{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2023-04-06","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1958-01-08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430858\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" HI\nI\nNelson's Reeprc\n1952 Days\nTraffic Fatality Free-\nVol   55\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy, little\nchange in temperature. Light\nsoutherly winds. Low-high at\nCranbrook 10 and 25, Crescent\nValley 20 and 30.\n*U (ON, B. C, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 8, 1958\nNot. more   Than  60   Dally.   lOo  Saturday\nNo. 217\nGov't Suspends\nFreight Rate\nIncrease\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The most complex freight rate tangle\nin decades shaped up Tuesday as the cabinet suspended a\n3.6-per-cent increase to hear an eight-province appeal. It\nbecame known the railways plan a separate appeal to the\nSupreme Court of Canada.\nIn the unprecedented two - way\naction, the provinces are arguing\nbefore the cabinet that the railways should have received no increase and the railways will tell\nthe high court that they did not\nget enough.\nThe increase authorized by the\nboard of transport commissioners\nDec. 27, estimated to yield $15,-\n000,000 a year to the major railways, was to have taken effect\nJan. 15.\nOFF UNTIL MARCH\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker announced in the Commons\nTuesday it has been suspended\nuntil at least March 1 to enable\nthe provinces\u2014all except Ontario\nand Quebec\u2014and the railways to\nprepare their arguments.\nAs far as freight rate experts\nhere could recall, the suspension\nwas the first for a general freight\nrate increase since February,\n1918. v\nThere have been various appeals to the cabinet and to the\nSupreme Court of Canada, but\nnone in which a board-authorized\nincrease was held up pending\njudgment.\nNor has there ever been, concurrently, a case in which one\ndisputing party went to the cabinet and the other appealed to the\nhigh court.\nThe railways, It was learned\nTuesday, told the cabinet in their\ninitial formal reply Monday to\nthe provinces' appeal that they\nwill appeal to the court on the\ngrounds of law and jurisdiction\u2014\nthe two bases of appeal from the\nboard to that tribunal.\nERROR IN LAW\nInformants said the railways,\nseeking a 10-per-cent boost worth\nabout $35,000,000 a year, told the\ncabinet they will claim before\nthe court that the three - man\npanel of the board headed' by Assistant Chief Commissioner Hugh\nWardrope made a \"fundamental\nerror in law.\"\nIt would also be claimed that\nthe board exceeded its jurisdiction in denying the railways   an\nCOAST AIRPORT\nCANADA'S BUSIEST\nOTTAWA (CP) - Vancouver's\nairport was the busiest in Canada during November with aircraft taking off and landing 19,-\n726 times.\nThe transport department said\nTuesday that Canada's 23 main airports handled a total of 201,264\ntake-offs and landings, 15.8 per\ncent more than in November,\n1956.\nincrease of an extent which the\nrailways believe it was the\nboard's duty to award.\nNo details of the point of law\nwere given. The railways have\nuntil Jan. 26 to file the appeal.\nTo get before the court, the\nrailways first will have to obtain\nleave to appeal. This will be\nsought from one of the justices.\nSIGN FOR OPTIMISM\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The six-\nweek postponement of a proposed\n3.6 per cent increase in railway\nfreight rates is a reason for hope\nthat an appeal against the increase\nby Western provinces will succeed,\nB.C. legal and industrial experts\nsaid Tuesday.\nLawyer C. W. Brazier, counsel\nfor the B.C. government in the dispute, said the postponement, announced Tuesday by prime minister Diefenbaker, is a sign for\nguarded optimism.\n\"I always felt that if the increase\nwent into effect (on Jan. 15) it\nwould never have been taken off\nagain,\" he said.\nPresident Brain Gattie of the\nB.C. Lumber Manufacturers Association said the postponement\nshows Mr; Diefenbaker \"has some\ndoubt whether or not the increase\nshould have been granted.\"\nSubpoenaed\nTo Appear\nAt Inquest\nVANCOUVER (CP)'- A representative of a city \"pharmaceutical\noutlet\" has been subpoenaed to\nappear at the inquest Friday of\nDavid Horsfall, 17, who died here\nTuesday from rocket fuel fumes.\nCoroner Glen McDonald said late\nTuesday it will be asked if \"this\nchemical and others like it are being properly sold.\"\nHe said representatives of the\nB. C. Pharmaceutical Association,\nthe school board and the poison\ncontrol centre at General Hospital\nwill also attend the inquest.\n1 The coroner's move follows an\nappeal by the boy's father, Cpl.\nH. B. Horsfall of the RCAF, for a\nban on the jpen sale of potentially\ndangerous chemicals.\nThe youth, who had \"always\nbeen extremely careful\" died after he had been overcome Monday\nnight by the fumes from, a four-\nounce bottle of nitrobenzene he had\nbeen experimenting with as a fuel\nfor home-made rockets.\n(Soo also story Page 3).\nEducation Qrants\nProposal Defeated\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Commons\nTuesday night rejected 163 to 27\na CCF motion suggesting federal\ngrants to the provinces \"to relieve the crisis in education.\"\nThe motion, technically one of\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltll\nBlind Man Happy\nOver New Dog\nWHITNEY, N. J. (CP) -\nGeorge Cohen, who is blind,\nhas found a new seeing-eye\ndog to take the place of Bambi.\n\"Her name is Belle and she's\nbeautiful,\" said George. \"She.\nlooks just like Bambi, except\nshe's smaller and much faster.\n\"Tell my friends in Montreal\nthey'll think she is Bambi\nagain.\"\nGeorge was in a dither of\nhappiness when he was interviewed Tuesday at Seeing Eye '\nIncorporated, a non-profit organization that trains dogs to\ncare for blind folk.\nBut only a few days ago he\nwept and wrung his hands because Bambi, his companion\nfor nine years, had to be \"put\nto sleep.\"\nGeorge, impeccable and handsome at 43, and the boxer dog\nwere familiar sights on Montreal's busy streets as he went,\nhis rounds as a salesman.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nnon-confidence in the Progressive\nConservative government, was\nproposed by CCF Leader Cold-\nwell. It won support from Herman M. Batten (L\u2014Humber - St.\nGeorge's) and Frank Christian\n(SC\u2014Okanagan-Boundary).\nBut government supporters and\nmost Liberal and Social Credit\nmembers opposed the suggestion\nin the form proposed by Mr. Cold-\nwell.\nFormer immigration minister\nJ. W. Pickersgill (L\u2014Bonovista-\nTwillingate) said the Liberals opposed it because no matter how\nsuch a proposal was hedged\nabout with words, by earmarking\nfederal funds for education the\nfederal government would be invading a field of provincial responsibility.\nSocial Credit Leader Solon Low\nsaid this was not a proper motion for the government to consider as one of non - confidence.\nBut since a new federal - provincial conference that could consider the matter was to be called\nsoon, Social Credit would oppose\nthe motion, although' it believed\nmore money is needed for education.\nMr. Coldwell's motion called\nfor' federal aid to expand and\nequalize educational opportunities across Canada \"without\nin any way encroaching on the\nexclusive jurisdiction of the provinces in the field.\"\nIke Proposes $1.3 Billion\nBoost in Defence Spending\nNO WOMEN are allowed to visit the U.S. scientific station at\nMcMurdo Sound in the Antarctic, but regulations say nothing\nabout snow women. So here is Airman Billy Crowe of Lynn,\nAla., putting the finishing touches to his sculpture. She is a redhead, with hair dyed with hydraulic fluid.\nNo Election Till\n1961 Says Bennett\nVICTORIA (CP) - The next\nprovincial election probably won't\nbe until 1961, premier Bennett\nsaid at a press conference Tuesday.\nThe premier's remark indicated\nthe provincial Social Credit Government would like to run the\nfull five-year term, something\nthat rarely has been done in B.C.\npolitics.\nThe coming session of the legislature will be marked by \"good\nwill and dignity,\", the premier\npredicted.\nHe said the session, due to\nopen Jan. 23, will probably be\na cheerful and friendly one because \"the election is out of the\nway now, there is none in sight\nSee Russ Plot\nBehind Aid Oiler\nBy JULIUS GOLDEN\nRIODEJANEIRO (AP) -\nWorld Communist leaders recently decided to offer Soviet aid\nto Brazil in an attempt to make\nit a spearhead of Latin American\nhositility toward the United States,\na high government source said\nTuesday.\nThe official said the Brazilian\nforeign office has prepared a secret\nreport showing the plan was outlined at the November meeting of\nCommunist leaders in Moscow.\nThe source said the report declares:\n\"The foreign office has proof\nminutes of meetings held in\nMoscow that a new tactic was\nadopted against the West\nwhereby Brazil would serve as a\nspearhead for a hostile policy\nagainst the United States.\nLatin American Communists\nhelped draw up the plan, said the\ngovernment official who. disclosed the report.\nThe Russians have offered oil\nequipment and other technical\nassistance to Brazil and are seeking to renew cultural and diplomatic relations, severed in 1947.\nBrazil has seemed reluctant to\nrespond to the Soviet overtures.\nfor B.C. and the members know\neach other now.\"\nThe B.C. Centennial year is \"off\nto a good start,\" re observed,\nhowever, no plans could yet be\nreleased concerning the visit\nhere in July of Princess Margaret.\nThe premier showed a press\nconference a thick sheaf of telegrams' wishing B.C. the best in\nits centenar, most of them from\nLondon.\nOne from London was signed\nby Bernard Gore, \u2022managing' director of the Wenner-Gren (B.C.)\nDevelopment Company.\nThe federal government's postponement until March 1 of the\n3.6 per cent freight rate increase\nshould have been until March 1,\n1961, premier Bennett said Tuesday.    .\n\"Seriously though,\" he said,\n\"the government of B.C. is very\npleased with the  development\n\"We certainly will be making\nsubmissions to the (federal) cabinet in this regard.\"\nActual development work in\nGaribaldi Park probably will begin this year, the premier reported.\nThe premier told a press conference that development of the\npark \"is on our program\" and\nthat there is. \"planning going on\nnow.\"\niiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiHiniiiimniiiiiiiiimiii\nRed Licence\nPlates For\nOffenders Urged\nBELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP)\n\u2014 \"Fire engine red\" license\nplates for reckless and drunken\ndrivers was proposed Tuesday\nby Washington State, representative George G. Dowd on\na means of cutting down on\ntraffic accidents.\nHe said the mandatory issuance of the red license plates\nwould, in effect, place a warning tag on reckless and drunken drivers so other motorists\ncould exercise special caution\nwhen they saw them.\n\"Red is definitely the color to\nuse,\" Dowd said.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDraft ol Ike's\nletter To NATO\nWASHINGTON (AP)-A draft\nof President Eisenhower's pro,-\nposed reply to Soviet Premier\nBulganin's December letter has\nbeen sent to Paris for co-ordination with Atlantic pact governments.\nThe U.S. state department said\nthe Eisenhower-approved version\nwas cabled Monday to Ambassador Randolph Burgess, American representative at the NATO\ncouncil.\nPress officer Joseph Reap said\nthe American answer, which is\nreported to brush aside the idea\nof any immediate East-West non-\naggression pact, will be discussed Wednesday at a meeting\nof. the permanent, representatives\nof the 15 Allied powers.\nEisenhower is understood to\nkeep the door slightly open to an\nEast-West summit meeting provided substantial progress is\nmade in advance on a lower level\nin easing deadlocks on such problems as disarmament and German unity.\n70,000 UBC\nEnrolment Seen\n\u25a0 VANCOUVER (CP) - J. E. A.\nParnall, registrar of the University\nof British Columbia, Tuesday predicted a 10,000 student enrolment\nat the university next year.\nThe record year to date,was in\n1947 when 9,374 students were enrolled.\nHe expected 8,975 for the Spring\nterm.\nMacmillan Takes Off\nOn Commonwealth Tour\nLONDON (AP) - Prime Minister Macmillan left London Tuesday on a six-week tour to unify\nCommonwealth thinking on international problems.\nHis visit to \u25a0 India, Pakistan,\nCeylon, New Zealand and Australia dramatized the fact that\nBritain's relationship to the Commonwealth countries now is one\nq(, equal partnership.\n'Macmillan left behind a hastily\nresolved cabinet crisis and the\ndiplomatic loose ends of his proposal for a nonagression pact with\nthe Soviet Union.\n.Minutes before he stepped,on\nhis plane the prime minister,\nsmiling and jaunty, said he had\nresolved the differences in his\ncabinet revealed by the unexpected resignation Monday night\nof the chancellor of the exchequer, Peter Thorneycroft.\nThe prime minister left Home\nSecretary Richard A. Butler in\ncharge of the cabinet during his\nabsence. At the time of Sir Anthony Eden's resignation a year\nago Butler was the unsuccessful\naspirant for the job that ultimately went to Macmillan.\n'\u25a03f~\n.3       .      g-^k^ti?^\nA NEW LAUNCHING SYSTEM for the U.S.\nnavy's Regulus II guided missile Is being developed. This artist's conception shows for the\nfirst time the details of the new system which\npermits the supersonic missile to be launched\nfrom the deck ot a submarine.\nMoney Would do Toward\nMissiles, Air Defence\nBy W1LMOT HERCHER\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014Plans to channel an extra $1,-\n370,000,000 into missiles and air defences, starting immediately, were presented to Congress Tuesday by President\nEisenhower.\nHe asked for $1,260,000,000 in new money. About\n$119,000,000 of it is to be spent before June 30, pushing\ndefence expenditures into the neighborhood of $38,900,-\n000,000 for this fiscal year.\nEisenhower also asked Congress to approve the transfer of $110,000,000 in defence department funds already\nappropriated to the missile and related programs as an\nadditional shot-in-the-arm,\nHe proposed to use $10,000,000 of\ntransfer funds to start the wheels\nturning in the government's newly\ncreated space agency, which will\ndeal with satellites, anti-missile\nmissiles and space vehicles.\nTOP ISSUE\nAll these emergency measures\nwent in the direction of meeting\ncongressional criticism of the way\nin which the Eisenhower administration has responded to Russia's\nspace age challenge. They were\npresented a few hours after Congress convened for its new session.\nNational security in the missile\nage was the principal subject discussed when the Senate's Democrats and Republicans caucused\nseparately during the day.\nAddressing the Democratic senators, majority leader Lyndon B.\nJohnson of Texas said \"the peril\nof the hour is obvious.\"\n\"There is something more important than any ultimate weapon,\" he saldl \"That Is the ultimate position\u2014the position of\ntotal control over earth that lies\nsomewhere out In space.\n\"Whoever gains that ultimate\nposition gains total control over\n\u201e. flue earth, for the. purposes j>f\ntyranny or the service of freedom.\"\nHere is what the administration\nintends to do with the supplemental appropriation of $1,260,000,000\nrequested Tuesday.\nSpend $683,000,000 of it for the\ndevelopment and procurement of\nlong-range ballistic missiles, including construction of launching\nsites on land and aboard submarines.\nInvest $329,000,000 in a detection\ns'ystem for defence against enemy\nballistic missiles. This includes\nwork on anti-missile missiles.\nPut $219,000,000 into accelerating and expanding the construct-\ntion of dispersal and alert facilities for the Strategic Air Command.\nAt the Democratic caucus, Sen\nator Stuart Symington of Mis\nsouri predicted the U. S. will be\nbehind Russia in over-all air\nstriking power by 1959 unless\nU. S. plans \"are Immediately\nand radically changed.\"\nSymington, a former secretary\nof the air force, criticized the EiS'\nenhower administration for not\nputting more money and effort\ninto new aircraft as well as mis'\nsiles.\nWith Senator.John\u00bbo.n,he called\nfor swift action to rectify \"deficiencies\" and* pull ahead of Russia in the scientific-military field.\nCanada Preparing\nTo Make Missile\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Preliminary\ntooling up for production of an\nair to air missile in Canada for\nthe RCAF has finally begun, it\nwas disclosed Tuesday.\nGovernment officials said a licence has been obtained to manufacture the Sparrow H missile\nin Canada'. The Sparrow was developed in the U. S. by Douglas\nAircraft Company and Sperry\nGyroscope Company.\nIndustry sources disclosed that\nwork basic to production of the\nSparrow has started in Canadian\nplants.\nFive firms will have a share in\nSparrow production \u2014 Computing\nDevices of Canada, Canadian Wes-\ntinghouse, Canadair Ltd., De Hav-\nDENIES OFFICIAL\nSAID COMINCO\nPLANS LAYOFFS\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 A local official\nof the International Union' of\nMine, Mill and Smelter Workers\nTuesday denied that a union leader had attributed a layoff statement about Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Co., to a company\nofficial.\nA report from Vancouver quoted\nKen Smith, western leader of the\nMine, Mill Union, as saying information was given to the union\nby a company official that Consolidated expects to lay off 1500\nworkers in Trail and Kimberley\nif new tariffs are imposed by the\nU. S. Dn lead and zinc.\nLocal 480 officer Remo Moran-\ndini said that in a telephone call\nMr. Smith had said he had been\napproached by a coast reporter\nand asked whether he could confirm rumors that a 1500 worker\nlayoff was likely.\n\"Mr. Smith told me,\" said Mr.\nMorandini, \"that at no time did\nhe say that he had been given this\ninformation by a company official.\nMr. Smith said he told the reporter simply that he could not disclose his source of information.\"\nGeneral manager R. D. Perry of\nthe company's \"operation at Trail\nsaid he did not wish to speculate\non layoffs.\n\"No one knows what effect Uie\ntariffs would have on prices,\" he\nsaid.\nilland Aircraft Company and Avro\nAircraft Ltd.\nIt probably will be three or\nfour years before the missile,\nwith a range of four to five miles\nis in operational, use with\nRCAF.\nThis will make 14 to IS years in\nall since plans were laid down in\n1950 for acquisition of an air-to-air\nmissiles for the air force.\nThe Sparrow will comprise the\nmain armament of the successor\nthe CF-100 jet interceptor now in\nsquadron service. ^This may be\nthe supersonic CF-105 now being\ndeveloped by Avro.\nThe CF-100's main armament is\nan unguided rocket carried in the\nwingtip pods. Each pod carries 24\nrookets.\nMental Exam for\nYoung Arsonists\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Three boys\nwere remanded for mental examination after they pleaded\nguilty in juvenile court Tuesday\nto charges of arson and attempted\narson arising from 16 fires.\nThey gave no reasons for setting\nblazes in east-central Ottawa that\ncaused $215,000 damage during a\nthree-month period.\nPolice, testified the youngsters\ntold them they were not interested\nin seeing fires or fire reels.\nJudge John McKnight ordered the\nboys \u2014 10 and 12-year-old brothers\nand a 14-year-old friend \u2014 remand\ned in custody to Jan. 15 pending\npsychiatric examination.\nlillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllF\nCripples' Friend\nCallow Dies\nHALIFAX (CP) -r Walter\nCallow, blind, paralyzed, legless \"human log\", who gave\nhis life to helping his fellow\ncripples, died Tuesday night in\nCamp Hill veterans' hospital.\nHe was 62.\nDoctors said Ids heart failed\nafter two months of influenza\nand bronchial pneumonia.\nHe had lain nearly motionless on his hospital bed for\n20 years. Despite weakness\nand pain, he conducted a one-\nman campaign that provided\nwheelchair buses for hospital\npatients here and in other parts\nof Canada.\nDuring the Second WorM\nWar he raised money to sand\nmore than 1,500,000 cigareta to\nservicemen overseas.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiin\nPGE Progressing\n11 Miles a Day\nVICTORIA (CP) - Workert on\nthe Pacific Great Eastern \u25a0wet*\nlaying rail Tuesday at a point DB\nmiles north of Prince. George, Premier Bennett said.\nHe said at a press conference\nthat a large tunnel was necessary\nat Mile 132 and caused a alight\ndelay because the engineers originally thought they could go around\nthe obstruction,\nTrack now is being laid north of\nthe completed tunnel at a rata,of\nVh miles a day. The Premier said\nweather was the main factor to\nbe considered in whether the builders could keep up the pace.\nHe said it was hoped the Hnc\nwould fos finished, Into Fort St,\nJohn and Dawson Creek, by next\nsummer and said the inaugural\nrun was slated for September or\nAugust.\nThe railway has had a good year\nfinancially, he said; \"we certainly\ndidn't lose any money.\" He said\nthe 1957 report was not yet complete.\nThe premier also said ha was\nhopeful of getting a federal subsidy for the railway because \"our\nrequest was so legitimate and so\nfair.\"\nParliament\nTuesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe Commons defeated 163 to\n27 a CCF motion proposing federal\ngrants to the provinces to relieva\nthe crisis in education.\nLester B. Pearson (L-Algoma\nEast) said the Liberal party'*\npolicy is to move towards \"freer\ntrade and expanding trade between\nall free countries.\"\nMines Minister Paul Comtois announced the government plans a\ntwo-year extension to 1960 in federal subsidies to gold mines.\nSenate Opposition elader W. Ross\nMacdonald protested the government had asked the Senate to approve too many bills without proper\nconsideration.\nSteacy to Speak\nAt BCFGA Meet\nKELOWNA (CP) - Agriculture\nMinister Newton Steacy will be the\nopening speaker at the 69th convention of the B.C. Fruit Growers'\nAssocitaion here next Tuesday.\nApproximately 500 delegates are\nexpected to attend the three day\nconvention.\nNEW YORK (CP). - The Canadian dollar was 7-32 higher at a\npremium of 1 1 - 32 in terms of\nU. Sr funds; a week ago 1% per\ncent premium. The pound sterling\nwas 9-32 lower at $2.811-32.\nAnd in This Comer. \u2666 \u2666.\nNORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla, (AP)\u2014This municipality's Junior\nChamber of Commerce has come up with a new get-out-the-vote\ngimmick.\nEveryone who shows up at the polls today to vote on a new\ncity charter will be given 100 trading stamps.\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014Detroit police have found their motor tricycles great for catching runaway police horses.\nPatrolman Thomas Stapleton manoeuvred his tricycle a mile\nand a half through downtown rush-hour traffic Monday before he\ncorralled High Hat, a police horse that yanked free from where it\nwas hitched.\nB.C.   (CP)\u2014Three   grade  five   school-\nmpney tree here Monday at the rear\nNEW  WESTMINSTER,\nboys thought they found\nof their school.\nHarvey Stonehouse. Bobby  Fry and  Philip Gnott found- $680\nat the base of a tree and handed their find to their parents.\nPolice believe the money  belongs to  Mrs.  Margaret Peschke,\nwho reported she lost $900 last month.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8, 1958\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-9:t>0\n\"SEA WIFE\"\nJoan Collins Richard Burtdn\n^V FRANK\nBtNMrmtk\nCouncil Would Put Civic Centre,\nRecreations Under Parks Board\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nf shows nightly starting at 6:49\n\"Tarzan and the Lost Safari\"\n(Technicolor)\nGordon Scott, Ynlande Donlan\nSHORT-NEWS\nPremiere  Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nTONIGHT and THURSDAY\n\"World Without End\"\nHugh Marlowe, Nancy Gates\n\"Man Behind the Gun\"\nRandolph Scott\nPOWER OUTPUT INCREASES\nA total of 3,973,980 kilowatt hours\nwas generated at the City Power\nPlant ln December, showing continued Increases ln the output of\nthe city-owned utility.\nOutput was Increased 4.9 per\ncent over that of December, 1956\nwhen 1,503,450 K.W.H. were generated.\nRemainder of the report, received at City Council Monday\nnight, with the 1957 figures shown\nfirst, were i\nAverage load, 4038 and 4709, an\nincrease of 4.9 per cent; peak\nlead, 8450 k.w.h. and 8300 k.w.h.\nan Increase of 1.8 per cent; minimum load, 2400 k.w.h. and 2080\nk.w.h., an increase of 15 per cent;\n30 minute average load, 8283\nk.w.h., and 8200 k.w.h., an Increase\nof one per cent; and station service, 10,140 k.w.h., and 9450 k.w.h.,\nan Increase of 7.8 per cent.\nSoot Damage as\nFurnace Blows\nCHAPPED   SKIN 7\nNOXZEMA\nSKIN CREAM\nDouble Value Special\n10 oi. Jar\n$1.2S\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress ot Health\"\n433 Josephine St\nPHONE 1203\nAn exploding oil furnace caused\nalarm and sent a great quantity of\nsoot throughout the home of Mrs.\nE. A. Jeffcott, 624 Mill Street late\nTuesday afternoon. *\nThe fire department found that\nthe explosion had extinguished the\nflame in the furnace but there was\nno fire as Mrs. Jeffcott had, \"with\ngreat presence of mind,\" turned\nthe control switch off, preventing\nany more oil from entering the\nfurnace. There was no serious\ndamage.\nThe explosion was reported to\nhave been the result of incomplete\ncombustion. The fuel in the fuel\ntank was low and running into the\nfurnace unevenly, causing the\nflame to be extinguished and then\nre-light. The fire department replaced the pipes and checked the\nsystem to be assured everything\nwas in order.\nCity Council, at its statutory\nmeeting, opened discussions on\nthe possibility of setting up a Parks\nBoard in Nelson.'\nFaced with difficulties under the\nnew Municipal Act, Mayor T. S.\nShorthouse waived definite appointment of a New Civic Centre\nCommission and Recreation Commission, until. the next Council\nmeeting, hoping to be able to set\nup a single governing body for\nboth.\nThe mayor will approach members of the Civic Centre Commission, .to ask them to continue service until possibilities have been\nfully looked into, and asked aldermen to submit names of prospective members for both commissions, and for the Library Board.\nAid. W. S. Ramsay, last year\nchairman of the Parks Committee\nand this year Finance' Chairman,\nsaid he had \"soon recognized\nthat something must be done\", but\nthat the act did not give a council\nauthority to set up a parks commission. A letter from J. E. Brown,\ndeputy minister of municipalities,\nsaid City \"probably could have\nthe same members on both commissions, but would have to have\nseperate meetings.\" One advan-\nI tage would be in the same staff\nI working for both commissions, the\nalderman pointed out.\n\"RED TAPE\"\nEach commission was limited\nto certain specific functions, Mr.\nBrown wrote, and he could not\nsee how there could be an intermingling of the business of the\ncommissions. \"They must be\ntreated separately ... you could\ncombine, but there is a lot of\nred tape involved.\"\nIt was a problem \"I don't think\nwe're going to solve in time for\nthis year's activities\", Alderman\nRamsay commented.\nThere was urgency In that decisions on the Midsummer Bon-\nspiel, and the Calgary Stampeders\nSummer training camp were\nawaiting action of the Civirj Centre\nCommission,\nAid. George Mermet, who In\n1957 served on the Recreation\nCommission, did not feel either\ncommission could operate on a\nsound basis until they were com\nblned. \"I strongly support a\nParks Commission, which would\ncombine both\", he said. Most\ncomplaints heard at the recreation commission meetings were\nthat members \"couldn't get together with the Civic Centre\nCommission on H.\"\nThe alderman felt there were\ntoo many members on the recrea\ntion commission \u2014 \"there were\nnever more than three or four out\nof the 12 members at any\nmeeting.\".\nHe \"strongly\" recommended\nthat both commissions be dissolved\nand a Parks Board started . . .\n\"picking members from both, and\nsome new ones.\"\nA Parks Board was \"very\nclose to the heart\" ol mayor T.\nS.   Shorthouse,   who   suggested\ncouncillors become familiar\nwith the operation of the Trail\nParks Board.\n\"If they won't let Us call It a\nParks Board, call it what you\nwant\", Aid. Mermet said, \"but\ngive them the job the recreation\nboard is doing.\"\nMayor Shorthouse said he would\nsee the commission members, and\nask them to continue until a new\none could be appointed.\nAid. B. C. Afflck wanted to know\nif the commission was re-appointed, would \"they be willing to\nenlarge their duties?\"\nThe mayor said he' would ask\nif they were willing \"to go along\nwith a Parks Board ... I think\nin most cases they would continue.\"\nMembers of the Civic Centre\nCommission are L. Lefeaux, W. C.\nHancock, F. A. Beresford, Mrs.\nE. E. Wallach and Gordon L.\nWebb.\nOn the Recreation Commission\nare B. B. Crawford, W. C. Han\ncock, Mrs. G. Frederiksen, Arvid\nSchneider, Aid. Mermet and Gordon Taylor. The balance of the\n12 members resigned during the\npast year.\nTerms of the entire Civic Centre\nCommission expired Dec. 31. Last\nyear three retiring members were\nre-assigned to one-year terms, in\nplanning for a change in the system this year. This was done, Aid.\nRamsay explained, before the\nMunicipal Act \"complicated\nthings.\"\nCouncil Awards\nGasoline Tender\nOdds...\nmd Ends\n...by M.D.B.\nRotarians Told...\nThree Requirements\nBehind UBC Campaign\nOffer of Standard Oil to supply\nregular gasoline at 25.7 cents per\ngallon and premium gas at 28.9 a\ngallon, was accepted by council at\nits statutory meeting on Monday\nnight. Prices do not include thi\nB. C. gasoline tax.\nShell bid 26.1 and 29.6 cents and\nBritish American who had the\ncontract last year, tendered 26.1\nand 30.6 cents. Imperial bid only\nfor regular gas, 25.85 cents, and\nMcColl-Frontenac did not tender.\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse and Mr.\nHarper were authorized to pay discount-bearing accounts without\nprior council approval. This saves\nmoney each year, Mr. Harper\nstated.\nReinvestment of bylaw funds was\nleft to the finance committee.\nAbout $100,000 is left in the street\nimprovements bylaw account, Mr.\nHarper said, and he thought that\nabout $75,000 could be put in six-\nmonth treasury notes or government bonds, so the money would\nbe available when needed,\nTwo Speakers\nAddress Lions\nLions' Club members heard two\nspeakers at their meeting Tuesday\nevening \u2014 Dr. Malcolm F.\nMcGregor of University of British\nColumbia who had earlier addressed the Rotary Club on the University Development Fund Campaign\nand Ian Brown of the Kinsmen\nClub, who spoke briefly of the\nB.C. Child Care and. Polio Fund\ncampaign.\nDr. C. H. Wright of Trail, West\nKootenay chairman, who introduced Dr. McGregor, was himself introduced by L. S. Gansner, Nelson\nchairman of the UBC campaign.\nMembership pins were presented\nto new members Keith Barkes, W.\nOlson, and R. Thompson by president Walter Ebdon. Membership\ncertificates were given to W. Olson,\nK. Barkes, C. Trkla, R. Thompson,\nJ. James and R. Rocheleau by G.\nHartridge.\nAn engraved paperweight Lion\nwas a gift to Fred McKay from the\nNelson. Lions, on his departure\nfrom Nelson. Mr. McKay'has been\ntransferred to Victoria.\nDiscussion was held on the Lions'\nClub part in the burning of Christmas trees by the Nelson Fire Department at the airstrip next Monday night. There will be 15 or 20\nmembers on hand to serve coffee to\nthe adults and free hot chocolatae\nto children attending the burning\nTo Assess\nBusiness District\nI hope you all read that pistol-\npacking Granny story we ran in\nthe Jan. 4 edition, for one Nelson\nlady who read it wrote in to tell\nof her acquaintance whit this\ndoughty 84-year-old ot White Rock\nwho took pot shots at bandits who\nsucceeded in robbing her of almost\n$15,000. The lady could hardly believe anyone would want to rob\nanyone like Pansy Mae Stuttart\nand she tells of vacations and weekends spent at Grandma Stuttart's\nslab covered house which she had\nbuilt herself at Tsawassen Beach.\n*   *   *\nShe says she and her friends\nwould go there, swim and relax all\nday and in the evening Mrs. Stuttart would entertain them with\nstories of her adventuresome past.\nShe also taught them to play crib-\nbage on a board made of a walrus\ntusk. Bear and cougar rugs were\nscattered about the floor of her\nhuge living room and in front of\nthe stone fireplace she built entirely by herself.\nis   *   si\nMrs. Stuttart even in those days,\naround 1944, had the vitality of a\nperson half her age, the lady remarks. She had a big fishpond in\nfront of her house, also built with\nher own hands, which She stocked\nwith fish and planted with .lilies.\nWhen her beloved cocker spaniel\ndied, aged 18 years, on a hot summer's day, she would allow no one\nto help her as slie dug a grave for\nthis pet who had been her constant\ncompanion. For a long time she\nrefused to get another puppy, but\naccording to reports she now has\na seven-year-old cocker spaniel\nnamed Miiffett. \"She was so kind\nand friendly to everyone, it's hard\nto believe that anyone could have\nbeen so mean to her,\" the lady\nconcludes.\n*  +  *\nMrs. Stuttart is apparently\namong the last of a vanishing\nspecies of women who came to the\nwest when it was wild and woolly\nand had to \"do (or themselves\".\nIt was sturdy pioneers like her who\nbuilt our flourishing West. This\nletter was most appreciated, thank\nyou.\nIn the University of B.C. lies\nthe future of the province.\nFor this reason, the university's\nappeal for public support of its\n$7,500,000 fund-raising campaigii\nshould be everyone's concern, Dr.\nMalcolm McGregor, chairman of\nthe department of classics, told\nNelson Rotary Club at its luncheon\nmeeting Tuesday.\nUBC's aim, he said, has been to\noffer a liberal, general education.\nIn this objective it has established\na better balance than exists in\na number of other universities,\nparticularly in the United States.\nDr. McGregor set forth three\nrequirements tor the fulfillment of\nthis aim.\n\"We have the first requirement,\nwhich is the men.\" He described\nfaculty members as \"the most distinguished men in their respective\nfields on the Continent.\"\nBooks were the second requirement. UBC has a small but good\nThe Weather\nNelson  \t\nKimberley\n32    -\n18   -\nFor Service\nCall...\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.       ,   Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and Hearing Service\nSTORAGE\nAt\nTruck Terminus (Nelson) Ltd.\nIs\n\u2022 FIREPROOF\n\u2022 CLASSED FOR EASY REMOVAL\n\u2022 MODERATE RATES\n\u2022 NEW, UP-TQ-DATE BUILDING\nINSURES YOU AGAINST\nDAMAGE.\nPHONE 77\n\"DON'T QUOTE\"\nBRINGS WORD\nOF CAUTION\nA number of requests from members of Council to the Press to refrain from using comments, drew\na word of caution from Alderman\nW. S. Ramsay at the statutory\nmeeting Monday night.\n\"Something has been said here\ntonight more often than it was\never said on any night during the\npast year. And Council got a considerable roasting for it last year.\nI refer to asking the press 'not\nto 'quote'. I have heard nothing\nhere tonight that could not go\ninto the paper.\"\nCivic Keep Fit\n(lasses Resume\nA two-and-a-half-hour business session followed the\nceremonies that saw a new mayor and three new aldermen take civic office in Nelson.\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse and Aldermen Edith Van\nMaarion, C. E. Bradshaw and Boyd C. Affleck sat through\nthe first meeting of their two-year terms Monday night. The\nagenda was a comparatively brief one, wilh major discussions centering around the proposed $2 million hotel project, and possibility of setting up of a Parks Board in Nelson.\nAn estimate . on the cost of a\n\"float\" to publicize Nelson in parades throughout B. C. and in Spokane will be brought to the next\nmeeting of Council.\nAn invitation from Frank E.\nRobinson, secretary of the Kimberley Kinsmen Club, to enter a\nfloat in the monster Snow Fiesta\nparade in that East Kootenay centre, brought the suggestion that a\n\"Nelson float\" be assembled. Aid.\nRamsay said the 1957 Council had\nleft the proposal over, feeling the\nnew council could consider having\na float built \"to advertise our city\nin Spokane, at the Peach Festival\nin Penticton, and at Kimberley.\"\nThe float would be one to be\nused on a truck, and one that\ncould be taken apart and stored in\nboxes, Aid. George Mermet said.\nFinance committee will bring in\na report.\nParade in the Snow Fiesta \u2014\nfirst centennial event in B. C\u2014\nwill be Feb. 22.\n*   *  *\nRequest from F. J. McAvinn, 83\nHigh Street, for a curb wall in\nfront of his home, will be considered by the public works committee when it draws up its 1958\nbudget. Mc. McAvinn asked that a\nretaining wall from- the steps on\nWillow Street be extended to protect his home from water runoff.\nThe water, which ran under the\nsidewalk and down under the house\nfoundation, has caused the house\nto settle three-quarters of an inch,\nhe said.\nMr. McAvinn will be informed he\ncan not place no-parking signs at\nthe lwo ends of his property. Under the parking bylaw, cars may\npark in front of a property only\ntwn hour;-,, and he could end the\nnuisance oi over-parking by asking\npolice to have the cars moved, Mr.\nHarper stated.\n\u2022  *  \u00ab\nReport by Community Planning\nConsultants of Vancouver on cost\nof making a community planning\nstudy for Nelson requested by the\n1957 council, was copied for aldermen to study. New councillors\nseemed interested in the subject.\nThe former council also wrote a\nEdmonton firm, but they did not\nhave a planning consultant and\nhope to get one early this year,\n4     4     4\nApplication of R. 'A. King, 414\nMill Street, to sell Rawleigh products, was approved. Licence fee\nwill be $50. He had applied to sell\nRegal Stationery as well, but city\nclerk C. W. R. Harper said another $50 licence would be needed.\nIf so, Mr. King told him earlier,\nhe would take only the first\nlicence.\n4    4    4\nInviting Princess Margaret to\nvisit Nelson during her trip to\nB. C. this summer in connection\nwith centennial festivities was suggested by Aid. Edith Van Maarion.\nThis has already been done, she\nwas advised.\nCity Assessor G. A. Butling will\nbe assisted in the assessment of\nthe business area in 1958 by\nstaff from the Victoria office of\nthe  assessment commissioner.\nCity Council Monday night decided to ask the office to schedule\nthe Nelson work for 1958.\nThe residential areas were\nbrought to provincial standards\ntwo years ago, and the commercial\ndistrict iNo. 1 fire zone) was left\npending the completion of a manual being compiled by the assessment commissioner. It is on this\nmanual that assessments throughout B.C. are based.\nSince that lime, Mr. Butling said\nTuesday, the commissioner's office had brought manual sections\ncovering stores, apartments, service siations and other business\nestablishments.\nHe had been reluctant to do\nthe work earlier because, \"apart\nfrom the enormous cost, without\na manual I couldn't be sure the\nassessments would be on a par\nwith other centres.\"\nEstimated fee set by the commissioner's office in a letter read\nat Council, was $5000, subject to\nany adjustments, and depending\non the number of improvements\ninvolved. The City would pay 80\nper cent, or $4000, of this.\nThere was a \"great need\", for\nthe assessment, Mayor T. S. Short-\nhouse said, commenting the fee\nproposed was \"nominal.\"\nThe assessment must be com\npleted by 1959, City Clerk C. W. R.\nHarper told the meeting, and said\nMr. Bulling had not the staff to\ndo Ihe job without outside assistance.\nBus Revenues\nContinue Decline\nRevenue of the Nelson Transit\nsystem continued its downward\ntrend last month.\nFigures presented by city clerk\nC.W.R. Harper to the statutory\nmeeting of city council Monday\nnight were as follows, with December, 1956, comparisons bracketted:\nluel used, 1595 gallons '1792 gals.):\nmiles run 5130 (6214': passengers\ncarried 31,901 (43,539); revenue\n$2455.58 ($3373.08).\nNo \"Account\"\nFor City Hall\nDesigning\nA letter from the architectural\nfirm of Williams and Fairbank\nMonday night assured City Council there would be no account\nrendered for the designing of a\nCity Hall.\nThe letter, signed by David P.\nFairbank, said wording of a newspaper report of a Council reply\nto an inquiry had \"caused much\nconcern, because the public has\nobtained the impression we are\nattempting to charge the City\nfor something that it not our due.\"\nAid, Ramsay told the meeting\nthe past Council's \"misundersand-\nings was as to whether the firm\nhad been appointed. As far as we\ncould gather,' they seem to have\nthe impression they had been appointed two or three years ag6.\nThe point we wanted to make was\n'that there was no appointment.\nThere was no record of one in the\nCity Hall, and they (the architects)\nwere not able to produce a letter\nto indicate they were appointed.\n\"If in the future we wanted to\nbuild a City Hall, the firm could\nsay it had already been appointed\nand City Council would not be free\nto name an architect\", Aid. Ramsay said\nNEW ARTERIAL\nROUTE\nDISTURBS  PTA\nCopy of a letter by works superintendent E. E. Olson to B. C,\nHighways Department in September, will be sent to Central and\nSouth Nelson Parent-Teacher Association to answer a question posed at the first meeting of the\n1958 council.\nSecretary Mrs. F. W. Booth\nwrote that members were concerned about proposed change of the\narterial highway from the 400\nblock Silica Street, to the 400 block\nCarbonate Street, passing the\nNorth side of Central School and\ncreating another danger for children.\nIn his letter, Mr. Olson said the\ncouncil would agree to the change\nif the department erected a chain-\nlength fence along the top of a\nwall outside the school to prevent\nchildren who use the bank at the\ntop of the wall for a slide and play\narea, from falling into the street,\nwith little or no warning to motorists. Making the 700 block on\nWard Street, the same width as\nthe 500 and 600 blocks, and widening the northwest corner o( Ward\nand Carbonate for easier turning\nradius, were also sought.\nAid. George Mermet said large\ntrucks can hardly make the corner of Silica and Ward Streets now\nand thought the change would slow\ntraffic past the school because ot\nthe turn at Ward and Carbonate.\nAid. Ramsay pointed out the matter was originated by the highways department and submitted\nto council for approval.\nWidening Silica Street would be\nexpensive because light and telephone poles are located there, city\nclerk Harper suggested. There are\nhouses -on one side only of the\n400 block Carbonate Street, which\nwould assist traffic.\nAid. B. C. Affleck said he would\nbe happy to see the school board\nfence the entire block.\nThe past three weeks at the\nCivic Centre have seen curtailment\nof activity in the physical recreation field. Due to the temporary absence of the Recreation Director\nJ. R. Johnson in Scotland during\nthe Christmas season, badminton\nond J>asketball have been the main\nactivities in the gymnasium, with\ntemporary suspension of men's and\nwomen's \"keep fit programs.\"\nJunior'badminton players had the\nuse of the gym every afternoon\nduring the holidays and senior enthusiasts were in action in the\nevenings. Monday and Wednesday\nevenings have seen basketballers\nperforming \u2014 this year with more\nvigor than last, there being three\nteams in action.\nToday the physical fitness programs for men and women will\ncommence, with Mrs. M. Slater\ndirecting the women in musically\ntimes exercises called \"rhythmics\".\nThis class of 24 women is.the largest group aside from the badminton club in the recreation program.\nMen's \"keep fit\" classes specialise in Judo, under the direction of\nGerhardt Renk.\nIt is hoped soon to have square-\ndancing classes for juniors under\nthe direction of Bob Dean.\nlibrary of 350,000 well-selected volumes.\nIn the third requirement\u2014buildings- and facilities\u2014the University\nfall \"desperately, shamefully short\nof what is adequate.\"\nMore than* 3000 students seek\nhousing on the campus each year,\nyet only 1100 can be accommodated. Of the army huts acquired 12\nyears ago, Dr. McGregor said\n\"these are'now slums, no matter\nwhat we do to keep them in fair\ncondition.\"\nClassfooms, especially in the arts\nbuilding, are crowded. The library,\nused by the student body of 8900,\nhas space for only 2500. The cate-\nteria was built when enrolment\nwas 1800 and is unchanged since\nthat day.\nSPIRIT HIGH\n\"However,\" Dr. McGregor added, \"the spirit of this institution\nis amazingly high. The student?\nmake the best of their living and\nstudy conditions.\"\nThe government has guaranteed\nto match any sum the University\nraises up to $7,500,000. To date\ntwo and a half million dollars has\nbeen given, mostly by large corporations. For the rest the University is going to the B.C. public, individual residents and businesses.\nDr. McGregor was introduced\nby C. H. Wright of Trail, chairman\nof the drive in-West Kootenay, who\nannounced that' organization for\ncanvassing in every community\nin the district is going well and\nwill assure a complete canvass.\nHe called on Rotarians to support\nthe drive to the maximum.\nProgram chairman Nelson Allen\nintroduced Dr. Wright.\nClub president R. H. Dill welcomed into the membership D. F.\nMartin, Ben Hans and Paul Riley.\nJaycee Speech\nCourse Begins\nAbout 15 men attended the first\nof eight sessions on effective speaking Tuesday sponsored by the Nelson Jupior Chamber of Commerce.\nInstructor is G. L. Fillipelli of\nTrail, past national Jaycee president. The course is open to non-\nJaycees, and more are expected to\nattend.\nThe group started by discussing\ntheir daily work routine. Chairman\nBernard Allard Introduced Mr. Fillipelli.\nRites Held Here\nFor T. Keveny\nRequiem Mass was sung at the\nChurch of the Blessed Sacrament\nin Fairview Tuesday morning for\nThomas Keveny, former Fernie\nman, who died at the Mount St.\nFrancis Infirmary Thursday at the\nage of 83.\nRev. Father G. Feehan was celebrant. Rosary was recited at the\nThompson Funeral Home Monday\nevening at 7 p.m. Interment was in\nthe Nelson Memorial Park.\nInfant Passes\nThe infant daughter o( Mr. and\nMrs. Louis Maglio, 920 Cedar St.,\ndied in the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Monday evening. The six-\nmonth-old baby, Dorothy Elaine\nMaglio, is survived, besides her\nparents, by three brothers and\nseven sisters, her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. T. DeLuca\nof Michel, and her paternal grandmother, Mrs. D. Maglio of Nelson.\nClassifier; Ads  linns  IN\".urns!\nStanfield's\nUNSHRINKABLE\nUnderwear\nfor Men ...\nA very complete stock,\nfrom Shirts and Shorts to\nthe heavy ribbed types . . .\nthree weights in the popular\nlongs and shirts style . . .\noutsizes in most lines... All\nstandard list prices.\n' All Weights In\nSTANFIELD'S\nWORK SOCKS\nGodfreys\n378 Baker St\nCLASSIC WORK\nThe parthenon at Athens, famous\nGreek temple, was started in 450\nBC. and completed in 438 BC.\nchange N OW to a\nreally BETTER Coal\n0 1   Northern Wyoming Coal  9 f\nlower in ash!\ncontains no waste!\ndoes not clinker!\nis easily fired!\nOrder KMtHBURfl COAL Now!\nProduced by Big Horn Coal Co. of Sheridan, Wye.\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\n Former Moyor Heads\n''Forks Board of Trade\nGRAND FORKS - D. C. Manly, a former mayor of Grand\nForks, was elected president of the\nGrand Forks Board of Trade at the\nannual meting Monday night. He\nsucceeds William   Penman,   and\nD. C. MANLY\nCommission\nStarts Year\nAt Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR - Newly elected\nchairman and members of the\nCastlegar Village Commission\nwere sworn into office Monday\nnight.\nElmer Kraft, chairman, ' who\nwon re-election in December, appointed committee chairmen for\nthe year as follows:\nHealth and welfare, Mrs. Elizabeth Rysen; public works, Gordon\nPet'tt; water works, R. A. Mad-\ndocks; fire, light and parks, R.\nW. Cook; finance, Mr. Kraft.\nA grant of $10 was voted to the\nHandicapped Children's Society.\nSigning of a contract with the\nCivic Workers' Union was authorized.\nwas secretary of the Board about\n35 yearsiago.\nOthers elected at the well-attended banquet meeting were E.\nB. Mitchell, first vice-president;\nLeo Mills, second vice-president,\nand Klaus Scheer, secretary. The\nsecretary has been Archer Davis,\nnew mayor of the Boundary city.\nOptimism concerning the status\nand future of Grand Forks was\nsounded in the keynote address of\nStanley Orris, publisher of the\n\u25a0Grand Forks Gazette.\nSTABLE ECONOMY\n. The Grand Forks area was showing remarkable economic stability\nhe noted, plus a steady growth.\nOver the past seven years the population had increased by 70 per\ncent.\nThe last decade had brought a\nnumber of'improvements, including the introduction of natural gas,\nthe city's new sewer system, and\nexcellent television.\nA good portion of the credit for\ngeneral improvements both in economic growth and facilities could\nbe given to the Board of Trade, he\nsaid, urging full support of the organization and its undertakings.\nMrs. R. W. Haggen, MLA for\ndrand Forks-Greenwood, spoke on\na number of projects which she will\npropose for the riding before the\nnext session of the Legislature.\nAmong objectives toward which\nshe will direct her efforts will be\nelectrification of the rural North\nFork area.\nClose to 50 members attended the\nmeeting which also featured musical entertainment.\nFOR\nM0V1N\nTRANSFER\nCO.\n119 Baker St   -   Nelson, B.C\nPhone 33\nFruitvale Plans\nCentennial Fair\nFRUITVALE - The annual\nmeeting of the Fruitvale Fair\nAssociation is to be held on Friday\nnight, according to information\ngiven out to the members of the\nAssociation by the executive. Besides the election of-1958 officers,\nannual reports will be received\nfrom the committees and a full\nreport on last fall's fair will be\ngiven. Antoni Sandrin is the\npresent president..\nPlans will also be made for this\nyear's fair which will have a\nCentennial flavor.\nEdgewood Makes\nOutdoor Rink\nEDGEWOOD - Although Dhe\nweather has not been exceptionally cold, some', members of the\nSkatiiyj Club have been successful in making enough ice for\nskating. The-first session was held\non Saturday afternoon and it is\nhoped that if it does not get\nmilder, continual sessions will be\nheld. A schedule has been drawn\nup and been posted. It was found\nthat rates had to be increased as\nexpenses were higher than first\nanticipated.\nCAR THEFT INCREASES\nMONTREAL (CP) - A police\nreport showed an average of 15\ncars a day were stolen in Montreal during 1957. Altogether, a\nrecord 5,365 cars were stolen, an\nincrease of 1,487 over 1956. About\n95 per cent of the stolen cars\nwere recovered.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLETTER COMES\n46 YEARS LATER\nHARROP \u2014 The mail always\ncomes through, even though it\nmay be 46 years late, Mrs. W.\nJ. McConnell of Harrop concludes.\nA faded brown envelope addressed to her at Nanton, Alta.,\nenclosing a letter written by her\nfather oh February 15, 1912, has\nfinally reached her.\nCaught in a mail chute in the\nmain branch of the Bank of\nNova Scotia in Vancouver, the\nletter lay there until December\nwhen the chute was dismantled\nduring bank alterations.\nIt was forwarded to the district director of postal services,\nCalgary, then to Nanton, former\nhome of the McConnells where\nit was re-directed to Harrop. Mr.\nMcConnell's brother who still\nlives at Nanton furnished the\ncorrect address.\nMr. and Mrs. McConnell have\nbeen residents of Harrop for\nmore than 45 years.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nRocket Fumes\nKill Teenager\n. VANCOUVER (CP) - David\nHorsfall, 17-year-old rocket fan,\ndied in hospital early Tuesday after\nhe was overcome by chemical\nfumes at his home Monday.\nHe was taken to hospital at 5\np.m. when he was discovered unconscious by his father.\nDescribed as a keen student of\nchemistry, the youth had been\nexperimenting in the kitchen.\nMrs. Horsfall said the house\nwas \"full of fumes.\" she said\nshe took her son outside and\ncalled the inhalator. The youth\nwas unable to tell his parents\nwhat had happened.\nMrs. Horsfall said her son was\nkeenly interested in rockets.\n\"He buys his own materials at\nthe drug store,\" she said Monday, \"although I have tried to\ndiscourage him.\"\nKASLO'S BABY\nOF '58 A GIRL\nKASLO - The first baby of 1958\nborn at Kaslo Victorian Hospital\nis a girl, Shelley Marie, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs.\" Paulhus of\nRiondel.\nThe child, their first, arrived on\nNew Year's Day at 1:30 p.m.,\nweighing six pounds, 15 ounces.\nOpen Air Rink\nMade At Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE - With colder\nweather, a sheet of ice has been\nmade by the volunteer firemen\nnear the firehall. Poles have been\nerected to provide lighting, but\neven without lights many youngsters are enjoying skating in the\nmoonlight.\nCommissioners Take\nOaths of Office\nINVERMERE - Village of Invermere commissioners A. E.\nErickson, E. J. Lambert, Corbin\nMitchell and Des Askey took their\noaths of office Monday night at\nthe first, meeting of the year. Fifth\ncommissioner Albert Portman is\nserving a second term.\nWINDERMERE CURLING\nRINKS IN FULL ACTION\nINVERMERE - Play has\nstarted at both the Invermere\ncurling rink and the new Edge-\nwater rink.\nAt Invermere the Legion Cup\nis on play.\nBrisco also has a new rink\nthis year almost ready for curling  and  there  will be  curling\nagain at the Mineral King Mine.\nThe East Kootenay Zone of\nthe Canadian Legion will hold\nits annual bonspiel at Invermere this year on January 17\nand 18 and the annual Windermere District 'Spiel is scheduled for January 31, February\n1 and 2 at Invermere.\nNOTICE\nNEW OFFICE HOURS\nAt The Daily News\nIn order to render a full six day office service to our customers The Daily-\nNews business office wiN now be open every day except Sundays and\nholidays from '\n8 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nat the same time office personnel are getting a five - day week.\nIt is our hope that these office hours will benefit all, especially those\ndistrict folk who come to the city on Saturdays.\nNelson Daily News\nFirst Woman Welcomed\nTo Cranbrook Council\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Two new aldermen, Mrs. W. 0. Green, who is the\nfirst woman ever to serve on Cranbrook city council, and William\nHume were welcomed at the statutory meeting of the city council\nMonday evening, and all six city\ncouncillors and the mayor took the\noath of office before city clerk\nG. M. Robertson.    ,\nCommittee appointments of Aldermen for the- year, with first\nnamed  chairman in  each  case,\nCommittees\nSet Up For\nFernie Council\nFERNIE \u2014 Passing of statutory\nbylaws, appointment of standing\ncommittees and acting mayors and\nroutine matters were the main\nitems of business at the initial 1958\nCity Council meeting Monday\nnight.\nMayor James White named the\nfollowing standing committees:.\nFinance, Aid. Frank Butala and\nAid. Isaac Haile; light and power,\nAid. John Sweeney and Aid. Mike\nNee; public works and water, Aid.\nRobert Lilley and Aid. Jack Min-\nton; fire protection, Aid. Nee and\nAid. Butala; arena, parks and cemetery, Aid. Minton-and Aid. Lilley; apartments, Aid. Haile and\nAid. Sweeney; health and welfare,\nAid. Haile and Aid. Minton; policing, Aid. Butala and Aid. Nee;.hospital board, Aid. Lilley, Aid. Sweeney and former Aid. Joseph Haile.\nEach of the aldermen was allotted a two-month period during\nwhich he will be acting mayor\nshould Mayor James White be absent. The terms are, January-February, Aid. Sweeney; March-April,\nAid. Butala; May-June, Aid. Lilley; July-August, Aid. Haile; September-October, Aid. Nee; November-December, Aid. Minton. Henderson, Waines and Henderson\nwere reappointed city auditors.\nThe reappointment of the firm of\nHislop and McKay as city solicitors\nwas approved.\nStatutory bylaws setting the\nmayor's indemnity at $500 annually and the aldermen's renumera-\ntion at $5 per regular and special\nmeeting received preliminary\nreadings. Bylaws covering repayment of taxes for which five percent interest will be paid and a provisional budget to cover expenses\nuntil the final budget is passed,\nwere given approval.\nThe B.C. Telephone Company\nmade inquiries regarding certain\ncity owned properties in which the\ncompany was interested. As another piece of city owned property\nhad been sold recently presumably\nfor telephone company use, the\nmatter was tabled until the next\nmeeting while further information\nwill be sought.\nRadio Station CKEK at Cranbrook requested permission to have\na reporter present at City Council\nmeetings and to take tape recordings of discussions. Reports of the\nmeeting and the discussions would\nbe aired as a public service. Council decided a reporter, could attend\nmeetings to take notes, but refused use of the tape recorder.\nWholesale\nPrices Down\nOTTAWA (CP)-Canada's general, wholesale price index declined to 224 in November from\n224.8 in October, the bureau of\nstatistics reported Tuesday.\nThe 1935-39 average equals 100\nin the index.\nThe November index was 1.1\nper cent lower than November,\n1956.\nBetween October and November, animal products declined to\n230.5 from 232.7. Lower prices for\nhides, hogs, pork products and\ngrade A' eggs outweighed higher\nprices for steers, calves, lambs,\nfresh beef, veal, lamb, fresh\nmilk in some cities and grades B\nand C eggs in most centres. .\nCommodities moving down\nfractionally included wood and\ntextile products, non-ferrous metals and iron products.\nThe one rise was in vegetable\nproducts, which moved to 193.6\nto 192.8.\nMONTREAL. (CP) - Police in\nsuburban Outrerhont have recovered more than $25,000 in loot\nand arrested a man. a woman\nand a juvenile in connection with\n16 house break-ins during the last\nsix months.\nHelps Ywi Overcome\nMug of Piles\nOr Money Back\nYon do Slot beve to b* tortured and\nMDDVTStfsiftl by the Itching sorrciess And\npain of pJlol nay Ions**:, Hcre '\u25a0\nreel help for you.\nGot a package of Hem-Rosa1, en In.\ntemol pile treatment, at any drug store\nand use as directed. You wiil be pleased\nat bow qaiclcjy your pile trouble is relieved. If you are Dot 100% pleased\nafter using Hcm-Roid 2 or 3 days, as a\ntest, ask tor your money back. Refund\nagreement by all drug stone.\nwere A. J. Balment, A. E. Jones,\nand Mr. Green for finance, health\nand welfare; Mr. Jones, Sam Mc-\nLeary and J. -H. Ward for electric\nlight, Mr. McCleary, Mr. Jones,\nand William Hume for works, Mr.\nWard, Mr. McCleary and Mr. Balment for fire department, Mrs.\nGreen, Mr. Ward, and Mr. Hume,\npublic relations and Mr. Hume,\nMrs. Green and Mr. Balment for\nparks and recreation services.\nMr. Ward anfl Mrs. Green were\nnamed'representatives on civil defence. Mr. Balment 'will be representative on the East KoStenay\nUnion Board of Health.\n\u2022 Mayor R. E. Sang was granted\nthree months leave of absence\nstarting January 11, and Mr. Balment will be acting mayor.\nPrepayment of taxes on individual properties equal to last year\nlevy less $30 will be accepted this\nyear again up to March 31, to\nbear interest at the rate of four\nper cent from the date of payment to June 30.\nNext Monday was named for\ncontinuation of negotiations with\nthe General Workers Union, Local\n212, with regard to contract re\nnewal with employees who are\nseeking 30 cents increase plus\nother benefits. Current contract\nexpires Jan. 31.\nTraffic Deafhs\nDown In B.C.\nVICTORIA (CP) _ Traffic\ndeaths oh B.C. highways dropped\nby 65 to a total of 251 in 1957,\nmotor vehicle branch officials\nsaid Tuesday.\nOfficials said the decrease\nfrom 316 in 1956 could be attributed to \"better police coverage\nand action, or the fact that there\nis more respect on the part of a\nlot of the public' for others.\"\n\"Still, too many of the victims\nare pedestrians \u2014 about one-\nthird,\" an official said.\nTRADE TRIP OPENS\nDELEGATE'S EYES\nVANCOUVER (CPl-It's going\nto take people, power and shorter\ncoffee breaks to pump industrial\nvigor into British Columbia, a\nUniversity of B.C. professor said\nTuesday.\nThe people will come from\nEurope as immigrants.\n\"But perspiration, meaning\nshorter coffee breaks, more effective use of manpower, including automation, and better business and industrial management,\nwill have to come from you\npeople,\" said physics department\nhead Dr.  Gordon Shrum.\nDr. Shrum, who is also director\nof the B.C. Research Council, was\ngiving his impressions of a recent trip to Europe as a member of a four-man B.C. trade\ndelegation headed by Attorney-\nGeneral Robert Bonner.\nHe said he is more favorably\ndisposed toward the Wenner-\nGren project for development of\nthan he was before he went on\nB.C.'s Rocky Mountain trench\nthe trade junket.\n\"What I saw in Europe leads\nme to believe that by the time\nPeace River power is ready for\nthe Lower Mainland, means will\nhave been found to get it here\neconomically,\" he stated.\nThe monorail railway, also proposed for .B.C. by Wenner-Gren\ninterests, has \"much in its\nfavor,\" Dr. Shrum said. He said\nhis party had ridden on a model\nmonorail set-up in Cologne,\nGerman Chairs\nEuratom\nPARIS (AP)-Walter Hallstein\nof West Germany Tuesday was\nnamed chairman of the new six-\ncountry common market executive panel.\nLouis Armand of France was\nnamed chairman of the executive\npanel which will administer Euratom, the six-power \u25a0 pool for development of nuclear energy.\nThese choices were made by\ndiplomats of the common market\n(Euromart) and Euratom countries at the conclusion of a two-\nday session.\nThe foreign ministers of\nFrance, West Germany, Italy,\nBelgium and Luxembourg and a\ndeputy foreign minister for Holland agreed on the appointments\nin setting up the machinery of\nthe new institutions.\nThey agreed to support Pietro\nCampilli of Italy as president of\nthe new European investments\nbank.\nThey also decided that the\npresidency of their new supreme\ncourt should be held by a jurist\nof Dutch nationality. The person\nwas not Identified and possibly\nthe Dutch government will be\nasked to nominate him.\nThe ministers agreed to concentrate all these institutions in\na single city or \"capital,\" but\nwere unable to agree 'on a choice.\nInstead, \\they agreed to survey\nthe field and hold another session before, June_ 1 lo make the\ndecision.  ''\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8,1958 \u2014 3\nA\nIf\nUNSEASONAL WEATHER fa the Kootenay* has everyone looted. It may no*\nbe exactly June in January, but mild temperature* arid low precipitation are irjetfc.\ning the winter oi 1957-58 one of the most clement in years. Most people are pleased,\nexcept youngsters such as Linda and Tony Barrera, children of Dr. and Mi*. A, M.\nBarrera of Kaslo, who went outdoors the o ther day for a sleigh ride only lo find\nspring-like conditions. The temperature stood at 40 when rhis picture was taken.\n\u2014R. C. Bfacirmore rjrhotVx\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 39c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount tor prompt payment.\nL.A. to F.O.E.\nMeet Tonight 8 p.m.\nTwilight Club Banquet\n6:30 Tonight in the Memorial Hall.\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2-4 p.m.\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.\nSupplies for all needle arts.\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nFisherman's Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN-BALI'OUR, B.C.\nMary Maxim Sweater Wools.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL - 8 P.M.\nFor Niagara Heat and Massage\nDemonstration and Information\nph. Mrs. J. Florio at 625-R.\nOn Sale\nLadies' Coats and Car Coats.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPy SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nHOSPITAL AUXILIARY\nMEMBERS\nMeeting Fri. 2:30. Dues.\nGlass- tops for Furniture. Cut to\nany shape. Edges polished.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nProgressive Conservative\nNOMINATING CONVENTION\nLegion Hall, Trail,\nSat.,, Jan. 18, 2 p.m.\nFlannelette   Sheets,   pink   and\nblue borders.' 70x90. reg. $5.95 for\n$5 50\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLJNG\nIt. permanants try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.   \"\nCastlegar and District Hospital\nAuxiliary election of officers, Wed.,\n8 p.m., High School Cafeteria.\nNomination accepted from the\nfloor. Please attend.\nNelson Funeral Home Ltd.\nAmbulance Service, 613 Ward St.\nOxygen. Phone 53.\nA dignified, courteous service for\nevery faith; Prices all can afford.\nAgents for Bronze Plaques.\nPatients ln Kootenay Lake General\nHospital can have The Daily News\nsent lo them every morning.\nPhone 1844\nCirculation Department\nDaily News.\nHOUSING STARTS UP, DOWN\nOTTAWA (CP) - Construction\nof 11,902 housing units was\nstarted during November, a\nsharp increase from the 8,049 in\nthe corresponding month a year\nearlier, the Bureau of Statistics\nreported. Construction. starts during the first 11 months of 1957 totalled 114,099, roughly seven per\ncent behind the 1956 figure of\n123,237.\nANNOUNCING\nWINTER HOURS FOR\nLORD NELSON DINING ROOM\nMON.-SAT.\u20147 A.M. - 9 P.M.\nSUN. \u2014 12 NOON - 9 P.M.\nDINING ROOM AVAILABLE FOR\nBANQUETS AT ALL TIMES.\nCIVIC DEFENCE MEETING\nAn important meeting of Civil\nDefence will be held at CD headquarters in the old Poet Office\nThursday at 8 p.m. sharp. Will all\nthose who have taken courses\nplease attend.\nPRE-NATAL CLASSES -\nNELSON\nThe Selkirk Health Unit, 303 Baker St. is giving a series of prenatal classes starting Monday, Jan.\n13th in conjunction with exercises\ngiven under auspices of Kootenay\nLake General Hospital by one of\ntheir physiotherapists. AH ladies\ninterested are asked to Phone 435\nfor further information.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFINCH\u2014Funeral services tor the\nlate Peter Finch of Fruitvale will\nbe held Wednesday, January 8,\n1958, at 2 o'clock from St. John's\nAnglican Church, Fruitvale. Rev.\nJ. C. Davenport will officiate. Interment in family section, Fruitvale Memorial Cemetery. Clark's\nFuneral Chapel in charge.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMAGLIO \u2014 Mass of the Angels\nwill be celebrated for Baby Dorothy Elaine Maglio, infant daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Louis Maglio,\nat the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate on Thursday at 10 a.m. Reverend Father A. Maglio will be\nthe celebrant.\nInterment will take place hi the\nNelson Memorial Park.\nDodd's\nKl  D iM  E Y\nPills\nToday's Insurance\nProblems\nAnswered by\nYour Krwuroriee ActWsore\nQUESTIONS What k \u00ab\nCommercial Blanket\nBond?\nANSWER: Ona wMott\ncovers o-H employees cm\nthe payroll\nHave yon an insurance problem of your own? Come to\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nhelp you without charge or\nobligation of any kind I\nRobertson -\nHi.Nard,Catten\n456 Ward St.      Ph. 1912-10K\nSell Us Your\nCOAL\nCONTACT  US  TODAY\nImmediate Installation on Gas or Oil Heating\nand we will buy and remove your present\nfuel   supply,\nREMEMBER \u2014 We are B.C. Government Licenced,\nBonded and Insured to Protect You.\nInternationally   knowin   brandi   of'\u25a0ga\u00bb   and   oil   furnaces,\ngas hot water heaters, space heaters, wall heateri,\nThe Complete Installation Engineered to Suit\nYour   Requirements.\nGas Furnace, All Duct Work, Registers, etc..\nInstalled.\n$499.00 \u00abnd \u00bbp\n(NO DOWN PAYMENT \u20143*YEARS TO PAY)\nPhone us for a free estimate.\nNo obligation of course.\nColumbia Trading Co.\n902  Front St. \u2014  Nelson,  B.C. \u2014  Phone   1511\n HflaUlt iatlg Nwi0 GmsofThouSjht\nttatablisHad April 39. 191)1\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized at Second Class Mall. Post Utiles Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER Ol   1'HE AUDl'l  BUREAU Oi' CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER Oi   THE CANADIAN PEEKS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to l'he Associated Press or Reuters ln this paper,\n\u00bb. and also the local news published therein.\nWednesday, \/anuary 8, 1958\nMaintaining Qood Relations\nTcj, every country the prime purpose Of diplomacy Is the preservation\nof good relations with other countries.\nWith Canada it has become the almost unquestioned matter Discontinuing the happy state of affairs which\nexists between her and the United\nStates. ,.\nNevertheless such good relations\ncannot continue indefinitely without,\nfrom time to time, some periodical reassessment of the relations. between\nthe two countries, particularly by the\nsmaller of the .two, the one most likely\nto be concerned.\nSuch a time has now arrived when\ndifferences between Canada and the\nUnited States, while not serious, are\ni\nnevertheless apparent. We have at\nthis moment the cutback of fifteen per\ncent In Canadian exports of oil\nordered by the United States, the possibility of a tariff against our base\nmetals and the disagreement over the\nuse of the waters of the Columbia\nRiver for hydro-electric purposes.\nThe United States Is a peace-loving\nnation and a friend to all, but where\nIts own Interests are concerned.it Is\nentirely realistic and hardboiled. Sentiment has no place In business and\nthe U.S. does not let friendship mix\nwith the business of government. The\nhistoric phrase of Calvin Coolidge\nconcerning the remission of war loans\nto hard-preBsed Britain\u2014\"They hired\nthe money\"\u2014explains this attltuds.\nThe refusal of the Americans to\nallow Canadian oil to enter will undoubtedly hurt the Canadians but to\nthe Americans what is important Is\nthe good of their .own people. It is\nthe same with their raising a prohibitive tariff against our base metals. It\n'is their own people they are thinking\nof \u2014 not Canadians \u2014 and' who shall\nsay they are wrong?\n. They carry this consideration a\ngreat deal farther If reports in the\nHouse of Commons are to be believed.\nThese suggest that pressure from the\nPentagon and the leaders of the armed\nforces of the United- States forced\nCanadians to purchase from American\nfirms defence equipment which could\nwell have been made in Canada. And\nthis raises the question as to whether\nthe Liberal government did not purchase American friendship at the\nsacrifice of Canadian interests.\nWith all this before them, it Is not\nto be wondered at that British Columbians are fearful of what may happen\nto their interests in the Columbia\nBiver. Fortunately, this Is a matter of\nlegal Interpretation of International\ntreaties, but in the negotiations the\nCanadian delegates should, like the\nAmericans, remember that it is the\ninterests of their own people which\nare Important, not a sentimental feeling of friendship for another nation.\nFinancing University Growth\nThe temporizing with the problem of university expansion cannot be allowed to go\non much longer. The approach of enormously\nlarger enrollments within the next few years,\nand the crisis of accommodation and staff\nwhich these would create, have been recognized for two or three years. The universities\nand collgees have done much hard thinking\non the matter, but there has been almost no\nresponse from the Governments which will\nhave to underwrite the expansion program.\nWithin less than ten-years, the most careful statistical forecasters indicate university\nenrollments in Canada will rise to between\n110,000 and 135,000 students, assuming a\nsmall rise in the percentage of students of\nincreased numbers now beginning to go\nuniversity age, and also, of course, the vastly\nthrough the secondary schools. To teach\nthese new thousands, there will have to be\nan increase in university teaching staffs\nfrom about 6,000 at present to at least 9,750.\nThere will have to be new buildings,\nwith equipment, laboratories, residences,\nlibraries, and all the other elements of a\nuniversity's physical structure. Added to the\nnew facilities which will be needed is the\nfact that much of the existing plant in the\nolder institutions needs renovation or replacement.\nEven this summary does not begin to\nmeet the need for new Institutions, entirely\napart from those now is existence. Institutes\nof technology, giving instruction on the full\nuniversity level, could relieve much of the\npressure on the present universities to provide more technically trained people.\nIn the face of this manifold demand, the\nfinancial need has not yet begun to be met.\nThere is evidence, in the recent report of\nthe Industrial Foundation on Education, that\nbusinessmen are beginning to realize the importance as well as the size of the university\nproblem. All that these men and their corporations can give will be needed. There\nhave been special capital grants from some\nof the provinces, but none of the provinces\nhas fully faced the situation.\nAlthough the Dominion government\ndoubled its per capita grant to the universities, that still falls far short of the increased requirements for salaries and overhead. The Canada Council's $50 million for\ncapital investment in the universities over\nten years is a mere drop in the bucket.\nSome of the older universities are now\ntrying to raise money to finance their expansion program. The more they get from\nprivate sources, the more difficult it will\nbe for the smaller and newer institutions\nto get their own programs under way.\nThere is not a month to be lost if our\nuniversities and colleges are not to be\nswamped in a very few years by a demand\nthey cannot fill. Planned for, the crisis may\nbe met intelligently. Unplanned for, the\nemergency will become a debacle, with disastrous consequences for the people of this\ncountry.\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nIt's Been Said        \u00ab\nHappiness and virtue rest upon each\nother; the best are not only the happiest,\nbut the happiest are usually the best.\u2014Edward George Bulwer-Lytton, Nineteenth Century English novelist.\nWatch Your Lanauoqe\nREPARATION - (REP-a-RA-shun) -\nnoun; a repairing; the act of making amends\nfor a wrong; compensation, especially by\ncountries, as war indemnity for economic\ndamages. Origin: Old French from Latin.\nIDEAS\nGod gives you His spiritual ideas, and\nin turn, they give you daily supplies.\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n\u2666 *     \u2666\nIdeas art like seeds. After years of lying\ndormant they may suddenly spread with\nlightning rapidity.\u2014Gaetana Salveminl.\n\u00bb     *     *\nThe ideas that benefit a man are seldom\nwelcomed by him on first presentation.\n\u2022: \u2014Elbert Hubbard.\n'*     *     *\nNew ideas can be good or bad, just the\nsame as old ones,\u2014Franklin D. Roosevelt.\n\u2666 \u00bb        \u00bb     a\n,   Ideology Is to genuine ideas what processed cheese is to the real thing.\n, T       '' \u2014Jacques Barzun.\n\u2666 *     \u00bb\".-\u25a0,-\nYOU will find hundreds of persons able\nto produce a crowd of ideas upon any subject for one who can marshal them to the\nbest advantage.\u2014Andrew vlackson.\nTalk About Talks\nIt is apparent that there is going to be\na great deal of manoeuvring for position\nbefore any agreement to reopen disarmament discussions is reached. Moscow started\nthis manoeuvring last fall when It scuttled\nthe London disarmament talks and then went\nto the United Nations General Assembly to\ndemand an 82-member disarmament commission. The West countered with a 25-mem-\nber commission at the UN and then, at the\nParis NATO meeting, proposed a foreign\n\/ministers' conference as an alternative. Now\nMoscow has retorted through the speeches\nof Mr. Khrushchev.and Mr. Gronnyko to the\nU.S.S.R.'s Supreme Soviet. They want a\nspecial UN session or an international conference of undefined charatter.\nIf the Russians are going to ploy hard lo\nget to disarmament talks, as Mr. Khrushchev and Mr. Gromyko Indicated, they are\ngoing to have to show a good deal of diplomatic adroitness. The Russians are past\nmasters at stirring up intrigue and rebellion\namong dissatisfied peoples. They know how\nto make the most for propaganda purposes\nout of Western blunders and shortcomings.\nBut they have never shown themselves very\nskilful at manufacturing their own propaganda\u2014though it must be admitted that their\nmethods are not as crude as they were in\nStalin's day.\nPresident Eisenhower and Mr. Dulles\nwere quite riiht to reject as unworkable\nthe Soviets' 82-member commission idea.\nAnd they were on safe ground on doing so.\nfor even neutral countries like India saw no\nvalue in it when it was proposed at the\nUN. But the West must play 'this game carefully too. Our protestations of our desire to\nreach agreement will fail, from the propaganda point of view, if we reject Soviet proposals without showing reasonable flexibilitv\nin our counter-proposals.\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nPress Comment\nA PUZZIJNG FIGURE\nA press dispatch from Moscow quotes\nTrade Minister Pavlov to the effect that\nthere are\" only 2000 restaurants in Russia.\nThis is a puzzling figure\u2014only one restaurant\nfor each 100,000 of population\u2014when it is remembered that the Communist regime, at\nleast in its earlier years, showed a tendency\nto break up family life. Mr. Pavlov's statement conjures up a vision of long, wretched\nqueues stretching over the horizon from each\nrestaurant, the weaker citizens dropping in\nthe snow as they succumb to hunger.   \u2022\nBy comparison, Canada has about 18,000\npublic eating places\u2014more than one for each\n1000 of population. We cannot, however, preen\nourselves In the belief that we are a hundred\ntimes better fed than the Russians. A gentleman who has been to Russia recently advises\nthat the 2000 restaurants would be establishments catering to transient trade. The Russians do not encourage transiency. They do\nhave highly efficient institutional catering\narrangements f6r the working folk\u2014and some\nof the best bread in the world.\u2014Toronto Globe\nand Mail.\nA lot of highway accidents occur when\nmotorists drive in high gear while they leave\ntheir minds in neutral.\u2014Woodstock Sentinel-\nReview.\nTIED DOWN\nA prison sentence for a Tennessee man\nupset his marriage nlans. But he's still going\nto be tied down.\u2014Saskatoon Star-Phoenix.\nYour. Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0By tFrmu^mu Drake-\nLIBERTINE - (LIB-er-teen) - noun; a\nfreethinker; one without self-restraint, a'\nrake. Adjective; freethlnkine, uncontrolled\nor licentious. Origin: Latin\u2014libertinus, freed\nslave.\nWOULD BE FUNNY!\nJokes and gags about property rights in\nouter space are wearing a bit thin, but\nwouldn't it. be funny if some characters out\nthere thought they owned us?\u2014Brantford\nExpositor.\nTODAY'S BIRLP\nTHOUGHT\nWhy do ye eat and rink with\nsinners? Luke 5:30.\nChrist has been portrayed as a\npale Galilean wilh fits. Had he\nbeen of that ilk he would not have\nbeen invited as. a guest to sophisticated homes wherever He went.\nHe overthew the tables of the\nchangers, he was no silly mole-\ncoddle.\nOajmI ML\nW\/WX Am A HUT TIP\noChas.JASON, ,\n.HE9AT0M -jj|\nDLLM0' (A\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according to\nthe stars,\nFor Thursday, Jan. 9, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Good Moon and Sun Influences\nshould help' to push matters for\nwhich you have skill, talent. You\ncan add to the value of saleability\nof your products or output by\ngiving i them more polish, a \"new\nlook.\" Keep up to date,\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nMechanics, manufacturing and artistic pursuits have fresh encouragement, nbw. Checking and stocktaking are also In line. In buying,\nexertise .sound- judgment. Good\nrays on the whole.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Geminl)-\nFulfill promises as promptly as\npossible and do net take on more\nresponsibilities than you can\nhandle. Try to wind up present obligations and be careful in written\nmatters. \u2022\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23-lCancer)-\nFine Moon and Siin aspects hold\npromise of heart-warming, benefits. Be discriminating, ambitious;\nmuch can be gained through your\nintelligent management Taboo\nworry, fear. \u25a0\nJULY 24. to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nDay encourages, stimulates good\ndeeds, wholesome activtities\nsports, community Interests. You\nmay not feel as mentally sharp as\nusual, but keep to your schedule\nnevertheless.\nAUGUST 21 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Heed advice to Gemini\nand Sagittarius. Work, science,\nany matter with which you are\nfamiliar or have training can advance under good management,\nRemain calm, reasonable; be\nhappy.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Similar to Taurus.\nYour even 'balance and generally\ngood judgment can be big assets\non a day like this. You should\nmake good headway if you   do\nyour best. Enjoy some relaxation,\ntoo. \u2022'\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n'Scorpio) \u2014 A so-so day. Government and military interests, also\nsound business enterprises, are\nunder mostly good influences but\nthey must be handled expertly.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittariusl \u2014 Jupiter's position now suggests that you be cautious in all financial trasactlons.\nOtherwise, the day is a fovorable\none and can prove highly consequential where your occupational\ninterests are concerned. \/\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Don't waste energy\nor time on pointless ventures, or\non people who are Irritating or\ncontentious. You can enjoy a good\nday by being your bright steady\nself. \u25a0\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Fine Uranus influences. -You should be able to use\nnew, methods, machinery or tools\nwith deftness, yielding. better results. Smart planning can ' help\nyou to gain; also save time, effort.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Neptune's position suggests care in handling liquids,\nmedicines. Show,, your good sense.\nHowever, don't shirk difficult\ntasks or fear new undertakings.\nMove ahead with discretion, but\nalso determination.\nYOU BORN TODAY have a\ngreat desire for knowledge; are\ninnately generous, dependable, Industrious, ambitious, and broadiy\ncapable; may have a tendency to\nbluntness; to be too determined.\nThese traits can be drawbacks\nand 'should be restrained for the\nsake of-your, own happiness and\nthat of your family. You can succeed to a high degree in any honorable trade,. profession, calling;\nwill study, work hard for success.\nBirthdale: Thos. Warton, English\npoet laureate.\nKing Features.\nStart Campaign Going\nFor Liberal Leader\nOTTAWA (CP)-Veteran politician Paul Martin and diplomat\nLester B. Pearson have started\na pre-conveption fight for the\nLiberal leadership.\nThe two main contenders have\nsent letters to the 1,500 or so delegates appealing for support\nwhen voting gets under way during the three - day convention\nopening Jan. 14.\nSenator David Croll, a Pearson\nsupporter, claimed that the 54-\nyear-old Mr. Martin \"hit eblow\nthe belt\" in one part of his letter\nwhere he stated he would reappoint the 60-year-old Mr. Pearson\nas external affairs minister once\nhe became prime minister. -\n\"I shall have at my right hand\nand reappoint to our most important cabinet post the greatest\nminister of external affairs Canada has ever, had,\" Mr. Martin\nsaid. \"He may then continue to\nFuch's Party Unshaken\nIn Aim To Reach Pole\nNo married folks agree all the\ntime. If they live in peace, It's\nbecause one has got reconciled to\nlettin' the q'.ber have his own way\nall the time.\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. (Reuters)\nDr. Vivian Fuchs and his British\nteam advanced another 31 miles\ntoward the South Pole Tuesday as\ndisagreement mounted with Sir\nEdmund Hillary on. Fuchs'\nchances of crossing the frozen\nAntarctic.\nThe 49-year-old mild-mannered\nBrilon, determined to \"go it\nalone\" if necessary on the last\nleg of his 2,100-mile crossing of\nthe ice-covered continent, was 290\nmiles from the pole. He expects\nto reach it before Jan. 17.\nWhat happens after 'that has\nbrought the disagreement between Fuchs and HIJlary, who\nlast week with four New Zealand\ncompanions became the first\noverland team to reach the pole\nsince 1912. The co-conqueror of\nMount Everest has advised\nFuchs to stop at the pole, while\nthe Briton says he will push on.\nUnder the original plan Fuchs\nwas to continue past the pole to;\nwards the New Zealand Scott\nBase on McMurdo Sound, using\nsupply depots Hillary set up in\nhis.advance to the pole! It would\nbe the first time an overland expedition had crossed from one\nside of Antarctica to the other.\nUNWARRANTED DANGER .\nHillary advised Fuchs to stop\nbecause to'continue past the pole\nmight bring unwarranted danger\nto the party as the Antarctic\nwinter set in.\nFuchs rejected Hillary's suggestion and said he would (ind\nhis way out from \"Depot 700,\"\nwhere the Hillary team was originally tp link up and guide him\nback to Scott Base. Hillary flew\nout Monday from the pole back\nto Scott Base.\nFuchs, who has had to battle\ndangerous crevasses and high-\npacked snow ridges shaped by\nthe wind, now is weeks behind\nschedule.\nFuchs has made daily seismic\nstudies of what lies beneath the\nice as well as gravity tests and\nglaciological work.\nThe London ' headquarlers of\nthe Commonwealth Antarctic expedition has declared its \"full\nsupper!\" o[ Fuchs and upheld\nhis decision to press on.\nCharles Bowden, chairman of\nthe committee directing the New\nZealand operations, said it has\nnot lost sight of Its primary\nduty\u2014to support Fuchs in making his cross-continent trip.\nCORRECT THING\nHe said Hillary had that responsibility clearly in mind and\nhis suggestion that Fuchs slop at\nthe pole and continue next year\nwas \"actuated by Hillary's assessment of likely conditions.\"\nNew Zealand Premier Walter\nNash commented: \"My ] personal\nknowledge of Sir Edmund is such\nthat he would at no lime do olher\nthan the correct thing and Ihe\nbest thing for all parties- concerned,\"\nMost New Zealand newspapers\nhave defended Hillary's decision\nThe 'Auckland   Star   says:   \"All\nNew Zealanders will say that it\nSir Edmund Hillary says a risk\nis unjustifiable, it is. The London\ncommittee has taken . a very\ngrave responsibility.\"\nThe Napier Daily Telegraph\ncomments that \"Hillary seems\nmore expert in exploration than\nin public relations.\"\nIn Australia, the Sydney Nor-\nning Herald labels as \"just plain\nsilly\" any suggestion that Hillary\nneglected his main job o! establishing depots for Fuchs.\nIn Britain, several newspapers\nhave criticized Hillary for wrangling with. Fuchs.\nThe London Daily Sketch says\n\"it is sad to see these two great\nmen quarrelling at the frozen\nlimits ot the earth; it is sad to\nsee the brave south pole adventure ending in a blaze of acrimony.\" '\nThe London Daily Mail, in an\n\"open letter\" to Hillary, pleads\nwith him to not spoil Fuchs\"1 \"private dream\" that the expedition\nshould not be one for personal\nglory but an epic Commonwealth\neffort in which all countries\nshould share.    \u2022\nThe letter says the two had not\npreviously \"hit it oft\" but adds\nthat the evidence is too scanty\nto makea judgment. But Ihe inclination of the moment was to\nsay \"poor show, Sir Edmund,\npoor show.\"\nThorneycroft\nRumors Busy\nLONDON (Reuters) - Two\nnewspapers speculate that there\nmay be more behind the resignation of. Peter Thorneycroft, chancellor of the exchequer, than a\ndispute with the cabinet on a rise\nof le\"ss than one per cent in government spending.\nThorneycroft quit Monday night\nbecause he said the cabinet\nwanted to increase budget spending by \u00a350.000,000 despite his\nplea for stability.\nBut the Liberal newspaper\nManchester Guardian wonders\nwhether Thorneycroft's action was due solely to this difference'of o'pinion.\n\"Much remains to emerge ln\npublic,\" it comments. \"There is\nan air of unreality about the dispute as so far unveiled.\"\nThe London Dally-Mail, Conservative, asks: \"Did; Mr. Thorneycroft decide to go on that\ncomparatively' trivial matter, or\nis there some other reason?. . .\nOne conjecture is as good as another.\"\nDefence for Thorneycroft's action comes from the independent\npaper The London Times. It expresses regret that Prime Minister Macmillan \"has not in the\nend supported his courageous\nchancellor of the exchequer.\"\n\"All those who have felt that\nthe battle for Britain's economic\nstability is still in'the balance\nmust have hoped that the support\nwould be forthcoming. But as it\nwas not, Mr. Thorneycroft had\nno choice but to resign.\"\nThe-Dally Telegraph', Conservative, describes the chancellor's\nresignation as \"misjudged\" and\nsays it must have \"deplorable\neffects.\"\nLord Beaverbrook's Daily Express says \"the pebple will feel,\nas the cabinet felt, that this was\ncarrying fiscal purity to excessive lengths.\"\nA business newspaper, the Financial Times, says it would be\na mistake for foreign financial\ncircles now to assume that \"sterling is the less, reliable.\"\nrepresent this country at the\nUnited Nations, at, NATO and\nat other international gatherings\nWhere his return is awaited\nby representatives of many nations.\"\nPERSONAL   CAMPAIGN)\nSenator Croll said in an interview he just didn't like the phrasing in that part of, the letter. Mr.\nPearson, in his campaign opener,\nmade no reference to Mr. Martin\n>or any other contender.\nSupporters of Mr. Pearson said\nthe Nobel Peace Prize winner,\ndidn't want to do any letter-writing, planning to leave his campaigning until the convention\nopened. But Mr. M.artin, member\nof Parliament for 22 years, appears to have set the pace. Mr.\nMartin also made personal longdistance telephone calls to soma\n400 delegates.\n\"We have a vast and important reorganization job to do,\nfrom the bottom up,\" Mr. Martin\nadded ,jn his letter. \"We shall\nneed practical as well as skilled\nleadership^\"'\nHe was sure he could lead the\nLiberals hack to government office and if he. became prime minister; he would continue to expand social welfare policies\n\"which in the past, won such enthusiastic public support for Canadian liberalism.\"\nGREAT   SIGNIFICANCE\nMr. Pearson said the convention will be an \"event of great\nsignificance for our oountry and\nfor our party.\"\n\"The delegates . . . may well\nbe taking part in opening the\ncampaign for the next general\nelection. As Liberals we welcome\nthis forthcoming appeal to the\npeople, gut we must organize for\nit and fight to win it.\"\nIf he beoame leader he would\nbe \"deeply conscious of the\nobligation to follow those progressive and essential principles\nof Liberalism which have guided\nand sustained our leaders.\" .\nUsually t h e leadership alternates between English and\nFrench \u2022 speaking leaders. Rt.\nHon. Louis St. Laurent.- who\nsteps down, is a bilingual, Roman\nCatholic from Quebec. Mr, Martin is a Catholic and also bilingual. Mr. Pearson is an English-\nspeaking Protestant.\nPearson To Be\nOn TV Saturday\nOTTAWA (CP) - Lester B.\nPearson will make a three-minute speech at the end of Interviewer Mike Wallace's television\nshow over a United States network next Saturday.\n' Mr. Pearson will be guest In\nNew York of the American Nobel\nanniversary committee whose\nmembers will appear on the\nshow over ABC network from\nNew York Saturday night. Mr.\nPearson's office said the Nobel\nPeace Prize winner will not be\nsubjected to detailed questioning\nby Mr. Wallace who gained\nprominence as a stiff questioner.\n% Car Ring\nWINDSOR. Ont. (CP)-Samuel\nDunbar, 35. of Windsor Monday\npleaded guilty to a charge of\nsmuggling stolen United States\ncars and was remanded to Jan.\n13 for sentence.\nDunbsr was one of five men arrested in what RCMP officers\nterm a nation-wide ring, operating between here and Port Arthur and Edmonton.\nDunbar was arrested wilh William Edmunds. 39, ot Brockville.\nOnt.. Dec. 13. Edmunds pleaded\nnot guilty Monday and was remanded to Jan. 13 for trial date.\nJoseph Asset, a former Windsor bootlegger, is being held by\nRCMP in Edmonton in connection with the charges. Two Others\nare also being held in the West.\nj The investigation into the ring\nbegan in Edmonton when a detective overheard a m a n trying\nto sell a late model car tor a\n\"sacrifice\" price. Since then four\nCanadian police forces and the\nU. S. Federal Bureau of Inv\u00bbst-\nigatlon have been involved in the\nease.\nBusiness Spotliqht. . .\nSalesmanship Changed\nWithin Last Few Years\nKEFP SHOPPING IN FIRE\nLONDON (AP'\u2014Fire broke out\nTuesdav. at Selfridgcs, one of\nLondon's biggest department\nstores, as'crowds jostled for bargains-at the January sale The\nblaze was extinguished quickly.\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press  Business  Editor\nSome striking comparisons between methods of doing business\na few years a'o ard Ucss ot today were drawn at a management seminar of the Toronto\nchapter of the American Marketing Association.\nHarry Suflrin of Montreal, director of research and organization of Steinbergs Ltd,, referring\nto the foundation of that firm in\n1917, said:\n\"Space allocations and space\nutilizations were at. their most\nefficient peaks since merchandise was piled ,to the coiling.\nSlore layout could not matter\nless, since a good clerk knew\nwhere to lind things.\n\"Selling was not- dependent\nupon the excellence of packaging,\nof of displays, fixturing or lighting. Crackers were sold out of\nbarrels, cheese was cut from\nhuge slabs. Almost all commodities were sold, in bulk to the\n\u2022<ror-ery s:ore whirli. h turn,\nbroke the bulk and weighed\nthe items according to the customers' needs.\n\"Yet, even in those days, there\nwas a poUcy \u2014 the policy that\nsaid we must keep the customers happy. And today the\ngreatest asset, as? in those days,\nis the customers' goodwill.\"\nWANT ELABORATE ITEMS\nGiving today's side of the picture, Dr. Edgar Gunther. director of market research, Fortune\nMagazine, said:\n\"T o d a y, we demand pie-\nstrained and pre-cooked baby\nfoods, prepared cake mixes,\nfrozen fruits and vegetables, pre-\ncul meals, pre-cooked dinners in\nthrow-away pans.\n\"We're even too lazy to pop\ncorn in the old-fashioned way\u2014\nwe buy it already seasoned, in\nexpandable aluminum-foil packages which we just stick in the\noven.\"\nMuch ot the seminar's daylong discussions by some 160\nbusiness representatives centred\naround the problem of marketing\nthe tremendous output of factories.\nOne suggestion was that rental\nmav r?nlace ownersh'i in the\nautomobile and large household-\nappliance fields, with customers\nperhaps getting a new model\nevery year.\nOther discussions centred\naround improved research and\nsalesmanship.\nPaul Dixon, vice \u2022 president,\nmarketing. Sea Breeze Manufacturing Ltd., Toronto, said:\n\"How long is it since a car-\ndealer salesman has called you\neither on the telephone or at your\nhome to interest you in a new\ncar? I would be amazed if there\nwere five people here who have\nbeen called\u2014not in the last three\nmonths, but in the last three\nyears.\nSEES COMPLACENCY\n\"Look at the white goods' Industry. The fantastic growth experienced over the last 10 years\nappears to have lulled it into a\nstate of complacency.\n\"Mrs. Consumer must be exposed to the features and wonder\nof the products by proper demonstration and sound selling techniques.\n\"Or lock at the electronics industry. Granted there is heavy\nsaturation of television, but there\nare still a half-million wired\nhomes within range ol Canadian\ntelevision programs which have\nstill not made an original purchase' of a TV set. In several\nlarge cities 45 per cent of sets in\nuse are over three years old.\"\n 5\"\nPROMINENT NELSON families were linked with\nthe marriage in the new Fairview United Church of\nMarilyn Louise Harrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. D. Harrison, and Donald Wilfred Laishley, son of\nDr. and Mrs. Wilfred LaiBhley. Rev. H. R. Whitmore\nperformed the double-ring ceremony, first wedding to\nbe solemnized in the-church. The bride and groom, are\nstudents at University of B.C.\u2014Vogue photo.\nMr. and Mrs. Patrick A. Poulin are pictured here\nfollowing their wedding in the Cathedral- of Mary Immaculate. Mrs. Poulin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John\nM. O'Shaughnessy, was formerly a teacher at Central\nSchool. The groom, in his final year in engineering at\nGonzaga University, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. P. E.\nPoulin.\u2014Vogue photo.\nAbout the Town\nIM\nPHONE 1844\nAfter a four weeks' holiday at\nPringe George, where they visited\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. P. 0. Bird, 914 Observatory Street, have returned to Nelson, stopping off in Kelowna en\nroute home. In Pringe George they\nwere guests at the home of Dr. and\nMrs. D. G. M. Kettyls (Barbara)\nand their family. Dr. Kettyls is the\nDirector of the Cariboo Health\nUnit.\n* *  *\nMiss Lorrie Straub of Omak,\nWash., and Miss Dolores Wahl-\nstrom of Nakusp, who have been\naway from Nelson during the\nChristmas and New Year's season,\nreturned Monday evening to Nelson\nto resume their studios at Notre\nDame College.\n* +   *\nAfter spending the Christmas and\nNew Year's holiday with his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. p. Langill,\n817 Fourth Street, Roy Langill of\nVancouver returned to the Coast\nFriday by plane.\n* *  \u2666\nMrs. Mabel Jeffs, 380 Baker\nStreet, has been a patient ln the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nsince last Saturday.\n*  *  *\nRecreation director Joe Johnson\nreturned Monday from a holiday\nto Scotland, where he visited relatives in and nea.r Glasgow. Leaving Nelson on the 19th of December, Mr. Johnson travelled the\nPolar route by CPA to Amsterdam,\nfrom Vancouver. From Amsterdam\nhe flew to London and Glasgow. On\nhis return he flew from Prestwick\nto Montreal, then to Vancouver,\nand came on to Nelson by bus.\nGROUP PLANS\nVALENTINE TEA\nPlans for their annual Valentine\ntea to be held February 15 were\nmade by members of the Alma\nGroup of St. Paul's-Trinity United\nChurch at their monthly sbusiness\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. Gt\nTurner.\nCo-hostesses were Mrs. - W. S,\nRamsay and Mrs. Don Porteous.\nThe door prize was won by Mrs,\nJ. Young.\nBride From Hong Kong\nMakes Pretty Picture\nThe son of a well-known Nelsonwas wed in a civil ceremony ln\nmerchant and his bride-to-be who the Nelson court house by Court\nhad arrived by plane from Hong\nKong, were principals in a wedding\nheld Monday afternoon, followed by\na large reception ln the Hume Hotel\nSilver Room ln the evening.\nMiss Sheu-Moi of Hong Kong, who\narrived in Nelson December 31,\nFruitvale LA Plans For Installation\nKiddles Just love the wild cherry flavor\n... and It snotties, relieves so fast.\nTHE CHILDREN'S OWN\nCOUGH SYRUP\nWith Vitamin C\nTWO BUCKLEY PRODUCTS\nFRUITVALE - At a special\nmeeting Uie executive of the ladies' auxiliary to the Canadian Legion's Fruitvale branch, plans were\ncompleted for installation of the\n1958 officers of both the branch\nand the auxiliary. This is to be\nheld Jan. 14. Plans include a social evening and a buffet supper.\nPlans were also completed for\na catering on Jan. 10, with Mrs.\nGordon Stoutenburg in charge of\narrangements.\nEdgewood\nEDGEWOOD - Newlyweds Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Atkinson of Vancouver spent a week with the former's\nparents Mr. and Mrs. J. Klein. A\nnumber of friends surprised the\nbride at the parent's home and\npresented her with a number of\ngifts. Mrs. W. Shipmaker sr., Mrs.\nE. J. Donselaar and Mrs. R. Hopp\njr. were the hostesses. During the\nevening the bride and groom showed slides of some of the mountain\nclimbs they have been on,' in various resorts throughout Canada.\nMrs. Atkinson said that when she\ncomes back. again she will bring\nslides of her recent trip through\nEurope.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Nesbitt of Princeton visited with the former's\naunt, Mrs. J. S. Vrooman.\nMr. and Mrs. V. 0. Nesbitt of\nVancouver spent a few days with\nIhe former's brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Nesbitt.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jordan and\nfamily of Chilliwack visited friends\nand relatives here.\nFruitvale Notes\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Miss Doreen De-\nBruyn, of Essondale Nursing School\nmade a short visit to her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Louis DeBruyn.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Duncan sr.\nand daughters Lois, Constance and\nHeather, have returned from\nmotor trip to California.\nMr. and Mrs. Jofrn Duncan have\nreturned to their home in Haney\nThey were accompanied by Mrs\nWalter Duncan jr and daughter\nwho will visit there for a few days\nMr. and Mrs. Kenneth Gibbard\nhave returned from spending the\nChristmas vacation at Vancouver\nand Victoria. They are on the\nFruitvale teaching staff.\nMr. and Mrs. Edwin Henry and\nfamily have returned from Calgary\nwhere Mrs. Henry arid the family\nhave spent the past month.\nMiss Marion Mauchline has returned to her teaching duties at\nVictoria after spending the Christmas vacation with her parents, Mr\nand Mrs. William Mauchline,\nMr. and Mrs.'Norman Horner and\nfamily of Prince George are visiting the latter's mother, Mrs. Eliza\nbeth Sims.\nWoman. Wahtin,\nPrinted Pattern\n9292\nHALF-biZE   BASIC\nFashion's favorite sheath proportioned for half - sizers. If you're\nshorter, fuller, sew this Printed\nPattern in basic black, winter navy\nor sapphire blue for flattery in the\nnew year.\nPrinted Pattern 9292: Hall-sizes\n14%, Wk, Wh, 20^4, 22V4, 24%.\nSize 16% requires 2% yards 54-\ninch fabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part, easier .accurate. '\nSend FIFTY CENTS in coins\n'stamps not accepted) (or this pattern. Please print plainly Size,\nAddress, Style Number.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.,\nToronto, Ont.\nRegistrar K. D. McRae to Kenneth\nHingwing, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nD. Hingwing, 801 Victoria Street.\nThe bride was attired in a brown\nsuit with . white hat and gloves,\nbrown shoes, and a corsage of\nwhite carnations.\nChanging into a lovely Chinese\ndress of green brocaded satin with\nsilt side skirt, the small, beautiful\nbride was a picture as she smiled\nand' bowed to the guests. About 230\nfriends and business acquaintanees\nattended the reception, among\nwhom were representatives of citvl\nand provincial governments,\nToasts were proposed with fruit\npunch, the toast to the bride being\noffered by Leo Whitelock, responded to by Mr. Hingwing, the father\nof the groom. Vincent Moore spoke\na few words of felicitation.\nA Chinese dinner was served to\nthe guests, of barbequed pork, bar\nbecued duck, chop suey, cashew\nchicken, sweet and sour spare ribs,\nand rice,\nThe bride and groom met in\nHong Kong, and waited two years\nbefore Mr. Hingwing, by Canadian\nlaw, could bring his future bride to\nCanada to be married. They will\nreside in Nelson.\nBride Designs\nHer Dress For\nCoast Wedding\nEDGEWOOD - A wedding of\ninterest to Edgewood took place in\nVancouver recently. The Bethlehem Lutheran Church, decorated\n,with greenery and white flowers\nwas the scene of the wedding of\nHedwig (Hedy) Klein and Jack\nAtkinson. Rev. F. T. Gabert performed' the double ring ceremony.\nThe bride is the only daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. John Klein of\nEdgewood and the groom is the\neldest son of Mr. and Mrs. John\nR. Atkinson of Vancouver.\nA dress designer, the bride wore\na cocktail length shirt waist gown\nof white lace over taffeta of her\nown styling. Her shoulder length\nveil felMrom a white satin bandeau\nheaddress. She carried an all\nwhite bouquet of chrysanthemums\nand gardenias.\nHer maid of honor and sole\nattendant, Miss Elizabeth Walker,\nwore a cocktail length blue taffeta\ndress, also designed by the bride,'\nfeaturing a bouffant skirt. She\nwore a matching bandeau and\ncarried a bouquet of pink carnations.\nBest man was Mr. Frank Atkinson, brother of the groom and\nushers were Mr. Roger Atkinsdn\nand Mr. Peter Mellish.\nMr. William Poole of Port Al-\nberni proposed the toast to the,\nbride at the reception held at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Fairley\nof West Vancouver.       .   v .\nMembers of the Vancouver section of the Alpine Club of Canada,\nIhe bride and groom left for a ski\nhoneymoon at Sun Valley and\nMount Hood.\nRumors Rouse\nKeen Interest\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 Announcement Tuesday that Prime\nMinister R. G. Menzies and Russian leaders have exchanged new\nyear messages aroused keen interest in diplomatic circles here.\nThere\" is speculation that the\nexchange may foreshadow renewal of diplomatic representation between Australia and Russia, broken off in 1954 after the\ndefection of a Russian embassy\nofficial in Canberra, Vladimir\nPetrov.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8, 19S8 \u2014 S\nMR. AND MRS. WILLIAM LEES BEATTY\n-Vogue photo.\nBeatty-Brown Marriage Vows\nPledged In Candlelight Ceremony\nIn St. Paul's - Trinity United\nChurch, Christmas trees, large\nwhite chrysanthemums, poinsettias\nand flickering candlelighfmade an\nimpressive setting'for the marriage\nof Barbara Joan Brown and William Lees Beatty, performed by\nRev. Donovan E. Jones.\nIan Isbister the. diminutive\nnephew of the bride, carrying a\nsmall white satin pillow with two\ngold rings for the double-ring ceremony preceded Miss Mary Jane\nCohill, bridesmaid, and Mrs. William Isbister, shster of the bride\nas Matron of Honor, down the aisle\nto the Altar.\nFollowing, on the arm of her\nbrother Mr. Richard. Brown the\npetite bride looked radiant in a\nwaltz length gown of white silk\nvelvet with a fitted bodice and\nscalloped neckline. Her embroidered silk tulle veil cascaded, from a\ntiara of pearls and irridescent sequins. She carried a white' bible\ncrested with gardenias and satin\nstreamers, and wore a single string\nof pearls, the gift of the groom\nHer attendants wore identical red\nsilk velvet dresses and carried\nwhite fur-muffs with sprigs of holly.\nTheir headdresses were of sequined\ntulle with fur pom poms.\nThe ring bearer wore dark green\nslacks, and white blouse with bright\ngreen cumberbrind and tie.\nMr. Walter Beatty of Nanaimo\nwas his brother's best man. Ushers\nwere Mr. Desmond Nex, Mr. John\nRainey, Mr. Owen Brown and Mr.\nDavid Townsend.\nThe mother of the bride wore a\ngrey lace dress oyer rose silk\nwith matching accessories and the\ngroom'S mother wore a royal blue\ncrepe and lace dress with accessor\nies en tone. Both wore corsages of\npink carnations.\nCHOIRS SINGS\nMembers of the senior choir, the\njunior boys' and girls' choirs, united\nj'to sing the beautiful hymns \"0\nPerfect Love\" during the signing\nof the register, accompanied by\nMr. Merlin Bunt, organist.\nAfter the ceremony the reception\ntook place in the Silver Room of\nthe Hume Hotel. Mr. J. H. Coventry proposed the toast to the bride.\nCongratulations and best wishes\nwere .received by telegram from\nHonolulu, Victoria,, Vancouver,\nSeattle and Ontario, and were read\nby the best man.\nPresiding at the tea table were\nMrs. D. D. Townsend and Mrs.\nRoly Brown, aunts of the bride.\nA separate iable with bouquets of\nred and white chrysanthemums\nand pink tapers was centered by a\nbeautifully decorated three - tire\nwedding cake topped with miniature bride and- groom. Mr, and Mrs.\nBeatty cut the cake and personally\nassisted in serving it. The servi-\nteurs were Mrs. Bruce Arnesen,\nMrs. George Trainor, Mr. and Mrs.\nDesmond Nex, Mr. and Mrs. John\nRainey, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Brown,\nMiss Molly Arnesen, Miss Shirley\nHughes, Miss Joan Jarbeau, Miss\nRachael Johnson, Miss Paulette\nDavis, Miss Theresa Joje, Mr.\nColin Brown and Mr. David Town-\nsend.\nVksdkawgL\n%, ctauhcL LVhwIeJL\nNEEDLE PAINTING\nJust a little embroidery for these\npictures. They will add beauty to\nany room. Use natural coloring.\nOr Just black or brown as in an\netching.\nPattern 618: transfer of two pictures 9%xll\u00bb\/\u00ab inches (embroidery\nsize); color chart.\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 Number,\nyour Name and Address.\nAs a bonus, two complete patterns are printed right in our 1957\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Book\nDozens of other designs you'll want\nto order\u2014easy fascinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts\nbazaar items. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book today!\nMiss Connie Romano was In\ncharge of the guest book. Miss\nRose Ann Zabawa caught the\nbride's bouquet.\nA period of dancing followed the\nreception after which the happy\ncouple left for a week's honeymoon\ntrip to points south en route to\nNew Westminster where they will\nmake their home. The, bride chose\nfor her going away ensemble, a red\nwool sheath dress, with matching\nhat and bag, a black seal-skin cloth\ncoat, and black gloves and shoes.\n6ut of town, guests Included Mr\nC. Beatty, Mrs. R. D. Hall and\nMr. and Mrs. Nex, and Mr. and\nMrs. Rainey of Victoria, Mr. Walter Beatty of Nanaimo, Mrs. D. D.\nTownsend and Mr. -David Town-\nsend, Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Griffiths,\nCarleton, Douglas and James Currier, Miss Paulette Davis and Miss\nTheresa Poje of Trail, Miss Connie\nRomano and Mr. Dennis Trie of\nSpokane, Miss Rachael Johnson of\nKamloops, Miss Rita Carey of\nRevelstoke and Mr. and Mrs. Owen\nBrown of Cranbrook.\nThe bride and her bridesmaid are\nboth recent graduates of the Royal\nJubilee Hospital in Victoria.\nWloJVJUL $0MifL...\nWilliam Holden, One-Time Hollywood\nStar, Ranks as International Actor\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - \"There\nisn't a place in this world where\nI won't go if I think I can make\na good picture there,\" says international actor William Holden.\n'Ever to Ceylon?\nRoyalty Attend\nBirthday Dance\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Nearly\n200 guests danced until the early\nhours Tuesday at the belated 21st\nbirthday ball for Princess Alexan\ndra, daughter of the late Duke of\nKent.\nPrince Philip was the princess'\npartner in the first dance.\nJazz and rock 'n roll tunes took\nsecond place to rhythmic \"cha-\ncha-cha\" music from Latin Ame\nrica.\nThe celebrations began Monday\nnight with a dinner party attended\nby about 20 guests, including\nQueen Elizabeth, Alexandra's\ncousin.      .   '\nPrincess Margaret did not attend. Court officials said she had\na bad cold.\nIt was the. fifth time in recent\nmonths that Margaret had failed\nto show up at an expected engagement with the Queen and\nPrince Philip.\nAlexandra was 21 on Christmas\nDay, but the celebrations were\npostponed until this ppst-holiday\nparty.\nThe music room of Kensington\nPalace, converted into a bar for\nthe occasion, flowed with champagne and gin, whisky and port.\nAmong the guests was Lady\nMoyra Hamilton, lady-in-waiting\nto Princess Alexandra. The name\nof her brother, the Marquess of\nHamilton, 23, has been romantically linked with the princess.\nCourt officials, cautious when it\ncomes to royal romances, would\nnot say if the marquess himself\nwas present. He was not seen by\nreporters.\nVEEP'S WIDOW DEAD\nPHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - Mrs.\nThomas R. Marshall, 85, widow\nof a former vice-president of the\nUnited States, died Monday night\nin a Phoenix hospital. Her husband, who died in 1925, served\nas vice-president from 1913 until\n1921.. He was credited with originating the- saying: \"What this\ncountry needs is a good five-cent\ncigar.\"\n\"Yes, even though I was miserable there, I'd go back if I\nthought the picture would be as\ngood.\"\nAntarctica?\n\"I'd go there, too, Uiough I\nhate cold.\"\nPROVES POINT\nHe certainly has proved his\npoint: That film stars can no\nlonger sit beside Hollywood\nswimming pools; they must go\nall over the world.     i\nOscar winner Holden is living\nevidence of that. He used to\nspend his time shuttling back\nand forth , between Paramount\nand Columbia studios, which\nshared his contract and which\nare a mile apart. '\nNow he's hustling all over the\nglobe. In' the last year he\" went\nto Ceylon to make The Bridge on\nthe River Kwai. Then he travelled to England for The Key with\nSophia Loren.\nrle's back in his Hollywood\nhaunts, but who knows for how\nlong?\nALL ONE BUSINESS\nHe expounded: \"My thought\nabout the film business is this:\nall this carping between the\nmovie businesses in Japan,\nAmerica, England, France, Italy\nand all over is ridiculous. We've\ngot to wake up to the fact that\nwe're all segments of the same\nindustry. I think films are going\nto get more and more international all the lime. The time will\ncome when it will be commonplace for stars, directors and\nother creators to work on films\nin Ihe industries of many countries.\"\n\"I've been home.\u201e,about five\nmonths in the past four years,\"\nhe remarked, \"ff I'm not making\npictures abroad, I'm overseas\nhelping to sell themi spending\ntwo or three months in Japan, a\nmonth in Kong Kong and so\nforth.\"\nHe took his whole family to\nLondon, but or.ly his wife, Brenda\nMarshall, joined him in Ceylon.\nMAKES FISH\nmore TEMPTING'\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nBALANCE 18 MONTHS\nJji&jna^\nMushrooms\nGive Special\nFlavor, Texture\nBy MARGARET CARR\nThis is the open season on those\nheavenly fresh mushrooms which\nare, now at the peak of their perfection \u2014 and for canned mush-\nrooms^ too, available in all food\nstores.-Both give a.gourmet flavor\nand texture to hundreds of dishes\nand turn unexciting ones to masterpieces for the family, table,\nMushrooms are rich in flavor\nand high in protein and vitamin\ncontent. Fresh mushrooms, which\nshould never be peeled, are quick\nand easy to cook. Try some raw,\nquartered and chilled, with your\nfavorite cocktail dip. Saute^them\nlightly and serve as a vegetable.\nOr put Into meat loaves, stews,\nleft-overs, sauces \u2014 almost any\ndish \u2014 for fine flavor.\nAnd calories \u2014 well, mushrooms\nhave the leastest for the mostest\nof almost any popular food you\ncan name. Fresh or canned mushrooms in brine contain only 68\ncalories per pound.\nUse fresh or canned mushrooms\nto prepare family \u2022 pleasing Pork.\nwith Chinese Mushrooms. Centuries ago the Chinese learned how\nto cook vegetables with meat so.\nthat the vegetables retained, their\ncrispy goodness, and the meat its\nfull flavor. The secret of this substantial main dish is to slice the\nmushrooms, pork and vegetables\npaper-thin. Then, everything is\ncooked in a very brief time and\nr e t a 1 n\u00ab its full - bodied flavor.\nSprinkle a few pretzel crumbs instead of crisp noodles around the\nrice so as to give a contrasting\nnutty texture to the dish.\nPORK WITH MUSHROOMS\nCHINESE\n1 pound lean pork; 3 tablespoons\nbutter; salt and pepper; 1 small\nonion, chopped; 2 to J stalks of\ncelery; 1 pound fresh mushrooms,\nsliced, or 1 4-oz. can sliced mushrooms, drained; pinch ginger and\nnutmeg; 2 tablespoons cooking\nsherry or sherry wine, or chicken\nbouillon; 2 tablespoons soy sauce;\nU4 cups rice, cooked; % cup\ncoarse pretzel crumbs (optional).\n\u2022 Cut the pork in thin slices and\nthen cut the slices into thin strips.\nMelt the butter, add the pork and\n,cook, stirring occasionally, for 10\nminutes. Season to taste with salt\nand pepper.\nCut onion In half and\" slice each\nhalf into a measuring cup. Add\nenough shredded celery to fill the\ncup. Add to pork. Add mushrooms,\nginger and nutmeg, and simmer,\nstirring often, 20 minutes. Add wine\nor chicken bouillon and soy sauce,,\nand simmer, covered, 10 minutes.\nServe with rice. Sprinkle pretzel\ncrumbs around the rice. Serves\nCOMMIT GEIN TO\nSTATE HOSPITAL\nWISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis.\n(AP) - Judge Herbert Bunde\nfound Edward Gein, 51-year-old\nself-admitted ghoul and mutilation killer, to be legally insane\nand ordered him committed to\nthe Wisconsin Central State. Hospital for the Criminal Insane for\nan indefinite period.\nGein has admitted slaying two\npersons and robbing at least nine\ngraves. He was charged with\nfirst-degree murder In the death\nof Mrs. Bernice Worden, a 58-\nyear-old widow.    '.\nJudge Bunde said at the close\nof a sanity hearing Monday night\nthat it is unlikely he (Gein) ever\nwill be at liberty again.\"\nThe tale of Gein's admitted\nslayings and grave lootings unfolded after he was arrested ln\nthe slaying of Mrs. Worden. Her\nbody was found hanging in a\nshed at the rear of his home. He >\nlater admitted killing Mrs. Mary\nHogan, a tavern operator. j ,\nDON'T PITY\nTHE\nPOOR GIRL!\nJUST TELL\nHER TO\nTAKE...\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nShe'll-Rfit split-second relief as the powerful\nmedication In Buckley's Mixture instantly\nspreads warming, soothing Ingredients\nthrough throat, chest and tubes-and stops\nthe tickle that makes her cough. Contains no\nsyrup-safe tor diabetics. 59; and 85s everywhere. That's why It Is -\nCANADA'S FASTEST-SELLING\nCOUGH\nREMEDY\/^\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8,1958\nL\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\n\"D\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\n-Y\nE\nR\nSO I'M TO 60\nTO CALETlttEH,\nAND 6ET CHUMMY \\\nWITH THE SKIN-\nDIVERS? I\nWHY!\n\/HERE'S the dope: last week \\\n\/ FOUR U.S. SUBS HEADED FOR A   1\nSUPERSSCRST RENDEZVOUS IN\n\\JriE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN.   \/\nTHEIR ARRIVAL, EVEtf\nTHEIR NA\/VsES,vJERE\nINSTANTLY REPORTED\nBY RUSSIAN RADIO,\nWE WERE PRETTY\nBADLY JOLTED.\nWAS THEREA SECURITY UAH? HAVE THE COMMIES\nBROKEN OUR tOttt? OR HAVE THEY SOME INFERNAL\nDEVICE'FOR TRACKINS OUR SHIPS?\nYOUR JOB, SAWYER, IS TO FIND OUT.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - Aircrafts\nled the way for a good stock market rally Tuesday as the U.S. Congress reconvened amid an atmosphere pointing to increased defence spending.\nThe rise tacked an estimated\n$2,000,000,000 to the quoted value\nof stocks listed on the New York\nStock Exchange, based on the\nrise in the Associated Press average.\nLeading issues,, mostly lower at\nthe start, picked up strength as\nsuccessive statements from\nWashington all pointed in the\nsame direction\u2014more spending.\nAmong Canadian'issues on the\nNew York exchange, Aluminium\nLtd. rose % on sales of 3600\nshares, Canadian Pacific rose %,\nDistillers-Seagrams and International Nickel Vi and Dome Mines\nVs. Walker-Goodenham lost 'A and\nMclntyre Porcupine 1.\nTORONTO (CP) - Pipelines\nand western oils Tuesday led the\nstock market to a solid advance\nafter prices had edged lower in\nthe first half of the session.\nThus the market carved out its\nfifth straight gain, the longest\nrally since last spring. In the\nlast few months, however, there\nhave been stronger advances but\nin a shorter time.\nWestern oils posted an index\ngain of 3% points, their best\nshowing in a month. Industrials\nwere ahead 2Vi points. Base metals, lower on index until a few\nminutes before the close, recorded an index-gain of more than\none-quarter of a point and golds\nadded one-quarter of a point.\nTuesday's climb was strong but\nit didn't outdo the advances of\nlast Thursday and Friday. Of 526\nissues traded, 238 advanced, 123\ndeclined and 165 were unchanged.\nPipelines, the strongest winners in recent days, appeared\nsuffering from profit - taking in\nthe first two hours but just after\nnoon Trans - Canada spurted\nahead.\nIndustrials had gains ranging\nto 3Yt points among' key issues\nwhile senior base metals and\nwestern oils moved ahead in a\none-point range. Low \u2022 priced issues in mines and oils were\nahead. Early losses were either\np a r e d or eliminated in most\ncases.\nTrading was the heaviest of the\nyear with a volume of 1,697,000\nshares compared to Monday's\n1,683,000.\nIndex gains: Industrials 2.31 to\n#3.56; golds .20 to 72.03; base\nmetals .37 to 146.88; western oils\n3.68 to 130.84.\nMONTREAL (CP) - An afternoon rally developed Tuesday on\n!w\/\/'W\"'sm\nj  !   Chewing Wrigley's   \u00bb\nyi    Spearmint Gum\ni\nyi    Spearmint Gum\nhelps to keep      \/>\nP Your Teeth J\n| Clean... %\nfYourSmile\u00a7\npAtttactiveJ\nthe Montreal and Canadian\nstock exchanges and gains outnumbered losses at the close.\nTurnover was moderate in the industrials but light in the mines\nand oils.\nTrans - Canada Pipeline advanced 3% to 24'A and Interpro-\nvincial Pipeline 1% to 39%.\nIn newsprints, Paper improved\nVh at 29% and Price Brothers %\nat 37%. General Dynamics rose\n1% to 63Y4 in a higher miscellaneous group.\nLosses of a point were shown\nby Noranda at 36 and Hudson\nBay at 43. Refining' Oils climbed\nfrom their lows as B-A improved\nft to 35% and International Petroleums closed at 35, a loss of\n%\nGains of % were shown by\nHome Oil A at 15% and Home\nOil B at 14&.\nHollinger lost % at 20%. United\nAsbestos added 25 cents at 5.55.\nAmong speculative mines, Stan-\nleigh dipped 75 cents to a new\nlow of 1.65, Aiscope lost 2 cents\nat 13 and Mid Chib gained 7 cents\nat 65.\n. Industrial volume was 56,500\nshares; mines and oils 218,900. Of\nthe 194 issues traded,' 72 advanced, 51 declined and 71 were\nunchanged.\nThe exchanges' closing averages show banks off .07 at 44.27,\nutilities unchanged at 131.2, industrials up .4 at 229.3, combined\nup .2 at 196.6, papers up 15.45 at\n1,037.89 and golds off .49 at 63.63.\nWildlife Conference\nPldns New Program\nN. Dakota Adds\nTo Oil Wells\nDENVER, Col. (AP) - North\nDakota, after posting in 1957 its\nbest record in history for oil discoveries, began the new year with\ntwo important completions by\nAmerada Petroleum.\nOne of these wells, Petroleum\nInformation reports, was the No.\n1 Kennedy in McKenzie County,\nflowing 374 barrels a day from\nthe Madison sand at 8,995-9,034\nfeet. The well is 2% miles north\nof Fancy Buttes field.\nThe other well is the No. 1\nScoria in Billings County, getting\n140 barrels a day from the Heath\nformation and about 175 barrels\na day from the Madison.\nSahara Oil Flows\nInfo Tanks\nALGIERS (Reuters)\u2014The first\nSahara oil flowing through a 112-\nmile pipeline is pouring into storage tanks at the desert railhead\nof Touggourt, it was learned here\nTuesday.\nTanker cars will take the oil\non the rest of its Algerian journey\u2014250 miles to the Mediterranean port of Philippeville.\nFrom there tankers will take it\nto Marseille.\nThe oil has been flowing slowly\nalong the six-inch pipeline from\nthe Hajssi-Messaoud field since\nNew Year's Eve.\nFrench air force planes, helicopters, paratroopers and camel\ncorps troops patrol the pipeline\nto prevent any insurgent attack. The pipeline will eventually\ncarry 1,800 tons of oils a day\nfrom the oil field to Touggourt.\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\n(Programs subject lo change by stations without notice.)\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n9:00 Good Morning\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow \u2022\n9:45 Guiding Light \u2022\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n10:15 Love of Life\n10:30 As The World Turns *\n11:00 Beat the Clock \u2022\n1J:30 Houseparty *\n12:00 The Big Payoff *\n12:30 The Verdict Is Yours *\n1:00 Brighter Day \u2022\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edgevof Night *\n2:00 Garry Moore *\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 IJoug'Edwards News *\n6:30 I Love Lucy *\n7:00 The Big Record *\n8:00 The Millionaire *\n8:30 I've Got a Secret \u2666    '\n9:00 Circle Theater\n10:00 The Crusader\n10:30 The News\n10:35 Show \u2014 Shock\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n:10 Color Test Pattern\n:12 Test Pattern\n:25 NARTB\n: 26 Bible Reading\n:29 Program Previews\n:30 Q Tunes\n00 Tic Tac Dough *\n30 It Could Be You \u2022\n00 Arlene Francis Show *\n30 Fun To Reduce\n45 Short Subjects\n00 Price Is Right \u2666\n30 Bride and Groom *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n00 Queen For a Day *\n45 Modern Romances *\n00 Dear Phoebe *\n30 Truth or Consequences '\n00 Matinee On Six:\n\"3 Little Girls In Blue\"\n00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"Keeping Company\"\n30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n45 NBC News \u2022\n00 Truth or Consequences *\n30 Wagon Train *\n30 Father Knows Best \u2022\n00 Harbor Command\n30 Highway Patrol\n00 This Is Your Life \u2022\n30 Late Movie\n\"Stronger Than Desire\"\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\n2:30 Liberace\n6:45 Phillips World News\n3:00 American Bandstand * '\n6:55 Sport Spotlight\n3:30 Do You Trust Your Wife *\n7:00 Wednesday Night Fights\n4:00 American Bandstand *\n7:50 Hank Weaver's Corner *\n4:30 Popeye\n,8:00 Disneyland \u2666\n5:00 Wild Bill Hickok *\n9:00 Tombstone Territory \u2022\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Club *\n9:30 Ozzie and Harriet *\n6:00 Kit Carson\n10:00 Date With The Angels *\n6:30 Newsroom\n10:30 Channel 2 Theatre\n6:40 Weather Sketch\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nBy GERALD FREEMAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMontreal (CP)\u2014A five - point\nprogram for making conservation\nlaws meaningful and effective\nwas suggested Monday at the\nNortheast Wildlife C o nference\nhere.\nE. L. Skuce of the Ontario department of lands and forests\nmade the proposal at a session\nof the Conservation Law Enforcement Chiefs Association, one of\nthe several meetings which comprise the conference.\nThe   800   registered   delegates\ncome from Ontario, Quebec, the\nAtlantic provinces, and 11 northeastern American states.\nHUMAN OBSTACLE\nMr. Skuce told the enforcement\nchiefs that \"in the conservation\nof our natural resources there are\nmany different obstacles but one\nwhich seems to bother us perhaps more than any other is the\nobstacle of people who have no\nregard for regulations.\"\nAs a plan of action he proposed\nfive steps:\nFirst, make sure the programs\nto be enforced' are wise and in\nthe best interests of conservation;\nsecond, make sure everybody\nunderstands their purpose; third,\nkeep people informed of the benefits brought by law enforcement;\nfourth, \"place before justice per-\n:ons who disrupt the plan,\" if\npossible in such a way that they\nwill come back and help the\nplan.   '\nThe fifth step is a constant review of the other four rules to\n\"assist in deciding, where our efforts should be increased or decreased.\"\nWhat is needed, he said, is \"enforcement by will rather than by\ncompulsion.\"\nAt the same meeting Alfred J.\nHunyadi, chief conservation officer for the Connecticut state\nboard ol fisheries and game,\nurged that wildlife scientists\nthemselves take a larger hand in\nenforcement.\n\"Fish and game biologists often\ndo an excellent job in proposing\nor drawing up such regulations,\"\nMr. Hunyadi said, \"but then it\nappears that interest ceases.\"\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\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00-Wews\n9:10\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n9:30\u2014Women Today\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Story Parade\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang        \u25a0   ,\n10:45\u2014Tex and Jinx        *   .\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Seven-Come-Eleven\n11:30\u2014Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Song Serenade\n11:55\u2014Entertainment World\n12:00\u2014Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\nJANUARY 8, 1958\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12;55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014Cr\u00bbLN Reports\nl:15-Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Musicale\n3:00\u2014Hockey\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boatei\n' 4:45\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\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber Musie\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions       ,\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8.10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:45\u2014Food Facts\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Theme and Variation\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\nJANUARY 9, 1958\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 Mystery\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014This Man's Music\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30-Recital\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vane. Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00\u2014Mid-night Concert\n11:57\u2014News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS        3. Warp.\n1. Flesh of, calf     yarn\n\u20224. Behold!\n5. Correct\n6. Soft\nmineral\n7. A league\n8. Part of\na garment\n11. Sport\n12. Well,\npleased\n131 Delineate\nIS. Exhibition\n17. Bellow\n20. England,\npersonified\n21. Com.\npas.   .\nslon.\n23. Submerge\n24. Leaf\nveins\n25. Joins\n26. Amcrl.\n. can\nIndiana\n27. Indented\ncake\n28. Secure\n30. Christmas\ngreens\nJIGUMH H'JllGin\n[IJBHHM tSHUIItt\nQBEI3H IdHIIHE\n\u25a1RIB       MSIi-.H-MII\nrjHanr-iiiiu    be\nHBffl   HHHfi\nk pig a Pi i-inaiSH\nraasiH huh\n:-ni [:i':j;:iw[i2iE\nanBHiia mat?\nDraamra aaHoa\naaaaia ibhuihh\nsasss obese\nYesterday1' Answer\n33. Hint\n34. Painting;\nmaterials\n36. Distant\n38. Exist\n5. Outcasts\n(Jap.)\n9. Boss of\na shield\n10. Shaded\nwalk\n11. Fluent\n12. Knocked\ndown\n14. Perform\n15. Prize fowl\nbreeder\n16. Mother   .\n17. Foray\n18. Polynesian\ndrink\n19. Command\n21. Recognized\n22. Rowing\nimplement\n23. Thus (L.)\n24. River (Ger.)\n26. Tendons\n29. Hostel\n30. Ape's foot\n31. River\n(Latv.)\n32. Kind of\nfaucet\n34. Away\n35. Mine\nsupports\n36. Shrill\nInstrument\n37. Jewish\nmonth\n38. Sphere\n39. Weaver's\nreed\n40. Gaelic\nDOWN\n1. God of fire '\"'\n2. Send forth\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nis LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoija\ntrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nKCV    MFC    FMUBOGV    VPVGASJOCH\nOC    RKNOSBXV\u2014VZMVYS    MJFOFMSVO\n\u2014RSVCXJFN.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: A WOMAN'S WHOLE UFB It\nA HISTORY OF THE AFFECTIONS \u2014 IRVINO.\nDlstrlbutid by King Fttttru Syndiota\n1\n1\n2,\nI\nto\nsa\n',?-\"\n%\n%\n4\n%\nB\n\u00a7\nII\ni\n13.\niS\n14\n|\n15\n\\b\ni\n17\n%\nil\n\\i\n20\ni\n2\/\n%\n'ft\n21\n'Si\nS3\n4\ny4\n24\n25\"\n'^\n26\n21\n28\n2?\n|\n30\n|\n31\n32.\n33\n%\n34\nIS\n^A\n3\u00bb\nI\n37\n''\/A\n'.'0\n%\n%\n39\ni\n4o'\n%\n S3\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  *~  PHONE   1844\nHELP WANTED\nBE PROUD OF YOUR JOB\n.Sell world famous Underwood\nand Remington Typewriters,\nAdding Machines, etc., as low as\n$1 down, $1 week. Full or part\ntime. High commissions. Canadian Typewriter Sales, 113 Mc-\nCormack St., Toronto 9..\nSECOND CLASS STEAM ENGIN-\neer required to take charge of\n600 h.p. capacity steam plant.\nM.S.A. medical plan, excellent\nworking conditions in year round\noperation. Kootenay Forest Products Ltd. Ph. 1200, Nelson. B.C.\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n$23 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-1745, Montreal, P.Q.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, EtC, FOR SALE\nWANTED - RELIABLE HOUSE-\nkeeper to care for children; live\nin or out. Phone 604-R.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nACCOUNTING OR BUSINESS\nmanagement position wanted.\nFifteen years experience includes transport, lumbering, mining\nand finance. Thorough knowledge\nof cost accounting, budget preparation and financial statements\nExcellent references. Apply Box\n9414 Daily News.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd.. or phone\n186-X-3.\nWILL DO ALL TYPES OF HOME\nrepairs. Ph. 4182 Castlegar. Will\npay toll charge.\t\nFOR HIRE - TANDEM\" DUMP\ntruck, 10 yd. capacity. Phone\n1757-R.\t\nFOR ANY ODD JOBS, PHONE\nhandyman, 256-R.\nRENTALS\nGROUND FLOOR APT LARGE\nliving room wilh fireplace Dinette, kitchen, 1 bedroom. Fridge\nand stove only. Heated. Phone\n542-R.\nHOUSE FOR RENT. SUITABLE\nfor Nelson workers. Low rent.\nApply M. Cunningham. Crescent\nValley. Phone 206.\nMAIN FLOOR HOUSEKEEPING\nrm\u201e fridge, stove, heated, priv.\nent, and parking; 171 Baker St.\nSTORE SPACE FOR RENT - 659\nBaker St., opposite bus depot.\nApply to P. K. Reibin. Nelson.\nTWO SUITES FOR RENT,\nWould have to be seen to be ap-\npredated. Phone 127.\nEXTRA NICE MODERN APT., 3\nrms. and tiled bath, aut. heat,\nfrig, and range only. Ph. 130.\nDOUBLE ROOM SUITABLE 2\ngirls. Central. Warm, clean.\n216-C Vernon.\nFOR RENT - UNFURN. SELF-\ncontained apt. Centrally located.\nPhone 933-X.\nFOR RENT - 4 RM. HEATED\napt., available Jan. 15th. Phone\n558-R.\t\nDOUBLE AND SINGLE UNITS.\nNorth Shore Motel   Ph   1684.\n4 ROOM SUITE. PARTLY FURN-\nislied. Close in. Pnonc 672-R.\n2-ROOM SUITES FOR RENT. AP\nply 614 Victoria Street.\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM    FW\nrent. 606 Front St.\n8  ROOM APT.  ON  BAKER ST.\nPhone 1150 days.\t\nLOST  AND  FOUND\nLOST-MOUNT ROYAL 21 JEWEL\nman's wrist watch with blue face.\nSentimental value. Reward. Ph.\n562-Y.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nFOR SALE - 3'FRESH MILK\ncows and 3 to freshen in 2 weeks.\nPhone 64074, Rossland.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nt   W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephuie St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.   ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr. Rav Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-8th St., Nelson, Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, ME1C\nBC Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n. 218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work.\nAppliances, Free Estimates.\nPhone 774, 523 Cedar SI., Nelson.\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent. 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\n.  BENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop  Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor  rewinding  Phone 593       324 Vernon SI\nWATKINS PRODUCTS\nWatkins Quality Products,\nt Phone 469-Y.\nSMALL HOUSE, 804 SIXTH\nSeparate workshop and chick-\nenhouse. Concrete foundation.\nNewly wired. 2 tS^fljft\nbedrooms. 3>3\u00bbUU\n$3000 Will Handle.\nImmediate   Possession.\n6-MILE\n3-bedroom bungalow on level\nlot 150' x 200',  built 5 years\nPrice0\"88'' $6950\n$2000 Down and $50 and 7%\nInterest Per Month.\n6-MILE\nNew bungalow, 2-bedroom, on\nlevel  lot, improved;  200 feet\non.hlghway. $8500\nTerms: $2000 Down.\nYMIR ROAD\nJ, MILE FROM CITY\n4\u2014Modern bungalow on level\nlot. Built 4 years. Full basement, automatic oil furnace.\nWell water J^QQ\npressure svstem.     ^\nDown Payment, $4000.\nCar Insurance and Package\nPolicies a Specialty\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 28 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nLAND FOR SALE, GORDON RD.\nPh. 1272-L.\nMACHINERY\nAll Your\nNEEDS FROM ONE SOURCE\nLA. Welding and Cutting\nEquipment.\nWelding Gases\nMiller AC & DC Arc\nWelders.\nMild and Stainless Steel\nElectrodes.\nWear-Resistant and Hard-\nSurfacing Electrodes.\nGas Welding Rods\nGeneral Welding Supplies\nStevenson ;\nMachinery. Limited\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nECONOMICAL\nLOGGING\nWith\nJohn Deere\nCrawler Tractor\nWith Hydraulic Angle Tilt\nDozer. Hydraulic Controlled\nWinch and Operator's Guard.\nYOU CAN OWN ONE!\nAsk Us About the John Deere\nFinance Plan\nSee\nH.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\n' MAC'S\nWelding  &  Equipment  Co.\nLtd.\nPHONE 1402\n514 Railway St.     Nelson, B.C.\nTRAILERS\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar. Phone 2701\nCranbrook,  Phone JU-6-2270\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nTHE ALL NEW \"REX\"\n10 ft.'wide, 45 ft. long.\nMany Other Models on Display\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSMALL   OR   MEDIUM   DEEP\nfreeze. Phone 1062-R.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nSALE\n1950 Ford i\/2-Ton\nLie. C69080\nOnly $150\n1951 Pontiac\nLie. 331-972\nOnly $569\n1949 Meteor\nLie. 296-209\nOnly $270\nPHONE  35\nie\nLtd.\nA-l CARS in A-l Condition\n1957 Nash Met. Hardtop\n1957 Chev, Station Wgn.\nWith Positraction\n1957 Chev. 4-Door\nOnly 600 Miles\n1957 Borg-Ward\n1956 Oldsmobile\n1956 Chevrolet\n1956 Ford\n1955 Zephyr\n1955 Ford\n1955 Meteor\n1955 Plymouth\n1955 Austin\nA   Complete   Line   of   Good\nCars from 1947 to 1954\nSmall\nDown Payments\nMonthly Payments Starting\nMarch 1, 1958\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repais and \"do it yourself\"\ntractionizing. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '51 Hlllmans,\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Stude-\nbaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '53\nAustin. Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 1383-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.\nFOR SALE - 1951 FORD, RADIO,\nwinter tires. Good shape. Phone\n1308-Y after 6 p.m.\n1952    VANGUARD    FOR   SALE.\nPhone 1841.\nNrlamt SatUi Nrroa\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin  advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month        _    $ 1.25\nThree months     $ 3.50\nSix months     $ 6.50\nOne year    $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month            * 1.75\nThree months $ 500\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 Saundry\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTh\u00ab Dally News does- not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO   STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\t\n.05\n13.50\nAnacon Lead \t\nAtlin Ruff\t\nAumaque \t\n.51\n.22\n.07V4\n2.00\n.20\n.27\n.13\nBoymar \t\nBroulan \t\nBrunhurst \t\nBrunswick \t\nCampbell C    \t\n.09\n.57\n.05\n2.80\n4.75\nCampbell R. L\t\n5.35\n1.70\n5.75\nCentral Patricia \t\n.66\n.44\nCoin Lake \t\n.12\n11.75\nCons. Discovery \t\nCons Halliwell    \t\nCons Mining & Smelting ..\nCons Red. Pop\t\n2.45\n.35\n17.00\n.10\nCon Sanorm \t\nCon Sub \t\n.06\n.61\nConwest  \t\nD'Aragon\t\n2.39\n.12\nEast Sullivan \t\nFalconbridge  \t\nFaraday\t\nFrobisher\t\nGiant Yel\t\nGlen Uranium \t\nGolden Manitou \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHeadway  \t\nHollinger   \t\n1.70\n23.00\n, 1.53\n1.33\n4.40\n.10\n.34\n13.75\n.48\n20.6214\n43.00\nInt. Nickel\t\nIron Bay \t\nJoliet Que\t\n72.00\n1.70\n.21\n15.37^4\nLabrador  \t\nLakeshore \t\n16.00\n4.10\n5.00\nLittle Long Lac\t\n1.80\n.58\nMacassa \t\n2.56\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes:\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357\nGAS PIPING AND HEATERS\nsold, installed and serviced. Licenced, bonded gas fitter. Norm\nBowcock, phone 385.\t\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening, 924 Davies St.\n22 GAL. INSULATED HEAT CON-\ntrolled electric tank. $28. Ph. 902.\n2ROLL-AWAY BEDS, LIKE NEW.\nWith mattresses. Ph. 1729-X.\n30-06   RIFLE,   $80.00.   PH.   517-L\nafter 5 p.m.\n2 BRICK LINED COAL HEATERS.\nPhone 1272-L.\nBUILDING  SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD.\nfor all Building Supplies. Specializing in Plywood. Contractors enquiries solicited. Phone or\nwire orders collect. 3600 E. Hastings St\u201e Vancouver. B.C.. GLen-\nburn 1500.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor 2 working men. In quiet home.\nPhone 674-R.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen^Phone 1179-X.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash. When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar..\nCOLONIAL HOTEL, SPOKANE,\nWashington. Clean, comfortable\nrooms at $2 and $4 for two. Parking 1 block. Centre of shopping\nand theatre district at N 124 \\h\nPost.\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO  RENT - 2 BED\nroom hoilse. Phone 37.\n2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE, WIR-\ned for range. Ph. 833-R.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS\nFridays, ph. 366-R oM83-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\nS^'mo Drugs, Sahno, and all\ndruggists. i\n...    1.80\nMalartic G. F\t\n...    1.20\nMaritime Mining \t\n...      .63\nMart McNeely   ,\t\n.0814\n1.03\n.11\n1,90\n9.25\n.48\nMulti MIns \t\n...      .45\nNew  Delhi ' :.\t\n...      .46\nNew Fortune\t\n.12\nNew Highridge \t\n.16\nNew Harricana \t\n.12\nNew Jason      \t\n.07\n.17\n36.50\nNormetals \t\n...    2.65\nNorpax     \t\n...      ,26'A\n...     1.60\nNorth Rankin\t\n...      .61\nOpemiska     \t\n...    6.50\nPickle  Crow\t\n...    1.08\n.30\nQuebec  Lab      \t\n...      .06%\nQuebec- Lithium      \t\n...   '6.15\nQuebec Metallurgical \t\n.75\nQuemont    !\t\n..     8.00\nRadiore    ......\n.42\n.89\nSan   Antonio  \t\n.42\n...     4.20\nStadacona   \t\n,   -  48V4\nSteep Rock\t\n...    9.00\nSullican Con \t\n...    1.84\n1.19\n1.42\nTemagami\t\n..    1.20\n.93\nUnited Keno  \t\n...    3.65\n.65\n..   31.37V4\n1.37\nV\/aite Amulet  \t\n..    6.00\nWiltsey Goglin  \t\n...      .22\nYellowknife Bear  \t\n...      .77\n.04\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc \t\n...      .18\nBanff Oils \t\n...    1.81\nBailey Selburn \t\n.    8.35\nCalgary and Edmonton .\n...   20.75\n4.30\nCanadian Devonian\t\n...    5.75\n.18\n...    2.00\nHome A  \t\n...      .16\nLiberal Pete \t\n...     1.25\n.11\n.59\nNat.   Pete   \t\n..    2.00\n1.25\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\t\nBralorne  \t\nCanusa  \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nGiant Mascot _..\nGranduc  \t\nHamil Sil \t\nHighland Bell \t\nNational. Ex \t\nPioneer Gold   v\t\nPremier Border ....~\t\nQuatsino  '.....,....\nSheep Creek     , >._....\nSilback Premier ......\nSilver Ridge    \t\nSilver Standard   \t\n.12\n4,50.\n.02\n.45\n.10\n1.20\n.02\n1.10\n.19,\n1.09\n..04\n.27%\n.31\n.04%\n.02\n.14\n.11\n.17\n.20\n.15\n.36\n20.50\n1.85\n15.00\n1.20\n1.15 '\n.40\n    12.75\n 16\n 15\n     2.55\n ,      .17\nINDUSTRIALS \"\nAlberta Distillers         1.30\nAlberta Distillers Vt      1.15\nB C Forests      9.25\nB C Telephone    .     :  39.50\nCrown Zeller  (Can)      14.25\nLucky Lager  '. :..    4.20\nMacM k Bloedel B     24.25   .\nMid Western      1.30\nPowell River     30.50\nTrans Mtn    59.50\nWestminister Paper    22.50\nWestern Plywoods    10.50\nUNLISTED\nBid    Ask\nAlta Gas Trunk     13%   13%\nTrans Canada Com .   .   24%   24%\nTrans Mountain Unit   .59     \u2014\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal       39.00 ,40.00\nCan. Bank of Com. ... 40.50 11.50\nImp. Bank of Can. 43.50 44.50\nRoval Bank of Can. 57.50 58.50\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund           7.81    8.57\nCommonwealth Int. . 6.29 6.91\nGrouped Income 3.14    3.43\nInvestors Mutual ... ,. 9102 9.75\nLeverage .'.    4.23    4.65\nTrans Canada \"C\" ....    4.75    5.15\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTrojan   . \t\nWestern Exploration ...\nOILS\nAltex   ... \t\nA P Consolidated\t\nCalgary  &  Edmonton\nCharter  :\t\nHome   \t\nNew Gas Ex \t\nOkalta  Com    \t\nPeace River Gas  __.\nRoyalite\t\nRoyal Can _\t\nSparmac   _\t\nUnited   \t\nVanalta\t\nRIOTS QUELLED\nIN  NAIROBI JAIL\nNAIROBI, Kenya (Renters) -\nPrison guards opened fire during\na riot Monday night in Nairobi's\nLangata prison.\nFirst reports said 31 Mau Mau\nterrorist convicts were .wounded.\nThe guards said .they opened\nfire after ;tear gas failed to\nbreak up the riot.\nTear gas was used again before\nthe rioters capitulated at dawn.\nThe siege had lasted all night.\nAbout 47 convicts were reported to have taken part in the\nriot. They broke into a store and\nseized axes and otheY tools, and\nthen tore down the prison kitchen\nand ripped up rocks from the\nprison yard.\nOkalta      1.27\nPacific  Pete    19.25\nPetrol         55\nProv   Gas        2.63\nRoyalite      13.37%\nSpooner 21\nStanwell  Oil 75\nTriad     4.90\nUnited Oirs     2.55\nYank Canuck     07\nWestern  Pacific   18%\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi      25'\/4\nAlgoma Steel     25Vi\nAluminum     28,%\nArgns 2nd pfd     46\nAtlas St     16%\nB. A. Oil     35%\nBathu'rst Power     42\nBeatty Bros      4\nBell Telephone'.'. \u2022.     40%\nBrazilian.      6%\nB.C. Electric 4%s     88\nB.'C. Forest .'       9%\nB. C. Packers A     11%\nB. C. Power A     38\nBurns A          10%\nCanadian Breweries      26\nCanadian Canners      13%\nCanadian Celanese     14\nCan. Cement       25%\nCanadian Dredge          15%\nCan. Malting       51%\nCan. Oil       26\nCanadian Pacific Rly     22%\nCockshutt        8\nCons Gas      29%\nDist. Seagram      25%\nDom. Foundries      24\nDom. Stores  53\nDom. Tar & Chemical     10%\nDom. Textiles  .'     7%\nFamous Players     15\nFanny Farmer     18%\nFord A     67%\nGatineau     27%\nGatineau 5% pfd    104\nGoodyear T    141\nGypsum Lime      27%\nHoward Smith _     26\nImperial Oil _     40%\nImp. Tobacco     12%\nInt. Pete   \u201e     34%\nLaura Secord \u201e     19\nLoblaw A _     21\nLoblaw B  .....;   22%\nMassey Harris       6%\nMcColl Frontenac     50%\nMoore Corp _  ' 64%\nPage Hershey      106%\nPowell River ....;     30%\nPower Corp \u201e.    54%\nShawinigan      24%\nSicks Brew _..    22\nSimpsons A -,   17Y4\nStandard Paving      34\nSteel of Canada     46%\nUnion Gas of Can     68\nUnited Steel           12\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8, 1958 \u2014 7\nCall On Ottawa To Amend\nFarm Products Price Bill\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Interpro-\nvioncial Farm Union Council Tuesday called on the federal government to scrap the 10-year average\nmarket price proposed in agricultural prices stabilization bill and\nestablish a guaranteed price based\non the cost of production.\nFollowing a meeting with Agriculture Minister Douglas Hark-\nness, James Patterson of Winnipeg, IFUC vice-president, said\nhe could see no .reason why the\ncost-of-production basis could not\nbe used for the payment of price\nsupports for farm products. The\nstabilization bill now is \"before\nParliament.\n\"We hope this amendment will\nbe made in the bill to give some\nassurance that the farmer's production costs will be met,\" he\nsaid.\nIn a brief presented to the government, the council urged that\nsupport prices be established on\na regional basis and that they be\nguaranteed for a period of not\nless than 12 months. >\nVERY CORDIAL\nFollowing the 90-minute meeting with the agriculture minister,\nIFUC representatives said the\ndiscussions were \"very cordial.\"\n\"We found Mr. Harkness very\nattentive and are hopeful there\nwill be a change in the legislation. However, we received no\ncommitment of any kind.\"\n\"The support market price\nshould be established at levels\nsufficiently high to. assure the\nthe consumer paying more than\nthe disaster price, but not so\nhigh as to cause the government\nto accumulate large surpluses,\"\nthe brief said.\nWith Mr. Patterson when the\nbrief was presented were Arnold\nPlatte of Lethbridge, president\nof the Alberta Farmers Union;\nO. Turnbull of Kindersley, Sask.,\nvice - president of the Saskatchewan Farmers Union; .and\nGordon Hill of Varna, Ont., president of the Ontario Farmers Union,\nthe council brief said the proposed agricultural prices support\nlegislation was considered so urgent that a special meeting of\nthe IFUC board was called to\ndeal with it.\nPEEBLES\n1949  PONTIAC\n2-tone red and white.\nPEEBLES\n\"We have left behind a vast\nnumber of disappointed farmers,\namong whom there has been considerable agitation for 'a mass\ndelegation to converge on Ottawa\nfor the purpose of demonstrating\ntheir displeasure and dissatisfaction with the legislation,\" the\nbrief added.\nThe council asked that the total\nany producer may receive in the\nform of deficiency payments under the legislation should not be\nso large that they encourage corporation farms.\nTHE\n,      BEST 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 ot\nBody Damages and Paint Coma to\nNelson\nMotor\nProducts\nLTD.\n281 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C. Ph. 121-2\nANNOUNCEMENT\nWe Are Now Compiling\nMaterial for Our\n1958\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nIf you have photos of interest you\nwould like to have appear in this\nissue please submit them to\nPictorial Edition Editor\nNelson Daily News\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8, 1958\n\"Take Time Off Your Hands\"\n'HELENA RUBINSTEIN\nEstrogenic Hormone\nHand Lotion\n$4.25 Value ,:\nNOW ONLY\n'    $1.25\nRich, smoothing hand lotion.\nFull 3 months supply.\nw-*****to\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nMoore Supplants Henri\nAs NHLs Scoring Best\nMONTREAL  (CP)  - Montreal| third place,  and with 41 points,\nDurelle Likes Fighting;\nLikes Fishing Even More\nCanadiens' two leading scorers\nswapped positions at the top of the\nNHL scoring parade in last week's\nplay and withstood the challenge of\nothers who had a hand in a rich\nharvest of points.\nDickie Moore bagged three goals\nand three assists for six points to\ntake over the league leadership\nwith a total of 45. Henri (Pocket\nRocket) Richard picked up two\ngoals and two assists and eased\ninto second place with 44 points.\nGordie Howe of Detroit Red\n.Wings, who has been coming\nwith a rush despite his team's so-\nso play this season, rang up five\ngoals and tossed in an assist. The\nsix-point production by last season's titleholder still left him in\nEskimos Show\nProfit in '57\n.EDMONTON (CP) - The Edmonton Eskimo football club made\na profit of $5412 in 1957 despite its\nfailure to get into the Grey Cup\nfinal.\nTreasurer Bob Purvis told the\ntouchdown club's annual nominating meeting Monday night that the\nclub's accumulated surplus is $129,-\n750.\nFor the first time since the club\nwas reorganized in 1949, all five\nnominated for the football club ex\necutive were elected by acclama\ntion.\nThe club, which has an executive\nof 20 with five new directors elected each year, will meet later to\nname a president. It expected Cecil\nRosswill be re-elected president.\nNew directors are Eric Duggan\nGordon Wynn, Rollin Prather, Bill\nHaddad and George Manning.\nAs a result of the new import\nrule, the 1957 cost of imports was\n$19,000 higher than in 1956, Mr.\nPurvis reported. Total income was\n$451,959 and total expenditures\n$446,547.\nfour behind the leader.\nBronco Horvath of Boston Bruins\nwith a five-point splurge on two\nand three assists, ran his\ntotal to 39 and hung grimly to\nfourth place.\nGEOFFRION CLIMBS\nBernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion\nof Montreal, who missed five early\nseason games when laid low by\nAsian flu, scored three goals and\nadded two assists during the week.\nThe five points, brihging his total to 36, lifted Geoffrion from a\nseventh-place tie of a week ago\nto lone occupancy of fifth place.\nGordie Howe caught tip with\nCamille Henry of New York -for\nthe goal leadership, each with 20.\nMoore and Henri Richard head the\nassist producers with 26 apiece.\nThe leaders:\nGAP PiM\nMoore, Mont     19  26  45  38\nH. Richard, Mont..   18  26  44  22\nHowe, Detroit     20  21   41  24\nHorvath, Bost     16  23  39   24\nGeoffrion, Mont ....  18  18  36  35\nStasiuk,  Bost      14  20  34   16\nBathgate, N Y     11 ,23  34 19\nHenry, N Y  20  12  32    2\nBeliveau,  Mont  ....   12   20   32   40\nHarris, Toronto ....   12  20  32   16\nNEW YORK (AP) - The eyes\nof Yvon Durelle light up and words\ntumble from his. lips when he\ntalks about his fishing fleet back\nhome in New Brunswick. You almost forget he is a fighting man\nwho makes his big bid for a light\nheavyweight title match, in a bout\nFriday with Tony Anthony at Madison Square Garden.\n\"Nobody beats me on salmon,\"\nhe was saying Monday over a\ncup of coffee in a Broadway restaurant with his managers Chris\nShaban of Moncton, N. B., and\nLew Meyers, his New York representative. \"One day we got 185,\nworth $1150. Very seldom do we\nmake less than $100 a day.\"\n\"How big do they run?\" a fellow asked.\n\"The biggest I ever got was 44\npounds.\"\nManager Shaban gave Yvon a\nlong, hard look. \"Where you go\nwhen you die?\" he asked, winking\nat the others.\n\"So help me,\" \"said Yvon, raising his right hand high. \"Forty-\nfour pounds. We were high boat\nthat day.\"\nOWNS FISHING BOATS\nDurelle had been talking about\nhis home town of Baie Ste. Anne:\na fishing village of about 300,1am-\nilies on the New Brunswick coast.\nHe owns three fishing boats that\nsail out daily from April to November with a total crew of about\n17 men, searching for, salmon,\nmackerel, lobster or cod.   .\n\"When I get home from this\nfight, I buy a fourth boat,\" he\nsaid. \"With equipment and all they\ncost about $5000. That will make\nme biggest fisherman in Baie Ste,\nAnne. Before I stop I want to have\nsix boats.\"\nNormally a fisherman would be\nhome at this time of year, repairing his motors, patching the nets\nor fishing through the ice. The\nchill days and dark nights give\nthe boats a five-month enforced\nvacation.\nBut Durelle, ranked among the\nfirst three contenders for champion Archie Moore's crown, has\nan off-season job. He fights for-\nmoney\u2014$4000 every time he goes\non television, plus a little more\nfrom his share of the gate.\nSEE THE WORLD FREE\n\"I like to fight,\" said Durelle.\n\"I don't need to, but I meet a\nlot of people, see the world for\nfree. I like it. But once Yvon starts\nto get hurt, that is enough. I have\na good business and 1 can work\nhard. I want to keep on working\nhard.\n\"Some fights I had in New\nBrunswick, I was on the boat all\nday, came in at 6 o'clock, changed\nmy clothes and drove 50-60 miles\nto fight. One time we were out to\nsea three days in a storm, I just\ngot back in time to get to the fight\non time.\"\nDurelle \"got away\" for 12 fights\nin 1957 winning 10, losing one and\nfighting a draw, the draw was\nwith Anthony in June.\nIt almost cost Anthony his\nchance to fight Moore for the\ntitle. Many thought Durelle had\nthe edge: Anthony went on to fight\nMoore and was stopped in the\nseventh round.\nIf Durelle gets over Anthony, it\nis possible he might get a championship match with Moore in\nMontreal during' the summer. If\nthat, happens, Yvon's six-boat\nfleet will become a reality.\nChange Dale\nOf Daily News\nSki Classes\nSki director Helmuth Mayrhofer\nof Nelson,Silver King Ski Club reported Tuesday that, contrary to\nearlier reports, ski classes sponsored by the Nelson Daily News\nwill not begin this weekend.\nBecause all available manpower\nwill be needed to complete work\non the T-bar lift and the hill is not\nyet in condition to handle the expected rush of skiers, old and new,\nthe starling Tjate has been newly\nestablished as Jan. 19, Helmuth\nstated.\n, The cabin has not yet been com\npleted, the concession stand is not\nyet ready to operate and several\nrelatively minor factors have contributed to the unforeseen delay.\nIIIIIllltMIIIIIMIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllll flllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIMIII\nDurelle III; Bout Postponed\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Yvon Durelle, Canadian and\nBritish Empire light-heavyweight champion, was stricken\nwith ptomaine poisoning Tuesday, forcing cancellation\nof his important Friday night bout with Tony Anthony.\nThe fight's promoters said the attack was not serious\nand the fight has been rescheduled for Jan. 31.   -\nDurelle was examined by doctors of the International Boxing Commission. They reported the rugged\nfighter from Baie Ste. Anne, N.B., is weak from the attack,\nbut should be completely recovered in 10 days.\nThe delay in rescheduling the fight will give Durelle\ntime to work himself back into shape, a promotion\nspokesman said. , '\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFive Goals Within Three\nMinutes Wins for Rossland\nLIFE NOT\nHarvey Doubtful\nStarter Thursday\nMONTREAL (CP) - Montreal\nCanadiens announced Tuesday\nthat NHL all - star defenceman\nUIABTU I HlllJAQ Doug Harvey is a doubtful starter\nW UK III LlVINU \u25a0 Thl,rsciay here against Chicago\nBlack Hawks.\nThe club said Harvey suffered\na \"severe sprain\" to his right\nankle during a workout. T u e s day\nThen wake up the liver!\nYou know (hat sour, sunk, constipated feeling?\nIt may be caused by the liver. If your liver'\ndoesn't pour out up to two pints of bite a day\nyour food may not digest properly, gas bloats\nap your stomach and you feel that lire's just\nnot worth living. That's when the liver needl\nmild gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills. These\nfamous vegetable pills help stimulate the Hon\nof liver bile. Soon your digestion starts function.\nIng properly and you feel that happy days are\nhere again! Don't ever stay sunk. Always keep\nCarter's Little Liver Pills on band.\nmorning and may not be fit by\ngame time.\nStill out for the Canadiens are\nMaurice (Rocket) Richard, recovering from a nearly-severed heel\nlendon, and Jean Beliveau with a\nrib separation.\nHFC has made loans\npromptly for 2 generations\nSince Dad's day HFC has been\nmaking prompt loans, in privacy,\nto people who need money for al]\nkinds of good reasons. At Household you can borrow up to $1,000,\nget one-day service and take up\nto 30 months to repay on the\nterms you choose.\nBorrow confidently from HFC\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nCaunfiuZtffitr tf Canada?\nE. G. Bernard, Manager\n608 Baiter Street Telephone 1890\nNELSON\nEagles Eyeing\nHampton Pool\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Hamp\nPool, coach of the Toronto Argonauts of the Big Four Union, is reported receiving top consideration\nas coach of Philadelphia Eagles of\nthe National Football League.\nAlthough there has been nothing official, it is known Pool was\ninterviewed by Eagle officials.\nPool, for Hire eyears head coach\nof the NFL Los Angeles Rams,\ncame to Argonauts last season. He\nwas here for the National Colleg\niate Athletic Association convention.\nIt was reported Tuesday that\nPool' was not offered the Eagles\ncoaching job but that he is at the\ntop of consideration list.\nHugh Devore, now Eagle coach\nis said to be slated for another\njob in the Philadelphia organization. Other candidates for his job\ninclude Dick Gallagher, assistant\nto Paul Brown with Cleveland\nBrowns, Lou Rymkus, line coach\nwith Green Bay Packers, Nick\nSkorich. former Pittsburgh Steel-\ners line coach, and Ray Richards\nrecently deposed Bead \u2022 coach of\nChicago Cardinals.\nBusiness Women's\nCurling\nFollowing is the draw for tomorrow night's Business Girls'\nCurling Club competition at Nelson Curling Club at 9:00 p.m.:\nJamieson vs McDougall.\nBrown vs Kershaw.\nMiller v\u00ab Lehto.\n,  McGovern vs Allen.-\nBowling\nSchedule\nFollowing is the schedule for\nBowl-a-drome, starting Thursday\nremaining competition in Mixed\nCommercial League at Nelson\nnight:\nJan. 9\u20147 p.m.:- Queens Hotel\nvs. Bank of Commerce; Palm\nDairies vs. Imperial Bank; Fuller\nBrush vs. Overwaitea.\n9 p.m. \u2014 Star Grocery vs.\nOrange Crush; Hume Hotel vs.\nBank of Montreal; Lucky Strikes\nvs. CYO.\n, Jan. 18\u20147 p.m.: Bank of Montreal vs. Imperial Bank; Hume\nHotel vs. Star Grocery; Orange\nCrush vs. Queens Hotel.\n9 p.m.\u2014Lucky Strikes vs. Fuller\nBrush; Overwaitea vs. CYO;\nBank of Commerce vs. Palm\nDairy.\nJan. 23\u20147 p.m.: Overwaitea vs.\nPalm Dairy; Fuller Brush vs.\nQueens Hotel; Bank of Commerce\nvs. Hume Hotel.\n9 p.m.\u2014Imperial Bank vs. Star\nGrocery; Bank of Montreal vs.\nLucky Strikes; CYO vs. Orange\nCrush.\nJan. 30-7 p.m.\u2014CYO vs. Fuller Brush; Imperial Bank vs.\nHume Hotel; Lucky Strikes vs.\nOrange Crush,\n9*p.m.\u2014Bank of Commerce vs.\nOverwaitea; Star Grocery vs.\nPalm Dairy; Queens Hotel Vs.\nBank of Montreal.\nFeb. 6\u20147 p.m.\u2014Hume Hotel\nvs. Lucky Strikes: Bank of Mont-\nheal vs. CYO; Overwaitea vs.\nStar Grocery.\n9 p.m.\u2014Queens Hotel vs. Palm\nDairy; Bank of Commerce . vs.\nFuller Brush; Orange Crush vs.\nImperial Bank.\n\u2022 Feb. 13\u20147 p.m.\u2014Imperial Bank\nvs. Queens Hotel; Star Grocery\nvs. Fuller Brush; Palm Dairy vs.\nLucky Strikes.\n9 p.m.\u2014CYO vs. Hume Hotel;\nOrange Crush vs. Bank of Com-\nLjnerce;   Bank  of   Montreal   vs.\n\"Overwaitea.\nFeb. 20\u20147 p.m.\u2014Palm Dairy\nvs. CYO; Overwaitea vs. Orange\nCrush; Bank of Montreal\nFuller Brush.\n9 p.m.\u2014Star Grocery vs. Lucky\nStrikes; Imperial Bank vs. Bank\nof Commerce; Hume Hotel vs.\nQueens Hotel.\nFeb. 27\u20147 p.m.\u2014Bank of Montreal vs. Star Grocery; Queens\nHotel vs. Lucky Strikes;, Imperial\nBank vs. Overwaitea.\n. 9 p.m.\u2014Orange Crush vs. Hume\nHotel; Palm Dairy vs. Fuller\nBrush; CYO vs. Bank of Commerce.\nMarch 6\u20147 p.m.\u2014Palm Dairy\nvs. Hume Hotel: Imperial Bank\nvs. Fuller Brush; Queens Hotel\nvs. CYO.\n9 p.m.\u2014Lucky Strikes vs. Overwaitea; Star Grocery vs. Bank\nof Commerce: Orange Crush vs.\nBank of Montreal.\nMarch 13\u20147 p.m.\u2014Bank of\nCommerce \"s. Bank of Montreal;\nOrange Crush vs. Palm Dairy;\nHume Hotel vs. Fuller Br,ush.\n9 p.m.\u2014CYO vs. Star Grocery:\nImperial Bank vs. Lucky tSrikes;\nQueens Hotel vs.  Overwaitea.\nMarch 20 \u2014 7 p.m. \u2014 Imperial\nBank vs. CYO; Star Grocery vs.\nQueens Hotel; Bank of Montreal\nvs. Palm Dairy.\n9 p.m.\u2014Fuller Brush vs. Orange\nCrush; Overwaitea vs. Hume\nHotel; Bank of Commerce vs.\nLucky Strikes.\nMarch 27\u20147 p.m.\u2014Overwaitea\nvs!.Fuller Brush; Bank of Montreal vs. Hume Hotel; Orange\nCrush vs. Star Grocery.\n9 p.m.\u2014Queens Hotel vs. Bank\nof Commerce; Lucky Strikes vs.\nCYO; Palm Dairy ts. Imperial\nBank.\nApril 1\u20147 p.m.-Qutens Hotel\nROSSLAND-Rossland Warriors\ntook advantage of a prolonged defensive lapse in the first period\nto ram home five goals within\nthree minutes and three seconds\u2014\nfor what may be a Western International Hockey League record-\nen route to a 6-2 victory over Nelson Maple Leafs.\nShots on goal indicate the play\nwas much closer than the score\ntells. Reno Zanier, Warrior netminder, played exceptionally well\nin stopping 34 shots. Leafs' gallant\nand overworked GuS Adams blocked 38, 15 in the final stanza.\nAs they did at Nelson Civic Arena\nSaturday night, Warriors took advantage of their early opportunities \u25a0 and coasted home from there\nto tie Spokane Flyers for first place\nin the four-team circuit. Each of\nthe two leading clubs has played\n30 games.\nGeorge Ferguson, Leo Lucchini,\nGil Desrosiers, Pinoke Mclntyre,\nRay Demore and Hal Jones scored\nfor Rossland. Dave Stewart scored\nin the second period and Jim Pilla\nin the third for Leafs, who have\nnow dropped, nine games in succession.\nThey seek a road out of the\nmorass of defeat tonight at Civic\nArena when Spokane arrives in\ntown in an effort to regain their\nhold on first place.\nOnly a minute and 18 seconds\nelapsed between Ferguson's slap\nfrom 25 feet out and Lucchini's\ndeflection of Desrosiers' pass.\nSome 43 seconds later, Desrosiers\nrounded a Leaf defenceman and\nfound a chink in Adams' armor.\nAfter 28 seconds, Pinoke scored on\nDemore's pass to make it 4-0. Demore waited all of 34 seconds before making it 5-0, scoring from\na scramble.\nStewart scored on a long shot\nfrom the point, while Pilla batted\nhome Cliff Shockey's passout late\nin the third period. Stewart's goal\nkept alive Leafs' record of never\nbeing shut out this season.\nNelson\u2014Goal: Adams; defence:\nFlaman, Severyn, Parker; forwards: Malacko, Hyssop, Keller,\nAppleton, Maglio, Pilla, Shockey,\nMartini, Stewart.\nRossland \u2014 Goal: Zanier; de\nfence:   Kraiger,  Fletcher, Fergu\nson, Lofvendahl; forwards:' \u25a0 Andrews, Desrosiers, Jones, Lucchini,\nLenardon, Demore, Chorney, Mclntyre, Turik.\nOfficials \u2014 Al Toikko and Bing\nJuckes.\nFirst period\u20141. Rossland, Ferguson (Chorney, Turik) 13:04; 2.\nRossland, Lucchini (Kraiger, Desrosiers) 14:22; 3. Rossland, Desrosiers Kraiger)  15:05;  4. Ross\nland, Mclntyre (Jones, Demore)\n15:33; 5. Rossland, Demore (Mclntyre, Jones) 16:07.\nNo penalties.\nSecond period\u20146. Nelson, Stewart (Hyssop, Keller) 14:50.._\nPenalty\u2014Fletcher, 2:24.\nTnird period\u20147. Rossland, Jones\n(Mclntyre, Demore) 3:27; 8. Nelson, Pilla (Shockey) 14:15.\nPenalty\u2014Severyn, 7:31.\nSki Slants\nBy SITZMARK\nSkiing was excellent on the hill\nlast Sunday, and many old and\nnew members tried out their\n\"boards.\" A few rides in between\nbouts of tramping the area below\nSilvar King Road helped spice the\nday for members.\nA crew was working on last\nyear's tow, and they hope to have\nit in operation for next Sunday.\nEveryone1 is asked to remember if\nthey wish to ride the lift they must\nshow their membership card or\npay double on the tow.\nMembership cards will be avail\nable at the cabin. I hope all skiers\nwill realize that putting the lift in\norder and operating it costs money\nand that is the reason we must\ninsist that everyone riding it must\nbe a member of the club or pay\ndouble fees.\nSome members spent the day\nputting the addition of Hie cabin\nin order. We now have double the\ncabin space of last season. It probably will still be crowded at times,\nbut should be more comfortable\nthan last year.\nWe are still being held up on the\ninstallation of the new lift by the\narrival of machinery. However, we\nexpect everything should be ready\nto go by next weekend. At a meeting in the cabin, a crew of 10 members volunteered to be on the job\nat eight o'clock Sunday morning to\nhelp install the upper bullwheel\nand put the sheaves on the towers.\nSunday, a couple of crews pulled\nthe cable out of the snow, so it will\nbe ready to be placed on the\nsheaves, when work progresses\nthat far.\nBe sure to ski in control, watch\nfor flags marking any obstructions\nthat will cause a fall, and maybe\nan accident. There will be ski\npatrol members on the hill to look\nafter everybody.    -\nBe sure to follow their advice.\nI We hope a lot will be accomplish\nI ed on the new T-Bar lift this week\nend. All who wish to come and help\nwill be appreciated. Oh, yes. Anyone helping on the lift will be covered by compensation in case of\naccident.\nONE OF A HOST of tough and talented Spokane\nFlyers visiting Civic Arena tonight to do battle with\nNelson Maple Leafs is Larry Plante, six-foot-four-inch\ndefenceman who on his last trip to these parts sidelined\nErnie Gare\u2014probably for the season\u2014with torn ligaments, as he checked the little Leaf stalwart hard against\nthe boards.\nBritain's Fowl Rule Worries\nHeavyweight Champ's Manager\nNEW. YORK (AP)\nover Britain's foul rule has\nraised some doubt about Floyd Patterson's plans for making a defence\nof his world heavyweight boxing\ntitle in London this year.\nCus D'Arnato, Patterson's manager, will ask waiver of the foul\nrule before Patterson agrees to\nmake a trip.\n\"I wouldn't want to risk the\nchance of losing the championship\non a low blow,\" said D'Arnato.\n\"Floyd is not a foul fighter as\neveryone knows, but in England\nyou can lose the title for one blow\nthat might stray below the belt\nline.\nHowever, Teddy I Waltham, secretary of the British   Boxing\nvs. Orange. Crush; CYO vs. Overwaitea; Fuller Brush vs. Lucky\nStrikes'.\n9 p.m.\u2014Bank of Montreal vs.\nImperial Bank; Bank of Commerce vs. Palm Dairy; Hume\nHotel vs. Star Grocery.\nApril 10\u20147 p.m.\u2014Hume Hotel\nvs. Bank of Commerce; Lucky\nStrikes vs. Bank jjf Montreal;\nStar Grocery vs. Imperial Bank.\n9 p.m.\u2014Overwaitea vs. Palm\nDairy; CYO vs. Orange Crush;\nFuller Brush vs. Queens Hotel.\nApril 17\u20147 p.m. \u2014 Orange\nCrush vs. Lucky Strikes; Palm\nDairy vs. Star Grocery; Overwaitea vs. Bank of Commerce.\n9 p.m.\u2014CYO vs. Fuller Brush;\nQueens Hotel vs. Bank of Montreal; Imperial Bank vs. Hume\nHotel.\n(\nExecutive Buys\nSeattle Amerks\nSEATTLE (AP) - The, Seattle\nAmericans hockey club has been\nsold for $50,000, The Times said\nTuesday.\nThe purchaser was David Hen-\nsley, 36, president of a local investment securities company. A\nSeattle resident for six years, Hen-\nsley formerly was an executive\nwith Western Hotels, Inc., here\nand in Portland.\nIn making the sale, J. ElfOy\nMcGaw retained television rights\nfor the team's games here for the\nremainder of the season. McCaw\nis a television executive.\nKeith Allen will remain as coach\nThe Times reported.\nA hassle i Board of Control, said in London\nhe is sure the Board will not\nchange its rules for Patterson.\n'We have had Americans defend their world titles here before\u2014\nGus Lesnevich, Ray Robinson and\nArchie Moore \u2014 and they were all\nquite happy with British conditions.\nI see no feason why Patterson\nshould not be the same.\"\nInformed of Waltham's reaction\nD'Arnato said: \"I'll take it up\nwhen I go to London, As I understand it, this is only Waltham's\nopinion, not the board's decision.\"\nAlthough D'Arnato is anxious\nto have Patterson defend for pro-\nmotor Harry Levene in London, the\nmatch, in spring or early summer,\nstill is tentative. D'Arnato said Joe\nErskine, British champion, might\nget the shot if he beats European\nchampion Ingemar Johansson in\nSweden Feb. 14.\nJanuary\nSUIT\nSALE\nOn  Famous\nW. R. Johnston\n' Hand   Cur  and\nTailored-To-Measure\nExtra Pants\nFREE\nChoose now from any\nof the new Fall Samples\nand save $20.00 or more\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00b0\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nExpect Rocket\nIn Vancouver\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Maurics\n(Rocket) Richard will appear at\nthe Oldtimers' Association hockey\ngame here Jan. 19, officials said\nTuesday.\nRichard has been granted permission by Montreal Canadiens of\nthe National Hockey League to fly\nto Vancouver for the game, they\nsaid.\nThe Rocket has been out of the\nCanadiens' lineup for several\nweeks with a partially severed ach-\nilles tendon. He was leading scorer\nin the NHL at the time of his injury.\nRichard's appearance at the\ngame, held annually to raise funds\nfor former hockey players in need\nof financial assistance, was arranged by John Taylor, Progressive Conservative M.P. for Vancouver Burrard.\nMr. Taylor made the arrangement through Senator Donat Raymond, director of the Canadiens.\nTWO YOUNGSTERS\nTO DO BATTLE\nCHICAGO (AP) - Explosive-,\npunching Sugar Hart and clever'\nLarry Baker battle for a fresh\nstart in the welterweight \"sweepstakes\" at Chicago stadium tonight\nin a nationally televised bout.\nHart, 21-year-old Philadelphian\nwith 19 knockouts in his 22 victories, is rated an ll-to-5 favorite in\nthe 10-rounder.\nBaker, 26, from Mount Vernon,\nN.Y., is ranked No. 8, one notch\nahead of Hart, in the National\nBoxing Association ratings. The\nwinner should make progress in\nthe scramble for Carmen Basilio's\nvacated 147-round crown.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nResults of inter-club play at\nNelson Curling Club' Tuesday\nnight:\nJ. Leeming 11, J. Harvey 12.\nA. Hamson 6, Duckworth 8.\nJ. Haines 12, R. Chandler 8.\nW. Tickner 7, W. Wait 9.\nN. R. Sardich 8, H. Farenholtz 14.\nM. B. Ryalls 6, R. Palmer 9.\nR. Boates 7, F, Charmichael 10.\nJ. Sutherland 10, D.M. Sample 7.\nR. F. Wallace won by default\nfrom D. Meakins.\nS. Jefferies 10, W. Tozer 9.\nLate Monday scores:\nE. C. Hunt 10, J. Thorn 8.\nN. Lutkiwich 6, D. Porteous 12\nW. Tozer 8, R. Carmichael 9.\nJ. Milne 7, L. Peerless 5...\nW. Triggs 6, A. Reid 9.\nWIHL STANDINGS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nW  L   Gf   Ga Pts\nSpokane     18   12   128   104   36\nRossland      17  12   118  101   36\nTrail      12   18   111   129  24\nNelson      11  17  ill  134  22\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nIIIHIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nKootenay Women to Curl\nOn Thursday, Jan. 16, the 20th annual Kootenay\nWomen's Bonspiel is scheduled to get underway at\nNelson Curling Club.\nHeld last year in Creston, the event\u2014which alternates among host rinks in East and West Kootenay\nregions\u2014is back in Nelson for the first time since 1953.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinr\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nHove The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0        LIMITED        **\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nNoxzema Special\nFor   Chapped   Skin\nDouble Value Giant Size\nPrice $1.25\n3-Woy  Shave\nRegular 75c\nSpecial 59<\nSold at Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nBox 460 Phone S*\nSENIOR\nHOCKEY\nTonight\nCivic Arena\n8:00 p.m.\nReserved  Seat Sale\nKootenay Statloneri\nTODAY\n10 a.m. \u25a0 5 p.m.\nGORD  FLAMAN\nNelson City Band\nin attendance.\nSPOKANE vs. NELSON\nFLYERS MAPLE LEAFS\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_08","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\/1.0430858","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":"1958-01-08 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":"1958-01-08 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":""}]}