline in prices of new cars\nkept United States living costs\nfrom advancing in December.\nThey averaged the same as in\nNovember.\n'The labor department said it\ncannot predict whether the current January living-cost level will\nrise or drop from its present record high.\nThe December index stayed at\nthe same peak mark of 121.6 per\ncent of the 1947-49 average as was\nrecorded for November. This is\n3.1 per cent higher than a year\nearlier.-The index has risen in 14\nof the last 16 months.\nLower prices for automobiles\nand apparel offset slight ad-\ncances for food and other goods\nand services in December. New\ncar prices declined 2.3 per cent\nas dealers began granting larger\ndiscounts.\nLTD.\nVJ\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nHove The Job Done Right\nUIC GRAVEC\n\u2122        LIMITED        \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb\n' PHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nICC To Move\nHeadquarters\nSAIGON, Viet Nam (AP)-The\nInternational Indochina Control\nCommission announced Tuesday\nit will shift its headquarters from\nHanoi, in the Communist north,\nto. Saigon.\nThe date of the move to South\nViet Nam was not announced.\nThe commission, composed ot\nrepresentatives from Canada, Poland and India, was set up to\nobserve the workings of the 1954\nGeneva armistice agreement.\nA Saigon newspaper said several days ago that the commission was dissatisfied with constant Communist supervision and\npoor living conditions in Hanoi.\nSpun\nCREAM PERMANENT\nBy ELIZABETH ARDEN\nEasy-to-Follow   Instructions\nSoft, Natural Curl\nPrice $2.00\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nBox 46\nPhone 34\nYour     f ~j\nfirst taste. \u00bb9\ntells you\n* why ,\ndeserves\nCanada's most distinguished\ndecanter\nMellow, light-bodied Calvert\nHouse Canadian Rye Whisky\n,... smooth with water\nor \"on the rocks.\" In a sleek\ndecanter that does it justice\u2014\nand says nice things about\nyour taste, too. All at a\nvery modest price.\nCALVERT- Created for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published ot displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard ,or by the Government ot British Columbia.\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_22","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0430790","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":"1958-01-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1958-01-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}