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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" $613,000 School Budget\nCranbrook Board Estimate\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook District School Board has completed\nits estimate of the budget for 1958\nfor submission to the Department\nof Education at a total of $613,000.\nAny revision must be completed\nprior to March 15 when the budget\nwill be presented to the city council for approval. The 1957 expenditures on district school operations\ntotalled $331,395.55 and exceeded\nrevenue by $7761.58. The year\nended- with a bank overdraft of\n$18,396.93.\nNotification has been sent the\nboard by the Labour Relations\nBoard that a newly formed Local\n72!) of the Cranbrook School District Employees Union, covering\ncustodians and heating engineers,\nhas complied with preliminaries\nand has been certified as bargaining agent for them in a board-\nunion working contract.\nApproximately ten applications\nhave been received by the board\nfor the appointment of principal\nof the new eight-classroom elementary school on Eleventh Avenue,\nwhich is scheduled for opening and\noccupation next September. Appointment has not yet been made.\nLes Tipton, who ranches at the\nnorth end of Moyie Lake, has been\nrecommended  to  the  superinten\ndent of education as appointed\nMoyie rural school representative\nsucceeding W. W. Wiley of Hiawatha Motel, who has left the district.\nMiss Margaret Tait of Williams\nLake has been appointed to the\nstaff of Mount Baker School as\ngirls' physical training instructor,\nsucceeding Mrs. C. W. Brocking-\nton who was appointed temporarily\nlast September.\nSuccessful winter operation of\nthe hot lunch programs by Mrs.\nGunnar Billmark and Mrs. S. G.\nRodney at Mount Baker School,\nand by Mrs. Emma Anderson at\nCentral School was reported and\nthe program will be continued until Easter holidays.\nAccounts totalling $57,594.71 were\nauthorized by the board for payment.\nSEPARATED AGAIN\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Judy\nGarland and Sid Luft parted\nagain Tuesday. Lawyer Jerry\nGiesler said she gave him the\nimpression she wanted to sue for\ndivorce. But she made the same\nrequest twice before in recent\nyears and \"sometimes it takes a\nfew days, sometimes a little\nlonger, but they always make\nup.\"\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nFisherman's  Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C.\nPaints, canvases, brushes, pastels.\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nFOR ELECTROLUX SALES\nand service, phone 1108.\nRunning shoes in all sizes.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting. Paperhanging. R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\njPepper and tomato seeds. Plant\nnow.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFibreglas panels ln white, 92x81.\nfor $7.95 per pair.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nMARCH 31st\nVOTE\nDEWDNEY 1*1\nPartner Whist, Eagles Hall, to'\nnight, 8 p.m. Everybody welcome.\nMrs. DeArmond\nPasses al\nCranbrook\nCRANBROOK - A resident of\nCranbrook since 1951, Mrs. Keith\nDeArmond died Sunday ih St. Eugene Hospital after a long illness\nat the age of 30 years.\nMrs. DeArmond, nee Evangeline\nSafioles, was born in Ashern, Manitoba. She spent the early part of\nher life in Ashern and in Edmon\nton, where she worked in the office\nof the\u00abRoyal Bank of Canada, being\ntransferred to the Cranbrook\nbranch in 1951. Mrs. DeArmond\nwas married in Cranbrook in 1952,\nShe is survived by her husband\nand two young daughters, Leslie\nand Katherine at their home here;\nher mother, Mrs. K. Safioles of\nCranbrook; five brothers, Alex in\nSeattle, George and Lou in Edmon\nton, and Perry in Ontario, and\nthree sisters, Mrs. Moore of Win\nnipeg, Mrs. M. Dory and Mrs. M\nJ. Warwick of Edmonton.\nTO TAKE 10-WEEK\nPOLICE COURSE\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Sgt. Maxwell\nof the Kimberley deatchment of\nRCMP leaves Friday for Regina\nwhere he will attend the Canadian\nPolice College for a special ten\nweek course. The course is comprised of over seventy subjects including criminal law, administration care and handling of prisoners, first aid, excise act, traffic\ncontrol and public speaking.\nHANIC'S RADIO AND TV\nREPAIRS, PHONE 1156-R.\nALSO EVENINGS.\nCaterers required for Nelson\nGolf and Country Club. Living\nquarters provided. Write Box 141,\nNelson, B.C.\nPlywood of all kinds.\nFull sheets or cut sizes,\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nHerridge Urges\nTrade With\nRed China\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Expansion\nof Canadian trade with all countries including China is one way\nin which Canada surpluses could\nbe disposed on world markets and\nprovide work for Canada's unemployed, H. W. Herridge, CCF member for Kootenay West, said here\nTuesday.\nMr. Herridge was addressing\ndelegates at the annual Canadian\nconvention of the International\nUnion of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers.\nWe have got to recognize\nChina,\" he said. He urged the\nunion to fight for international\npeace, recognition of China and for\na policy which would increase Canadian trade.\nMr. Herridge said Canada could\nfind large markets for its produce\nin China, India and other countries\nin the Far East.\nOn   Sale \u2014 Polar   Indian type\nsweater wool, 79c; Maple Leaf\nwool,  3-ply,  22c.\nEBERLE'S,   ON   BAKER ST.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nGlamorine Rug Cleaner, 30 oz.\n$1.90; 60 oz. $2.98; 150 oz. $4.49.\nWOOD,  VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nShoes for girls and boys! A good\nvariety in all sizes at sensible, low\nprices, at\nI     EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nElectrical Men\nIn Increase\nAl Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Complete agree'\nment has been reached by the city\ncouncil and the bargaining committee for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers for\na new working contract for elec\ntrical department employees to\nrun two years and one month, with\nJanuary 31, 1960 termination date.\nNew contract sets 12'4 per cent\nincrease of wages effective January 1, 1958, and five per cent increase again February 1, 1959. It\nalso stipulates four hours' regulation pay for any employee required\nto be on emergency call on non-\nworking days regardless of whether\nhis services are required, addition\nof Remembrance Day and Boxing\nDay to bring to nine annual paid\nstatutory holidays, 15 days annual\npaid vacation for employees of 10\nyears or more service, and cumulative sick leave up to 45 days,\nUnder the agreement the city\nwill also provide pole strap and\ngaffs in addition to special clothing it already provides for linemen.\nBond Issue\nApproved\nFor Memorial\nCRANBROOK\u2014At a special general membership meeting of the\nDr. F. W. Green Memorial Society,\nthe finance committee was author\nized to proceed immediately with\npreparation and sale, of a bond\nissue to meet the cost of the project above the originally estimated\n$75,000.    \u2022\nBonds will be in denomination of\n$250, redeemable within ten years\nand bearing interest at three per\ncent. The issue will total $25,000\nwith a substantial fraction retained\nby the Society. Bonds will be available through any member of the\nboard of directors and the finance\ncommittee. The meeting named as\ntrustees for the bond issue the\nSociety chairman, Edward Gummer, Dr. W. O. Green and Dr.\nLaird Wylie.\nStage, Water Revue\nTo Appear in Trail\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail Junior Chamber\nof Commerce have signed a contract with a Calgary \"agency to\nbring the \"Canadian Sports-Boats\nand Vacation Shows\" to Trail.\nThe show, to be held at the Cominco Arena in May, features a\nstage and water revue. One of the\nattractions at the show will be a\ntrout tank with 500 fighting mountain trout, where the public tries\ntheir luck \u2014 and they can keep all\nthey can catch.\nThis will be the show's first ap\npearance in the district.\nCreslon Rink\nTop Winner\nAl Riondel\nLarge Crowd Sees\nat Natal\nPlays\nNATAL \u2014 At the Sparwood High\nSchool auditorium the Fernie\nDramatists, under the direction of\nMrs. D. Morgan, presented two\none-act plays before a large crowd.\nThe two plays presented were\n\"Maggie's Love Affair\", a comedy,\nand a mystery drama entitled \"The\nLate Miss Cordell\", both of which\nwere well received.\nDuring intermission the audience\nwas entertained with solos by Mrs.\nFrances Lees of Fernie and a\ngroup of songs by the Sparwood\nHigh School choir under the direction of Miss B. Nelson.        t\nThe event was sponsored by the\nMichel-Natal United Church.\nCourt of Revision\nHearing Appeals\nKIMBERLEY - The court of\nrevision 1958 has commenced the\nhearing of all verbal and written\nappeals. All cases will now be reviewed including those on which\nadjudication was given, those\nwhich were not heard due to the\nappellants being absent, and those\nwhich were withdrawn. The court\nmust complete its review by February 28th with appellants being\nnotified in the usual manner as to\nthe disposition of their case.\nSEIZE  ARMS\nBONE, Algeria (AP)\u2014French\nauthorities Tuesday seized a case\ncontaining arms for Morocco\naboard the Italian freighter\nMaria-Luisa in Bone Harbor. The\ncase had been loaded aboard\nunder a regular manifest before\nthe ship left Genoa with a cargo\nof prefabricated housing for\nFrench forces here. France\nmaintains a right to seize any\narms shipped within a 30-mile\nrange of Algeria. \t\nIncrease Given\nCranbrook\nHospifal Workers\nCRANBROOK - Local 180, Hospital Employees Union, which is\ncertified bargaining agent for all\nSt. Eugene Hospital lay employees,\nhas reached terms with Cranbrook\nhospital board of management renewing its agreement due last January 1 for an 18-months term concluding June 30, 1959.\nWilliam Black and Sid MacDonald of Vancouver were negotiators'\nfor wage terms in all four East\nKootenay Hospitals who have union\ncertification, Cranbrook, Kimberley', Fernie and Creston, and\nJames Quinn of Kimberley, chairman of the East Kootenay Hospitals Association, was chairman for\nmanagement negotiations.\nCranbrook contract allows five\ncents increase in all wage categories, with additional increment\nto male employees of $10 to $15\na month. It also provides proportional basis of increase for all\nregular part-time employees filling\ncertain employee prerequisites.\nHIS\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958 \u2014 3    '\nCranbrook Legion Gives\n$7000 to Memorial Home\nSAFEWAYS the best place\nin Nelson to shop\nSEE THE BIG\n4-PAGE FLYER\nIfs Packed Full of\nSEAFOOD VALUES\nand LENTEN IDEAS\nBARGAINS GALORE\nIn Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, Meats\nSAVE\nPrices Effective\nFeb. 27 to Mar. 5th\nSAVE\nCanadal^SAFEWAY\nRIONDEL\u2014The Riondel Curling\nClub was host to rinks from Trail\nNelson, Creston and Salmo at a\nthree-day bonspiel in the Riondel\ncurling rink. Winners were:\nPrimary event, first, A. R.\nSpeers, W. Eastman, J. Greyell\nand J. Barber, Creston. Prizes\nwere camp stoves.\nSecond, A. Waters, G. Koehle,\nJ. Braybrook and M. Gee of Nelson. Prizes were sets of steak\nknives.\nThird, L. MacDonald, T. North,\nS. Schram and D. Fowler of Riondel. Prizes were lighters.\nFourth, L. Salvador, G. Salvador,\nWiggins, and a fourth, of Creston.\nPrizes were lighters.\nSecondary\u2014First, A. M. Chesser,\nR. Dockerill, J. Atwell, C. Thompson, of Trail. Prizes were copper\ncreamer, sugar and tray.\nSecond,  J.  Rees,  B.  Kidd.\nMawdsley, and L. Collazzo of Riondel. Prizes were drills.\nThird, L. Webster, T. Holmes\nR. Peitzsche and L. Mallow of\nRiondel. Prizes were drainboard\ntrays.\nFourth. B. Bradford, F. Oquist,\nJ. Donald and Ray Dortman of\nRiondel. Prizes were wallets and\nlighters.\nTertiary\u2014First, A. Hill, L. Bay,\nE. Colman, D. McDonald of Riondel. Prizes were coffee carafes.\nSecond, B. Beckett, G. David, H\nLoughery and C. Allen of Riondel.\nPrizes were first aid kits\nCRANBROOK - Highlight of the\nsocial evening held ior presentation of the travelling gavel on Saturday to the Cranbrook branch of\nthe Canadian Legion was the donation of a cheque for $7305 to Ihe\nDr. W. F. W. Green Memorial\nHome Society as the branch's contribution over the past year.\nThe cheque, presented by Cranbrook branch president Archie\nKary, represents the branch's contribution to the society over the\npast year. The Legion Ladies' Auxiliary presented an additional $350\nto the Society, cheques being received by Memorial Society's president, Edward Gummer, who expressed the society's appreciation\nof these two organizations on behalf of the memorial home.\nNearly a dozen Legion members\nand their wives made the trip to\nCranbrook for the social evening\nin the clubhouse. The Edgewater\nbranch of the Canadian Legion,\nheaded by Bert Beamish, president, presented the gavel to the\nCranbrpok branch.\nThe gavel moves to a different\nEast Kootenay branch every three\nmonths along with a \u201eparty of\nbranch members as a fellowship\nmeasure among the various\nbranches.\nThe branch has confirmed the\nappointment of its new full-time\nsecretary-manager, William\nScblapbach, effective next Monday.\nHe has served in this capacity at\nan Okanagan branch and at present is secretary-manager of the\nInvermere branch. Acting secretary-manager for the past two\nmonths has been branch vice-president Harold Kniess. The branch\nexecutive has completed its board\nwith appointment of three additional directors, Eric Newton, R.\nG. Taylor and Mr. Kniess.\nAn entertainment program following transfer of the gavel and\npresentation of the cheque was\nprovided the guests in transparency slides shown by Frank Jones\nof a recent visit to Denmark and\nother points in Europe, and of this\ndistrict shown by' Bill Sweet.\nMothers' March\nHeld at Natal\nNATAL \u2014 Under chairman Kinsman-Robert Thomson of Sparwood,\nthe Mothers' March for 1958 was\nheld throughout the Natal-Michel-\nSparwood district.\nProceeds from this Kinsmen-\nsponsored drive will go towards the\naid of the B.C. Child Care and\nPolio Fund, and will be used to\nprovide treatment for B.C.'s handicapped children and to continue\nrehabilitation services for polio victims.\nAt the conclusion of the p o Ii o\ncampaign, Kinsmen Will sponsor\na rifle shoot at the Natal rangi'\nSaturday. Good prizes have been\nassured through the generosity of\nthe local merchants.\nPrevious to the Mothers' March\nother activities were undertaken\nin an effort to make this drive go\nover the top. The results of the\ncampaign in the district will be released shortly,\n\"CANAUA\nH017ES\nML\"\nCANMORE\nBRIQUETTES\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL & TRANSFER\nFreeways May\nEnd Coast\nTraffic Jams\nVANCOUVER (CP1 - A multi-\nmillion - dollar network of freeways is being considered as the\nanswer to Vancouver's downtown\ntraffic problem.\nThe freeways are expected to\nbe recommended early this year\nby the metropolitan planning\ncommission, which is studying\ncity' hall surveys on the highway |\nproblem.\nCity hall officials say downtown\nstreets have just about reached\nthe lim.it of their capacity. The\nstreets now cannot be widened\nexcept at a terrific cost.\nSororities Not\nUsual In\nAussie Colleges\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Sororities and fraternities do not fit\nthe Australian pattern of university life, Miss Agnes Scobie, Syd-\nmen, said in an interview here,\nney University's  adviser to wo-\nMiss Scobie has returned to\nSydney after visiting 24 North\nAmerican universities. She was\non a Carnegie grant to study student services such as housing,\nhealth facilities, student government and employment.\n\"Our students like co-ed interest clubs such as the 'bushwalk-\ners' club, a form of hiking, or\nthe 'cave-finders' club, members\nof which search for natural caverns,\" she said.\n\"Residence halls are necessary\nand we need to increase our facilities. American universities base their program on student residents and I feel it is a\nwonderful plan. North American\nhealth services and student governments are excellent, too.\"\nMost of the 8,500 Sydney University students spent three\nhours a  day  commuting.\n\"Lack of residence halls means\na long trip piled on top of heavy\n\u2022homework and a busy campus\nlife,\" Miss Scobie said. \"It is our\nstudents most serious problem.\"\nFew Australian students marry\nbefore they graduate.\nMiracle Cushion\nHolds False Teeth\nTight\nSnug \u00ae brand\nDenture Cushion- are a triumph\nof science, a sensational new plaa-\ntic re-lining that\ngets rid of the\nannoyance and\nirritation of loose,\nbadly fitting false teeth. Snug eases sore,\nirritated gums due to loose fitting dentures.\nApplied in a few minutes, makes the\nwobbliest plates stay firmly In place\u2014gives\nperfect comfort. Eat anything\u2014talk, laugh\n\u2014 plates \"stay put\". Harmless to gums or\ndentures.\n8nug re-liners oan last from 2 to 6 months.\nStays soft and pliable \u2014 does not harden\nand ruin plate, peels right out when replacement is needed. No daily bother with\nadhesives. Get Snug brand Denture Cushions todnyt 21intTR forupper or lower plates\n$1.50. Money back if not eatisfted. At all\ndrugo-rtt,\nG. T. FULFORD Co., Ltd., BrockviUe, Ont\nOLSON'S\nPhone  1149\nCredit\nJewellers\nNelson,   B. C.\n Nelson's  Record\n2002\nTraffic  Fatality-Free Days\nI\nRfraF\/;\nS*2g*\n50tl\n\/ol. 55\nT7 t\u00bbt\";.\"\u00b0w \u00bb\nun\"]\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with clear\nperiods. A few showers, mostly\nover the ridges. Little change in\ntemperature. Light winds. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley, 28 and 42.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 27, 1958\nNot More Than 6c Daily,  10c Saturday\nNo. 260\nHeavy Road Program for District Announced\ny ..,L<tr  A rm-   fink,  A n. i_,_.rTwo Near 1>ea,h    Trail Brid9e' Nelson-Creston\nIMUCiear Arms  Uniy AnSWei After Shootings      Roads on Big Highway Program\nIf Russians\nH   T*.    MONGOLIA\nSPOKESMEN for.the Freedomitet, who have been ln the\nSoviet Union negotiating for land, have said they plan to recommend that their followers return to Russia and settle in one of\ntwo areas far beyond the Ural Mountains. One possible choice of\nthe Freedomites is the Omsk area, main centre of which is the\neity of Omsk 1400 miles southeast of Moscow. Omsk has a population of more than 200,000 and lies In the midst of a wooded steppe.\nAnother possible choice is the Altai region, another 600 miles southeast of Omsk. It is a mountainous country of fertile valleys and\nis reported to hold great mineral wealth. The chief centre of the\nAltai region is the town of Barnaul. Spokesmen for the sect who\nhave visited Russia say the Soviet government has promised them\nsanctuary and freedom from all state interference.\u2014CP Newsmap.\nSudanese Go\nTo Polls To\nday\nDrums, Loudspeakers Used to Get\nOut Vote; Coalition Gov't Seen\nBy HORACE CASTELL .\nKHARTOUM, The Sudan (Reuters)\u2014The Sudan starts\nrotincf today in its first parliamentary election as an independent state with little difference between party platforms\nand only tepid enthusiasm among the electorate.\nAs the election campaign by more than 600 candidates entered its final stage, the country was distracted by\nEgypt's sudden claim to areas\ncratic and Liberal parties with the\nNational-Unionists in opposition.\nThe outstanding personalities are\nSaved Abdullah Khalil, the 70-year-\nold premier and secretary-general\nof the Umrna party, and Ismail\nEl Azhari, Unionist party leader\nwho formed the first all-Sudanese\ngovernment following the 1954\nagreement between, Britain and\nEgypt granting the Sudan independence Jan. 1, 1956,\nPROBABLE COALITION\nOf the two, El Azhari enjoys the\ngreater popular support while\nKhalil has the backing of the\npowerful Ansar religious sect and\nbusiness interests.\nDomestic problems facing the\nnew government to be formed af-'\nter the election \u2014 almost certainly\nanother coalition \u2014 touch almost\nall aspects of national life. The\n976,000-square-miIe country is' in\ndesperate need of road, rail and\nhousing development. Educational\nand medical services also are priority problems.\nVoting will be staggered throughout the country until March 8,\nwhen the counting of the votes is\ndue to start.\nSays'Defeat, Occupation by Russ Only\nAlternative If Case of Aggression\nBy WALTER DAVIS\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Britain said Wednesday the West\nmust use nuclear weapons against a major Soviet aggression\neven if the Russians refrain from using them.\nDefence Minister Duncan Sandys said the alternative\nis \"defeat, and occupation.\" He was opening a two-day defence debate in the House of Commons.\n\"It is really no good mincing matters,\" he said. Some\npeople had been shocked by his recent annual report on\ndefence spelling out the policy of nuclear retaliation even\nif Russia used only conventional arms.\nBut without nuclear retaliation, Russia's superior conventional forces \"are bound\nto be successful.\"\nA Western built-up of conventional arms would be a \"stupendous\" drain on manpower, money\nand industry.\nSandys said that the more\nthese \"ugly choices\" are studied\nthe more it is realized that the\nonly sensible way out is comprehensive disarmament.\nBRITAIN SHOCKED\nGeorge Brown, chief Labor\nparty spokesman on defence said\nBritain- was shocked by Sandys'\nalmost complete reliance on \"the\nweapon of mass suicide.\"\nHe presented a motion to be\nvoted on tonight which criticizes\nthe government defence program\nincluding the agreement on building British bases for American-\nsupplied rockets without awaiting\nthe outcome of an East - West\nsummitt conference.\nSandys declared the government's reliance on nuclear weap\nons \"is the accepted and well-\nestablished strategy of NATO\nand it is by this method that peace\nhad been preserved during the\nlast decade.\"\n\"The West will never start a\nwar against Russia. It is equally\nobvious that no one in his senses\nwould think of launching a nu\nclear  counter-offensive  to   deal poses only.\"\nwith some minor incursion or an\naccidental border incident.\nSTRIKE OR SUBMIT\n. \"If on the other hand Russia\nwith her incomparably larger\nconventional forces, were to\nlaunch an all-out conventional attack, then the Western allies\nwould have the choice of striking\nback with nuclear weapons or of\nsubmitting to defeat and occupation.\"\nAmid cheers, he added: \"To\nme, it is inconceivable that the\nfree peoples would meekly surrender their liberties without a\nfight, whatever the consequences.\"\nSandys said he feels sure that\nSoviet leader Nikita Khrushchev\n\"is the last person in the world\nto resent or be put off by plain\nspeaking.\"\nHe rejected the Labor call to\nhalt preparation of the missile\nbases until after a summit meeting.   ;\n\"We do not feel that a gesture\nof this kind will have any; practical effect.\"    \u2022\nRussia, he added, is going\nahead with its own rocket plans.\nEarlier, Sandys said: \"There\nis nothing I wish for more ardently than to see the world disarm, right down to the level\nneeded for internal security pur-\nTwo Near Death\nAfter Shootings\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP)-\nTwo Prince George men were near\ndeath late Wednesday after a\ndouble shooting earlier in the business district of this north-central\nBritish Columbia centre,.\nR. Lome McCruish, partner in\nan insurance adjusting company,\nwas shot in the stomach with a\n12-gauge shotgun, wielded by a\nman who invaded his private business office.\nFive minutes later, on a street\neight blocks away, Herbert L.\nClark apparently fired a bullet\nfrom a .38-calibre revolver into his\nown head, RCMP said.\nLate Wednesday hospital authorities reported McCruish was in critical condition after a two-hour operation. Clark, they said, was only\n\"hanging on,\" with slim prospects\nof surviving.\nBoth men were believed to be\nabout 35 years of age. McCruish,\nwho had lived in this city for at\nleast four years, is married and\nthe father of three small children.\nClark was employed in a chartered accountant's office next door to\nthe McCruish and Barton Insurance Company, police said.\nAn extensive highway program in the Nelson-Creston\narea was outlined by Highways Minister P. A. Gaglardi\nin a speech in the legislature Wednesday.\nProposed construction for the next fiscal year includes\na start on the Trail Bridge, continued reconstruction of South\nSlocan road, and a new contract to be called for work on\nthe east end of the Creston-Salmo cutoff. Further work is\nscheduled for the Nelson-Kaslo, the Harrop-Procter and the\nCastlegar airport roads. Riondel townsite road and CreBton\norchard roads will be proceeded with and will include surfacing.\nGov't Will Just\nSit Back\nSays Knowles\nCHILLIWACK (CP) - Stanley\nKnowles, deputy CCF leader, said\nWednesday night the Conservatives will sit back and take things\neasy if they are elected to office\nMarch 31.\n\"They will tell Parliament what\nis what, just as the Liberals did,\"\nhe said here at a public meeting.\n\"Any beneficial legislation the\nTories now are talking about will\nbe brought forward at a snail's\npace.\"\nThe only guarantee of action in.\nthe next Parliament, Mr. Knowles\nsaid, \"lies in the CCF, the party\nthat has always fought for your\ninterests.\"\n\"With the CCF in power you will\nget action on pensions, health,\nhousing, labor legislation and farm\nsecurity, or with the CCF greatly\nstrengthened in Parliament you\nwill get a continuing fight to win\nthese things.\"\nan the northern frontier.\n. Only the voting will show\nwhether this has influenced the\nbalance between the two main\nparties \u2014 the National Unionists\nand Umrna.\nObservers believe that Unionist\nsimporters who swung to Umrna\nwhen the Egyptians made their\nclaim have gone back to the Unionists now that Egypt has postponed\nconsideration of the dispute until\nafter the election.\nUSE SYMBOLS\nDrums in the largely Negroid\nand pagan south and the blaring\nof loudspeakers on hired taxis in\nthe predominantly Arab and Moslem north accompanied the final\ncampaigning.\nThe electorate totals about 2,-\n500,000 out of a largely illiterate\npopulation of 10,500,000.\nSymbols have been provided to\ncandidates in the more primitive\nparts to enable illiterates to vote.\nWhen the life of the last parliament expired last summer, the Sudan was being ruled by a coalition\nof the Umrna, the People's Demo-\nAiling Strijdom\nUnknown Quantity\nBy LYNN IIEINZERLING\nJOHANNESBURG (AP) - With\na general election* less than two\nmonths away, Prime Minister Johannes Strijdom's role in the future leadership of South Africa is\na question mark.\nThe ailing Strijdom, who in three\nyears a sprime minister has pushed through Parliament an assortment of racial legislation designed to maintain the white man's\ndominant position in South Africa, has been silent and inactive\ntn political affairs for nearly three\nmonths.\nStrijdom cancelled all engagements last December on his physician's advice. He is reported\nprogressing well but sees only his\nclosest advisers and friends.\nBut opposition leaders and' apparently some of the leaders of\nStrijdom's own National party are\nbeginning to speculate on his successor in the event the Nationalists are returned to power in April\n16 elections and Strijdom decides\nhe must resign.\nThere is general belief here that\nthe Nationalists will win another\nfive-year mandate. The question of\na successor to Strijdom thus becomes pertinent \u2014 particularly\nbecause one of the leading contenders is perhaps the most controversial figure in the country,\nDr. Hendrik F. Verwoerd, minister\nof native affairs.\nDr. Verwoerd takes an uncompromising stand for complete separation of the races in South Africa and the return of Africans to\ntribal status. As deputy to Strijdom Dr. Verwoerd is first in line\nto head the party if Strijdom resigns.\nDavenport Testifies Alterations\nEvident in Schultz Record Book\nBy H. L. JONES\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Testimony about alterations of the records of an accused company and\narrangements for a split of commissions on B.C. government business was given Wednesday by a\ncrown witness in the Sommers\nbribery-conspiracy hearing.\nGeorge H. Davenport, one-time\naccountant for the C. D. Schultz\nCompany Limited, made more\nthan a dozen identifications of instances in a company record book\nwhere he said he could detect \"alterations or obliterations.\" He\nsaid the changes were made about\nFebruary or \"March,  1955.\nTaking the stand in the 10th day\nof the preliminary hearing of\ncharges against former lands and\nforest minister Robert Sommers\nand others, Davenport also   told\nof a split-commission arrangement\nbetween the Schultz Company and\nPacific Coast Services Limited,\nanother of the accused. He said\nPacific was to receive five per\ncent of all commissions the Schultz\nCompany got on government business.\nThe witness testified further\ntha.t C. D. Schultz, head of the\nSchultz Company, had once told\nhim that a column of figures\nheaded \"other\" in a company record referred to Mr. Sommers who\nthen was minister. In the record\nshown him this column contained\nentries totalling $1,502.95 at October, 1954.\nAt one point in the hearing before Magistrate Oscar Orr,\nSchultz counsel Alfred Bull suggested Mr. Schultz. might have\ntold Davenport that a certain\n$1,000 allegedly passed to Som\nmers was for \"campaign funds.\"\n\"I do not recall him saying that,\"\nDavenport replied.\n\"But it is a possibility though,\"\nquestioned the counsel.\n\"It might have been,\" the witness admitted.\nHe said he could not recall the\nexact words of Iris conversation\nwith Schultz, but the head of the\nSchultz firm had told him that Uie\n$1,000 had been passed to Sommers \"in some way.\" He was repeatedly questioned about the\nphrase \"in some way\" by the defence but could add nothing further.\nDuring the day Davenport identified many ledger cheques and\nvouchers now held by the crown\nas,evidence in the case. But most\ntimes he was not asked to explain\ntheir import.\nIn his preliminary talk, Mr.\nGaglardi urged visitors to travel\nover British Columbia and' said \"I\nagain would like to take this opportunity of exhorting all of the\ntravelling public to travel over\nB.C. this year and see lor themselves the beauties and the privileges that are being offered.\"\n\"We will do our best to see that\nthe highway system is in as good\nshape as possible so that the travelling public is well accommodated and every effort will be\nmade by my men to make the trip\na pleasant one.\"\n\"At this point I would like to pay\ntribute to our men. We have received numerous letters commending the courtesy of some of our\nemployees in helping out the tourists and the motorists and for this\nI am personally grateful. This ap1\nplies to both inside' and outside\nworkers.\"\nDepartment of Highways has\nover 45 contracts operating at this\ntime and is administering another\nfour or five toll bridge contracts,\nto keep employment at a high\nlevel.\n\"Another thing that has been\nkicked around considerably on\nthe floor of this house is of a personal nature \u2014 my church.\n\"I want to openly state very\nemphatically that my church work\nhas nothing to do with the department of highways.\"\nIn the administration of the department it is necessary to spend\na considerable amount of time in\n<the field. Hence the criticism\nabout my much travelling, my\nairplanes and my expenses. But\nthe results of this are self-evident\nSince I have chosen to travel extensively and continuously, it is\na proven fact that the efficiency\nof my department has increased\nby easily 100 per cent.\n\"This   coming  year  will   Bee\nthe major portion  of highways\nmoney  being  spent  on  Trans-\n.Canada Highway and we   will\n'endeavor to complete lt by 1960.\"\nMr; Gaglardi next gave grand\ntotals of highways let during 1957-\n58, which amounted to 141.25 miles\nand grand totals of all highways\nbuilt during the period which\namounted to 169.44 miles.\nA breakdown of field surveys to\nbe completed in East Kootenay\nthis year were as follows: Southern Transprovincial highway, 23\nmiles; Kootenay \u2022 Columbia highway, 51 miles.\nPROPOSED BRIDGES\nProposed bridge construction in\nthe Kootenays for 1958-59 were:\nChristina Creek, in the Grand\nForks-Greenwood district; Cascade\nUpper, Grand Forks - Greenwood\ndistrict; Lost Creek, Nelson-Creston; Upper Annable Underpass,\nRossland-Trail; Trail bridge, Rossland-Trail. ,\nGeneral Bridges in progress during 1957-58 in this district were at\nSanca Creek and Old Channel Koo-\n.tenay River, both in the Nelson-\nCreston district.\nFinancial allocations for dls-\nGov't Votes\n$2 Million for\nPay Increase\nVICTORIA (CP) -The government passed its first money vote\nWednesday \u2014 a $2,025,000 supplementary vote to pay for the pay\nincrease promised the civil servants last July.\nWASHOUTS ON THE TRAIL-CASTLEGAR ROAD, near Kinnaird, did this damage to the CPR railway tracks. Waters rushed\nthrough a narrow gap to bite into the track footings and left the\ntracks suspended over a considerable chasm, above. A Canadian\nPacific Railway work train pulled into the Kinnaird area Wednesday to start the long job of filling in the two serious track washouts\non toe lint from Kimberley to Trail. Department of highways\ncrews were also at work repairing two large road washouts, which\nalso occurred early Tuesday as the result of several days of steady\nrain. Detours have been established around the washouts. The CPR\nline, which carries ore from Sullivan Mine to the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company operations at Trail, is expected to\nbe ont for a few days. Hospital authorities said here that three\npeople injured as a result of the washouts are \"coming along\nnk\u00bbly.\"-Photoi by G. C. Pettitt.\ntrlct vote roads for the 1958-59\nfiscal year were given for the\nKootenays as follows: Columbia\n$141,000; Cranbrook $12 6,000;\nFernie $128,000; Kaslo - Slocan\n$157,00;  Nelson \u2022 Creston $216,-\n000; Rossland-Tnall $126,000.\nTotal mileage of road in British\nColumbia   is   23,000.   About   1500\nmiles are little more than trails\nand another 9200 miles come by\nthe description of road honestly\nbut they are dirt surface. The rest\nare improved roads including the\nvery highest standard paved highways,  good gravel roads, lower\nstandard  pavement  and  graded\ncountry roads.\nAbout 3500 miles are paved and\nsome 2500 of this high standard\ncompleted in recent years..\nEMPLOYS 4500\nAt peak periods (he B.C. Department of Highways employs\nabout 4500 persons, one for every\n100 vehicles now registered in the\nprovince.\nIn the past six fiscal years (1952-\n53 to 1957-58), British Columbia\nhas spent some $320,000,000 on its\nhighways and bridges, including\nboth capital and maintenance.\n\"Equally well received and most\nwarmly welcomed was the completion and opening of the second\nand third undertakings of the Authority \u2014 that is, the Oak Street\nand Middle Arm Bridges, and the\nNelson Bridge. The Oak Street\nSystem has proved a tremendous\nasset to the movement of traffic\nbetween the City of Vancouver\nand the Townsite of Richmond and\nthe Airport. The Nelson Bridge,\nwhich replaced the ferry that\nserved the district so well for\nmany years, has heralded the beginning of a, new era for the people\nof the Nelson district.\"\nStumping With\nThe Leaders\nKIMBERLEY (CP) - The Liberals and Progressive Conservatives are so busy trying to blame\neach other for unemployment that\nthe economic facts of the situation\nare being \"sedulously ignored,\"\nCCF Leader M. J. Coldwell said\nWednesday night.\nCampaigning for the March 81\nfederal general election, Mr. Cold-\nwell said:'\n\"The fact is that periodic large\nscale unemployment is an integral\nand continuing part of the 'type of\nunplanned economy to which both\nold-line parties' are wedded and\nunless a fundamentally new approach is taken, unemployment will\ncontinue to plague the economy.\n\"So it is time to cut through Hie\nsmoke-screen, to put an end to the\npolitical trickery.\n\"Nothing less than a fundamental reorganization of the economy,\nnothing less than a program of\nsocial and economic planning\nthrough public agencies, democratically controlled through Parliament, will suffice to deal with the\nsituation.\"\nMr. Coldwell said only the OCF\nprogram is. designed to do that.\n\"Therefore the CCF is the only\nreal alternative, the only alternative to the old-line parties which\nare blind of vision and bankrupt\nof policy.\"\nOFFERS FARMERS HOPE\nSTONY PLAIN, Alta. (CP) -\nLester B. Pearson told this Alberta farming community Wednesday it would be \"pretty close to\nthe front lines\" if a third \"and\nlast\" world war broke out.\nThe Liberal leader said he agrees\nthat Canada's framers have not\nshared in the country's general\npost-war prosperity.\nHe hoped to offer some possible\nsolutions but wanted to be \"pretty\nsure of what I am saying\" before\nhe put any proposals forward. He\ndidn't want to make any promises\nhe could not fulfil and he did not\nwant to get the farmers into a\nposition where they were producing huge surpluses which could\nnot be sola.\nBut even more important than\nthe farmers' cost-price squeeze\nand the problems of unemployment was the desire for peace,\nfor without peace, \"nothing else\nwould matter very much.\"\nAt Edmonton Wednesday night\nhe said that if he becomes prime\nminister he will create a market\nat Montreal for Canadian oil if the\nUnited States continues to restrict\noil imports from Canada. Most\noil' in Eastern Canada now is imported.\nThe Liberal leader, addressing\na rally here, said also that he ia\nopposed to price discrimination\nagainst Canadian consumers. He\nwould make sure that Canadians\ndid not pay a higher price for oil\nand natural gas than prices\ncharged to American consumers\nof the Canadian products.\nIGNORE FARMER\nVIKING, Alta. (CP) - Social\nCredit Leader Solon Low said Wednesday the Progressive Conservatives \"turned their backs\" on the\nwestern farmer after promising\nthey would give him a fair deal.\n\"The Conservatives are trying to\nmake the farmers believe that they\nreally did something for them when\nthey brought in . . . the bill to\nstabilize the prices of agricultural .\nproducts.\"\nHe said any real improvement\nin the farmers' marketing and\nprice position can be attributed\nto \"what the Liberals and Conservatives scornfully call t'h e\n\"splinter\" parties.\nRIMOUSKI, Que. (CP) - Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker Wednesday\nnight dropped an indirect hint that\nhe will increase Quebec's representation in the federal cabinet if\nhis Progressive Conservative government is re-elected with strong\nQuebec support.\n\"You have it in your power \u2014\nand I know that you understand\nme well when I say this\u2014to surround me with the talented lieutenants I need to direct the destinies\nof our\/ country,\" he told an audience of more than 1200 here.\nQuebec should be able to speak\nwith a strong voice in the Commons.\n\"You must send a large group\nof Conservative members to the\nParliament of the nation.\n\"Whoever is at the helm needs\nthe co-operation of numerous associates and' I hope that the province of Quebec will participate\nactively in the administration of\nour country.\"\nDowding Says CCF\nHaving Field Day\nVICTORIA (CP) - The CCF\nhas accomplished more in the\nlegislature this year than in any\nother year since 1952, one of its\nmembers told the House Wednesday.\nGordon Dowding (CCF-Burnaby)\nsaid this year's budget debate had\nbeen \"a great field day for the\nCCF.\"\n\"The Social Credit has had it\non the federal political field and\nthey are beginning to worry about\ntheir future on the provincial\nfield,\" he said.\nMr. Dowding said it appeared\nfrom daily proceedings the government was attempting to drag\nthe session right up to the federal\nelection March 31 so the CCF won't\nhave \"a chance to campaign.\"\n\"I hope you keep saying that\nnext week and the next when the\nnight sittings start,\" Premier Bennett said.\nMr. Dowding said the CCF this\nyear had managed to change gov\nernment intention on the New\nHaven Borstal School, psychiatric\nnurses, Woodlands School for Retarded Children, the Municipal Act\nand:\n\"We've managed to keep members of the cabinet from running\nall over the country.\"\nHe said Don Wilson, radio announcer hired by the Social Credit\nparty to do daily broadcasts on\nthe legislature, was \"a Minister\nof Propaganda.\"\nHe cited the Alberla Press Act\nwhich was promoted by then Premier William Aberhart \"to see that\nthe press did exactly what the government wanted.\"\nHighways Minister Gaglardi was\nscheduled to follow Mr. Dowding,\nand was to be the last speaker in\nthe budget debate that began Feb.\n10. The legislature was believed\nready to hold a night sitting and\nswing into the detailed discussion\nof estimated expenditures in t h e\n1958-59 budget of $284,000,000.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,JTHURSDAY, FEB. 27, M58 Goodwill   Trip\nTo Spokane for\nTONIGHT - THRU SAT. Complete Shows 7:00 - 9:05\nxouii near aooui it everywhere...\nW\\lt Disney\n,_^Bk    THE STORY OF\nrewi\nTTrst true-life Taatafy\nm eouM av\nTECHNICOLOR\n\u2022Hat\n_^\u00bb\nNIOK,the tale of a    t**\u00bbCoosT\nbaby elephant and a boy\nin COLOR\nChildren 25c Any Time\n\"WNICOIOI.\"\t\nCIVIC\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight,  Friday,  Saturday\n\"DESIGNING  WOMEN\"   (Cine)\nGregory Peck, Lauren Bacall\nNEWS \u2014 SHORTS\n22,000 PHONES IN\nTHIS DISTRICT\nThere were 22.455 telephones in\nKootenay and district exchanges on\nJan, 1, 1958, B.C. Telephone Company officials reported.\nTrail topped the list with 5780.\nfollowed by Nelson with 4072. Other\nfigures were: Kimberley, 2110;\nCranbrook, 1961; Creston, 1330;\nRossland, 1178; Castlegar, 1123;\nFernie, 786; Fruitvale, 682; Grand\nForks, 694; Fruitvale, 682; Invermere, 384; Nakusp, 343; Natal, 306;\nSalmo, 283; Golden, 272; New Denver, 256; Greenwood. 256; Kaslo,\n237; Balfour, 114; South Slocan,\n110; Christina Lake (operated from\nGrand Forks', 59; Rock Creek, 58;\nRadium (operated from Invermere), 38; Slocan City, 23.\nCONCERT SERIES\nFINEST YET\nThe Chanticleers, male voice\nquartet, received great applause\nfrom an enthusiastic audience\nMonday during their presentation of one of the finest performances of the Nelson Overture Concert .Series this season.\nWilliam    Diard    and    Richard .\nWright, tenors, Raymond Kenst. Henry Perdue Dies\nbaritone   and  James   Martindale.j a\u00ab, V\u00abH*>ft\nbass, captivated the audience as \"\"   \"OnCOUVer\nPee Wee Teams\nA goodwill trip to Spokane and\nan appearance on televsion will\nbe a hockey season highlight for\ntwo  of  Nelson's  pee-wee  teanjs.\nThursday Fire Chief E. S. Owens\nand James Lowe will take the\nboys to the Washington City on\na goodwill jaunt fostered by Roy\nMcBride, managing-coach of the\nSpokane Flyers. Team members\nwill be interviewed on KXLY-TV\nby Ben Roscoe at 4 p.m. Thursday.\nNELSONITE DIES\nIN ONTARIO\nAn early-day resident of Nelson, Frank Pullen, died recently\nin  Oakville,  Ont.\nMr. Pullen came from Toronto\nmore than 55 years ago to install\nNelson's first street cars.\nHis wife is the former Gladys\nMary Cummins, daughter of the\nlate Mr. and Mrs. Colin Cummins,\nand cousin of Doug Cummins, Con\nCummins and Mrs. W. W. Bennett\nof Nelson.\nBesides his wife, Mr. 'Pullen Is\nsurvived by five children, Rear\nAdmiral H. F. Pullen, RCN, Halifax; Mary Gweyneth Young, Winnipeg; Colonel E. G. Pullen of\nOakville; Nanette Mary Durant in\nSussex, England, and Captain T.\nC.  Pullen in London,  England.\nTHE HOUSE ln which two Nelson men were\nInjured Wednesday evening shows extensive\ndamage received when a gas cookstovc leakage\ncaused an explosion which damaged the walls\nand chimney in the upper storey.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nFined $100 for\nImpairment\nGusUv Dahlsten of Nelson wa6\nfined $100 and his drivers' licence\nsuspended for one month Wednesday when he pleaded guilty before Magistrate R. S. Nelson to\ndriving while his ability was impaired by alcohol. The offense took\nplace Tuesday on Front Street.\nThe Weather\nNELSON     37\nToronto    24\nWinnipeg   21\nMin Max Pre\nRegina\nCalgary  ...\nEdmonton \t\nKimberley ....\nKaflo  \t\nGrand Forks\nPenticton\n20\n11\n5\n33\n35\n28\n36\nIhey sang their way through opera\nlight opera, spirituals arid Broadway hits.\nOne of the highlights of the program was a delightful, condensed\nversion of the Gilbert and Sullivan\nopera \"HMS Pinafore.\"\nThe blend of voices in the quartet selections was outstanding and\nsolo selections displayed the high\ncalibre vocal presentation of all\nquartet members, each of whom\nhad wide professional experience.\nStage direction by Genen Bay-\nliss produced a pleasing and unusual grouping of the quartet. Responsible for musical arrangements was musical director Donald Smith. Accompanist was Jer-\nald Stone.\nRepresented on the program\nwere Peri, whose \"Invocazione di\nOrfeo\" was the opening selection.\nLeganzi, \"Che Fiero Costume,\"\nBrahms, \"O Could I but Return\"\nand \"Serenade\" and Strauss, \"Devotion.\"\nSolos by Mr. Martindale of the\nfine bass voice were \"Now for\nVengeance\" from Mozart's \"Marriage of Figaro\" and a sea shanty\n\"Blow ye Winds.\" Mr. Wright pre>\nsented  \"Romance'\nWord has been received of the\ndeath of Henry George Perdue of\nNelson in the Shaughnessy Military Hospital in Vancouver on\nTuesday night at the age of 82.\nBorn in London, England in 1875.\nMr. Perdue came to Canada in.\n1906, residing in Snowflake, Manitoba until 1907, when he moved\nto Coleman Alberta. He was a\nresident of Coleman until his enlistment in the Canadian Army\nwith the 192nd Battalion, with\nwhom he -served overseas.\nFollowing three years in the\narmy, Mr. Perdue came to Nel- CPR SERVICES TO\nson in 1919. living here until last' !\nOctober when he was taken to\nthe hospital in Vancouver. He was\na resident of Mount St. Francis\nprevious  to  leaving Nelson.\nHe is survived by his wife, son\nPercy and two daughters, Mrs.\nIra Hall and Mrs. M. Solbakken.\nThere are ten grandchildren and\nsix  great grandchildren.\n$25,000 Curling Rink Plan\nSet Before City Council\nGas Leak Causes\nExplosion. Fire\nLeakage in a gas cookstove Wednesday caused an explosion which\ninjured two men, and partly demolished the chimney and one wall\nof a house on Hall Street.\nRushed to hospital by fire chief\nE. S. Owens were John Perepol-\nkin, who received seaond degree\nburns about the face and hands\nand Mike Malakoff who also received facial burns but who was\nnot detained in hospital.\nThe explosion occurred in a\nhouse owned by Joe Sawada,\nwhere the two men were rooming.\nReturning from work, Mr. Pere-\nHOCKEY SCORES\nOkanagan Senior\nKelowna 5 Penticton 2.\n(Kelowna wins best-of-seven semifinal 4-1).\nKamloops 2 Vernon 6.\n(Kamloops    leads    best - of-seven\nsemi \u2022 final 2-1, one game tiedl.\npolkin smelled gas and lit a match,\nwhereupon he was instantly thrown\nto the ground by the blast.\nHis companion had tried to warn\nMr. Perepolkin against striking\nthe match but was unable to make\nhim hear in time, both men were\nable to leave the house and were\nfound in a dazed condition when\nNelson fire department crews arrived at the scene.\nThe explosion set fire to curtains\nand other materials within the\nroom but the blaze was guickly\nextinguished by the fire department.\nMost aamage was received by\nthe front wall, gable-end and\nchimney of Ihe house. The chimney had to be entirely removed,\nbut the firemen were able to pull\nthe wall back into shape.\nA report on Mr. Perepolkin's\ncondition said he had received extensive burns but \"was not too\nbad.\"\nA planned $25,000 expansion\nand renovation of facilities at\nthe Civic Centre curling rink was\nlaid before City Council last\nnight.\nNo decision on the program\u2014\nwhich would cost the city $10,000\nnow and $15,000 over a five-year\nperiod\u2014was reached but a committee of six was suggested to\nstudy the proposal further. The\ncommittee, to be headed by\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse, would\ncomprise two representatives\nfrom City Council, the Civic\nCentre Commission, and the\ncurling club.\nRecommendation to form the\ncommittee came after an hour and\na half discussion between Council,\nVehicles Collide\n\"When I Have Sung my Songs to\nYou\" by Earnest Charles.\nThe last portion\u00abof the first half\nof the program was the hilarious\nperformance   of   HMS   Pinafore,\nm\"| preceded  by  fitting\" prologue  by\n1FiMr. Wright.\nSECOND  PART\nFollowing the intermission, Mr.\n\"Serenade\" by\nVehicles  driven by  Robert An-\n..,,,.,\u201e ,,,,.. derson  and Alex  Bedard of Nel-\nb'v Bizet and son collided about 11 a.m. Monda?\n.in\nHealth Assurance\nFor the Family\n\"PARAMETTES\"\nTablets:\nM tor $3.50   100 for $6.00\n250 for 414.00\nSyrup:\n7\"4 \u00ab, $3.50        II oz. $5.50\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St,\nPHONE 1203\nat   Hall   and   Front   Streets.   No\ndamage report was available.\nrousing ovation at the conclusion\nof the program. They sang as encores \"Erlking\" by Franz Schubert and \"The Johnson Boys\" with\nappropriate actions. Called back\nyet -again, the performers and Mr.\nStone  presented  a  fitting  \"Good\ni Night Ladies\" with one verse by\nDiard, tenor, sang\nEdward Love and \"Mr*to me|jjijr;gt ^ fa cb^ s ^n r ecefite'd\nOnly\" in an arrangement by Ro- h \u25a0 ft       d|\nger Clouter.\nThe rich baritone voice of Mr.\nKeast was displayed in the Prologue from \"Pagliacci\" and the\nrobust \"I Love Life.\"\nTraditional Negro spirituals.\n\"Balm of Gilead,\" \"Take my\nMother Home,\" \"Great Gettin' upj\nin the Mornin'\" and \"Witness\"\npreceded several hits from Broadway.\nHeard were selections from \"My\nFair Lady\" hy Loews, \"Carousel\"\nby Rogers, \"Very Warm for May\"\nby Kern and \"Of Thee I Sing\"\nby Gershwin.\nThe quartet and their accompanist,  Mr.  Stone,  were  given   a\nBE REVISED SOON\nWhen CPR passenger train\nschedules are changed Monday between Vancouver and Penticton,\nNelson services to Penticton will\nalso be revised to connect with\nthis run.\nThe service is being speeded up\nand rail diesel cars, which can be\noperated in multiple units, will replace the conventional passenger\ntrains.\nThe new schedule provides for\ndeparture from Vancouver at 8\na.m. daily and departure from Penticton at 4 p.m. daily.\nThe train which leaves Nelson\non Mondays and Thursdays will,\nas from next Monday, depart at\n7; 30 a.m. and connect with the\nPenticton service.\nRail diesel cars have proved\nhighly successful in other parts of\nCanada,, said CPR officials, and\nIheir introduction in this area\ncould increase travel Interest by\ndaylight through the spectacular\nCoquihalla  pass.\nMayor Dissatisfied\nWith Jail Future\nDiscussions regarding future\nof the Nelson jail have been\n\"anything hut satisfactory. We\nhave had no consideration or cooperation from the department,'\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse com\nmented Wednesday.\nHe was answering a telegram re-\n\"\u00a3\u00a3& w$mtf4c\u00a3\nPaint\nColors\nBaptonc\nSatin Clo\nBAPCO\n\u00ab->**MMI*---~_ail_-->-B-----------i\nBAPCO\nPURE  PAINT\nQr. Up from '$2.65\nGal., up from $8.50\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBAPTONE\nQuart   $2.10\nGal.   $6.65\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022   *\nSATIN  GLO\nENAMEL\nQuart $2.95\nGal. $9.75\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nSATIN GLO\nSATIN\nQuart $2.75\nGal. $8.75\nPLUS\nSATIN GLO LATEX\nPORCH and FLOOR\nENAMEL\nMARINE PAINT\nBAPCOLITE   ENAMEL\nand Many Others.\n) 6Wt?xfeed\n\\X\\%\\\n?$!,\nw\n&ti\nCatin-Glo\n\u00bb___\u00ab\u00ab(*__\nWTfT\nWood, Vallance pardware Co. Ltd.\nPhone  1530\nWholesale*\"- Retail\nNelson, B.C.\nceived by Nelson Chamber of\nCommerce from Hon. W. D. Black,\nMLA for Nelson-Creston and provincial secretary: \"Deputy attorney-general and mayor of Nelson\nhave been corresponding re disposition of Nelson jail. Negotiations proceeding satisfactorily so\nfeel renresentative not needed to\ngo lo Nelson at present.\"\n\"The delegation which waited\nupon the attorney - general\nand his deputy, Dr. G. D. Kennedy, Jan. 30 relative to the provincial jail closure were given assurance that a government representative would he in Nelson the\nweek following the interview to\ndiscuss with us the seriousness of\nthe closure to the city and entire\nKootenay area,\" Mayor Short-'\nhouse continued. \"At this date we\nhive not been visited by a government renresentative.\"\nRCMP SAY NO\nGovernment authorities were\nthen of the opinion the building\nmight be shared bv the city and\nRCMP but RCMP authorities said\ntiiev were not interested in the\nbuilding.\nThe Feb. 12 council meeting decided to ask for a provincial government renresentative to visit\nNelson and discuss the matter.\nOn Feb. 14 Mayor Shorthouse\nwrote Mr. Black: \"I would appreciate vour valuable influence to\nfurther the request of the council\nand at the same time to give some\nthought to the Kokanee Glacier\nPark development which has been\nforemost In my mind and in the\nminds cf the citizens of the district for many years.\"\nThe mayor said tills park was\nmarked on district maps but tourists could not get to it.   '\n\"I had hoped that the department of correction would give\nconsideration to our request that\n(ho provincial jail would remain\nopen for the purpose of providing\na base from which the young\nand first offenders could be given\nan opportunity to serve useful\nterms similar to conditions. set\nup for the forestry camps which\nhave recently been opened by the\ngovernment In four coast areas.\"\nMr. Black replied: \"I appreciate\nthe council's Interest, ln the rhatter\nof establishing a forest camp in\nthe Nelsdh area and you may be\nsure that we will keep this suggestion in mind as we expand our\ncorrection program throughout the\nprovince.\"\na four-man curlers' delegation and\nMrs. J. D. Wallach, representing\nthe Civic Centre Commission. In\nthe delegation were L. G. Peerless.\nArt Waters, R. M. Chandler and\nH. Moore.\nMain points brought out during\nthe discussion were:\n1. Curling Club suggested financing through a $10,000 grant from\nthe city and five years free rental\nof the rink. The free rental, based\non $3000 per year, would enable\nthe club to pay back a $15,000\nloan, to be backed by curlers' personal notes.\n2. Work would be done on a voluntary basis by club members,\nthus bringing to the city a $30,000\nimprovement program at a savings\nof $5000.\n3. Any extra monies earned\nthrough the increased facilities\nwould be turned back into the\nCivic Centre. It was, the delegation\npointed out, to be a non-profit venture.\n4. A new lounge, not to be licenced except during bonspiels, would\naccount for over half the expenditure, the rest going into improving\nspectator space, the ladies' room\nand kitchen, and the locker room.\nNelson's curling rink would be\na modern one, and up to the standards of ones in Trail, Creston and\nother district centres, Mr. Peerless said.\nMain, benefit of the modernization would be to Nelson's annual\nMidsummer Bonspiel, an event\nthat attracts curlers from across\nCanada and from many of the\nStates, Art Waters stressed. \"The\nbonspiel is something we have to\nhang on to . . . if we have a nice\nplace to take the visitors, they're\ngoing to be happy and come back\nagain.\"\nFINANCING A CONCERN\nBut Council's concern was the\nfinancing. An out and out grant\nwould have to be made Ihis year,\nand the Civic Centre Commission\nfor the next five years would be\nwithout the annual $3000 rental.\n\"And this is not. what we consider\na fair rental.\" Mrs. Wallach pointed out. \"We wanted $3500 this\nseason.\" '\nThe difficulties of fitting thr>\n\"rant, into the budget was stressed\nbv Alderman George Eckmier.\n\"Last year we sat and swcatcl\nfor hours frying to hoH the mi'l\nrale. We took $200,00 off the estimates, and we had to raise' the\nrale five mills.\"\nOther things should be set aside\nln favor of the curling club expansion, Mr. Peerless said. \"This\nis \"a most Important thing. We\n(Ihe curlers) are doing a lot for\nfills Citv, more lhan most people j\nrealize.\"\nObjection lo subsidizing adult\nsport was raised by Aid.  W. S.\nRamsay. \"Where there are youngsters involved, like the ski hill\n\u2022Nelson's Centennial project) venture and the Rotary Pool, it's different. But I think adults should\npay their own recreation tab.\"\nThe alderman favored making a\nloan for the entire sum, thus not\ncommitting future councils or turning ownership of the curling building to'the Club . . . \"I would rather do that than be forking out\n$5000 or $10,000 every year.\"\nMayor Shorthouse said he didn't i\nthink the City could consider selling\nthe building; it would not be possible without a public plebiscite,\nhe added. The Mayor said it was\nhis opinion the curlers were the\nonly group using the Civic Centre\nthat paid its own way.    \u25a0\nTaxpayers were subsidizing the\nCivic Centre activities more than\nthey realized, Aid. George Mermet said, stressing that if facilities remained the same, curling\nwould  \"fold up\" in Nelson.\n\"The $10,000 isn't too much.\nSure we'll be criticized. But are\nwe going to leave it and lose curling? Or are we going to go along\nwith it, as we did with the Rotary\nPool?\"\nThe proposed committee will\nwork toward a \"satisfactory\" plan,\nwhich it will put to the Civic\nCentre Commission. The Commission's recommendation will come\nto Council.\nEverything tjou desire,.,\na complete set of candlewick tableware in the famoui\n\"Corn Flower\" pattern ia a possession to be cherished for\ngenerations. You can add to your set as you wish because\n\"Corn Flower\" candlewick ia an open stock design. Come in\nand see it today.\nIllustrated:\n10\" two-handled plate, 8\" fan vaie, 5'\/V centre bandied lemon tray#\n!i\n12\" 4-iection relish.\nGENUINE\nCotoJb**\nThis t.b.l ia found only on \"Corn Flower\" tine cut j\/asarrarSi\nOver 250 gift selections to choose from...\nask to see the \"Corn Flower\" catalogue\nCollinson's Jewellery\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nEstablished Since 1897\nPhone 120 Nelson, B.C.\nNew Denver -\nSlocan - Silverton\nU.B.C.\nNeeds Your\nHelp\nUrgently!\nIf you have not already\nbeen approached will you\nplease PHONE 89 NEW\nDENVER, or write to J. W.\nMINN IS, CHAIRMAN,\nCARE OF LUCERNE HIGH\nSCHOOL, NEW DENVER.\nUBC   Development  Fund\nCampaign  Committee  for\nNew Denver - Slocan -\nSilverton.\nRegulates washing action for all fabrics. Gives\ncorrect spin speeds,\ntemperature, choice of\nhot or cold rinsing.\nSaves on sudsy hot\nwater with the suds return control.\nSee It Today - Install Right Away\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\n574 Boker St.\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\nPhone 260\n N.lBon iatlt} Nnua\nEstablished April 22, 1902\ninterior British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthonzpd as Second Class Mail, Post Otfice Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OtJ   1'HE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER Or   1'HE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press ib exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all new*\ndispatches credited to it ot to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nThursday, February 27, J 958\nMake Driver Training Compulsory for All\ning. It would be quite likely that these\nare the ones with the most accidents.\nBut we are all against driver training in schools. Teachers have plenty\nto do without having another chore\nwhich has nothing to do with academic\nlearning thrust upon them. They have\nhad far too many such things thrust\nupon them ln the last few years.\nBut that does not mean that we\nare against driver training. Far from\nlt. We would like to see it compulsory\nfor all drivers before they receive their\ndriver's licence to graduate- from a\nproperly organized and recognized\ndrivers' training school. The passing\nout examination for such schools could\nbe much more searching than the\npresent government one, and faults of\ntechnique and temperament would\nmost likely be found during this training.\nThose drivers who have been convicted of offences against traffic regulations might also be compelled to\nattend school for stated periods \u2014 a\npunishment which might be more\neffective than a fine. And while we\nappreciate the voluntary work done by\nthe Safety Council, we think it is high'\ntime the government did something in\nthe matter. Safety education Bhould\nnot be a matter of slapping fines and\nimprisonment on people. It should start\nas the Safety Council believes, with\nthe new driver.\nMrs. R. Haggen, MLA for Grand\nForks, is a parent whose children have\ngrown up and she probably recalls\nwith little pleasure the adolescent days\nof her children. When she declares\nthat she is against driver training in\nthe schools she may remember the\ndays when who should have the car\nwas the chief source of controversy\nin the family.\nThere will be a great many people\nwho will agree with her that such a\ncourse should not be included ln the\nhigh school curriculum and others who\nwill consider that even such a course\ngiven outside of school hours is not\nln the best scholastic interests of the\nstudents. They, will point out that at\nthat particular period young people\nare mildly Insane on cars and driving.\nWhen ln the throes of it they seem\nunable to think of such things as homework, or even of staying at home.\nMr. T. A. Ross, chairman of the\ntraffic section of the British Columbia\nSafety Council, is greatly in favor of\nhigh school diiver training programs.\nHe claims that drivers who have been\nthrough this training are far better\ndrivers with fewer accidents to their\ncredit than those who have not had\nthis training. This Is probably true,\nbut there is always the suspicion that\nthe boys who are anti-social and potential delinquents never attend the train-\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetter! to the Editor on any topic et\ngenuine interest are welcome if they ere\nbrief, eccurate and fair. No letter will be\ninserted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe unnature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nSleigh Hills Necessary\nTo the Euitor:\nSir\u2014In reference to your editorial appearing in the February 20 Issue of the Daily,\nNews, we of the Central-South Nelson Parent-\nTeacher Association executive, \u25a0 have had\nmany phone calls from parents who heartily\ndisagree with your attitude towards sleigh-\nriding in Nelson.\nIt seems strange that such an issue should\nbe made of providing suitable hills for children to use for sleigh riding when Vancouver,\nKamloops and Cranbrook do this as a matter\nof course. We have a letter on hand from\nKamloops which tells us that their city engineer recommends areas to be set aside\nfor this sport each winter.\nWe find ridiculous the accusation that\nthis would be indulging children at the expense of adults, since designating certain\nareas for sleigh riding would be as advantageous to the motorist as to the child. The\nvery fact that this is an automotive age\nmakes this measure more than ever imperative.\nAs to the City Council having the power\nto ban the use of certain roads, a precedent\nwas already set when streets were roped off\nfor square dancing, thereby indulging adults.\nThere are several hills throughout Nelson\nthat could be utilized for sleigh riding without inconveniencing residents to any great\nextent, as these areas would only bo banned\nto traffic a few hours each day.\nWherover there are hills, snow, and\nchildren, there will be sleigh riding and it\nis up to us all to make this sport as safe as\npossible. We fail to understand your comparison between sleigh riding and the horse-\ndrawn vehicle, as almost every child owns a\nsleigh and they are procurable at almost\nany store in Nelson during' the winter months.\nIn these times, when there is so much\njuvenile delinquency, we were greatly surprised and disturbed to read an editorial\ncondemning such a wholesome type of recreation for our children.\nWe shall continue to urge the City Council to set aside hills for this purpose.\nCentral-South Nelson PTA Executive,\nMRS. M. JURILOFF,\nPress Secretary.\nCanada's Assets Sound\nPressed by circumstances into a corner\nprofessional economists, and some not so\nqualified, often come up with an equivocation like \"yes, but\" or \"on the other hand\".\nNew Frontier\nAn American airman, Donald G. Farrell, has spent a week in a sealed steel\nbarrel, under simulated space travel conditions. As his time ran out he appeared\nfatigued, but otherwise little the worse for\nhis experience.\nThat his ordeal was considerably easier\nthan what will be undergone by the first\nman to travel in space is easily assumed,\nhowever. That considerable factor, the mental hazard, was less.\nIt's one thing to sit In a sealed barrel\nknowing that help will come on the run\nat the first sign of trouble. Being alone hundreds or thousands of miles above the earth,\nwith no certainty of rescue, suggests strains\nfar greater than any Airman Farrell encountered.\nYet it's by such beginnings that new\nfrontiers are conquered. In the dawn of\nthe railways, less than 150 years ago, some\npeople insisted riders would suffocate at 15\nmiles an hour.\u2014Windsor Star.\nForgotten Dupe\nA self-convicted Soviet spy, Jack Soble,\nIs under treatment in New York's Bellevue\nHospital prison 'ward for having swallowed\nwhat is dsecrlbed as \"a quantity of nuts\nand bolts.\" How he gained access to this\nmaterial, whatever his state of mind, as\nyet lacks explanation.\nIt perhaps can be argued that anyone\nwho will swallow the Communist party line,\nas for so many years he had done, will\nswallow anything. But beyond that his present condition illustrates the unhappy state\nreached by another who served a forgetful\nKremlin too faithfully.\u2014Windsor Star.\nIt was that way last week when President\nEisenhower made his prediction of an upturn In his nation's economy this spring. The\n\"if\" and \"buts\" and \"on the other hands\"\nwere paraded in grim array against what had\nbeen termed the official view at Washington;\nbut there was little conclusive or enlightening for the general public in that. The president himself made the significant observation that times will become normal when people act that way.\nWhen one considers that the world for\n44 years has been faced with two global conflicts and thejr prolonged aftermaths, stretching from 1914 down to the \"cold war\" of the\npresent time, it is difficult to define what is\n\"normal\" to the human family. Certainly a\nstate of actual or suspended hostility cannot be accepted as an ideal to be cherished.\nWhat can fairly be said to have been the\ngain of the period is that to a greater extent\nthan ever before the inter-dependence of nations has come to be generally accepted. In\nspite of international friction and extremely\nnational upsurges, society is still dependent\nfor its ultimate living on its degree of cooperation in world-wide trade. That Is the\nbarometer to watch.\nWhile at present world trade is following\nthe slightly downward curve it entered some\n18 months ago, it could develop that this process is more normal than the artificial boosls\nand surges which carried it to unwonted\npeaks in postwar times. Certainly the nations of the earth have nothing to gain from\ntariff conflict and abnormal restrictions on\nthe ordinary exchange of goods and services,\none with another. It is a time, perhaps, when\nCanada will have to wait for the patterns of\nworld commerce to become a little clearer\nbefore again resuming the steady march of\nprogress which has carried it far up the\nscale invthe general family of nations. This\ncountry is well equipped to do that. It has\nsound assets, a stable people and an innate\nbelief in the enduring values of its own inheritance.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nBusiness Spotlight. ..\nSupermarket President Offers\nAdvice on Curbing Recession\nFireball   Explosion\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I just read your account of fireball\nin Saturday's paper.\nThis was seen by several residents of\nSilverton, at about 8:45 Friday night. It\nlooked like the giant headlight of a car making great speed. Its disappearance was followed by an explosion sharp enough to shake\nhouses in this town.\nCHAS.  E. TOWGOOD.\nSpelin&\n?\nAt the Canadian conference on education\nIn Ottawa, a sign read: Accomodations officer. It puzzled young and old alike. Were\nthe expetts introducing new spelling techniques, or was this\u2014perish the thought\u2014an\ner.ror? Accommodations, as anyone who\ntakes the trouble to inquire from an elementary school teacher will discover, is usually\nspelled with a double \"m\". Incredible as it\nmay seem, the cream of Canada's educationists had allowed the error to pass. This\nshould provide Johnny with ammunition\nwhen he comes home with a bad spelling\nmark. One can just hear him saying, \"You\nthink I'm a flop as a speller? Just guide your\npeepers over the mistake the big guns made.\"\n\u2014Toronto Telegram.\nThat Wi\u00a3\u00a3lin&' Line\nA fellow in Wolverhampton, England,\nproved his own guilt beyond doubt. Arrested\non suspicion of being tipsy, he was asked\nto walk a white line. Whereupon he replied:\n\"I'll walk it if you'll hold it Still.\"  ,\nIn the above circumstance, this reply\nhas its humorous aspects. But, more seriously, It proves the perils of strong drink.\nIf a man under the influence of liquor thinks\na straight white line on the floor is wiggling\nabout, imagine what could happen were he\ndriving an automobile in traffic.\nNot only would the highway itself be\nweaving about. But the vehicles on it, would\nbe doing strange contortions, particularly\nthat which he himself was driving. This\nsimple illustration of the effects of alcohol,\nby that souse ln Wolverhampton, indicates\nwhy there are so many highway accidents\ndue to drunken drivers.\u2014Windsor Star.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\"\"*\"       *ty Jiirxmy Hatlo\ni was on  ^\u25a0\/\/\/-\nTHE LACROSSE\nTEAM- SIXTEEN\nSTITCHES-GOT MV'\nHOSE BUSTED\nTWICE Ol THE\nBOXING TEAM-\nCOULDrJ'T PL\/V\nFOOTBALL- H4D\nA TRICK KNEE\nFEOM POLE\nVAULTING\nTuNlMG IM AS THE\nTWO RSH-STORy BOYS\nDWELL ON THEIR\nATHlETIC DUELIN&\nSCARS--\nTODAY'S  BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nSo built we the wall. . . for the\npeople had a mind to work. Neh\n4:6.\nSimilarly minded men have\nbuilt Christian fortresses all over\nthe free world.\nChmL 9(sL\nNEW YORK (CP) - Toronto's\nGeorge C. Metcalf said Tuesday\n\"courage and enthusiasm\" are all\nthat are needed to banish the recession. \u2022\n\"Put those business virtues to\nwork properly and you will have\nno recession,\" .said Metcalf, president of George Weston Ltd., and\nLoblaw Groceterias Co. Lid.,\nboth , with headquarters in Toronto, and chairman of National\nTea Co., Chicago.\nAddressing a luncheon meeting\nof the New York Society of Security Analysts, Metcalf held\nforth a glowing picture of the\nbusiness future\u2014especially in the\nfood business\u2014and denounced the\ntheory of \"tight money\" to fight\ninflation.\nNear him as he spoke was an\nilluminated semi \u25a0 globe showing\nthe continent-wide scope of his\nbusiness enterprises. The firms,\nwith affiliated companies, operate\nfrom coast to coast ln Canada\nand the United State , and from\nAklavik in the Northwest Territories to Florida.\n['escribing as \"propaganda\"\nthe claim Uiat tight money is the\nonly cure for inflation, Metcalf\nsaid:\n\"It took three years of tight\nmoney to kill the spirit that\nsp irked our magnificent pro-\ngress.\nj \"II will take more than a little\ncut in interest rates, or a little\nI easing of restrictions, or a Little\ntalk, to rekindle the flame. But\nthe answer is not so complex as\none might think. It can be summed up in the one word\u2014enthusiasm.\"\n\"Inspired enthusiasm,\" he said\nIs far more important than pro\nfessional skill, talent, genius or\neducation.\nAs proof of his own confidence\nin the future, Metcalf announced\nflat Weston enterprises plans to\nbo'ld 200 new\/stores in its inter-\nna'ional operations. He told a re-\npoiter later that 50 of these are\nplanned for Canada.\nHe also reported that Weston's\n195'' consolidated earnings were\n$3.1 < a share, an increase of 12%\nper cent over the comparable\nfigure of the previous year.\nSTRIKE SETTLED\nDAGEHAM, England (Reuters)\u2014A non-union employee left\nthe Briggs motor bodies works\nhere Tuesday and 1,700 workers\nwho struck Monday because ho\nwas hired on return to work.\nI like to see a woman hold her\nhead up, but I hate to have one\nlook at me like she was aimin'\ndown her nose.\nApple chunks a-plenty! Monarch\nApple Pudding has Grandmother's\nkind of homey, old-time goodness.\nIt's a feather-light pudding with the\nnatural goodness of juicy Canadian\napple' chunks, delicately sweetened\n... spiced with just enough tangy\ncinnamon to enhance the full, rich\nflavour of the hot fruit sauce!\nSelf-saucing magicl\nAll Monarch Puddings make their own\nluscious hot sauce while haking! And\nthey're so quick and easy to serve.\nDelight your family with a Monarch\nSelf-Saucing Pudding soon \u2014 they'll\nlove them all, Sponge or Fruit!\nonarch\n\u2022Self-Saucing-'\nPUDDINGS\n ^m\nMany Women and Some Men\nUndergo Plastic Surgery\nBy HAL BOYLE\nNEW YORK (AP) - Cosmetic\nsurgery has become a booming\nbranch of medicine \u2014 and three\nout of four patients are women.\n\"That is because women in our\nculture are expected to be beautiful,\" said Dr. Robert A. Frank-\nlyn, a specialist in the field,\n\"whereas men are expected only\nto be talented and good providers \"\nDr. Franklyn estimated there\nare 260,000 plastic (or cosmetic!\nsurgery operations a year in the\nUnited States. He breaks them\ndown as follows:\nNose operations\u201470 per cent.\nFace lifting\u201415 per cent.\nBreast operations\u201410 per cent.\nOthers\u20145 per cent.\nFULLER BOSOM\nBut the amazing development\nto Dr. Franklyn is that women\nnow look to surgeons to provide\nthem with the fuller bosom nature denied them.\n\"In another few years, if our\npresent bosom culture continues\"\nhe remarked, \"breast operations\nwill make up 50 per cent of all\ncosmetic surgery.\n\"Formerly, the objective in\nthis type of operation was a reduction in the size of the bosom.\nA STEP TtJJjCfiE\nFU1$$E\nDEWitt'VH\nNow 99 per cent of the women\nwant a larger bosom.\n\"This comes about because of\na change in beauty goals. The old\nskinny, flat silhouette of the high-\nfashion model is out. The goal of\nwomanly beauty today is a round\ncurvy, healthy look.\"\nONLY 15 MINUTES\nCosmetic surgery has been\nimmensely speeded in the last\ndecade.\n\"A woman can now get a new\nbreast in 15 minutes,\" said Dr.\nFranklyn, \"a new nose in 10 minutes, or a face lift in 30 minutes. These no longer are hospital operations. They are beauty\nparlor surgery.\"\nThe doctor, husband of actress\nVanessa Brown, has operated on\nmany film stars, but this type of\nsurgery today is gone in for by\nthe masses.\n\"The typical female now is a\n24-year-old housewife who is flat-\nciiested and has some marital\ndifficulties.\" he said. \"She feels\nthat if she had a fuller bosom\nshe could win back her husband\n\u2014and it often does. She feels\nmore adequate. Often these\nthines are mainly psychological.\"\nAlthough Dr. Frank'yn advocates cosmetic surgery for the correction of major physical defects,\nhe is annoyed by those who seek\nit out of minor vanity.'\n\"Some girls want an operation\nmerely to give them dimples,\" he\ncomplained, \"and now and then\na man shows up asking if,\nplease, can he have a cleft in his\nchin like Gary Grant.\"\nSees Danger of\nNormal Child\nBeing Neglected\nMONTREAL (CP) - The normal child may be getting \"shortchanged\" while the public seeks\nout delinquents, a leading Roman\nCatholic welfare official warned\nTuesday night.\nRev. Patrick J. Ambrose, director of the Catholic welfare bureau\nof the Federation of Catholic Charities, delivered a report on the bureau's activities to the annual\nmeeting of the federation.\n\"We hear so much about delinquent children, bad children and\nstupid children, and the amount\nof effort and money contributed in\nthe hope of reclaiming and educating them that we might lose\nsight of the good children and the\nbright children, by far the major\nity,\" he said.\n\"We could ask ourselves if, in\nthe process of looking after the\ndelinquent, the normal child might\nbe getting shortchanged.\"\nHe said there \"seems to be a\nthrill today in looking after delinquents. We usually find countless\nnumbers of men and women who\nare willing and ready to do things\nfor delinquent youths but who shy\naway from doing things for the\nordinary, good, normal, whole\nsale adolescent or teen-ager.\"\n;-.i|llllllllll!imillllll,l!ll!l,lll!llimil!llllllllll|i';\nI IRENE'S |\nsniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif\nSPRING COATS\nFeaturing Tweeds, Checks and Solid Colors\nin several delicate Spring shades.\nA LOYELY HAT\nMAKES  IT  SPRING\nSee Our  Display of the\nLATEST IN MILLINERY.\nDeftly Tailored to Put Your In a\nGay Spring  Mood\nA full size range Including half sizes.\ncrisp\nfresh\nTOPS!\nFor Spring...\nIn smart up-fo-the-minufe\ntashions that look \"like\na million\", cost but a\nlew dollars. Stay well\ngroomed and add allure.\nCome in and see our\nnew collection,\nt\nPRICED\n1.98 ,o 3.98\nQoSiL LADIES'APPAREL\n\"The Fashion Centre\"\n535 Baker St. phone 775\nQueen Mother Meets\nUp-Country Kiddies\nCANBERRA (Reuters) - The\nQueen Mother met 34 - children\nfrom Australia's remote territories in a ceremony at Government\nHouse Wednesday.\nShe later drove to a parade at\nthe Royal Military College at Dun-\ntroon, raising a silk parasol for\npart of the time to protect herself\nfrom a temperature in the 90s.\nAbout 11,000 children lining the\nroute back to government house\ncheered the Queen Mother as she\npassed.\nSi}, ctaixha, idlwikh.\nSUNBURST QUILT\nA sunburst of radiant colors \u2014\na quilt that will be a prize possession. It's easy to make from\njust four patches\u2014use scraps for\nthe lovely design.\nPattern 712: charts directions,\npattern of 4 patches. Yardages,\nsingle, double-bed quilt.\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\n*o order\u2014easy fascinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts\nbazaar items. Send 25 cents for\nvour copy of this book today!\nYou Are Invited\nTo COME and HEAR\nHON. GEORGE HEES\nMinister of Transport\nSpeaking in Support of the\nDiefenbaker Government\nat\nCapitol Theatre\nNelson, B.C.\nFriday, February 28th 8 p.m.\nAlso Speaking Will Be\nPeter Dewdney\nProgressive Conservative for Kootenay West Cqndidate\nTHERE WILL BE TWO WOMEN candidates for the Hamilton\nWest seat in the House of Commons in the next federal election.\nMrs. Dorothy Crewe, shown above with her granddaughter, has\nbeen nominated by the Liberal party to contest the seat held by\nHon. Ellen Fairclough. \t\nRecipes .\nDash of Curry\nBy MARGARET CARR\nThe Indian cuisine is renowned\nthroughout the world for its savor\nand piquancy. A great variety of\nspices are used in the preparation\nof dishes, the selection of which\ndepends entirely upon the experience and skill of the cook. The\nsauce, highly seasoned but not\nnecessarily very hot, in which the\nfresh foods are cooked is colled\nin one Indian language kari\u2014corrupted into our curry.\nHere in Canada during the past\nfew years curry powder has become very popular and rightly so,\nfor its delightfully pungent and\nexotic flavor has almost unlimited uses. Curries of lamb, veal,\nchicken and rice are fast becoming old standbys. New flavor\nnotes are added to dips, gravies,\nmacaroni and salad dressings with\nthe addition of curry.\nIn India where curry originated,\ncooks prepare a differently blended\ncurry powder for each of their\nfavorite curry dishes. These old\nrecipes are jealously guarded and\npassed down from generation to\ngeneration. In this country, formulae vary depending on the\nmanufacturer.\nWhen a recipe says \"add curry\nto taste,\" in general it is safe to\nuse % teaspoon to each cup of\nsauce or liquid. You may go on\nfrom there, but make a note of the\namount you like. Next time there'll\nbe no doublt. But do make sure\nthat curry blends smoothly into\nsauce ani that it docs have a\nchance to cook long enough to\nblend the flavors of the 12 to 15\ningredients that go into the making of this popular seasoning.\nCURRIED MACARONI\nOne 8-ounce package shell or\nelbow macaroni, 2 cups medium\nwhite sauce,, 1 tablespoon grated\nonion, 1 tablespoon curry powder.\nCook macaroni according to the\ndirections on the package. Prepare the white sauce and to it add\nthe grated onion and curry powder.\nCombine cooked macaroni and\nwhite sauce. Pour into a buttered\ncasserole,' and top with buttered\ncrumbs. Place in 350 degrees F.\noven 10 to 15 minutes. Garnish with\ncrisp bacon strips.\nVEAL CHOPS WITH\nCURRY GRAVY\nFour veal (loin) chops, 1\" thick,\nNatal Notes\nNATAL \u2014 Mrs. Chris Storm of\nMichel is visiting her son-in-law\nand daughter in Calgary, Mr. and\nMrs. Ed. Tucker.\nAttending the wedding of her\ngranddaughter, Mary Ann Vey-\nprava at Blairmore, Mrs. A. Pen\nman and daughter Isa of Vancouver were guests of Mrs. Penman's\nson-in-law' and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. William Cousens of Michel\nfor two weeks.\nArthur Tondini of Castlegar\nspent the past weekend visiting\nhis parents in Natal.\nMrs. Mary Oley and daughter\nTerry of Spokane spent the weekend at Natal at the homt> of her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Paul Chala.\nStudents from Nelson Notre\nDame College spending the past\nweekend with relatives at Natal-\nMichel included Rodney Joyce,\nDeanna Perchinskv, Marlene Eb-\nerts and Frank Megale.\nAmong those attending the Snow\nFiesta at Kimberley from Natal-\nMichel over the nast weekend were\nMr. and Mrs. Ernie Borsato and\nMr. and Mrs. R. Hu\u00abhes.\nMr. and Mrs. John McGinnis\nand daughter Sandra of Natal\nwere weekend visitors at Windermere, B.C., at the home of Mr. and\nMrs, Pete Haman.\nFEWER  CARS\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A 23-per-cenl\nslump hit shioments of motor vehicles'from Canadian plants during Jjuiuafv. the bureau nf statistics said Wednesdav. The total\nwas 31,540 vehicles, against 41,104\nfor January, 1957.\nDenial Plan\nDiscussed\nBy PTA Group\nNATAL \u2014 At the monthly meeting of the Michel-Natal-Sparwood\nParent-Teacher Association at the\nSparwood High School, the project\ncommittee recommended that the\nmajor project should be a determined effort to have a dental\nscheme instituted. The response to\nlast year's questionnaire was affirmative in less than 20 per cent\nof those contacted. However, it\nwas felt that the poor response was\ndue to a lack of understanding.\nThis year the committee will ensure that all concerned are given\nfull details. A letter from the\nSchool Board informed the PTA\nthat the board is unable to participate in the financing of this project. In spite of this, the parents\nshould get full value of whatever\nthey contribute.\nA discussion regarding the interpretation of report cards was\nled by principals N. A. Gill cf\nSparwood Jr.-Sr. High School and\nFrank Mitchell of Michel-Natal\nElementary School.\n2 tablespoons butter or margarine,\nVi teaspoon salt, dash of white\npenner, 'A cup hot water.\nMelt butter in fryer and brown\nchops on each side, add seasoning,\nand hot water. Cover tightly and\ncook slowly over low heat for 35\nto 45 minutes or until tender. Remove to a hot platter and keep\nwarm while gravy is prepared\nServes four.\nCurry Gravy\nThree-quarters cup hot water\nHi tablespons flour, 114 teaspoons\ncurry powder, >\/j teaspoon salt, 1-3\ncup cold water, 1-3 cup evaporated\nmilk. % cup cooked, chopped\nmushrooms  (optional).\nAdd water to pan gravy in fryer,\nand bring to a boil. Blend flour\ncurry and salt with cold water, add\nto pan gravy and cook until\nthickened, stirring constantly. Add\ncream and mushrooms, pour over\nchops.\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nSWEATERS GROW PRETTIER each season but we Just can't\nimagine how the designers can Improve on the current crop.\nHadtey designs a handsome sweater In fine lambs' wool and angora mixture yarn with a new note ln the two self bows at (he\nneck and end of the yoke banding. A delightful choice for the\nyoung girl, the long-sleeved cardigan can be worn as a blouse\nduring the cold weather and later as a spring and summer jacket.\nBrownies Mark\nThinking Day\nWILLOW POINT - The birthday of their founder and of Lady\nBaden-Powell was observed as\n\"Thinking Day\", when Guides and\nBrownies all over the world were\nto think of one another.\nWillow Point Brownies, directed\nby Brown \u25a0 Owl Mrs. J. Learmonth, celebrated Thinking Day\nat the church hall. Parents, teachers and sponsors from different\norganizations joined in the celebration.\nThe Thinking Day Fund came\ninto being at the meeting, each\ngirl contributing a penny to be\nused for the expansion of world\nguiding.\nIn the Thinking Day ceremony,\nthe Brownies formed a circle\naround their leader, who had a\nlarge tree foil on the table. Mrs.\nLearmonth lit a large red candle\nand placed it on the foil. Each\nBrownie, representing a total of\ncountries, also placed a lighted\ncandle on the foil.\nMrs. D. Heddle, Mrs. C. Shannon, Mrs. C. Linden and Mrs. A.\nRobinson presided at the tea table,\nwhich was centred with a bowl of\ndaffodils.\nThe Brownies acted as servi-\nteurs. Mrs. P. Stewart and Mrs.\nR. Reid were in charge of the\nkitchen.\nCashier was Mrs. N. Sodolosky.\nThe birthday cake was cut by\nMrs. C. Linden.\nBrownies, Guides, Cubs and\nScouts all attended the church service Sunday at St. Andrew'a-by-\nIhe-Lake.\nWhilfon Wins\nPC Nomination\nOTTAWA (CP) - Fiery Charlotte Whitton, 60-year-old former\nOttawa mayor, returned triumphantly to nolilics Monday night by\nwinning the Progressive Conservative nomination for the federal\nriding of Ottawa West. It was her\nsecond bid for such a nomination\nin a year.\nMiss Whitton defeated lawyer\nOsmond F. Howe. 58, in balloting\nthat gave her 1166 votes to 350\nfor Mr. Howe.\nSince 1940 the seat has been\nheld by Liberal George J. Mcll-\nraith, already nominated to defend it for the sixth time. The\nconstituency never has been won\nby a Conservative.\nAfter her nomination, Miss Whitton told a reportedl \"I'll lick\nGeorge Mcllraith or ' leave him\nwith a limp for the rest of his\ndays.\"\nTo the some 3200 persons who\nattended the meeting, she said:\n\"Come then, ride on, ride on, ride\non to victory.\"\nA miniature battle of the sexes\ncharacterized the earlier stages\nof the nomination drive, into which\nthe constituency's Young Conservatives threw their weight behind\nMiss Whitton.\nLightning Hits Plane,\nMakes Safe Landing\nBOSTON (CP) - Lightning twice\nstruck a Trans-Canada Air Lines\nViscount airliner Tuesday when\nthe plane, carrying 22 passengers,\nencountered a severe electrical\nstorm on a flight to Maritime\npoints, TCA officials said Wednesday.\nThey said that lightning striking\naircraft is not unusual in such\nconditions.\nThe Viscount met the storm 3000\nfeet over Yarmouth, N.S., its first\nscheduled stop. Unable to land\nbecause of weather conditions, it\nreturned to Boston.\nInspection here showed minor\npinhole\" damage in the right\nwing flap and left aileron.\nThe plane later resumed .its\nflight and made the usual stops\nat Yarmouth, Saint John and\nHalifax and flew on to Montreal.\n_ NEW YORK (AP)-Comedian\nBob Hope, equipped with a Russian dictionary and fur hat but\nwithout a Russian visa, left by\nair Tuesday for London en route\nto Moscow. He said he expects\nto obtain the necessary Soviet\nclearance after reaching England so that he can attend a\nscreening of one of his films in\nMoscow March 4. The showing\nhas been arranged as.' a cultural\nexchange program.   I\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958\nCouple Celebrate\n58 Years Married\nAt an afternoon and evening reception in their home, Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Curran, 920 Third Street\ncelebrated the 53th anniversary of\ntheir wedding.\nMany friends and neighbors called to congratulate them. There\nwere many flowers -from friends\nand telegrams were received from\ntheir sons Harold of Toronto and\nJim of Nanaimo. Bill, another son,\nlives in Nelson.\nW. A. Curran of Trail, brother\nof Mr. Curran, was present at the\ncelebration with his wife and\ndaughter Joan. Also present were\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. Guillaume of\nTrail and daughters Jill and Jane.\nMrs. Guillaume is a niece of Mr.\nand Mrs. Curran.\nMr. and Mrs. Curran have nine\ngrandchildren and six great grandchildren.\n0mm, 'Up, Utith,\nPrinted Pattern\n9370 10-18\nSEW-EASY SHEATH\nOur smart Printed Pattern\u2014sew\nsimple. You'll make this sheath-\ndress in so little time; easy instructions are printed on each part.\nA real beauty; those sleek, slim\nlines do such marvelous things for\nyour figure.\nPrinted Pattern 9370; Misses'\nsizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 requires 3W> yards 39-inch fabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, and\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.\nToronto, Ont.\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nLLOYD\nBaby Carriages\nand\nBaby Strollers\nat\njAwntutL\nFighting Dogs\nCovet Colored\nRoyal Gown\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) -\nPrincess Alice, elderly great aunt\nof the Queen, was given an anxious time by a hound, a terrier\nand two mongrels Wednesday when\nshe appeared for a ceremony at\nWest Indies University,\nWhile she and other dignitaries\nwaited on the university lawn, the\nhound and a terrier took a fancy\nto her colorful ceremonial train\nand began a fight to seo which\nwould jet pessession. Two mongrels joined the melee.\nUniversity officials were about\nto go onto their hands and knees\nto meet the foe at dog's level. But\na policeman waded in and sent\nthe dogs scurrying.\nThe princess was unhurt and tha\ngown undamaged. When Lord\nHailes, governor-general of the\nBritish West Indies Federation, arrived a minute later, official dignity had been restored.\nPrincess Alice was a popular\nfigure in Canada during the yean\n194045 when her husband, tha\nEarl of Athlone, was Governor-\nGeneral.\nStangroom Is\nPTA Speaker\nRobert Stangroom of Nelson, regional consultant of the Community\nProgrammes branch was the\nspeaker at the Willow Point Parent-Teacher Association meeting\nTuesday night.\nAmong business of the organization, it was reported that there\nwere 20 paid-up members.\nMrs. W. P. F. Green and Mrs.\nA. McElroy were appointed to act\non the bursary committee. Arrangements were also made for\na group to serve refreshments at\n\"open house\" at the Willow Point\nschool during Education Week.\nMrs. Green's room won the attendance prize.\nCOLORFUL EVENT\nThe Pas, Man. is theh site of\nthe world-famous trapers' festival held each February.\nirsMCOuwimim\nB\nMEDICATION\nUCKLEY'O\nMIXTURES\nJayktiL...\nNew \"Drip-Dry\" Cottons\nIn all-over and borders. Wide     $1.10       $1.29\n___        I      and      I\nassortment\nB. C. Centennial Print\nSanforized and Sunproof. $1.10\n36\". Yard       I\n\"Drip-Dry\" Crease-Resistant\nCorduroy, 36\"  $1.69\n624 Baker St. Phone 1485\nWITH EAST\nELEGANCE\nIn  Tweeds,  Wool   Tartans  and\nPlain   Fabrics,  with   fine  detail\nIn many Skirt Styles.\nPRICED FROM\n*9.95 .o *25,00\nV..,*.^\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958\nat\n\u2022 \u2022\nfOjt.Boy\nON Swift's Fine Products\nf l) K I- r P   Nabob. Drip or Regular Grind.\nSALAD DRESSING Kmft,sMimdewhip*i6\u00b0z-|ar\nTOMATO CATSUP\nJELLY POWDERS\nPINK SALMON\nAylmer. 11 oz. bottle\nMalkin's. Assorted flavors.\nCloverleaf. 7i oz. tin\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nMist-o-Gold. 48 oz. tin\n,9\u00ab\n10 for 69e\n25c\n25c\nCrisp\nLETTUCE\nSolid\nHeads.\neach\n15\nNetted Gem\nPOTATOES\nNo. 2.\n10 * 25\n<       Fancy\nMcintosh APPLES\nOkanagan.\nCrisp and  Juicy\nIb.\n10\n\u2022      \u00ab, \u25a0.. \u2022      t      \u2022\nCORNED BEEF swif,'s Exeter-n <\u00ab\u2022 tin\nFRESH   EGGS   Brookfield. Grade \"A\" Large. Doz. In Cartons\nCHOICE PEACHES Be\u00bber B\u00b0y-\u00bb \u00ab\u2022 *\u00ab \u2022\t\nSTRAWBERRY JAM Maiidn. pure. 48 oz. ^\nMARGARINE swa* aiu***. i6 <\u00ab. cm\t\nPURE   LARD    Swift's Silverleaf. 16 oz. efn\t\nSAUSAGE    Swift's Brookfield. Fresh skinless. 16 oz. ctn. 5< off\nBUTTERBALL TURKEYS\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\n\u2022       \u2022       \u2022        \u2022       \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022       \u2022\u2022\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022       \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nPRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY\nGrade A Swift's Oven-Ready. 12-15 lbs.\nWATCH FOR OUR 4-PAGE FLYER DELIVERED TODAY\n..    .    .       Jj\n49\n2- 39\n99\n2 - 75\n2 - 45'\n45<\nib. 49\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n VS3\nBishop Not Punishable\nFLORENCE, Italy (AP)-The\npublic prosecutor conceded in\ncourt Wednesday the Roman Catholic Bishop of Prato is not punishable for defaming an Italian ath-\niest and his wife by calling them\n\"public sinners\" because they\nwere married by civil rites and\nnot in the Church.\nProsecutor Manlio Mazzanti\nsaid the accusations against Most\nRev. Pietro Fioredelli and his\nparish priest, Rev. Daniello\nAiazzi, \"did not constitute a\ncrime since the bishop acted\nwithin the rights of his Church\nmandate.\"\nThe bi s h o p, first Catholic\nclergyman of his rank to be tried\nin Italy since tile Lateran Pacts\n29 years ago, is being tried in\nabsentia, because \"my prestige\nand the holiness of my ministry\nforbids me to come to court in\nperson.\" He also ordered his\npriest not to attend.\nThe suit against them was filed\nby former Communist partisan\nMauro' Bellandi and his wife,\nLoriana. She said \"civil marriage\nis legal In Italy and I cannot tolerate being called my husband's\nconcubine.\n\u25a0 The- case of the bishop of Prato\nattracted widespread attention by\nItaly's leftist press, brought\nflareups in the legislature, and\nprobably will be raised by the\nCommunists as an issue in Italy's\nspring national elections.\nThe prosecutor, representing\nthe state, asked the three-judge\ncourt to acquit the bishop and\npriest of the charge of defamation, in effect throwing out his\nown case.\nIf convicted they would have\nfaced possible jail sentences of\nup to three years, and fines of\n10,000 lire  ($260).\nIn addition, the Bellandis had\nasked \"moral and material damages\" of 1,500,000 lire ($2,500).\nSweeter\nFresher\nFlavor!\nmmm,\nWESTERN CANADA'S\nFAVORITE EVAPORATED\nTo Investigate\nTreatment of\nKorean Boy\nSEOUL (AP) - A 13-year-old\nKorean boy caught stealing at a\nUnited States Army base was put\nin a wooden packing box and\nflown 25 miles before being released apparently unharmed, the\narmy said Wednesday.\nGen. George H. Decker, commander of U.S. forces in Korea,\nsaid he \"regretted the treatment.\" The incident is being investigated \"and appropriate action will be taken.\"\nKim Chung Nyon was caught\nby members of the 8th Army aircraft maintenance centre at As-\ncom City. He had a clock, cigaret lighter, flashlight, two post-\nexchange ration books and $fi in\nmilitary scrip\u2014forbidden to Koreans.\nThe boy was put \"in a wooden\npacking box-used for transporting\naircraft parts\", and Maj. Thomas I\nG. Jones flew the box in a helicopter to an airfield at Uijongbu, |\nthe army said. The size of the\nbox and how tightly it was closed\nwere not disclosed.\nAt Uijongbu the box was taken i\nto a supply room and the boy, I\n\"apparently unharmed, was re-:\nleased and departed from the air-\nstrip,\" the army said.\nThe Seoul newspaper Hankook\nIlbo says soldiers and Korean\nemployees heard sounds from the j\nbox and opened it. The boy was |\n\"whimpering and in feeble con-\ndltion, his face smeared with\nblack coal tar, the paper says, j\nand he was \"forced to flee\" from\nthe airstrip.\nWaist-High Drifts Hamper\nBritain's Transportation\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014! Shivering\nBritons floundered through waist-\nHigh drifts Wednesday as one of the\nworst winter storms in 40 years\nspread havtc throughout the\ncountry.\nScores of towns and villages\nwere isolated by snowdrifts up to\n15 feet deep as the storm continued into its third day. Some\ncommunities were reported running short of food as snow-clearing equipment battle to reach\nthem through the drift-clogged\nroads.\nMotoring organizations reported\n\"chaos everywhere\" with more\nthan 100 main roads blocked and\nthousands of cars abandoned.\nTrains were hopelessly behind\nschedule, some arriving as much\nas 1J hours late in London on\nruns from Scotland.\nSeveral airlines were forced to\ncancel flights out of London and\nplanes which did lake off had to\nbe delayed for de-icing. Scotland\nand the north of England bore the\nbrunt of the storm,  but almost\nevery  part of  the  British  Isles\ngot a share of the snowfall. Buses I\nhad to be abandoned in the snow, j\nHundreds   of   children   slept   in\ntheir  schools  when  their  buses \u25a0\nwere  unable  to  get  through  to i\ntake them home.\nTelephone and power lines were ]\nwrenched down and a 92-year-old\nwoman   was  killed   near  Dover\nwhen  wind sent the chimney of j\nher home crashing down through\nthe roof.\nFLOODS ON CONTINENT\nMeanwhile snow, sleet and I\nfloods cut a path through West- j\nern Europe, disrupting road, rail I\nand air traffic and sending ships\ninMhe English Channel scurrying\nfor port.\nVillagers near Paris barricaded their doors and prepared\nboats as the\" Seine and its tributaries, swollen by heavy rain,\nrose sharply. In West Germany\nthe Moselle River was rising by\nmore than two inches an hour,\nthreatening the town of Zell and\na number of villages.\nIn Belgium, the river Sambre\nbroke its banks in several places,\nhalting barge traffic and flooding a railroad line.\nSleet and snow grounded aircraft at Paris and in the Netherlands. Heavy snowfalls and a\ndanger of avalanches were reported in Austria. In central Norway, temperatures tumbled during the night to 45 below zero.\nGales whipped the English\nChannel Wednesday and storms ofl\nEngland's southeast coast were\ndescribed as the worst in memory. Pounding seas blasted hu^e\nholes in concrete sea walls.\nAt Le Havre. France, ships\nwere waiting off port unable to\ndock until storms subsided.\nThe freighter American Hunter\n8,433 tons, ran aground in the\nScheldt Estuary Tuesday night in\ngales and heavy snowstorms.\nIn Germany, floods on the\nupper Rhine halted shipping as\nships were unable to pass under\nIhe bridges. Flooded river banks\nin low areas stopped ferries running.\nThe Netherlands reported some\nminor breaks in dikes northeast\nof Amsterdam, threatening small\nscale floods.\nN_<,53tf RAU,Y K!5Y,'\". THU5SPAY, r\"\", ?7. T\"_3 7\nOf Rights Says\nJudge Sullivan\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\n(CP)\u2014Mr. Justice Harry J. Sulli-\n| van smd here Tuesday night that\ni Canadians need a bill of rights\nj to protect them from boards and\nJ bureaus with powers capable of\n; oyershadowing those of the\nj courts.\nI    Speaking at a meeting of the\nI New Westminster Board of Trade\nj he  asked:   \"Did you know  that\nI t h e    Workmen's    Compensation\n! Board has the right to assign the\n! name  of  Harry   J.   Sullivan   to\ni your  payroll  and  demand  pay-\n] ment of my back salary?\"\nj    He told the more than 300 businessmen  present  that  the WCB\nj \"has the statutory power to decide whether I am your servant\nand entitled to collect a salary.\"\nHe  said  that  because  of  the\nI average    Canadian's    \"inertia,\"\n, many  such boards  and bureaus\nhave  been granted such  \"awful\npowers.\"\nYour individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2022f*- By Frances Wrake-\nyour   birthday    comes  and  find\nwhat your outlook is, according to\nthe stars.\nFor Friday, February 28, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\nOldest Soccer\nLook in the section in which \u2014 Wait to determine carefully\nwhat you should do, then proceed;\nbut be equally careful not to make\nmistakes through haste or overlooking. Don't depend upon past\nknowledge only.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nAuspicious rays from yesterday's\nbenefic Venus aspect urge you to\nput forth all sensible effort to gain\nnew ground in whatever your field,\nand make little home improvements, too.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nMercury in propitious position.\nThe fire and ambition generated\nnow can be of great help in finishing up leftovers as well as stabilizing new affairs. Go, but without too much gusto.\nJUNE 22 lo JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nIo Retire Soon\nRequests Act\nNEW! MIRACLE MARGARINE FROM KRAFT!\nBRAND\n6 FUli- SIZE STICKS\nin each one-pound package\nITS WHIPPED!\nWhipping does wonderful things for other\nfoods\u2014and now it does wonderful things\nfor margarine. Whipping makes Miracle\nMargarine so pleasingly light in texture,\n\u2022it melts instantly on your tongue. Full\nflavor is released immediately.\nEach pound contains 6 full-size sticks\ninstead of 4. Each pound spreads far more\nslices of bread. Pick up a King-Size package of Miracle Margarine today.\nLook for Miracle Margarine in your grocer's dairy case\nB.C. Pouiy\nALDERGROVE, B.C. (CP) -\nA new act to protect the poultry\nindustry from unmarked imported products will be requested\nby the West Coast Poultrymen's\nAssociation.\nThe' decision to approach the\nprovincial government was taken\nat the annual meeting here attended  by  100 poultry  farmers.\nA five-man delegation was appointed to work with the Poultry\nIndustries Council and interview\nthe cabinet regarding the\nAct.\nNamed were association president John Shuttleworth of Mill-\nbank, director Eric Flowerdew of\nLangley municipal council, Art\nKrieger of Aldergrove, Ted Watson and B. Schroter from the\nPIC.\nA resolution passed by the\nassociation pointed out that the\nB.C. poultry industry is vulnerable to unmarked poultry products being imported and sold in\ncompetition  as  B.C.  products.\nMarking of the country of origin of all imported eggs, poultry\nproducts and turkeys offered for\nconsumption in the province was\n\u2022tsked.\nMembers made lt clear to the\ndelegatkn that they did not want\nhatching eggs included in the\nscope of the Act.\nVANCOUVER    (CP)    -   John\nRussell, who at 73 is British Columbia's, oldest  soccer   commissioner, is to retire. . .       ,, ,       \u25a0    ,\nD.\u201e.,.\u201eir, j\u201e,i.i\u201e., t\u201e \"\u201ei\u201e\u201e \u201e_\u201e \u00bb conscientious, thorough attitude\nRussell s decision to   give way ! ,\u201ein n\u201e, \u201e\u201e\u201e ,\u201e,!j u\u201ei\u00ab tv,.\u2014,. \u201eu,,..i.\n0  .ununfr.r   mat,\"   \u00ab,,,!   onH   Mi    \u00ab'lll put yoU  (and hop those  about\nto a younger man\" will end his\n50 years of active participation\nin  Canadian  soccer.\nHis replacement on the B.C.\ncommission will be Pacific Coast\nLergue director Aubrey Sanford,\nwin became a director in 1057.\nPreviously he had been, a mem-\nyou) out front in the early and\nlasting winnings. Control the emotions. Your kind of sturdy patriotism is needed.\nJULY 24 to AUG. 23 (Leo) -\nDignity, magnanimity, frankness\nand trust are strengthened under\nber   of   the   New   Westminster! such aspects as today's when you\nRoyals  club during  1023-1035.      i keep  your  best self in We.  A\nRussell was active in the Van-, healthy co-operative spirit pays,\ncouver Athletic Commission from j   Atjg. 24 to SEPT. 23 (Virgo) -\n190M9U, before becoming pres \u2022  And here we note the vitality and\ndent of the old Dominion Foot-, coordination    so    sorely    needed\nball  Association.   He  became\nB.C.  commissioner in  1033.\nAlgerian Rebels\nOpen Offensive\nALGIERS (AP)-The French\nannounced Wednesday that the. Algerian rebels have launched a major new offensive. The French\nadmitted 60 of their men killed,\n79 wounded and 11 missing in \u2122\u201ertwhilA aim\nfour days of fighting-more than Wll,llh'1\"1\nthese days. Give all you can within reason. It will boost your stock,\naid loved ones, make you feel good.\nSEPT. 24 to OCT. 23 (Libra) -\nGood-natured d i s p o sitlon and\nthoughtful action (and tact) will\nhold down errors, make the going\nsmoother for quicker success. Be\nguarded ln associations.\nOCT. 24 to NOV. 22 (Scorpio) t-\nBy your general stability and direct approach you can make some\nnotable decisions and place into\neffect just-right arrangements and\nsolutions.   Work   hard   for   this\nFather of Radar\nTells Own Story\nLONDON (CP)-The detailed\nstory of the development of\nradar, regarded as one of the\ngreat revolutionary discoveries\nof the 20th century, is told in a\nbook just published by Sir Robert . Watson-Watt, widely\nacknowledged as the \"father of\nradar.\"\nThe book, Three Steps to Victory (Odhams Press), describes\nthe evolution of radar\u2014radio direction-finding and ranging\u2014and\nshows the immensely important\npart it played in saving Britain\nfrom defeat in Ihe Second World\nWar.\nIn 250,000 words, Sir Robert\nfells how radar had its beginnings in curiosity about thunderstorms and their effect on radio,\nand how wilh this knowledge as\na background scientists evolved\nprinciples for detection of certain\nobjects through the reflection of\nradio waves.\nPATERNITY STRESSED\nThree Steps to Victory is an intensely personal book, and British critics are mixed in their\nreactions. There is ungrudging\ncredit for Sir Robert's achievement, but regret among some reviewers that he felt it necessary\nto reopen old rivalries.\nThe Daily Express, for Instance, comments that Sir Robert apparently wants to establish not only that he is the\nfather of radar, but the grandfather as well.\n\"No claim to paternity has\never been pressed so strenuously,\" says the paper's science\nexpert, Chapman Pincher.\nIn his partly autobiographical\naccount, Sir Robert looses a few j\nshafts at Sir Edward Appleton,\nnow principal of Edinburgh Uni-\nversity, who years ago publicly\ndisclosed lhat Sir Robert was the\nonly member of the team work-\ning on radar who wanted to patent the inventions.\nThe New Statesman, says the\nbook will remind readers lhat\nobjective scientists can also be\nexceedingly subjective. '  i\nIGNORED AFTER WAR\nThe magazine sympathizes, ,\nhowever, with Sir Robert's apparent resentment that the pioneers of radar were virtually\nignored in post-war honors lists,\nand had to spend 44 days before\nan. official commission justifying\ntheir claims - for financial rewards. Finally, they received\n\u00a387,950, of which \u00a352,000 went to\nWatson-Watt.\nThe lengthy book contains\nmany sidelights. One is that in\n1937 Sir Robert went to Germany on a spying mission at\nPrime Minister Neville Chamberlain's request to investigate a\nreport that there was a radar research station in East Prussia. It\nturned out there wasn't.\nThe Scrls-born Sir Robert. 65,\nnow lives in Canada. He has a\ncompany in Montreal, where his\nstaff are working on an Uiderw.v\nter \"eye\" designed to spot submarines th1; way radar detects\nthe move.nf.ot ot aircraft.\nthey have lost all winter.\nRebel losses were put at about\n157 dead, a ratio far below the\nusual French claim.\nFrench units have fought six\npitched battles since Feb. 23,\nmost of them in eastern Algeria.\nFrance charges the rebels are\ngetting increasing support from\nacross the Tunisian frontier.\nFrench officials speculated that\nthe rebel offensive was timed to\ncoincide with the French-Tunisian crisis, now directing attention\nto the Algerian rebellion, which\nis more than three years old.\nTROOPS AMBUSHED\nThe latest pitched battle was\nreported by headquarters Tuesday night. That was near Tenes\nin western Algeria where soldiers\ninto an ambush and lost 24 dead\nand eight missing.\nThe six latest battles were all\nagainst large numbers of rebel\ntroops, an indication that the National Liberation Front (FLN) is\nagain committing Its forces ln a\nshow of strength.\nThe pattern of the clashes has\nbeen roughly similar. French patrolling units have run up on, or\nbeen ambushed by, rebel units\nin strength, some armed with\nmortars and machine-guns.\nThe office of the French resident minister In Algeria, Robert\nLacoste, charged Tuesday that\nrecent rebel captives had been\nnewly trained in Tunisia, some by\nEgyptian and Syrian instructors.\nThe rebellion has also brought\nterrorism to France itself. Some\n30,000 police in the country are\nnow being used to put down at-\nNOV. 23 to DEC. 21 (Sagittarius)\n\u2014 Having what one wishes is gratifying at times only. But doing\ngraciously what one must, can\nreally have a happier outcome.\nAn expansive, warm period with\nright help.\nDEC. 22 to JAN. 20 (Capricorn)\n\u2014 Watch that these attributes are\nprosent to round out a successful\nday: prudence, creditability, constructive execution, proper system.\nStrive, but maintain good humor,\ntoo.\nJAN. 21 to FEB. 19 (Aquarius)\n\u2014 Your intuition, foresight and\ntalent for seeing through, and cutting through, red tape can do wonders now. Exercise all assets to\nplace today above the ordinary.\nAim higher.\nFEB. 20 to MARCH 20 (Pisces)\n\u2014In i n s t ructions, suggestions,\ntrips, discussions, study and the\neveryday matters, give due consideration to important little items\nand you will do well. Maybe speed\nup tempo.\nYOU BORN TODAY: Outstanding advantages of Pisces: far-\nreaching benefits to man through\nyour conscientious,. Intelligent effort: discovery and re-discovery of\nuseful practices, devices, means\nfor cooperation; surgery, healing;\npreservation. Under Neptune this\nsector has conducted many of our\nunusual advances. If you are not\ndeveloping God's gifts, then inversion of your better qualities occurs and you will lack ambition to\nfight obstacles, may become lazy\nand liable to needless defects. We\nall need daily urging: step forward\ntacks which have cost about 7501 with greater will and faith, and be\nlives   since  last   August\u2014mainly j happy as you work. Birthdate of:\nin fights between rival national- Michel de Montaigne, essayist,\nist Algerians. King Features.\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n-^-by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, Feb. 27th\u2014Need an extra room in\nyour house? You've probably got 90% of it built\nalreadyl What. I mean is, it's right under your\nfeet, or over your head . . . ready to be fixed\nup. Whether you plan to build yours in tha\nbasement or the attic, now's the best time to\n6tart work while winter is here and tradesmen\nare not tied up on outside construction. If\nyou're short of ready cash for your project, talk to your BANK OF\nMONTREAL manager about a Home Improvement Loan, available at 6% interest per year, and repayable ln easy installments.\nBy starting now you can get first-class craftsmen who will be out\nof reach at the first sign of Spring.\nDINNER'S READY1 Vegetables are piping hot\u2014with a slice of\nsunny-sweet BLUE BONNET melting goodness\ninto them. Baked potatoes\u2014hot biscuits\u2014a lemon\npie\u2014or freshly-made cake.  Mother flushed with\nfinal   preparations \u2014 Dad   ond   the   youngsters\nhungry\u2014and eager for the meal.   It's good to\nbe a home-maker, today, and it's good to have\nthe  fine  quality  of Blue  Bonnet  for  all your\ncooking  and  baking,  as  well  as  for  a  table\nspread.   Blue Bonnet is now  and always has\nbeen an all-vegetable margarine\u2014with essential\nminerals and vitamins added\u2014quality controlled. Let Blue Bonnet\nhelp you to be a good cook!\nGOOD HEALTH DOESN'T JUST \"HAPPEN\". It comes through\nthe protective qualities of the right diet\u2014for\ndogs, as well as for people. Give your pet the\nbest diet you can with DR. BALLARD'S\nCHAMPION DOG FOOD. It's enjoyable\u2014your\ndog will eat with relish. It's scientifically\nbalanced\u2014providing a dog with all the known\nnutrients he needs for ,body building and\nenergy. There are three flavors to vary the\ndiet even more\u2014Chicken, Liver and Regular.\nProtect your precious dog against diet defiaiency with Dr. Ballard's. ... See how happy and healthy he'll be\u2014and what, a good\ncoat he'll have!\nI'M A REAL FAN for anything I can use in a lot of different\nways , . . specially when it makes my cookery\ntaste better! That's why I depend so much on\nBAKER'S CHOCOLATE CHIPS\u2014those unusually\ndelicious, deeply-rich bits of chocolate goodness.\nBaker's Chocolate Chips do magic things to\ncookies, cakes, desserts,' and frostings\u2014and do\nthem more flav.oriully than any other chocolate\nchips I know. Their unfailingly crunchy, fresh\nquality is perfectly preserved by the new package, too. Chocolate Chips with the famous\nBaker's name have a wonderful 3-ply wrap of\nsturdy foil-covered paper, 1'ned with air-li^ht plastic, which keeps\nthe chips as fresh as the day they were made.\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958\nLIBERTY\nTHE FOOD STORE\nTHAT OFFERS\nMORE IN VALUE\nFeaturing Canada Packers Products\nATTENTION HOUSEWIVES: We ore offering a complete selection of frozen\nfoods \u2014 including many ready-to-eat items \u2014 at very special sale prices.\nTake advantage of tremendous savings as you stock up your freezers with\ntime-saving meals. Truckload sale of Canada Packer's quality products. Come\nearly, fill the cupboard with these Liberty values.\n14 VALUABLE PRIZES\nHere's a chance for everyone te win a beautiful prize \u2014 1 DeeCee Dell, 1 Roy Rogers\nholster and gun set, 1 party dress, 5 children'*\npurses, 1 Range Rider cowboy outfit, 1 towel\nset, 2 baseball gloves, 2 boxing gloves. Here's\nall you have to do. Put 2 Margene or Tulip\nlabels in each envelope. Place name and address on envelope, drop in contest box at the\nLiberty. Enter as often as you wish. Start now,\ncontest closes March 15th. But hurry!\nFresh Frozen. York,  fancy;\n12 oz. pkg. \t\n3*49\nFISH & CHIPS   Fraservale  \t\nPEACHES  Sliced, Fraservale; 15 oz.\nSAUSAGE ROLLS\n\u25a0rw   niKIKIFPQ Swanson's, Haddock, Beef,\n2 ,\u201er990\n.2 [or 55^\nFrig-Mix; 8 oz. pkg J\/0\n1 Chicken; Turkey; each O\u00abJ0\nbCALLwr 5 Cooked, ready to serve; 7 oz. pkg  DD?\nLI A nnnr1!\/' witn cheese sauce AUd\nnMUyUWIV or tomato sauce; 12 oz. pkg OS\u00bb\u00a3\nSOLE Cooked with lemon butter, pkg \u00a990\nORANGE JUICE ^<fc i 0l       2tins 39?!\nCHIP   STEAK5  90 seconds to cook; 5 oz.   3 pkg. 95$\nSTRAWBERRIES\nFancy Sliced, r%        \/LQtf\nYork; 15 oz     Z for 07*\nPOTATOES\n2 for 37*\nShoestring;\nYork; 9 oz.\nSQUASH\nSalad Queen. 14 oz.\nFor pie or vegetable.\nBEANS\nCUT GREEN;\nYork fancy. 10 oz.\nTry it in your baking.\nFresh, Tosty for flavor _\n2 ib, 59c\nTaste like a high-priced\nspread, yet low in price ,\nmim\nPhospholene Rug - Carpet er\nUpholstery Cleaner\nPk. Makes 2 Gallon\nPk. 35<2\nRound Steak\nolid savings:\nBUTTER\nMaple Leaf, Finest Grade\n2 lbs. $1.37\n\\\u201e ? & &\n A A,\nCP.\nRED LABEL\nlb.\n69\nROUND STEAK\nC.P. Red Label;     \t\nPOT ROAST\nCP. Red Label;\t\nBABY BEEF LIVER\nC.P. Brand; ,\t\nSMOKED HAMS\nMaple Leaf Brand, Whole, Half or Quartered;\nBOILING FOWL\nDrawn and Ready To Go; \t\nBACON\nC.P. Brand, Sliced; 1-lb. pkts.,  _ ,\nib. 69c\nn>. 42e\nib. 45c\nib. 59c\nib. 39c\nib. 65c\nQuality\nProducts\n$1.09\n531\nMaple Leaf Cheese        <frl QQ\nCanadian; 2 lb. box   TI,U7\n 37?!\n 290\nBaby Roll Cheese CC^i\nMaple Leaf; 16 oz \"*ir\n2 ibs 67c\nWashday Specials\nSoap Flakes\nMaple Leaf; for lingeries, babies\n. things, \"highly recommended\",\nThrift; jumbo size.\n99c\nSoap Flakes\nThrift; for heavy work clothes\nand everyday washday needs,\neconomical  too.\n3 Ib. pk. 69c\nLiquid Detergent\nMild for hands, cuts grease on\ndishes. A popular item in the\nkitchen, 20% bonus size contains\n14 oz. Tin 45c\n24 oz. tin 89c\ncanned goods\nDomestic Shortening\nln cannister tin; 3 lbs. .\nSnowflake Shortening\n2 lbs\t\nSwiss Slices\nMaple Leaf; 8 oz.\nCheese Slices\nMaple Leaf; 8 oz.\nLuncheon Meat\nKam; 15 oz. tin\t\nFancy Peaches\nSliced, York; 15 oz\t\nSnow Cap Pears\nFlemish Beauty; 15 oz.\nCream Corn\nFancy York; 15 oz\t\nGrapefruit Juice\nDonald Duck;  48 oz.\n2 for 790\n3 uns 690\n3 t\u201es690\n000\n2 Uns 670\nNabob Coffee\nib. 88c\nPUDDINGS 3\nRoyal Instant\t\nPEANUT BUTTER\nCream style, York; 16 oz\t\nPEANUT BUTTER\nYork; 9 oz., tumbler\t\nFRESH EGGS\nLocal \"A\" large in ctn. Dozen\nPURITY FLOUR\nFor better baking ....\n25\nlbs.\npkg. 250\n390\n290\n430\n$1.54\nBanana Fiesta\nCAKE MIX\nFIVE ROSES\n2   49c\nApple Juice 9        AT*\nSun Rype, Clear; 48 oz. \u2022* tins w* r\nGRAPEFRUIT AND\nPineapple Juice\n\u2022Doles; 48 oz\t\nDR. BALLARD'S\nDog Food\nChampion; 15 oz. .\nBlackberries\nEnsign; 15 oz\t\n790\n530\n2 u\u201e; 490\ntins\ntins\n880\nI Win a |\nj Hand-Carved ORIENTAL CHEST i\nI      BICYCLE or a CAR COAT\n'       Enter your cash register receipts over $3.00       '\nI     NOW. Winners will be asked simple questions,     j\n7-UP ~2>597\nLiberty's produce is fresher \u2014 truckloads to Nelson from the growing\narea, many in under 50 hours \u2014 no water legged produce. You get more.\nJuicy,\n. Sweet,\nMexican\nFree   sampling   Friday   and   Saturday.\nA    delicious drink. And mix; 28 oz. bottle.\nPlus deposit.\nToni\nSuper tip for wave set: reg. $1,25 ..\nPowdered Skim Milk\nMilkano, makes 12 qts. 3 lbs\t\nDill Pickles\nNalley's; 28 oz. tin \t\nSauer Kraut\nNalley's; 28 oz. tin \t\nSalad Dressing\nChampion; 32 oz. jar\t\nChicken Rice Soup\nBelmar; 4 pkgs. .\t\nOven-Cleaner\nEasy off; 6 oz\t\nInstant Coffee\nMaxwell House; 6 oz. jar\n89*\n95*\n37*\n24*\n57*\n45*\n39*\n(SMSlW\nFinest Quality Seafoods.\nFancy Cohoe Red Salmon\n7} oz.\n37'\nFancy Pink Salmon Delicious-\nTall Tins; 15 oz.\nS-C\nFancy Solid Tuna, White\nMeat; 7 oz.\n2 fior 65c\nCOFFEE ye..\nFresh roasted; yellow label; lb.   ' \"r\nmild, mellow, economy plus. Special.\nCOFFEE OCJ\nRed label; rich, brisk flavor; lb.    \"*?\ndeluxe, finest, special blend for Nelson's\nsoft water. Grind fresh when you buy.\nTEA BAGS\nFort Gany; orange pekoe; 100s .\nSARDINES O        39_\nKing Ospar packers         tins'*    r\nNorwegian, small in olive oil.\nMEAT PASTE 5        otj\nPate de Foie, York; 3 oz    .   tins \u25a0*' r\nCOOKED HAM *1 AQ\nMaple Leaf;  VA lb. tin     \u00abpi.*f*\nBEEF STEW 2\nYork; 15 oz.\ntins\n570\nDOUBLE\nBEGONIA BULBS\n3 in box 550\nFREE\nTHIS WEEK ONLY\n59c value saucepan with purchase of\nany Ideal aluminum ware.\n4-CUP COFFEE\nPERCOLATOR $2.2$\nFRESH DAILY\nCAKE-D0U6HNUTS\n 131-39'\nStar Special;\nBaker's Doz.\nPure Lard\nMaple Leaf; better baking .\n2 lbs. 43c\nPure, red-ripe berries\nStrawberry Jam\n- 99c\nYork 48 oz.\n V85\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958 \u2014 9\nDOOR OPENING SPECIALS^ Save! Orion Jersey Sweaters\nLimited Quantities \u2014 On Sale While They Last.\nPersonal Shopping Only. \u2014 No Phone, Mail or C.O.D. Orders Please.\n.19\nKnitting  Yarn\nHere's  a.chance  to  buy  100%   wool\nand blended yarns at a saving!\nAssorted colors. 1 oz. balls.\nReg. 1.29.\nMen's Tee-Shirts\n48 Only. Fine knitted cotton T-\nshirts. Short sleeves, breast pocket,\ncrew neck. Sizes S, M, L. Q Q\nWhite and pastels  iO\/\nReg. 2.95.\nLadies' Slippers\n33 Pairs Only. Wedge heel, mule style\nslippers in terry cloth or striped cotton. Sizes S, M, L. 1 1 O\nColors assorted    I \u2022 I at\nReg. 3.69.\nMen's Dress Shirts\n28 Only. Fine quality broadcloth shirts\nin colors of blue, tan, grey. Sizes collectively 14%, 15, 15%, | QQ\n16,. 16_ and 17 _    I .77\nMen's Flannelette Shirts\n36 Only. Good quality checked flannelette shirts. Two breast pockets. \u2014\nSizes S, M, L. Assorted |    AC\\\ncolors   Lt1\/\nReg. 25.75. Sunbeam\nJunior Mixers\n9 Only. Pastel colors.\nEach  \t\n12.99\nVr OFF\nCotton and Synthetics.\nRegular .69 'to 2.29.\nReg. 6.95 to 8.95.\nFit-All Dresses\nDrip-dry    cotton   dresses   with    the\nshirred waist that fits sizes 12 to 20.\nLimited quantity;\n20 dresses\t\n3.99\nReg. 1.69. Co-Co Mats\n24 Only. Firmly bound co-co      QQ\nfibre. 14\" x 24\"  iO\/\nStretchie Girdles\nOne size stretch girdles. Perfect figure\ncontrol. 20 only. a. Q\nWhite  .DO\nReg. 3.98.\nOrion Pullovers\nMisses' pullovers. Substandards with\nslight imperfections that will not affect\nwear.  24 only. |    QQ\nSizes 14 to 20   I .\u00bb\nReg. 5.98.\nOrion Cardigans\nMisses' cardigans; classic style. Sub-\nstandards with only slight imperfections. Good selection of *% QQ\ncolors. 36 only. Sizes 14-20.   _*.W\nReg. 3.98. Boxer Longs\nBoys' or girls' lined corduroy boxer\nlongs. Grey, green, brown. | ftQ\nSizes 4-6x. Limited quantity.  I \u25a0 3^ x\nReg. 1.29. Girls' Blouses\nGirls' sanforized cotton blouses. White\nand pastel shades. Sizes\n4 to 14. 36 only\t\n.68\nBENGALINE\nDUSTER\nCOATS\n16\n88\nAn outstanding value in\nheavy weight 6 ply Bengalee Duster Coats, fully lined.\nChose now from six brand\nnew 1958 styles, cuffed or\npush up sleeves, mandarin\nor lay back collar. Colors\n.suitable for early spring and\n[summer, Navy, Black, Powder and Beige. Choose now.\nSizes 10 to 18.\nAll-Purpose Wool\nHere's a chance for all home\nknitters to stock up on all-purpose\nwool at a saving. It's 95% wool\nreinforced with 5% nylon yarns\nfor longer wear, better laundering. First quality in a good choice\nof popular colors. 1-oz. balls \t\n.33\nPHONES\n 458\n\u00ab  52\n1     Men's Wear and Shoes \t\n^B       Fnrnltiirn\n  49\n  29 -\n 193\nWhat better way to increase your fashion wardrobe right now and on into\nSpring than with a beautifully matched sweater set! Clearance of National\nMakers, Reg. 5.98 and 6.98 sweaters. 100% Orion jersey. The short sleeved\npullover takes beautifully to costume jewellery and scarves. Cardigan is\nlovely with dresses \u2014 with its sweater mate it goes well with skirts and\nsportswear. Each sweater comes in a pliofilm storage bag. In beautiful pastel\nshades. Mix and match the different colors. Sizes 14 to 20.\nSale Price! Sheer Nylons\nHere's luxury at a budget price! First quality nylons in a sheer and beautiful 51-gauge, 15-denier weight. Dark seams of course for the most flattering, slimming look. Colors in nylons this year are lovelier than ever\ntoo: soft beiges and warmer tones for day and evening weat. You'll want\nto buy your nylon supply for Spring at this special saving. Get a few\nextra pairs for unexpected gifts, too. Sizes 8>\/j to 11\t\nS.S. PULLOVER\n.99\nHere's the kind of special buy every man wants to take advantage\nof! Fine fabrics (woven cottons, velours, flannels, chromespuns),\nneat collar style and a large color and pattern assortment: checks\nand overchecks, stripes, Ivy League designs. Only a manufacturers' clearance could bring you this outstanding value. Sizes:\nS, M, L, XL. ' \u25a0    \t\nAll Wool Worsted Dress Slacks\nThese all-wool slacks are obviously excellent value for\nthe money! Tailored from 100% all-wol English worsted\nfabric with a smooth finish, they will hold a press better,\nrecover quickly from wrinkles. Comfortable \"No-Wrinkle\"\nwaistband, sturdy pocketing. Favorite, semi-drape, regular\ncut style with double turned in pleats. Zipper closure. In\ncharcoal, medium or blue grey, charcoal brown. Sizes\n28 to 44\t\nMen's Sport Coats\nFor men who want the best at reasonable prices. \u2014 Choose now from this\nwide assortment of all wool, expertly tailored jackets. Leaders in style. \u2014\nChoose from several smart patterns in light or medium shades\t\nOnly Bay Day could bring this saving on jeans for children and teeners!\nFor little boys and girls you'll find Sanforized blue denims made with\ndouble knees, double stitching throughout, bar tacks and rivets. Boxer\nwaist, boys' with zipper. SizeB: 4 to 6x. Bigger girls' sizes come in popular\n\"slim jim\" style in sheer cotton. Concealed side zipper, tapered legs. In\nBeige, Blue, Red, Black. Sizes: 8 to 14. Boys' blue jeans are in heavy\nSanforized \"Treat-em-Ruff\" denim \u2014 made for long, hard wear- Sizes:\n8 to 16. Outfit the youngsters for Spring at a saving \u2014 buy Bay Day jeans!\nChild's   Sizes   2-\u00abx.\nftitetty $*% (tattqwtqi.\nINCORPORATED    2N?   MAY  1670\nSTORE HOURS\nTuesday,  Wednesday,  Thursday,   Saturday,\n, ..    9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m,\n\" Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nClosed All Day Monday\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27,1958\nMen's Suede Jackets\nn.88\nFor   sportsmen,   for   handsome Yv*><\ncasual wear I First quality suede V\nwith a rich finish, wool knit col- -^jl\nlar, cuffs, waistband. Silk lining.      . ,r*r^J^.\nCopper,   buck,   navy,   chocolate\ncolors. Sizes: 36 to 46. Bay Day\nSpecial 1\n%\nMen Stretch Ankle Sox\nOnly a manufacturer's clearance |\ncould bring this savingl 100%\nnylon. Magic fitting \"Toughies\".\nUnconditionally guaranteed for 90\ndays. Blue, wine, grey, brown.\nFits sizes 10 to 13. QQ\nRegular value 1.50  \u202205'\nmy*\nAthletic Shirts and Shorts\nStock up on lighter weight underwear at a saving. Fine\nquality cotton yarns ln soft, absorbent knit. Taped seams.\nDouble seat and front, elastic waist on shorts. \/IQ\nSizes: small, medium and large. Each    M\/\nBoxer Shorts\nFine quality embossed cotton \u2014 drip dry so needs little\nIroning. Elastic waist, balloon seat. Novelty QQ\nsports patterns. Sizes: small, medium, large  iO\/\nBroadcloth Pyjamas\nTailored In a roomy cut with lots of shoulder room. Fine\nquality broadcloth, plain shades) in 3 Q Q\nOil  (IMS    3l70\nReg. 5.95 Value\nNo-Iron White\nDress Shirts\n4\n69\nSave now on these famous make no-iron\ndress shirts. Roomily tailored from an\nall-Egyptian yarn; high quality English\nbroadcloth. Short point collars. Just wash\nand place on hanger to drip-dry.\nNew T-Shirts\nWhat does a man look for in T-shirts?\nIf it's comfort, long wear, handsome colors\nthen here's a bargain! Knitted cotton in\nstripes or cotton mesh with Gaucho or\nItalian collar. Navy, grey, camel, white.\nSizes: small, medium, large\t\n1\n99\nMen's Stroller Jackets\nNew cut and style in 100% waterproof blended viscose\nand nylon, rubberized red plaid lining, zipper front,\nzipper breast pocket, 2 large pockets with flaps. Colors:\nbeige, grey. Sizes 36 to 46.\n4\n99\nQuality Work Wear!!\nDRILL SHIRTS, PANTS\nGet set for working ln comfort with one of these\nwell-made Industrial sets. The pants are made of\nSanforized drill with tunnel loops, zipper, five\npockets made of top quality pocketing. Sturdy\nstitching. Cuffed in assorted leg lengths.. Sizes: 30\nte 46. Tan shirts are colorfast Sanforized twill. You'll\nwant to buy at least two at this Bay Day price.\nFlaps on pockets, extra roomy cut with lots of\nfreedom for shoulder movement. Favorite Suntan\ncolor. In sizes 14'\/\u00ab to 17'\/i.\nWHIPCORD TROUSERS\nYou'll want a pair of these for sturdy work wearl\nExtra heavy whipcord. Five strong pockets, four\nwith plastic trim. Cuffed and ready to wear. Assorted\nleg lengths from 30\" to 33\". J  QQ\nSizes: 30 to 46  3 %9*\nPants\nShirts\n3.49\n2-79\nSturdy Work Socks\nMade for foot comfort! All\nwool, wool-nylon mix. \u2014\nGrey twist. Classed as\nsubs due to \u00a3L\u00a3L\nminor flaws. ..,.,: \u00abOw\nfMiwiuamit\n!*  \u00ab.._._ir\\  >> \\\\  ,j\n\u25a0\u25a0  s \"\u25a0   \u25a0    , *\n' -. \u25a0 iMMMmniir\nWoven gingham in new widespread collar style. Sanforized,\nguaranteed washable. Full,\ncomfortable cut. Bright checks,\nsoft muted plaids in blue, red,\ntan, grey. Sizes 6 to 16. Make\na Bay Day Saving on shirts for\nboys!\nBoys' Dress Pants\n5\nRayon worsted flannel is good\nlooking, long - wearing. Cuffed\nwith self belt, pleats, zipper. Blue,\ngrey, brown. Sizes 8 to 16\t\n49\nBoys' Corduroy Pants   *f' J\u2122,Jeans\n* J Treat-em-Ruff   twill  eans are m\nBoys' Crompton corduroy pants \u2014 long\nwearing, washable, wide belt loops,\nzipper closure, cuffed. Shades of grey,\nbrown, blue, green, wine. SizeB 6 to 16.\nBoys' Jackets!\nGet two jackets for the price of onel\nNylon gabardine reverses to weather-\nwise satin. Dome front, two-tone wool\nknitted collar, cuffs, waistband. In\nwhite satin with black, blue, red. Sizes\n6 io 18\t\n4\n44\n'Treat-em-Ruff\" twill jeans are made, for the rough and\ntumble wear boys give them! Tapered legs, bar tacks\nand rivets at points of strain. 1   A f\\\nSizes 6 to 16. _i,^fV\n\"Flanasuede\" Shirts\n\"Flanasuede\" shirts are a favorite with boys! Sanforized,\ncolorlast. Soft, napped finish. Checks in grey, | QQ\nred, blue, brown. Sizes 6 to' 16.       I \u2022 W\n5\n99\nAthletic Shorts\nEvery comfort feature! Nylon\nreinforced, Lsstex insert in\nleg. Cotton rib. Pre-Bhrunk\nand full-cut, taped seams. \u2014\nSizes: small,        n <\u00a3l\nmedium, large.    5 for  *p I\nStretchie Socks\nWhat could be better for\ngrowing feet than socks that\nfit sizes from 8 to I0',4. First\nquality. In navy, blue, A A\ngrey, red, beige. t\"T^\nSpecial Value in\nChildren's T-Shirts Jaby\nA ' c f%   Gama9es\n^%   \u00a9.59\nFine combed cotton gives a\nsoft finish. Ribbed necks, short\nsleeves. Plain or' buttoned\nshoulders. Lovely patterns and\nstripes, Sizes: 1 to 6.\nCorduroy Longs 11\nPractical for outdoor wear.\nBoxer waist means they're easy\nto pi}t on and off, comfortable\nto wear. Red, navy, green and\nbrown. Sizes: |   ^Q\n2, 4, 6    l\u00bbaU7\n37.77\nCorduroy, jackets with bright plaid\nflannelette linings. Washable of\ncourse. Zipper front, elastic at\nback waist, 2 pockets. In red,\nroyal, navy, brown. Sizes: 4 to 6x.\n\"Balbriggan\" Briefs\nFirst quality \"training pants\". \u2014\nWell - finished, comfortable cut.\nWhite. Sizes: 2, 4, 6.    \u00a3\u2022 $1\nStock up and save!    w for      I\nSave! Nylon Dresses\nPretty styles: shirred, plain, embroidered tops, scalloped or plain\nhems. Each comes with matching\nslip. Sizes 6, 12,\n18 months .'\nMade for those warm Spring days\nwhen the children start playing\noutside. Fully lined, zipper front,\n2 pockets, washable. In toast,\nblue, red. Sizes: 4 to 6x.\nOur own HBC brand featuring all-\ntubular frame, anti-tip brake, full\nlining and lift-off platform. Special\nsee-through visor on storm hood,\nplastic handle grip. Grey and blue.\nReg. 18.95 High Chairs\nFolding type baby high chairs, sturdily\nconstructed with tubular chrome frame.\nWill fold up for easy transportation or\nstorage. Padded seat and back rest of\nprinted plastic *l C  QC\ncover     IJ.jrlf\nGirls' Rayon Briefs!!     New Blouses\nLitle girls like pretty underwearl\nComfortable elastic waist, ribbed\nlegs. In white and a choice of\npretty pastel colors.   A $1\nt for      I\nSizes: 2, 4, 6.\nShort sleeved styles in sanforized cotton.\nLace jabot, embroidered or toreador\nstyles. Sanforized. White, pink, | \/\"\u00a9\nblue. Sizes: 8 to 14    I \u00bb0>\n1.99\nSave on Car Coats\nPopular \"Loden\" fastening styles in Sanforized\npolished cotton. Bright cotton print linings, too.\nSome with sleeve tabs, patch pockets. Tan, red,\nturquoise. Sizes: 7 to 14 ,\t\n7'\n99\nBobtf Soaks\n44\nNylon Draw String Handbag:\nNylon handbags, waffle weave, in white and pastel colors. Good size. P\nregular 2.98 value in a popular spring and ^   T^C\"\nHere's a chance to buy\nyour favorite triple roll\"\nsocks. Combed cotton\nand stretch nylon. First\nquality. White. Size A\nfits 8*4-9%, B fits 10-\n11 Vt.\nsummer accessory\t\nNew Nylon Scarves\nFashionable accessory touch! .White,\npink, blue, royal, green, cham- CQ\npagne, red. Size: 12\" x 46\".   .  .\\\\t<r\nChildren's Stretch\nHere are those pretty \"stretch\" ankle\nColors: white, pink, blue, yellow and\nsocks! Nylon with turn-down cuffs,\nred. Sizes for 4 to 8*4,'      3 $'\n6 to 8*4.\nfor\n1\nCostume Jewellery\nReg. 1.50 and $2 value in assorted\nwanted styles of earrings, QO\nbracelets and necklets  tar 4?\nJEWELLERY SPECIAL\nWide choice of earrings, pins, necklaces in spring styles *\\ $*j\nand colors ;\u25a0. aim for      W\nSAVE! JUMBO\nGARMENT BAGS\nProtect your clothes from dust and moths,\nJumbo size plastic bags with 36\" zippers.\nWine, coral, blue, navy\t\n1\n.39\nPortable Typewriters\nI\nHBC portables. 88 character\nkeyboard. Precision made and\nfully guaranteed for 1 year.\nComplete with carrying case.\n$\n54\n\"Kbroseai\" Rain Boots\n\"Ivy Saddle\" Shoes\n\"Ivy League\" styling. Bouncy soles and heels, strap\nand buckle at back. White with black 2 QQ\nsaddle. Sizes 4-9. Medium width    J %<f<f\n1\n49   Men's Dress Shoes\nFor weather protection! Substan-\ndards of higher quality, nothing to\naffect long wear. Styles for high or\nlow heels. Women's sizes 4 to 10,\nReg. 2.98\nBOOT RUNNERS\nSpecial Savings. Black canvas\nuppers with cushion insoles and\n.ribbed non-skid putsoles, ventilators, ankle patch. Sizes 1 to 5.\n2\n.39\nA Reg. 12.95 value in men's quality calf leather oxfords-\nSingle and double leather sole styles to Q QC^\nchoose from in sizes 6 to 11. Black and brown.   J' *4r *\nWomen's Style Shoes\nReg. values to 7.95. Cuban or high heel styles. Blac1:\npatent, Panama, navy shades, no-mar soles for comfort and long wear. Sizes A Q^\ncollectively 5Vi to 9  HI.*V\nChildren's Shoes\n' Black moccasin vamp oxfords, or brown scuff-proof ic.\noxfords in pliable leather uppers and durable jS \u00a3?\u00a3\\\nneolite soles and heels. Sizes 8V_ to 2    3\u00abD<\nEverybody Shops! Everybody Saves! At the Bay on Bay Days\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958 \u2014 11\nSee yourself through\nSpring in style! Smart\ncombed sheen car coat\nwith raglan sleeves,\nfull lining. One style\nhas pert wing , collar,\nother has large front\npockets. Beige, red, turquoise, cognac. Sizes\n12 to 20,\nAll Weather Coats\nHere's high style for Spring at a budget price! New\nchemise silhouettes, popular boxy styles, mandarin\nnecklines and push-up sleeves. They're all \"showerproof\" \u2014 all sale priced! Flannel, worsted, tapestry\ntweeds,    imported    tweeds. .\nBlue,   turquoise,   grey,   red,      *m    _W     H Q\ncharcoal, airforce, beige and        > \u2022   a^a\u00b1 .%i\nbrown. Sizes 10 to 18\t\n16\nSuntan Slim Jims!\nft 2.99\nTrim, tailored \"slim jims\" are first\nchoice for smart casual wear!\nTapered legs, concealed side zipper. Made of good-looking, long-\nwearing sheen cotton. Firmly\nstitched and reinforced at points\nof strain. Your favorite Spring\ncolors. Beige, blue, black. Sizes:\n10 to 20.\nTartan\nSlim Jims     ^\n;i_*\n\\\nOutstanding Value I\nLingerie to Delight Every\nFeminine Heart\nHALF SLIPS\nScalloped double net ruffle at hem, satin trimming. \u2014\nColors: white, pink, turquoise. Sizes: small, ^ \"7Q\nmedium, large >  aim. I *r\nNYLON SLIPS\nOpaque nylon tricot. Double hem ruffle, satin trimming,\nadjustable straps. White. *S  \"TQ\nSizes: 32 to 40   JL.I7\nRAYON BRIEFS II\nElastic leg. Pastels and white. Sizes: small, J fl*|\nmedium, large <at for ^1\nPRETTY SLIPS\nA wonderful blend of cotton, nylon and dacron. So easy\nto wash. White only. *\\  \"TQ\nSizes: 32 to 40  \/L.I 7\nBABY'DOLLS I\nShorty nylon pyjamas. Net ruffles, satin trimming. White,\npink and turquoise. Sizes: small, medium       \"\\  TQ\n_nd large       dm. I JF\nWALTZ GOWNS\nDainty net and satin rtimming, satin sash. \"\\ ^FQ\nWaltz length. Sizes: small, medium, large. ..  ai*. I X\nWonderful value in popular tartan slim jims. \u2014\nLarge variety of authentic\ntartans. Each pair perfectly tapered for **! QQ\nfit. Sizes 10-18.   I .yy\nPopular\nSpring Blouses\nJust right to wear with\nSpring suits and skirts!\nDacron pique and \"Perma-\ntuck\" nylon in pretty new\nstyles. Convertible Johnny, Peter Pan collars, lovely buttons. Solid shades\nand patterns in white and\ncolors. Sizes: 1 QQ\n12 to 18   i.yy\nCotton Blouses\nSo much for your moneyl\nSanforized, Mercerized\nSanforized, Mercerized cotton blouses are as\nfresh and pretty as the\nfirst Spring flowers! Johnny, square or 3-tier collars\no'r open neck style. Dainty\ntrimmings, pearl or brass\nbuttons. Colors: pink, red,\nblack, blue, maize.\nSizes: 32 to 38\t\n$1\nReg. 8.95\nTweed Skirts\nBright Spring tweeds,\nsmartly flecked with contrasting colors. Soft draping wool skirts for your\nnew Spring wardrobe.\"\nSizes\n12 to 18.\nSpring Millinery\nSpring hats are more flattering, more feminine than\never! Pastels, black, navy,\nwhite, red, 2  1 Q\nroyal, beige. ..    3 \u2022 I <r\nReg. 7.95\nOrion Slacks\nWashable orlon slacks.\nSelf belt, cuffed leg. Colors of charcoal, brown,\nblue. Buy now and save!\nSizes C QQ\n12 to 20 j.yy\nReg. 14.95\nTartan Skirts\nAll-round hand pleated,\nauthentic tartan skirts. \u2014\nSoft wool material gives\nflattering drape to skirt.\nChoose your tartan now\nand save. 11 QQ\nSizes 12 to 18. I 1*77\nCotton Skirts\nDrip-dry, no-iron printed\ncotton skirts. One size\nshirred elastic waist which\nassures fit for\nall sizes 12-18.\n2.99\n6.99\nNew  Accounts\nNow Open\nPurchases made now are\nnot due till April 10th.\nFlannelette Blanket\nSale\nHere are those soft and fluffy\n\"Kingcot\" flannelette blankets. Thickly napped on both\nsides with neatly whipped\nends. First quality. Rose, blue,\ngreen, gold borders. 70\" x 90\".\nWabasso Sheets, Pillowcases\nHere's your best chance to stock up on famous Wabasso\n\"Family\" qualify sheets and matching pillowcases. They\nare made of closely woven cotton, neatly finished-with\nplain hemmed ends. Sheets are double size: 81\" x 100\",\npillowcases are 42\" x 33\". In white.\nSHEETS\n5.99\nCASES\n1.29\nSpecial Value!!\nFeather Pillows\nSoft and fluffy pillows made\nof sterilized and washed\nchicken feathers. \u2014 Sturdy\n\"featherproof\" ticking. First\nquality. Size: |    m*\\\n17\" x 24\"  1.1\/\nTOWELS\nPrinted Cottons\n3 yds. 1.00\nFamous \"Glenwood\" cottons in a\nchoice of lovely patterns: florals, novelties, children's designs. They're color-\nfast and wash very well. Sew and\nSave!\nFirst Quality Fine Broadcloth\nSmooth broadcloth makes sewing easy! You'll use it\nfor children's clothes, dresses, men's sport JJ ^1\nshirts. Variety of colors. 36\" wide  3 yds. \u00abP I\nNew Chenille Bed Spreads\nTwo beautiful patterns: One with multi-floral pattern,\none plain. Easily laundered. Gold, green, tur- mm QQ\nquoise, red, rose, white, blue. 86\" x 100\"    \/ .77\nSeconds I Point Blankets\nSeconds of famous four point blankets. They're all wool\nand two yards wide \u2014 luxurious blankets known for\nlong wearing qualities and superb warmth. With multi-\nstriped border or in green, blue, rose, 1Q QQ\ngold. Size: 72\" x 90\".     17.77\nChoice of solid colors with\nLurex thread in rose, blue,\ngreen, yellow, pink or jac-\nquard stripes on white: rose,\nblue, pink, green, yellow,\nbronze, black. Bath towels:\n22\" x 44\".\nEach ...,.,..._ ,\nNew Hand Towels\n.99\nClassed as substandards due\nto minor flaws which should\nnot affect wear. Solids, stripes,\njacquard or Lurex stripes. -\nRose, blue, green,\ngold. 15\" x 26\".\nDrapery Pieces\n.49\nSample squares for cushions,\netc. Floral, modern, children's\npattern's,\n24\" x 24\"\t\n.39\nAXMINSTER RUGS\nand Underfelt\n\u2022 Long staple all wool pile.\n\u2022 Permanently moth-proofed.\n\u2022 French aubousson or Chinese corner spray, floral field.\n\u2022 Plain ends, no fringe.\n\u2022 32*oz. underfelt.\n\u2022 Buy at this special price.\nRUG AND 32-OZ. UNDERFELT\n27\"xS1\"    8.95\n6 x, 59.95\n9x106  J09.50\n9x12   119.50\nPAY ONLY 10% DOWN\nOn All Furniture and Appliances\nBalance easy monthly terms.\n3 Pc. Bedroom Suites\n\u2022 5-PLY   VENEER,\n\u2022 DOUBLE   DRESSER, CHEST  AND   BOOKCASE   BED,\n\u2022 4' 6\" SIZE.\n\u2022 YOUR   CHOICE   NEW WALNUT,   MOCHA.\n\u2022 PLATE  GLASS   MIRRORS.\n\u2022 CENTRE-GUIDED   DRAWERS.\n\u2022 DOVETAILED   CONSTRUCTION,   FULL   FRAME.\n\u2022 PLANK   TYPE  TOPS. \u00abfc._.^\n\u2022 ATTRACTIVE   BRASS   PULLS. j   pcs    _J7\/0\nMattress      39\nSpring       19\n5 Pieces Total .... $237\n\u2022 Matching Box Spring, $39. May be purchased singly or as group.\nWhite Goods 20% Off\nReg.\nSALE\nAutomatic 30\" Frigidaire Range.\nFrench doors\t\n$399\n$319\nAutomatic 30\" Moffat Range with\nSyncromatic Control\t\n.. $429\n$345\n10.5 AMC Standard Refrigerator\t\n...$229\n$185\n10.5 AMC Push-Button Defrost \t\n...$289\n$233\n12.5 AMC Deluxe Refrigerator \t\n...$319\n$257\n13 AMC Chest Type Deep Freeze ...\n...$359\n$289\nAMC Semi-Auto. Wringer Washer\n$229\n$185\n2 Pc. Chesterfield Suites\n\u2022 Full foam rubber cushions.\n\u2022 Rubber topper on arms and back.\n\u2022 Modern wrap-around arms.\n\u2022 High  grade acetate covers.\n\u2022 Nubbed or sculptured pile creates new. surface appeal.\n\u2022 Kiln dried hardwood frame with corner block support,\n\u2022 Fine  welt tailoring.\n\u2022 Modern peg-leg with brass ferrules.\n\u2022 Your choice of coral, beige, mint green or\nplatinum. ,\nReg. 14.95 GUEST CHAIRS\n\u2022 Armless, no-sag foundation.\n$) Novelty fabrics, cotton repps.\na) All white cotton padding.\n\u00ab Hardwood frames.\n\u2022 Seat 18\" x  19\".\n\u2022 Blue, brown, pink; green,  wine,  grey.\n*259\n10.99\nReg. 29.95 LARGER GUEST CHAIRS\na) Armless,  wool  freize covers.\n$24\nSPORTING GOODS\n9'xl2' PALMETTO TENTS\nFor family holidays there's nothing like a tent. You carry\nyour accommodation with you and save on costs! Popular Palmetto style with rear extension, Dutch door.\nHeavy waterproofed drill with\nsturdy stitching. Folds up compactly, comes complete with\npoles and pegs. Full 9-foot by\n12-foot\t\n49\n99\nSPECIAL !\nGIRLS'AND BOYS'BIKES\nImported from England to give you this Bay Day\nvalue. Features chain guard, conventional brakes\nand durable chrome trim. Duo-color combinations:\nred with off-white or blue with\noff-white :....:.......\n39.99\nLEE-ENFIELD RIFLES\nConverted Army rifles, .303 calibre, featuring adjustable\nrear elevating sight, bolt action designed for' $1Q\nuninterrupted service. 5-shot magazine         \" ^\nLADIES' AND GENTS' LUGGAGE\nHeavy duty plastic covers plywood construction. Heavy\ntaffeta lining. Gents' are single two-suiters; ladies' consist of wardrobe and ltmJ QQ\ntrain case    \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\/\u00bb\nWindsor Television\n\u2022 1957 Model.\n\u2022 21-inch panoramic screen,\n\u2022 Oversize components for\n\u2022 Front control tuning,\n\u2022 Latest low-boy styling.\n\u2022 A Bay exclusive.\nPay Only $25 Down,\n25-tube chassis,\nthe finest reception.\n249.95\nBalance   Monthly\n6 Pc. Bunk Bed Ensemble\n\u2022 Solid rock maple.        \u2022 Mortise joint construction.\n\u2022 Colonial style. \u2022 Regular harvest finish.\n\u2022 Consists of 2 beds, ladder, guard rail, 2 flexible steel\nslat springs. $\/CO\n\u2022 Converts to two 39\" x 72\" twin beds. 6 Pieces    O^\nBUNK BED MATTRESSES\n\u2022 2 only\u2014Felt Mattresses. Each\n\u2022 2 only\u2014220 coil spring mattress. $'\nEach\n2 Pc. Lounge Suite\n\u2022 Kiln dried hardwood frame throughout.\n\u2022 Corner blocked for added support.\n\u2022 Back of lounge drops back to provide extra bed.\n\u2022 Removable arm-top reveals arbortie tray with storage space.\n\u2022 New frost \"58\" cover.\n\u2022 Red, brown, green.\n\u2022 Light or dark wood  finish.\n9 Modern peg-leg styling.\n\u2022 Fine tailored welt and button tufting.\n*14\n74\n169.oo\n$17 Down, Balance Monthly\nFloor Demonstrators\nPHILIPS HI-FI LT. OAK FINISH\n\u2022 Automatic recorder, all speeds.\n\u2022 Large console model.\nR.C.A. TOWNSMAN 21\" T.V.\n\u2022 Table model..\n\u2022 Front tuning controls.\n\u2022 Walnut cabinet.\nFRIGIDAIRE AUTOMATIC DRYER.\nBENDIX DUOMATIC\n\u2022 Combination washer and dryer.\nReg.\n409.95\n239.95\n349.00\nSALE\n327.95\n193.95\n279.00\n550.00\nHoover\nJunior Uprights\nDemonstrators, Reg.  99.95,\nComplete with cleaning\ntools.   -\nLight-weight, easy to\nhandle.\nMake ideal second cleaner.\nFor rugs, or as all purpose\ncleaner.\nFull 1 year      \u00a3Q  Qr\nwarranty.        O\/t\/y\nBissell\nCarpet Sweepers\n\u2022 Full 14\" brush action.\n\u2022 All metal case.\n\u2022 Easy \"dust-unload\" action.\n\u2022 Enamel push handle,\n\u2022 \"Beverly\" model\" j\nby Bissell.\n5.99\nHOUSEWARES\n\u2014   |     .,    |    H---II       I. IN.- II I .\u2014 I   I      I      \u25a0 ..II .11       I     \u25a0   .1\u2014 '\u25a0\u2014-_\u2014...l.    I \u25a0    \t\nELECTRIC KETTLES\nGleaming \"chrome finish. Automatic shut-off control.\nRubber cord. Classed as B grade \u00a3? QQ\ndue to minor flaws   Ot^7\nBATH SCALES\nSturdy mechanism for accurate weighing. Rubber foot\nmat. Five year guarantee. In pretty \/C QQ\npastel color choice    w\u00ab*'3'\nSANI-CUBE CANS\nA sanitary waste disposal tin. Inner aluminum tin, baked\nenamel finish. Quiet, seli-cloBing. \u00a3 QQ\nGleaming white   V\u00bb X*'\nGARBAGE CANS\n\"Hot dipped\" galvanized ware, with snug fit \"lock\" lid.\nCity approved type measuring approx. 2l\/i feet deep,\n18-inch circumference. Corrugated sides J   l\\C\\\nwith smooth rolled rim   sat \u2022TT3'\nBATH HAMPERS\nKeep your bathroom tidyl Fibre body, plastic covered\ntop. White, pink and yellow. f' QQ\n20\" x 20\" x 11\" size.     OtX ^\nIRONING PADS\nSilicone treated ironing pad covers make your iron glide\nfreely. Fits all standard 54\" ironing boards. QQ\nEasy to put on   \u202203'\nSTEAK KNIVES\nStainless Sheffield steel with simulated bone handle.\n4y2-inch serrated hlade. 8'\/2-inch \/CC\noverall length. Each   \u00abW^\nEverybody Shops! Everybody Saves! At the Bay on Bay Days\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1958\nBorder Cross-Examination Ends . . 1\nCommission Told No Gas\nExport Promises Given\nBy RICHARD ANCO\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCALGARY (CPI - Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Limited had no\nadvance arrangement with the\nformer Liberal government on\nthe question of export of Canadian natural gas to the United\nStates, company officials said\nTuesday.\nThey said that while the Liberals and former trade minister\nC. D. Howe helped to get pipeline construction under way by\nloans and advice, they in no way\npromised  Trans  - Canada auto\nmatic approval of a permit to\nship gas to the midwest U.S.\nThe company ended nearly five\ndays of detailed cross examination before the Borden energy\ncommission Tuesday.\nThe commission, with special\ninstructions' to study Trans-Canada's plans for export, is scheduled to make an interim report\nto Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nThe Progressive Conservative\ngovernment is not expected lo\ndecide on an export permit until\nthe report is forwarded.\nThrough   the   sworn   testimony\nof Trans-Cansda President Charles Coates, the commission\nlearned:\nThat the Liberals made no advance commitment on Trans-\nCanada's proposed export project\nthrough Emerson, Man. The government had indicated it would\nwait for approval of such imports\nfrom the U.S. Federal Power\nCommission before deciding on\nCanadian export.\nThat Mr. Howe suggested a\nmerger of two pipleine groups;\none seeking permission to build\na line from Alberta lo Winnipeg\nand direct to Emerson, the other\nwanting to build a Canadian line\nto Montreal.\nOPPOSED LOAN\nThat he advised the pipeline\npromoters to approach the Industrial Development Bank for a\n$70,000,000 loan for financing.\nThe plan later collapsed due to\noppoM'ion from major gas produce!!\nThat a committee of civil servants agreed the federal government ilould go ahead with construction o' fi35-mile section of\nthe tram \u2022 i-anada line through\nNorton OnUrio and suggested\nan $80,OOJ,oco direct loan be\nmade to tlit ompany. The loan\nwas repaid last year.\nWitnesses of Trans-Canada answered all questions asked by\ncommission counsel Arthur Pattillo and chairman Henry Borden, both of Toronto.\nThey also told Mr. Borden the\nmatter of gas exports is not immediate, although if delayed\nthere was the probability that\nAmerican pipelines would start\nserving present U.S. markets.\nHowever, the loss would be temporary since American demand\nis likely to grow steadily.\nCONTRACT  SIGNED\nMr. Coates emphasized that no\nadvance arrangements were\nmade  with   the  Liberal  govern-\nBIG BEN'S LIGHT OUT\nLONDON (Reuters)-The light\nabove Big Ben which tells London that the House of Commons\nstill is sitting went out Tuesday\nnight while the House was in session. The mechanical defect was\nrestored after about 35 minutes\nand the light shone until the\nHouse session ended.\nForeign Trade Deficif Lower\nment guaranteeing their support\nof exports at Emerson to Midwestern Gas Transmission Company. A contract has been signed\nby Trans-Canada and the American firm providing for exports of\n200.000,000 cubic feet daily.\nThe commission was told that\nsuch exports are not vital to the\nsurvival of the 3,280-mile pipeline. But they would increase\nsales, allow for an average five-\ncent reduction in rates to Canadian consumers and hasten the\npurchase of the crown section of\nthe line by Trans-Canada.\nOTTAWA (CP)-Canada's foreign trade deficit in January declined sharply by $44,000,000 from\nthe corresponding month in 1957\ndue mainly to a steep decline in\npurchases from.the United States,\nIhe bureau of statistics said Wednesday.\nThe month's deficit\u2014excess of\nimports over exports \u2014 totalled\n$11,600,000, about one-fifth of the\nImport surplus of $55,600,000 in\nJanuary a year ago.\nThe bureau described its trade\ndourer for January as preliminary and said reasons ,for the im-\npoit deiline are not yet apparent. Detailed export figu?es would\nbe isnr\/ec' shortly but those for\nimports would not be available\nfor several weeks.\n1957 DE1PICIT DOWN\nThe fi.de deficit with the U.S.\nin \u2022 January  dropped  sharply  to\n$58,200,000 from $127,100,000 a\nyear ago. At the same time the\nexport surplus with the United\nKingdom\u2014excess of exports over\nimports \u2014 eased to $21,900,000\nfrom $28,100,000.    '\nCanada's foreign trade deficit\nin 1957 dropped to $693,700,000\nfrom a peak of $842,300,000 in\n1956. The deficit in U.S. trade declined to $1,064,200,000 from the\n1956 record of $1,282,600,000, while\nthe country's favorable trade balance with Britain fell to $221,-\n400,000 from $333,700,000 the previous year.\nThe bureau said that imports\nin January declined nearly. 13 per\ncent in value to $401,100,000 from\nlast year's record total for January of $459,000,000. This continued a downward trend evident\nsince last October.\nPurchases from the U.S. were\ndown slightly more than 16 per\ncent at $289,600,000, compared\nwith the all-time January peak oi\n$346,100,000 last year. '\nImports from Britain in the\nmonth rose slightly ta $38,500,000\nfrom $35,700,000 but imports from\nall olher Commonwealth countries dropped to $11,700,000 from\n$16,300,000. Purchases from other\nforeign countries were up at $61,-\n300,000 compared with $60,900,000.\nCanadian exports to all countries in January declined by 3.5\nper cent to $389,500,000 from\n$403,400,000 in the corresponding\nmonlh last year. Shipments to the\nU.S. rose to $231,400,000 from\n$219,000,000 but sales to Britain\nfell to $60,400,000 from $63,800,-\n000.\nExports to the rest of the Commonwealth edged up to $22,800,-\n000 from $21,000,000 but there was\na sharp decline to all other foreign countries, with sales falling\nto  $74,900,000  from  $99,600,000.\nGRADE A RED\nEvery package In our meat\ncases is a picture of quality\n... of appetizing goodness.\nThat's because our meats are\ntop grades \u2014 aged right \u2014\ncut right \u2014 trimmed right \u2014\nthen carefully wrapped to seal\nIn- all the fine quaUty. You\ncan be sure that the meat you\nsee on display will taste even\nbetter than it looks. Don't take\na chance \u2014 take the choice!\nChoose your favorite cuts at\nOverwaitea \u2014 and get savings\nin the bargain.\nNEW\nCheese\nTASTY MILD\nParamount\n1 lb. \u2022\u2022*\u2022\nApprox.\n5 Ib.\nblocks _\nsSS\u00bb2\n8 ox.\nSTANDING RIB ROASTS   Ib. 59c I Sft\u00a3=\nSIDE BACON\nBY THE\nPIECE.\nGAINER'S\nQUALITY\nLEAN BEEF STEW Ib. 49c\nP?#ma\nThe produce you buy\nat Overwaitea is the\npicture of perfection\n\u2014 you see, taste,\nand enjoy the difference \u2014 and the prices are always right.\nPAMPERED\nPRODUCE\nPixie\nFROZEN PEAS\n2*29\nbohvt*\nTUN*\nrUKES\n24 oz.\njar\nLETTUCE\n_____ ib. 19\nPICKLES\nSwift's PREM 2\nHUNT'S; 15 ox-\nFruit Cocktail\nCOOKING\nAPPLES\nSpys or\nRomes ..\nai B \" \u00b0 3 W\nTOMATOES _r_ 29\nCauliflower _~_ > 25\nMARGARINE\nGOOD     *)   t-i,\nLUCK       ai'OI\nSOLO\n2 63'\nFree! Free!\nFor Thursday, Friday\nand Saturday Shoppers\nWe are giving away 5 sets of stainless\nsteel kitchen utensils consisting of 7\np: '.es each and valued at $4.95 each.\nSimply deposit your, cash register slip\nin the box provided. The five winners\nwill be asked a simple qualifying\nquestion.\nDRAW WILL BE MADE 5'30 p.m.\nMARCH 1st.\nOnce A Day \"Every Day\nSOUP\n|W CHICKEN\njW   VEGETABLES.- 2 for 35c i\niMEW n,waY\nJbrtffl      NOODLE\nTURKEY\nHOODIE\n.soup\n2-35c\nm\n\/MINESTRONE\nItalian-Style\nVegetable Soup\n*isfj2-\u00b0-35c\nCelery Hearts \u00ab*\u00ab\u2022 29\nLOOK For\nOur Big Month End Sale Flyer\nTo Be Delivered Today!!\nKITCHEN UTENSIL WINNERS FEBRUARY 15th\nMRS. R. PATTERSON \u2014919 Carbonate St., Nelson\nMRS. G. RICHARDSON\u2014313 Houston St., Nelson\nMRS. F. HAWES\u2014345 Hamilton Ave., Nelson\nMRS. W. CHERNENKO\u2014Taghum, B.C.\nMRS. 0. ANDERSON\u2014921  Fifth St., Nelson\nMrs. H.' 0. Borch\n205 Second St., Nelson\nWON THE MAPLE LEAF FLOUR\nDOUBLE BOILER DRAW.\nOVERWAITEA\nYOUR\nFRIENDLY\nGROCER\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\n PSPBi\n \"    :\nJAe.\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy  JOHN  SHORT\nSprttL \u00a3dibfL\nbums.\nIi nothing else, Floyd Patterson is king of the stumble-\n70 Rinks in\nWomen's Club\nMixed 'Spiel\nTRAIL \u2014 An increase of 13 rinks\nover last season has made the annual Trail Women's Curling Club\nMixed Bonspiel the biggest in history. With 70 rinks entered \u2014 including quartets from Nelson,\nRiondel, Creston, Salmo, Grand\nForks, Christina Lake, Rossland\nand Castlegar, as well as Trail,\n280 curlers will take part.\nFirst round draw for the event,\nwhich begins Friday, is as follows:\n6 p.m. \u2014 L. Ronald vs. A. B.\nAnderson; C. McGarvie vs. R.\nLyon; D. Mawdsley vs. A. A.\nRobb; T. Cowlan vs. D. Minto; J.\nC Urquhart vs. S. DelpuppO; M.\nBrennen vs. A. Robinson; E.\nMOntpellier vs. A. Forrest; A.\nLyon vs. J. Jarratt; N. Hinton vs.\nA. T. McDonnell; A. Martin vs. P.\nHenne; L. Emerson vs. N. A. Manning; A. Dafoe vs. G. Goodine; T.\nJohnston vs. A. Ferguson.\n8: 15 p.m. \u2014 E. Page vs. P.\nMartin; 0. Tedesco vs. J. Cameron; J. Baines vs. J. Morris; H.\nA. Thorpe vs. L. G. Moir; W. A.\nForrest vs. H. M. Witt; W. Ed-\nvs. J. D. Forbes; Reg An-\nThere can' be no doubt that Floyd is currently top\nman in the heavyweight division. He would kick billy-be-\ndarned out of Eddie Macrien or Zora Folley and he would\nchase Alex Miteff and the rest of the polite heavyweight\nchallengers right out of the ring.\nBut there is no proof of his superiority. He is undisputed\nking of Tommy Jackson and Pete Rademacher and Archie\nMoore, but Jackson is a simpleton who has taken too many\npunches on the head, Rademacher is an amateur with a\nprofessional outlook, and Moore is an old man.\nAt present, there is no backing to the belief that\nboxing is having a tough time. More youngsters are fighting\nthan at any time in 10 years, a few small clubs'have reopened their doorB and, as you realize ii you judge fights rorl^s\nfrom the safety of your living room chair, there are enough I ,jerson \"j, g. Pringle;  R. Stone\npretenders coming alonq as cannon fodder to keep James vs. R. Winstanley; R. Sanford vs.\nNorris and  Co., in business, : 1 A. Staples; E. Jensen vs. Ole Jen-\nfor years. mediate future, although Spokane's IM!  I Kwasney vs. N.  Mri'.v-\nPatterson has everything on his\nside. He is young, strong, able to\npunch, and anoarenlly capable of\ntaking one without giving out with\nthe resouding tinkle of cracking\nglass. And he rules over a division\nthat is fraught with nonentity.\nIt is commonplace among word-\nJugglers in this line of work to\nclaim that Joe Louis (or Jack\nDempsey or Gene Tunney or, for\nthat mailer, John L. Sullivan)\ncould in balmier days have belted\nthe whey out of all available competition. Net only is it commonplace, it is true. And what's more,\nEzzard Charles and Jersey Joe\nWalcott could do almost the same,\nalbeit with less precision.\nThere is nothing in the way of\nlegitimate competition in the im-\nSOCCER  SEASON\nHAS EARLY START\nTaking advantage of the mild\nweather to begin the local soccer\nseason far in advance of its usual\ndate, Recreational Director Joe\nJohnson announced Wednesday that\nan exhibition match will take place\nSaturday at Civic Recreation\nGrounds.\nJoe said he has made plans to\nline up players of German and\nHungarian parentage on one side\nagainst British and Canadian rivals\nIn what he called \"a national international.\"\nNick  Hospitalized\nWith   Infected   Knee\nDETROIT (AP) - Detroit Red\nWings said Wednesday forward\nNick Mickoski will be in hospital\nat least three days with a knee\nInfection.\nThe ailment will keep him out\nof the Red Wings' weekend road\ntrip to Montreal and New York.\nA club spokesman said the infection developed after Mickoski was\ninjured Feb. 16 in a game against\nToronto.\nVICTORIA GIRL WINS\nMIAMI (CP)\u2014Susan Butt of Victoria Wednesday defeated Gay Miller of Miami 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 in the\nwomen's second round of the Miami tennis tournament.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nJiny, JoiA,\nSKATING\nTODAY \u2014 2 to 4\n4:05 to 5:55\nTerry Lewis and Toronto's George\nChuvalo are a pair of youngsters\nwho might develop, Roy MeMur-\ntry's bubble broke into particles of\nsoap and water when Willie Bes-\nmanoff clobbered him.\nSo, then, Patterson has a chance\nto outlast Joe Louis' reign Of II\nyears. Especially if he doesn't\nfight anybody.\nIt may be he won't fight anybody, at that. Cus D'Amato, properly termed \"Cautious Cus, the\nCautious Cuss,\" by his associates,\nwants to fight Joe Erskine, the\nfighting Welshman.\nOn a good night, with two beer\nunder his belt, Joe Palooka of\ncomic strip fame could rip Erskine\napart. On a bad night, without, as\nfar as I know, any beer at all to\nlend aid, I n g e m a r Johansson\n(who?) did it by a knockout.\nFor Floyd's sake \u2014 and for his,\ntoo \u2014 D'Amato should find a fight\nagainst whoever or whatever\npasses as a legitimate contender.\nCus says it's only necessary that\nhe should be able to hold up his\nhands, but most observers figure\nit takes more than that.\nUtah Centre Signs\nPact With Eskimos\nEDMONTON (CP)-John Urses,\n20-year-old native of Salt Lake City\nand a centre with the University\nof Utah last year, has signed with\nEdmonton Eskimos for the 1958\nWestern Football Conference season, the club announced.\nUrses is the first new United\nStates player signed this year by\nthe Esks. He weighs 200 pounds\nand stands six feet one inch. He\nwas a unanimous All-Skyline Conference selection last season.\nlane; A. Albo vs. L. Ackney; W.\nEuerby vs R. Rose.\n10:30 p.m. \u2014 G. Page vs. H.\nMurphy; G. Beaudry vs J. Cornfield; J. Ink vs. G. Balfour; H.\nInk vs. Percy Smith; W. McFarlane vs. S. E. Dally; D. Perley vs,\nG. K. Fairbairn.\nSaturday: 8 a.m. \u2014 G. Grey vs.\nS G. Hill; D. Waterstreet vs. M.\nMoran; T. Saddler vs. J. Klovance.\nHORSES  HOBBLE\nON SLOPPY TRACK\nBOWIE, Md. (AP) \u2014 Two thor-\noughbreds fell and one of them\nhad to be destroyed Wednesday\nat Bowie race course. The track\nhas been In bad shape since a\n16-inch snowfall Feb. 15.\nTwice the remainder of the program was almost called off, but it\nwas finally completed. Whether\nthere will be racing today Is in\ndoubt.\nBernard fell In the first race,\nbreaking its left shoulder, and was\ndestroyed. Jockey Charles McKee\nwas not hurt. The spectacular fall\noccurred at the 3-16th pole.\nIn the seventh race, Battle Over,\none of the favorites, fell in the\nidentical spot of Bernard's accident. Battle Over struggled to its\nfeet and galloped on behind the\nfield.\nRussians Dominate\nMOSCOW (AP) - Russians fin\nished in the top three positions of\nthe 1500 metres Wednesday and\ncontinued to dominate the speed\nskating match with Norway.\n. Gennady Voronln won the event,\nwhich is 120 feet less than a mile,\nin two minutes, 14.1 seconds.\nBathgate Big Gun\nIn Ranger Triumph\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Handy Andy Andy Hebenton's counter at 19:15,\nWhitby Lauded by Russ Coach\nOSLO (CP)^Russia Wednesday\nranked its arch-rivals from Canada\nas the team to beat in the forthcoming world hockey championships\u2014a conclusion that will hardly\nsurprise the experts.\nBut team manager Pavel Korot-\nkov appeared more confident than\nmany of the experts that his powerful team will be able to take the\ntitle.\nMost observers agree the tournament, starting this Saturday, will\nbe decided March 9\u2014the final day\nwhen Canada and Russia meet.\nRussia arrived here Wednesday\nBombers Meet\nHawks Friday\nIn Hoop Final\nIt's official.\nThe gam* between Trail High\nSchool Hawks and L. V. Rogers\nHigh School Bombers tomorrow\nnight in the gymnasium of the Nelson school will decide the winner\nof the West Kootenay High School\nBasketball championship and the\nright to represent this area In B.C.\nplaydowns at Vancouver early next\nmonth.\nTrail dumped Rossland High\nSchool Royals 35-27 Tuesday night\nin Rossland by hooping 14 points\nin the third period as tlheir rivals\nmanaged only five. After their\ngame in Nelson, Trail has one\ngame remaining, that with Salmo,\nwhich holds down fifth spot in the\nsix-team high school loop.\nIn two meetings this year, Trail\nhas won both. In league competition last month, Trail edged Nelson 20-19 on Howie McSporran's\nfoul shots late in the game. In Kimberley, at the first annual East-\nWest Kootenay basketball tournament, Trail eliminated Nelson 35-\n31 en route to their tourney victory.\nDick Thorpe and Nick Manducca,\na pair of hot-shots who were named\nto the first all-star team at conclusion of hostilities in Kimberley,\npaced the Trail triumph with 13\nand 10 points, respectively. Ron\nFabbro was best for Rossland with\n10. Royals led 8-4 after the first\nquarter, but the tide turned in the\nsecond quarter., when Trail took\nover to lead 13-11.\nfor final practices. Canada is due\ntoday.    .\nKorotkov said Canada's Whitby\nteam, which has crushed all opposition in a series of exhibition games\nsince arriving in Europe Feb. 4, is\nstronger than Canada's last two\nrepresentatives in world competition.\nCanada sent Kitchener-Waterloo\nDutchmen, Allan Cup winners in\n1955, to the winter Olympics at\nCortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, in 1956\nbut the team lost to Russia. It\nalso was upset by the United States\nentry and finished third.\nEASY WINNERS\nIn 1955 Canada was represented\nby Penticton Vs, also Allan Cup\nchampions. That team easily won\nthe world title, whitewashing Russia 5-0 in the final game.\nWhile rating this year's Canadian\nentry higher, Korotkov thinks the\nRussian squad is improved, too.'\n\"Our strategy is more advanced\nnow than it was a year ago,\" he\nsaid.\nRussia was upset in the cham-\nnionships last year by Sweden.\nCanada did not enter a team, pro\ntesting the Russian suppression of\nthe Hungarian revolt.\n\"The Canadians play a hard,\nvery hard game,\" Korotkor said.\n\"But we're not worried. All our\nplayers are in great physical shape.\nThey can take the knocks.\"\nMeanwhile, fans called on officials to be tougher with Canada\nand the United States in a bid to\nkeep rough play out of the games.\nLast Road Game of Season\nTonight for Maple Leafs\nWhen Nelson Maple Leafs visit night when Leafs bowed 2-1 in over-\nRiggin Posts\nFifth Shutout\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Dennis Rig-\ngjn staged a sensational display\nbefore 5789 fans Wednesday night\nas he picked up his fifth shutout\nof the season, leading Edmonton\nFlyers to a 2-0 Western Hockey\nLeague victory over Winnipeg\nWarriors. -\nThe result moved Edmonton into\nsole possession of first place In the\nPrairie division, two points ahead\nof the Warriors. The Flyers have\ntwo games in hand.\nColin Kilburn opened the scoring\nat 14:18, poking the puck into a\nwide-open net. Len Lunde did most\nof the spadework as he pulled three\nWinnipeg defenders and substitute\ngoalie Julian Klymkiw to one side,\nleaving Kilburn a clear chance.\nFrank Rogeveen made it 2-0 at\n17:47 from close in on a pass from\nPatty Ginnell.\nBathgate scored once and assisted\non two other goals Wednesday\nnight as the second-place New\nYork Rangers twice came from\nbehind to beat Chicago Black\nHawks 4-3. The victory again postponed idle Montreal's inevitable\nclinching of the National Hockey\nLeague championship.\nThe Rangers, equalling their,\nlongest unbeaten streak of the\nseason at six games, padded their\nedge over third-place Detroit to\nfive points.\nDefencemen Lou Fontinato and\nJack Evans sent the Rangers ahead\nfor keeps with third-period goals,\nbut it was Bathgate who got them\nrolling.\nBathgate, the Rangers' leading\npoint-getter, tied it at 1-1 early\nin the second period on an angle\nshot after Ted Lindsay scored the\nfirst Black Hawk goal in the first\nperiod. Ed Litzenberser then pushed the last-place Black Hawks\nahead again at 14:00 of the period.\nIt was Bathgate again who helped set up another tie, assisting on\nFREE DELIVERY\nQool Boiikd Bslqm\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Name\n\u2022 Columbia Lager  \u2022 Fernie Lager\n\u2022 Kootenay * Columbia\nPale Ale Cream Stout\nEMPTY   BOTTLE8 COLLECTED  ON  DELIVERY  ONLV\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nFIRST LEAD\nFontinato gave New York its\nfirst lead at 8:00 of the third\nperiod, firing from about 50 feet\nout. Evans then produced what\nproved to be the clincher at 17:48\nslashing one in from goalie Glenn\nHall's right on passes from Bathgate and Harry Howell. Glen Skov\nscored the third Chicago goal ln\nthe last minute of play.\nNine of Bathgate's 25 goals have\ncome against the Black Hawks,\nwhile nine of Litzenberger's 24\nhave been scored against the\nRangers.\nIn the unbeaten streak (five victories and a tie) Bathgate has been\nin on 13 of 19 Ranger goals\u2014scoring five and assisting on eight.\nEric Nesterenko of the Black\nHawks went off the Ice for repairs\nmidway through the final period\nafter a run-in with Gerry Foley\nof the Rangers. Nesterenko needed\nseven stitches to close the cuts on\nhis face and head.\nFoley got. a five-minute penalty\nfor high sticking which opened a\ncut on Nesterenko's head. Nesterenko received a pair of minor penalties\nDunlop Winger\nRejoins Males\nI his advertisemant is not published or deployed by the Liq\nuor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbio\nTORONTO (CP) - Right-winger\nSandy Air of Toronto  leaves  by\n; plane today for Oslo to give added\nstrength to Canada's team in the\nworld hockey tournament.\n[    Manager Wren Blair of Whitby.\nnow playing exhibition  games in\nSweden,    telephoned Air Wednes,\n( day and asked him to   leave   at\nonce for Norway. The champion,\nships start Friday.\nj    Air, who had asked to be drOp\nI ped from the touring team for personal reasons, started packing his\n; bags.\nj    Blair, who said he was concern'\ned with the goal production of the\nright wingers, today must name\nthe 17 players who will comprise\nthe team challenging for the title.\nWhitby right wingers at the moment are Jack McKenzie, George\nI Samolenko,   Frank   Bonello   and\nI George O'Connor.\n|    In    14    undefeated    exhibition\ngames  in  Europe Whitby scored\n145, goals, 28 by right wingers andl Games Thursday:\ngave up 16. >   Toronto at Montreal\nSki Slants\nBy SITZMARK\nWe're back from Kimberley,\nwhere we saw the terrific competitive skiing in the Dominion\nchampionships. We marvelled at\nthe precision with which the events\nwere run off, even under such ad\nverse weather conditions.\nIt was quite evident that all citizens of Kimberley were behind the\ncelebrations 100 per cent. Store\nwindows were decorated with Centennial and Snow Fiesta motifs.\nAlmost every house had a snow\npalace or snowman in the yard.\nOf course, the mild weather had\ntaken its toll on all these works\nof art, but everyone made the best\nof lt, and I'm sure all visitors appreciated the effort, and also the\nhospitality of Kimberley. It was\ntruly a show that the whole community had a hand in.\nGetting back to our own ski hill,\nwe found the snow was completely\nrotten. A few skiers tried the hill\nSaturday but found the going\ntreacherous, so officials closed the\nhill to further skiing.\nWork at the upper end of our\nnew lift\u2014strengthening tower No,\n11\u2014was completed and the lift had\nanother test run. There are still\nseveral bugs in rt which will have\nto be remedied before skiers are\nable to ride it.\nWe had the good fortune to meet\nAl Beaton and Franz Gable In\nKimberley. Al is owner and operator of the ski lifts on Grouse\nMountain and Franz is the ski pro\nthere.\nOn their way back to the coast\nthey stopped over and looked at\nour lift. They really know ski lifts\nand offered some suggestions that\nwe will incorporate into our setup.\nIt does look like our skiing for\nthe. season is finished. We. have\nhad some great weekends and\nshouldn't be too disappointed. All\nski clubs in B.C. are in the same\nfix.\nWe can now concentrate our\nefforts on improving the Centennial\nlift and the hill to make sure we're\nready for the first snows in the\nfall.\nSomeone must have started\nrumor that the snow in Rossland\nis not skiable. I heard that their\nhill had been closed, but, on checking, found them to be still skiing\nthere. If you still want to ski. Ross\nland would be the best place to\nfind enough snow.\nAlso, this weekend at Rossland,\nthe Canadian Junior championships\nare to be held. Spectators will see\n6ome real experts in performance\nWe have just received a letter\nfrom friend Ed Stiles. He has had\ntrouble finding enough Snow for\n\u25a0Jood skiing, even in Austria. H-\nintended tn stav over there until\n'he end of March, but new exoects\nhe and Mrs. Stiles will be home\nabout the 15th.\nEd savs to save him some snow.\nWe can hardly do that, but expect\nhe'll get in a few runs at his old\nskiing haunts on Red Mountain.\nPractice Injury\nHairs Netminder\nTORONTO (CP) - Goaltender\nJacques Marcotte, picked up Sun\nday by Toronto Maple Leafs of the\nNHL, will not be able to play\nagainst Montreal Canadiens on\nThursday night as the result of\nan injury in practice Tuesday.\nMarcotte was hit under the right\neye by a puck shot by Frank Ma-\nhovlich. Coach Billy Reay cancelled plans to use Marcotte in place\nof Ed Chadwick, Leafs' regular\ngoalie  for  the  last two seasons.\nMarcotte, 23, was obtained by\nLeafs from New York Rangers\nfor $5000 and Toronto junior player\nBilly Kennedy.\nLeo Atwell\nPraises\nDunlops\nSpeaking before members of Nelson Gyro Club at Hume Hotel Wednesday night, Leo Atwell, secretary-treasurer of the British Columbia Hockey Association, said\nregistration of amateur hockey\nplayers In Canada totals some\n130,000 less than Russia's 200,000.\nMr. Atwell, a former star with\nNelson Maple Leafs, said Whitby\nDunlops, Canada's representatives\nat the world hockey championships\nwhich begin tomorrow at Oslo, are\nan outstanding team and fully\nworthy of representing this country in International competition.\nDunlops defeated Spokane\" Flyers\nof the Western International\nHockey League last spring in the\nAllan Cup finals at Toronto.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nWalt Tickner's-8-7 victory over\nWalt Triggs at Nelson Curling Club\nWednesday night served two purposes. It was a victory in the presi\ndents-vice presidents competition\nas well as a victory In the third\nclub competition.\nIn the first draw, Jake Haines\nedged Art Ronmark 9-8 in the\n'plugs final of the annual plugs-\ncolts compelition.\nResults:\nW. Triggs 7, W. Tickner 8\nD. M. Sample 16, E. C. Hunt 2\nJ. Haines 9, A. Ronmark 8\nD. Meakins 11, W. Marr 8\nW. Wait 11, A. VanSacker 7\nR. F. Wallace 10, J. Young 8\nL. G. Peerless 9, J. Leeming 4.\nnelson daily news, Thursday, feb- 27,1958 \u2014 13\nSpokane tonight for their second-\nlast game of the Western International Hockey League season, they\nwill be merely going along for the\nride.\nThe battle between the first-\nplace Flyers and third-place Leafs\nwill serve only to end the regular-\nseason schedule, as by no stretch\nof the imagination can either team\nchange its position, whether for\nbetter or worse.\nOf course, Leaf right-winger\nWendy Keller and centre Lee Hyssop will be more eager than most\nof their mates to close out their\n1957-58 road campaign on a victorious note. Keller leads Hyssop\nby eight points in the battle for\nscoring leadership, and Hyssop\npaces Flyer rookie Lloyd Maxfield\nby five in the chase for second\nplace.\nApart from that, nothing is at\nstake. Flyers are prepared to face\nthe cellar-dwelling Trail Smoke\nEaters Saturday night in a preliminary for their semi-final series,\nwhile in Nelson Saturday, Rossland\nWarriors visit to wind up the season. , ,\nLeafs are in better shape, physically and mentally, than they have\nbeen for weeks. Ernie Gare is definitely out with his knee Injury,\nand he won't see action again this\nseason, even in the unlikely event\nthat Leafs reach the Savage Cup\nfinals.\nHowever, Keller and Hyssop are\nrecovering from relatively minor\ninjuries, and playing-coach Shorty\nMalacko is almost over the char-\nley horse he picked up Saturday\nMontreal\nNew York\nDetroit\nBoston \t\nToronto\nChicago\nEchevarria  Popped\nBy Champion Brown\nHAVANA (AP) - Lightweight\nboxing champion Joe Brown of\nNew Orleans knocked out Cuba's\nOrlando Echevarria in the first\nround Wednesday night in the first\nlive telecast of an overseas sports\nevent to North America. Brown\nweighed 135%, Echevarria 136%\nfor the scheduled 10-round bout.\nTwo crushing rights to the jaw\ndid the job for the 32-year-old\nAmerican, who with Echevarria,\nhad been kept under heavy police\nguard for the last 48 hours in fear\nrebels might attempt to stop the\nfight, a highlight of Cuba's national sports festival.\nThe first right dropped Echevarria for a mandatory count of\neight with the bout less than a\nminute old. The second dropped\nthe Cuban champion for the full\ncount. The knockout came with\n10 seconds remaining in the round.\nBoardman Batters\nPerex for TKO\nMIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)\nLarry Boardman's pounding body\nattack won him a sixth-round tech\nnical knockout over Lulu Perez of\nBrooklyn, N. Y., Tuesday night in\na bout scheduled for 10 rounds at\nMiami Beach Auditorium.\nPerez, 134%, complained of severe pain in his left side at the\nend of the fifth. He started out for\nthe sixth but referee Cy Gottfried\n.\"topped the fight.\nBoardman, 139%, from Marlboro,\nCcnn., floored Perez once in the\nsecond round, with a left hook\nto the jaw.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The four\nEnglish Football League matches\ndue to be played Wednesday were\npostponed because of snowbound\nfields.\nThe matches were:\nDivision I\nPortsmouth vs West Brom\nDivision II\nBarnsley vs Sheffield U\nMiddlesbrough vs Leyton Or\nDivision III Northern\nBradford C vs Gateshead\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nHouston \u2014 Paul Jorgenson, 130,\nHouston, outpointed Gil Cadilli, 126,\nSan Francisco, 10.\nHEAVY SNOW BRIGHTENS HOPE\nAMONG SKI MEET OFFICIALS\nROSSLAND (CP) - Between six\nand eight inches of new snow fell\non Red Mountain here Tuesday,\nbrightening prospects for conditions this weekend at the Canadian\njunior ski championships.\nMoist weather which had plagued\nIhe area for days was replaced by\nslightly lower temperatures.\nThere are seven junior men's\nand two girls' teams entered.\nThe male representatives from\nOntario and Quebec have already\narrived at Red Mountain ski lodge.\nDon Bethune of Sudbury, Ont.,\nwas expected here Wednesday to\nsubstitute for Dave Rees, 14-year-\nold North Bay, Ont., youngster\nwho fractured his leg Saturday in\nhis first run down the course.\nStill due were entries from the\ncentral division, which includes the\nNHL STANDINGS\nBy The Canadian Press\nP W   L   T   F   A Pis\n59 37 13 9 209 122\n59 28 23 10 159 164 62\n58 24 25 9 135 172 57\n59 21 29 12 154 160 54\n57 19 28 10 159 169 48\n58 20 32 6 123 153 46\nThe Priceless Power\nof Enthusiasm\nBe for something \u2014 your\nhome, your job, your Country or your God! \"People\ncan die because they lose\ntheir enthusiasm,\" reports\nNorman Vincent Peale.\nRead in March Reader's\nDigest how to get more but\nof life by being enthusiastic.\nDiscover that: \"as you give\nyourself, you find yourself.\"\nGet your March Reader's\nDigest today: 43 articles'of\nlasting interest, including the\nbest from current books and\nmagazines, condensed to save\nyour time.\nPort Arthur-Fort William and Winnipeg areas, as well as two from\nBritish Columbia, one from Alberta\nand two from Wenatchee, Wash,\nThe girls teams will be from the\ncentral division and from B.C. Tho\nB.C. entry consists of Pat Nora,\nElizabeth Green and Sandra Os\nborne, all of Rossland, Gail Atch-\nzener of Kimberley and Beth Rose\nof Vancouver.\ntime to Spokane.\nKeller injured his back Feb. 15\nwhen he scored the tying goal as\nLeafs went on to win 3-2 against\nTrail, and Hyssop has a bothersome leg. Neither bore down especially hard in practice Wednesday night.\nFurther on the plus side of the\nhealth-and-welfare ledger, scrappy Jim Pilla is expected to play\ntonight. Sidelined with a foot injury for the better part of a month,\nthe fiery leftwinger has been skating, and will need only to tone up\nhis physical condition to be in top\n'Strikes V Spares'\nPete Fahlman, with 1490 for seven games, won the 10-pin bowling\ntournament at Nelson Bowl-\na-drome Sunday. He Incoroprated\nthe day's high single, 241, Into his\ntourney - winning total.\nJack Henton was second with\n1483 and Reo Rocheleau third with\n1424.\nOther tourney results: Tony Ce-\nlant 1413; Walt Dubyna 1411; Dave\nFullerton 1405; Mario Delia Seiga\n1402; Chuck Symmonds 1384; Roily\nBrown 1381; Gordon Strong 1372;\nBob Pickering 1365; Stan Grill\n1345; Gordon Pickering 1327; Al\nJackson and R. Zuccolotto 1287\n(tie); Ralph Pettit 1278; Walt\nBailey and Bernie Kearney 1277\n(tie); Jim Allan 1263; Ken White\n1257; Garry Rosling 1136; George\nLane Will.\nIn five-pin play, Rose Matheson\nof Hot Shots paced all women with\na 368 single and 762 triple. Her\nsingle was higher than any posted\nduring the week, but Bob McDonald of Queen's Hotel registered an\n849 triple.\nMen's Commercial League\u2014High\nsingle: Bill Day, Burns Lumber,\n278; high aggregate: Keith Loewen, Troubleshooters, 745; team\nhigh single: B & L 1125; team aggregate: B 4 L 3101.\nSenior Women's League: High\nsingle \u2014 Dot Waterer, Dot's, 261;\nhigh aggregate - Dot Waterer,\nDot's, 649; team high single \u2014\nIsabel's, 1025; team high aggregate \u2014 Isabel's, 2694.\n10-pin League: High single \u2014\nPete Fahlman, Roily Polly's, 199;\nhigh aggregate - Chuck Symmonds, Lucky Strikes, 491; team\nhigh single - Roily Polly's, 812;\nteam high aggregate \u2014 4A's, 2366.\nVariety Club: High single-Jean\nButler, Hot Shots, 250; high aggregate \u2014 Jean Butler, Hot Shots,\n629; team high single \u2014 Lazy\nJanes, 966; team high aggregate-\nLazy. Janes, 2693,\nJunior Women's League: High\nsingle \u2014 Mary Waldie, Corner\nPins, 263; high aggregate \u2014 Mary\nWaldie, Corner Pins, 263; team\nhigh single, Corner Pins, 990; team\nhigh aggregate \u2014 Corner Pins,\n2509.\nMixed Commercial League: Women's high single \u2014 Dot Waterer,\nHume Hotel, 291; women's 'high\naggregate \u2014 Dot Waterer, Hume\nHotel, 692; men's high single \u2014\nBob McDonald, Queen's Hotel, 326;\nmen's high aggregate \u2014 Bob McDonald, Queen's Hotel, 849; team\nhigh single - Queen's H6tel 1284;\nteam high aggregate \u2014 Queen's\nHotel 3406.\nFriday Mixed League: Women's\nhigh single \u2014 Rose Matheson, Hot\nShots, 358; women's high aggregate \u2014 Rose Matheson, Hot Shots\n762; men's high single \u2014 Ken Lam\npard, Friday Five, 274; men's high\naggregate \u2014 Al Morin, Two-Way\nKids, 625; team high single \u2014 For\nestry, 1028; team high aggregate\u2014\nTwo-Way Kids, 2781.\nMalmoe Buried\nBy Canadians\nMALMOE, Sweden (API-Canada's hockey team in the forthcoming world championships defeated the local Swedish club 22-3\nWednesday night in an exhibition\ngame in which the Swedes borrowed from the Canadian side to\nstrengthen their lineup.\nThe Canadians loaned the Swedes\ntwo players\u2014a forward and a defenceman\u2014and in the first period\nthe Malmoe skaters took a 3-0 lead\nbefore the Canadians from Whitby\ncould get rolling.\nAlt three Swedish goals were \u2022\nmade by Swedes themselves.\nThen the Whitby men started\nputting on the pressure and at the\nend of the period they led 0-3. The\nCanadians piled up seven more\ngoals and wound up with a nine-\ngoal attack in the third period.\nIt was the most one-sided score\nof the Canadian exhibition series\nin Europe in which the 1957 Allan\nCup champions won all of their\n15 games.\nIt also was the last exhibition\nfor Whitby in Sweden before the\nworld championships in Oslo, Norway, starting Friday.\nFANGIO BYPASSES\nAUTO MARATHON\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Juan\nFangio, world champion sports car\ndriver from Argentina, has decided\nto pass up the 12-hour international\nGrand Prix of endurance at Seb-\nring, Fla., March 22, it was reported Wednesday.\nStirling Moss of London, the\nworld's No. 2 ranking driver, said\nFangio told him he would be In\nEurope when the Sebring race is\nrun.\nFangio and Moss were In Havana this week to compete in the\nCuban Grand Prix. Fangio was\nkidnapped by Cuban rebels and\nheld until after the race started.\nMoss started the race but it was\nhalted quickly when a car smashed\ninto a crowd of spectators, killing\nfour persons and injuring several\nothers.\nFangio has won the Sebring race\ntwo years in a row.\nSMOKES\nFOR CANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving, with Ihe\nUnited Nations Emergency\nForce in the Middle East\n*1S- sends 400\nEXPORT\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included\nMall order and remittance toi\nOVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC.\nP.O. Box 490, Place d'Armes,\nMontreal, Que*\nThU offer Ii iub|ect to any change\nIn Government Rogulatloni.\nCanada's\nlowest\n\u25a0\nfull-size\nPf\n1958 Studebaker\nSCOTSMAN\nLongest mileage\u2014lowest maintenance\nof any full-size car on the road\nDEFOE SERVICE LTD.\n213 Baker Street\n 14 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27,1958\nL\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\n\u00a3\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\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nz\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nb:\nB\nA\nI\nL\nE\nY\nw\nVES.AHlSDAID,\nTOO-SAME AS YO'\nIS.CARV GRUNT-\nH??'\np-\n\"4\n\u25a0S'i\nLondoners To See\nCanadian NFB Films\nLONDON i<;P)-Britain's Imperial Institute has decided to\npromote a series of Commonwealth films produced by the National Film Board of Canada.\nThe board of governors, at a\nmeeting, approved a suggestion\nthat efforts should be made to\nhave the films shown in British\nschools, The institute will also\narrange showings for educationists, newspaper representatives\nand members of Commonwealth\nhigh commissions in London.\nThe series consists of 13 half-\nhour films, designed to pin down\nthe elusive idea that holds the\nCommonwealth together.\nCriticizes Age\nOf Suspicion\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Rev. Angus\nMacQueen, chairman of the\nUnited Church board of evangelism and social service, Tuesday\nnight said university graduates\nhave no more grasp of literature,\nreligion or politics than the man\non the street.\nMr. MacQueen, a London, Ont.,\nminister, told the board's annual\ndinner the educational system is\nnot producing wise and sensitive\npeople. It would be a mistake to\nswing toward an educational system which tries simply to turn\nout more scientists than the Russians.\nEthical, religious and political\nmen, Mr. MacQueen said, seem\nto have been outstripped in an\nera which has produced the mass\nman\u2014an age of servility, pessimism, suspicion and fear. A trip\nto the moon was not the greatest\nadventure to be prepared for in\nthese limes. The supreme adventure was learning to understand\nthe human heart.\nAussies Abolish\nDictation Test\nDetroit Missile\nFactory Busy\nBy DWIGHT PITKIN\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Business is\nbooming at Chrysler Corpora-\nlion's missile factory.\nI visited this big government-\nowned plant 16 miles north of\nDetroit last November after the\nRussians startled the world by\nputting up Sputnik I. Things were\nhumming then, but in a quiet sort\nof way.\nA second visit to the plant after the army put up the .American Explorer satellite, revealed\na big difference. There are more\nworkers. The operation is spreading from half-use of the plant and\nsoon will take over all the 2,100,-\n000 square feet of floor space.\nNEW TEMPO\nThere is a stepped-up production tempo on the Jupiter 1,500-\nmile-range missile, big brother to\nthe 200-plus-range Redstone.\nIt means the present work\nforce of some 5,500 soon will be\nincreased to 9,000. About one-\nfourth of the employees are engineers and most of the rest are\nhighly skilled.\nChrysler was awarded a new\n$52,000,000 contract in January\nfor production of Redstones and\nJupiters.\nMissiles require precision workmanship\u2014they don't roll off assembly lines.\nBut, as near as they can, mass-\nproduction techniques, are being\napplied to turning out Redstones\nand parallel assembly areas are\nbeing set up to turn out Jupiters\nin the same manner.\nCOMPLETE   PACKAGE\nThe 63-feet-long, six-foot thick\nRedstone is forerunner to the 60-\nfcct-long, eight-feet thick Jupiter.\nThe Jupiter's engine has a thrust\nof 135,000 pounds.\nNow both the Redstone and the\nJupiter will be packaged on a\nmass production basis\u2014the Redstone for the army and the Jupiter for the air force.\nThe Redstone goes out of the\nplant a complete package\u2014everything from the antenna-pointed\nnose to launching pad and looking like something set. up for an\nexploratory  trip to  the moon.\nOrder Hearings On\nStrike Violence\n|Bea-Aeroflot\nPact Signed\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Chairman John McClellan Wednesday\nordered immediate public hearings\nby the Senate rackets investigating committee on violence in the\nKohler strike that began four\nyears ago.\nThe Arkansas Democrat rejected a demand by the committee's other Democrats that the\nhearing start with testimony from\nWalter Reuther, president of the\nUnited Auto Workers, and offi-\nclals of the Kohler Company, I Aeroflot\nWisconsin manufacturers of bath- j airline.\nro?rV,fintures-.. _'\u25a0\u00ab.' _\"*V_ ,\u2022 J Douglas described the new\nMcClellan ordered that the first ( agreement as \"good and fair for\nwitness called should be the both sides.\" He said a Russian\nsmallest witness with respect to | delegation will fly to London next\nimportance.     \u2022 ~onth to complete arrangements\nRobert F. Kennedy, committee | for the service.\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - British\nEuropean Airways and the Soviet state airline, Aeroflot, signed\nan agreement here Wednesday providing for direct London-Moscow\nflights starting this summer.\nLord Douglas signed the 25-\npage document for BEA and\nMarshal Pavel F. Zhigarev, the\nchief,  for  the  Russian\ncounsel, said the lead-off witness\nwill be Allan Graskamp, president of the UAW's Kohler local\n833, but that he did not regard\nhim  as  the  \"smallest\"  witness.\nSAFETY MEASURE\nNational parks regulalions require that all persons, before\nclimbing a mountain, must register with the nearest park warden.\nThe flights will be via Copenhagen.\nBritish officials here said that\ninitially Aeroflot will use the two-\nengined Russian TU-104 jet on\nthe London-Moscow run. After\nthis inilial period the Russians\nare expected to change to their\nfour-engind   turboprop   IL-18.\nBEA will us four - engined\nturboprop Viscounts.\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 Australia moved Wednesday to abolish\nits notorious dictation test used for\nnearly 60 years to keep out unwanted aliens.\nIls notoriety results from the\nfact that it enables the immi-1 \u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e\u201e_\u201e ,\u201e\u201e, _\ngration department to submit an I WINNIPEG (CP) - Two Eski-\naiien to a lest in any European ! >\u2122s are still adrift on an ice floe\nlanguage it dcsires-whetiier the j somewhere on Foxe Basin inside\nnewcomer speaks it or not. For I the Arctic Circle, the RCAF said\nStill Search\nFor Eskimos\nexample, an unwanted Englishman might be handed a printed\ndocument in, say, Bulgarian. Un-\nable to read it, he would be I\nbarred from entry on grounds of\n\"educational inability.\"\nThe government announced\nTuesday that Parliament will be\nasked to abolish the tost under\nproposed new immigration laws, j\nOnly once has the dictation test j\nfailed to keep out an unwanted\nWednesday,\nA spokesman here said a second ski-equipped Dakota will\nleave Trenton, Ont., RCAF station to join in the s e a r c h,\nstarted by a civilian pilot Saturday and taken over Monday by\nthe RCAF.\nThe Eskimos, believed to be a\nfather and his teen-aged son,\nwent adrift during a severe blizzard Friday night. They were last\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE  DIAL\n(PACIFIC   STANDARD   TIME)\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27-   1958\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15-Wake;Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n11:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News .\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:30\u2014All Ihe Weather\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n9:30\u2014Women Today\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Story Parade\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45-Here's Health\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Seven Come Eleven\n11:30\u2014Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Song Serenade\n11:55\u2014Entertainment\n12:00-The Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12.30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Ottawa Philharmonic\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matine*\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boates\n4:45\u2014The Beacon Mystery\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30-UBC Digest\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Legislature Report\n7:35\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Pacific Playhouss\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Chamber Music\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC   STANDARD   TIME)\nFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28,  1958\nalien, when the government de-1 reported fishing near the tiny\n\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0 '    '     ' '   island of Ooglit, about 1,440 miles\nnortheast of here. With them on\nthe ice floe were a team of 11\nhusky dogs, an 18-foot sleigh, a\nprimus stove and a quantity of\nseal meat.\nAn1 advance search base has\nbeen set up on Melville Peninsula, 1,800 miles northeast of\nhere.\nAn Otter aircraft and a helicopter of Wheeler Airlines of St.\nJovite, Que., were standing by at\nChurchill to aid in the search.\nThe firm began the search Saturday.\ncided that a Czechoslovak novel\nist was an undesirable immigrant. Unfortunately for the. immigration department, he was\nalso a linguist. Test after test in\nEuropean languages failed to\nstump him.\nThe department eventually defeated the writer with a dictation\ntest in Gaelic. But victory was\nshort-lived. The immigrant appealed to the High Court, which\nruled that Gaelic was not a European language within the meaning of the act.\nLondon, Ontario Man\nChairs British Club\nLONDON (CP)-J. P. Hutchison, special representative for\nthe foreign trade department of\nthe Royal Bank of Canada, has\nbeen elected chairman of the\nMaple Leaf Luncheon Club, ap,\nAnglo - Canadian organization\nfounded in 1927.\nHutchison, formerly of London,\nOnt., succeeds Jack Stepler of\nVancouver, London representative of the Southam newspapers\nof Canada.\nEric Humphries, Canadian National Railways, was elected vice-\nchairman and George Taylor of\nOntario House, London, was reelected secretary.\nDEATHS\nBy The \"Canadian Press\nClaremont, Calif. \u2014 Ralph Waldo\nTrine, 92, whose inspirational\nbook, In Tune with the Infinite,\nwon him a world-wide following\n60 years ago.\nSan, Juan, Puerto Rico \u2014 Frederick B. Richards, 92, author who\nwas noted for his book Blade\nWatch at Ticonderoga.\nMontreal \u2014 Reginald .A. Gunton,\n65, general contractor and supervisor for Canadian Communications.\nNewmarket, Ont. \u2014 Robert Martin, 83, former secretary of the\nScottish Boy Scouts Association.\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\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Musical Program\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\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Folk Tales of French Can\n4:45\u2014Miss Switch\n5:00\u2014Bands on Parade\n5:15\u2014News\n5:25-On the Scene\n5:30-Sports Desk\n5:40\u2014Byline\n5:45\u201411th Resources Conference\n6:00-Points West\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:35\u2014Oslo World Hockey Report\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Tapestry in Music\n8:00\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014Free Time Political\nBroadcast\n8:45\u2014Piano Music\n9:00\u2014Songs of My People\n9:30\u2014Petit Ensemble\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30--Discussion on Liberty\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n11:57\u2014CBC News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nTELEVISION\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n9:00 Good Morning\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n9:45 Guiding Light *\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n10:15 Love of Lite\n10:30 As The World Turns \u00bb\n11:00 Beat The Clock *\n11:30 Houseparty *\n12:00 The Big Payoff *\n12:30 The Verdict Is Yours *\n1:00 Brighter Day *\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edge of Night *\n2:00 Garry Moore *\n2:30 Godfrey Time '\n2:45 TBA\n3:00 Fun Al Home\n3:30 Dotto *\n4:00 The Early Show\n6:00 The News\n0:15 Doug Edwards News \u2022\n6:30 Sgt. Preston *\n7:00 I Search For Adventure\n7:30 Kingdom of the Sea\n8:00 Richard Diamond \u2022\n8:30 Climax *\n9:30 Playhouse 90 *\n11:00 The News\n11:05 The Late Show\nFOR TODAY\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n8:10 Color Test Pattern\n8:13 Test Pattern\n8:25 NARTB\n8:26 Bible Reading\n8:29 Program Previews\n8:30 Q Toons\n9:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n9:30 It Could Be You *\n10:00 Dough Re Mi *\n10:30 Treasure Hunt *\n11:00 Price Is Right *\n11:30 Kitty Foyle *\n12:00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\n1:45 Modern Romances *\n2:00 I Married Joan *\n2:30 Truth or Consequences\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n\"Sadie McKee\"\n5:00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"At'The Circus\"\n6:30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n6:45 NBC News *\n7:00 Honeymooners\n7:30 State Trooper\n8:00 You Bet Your Life *\n8:30 Dragnet *\n9:00 Sea Hunt\n9:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford \u00ab\n10:00 Rosemary Clooney (C)\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Slightly Dangerous\"\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n5:00 Woody Woodpecker *\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Club *\n6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Pride of the Family\n7:30 Circus Boy *\n8:00 Zorro *\n8:30 Real McCoys *.\n9:00 Pat Boone Show *\n9:30 Duffey's Tavern\n10:00 Navy Log *\n10:30. Nightbeat\n10:35 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Prejudice\n5. Injure\n9. Guiding\nrope for a\nhorse (Fr.)\n10. Smlfrhy's\nblock\n12. Beginning\n13. Stop\n14. Grow old\n15. Not many\n16. Calcium\n(sym.)\nIT. Colored\nspots\n20. Owns\n21. Humor\n22. Winged,   ,\nas birds\n(her.)\n23. Kinds of\nhouses\n27. Sound a\nhorn\n28. Coin\n(Swed.)\n29. Pismire\n30. Shade of red\n34. Pronoun\n35. Asian ox\n36. River into\nEnglish\nChannel\n37. Lassoer\n39. Port\n41. Sugar\nsorghum\n42. Manifest\n43. Wooden\nblocks\n44. Mr. Whit,\nman\nDOWN\nt White-\n\\    striped\nantelope\n2.Insert\n3. Mature\n4. Place\n5. Billiard\nrods\n6. Afresh\n7. Yellow\nbugle\n8. Misname\n9. Friable\nearth\n11. Rents\n15. Tuft\nof hair\non horse's\nleg\n18. Taunt\n19. Ignited\n20. Hasten\n22. Af.\nfirm\n23. Steps\n24. Kind\n.of\nbridge\n25. Fate\n26. Epoch\n30. Baby.\nIonian\nlunar\ncycle\n31. Even\n32. Put\nforth\nef-\nfort\n33. Canvas\nshelter\nbkhsi Biaraa\n_____ _____\n__B_ ______\n________ -II\n__ Hara\naa____3 a__\n_aa __aa __\naa ________\n______ ____\n_____ _____\n_a__ _OE_\nYcBtorday'i Answef\n35. Robber\n(slang)\n38. For\n39. In what\nmanner\n40. Polynesian\ndrink\n%\ni\n1\n3\nX\n|\n5\nG\n7\no\n%\n'>\nI\n10\nII\na\nVA\n13\n14-\nf\/l\n%\n.5\n%\n10\n17\nIO\n19\nf(,\n20\n^\n21\n^\n1%\n23\n24\n25\n2b\n27\n%\n20\n%\n%\nVA\nIS\n|\n30\n3)\n32\n33\n31\n%\n35\n|\nV\/A\n36\n37\n36\nl\n39\nAQ\nA.r\n^,\n4-2\n%\n43\n,\u00bb\nM\n41\n%\n2-7\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work Hit\nAX YD LB AAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is use4\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOSM MAP PRTN SPP  VPN USMJ\nAB  MAFL PRBN-JCRBV.\nYesterday's Cryptoquotoi THE BUYER NEEDS A HUN\u00ab\nDRJP EYES, THE SELLER NOT ONE \u2014 HERBERT.\nSistrifcuttf t* -if nthiMi Syndicate   \t\n qc|(\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story ~  PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN  NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nFINLAY \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert, Finlay, 1172 Marianna\nCrescent, Trail, B.C., at the Trail-\nTa-lanac Hospital, Feb. 24, a son.\nSTRAUTMAN - To Mr. and\nMrs. Robert Strautman of R.R. 1,\nNelson, on Feb. 25. at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital,\" a son.\nMAG1ERA - To Mr.' and Mrs.\nH. K. Magiera of 622A Victoria\nStreet, on Feb. 25, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, a son.\nLANDY \u2014 To Mr, and Mrs. Patrick Landy ol Box 304, Salmo, on\nFeb. 25 at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, a daughter.\nKELLY \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Kelly of 609 Innes Street,\non Feb. 25, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, a son.\t\nHELP WANTED\nHELP WANT_D\nCLERK OF WORKS\nKootenay Lake General Hospital wiil receive applications\nfor the post ol Clerk of Works\non new hospital project. Duties\nto commence as close as possible to March 1, 1958. \u2022\nApplicants stale qualifications, experience, references,\nsalary expected. Candidates\nshould have highest character\nreferences and good general\nknowledge of construction.\nApplications in Writing to:\nAdministrator K.L.GH-\nNelson, B.C.\nLEARN DRAFTING OR BLUE-\nprint reading by home-study for\na well-paid secure job. Diploma\nawarded. Free folder. Mention\ncourse of interest. Primary\nSchool of Drafting, Dept. G,\nBox 123, Station \"Q\", Toronto.\nWE NEED TWO GOOD MEN\nwith cars to manage established\nFuller Brush route. Earnings\n$100 weekly. Men selected will\nbe carefully trained, Write Rex\nThomson, Creston, B. C, or\nnhnne 442-F.\nAMPLICATIONS WILL BE HE-\ncelved for city newspaper carrier boys. Apply Circulation Department. Nelson Dailv News.\nWANTED - MAN WITH FAMILY\nto work on farm. Must be qualified and experienced. Apply\nBox 8686. Dally News.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE_\nWANTED - HAIRDRESSER. AP-\nply Unemployment Insurance\nCommission.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT\nting, appliances, oil burners serviced. Norm Bowcock. Bonded\nLicenced Gas Fitter, ph, 3FI5.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd., or phone\n186-X-3.\t\nEG CAT FOR HIRE. SKIDDING,\nroad buliding and land clearing.\nPhone 247-X, Nelson.       \t\nRELIABLE 17-YEAR-OLD GIRL\nwill baby sit days or evenings\nPhone 1572-Y. \t\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE\nservations at the V 0 L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash When\nyou come down lor the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar.\nSHOPPING OR VACATIONING -\nIt's more fun when you stay at\nthe Colonial Hotel. Exact centre\ndowntown Spokane shopping and\ntheatre district at Post and Main.\nClean, quiet rooms at $2 to $4.\nRamp narking across Ihe slreM\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\ns\nA HOUSEWIFE CAN\nSAVE HERSELF A\nOF STEPS IF SHE\nALWAYS TAKES\nSOMETHING AS\nSHE GOES.\n__-___.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nLtd.\nUSED  CARS\n1957 Olds Super 88 Sedan\nFully rtouipped\n1956 Olds 88 Sedan\n1956 Plymouth\n4-Door Suburban\nRadio and Automatic.\n1955 Plymouth 4-D. Sedan\nAutomatic.\n1954 Chev. 4-Door Sedan\n1954 Pontiac 2-Door Sedan\nRadio.\n1953 Chev. 4-Door Sedan\nRadio, Turn  Indicators.\n1953 Chev- 5 Pass. Coupe\n1953 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan\n1953 Studebaker Sedan\nAn Economy Car,\n1952 Chev. 4-Door Sedan\n1952 Meteor Tudor\nPriced at $695.00\n1951  Studebaker Coupe\nA Steal at $325.\n1950 Ford Sedon\nReady for the Road. - $325.00\n1949  Ford Tudor -\n$105.00\nFOR A FAIR DEAL SEE\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nFOR SALE BY OWNER - MOD-\nern home at Nelson. Beautifully\nsituated on North Shore, facing\nLakeside Park and Fairview.\nRanch style, oil furnace, modern\nin every respect, 100 ft. frontage,\n1.06 acres, some fruit trees, moderate taxes. Full price $13,000.\nFor information call 348-Y.\nFOR SALE AT KOOTENAY BAY,\nB.C.\u20144 room semi-modern log\nhouse. Water, electricity, propane cooking. Ideal as summer\nhome. Situated on 200x150 ft. lot.\nTerms to reliable party. Apply\nH. E. Woods, Gen. Del., North\nSurrey, B.C.\nFOR SALE - DUPLEX HOUSE,\n6 rooms, furnace and bath in\neach. Apply 715 Josephine SI.\nHOUSE AND LOT IN K1MBER-\nley, B.C. Apply H. Harrop, phone\n1278.\nRENTALS\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n323 Vernon St.,\nPhone 35 - 36\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\"\ntractionizmg. Used parts for 11149\nto '52 Austins. '49 to '51 Hillmans.\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '33\nAustin. Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 13B3-L-2, Box 382,\n24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nROOM AND BOARD\nCCM 3-SPEED BICYCLE, SPORTS\nmodel. Recently overhauled, $30.\nPhone Gerry, 5B5-R.\nTRAILERS\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2 ]\nyoung gentlemen  Phone 1179-X    i\n\u25a0ROOM AND BOARD -PHONE!\n1196-Y.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young man. Phone. 284-R.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH. S.  ELMES,\nS.  ELMES,  ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nJH. C. McCORQUODALE. B.C.L.S\nLand and Engineering Surveys.\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr. Rav Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-Bth St.. Nelson. Phone 1-14-H\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil*\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n873 Baker St.   Nelson   Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances. Free Estimates.\nPhone 774^523 Cedar St., Nelson\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcIIardy Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar,  Phone 2701\nCranbrook.  Phone JU-6-2270\nFor the Best in Mobile Homes\nSee These:\u2014\n* PATHFINDER      * REX\n\u25a0k MERRIMAN      * A.B.C\nir MARATHON\nAlso a Good Selection of\nUsed Cars.\nTO RENT\n2nd   Flooi*  K.W.C.   Block\n2 Large, Attractive  Offices\nNewly decorated, large windows,\nVenetian   blinds.   Rent   monthly,\nincluding  heat and light \u2014 $55.\nApply\nC. D. BLACKWOOD AGENCIES\n536 Ward St.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms; furnished and heated.\nRates by day, week, month. \u2014\nAllen Hotel, 171 Baker Street.\nNEW MODERN HEATED 3 RM.\napartment with electric range.\nAdults. Apply 1019 Latimer St.\nor Phone 790-Y after 6- p.m.\nFOR RENT OR SALE - NORTH\nShore, about 10 miles, 2 bedroom\nhouse, fully modern, with excellent beach. Phone 1766-L-2.\n3-RM. URD. FLOOR DUPLEX -\nPrivate entrance, private bath,\ncentral. $35 a month. Phone\nM04-Y after 6 p.m.\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars\nphone 77.\ni-RuUM HOUSE. GAS FURNACE\nwired for TV. Close in. Adults\nB'-v anas. Dailv News.\n5 ROOMED HOUSE, 311 OBSER-\nvatory. Apply 1212 Hall Mines\nRoad.\n2-ROOM    FURNISHED    APART-\nment, close in. Phone 839-R.\nFOR RENT - HEATED H0U6E-\nkeeninT room. Phone 726-X.\n\u2022RM. FURN. APT, AVAILABLE\nMarch tsl. Phone 44-Y-3.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. 614 Victoria.\n1-BR.   HOUSE   FOR   RENT-PH.\n1323-L, Nelson.\nCampbell C          4.25\nCampbell R. L.      7.70\nCan Met ,      1.4S\nCassiar      7.30\nCentral Patricia     1.00\nChimo        50\nChromium      2.70\nConiaurum  34\nCons Denison     12.00\nCons. Discovery     2.91\nCons Halliwell  26\nCons Mining & Smeltin    17.50.\nNEW  YORK   (AP)-The  stock   New   York   exchange,   Mclntyre j Con Sub\"\u2122 I II     Z\nMARKET TRENDS\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27,1958 \u2014 15\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily Newt does not hold  Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO   STOCKS\nBailey Selburn   7.30\nCalgary and Edmonton .... 18.3714\nCdn Atlantic   4.00\nCanadian Devonian   5.45\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\n.07V_\n15.12%\n.53\n.26\n.27\n.14\n.08\n2.42\n.43%\n.25\n.13\n.12\n.58\n2.50\n.85\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAnglo Rouen  ...\nAtlin Ruff\t\nAumacho\t\nAumaque  \t\nAunor  :\t\nBarnat \t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBoymar \t\nBroulan    \t\nBrunswick  \t\nBuffalo Ank \t\nmarket rose quietly but substan\ntially Wednesday as it ended a\nstring of five daily setbacks.\nThe rise added an estimated\n$1,250,000,000 to the quoted value\nof stocks listed on the New York\nStock Exchange, based on the\nrise in The Associated Press\naverage.\nBrokers said it was a technical\nrebound.\nKey issues rose fractions to 2\npoints.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose $1 to $159.30\nwith industrials up $2.20, rails unchanged and utilities up 10 cents.\nAmong Canadian issues on the\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nAUCTION OF TIMBER SALE\nX-77768\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 10:30 a.m.\n1 local time), on Monday, March\n24th, 1958, in the office of (he\nForest Ranger, New Denver,\nB.C., the Licence X-77768, to cut\n24,000 cubic feet of cedar and\nhemlock sawlogs, 18,000 lineal\nfeet of cedar poles and piling and\n30,200 cedar fence posts, on an\narea situated1 near Silverton\nCreek, Kootenay District.\nThree 13) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend in person may submit\na sealed tender, to be opened\nat Ihe hour of auction and treated\nas one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the District Forester,\nNelson, B.C.; or the Forest\nRanger, New Denver, B.C.\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\n\u00ab\\tlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B C\u201e Ph\nPAcihe   6357\nCAFE EQUIPMENT - ELECTRIC\nrange, fridge, 20 cu. ft. deep\nfreeze, slicer, electric 2 basket\nfryer, dishes, cooking utensils,\netc. Used one season only. Premises for rent April 1. Apply Koo-\ntenay Cafe, Creston, B.C.\nSMALL COTTAGE IN FAIRVIEW.\nPhone 1287-L.\nFOR RENT - HOUSE, MARCH 1,\nPhone 1933-L.\nPARTLY FURN. 2 RM. SUITE\ngas. 723 Silica.\n3 ROOM SUITE FOR RENT-\nFront St.\nPARTLY FURNISHED 6 - ROOM\nhouse for rent. Phone 926-L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWE WILL DELIVER BY OUR\nown truck pullets of any age.\nDelivery to be made in July or\nAugust. Orders taken from now\non. No deposit necessary. Sound,\nhealthy stock guaranteed. White\nLeghorns, New Hampshires,\nWhite Rocks and Cross breeds.\nAppleby's Poultry Farm, Mission\nClt\". B.C.\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE OR TRADE >- 30 CAT\nwith bulldozer, in good condition.\nTrail Aulo Wreckers, ph. 2441.\n3Mamt Saily -fawn\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday', 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance.\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  \u201e   $ 5.00\nSix months    t 9.50\nOne year        $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely.\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown.\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nIn Rossland, Mrs. Ross Saundry.\nFOR SALE AT CRAWFORD BAY:\n10 yearling Holstein heifers: 10\n6-month old Holstein heifers: 6\nBorder Collie pups. H. Harrop,\nNelson, phone 1278.\nGUERNSEY MILKING COW FOR\nsale, Ihird calf. Apply N. Sam-\nsonoff. Koch's, Passmore. B.C.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED -> SINGLE AXLE LOG-\nging trailer complete with bunks,\nwinch and sub-frame. Would prefer air brakes. Have Woods 7-8\nyd. gravel box to trade. Kenneth\nLautings, Edgewater, B.C.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags, free of buttons, 10c per\nlb. Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED - USED CHEST OF\ndrawers or child's wardrobe.\nPhone 552-Y.\nWOOD   AND   COAL   STOVETN\ngood condition. Phone 1761-R-3.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - A BROOCH, BETWEEN\nHamilton Ave. and Civic Centre,\nBlue and white rhinestones in\nfloral design. Reward for finder.\nPhone 1028-X.\nFOR SALE: TWO CLOSET DOORS\ncomplete with door jambs and\nhardware; several window sash\nframes complete; one 700-17 tire\nand wheel; one oil lurnace conversion complete. Phone 1003-R\nor call 723 6th Street.\nUrt t>AL_-2 Cl,\u201ea,s, V ,ai'__L\nboilers: 4' diam. x 12'; 5' diam.\nx 16'. 350' Hi\" clean copper\ntubing. Phone 378-X-2.\nSET OF CARRYALL DRUMS FOR\nD7 or D18 cat. Good shape, very\ncheap. Box 62 or phone 127-R,\nNakusp,\t\n2 BED CHESTERFIELDS, 1-\n9x12 viscal rug. Phone 178, Lakeside Auto Court.\nPorcupine gained 1, International\nNickel %, Hudson Bay Mining Vi,\nAluminium Ltd., Vs and Canadian\nPacific _. Walker - Gooderham\nlost Vs.\nAmerican stock exchanged\nprices also were generally higher.\nGainers included Pacific Petroleum and Imperial Oil. Shawinigan lost % and Canadian Marconi V\u00ab among other stocks in\nthe Canadian section of the\nAmerican exchange.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Trading\nwas moderate and prices mixed\nWednesday on the Montreal and\nCanadian  Stock Exchanges.    '\nBase metals were mostly firm\nwith Aluminum up 'A at 27 and\nInternational Nickel stronger by\n1%.\nUtilities and banks were down.\nCalgary Power, 68>_, dropped '_.-\nConstructions and newsprints\nwere mixed.\nWestern oils were somewhat\nfirmer in a fractional range. Canadian Oil was up Vi at 26 and\nPacific Pete was up V. at 17%.\nMines and refining oils were\nsteady under moderate trading.\nCanadian Atlantic Oil was up 20\ncents at 3.95.\nClosing averages: Banks off .78\nat. 47.71.  Industrials  were up  .2\nat, 238.1  paners up 5.96 tn a new I \u25a0UsciwilH\nhigh at 1103.23 and utilities oft .3  mSmb 1>\nConwest      2.75\nCopper Corp  19\nCopper Man  09\nD'Aragon     14%\nDonalda      15%\nDyno  08\nEast Malartic     1.60\nEast Sullivan      2.00\nElder Gold     66\nFalconbridge     23.75\nFaraday\nFrobisher .\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel.\nGlen Uranium\nGoldale     \t\nGoldcrest\nGold Eagle\nGolden Manitou\n1.59\n1.46\n8.50\n5,85\n.11\n.16\n.07%\n.07'\n.30\nGunnar Gold     15.75\nh\n137.4\n68.77,\nGolds  were up  .50  at\nVarscni'viB- Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver. Lodge :..., -....\nBralorne\t\nCanusa '\t\nCariboo Gold       \t\nFarwest Tungsten ,..:\t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc    \t\nGrandview \t\nHamil Sil     ''.    ...\nHighland Bell\t\nKoolenay Base Metals ....\nNational Ex      \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Border \t\nOuatsino  \t\nSheep Creek  :\t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Ridge      \t\nSilver Standard   :'.....;\t\nSunshine Lardeau \t\nTaylor- \t\nTrojan  '.\t\nOILS ,\nAllex .       ....\u201e'..\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary and Edmonton ...\nCharter \t\nHome \t\nNew Gas Ex \t\nOkalta Com \t\nPacific Pete     \t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite\nFOR SALE - 21\" FLEETWOOD\nTV set in excellent condition. Ph.\n1622-Y.\nB C Forests\nB C Telephone\nCrown Zelier (Can)   16.00\nInland Nat Gas   2.40\n\u00bb Bi___ TANKS; CAPACITY 3501 Lucky Lager         ,  4.40\n\"\u25a0lUnns. Mfl.nn each. Ph. 378-X-?. I MacM & Bloedel B  25.75\n' Mid Western    1.45\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies Si.\n.14-\n5.50\n.03\n.67\n,09\n.09\n.92\n.05\n.05\n1.25\n.01\n.16\n1.44\n.07%\n.19%\n.36\n4.05\n.05\n.03\n.14\n.10\n.12\n.16%\n.15\n.37\n17.50\n1.65\n15.00\n1.10\n1.40\n47.25\n.30\n12.00\nRoyal Can 31\nSparmac  13%\nUnited   , * 2.03\nVanalta 16\nVanlor 116\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers    .'     1.35\nAlberta Distillers Vt     1.25\n10.00\n43.25\nWAjHINU MACHINE, 2 GALVAN-\nlzed tubs. $45.. Phone 1994-X.\nBLUE COLLAPSIBLE STROLLER\n-Phone 1669-Y.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS    -\nFridays, ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING AT THE\nMarvelle Beauty School in Trail\nFor information write to 1319\nBay Ave. or phone 2822.\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EF\nfective. 3 weeks supply $2,50, 9\nweeks $6.00 at Fleury's Pharmacy and all druggists\nWANTED TO RENT\n2 BR. HOUSE WITH BASEMENT\nand heavy wiring. Good tenants.\nBox 8754. Daily News.\nRESPONSIBLE TENANT D E-\nsires unfurnished suite or apartment. Box 1955.\n3 .RM.   HEATED   SUITE   FOR\ncouple. Box 1975. Daily News.\n1941   FORD   COACH   PARTS   -\nCheap. Phone 2014-L.\t\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD\n[or all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood Contrac\ntors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 3600 E\" Has\ntings St.. Vancouver, B.C., GLen\nbjurn 1500.\nPowell River    32.00\nTrans Mtn     42.50\nWestminster Paper     23.50\nWestern Plywoods\nl-NLISTED\nAlta, Gas Trunk\nTrans Can Com\nTrans Mtn Unit .\nWestcoast Com _\nWestcoast Trans\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can\nRoy Bank of Can\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund\nCommonw'lth   Int\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage \t\nTrans Can \"C\" ..\nHarminerals  \t\nHeadway   \t\nHollinger      \t\n.10\n.58\n21.75\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration    ;.\nInt. Nickel \t\nlonsmith    \t\n42.00\n.55\n73.75\n 11\nKenville\n.06\nKerr Addison\t\n'.abrador  \t\nLakeshore\n18.12%\n    15.25\n      4.80\nUtile Long Lac ...\n,orado   \t\njouvic't   \t\nMacassa      \t\n1.95\n 56\n 12%\n2.86\nMacDonald    \t\nUadsen R. L\t\nMalartic G. F. \t\nManeast ,\n.29%\n      2.35\n1.15\n 07\nMaritime Mining\nMart McNeely \t\nMcLeod\n.43\n.16\n      1.06\nMcKenzie R L\t\n 18\nMilliken       \t\n2.11\nMining Corp\t\n    10.00\nMogul\n 40\nMulti Mins\t\nNew Alger \t\n.50\n 06'1\nNew Delhi \t\n 50\nMew Harricana \t\nNew Jason    \t\nNew Lund     . ..\nNipissing\n.16'.\n      1.23\nMoranda New \t\nNorgold\n88.23\n 07''\nNormetals  \t\nVorpax  \t\n2.30\nCan Decalta   10\nCon East Crest  32\nDuvex         08\nHome A           15.25\nLiberal Pete           1.30\nLong Island Pete  08%\nMarigold     15\nMidcon         60\nNat. Pete      1.80\nNew Continental 30\nOkalta       1.45\nPacific Pete     17.50\nProv Gas      2.50\nRoyalite\nSpooner        \t\nSlanwell Oil \t\nTriad , \t\nUnited Oils     \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum      \t\nArgus 2nd pfd\t\nAlias St. \t\nB.A. Oil \t\nBathurst Power \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s    \t\nB.C. Electric 4\"4s \t\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Power A\nBurrard A\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Ccianese ....\nCan. Cement\t\nCan Chem Co \t\nCan. Malting\nCan'Oil\n12.37%\n.19\n.75\n4.50\n2.09\n27%\n23\n27%\n48%\nI6V4\n35Vi\n17V4\n42\n6V1\n42\n94\n10%\n40%\n7'A\n27 %\n1414\n13%\n28%\n5\n51%\n26\nCanadian Pacific Rly        23%\nCan. Packers B \t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas       \t\nDist. Seagram   \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium \t\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical.\nDom. Textiles    \t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer   \t\nFord A  \t\nGatineau \t\nGen. Steel Wares \t\nGypsum Lime\t\nHoward Smith \t\nImperial Oil   \t\nImp. Tobacco   \t\nInt. Pete       \t\n36\n8%\n33\n26\n25%\n11\n53%\n10%\n7%\n15%\n15%\n75 > 2\n31U\n80\n29%\n29%\nIke Hints Tax\nCut Possible\nWASHINGTON UP) - President Eisenhower said Wednesday\na tax cut is a possibility if, as he\nput. it, there is a deepening of the\nbusiness depression.    -\nIn discussing U.S. business conditions at a press conference, he\nused both the words depression\nand recession.\nEisenhower said a tax reduction would not necessarily'be his\nadministration's last resort in\ndealing with economic condititns.\nHe said a great deal of money\nis going to be spent on publje\nworks, flood control, defence and\nother domestic budget items. \u25a0\nEisenhower said he looks for\nsome increase in job opportunities in March\u2014a beginning] of tha\nend of Ihe present recession. He\nadded it will take some time to\nstop the recession but he hopes\nbusiness will be much better by\nmid-year.\nOn other topics, he was questioned about his recent 30-min-\nute talk wilh Russia's new ambassador, Mikhail Menshikov.\nEisenhower said there was some\ngeneral talk about such matteri\nas the possibility of a summit\nconference.\nHe replied to Republican demands from the middle West that\nhe fire Agriculture Secretary\nEzra Benson by praising the cabinet minister as a man of courage and honesty.\nLaura Secord  _\n19%\nLoblaw A  \t\n23\nLoblaw B  \t\n23\nMassey Harris\t\n6\nMcColl Frontenac\t\n51\nMont. Loco  \t\n15Vt\nMoore Corp _..   _\n66\nNat. Steel Car  \t\n21Vi\nPage Hershey     \t\n119\nPowell River\t\n32%\n59%\nRuss. Industries \t\n7%\nShawinigan  \t\n24%\nSicks Brew \t\n24'\/.\n16%.\nSleel of Canada      \t\n48\nTaylor Pearson  _.\n7%\nUnion Gas of Can _..._\n74%\nUnited Steel  -\n13%\nWestern Grocers A \t\n32\nFREE LIBRARIES\nThe principle of free public libraries was established in Britain\nby an act of Parliament in 1850.\n^n\nNorth Can          1.12\nNorth Rankin \u25a0 48\nOpemiska            5,80\nPickle Crow      1,20\nPlacer Devel     10,00\nPreston E. D     6.10\nQuebec Lab         07\nQuebec' Lilhium             5,65\nQuebec  Metallurgical       1.00\nQuemont      8.00\nRadiore   '  ,51\nRayrock            1,00\nSan Antonio        54\nSherritt Gordon      4,05\nSladacona    24\nSleep Rock         9.15\nSullivan Con      2.35\nSylvanite            1,23\nTeck Hughes      1.70\nTemagami          1,20\nThomp-Lund   96\nTombill 29 \u2022\nUnited Keno        3.70\nUpper Canada  73\nVentures      23,00\nViolamac            1.25\nWaite Amulet      6.00\nWiltsey Goglin  20%\nWright Hargreaves      1.58\nYeliowknife Bear     76\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc         .22\nUSE THIS FORM\nTo Order Extra Copies of\n23RD  ANNUAL    *\nPICTORIAL\nAND\nINDUSTRIAL\nEDITION\nMAIL, OR GIVE IT TO YOUR NEWSPAPER\nCARRIER OR TO THE DAILY NEWS\nCIRCULATION  DEPARTMENT.\nPRINT  NAMES AND ADDRESSES  PLAINLY  IN-\nBLACK  PENCIL\nName  \t\nAddress '- I\t\ncity-  , :\t\nName  _\nAddress\nCity    ....\nName  ..\nAddress\nCity   __\nLOGGER'S CHOICE\nName  \u201e\nAddress\nCity    __\n43.00\n44.00\n44.00\n43.00\n48.50\n49.50\n59.00\n61.00\n7.93\n8.70\n6.31\n7.15\n3.20\n3.50\n9.29\n10.05\n4.50\n4.95\n4.80\n5.20\nNEW AIR SERVICE\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 London\nand Moscow will be linked by\ndirect air service, starting this\nsummer, as a result of an agreement due to be signed here today'\nbetween British European Airways and Ihe Soviet state airline Aeroflot. Following this new\nagreement, the Soviet Union is\nexpected to 'Investigate the pos-,\nslbilities of competing in a few\nyears against British and American jet planes on transatlantic\nservices.\nName \u201e\nAddress\nCity    __\nMCCULLOCH'S\nNEW\nSUPER SSI\nlost power\n'per pound\"\noi<\nName  ..\nAddress\nCity    __\nYour Own Name ..\nYour Own Address\nSee the new McCulloch \"Thrifty\nMac\"at only 8189.50-tASYTERMS\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nWELDING &  EQUIPMENT\nCO    LTD.\nPHONE 1402\nCopy J!\/  anc' \/   P\u00b0s*a9e\nPlus 5% S.S. and M.A. Tax I\nTotal of 39c per copy covers wrapping and mailing\nby us to anywhere in Canada, Great Britain\nor the United States.\nPHCNE   1844   ,\nI     Nelsmt Ir\/tUt Heiua\nj ;  J\n 16 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 27,1958f\nAre You\nSingin' the Blues Again?\nSTOP RIGHT NOW . . .\nand Use\nRICHARD HUDNUT\nCREME RINSE\nHAIR CONDITIONER\n$1.25 and $2.00\nSEE OUR SPECIALS ON\nHot Water Bottles, School Binders, Candles,\nBooks, etc. All this week.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nSTRIKE VIOLENCE\nMELBOURNE (Reuters)\u2014Violence erupted on Melbourne\n6treets when police clashed with\nstriking seamen and stevedores.\nDock workers struck three days\nago to protest cuts in working\ngangs. \u25a0 aill\nsrael Views\nArab Unions\nWith Concern\nJERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel reserves her.right of action\nif Iraq moves troops to the Jordan - Israeli frontier, Premier\nDavid Ben-Gurion announced Wednesday.\nHe was speaking at a press conference , in reply to questions\nabout the newly formed Iraqi-\nJordan federation and Egypto-\nSyrian republic.\nBen-Gurion said Israel had not\nbeen informed that the Egypto.\nSyrian republic would respect the\narmistice agreements with Israel.\nBen-Gurion said he is in favor\nof a total embargo on further\nsupplies of arms to the Middle\nEast, but not an embargo which,\nas at present, applied only to Israel.\nHe said Israel regards the\nemergence of the two new Arab\nunions \"with some concern, especially as at their head are military   dictatorships.\"\nWOMAN ELECTROCUTED\nSARNIA, Ont. (CP) - A 25-\nyear-old Sarnia housewife was\nelectrocuted Tuesday night as\nshe vacuumed an apartment she\nshared with her chemist husband. Telfer L. Thomas found the\nbody of his wife, V i r g i n ia,\nsprawled on the floor, one hand\nclutching a still-operating vacuum cleaner, the other grasping\na fallen lamp. Police were ordered to examine the appliances\nfor short-circuits.\ntogether\n-with.\nOdds...\nand Ends\n...by M.D.B.\nA nimrod and photographer, one\nof our staff who lives oh the North\nShore, was surprised to see-deer\nin the beam of his flashlight the.\nother night. They were apparently\nenjoying the apples \u25a0 left-.on the\ntrees from last fall. Of course this\nwas right up his alley, and with\ncamera, flashlight and flashbulb\nhe shot them. He said it was the\nfunniest tiling to see for they both\nseemed to shoot straight up into\nthe air when the flash went off.\nWhat amused his most,: though\nwas their staggering, waltzing sort\nof gait as they walked away. He\nthought the light must have blinded\nthem a little, but I have a notion\nit was the imbibing tliey had been\ndoing in eating those apples.\n* *   *\nI see by the paper that Britons\nare fearing the passing of brewed\ntea as Ceylon considers manufacturing crystals for instant tea.\nWhat slaves we have become to\nspeed when we can't even wait\nfive minutes for a good cup of\ntea. Nor does it end here. For\nthose who haven't the time to\ncook rice there is a kind\u2014I suppose it is pre-cooked\u2014that cooks in\na minute, and even potatoes come\nin tins ready for warming. The\nlast straw, of course, is a whole\nmeal frozen in a little pan that\nyou just shove into the oven to\nwarm.\n* *   *\nWhat is the world coming to?\nRemember not too many years ago\nhow the little innocent, bride didn't\ndare throw tin cans into her garbage for fear the neighbors would\nsnort and make snide remarks\nabout \"these can opener cooks.\"\nThat was in a day when women\ngathered the fruit of a large garden and over a hot stove preserved\nthe results of her weeding and cultivating in jars to line her fruit\ncellar shelves. How times have\nchanged! When the day of the\nhome cooked meal passes, there\nwill be a great wailing and gnashing of teeth among the male population for sure, but with the following generation the little bride\nwon't have to listen to her spouse\nextolling the virtues of his mother's\ncooking\u2014this would seem to be\nthe silver lining to the cloud.\n* \u2666  *\nYes, fellows, cooking is becoming a forgotten art, but do not fret,\nas long as the little woman can\nstir a cup of milk into the contents\nof a package and put it in the\nautomatic oven, you'll get pies,\ncakes and cookies and if she can\nthaw out the packages from the\ndeep freeze you won't starve, but\nil's rather cold comfort for those\nwho have a gourmet's taste buds.\nSurvey Predicts New Peaks\nFor Forest Industries\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Canada's forest industries will reach new\npeaks by 1980 but will occupy a\nsmaller share of the national\neconomy, a survey for the Gordon economic commission forecasts.\n\u25a0 The survey, issued Wednesday,\nestimated aggregate production\nof all forestry products will\nreach $4,000,000,000 by 1980, an\nincrease of 120 per cent from\nabout  $1,900,000,0  in   1955.\nHowever, it found that the\ncountry's forests have sufficient\nresources to stand the probable\nincrease in the timber cut.\n\"Indeed,\" the report said, \"it\nis the resulting impact on prices,\nrather than the adequacy of\nsupply in the physical sense, that\n\u25a0is likely to determine both the\nsize and the share of the market\nwhich Canadian producers of for- j\nest products will obtain between\nHOW and 1980.\"\nCOST FACTOR\nThe report added: \"It is not at\nall certain that the requisite volume of wood will be available at\na cost which will permit it to be\nsold in competition ..with other\nmaterials and with the products\nof forest industries of other countries.\"\nThe survey is one of 32 special\nstudies made for the royal commission on Canada's economic\nprospects to help it prepare its\nfinal report. The commission,\nheaded by Toronto accountant\nWalter Gordon, made a preliminary report a year ago and its\nfinal one is expected to be made\npublic soon.\nA six-man forestry study group\nheaded by John Davis, former\nfederal trade department official\nand now research and planning\ndirector for the B.C. Electric\nCompany, prepared the latest\nspecial report.\nIt said that while cost and\nprice considerations may limit\nexpansion of forest industries,\nCanada   could  look   forward  to\na marked increased in both domestic sales and exports.\nSMALLER PERCENTAGE\nHowever, the expected rate of\nincrease in the industry would be\nlower than that for the economy\ngenerally. As a result, forestry's\ncontribution to the gross national\nproduct^value of all 'goods' and\nservices \u2014 may \" decline'\" fr o m\nabout 5% per cent in 1955-.to\nabout four per cent in 1980.\nDealing with timber resources,\nthe report estimated that Canada\nhas 854,800,000 square miles of\ncommercially \u2022 productive forest\nlands. -   '\nThe survey forecast an increase of 55 per cent in the Canadian lumber output by 1980, up\nto between 11,600,000,000 and 12,-\n100,000,000 board feet. Most of\n*he increase would be in British\nColumbia.\nins\nSandys Pleads\nFor East-West\nDisarmament\nPC Candidates\nTo Avoid\nX-RaysGood\nMONTE CARLO (AP) - Sir\nWinston Churchill's doctors said\nWednesday x-rays taken Tuesday\nwere \"very satisfactory\" and\nlhat no further medical bulletins\nwill be issued. This was taken to\nmean Churchill has almost completely recovered.\nThe daily communique has\nbeen routine since Sir Winston's\nillness was diagnosed a \\yeek ago\nas pneumonia anrJ pleurisy.\nThe cbmmunioue said:\n\"An x-ray of Sir Winston\nChurchill's lungs taken yesterday\nis very satisfactory. There are\nno abnormal shadows and there\nis no fluid in the pleural.cavity.\nIt is not- our intention to issue\nfurther bulletins.\" ,\nAnthony Montague-Browne, private secretary to Churchill, told\nreporters there has been \"no\nchange\" in plans for Churchill to\nvisit the United States in April at\nthe invitation of President Eisenhower.\nMany sources doubt, however,\nthat he will be able to make the\ntrip.\nAsked when Sir Winston might\nbe going back to Britain, Browne\nreplied that no plans have been\nmade, but \"he won't be going just\nfor the moment.\"\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Progressive\nConservative party headquarters\nhas advised candidates to avoid\npersonalities and stick to \"positive\" issues in the general election campaign, national director\nAllister Grosart said Wednesday.\nMr. Grosart, the, party's chief\nelection tactician, said literature\ngoing out from his office to candidates urges them to stress the\n\"achievements\" of Prime Minister Diefenbaker and the party in\ndomestic and international affairs\nand particularly its national development and social security\nprograms.\n\"We have advised all candidates that the public will be\nmore interested in the main issues of the campaign than in personalities.\" he said in an interview. This had been the attitude\nthroughout the campaign.\n\"We don't have to go on the defensive or waste time criticizing\nopposition personalities\" he\nadded.\nMr. Grosart said the name of\nno specific opposition person has\nbeen mentioned in campaign material sent to Conservative candidates.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014- Britain\nappealed Wednesday for a comprehensive East-West disarmament\nagreement down to the level of\narms needed only for internal security of each nation.\nDefence Minister Duncan\nSandys made the appeal at the\nstart of a two-day defence debate\niri the House of Commons.\nHe said Britain will work as\nhard as possible for an all-round\nagreement to end the world arms\nrace.\nxBut at the same time, he said,\n\"we cannot afford to lower our\nguard.\"\nReplying to Socialist calls for\nBritain to take the lead in halting her own hydrogen bomb tests\nand production of the weapon,\nSandys declared:\n\"Nothing would more prejudice\nthe prospect of world disarmament than for the West to disarm unilaterally in advance of\nan emergency.\"\nRIGHT DOWN\nHe said: \"As minister of defence, there is nothing I wish for\nmore ardently than to see the\nworld disarmed. I mean comprehensive, thorough-going disarmament, right down to the level\nneeded for internal-security purposes only.\"\nSandys then referred to his\nministry's annual report on defence earlier this month which\ncalled for building up Britain's\nnuclear and missile strength. He\nsaid this report made it clear\nthat comprehensive disarmament eventually will involve supervision and control by a world\nauthority.\n\"I believe nothing less than\nthat must be our ultimate objective,\" he said.\nSays U.S. Iron\nCurtain Bars\nRe-entry Permit\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Hungarian-born professor, described\nas one of the world's top mathematicians, said Wednesday he has\nbeen barred from the United\nStates by an \"American Iron Curtain.\"\nDr. Paul Erdos, 45, a resident\nof the U.S. from 1936 until he\nleft to attend a mathematical\nconference in Amsterdam in 1954\nsaid in a telephone interview he\nhas been unable to get a visa to\nre-enter the U.S. as a returning\nresident.\nDr. Erdos, who visited\nB.C. on a four-month lecture tour\nof Canada, said he was told before he left the U.S. in 1954 that\nhe would be refused a re-entry\npermit.\nHe said he decided to go just\nthe same because \"I don't approve of Iron Qurtains, whether\nWected by the U.S.S.R. or the\nU.S.\" He said he has never belonged to a political party and\nthere are no grounds on which he\ncould justifiably be barred from\nthe U.S.\nDr. Erdos said he now travels\ncontinually around the world and\nmakes his home in no particular\ncountry. He said he would spend\nseveral months a year lecturing\nin the U.S. if he is permitted to\nre-enter;\n' He said he has received no official word from Uie American\nMathematical Society about efforts being made to persuade authorities to grant his request for\na visa. The society was told a\nfund raised for the purpose by\nDr. Erdos' friends has been expended.\nCUT DEFENCE GAPS\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 A radar\nwarning system for all Atlantic\nPact powers to \"eliminate possible gaps in the defence line\"\nnow is being installed, Supreme\nHeadquarters Allied Powers in\nEurope announced Wednesday.\nSHAPE also disclosed that a\n\"much more efficient\" communications system has been\nachieved.\nAdjourn Traffic\nDeath Inquest\nKELOWNA (CP)-An inquest\ninto the death of William Metcalfe, 72, who died Tuesday in\nKelowna's first fatal traffic accident in two years, was opened\nWednesday and adjourned indefinitely.\nPolice said Mr. Metcalfe was\ntravelling in a car which collided at an \u2022 intersection with a\ncar driven by John Robert\nBealby, 20, who escaped injury.\nMr. Metcalfe died while being\ntaken to hospital by ambulance.\nThe  last  previous   fatal   accident here was on Christmas Eve,\n1956, when an elderly couple was\nkilled.\n(No Pickup)\n        T\n^mys Cheaper Foods\nCheck Inflation\nLONDON (CP) - John Hare,\nBritain's minister of agriculture,\nsays that falling food prices\nmay bring \"compensating advantages\" to Common wealth\ncountries in the long run.\nC o m rn e n ting in a London\nspeech on the \"alarm\" felt in\nsome Commonwealth countries\nover the recent fall in commodity prices, particularly for dairy\nproducts, Hare said lower food\nprices might give Britain a\nchance to check inflation.\nThis would be a boon not only\nto Britain but to all other countries \"who have the same stake\nas we have in the strength of the\nsterling area.\"\nSPRING\nSOX\nThe latest in the spring\nstyles has arrived.\n\u2022 Lambswool\n\u2022 Ivy Stripes\n\u2022 Stretchy  Nylons\n\u2022 Stretchy Wools\n\u2022 Happy Foot Sox\nAT\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00b0\nTHE  MAN'S STORE\n'Peg To Expel\nLazy Students\nWINNIPEG (CP)-The Winnipeg School Board has decided\nthat lazy \u2022 students, 16 years old\nor more may be expelled if they\nfail to show improvement in\ntheir attitude toward school\nwork.\nThe board Tuesday adopted t\npolicy \"of expelling from school\nthose students whose conduct is\nprejudicial to the welfare of the\nschool.\"\nA spokesman for the board\nsaid there are 107 students of\nthis age in the seriously indolent\ncategory in Winnipeg schools, of\nwhich about 27 are likely to b\u00bb\nexpelled because they will not\nreform.\nIf no, satisfactory improvement\nis shown after a two-month probationary period the parent will\nbe asked to withdraw the student.\nHave Th* Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n\"        LIMITED        \u2022\u00bb\u00bb\nPHONE 813\nMASTER PLUMBER\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n578 Baker St\nPhone M7\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nSTAR SPECIALS at the Star\nPRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY\/FRIDAY, SATURDAY\nCOFFEE\n\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\nChase and Sanborn QOt\niT^PPCE   Cllase *\"^ Sanborn\nInstant; 6 oz.\nRobin Hood\nInstant;   \t\nChicago Battles\nRunaway Cows\nCHICAGO (AP) - It was\nroundup time in Chicago for a\ncouple of hours Tuesday as six\ncowboys and scores of policemen\nchased eight  runaway cows.\nThe cows, headed for the stockyards, broke loose from a truck\nwhich fell apart near the busy\nCongress Street expressway.\nSquad cars, motorcycle policemen and patrolmen moved into\nthe heavily populated district to\nhelp corral the cattle. The cowboys, on horseback, came galloping from the stockyards.\nThe cows took off in all directions. One got as far as the downtown district. Startled shoppers\nbroke out with \"yipee\" cheers as\nthev watched the chase.\nTraffic slowed on the expressway and in other streets where\nthe cows roamed. One ran head\non into a car. Another suffered\ntwo broken legs when it rammed j\na policeman's motorcycle. One\nrested on the sidewalk in front of\na tavern.\nAfter two hours of chasing the\nfrightened animals, the city range\nriders captured seven. The other\nstray was shot and killed by a\npoliceman who said he fired in\nself \u2022 defence when the\u201e cow\ncharged him, ,,\nOATS\nTOMATOES\nde ac Lynn Valley\nrCMJ   Sieve 5\t\nNabob\n28 oz .\u00bb..\nBLENDED JUICE 5__?\nSALAD DRESSING T*\nSCOTTIES TISSUE 400s\n$1.05\n3 _b. pkg. 39$\n  3 for 89$\n4 for 53*\n2 f\u201er 75?!\nn; \u2022<   <at j. 44$\n2 for 69$\n(pjwduai, 0sp*vdm&nL      \/\nAPPLES   3 LB. Bag; Cookeri 37*\nORANGES 5 lb Poiy bo9 __ 77*\nTURNIPS 4 lb. f,r 25*\nWhat 0sptvdmjmL\nBLADE ROASTS _gft_.,. 55$\nSTANDINGS\nRIB ROASTS\nLb. 65<\nPOT ROASTS L_und,Bm\" 39$\nLEG ROASTS pL\u00b0Brk 69$\nPORK CHOPS i\u00a3n 65$\nVEAL PORK& BEEF 3Lb.95$\nMINCED FOR MEAT LOAFS ;\nFRESH\nHALIBUT\nLB. . . .49*\nSOLE FILLETS\nLB. ..'. .59*\nSTAR GROCERY\nPhone 10-11\nJ. Koenig, Manager\nNelson, B.C.\n488 Baker St.\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_02_27","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\/1.0430876","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":"1958-02-27 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":"1958-02-27 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":""}]}