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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":" ^\u25a0yiwm}.  '\u2022\u2014i\u2014\t\nNelson's  Record\n1974\nTraffic Fatality Free\nI\n>\u2022*\nVol  55\n*L0U\nm^\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay \u2014 Cloudy Thursday.\nLittle change in temperature. Wind\nlight. Low and high at Cranbrook\nand Crescent Valley, 30 and 35.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 30, 1958\nNot More Than 6c Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 236\nTeen-Agers Caught\nAfter Tenth Slaying\nHysterical 14-Year-Old Girl Runs\nTo Sheriff as Police Fire Halts Car\nDOUGLAS, Wyo. (AP) \u2014 Charles Starkweather, 19,\nrunty Nebraska gunman sought in 10 slayings, was captured\nWednesday in the badlands near this Wyoming cowtown.\nHe suffered head cuts during an exchange of shots\nwith a deputy sheriff. With Starkweather was Caril Fugate,\nthe 14-year-old girl who fled with him from Lincoln, Neb.,\nwhere police said he killed nine persons. Included among\nthe victims were Caril's mother and step-father.\nA 10th murder victim was found not far from where\nStarkweather was captured. Sheriff's men said he admitted\nthe killing. The dead man was Merle Collison, 37-year-old\nGreat Falls, Mont., shoe sales\nman.\nThe girl was almost hysterical\nand ran to Deputy Sheriff Bill\nRomer crying out her fear Starkweather would kill her. ,\nRomer said the gunman, who\nlikes to swagger in cowboy boots\nand black motorcycle jacket, had\nmade a crude attempt to disguise\nhis flaming red hair with shoe\npolish.\nThe bloody trail began less than\n48 hours ago in Nebraska when the\nslaying of Caril's parents and infant half-sister was discovered. As\npolice pressed investigation, other\nkillings were disclosed until the\ntotal reached nine.\nDouglas Sheriff Earl Heflin quoted Starkweather as saying after\nhis capture:\n\"They wouldn't have caught me\nif I hadn't stopped. If I'd had a\ngun I'd have shot them.\"\nCUT SCALP\nHeflin said that when Starkweather stopped his car and was\ncaught, \"he thought he was bleed-\nNew Novel\n\"Lewd, Immoral\"\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A prominent\nchurch official Wednesday compared the novel Peyton Place with\nnude calendar art and said a ban\nimposed by the deputy revenue\nminister on its import into Canada\nshould be continued.\nRev. J. R. Mutchmor, secretary\nof the board of evangelism and\nsocial services of the United\nChurch, drew the analogy during a\nprecedent - setting tariff 'board\nhearing of an appeal to have the\nban lifted.\nThe novel, which he said he\nbought in the United States and\nbrought to Canada before he knew\nof the embargo, is \"lewd, salacious\nand suggestive.\" He read it twice,\nhe said.\nThe ban was ordered under a\nsection of the revenue department's tariff regulations which prohibits the import of \"treasonable\nor seditious or immoral or indecent publications.\" \u2022\ning to death.\" Flying glass from\ncar windows smashed by bullets in\nthe short fight cut his scalp.\n\u2022 Heflin said a first degree murder\ncharge would be filed today against\nStarkweather in the killing of Collison.\nConverse County attorney William Dixon said that Collison had\napparently been napping in his car\nwhen Starkweather drove up.\n\"Starkweather shot once through\nthe window of the car and said\n'come out,' Dixon related. Then he\nblasted him (Collison) five or six\ntimes.\" Dixon said Starkweather\ntold him he wanted Collison's car\nbecause his own was \"too hot.\"\nIn a Douglas jail cell, Starkweather slouched on his bunk glowering. A Casper reporter said\nStarkweather asserted he had shot\nhis Nebraska victims in self defence.\nThe report of Starkweather's\ncapture lifted a shroud of terror\nfrom Nebraska's capital city where\nhastily-mobilized national guardsmen patrolled the city in jeeps and\nextra shifts of state troopers were\ncalled into the area.\nCHILD CLUBBED\nAll but one of the victims was\nshot in the head and that victim,\na girl just under three, was clubbed\nto death.\nOne victim, 16-year-old Carol\nKing, was subjected to \"an unnatural sen attack,\" Lancaster\nCounty attorney Elmer Scheele\nsaid.\nThe latest trio of victims were\nC. Lauer Ward, 48, president of\nCapital Steel Works;.his wife Clara,,\nabout. 46; and Lillian'Fencel, about\n60', their housekeeper.\nThe Ward's car was missing\nfrom their fashionable brick home\nand officers fofind nearby the abandoned car of an earlier victim,\nRobert Jensen, 17, of Bennet.\nThe six earlier victims of the\nkilling spree were: Marion Bart-1\nlett, 57, his wife Velda, 37 (Caril's\nmother by a previous marriage)\ntheir daughter, Betty Jean not\nquite three years old; August\nMeyer, 70, a Bennet bachelor\nfarmer; Carol King, and Jensen,\nBennet liigh school sweethearts.   .\nUphill Urges Gov't\nAssistance for Fernie\nVICTORIA (CP) - The greatest\nindictment of the capitalist system\nin North America exists in Fernie\ntoday, veteran MLA Tom Uphill\n(Ind.-Fernie) told the legislature\nWednesday.\nMr. Uphill delivered an impassioned plea to the government to\n\"do something\" to relieve Fernie\nnow'that the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal Co. mine there has shut down.\n\"Something must be done to alleviate the suffering that exists\nin the minds\" of some 300 coal\nminers thrown out of work by the\nclqsure, he said during the throne\nspeech debate.\nMr. Uphill said the Alberta government should see to it that at\nleast 147 of the Fernie miners be\npaid their usual salary because\nthe government was benefiting by\nthe wages the Coleman miners\nearned in B.C.\n\"It's their duty, their responsibility to see that these men get\nthe same amount of money as\nif they were able to continue\nworking.\nTeachers' Rating\nPlan Suggested\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Dean\nGeoffrey Andrew, assistant to the\npresident of the University of\nBritish Columbia, warned Wednes\nday that the public will not continue to pay professional teachers'\nsalaries to people with \"stenographer's\" qualifications.\nB.C. teachers should devise a\nmerit rating system for themselves\n\"before it is done for them\", the\nassistant to the UBC president, Dr.\nNorman Mackenzie told the fourth\nannual B.C. Education Conference.\nHe said the B.C.- Teachers Federation is going to have to face the\nproblem \"of differentiation between those hundreds of its members who have no more qualifications- than those of a stenographer\nand recognize they are not professional people and plug for recognition by their own peers' of a\nmerit rating system.\"\nHe said, \"the public just will not\npay fully professional salaries to\nunprofessional^\/ qualified people.\"\nTEN iPROVINCES\nPREPARE APPEAL\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Legal counsel\nfor eight of the JO provinces met\nhere Wednesday to prepare their\nappeal to the federal cabinet\nagainst a 3.6-pef-cent freight rate\nincrease granted to Canadian railways in December by the board of\ntransport commissioners.\nThe increase has been suspended\nuntil March 1 by the federal gov\nernment to allow the provinces\ntime to prepare their appeal.\nU.S. Gives $10 Million\nTo Baghdad Pact Members\nANKARA, Turkey (Reuters)\u2014The United States Wednesday smoothed away some of the tension of an American-\nIraqi rift with a $10,000,000 donation to the Moslem members\nof the Baghdad Pact.\nThe American grant, which still hinges on congressional approval, was made toward a joint communications\nproject by Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and Turkey.\nAwni el Khalidy, secretary-general of the five-power\npact, said it will be spent on a telecommunications network\nlinking the capitals and chief\ncool ruffled tempers after a heated\nexchange between the United\nStates and Iraq at a closed meeting Tuesday.        -\nConference sources said Dulles\nand Gen. Nuri al Said, the leader\nof the Iraqi delegation, became\ninvolved in a stormy argument\nover Nuri's demands that Israel\nbe forced back inside the borders\ncities of member countries.\nThe United States, although not\na full pact member, made a\ndonation of $12,500,000 to the alliance last year. Britain is the\nonly member from outside the\npact area.\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles' announcement of the donation helped\n\u25a0laid down in 1947 by the United\nNations.\nBut Dulles flatly rejected Nuri's\narguments, the sources said, declaring the problem should be settled by the United Nations and is\nnot a matter for discussion at the\npact meeting.\nUnder the 1947 agreement, Palestine was to be partitoned between a Jewish and Arab state.\nThe borders were outlined but\nfighting broke out and Israel increased its territory by about 40\nper cent.\nDulles held private talks with\nthe delegates of Iraq and Turkey\nWednesday in a bid to heal - the\nrift. But Iraq was expected to\npress for the inclusion of the Israeli problem in the pact's closing\ncommunique today.\nIN THIS \"ZETA\" MACHINE, British scientists have produced temperatures of 5,000,000\ndegrees centigrade, and with this accomplishment;\nhave brought closer the possibility of controlling\nhydrogen   fusion   to  provide  power.   Fuel   for\nthe process Is heavy hydrogen contained In sea\nwater in quantities sufficient to supply power for\nthe world for millions of years. Britain's scientists have been credited with first harnessing the\nhydrogen molecule at Harwell, where Zeta It\nlocated.\n\"AH they want It the right to\nwork at the only occupation they\nknow,\" he said.\nLeo Nimsick (CCF-Cranbroqk),\nalso speaking on the debate,\nwarned Attorney-General Robert\nBonner he might be made \"the\ngoat\" by the government if the\nSommers' case doesn't turn out\n\"the way he hopes.\"\nHis warning preceded only by\nminutes the demand by a government member that Mr. Bonner resign over his handling of the case.\nThe call, was made'by Mel Bryan\n'SC-North\" Vancouver).\nThe case concerns the charges\nof conspiracy to accept bribes\nlaid against former lands and forests minister Robert Sommers,\nMLA for Rossland-Trail.\nMr. Nimsick said that if the\ncase, now before the courts, turns\nout wrong for the attorney-general\nhe might be forced to resign..\n\"If he doesn't quit he will probably be turned out by the government.\n\"Somebody will have to be made\na goat and I warn him right now\nthat it might be him,\" he said.\nThe Trans-Canada Highway in\nB.C., he said, was \"miles and\nmiles of nothing being done.\"\ns Resignation\nSommers Case\nAttorney-General Failed in His\nDuty, Says Sacred Back-Bencher Bryan\nBy AL MARKLE\nCanadian Press Statt Writer\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The resignation of Attorney-General\nRobert Bonner was called for Wednesday by a member of\nthe government back-benches.\nMel Bryan (SC\u2014North Vancouver) asked Mr. Bonner\nto resign over his handling of the Sommers' case.\nFormer lands and forests minister Robert Sommers,\na member for Rossland-Trail, late last year was charged\nwith conspiring to accept bribes during his term in office.\nThe case had been in the public eye for more than two\nyears before Mr. Bonner ordered the RCMP to lay the\ncharges.\nW. BONNER\nFather Goes Berserk;\nMother, Child Killed\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A. mother\nand her four-year-old daughter\ndied Wednesday from wounds suffered in a bloody, knife-axe_ affray\nin a neat Burnaby home.\nThe father of the family and a\nsecond daughter, aged eight, are\nin hospital suffering stab wounds.\nRCMP officers, who arrived to\nfind the kitchen of the Burnaby\nbungalow covered in blood, said\nthe father apparently went berserk during breakfast,  attacking\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy The Canadian Press\n...After a ^ee-day- debute, the\nCommons passed the government\nbill to increase the provinces' share\nof the federal personal income tax\nfield.\n1 Deputy CCF Leader Stanley\nKnowles said the government was\nunfair to the country in not disclosing future policy on federal-\nprovincial fiscal relations.\nFormer fisheries minister James\nSinclair accused the government of\nstalling on tax sharing and then\nmaking more money available to\nprovinces as a pre-election announcement.\nThe Commons gave final approval to a government bill providing two-week paid vacations\nafter two years' work for all employees under federal labor laws.\nThe government's proposed new\nSuccession Duty Act was introduced and left over for the next parliamentary session for final action.\nThe Senate passed the government's farm price supports bill\nafter defeating a move to send\nit back to the Commons for amendment.\niimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nLoses Election\nBet, Eats Paper\nEDMONTON (CP) - Bill\nDownton of Calgary, Social\nCredit leader on the University\nof \"Alberta campus here, Wednesday ate a newspaper to pay\noff a pre-election wager.\nDownton had bet his party\nwould gain more seats in a\ncampus election.than the Progressive Conservative party.\nHe was nosed out by one seat.\nAided by buttermilk and\nmustard, he downed four pages\nof the college biweekly, The\nGateway, which he had de-\nnouced in an election campaign. , ,\n\"This paper has been giving\nme indigestion all year,\" he\nquipped.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nhis wife and children and thei\nattempting to kill himself.\nDead are Mrs. Audrey Freeman,\n32, and her four-year-old daughter,\nPauline. Pauline was dead when\nofficers arrived and Mrs. Freeman\ndied later in hospital.\nIn hospital are William Freeman, 36-year-old partner in a painting contracting firm, and his eight-\nyear-old daughter Doreen. Doreen's\nwounds are not serious and the\nfather also is expected to recover\nfrom gashes in the head and chest.\nOfficers said they found Freeman, clothed in undershirt and\ntrousers, in the front hall when\nthey arrived, blood streaming from\nhis wounds.\nHe was forced into a straight-\njacket and taken to hospital jn\nthe same ambuMhce as' Kis daughter, Doreen.\nSTUDENTS TO\nSUBMIT BRIEF\nCALGARY (CP) - In what may\nbe an unprecedented move, students at Calgary . Central High\nSchool are planning to submit a\nbrief to the royal commission on\neducation in Alberta.\nThe school's more than 550\nstudents will be polled in a series\nof questionnaires which will form\nthe basis of the brief, it was learned Wednesday.\n\u00ab*\nAdds to Election\nSpeculation\nSASKATOON (CP) \u2014' Speculation in Saskatoon political\ncircles on an early dissolution\nof Parliament increased Wednesday when Resources Minister\nAlvin Hamilton cancelled a\nspeaking engagement.\nMr. Hamilton was scheduled\nto speak noon Friday at the annual convention of the Western\nRetail Lumbermen's Association. Officials said they understood Prime Minister Diefenbaker has asked all Cabinet ministers to cancel all engagements\nthat would take them out of Ottawa this week.\nBahamas Strike\nEnds Today\nNASSAU, Bahamas (AP) - The\ngeneral strike which crippled this\nresort community for two weeks\nwill end today Sir Raynor Arthur,\ngovernor of the Bahamas, announced Wednesday night.\nThe governor gave-no details\nbut he said the Bahamas Taxicab\nUnion and the Bahamas Federation\nof Labor had informed him that\nthe strike will end this morning\nwhen the men return to work.\nThe attorney-general and Mr.\nSommers both were in' the House\nwhen Mr. Bryan,, speaking in the\nthrone speech debate, asked for\nthe resignation.\nHe read directly from his notes\nspeaking calmly but slightly hesitantly to a tense and hushed house.\nThere wasn't a sound or a movement when he finished with the\nwords:\n\"I call upon him to resign ... .\"\nMr. Bryan would make no comment when he left the legislature\nshortly before adjournment, but\nthe strain showed visibly on his\nace.\nHe started by advising the House\nhe had several matters concerning\nhis own riding to discuss but that\nhe wished to address himself first\nto \"one of the major issues facing\nthe province today.\"\n\"I want to speak -about a question that has been causing extreme concern to people . . ,\nthroughout the province.\n\"Over two years ago, statements\nwere made concerning the operation of our great forest industry\nand the government of this province.\n\"They were given wide publicity.\nThey led eventually to the resignation of a minister from the cabinet\nand a veritable storm of public\ncontroversy, ' iourt actions and\ncounter-actions.\n\"The outcome of- this case, has\nno. Hearing on what I have to say.\n\"What concerns the people of\nthis province and hat concerned\nthem with greater Intensity  at\ntime patted by, hat been the unsatisfactorily explained delay in\nresolving this issue on the party\nof the   minister   charged   with\nlaw enforcement and with main-\n-  taining the legal dignity of thit\ngovernment.\nft refer to the delay by the Honorable Attorney-General.\"\nHe said Mr. Bonner had \"failed\nto carry out his duties with the\nspeed and efficiency his position\ndemands.\"\nMr. Bryan, who never raised his\nvoice during the indictment of Mr,\nBonner, said \"a very important\nprinciple is at itake here . . .\nprinciple I am not prepared to\nsacrifice in the interest of party\nunity.\"\nFUNDAMENTAL ISSUE\nHe said it was a fundamental issue and should have been dealt\nwith \"without any concern for political questions or party loyalties.'\nMr. Bonner's failure to deal with\nthe issue \"has placed a serious\nstrain on the respect\" of the government.\nDuring the last, provincial election campaign, Mr. Bryan said, he\nHitler Star at Zenith\n25 Years Ago Today\nBERLIN (Reuters) \u2014 Twenty-\nfive years ago today, a wild-eyed\nAustrian housepainter only recently embarked on a career in\npolitics was appointed chancellor\nof Germany. His name: Adolf Hitler.\nThe Christian Democrats, the\nparty of West Germany's post-war\ngovernment, marked the anniver\nsary with a public reminder Wednesday to the German people to\nremember the \"terrible warning\nto present and future generations\"\nto be found in Germany's immediate post-war ruins.\nEntitled The Black Day, the\nstatement warned: \"Nazism could\nonly build its rule of fear on the\nruins of German democracy.\"\nMost Germans \u2014 except, perhaps, for a few Nazi fanatics -\nare expected to ignore today's anniversary.\nThe West Germany of today presents a different picture from the\nReich that Hitler took over. On\nJan. 30, 1933, the nation had more\nthan 6,000,000 unemployed. It. was\nsliding ever deeper into debt and\nthere -had been four chancellors in\nfour years.\nToday, West Germany has full\nemployment and rising prosperity,\nIt is the largest creditor in Europe's trading system and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer looks back\non eight continuous years of office.\n\"believed ... the attorney-general\nthat there was more sound, and\nfury than substance in the allegations.\"\n\"What happened,\" he asked, \"to\nchange his concept of law enforcement so drastically?\"\nHe said just before calling for\nthe resignation that it Was \"a\ngrave moment . . . reached only\nafter the most serious consideration.\"\n\"Is is my honest conviction that\nthe attorney-general of this province has shown a serious lack of\nability to fulfill all the requirements of his high post.\n\"I call upon him to resign in\nfavor of someone who can .. .\"\nMr. Bonner paused in the hallway just after adjournment only\nlong enough to tay: \"I've never\nwalked away from a tough job\nIn my life and I don't Intend to\nstart now.\"\nMr. Bryan immediate political\nfuture is subject to speculation. He\ncould cross the floor and sit as an\nIndependent or with the CCF or\nLiberal groups. Government members sould read him out of the\nparty or bar him from caucus.\nPremier Bennett' could ask him\noutright for his .resignation from\nthe party.. \" '\u25a0 ,; \"-       \\ \u25a0'\nTOOK COURAGE\n\u2022 Tony Gargrave (CCF-\u00bbMacken-\nzie) said he knew something was\ncoming ih the House Wednesday\nbut didn't know what It was. He\nsaid Mr. Bryan's speech was \"an\nexcellent statement and took a\ngreat deal of courage.\"\nHealth Minister Eric Martin\nhotly denied there was any rift in\nthe party.\nRandolph Harding (CCF\u2014Kaslo-Slocan) said it waa a \"very\nsound, studied ttatement of the\npicture dealing with the Sommers' case.\"\n\"I was rather surprised and\ncan only hope that we hear more\nof government members in thit\nregard.\"\nThe Premier was in Vancouver\nWednesday to be presented to the\nqueen mother, as was opposition\nleader Robert Strachan.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP)- The Canadian dollar was 1\/32 higher at a\npremium of 17\u00bb in terms of U.S,\nfunds; a week ago 21\/32 per cent\npremium. Pound sterling was unchanged at $2.81 5\/3.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U. S,\ndollar closed at a discount of 1%\nper cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, down Vs. Pound sterling at\n$2.76%, unchanged.\nAsked\nDelays\nBennett\nDefends\nBonner\nVANCOUVER (OP) - Premier\nBennett Wednesday night said\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner\nis the \"most outstanding attorney-\ngeneral this province, or any other\nprovince has ever had.\"\n\"I couldn't disagree with anything more than with Mr. Bryan's\nstatement,\" said the premier as\nhe left the lieutenant-governor's\nhome here after attending a tea\nfor the Queen Mother.\nAsked if Mr.\" Bryan's motion\ncould lead to a split in the Social\nCredit ranks, the premier said:\n\"The answer is no.\"\n\u25a0 Asked to comment on Victoria\nreports that Mr. Bryan might be\n\"invited\" to cross the floor of the\n\u25a0House, Premier Bennett said: \"I\nnever will invite any member to\ncross the floor,\"\nADVERTISERS\nSWITCH BACK\nTO NEWSPAPERS\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Wall\nStreet Journal says some advertisers are switching from television\nto newspapers in an effort to get\nbetter returns.\nOthers, are turning \u25a0 from newspapers to direct mail appeals, the\nnewspaper says.\n\"Hit by stiffer competition and\nin many cases a downturn in sales,\ncompanies are trying to wring\nmore results from their advertising dollars.   .\n\"In the.'jargon of Madison\nAvenue ad agencies, advertisers\nare shifting from .the 'soft sell'\nto the 'hard sail' putting more\nemphasis on. products and prices\nand lesr on institutional or 'company image' advertising.\"\nBANKS BILKED\nTORONTO (CP) - About 30 Toronto banks have been bilked of\nnearly $16,000 by a man who had\nopened a small account in each.\nPolice said Wednesday tliey received phone calls''when the\nbanks found the man had cashed\ncheques for about $470 in each.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!\nGov't Should Pay\nUBC Costs-Nimsick\nVICTORIA (CP) - The -B.C.\ngovernment should pay the total cost for expansion of the\nUniversity of B.C., Leo Nimsick (CCF-Cranbrook) said in\nthe legislature' throne speech\ndebate Wednesday.\n\" \"The main foundation of our\nsociety has to depend on charity,\" he said.\n\"It has to go around the\nprovince with a tin cup for\nmoney. It is the duty of society ... to see that the University it looked after.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii\n25,000 Wait in Rain\nTo Qlimpse Queen Mother\nBy ERWIN FRICKE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An estimated 25,000 persons braved heavy\nrain Wednesday, to get a look at\nthe smiling, gracious, face of\nQueen Mother Elizabeth.\nThey lined a 20-mile circuitous\nroute and at some intersections\nstood five and six deep. The entire\nstreet was filled near city hall.\nAt least 3,000 school children\nwaved rain-wilted Union Jacks\nand one elementary school produced a 10-foot banner: \"Queen\nElizabeth School Welcomes Queen\nElizabeth.''\nThe rain fell with scarcely a letup from the time the Queen Mother\nand Lieutenant-Governor Frank\nRoss left the Ross home overlooking English Bay at 2:45 p.m. until\nthey returned nearly two hours\nlater.\nBut the 57-year-old royal lady,\nhere for a day en route to Australia and New Zealand, did not\nappear dismayed by the downpour. She kept the window of the\nslow-moving - limousine open and\nwaved and smiled to the throngs.\nShe took precautions, however,\nwhen on foot. Leaving city hall accompanied by Mayor Fred Hume\n\u2014 and preceded by a top-hatted\nmace-bearer \u2014 she noticed rain\nwas falling on her light mauee\ncoat and matching floral hat.\nWith a quick smile she turned to\nthe RCMP constable who was\nholding the umbrella for her. Her\nhand went out. For the rest of the\nwalk to the limousine, she\nried the umbrella herself.\nThe city hall visit was the only\nportion of her stay here that had\nany suggestion of official ceremony. Her one-day stopover was\nintended only as a respite from\nthe air trip which will eventually\ntake her around the world. The\ntour will make her the first mem-\nmer of the Royal Family to make\na round-the-world trip by plane. .\nGIVEN SILVER DOLLARS\nAt city hall, the Queen Mother\nmet city nldermen and was presented with two silver dollars,\nstruck to commemorate British\nColumbia's centennial this year.\nThe silver pieces will be delivered\nby the Queen Mother to her grandchildren, Prince Charles and Princess Anne.\nEarlier she stopped briefly at\nthe lookout at Queen Elizabeth\nPark but rain and clouds obscured the view of the coast mountains and Burrard Inlet.\nThe 95-acre park in the geographic centre of Vancouver\nwas once known as Little Mountain Park. It was renamed shortly\nafter Her Majesty visited it in\n1939 with her late husband, King\nGeorge VI.\nThe plane carrying the Queen\nMother to. Australia and New\nZealand took off from Vancouver\nInternational Airport Wednesday\nnight at 8:20 p.m. PST.\nMore than 1000 persons stood\n'n wind-driven rain to watch her\ndeparture.\n\"Thanks for a lovely visit, and\ngoodbye,\" she said to the mayor\nin her last words spoken on\nCanadian soil.\nThe Queen Mother carried a\nbouquet of flowers, gift of Mrs.\nHume.\nAnd in This Comer \u2666...\nHUDDERSFIELD, England (Reuters)\u2014Five-year-old Andrew\nGllfllllan saw Rin Tin Tin fighting Indians on a television program\n\u2014but there was no TV set.\nA dentist said he had done It by hypnosis while he filled two\nof^the boy't teeth. Before putting him In a trance, he gave Andrew\na choice of programs.\nLater, Andrew ran home to tell his mother about the \"exciting\"\nRin Tin Tin adventure he had Imagined.\ninto\nLITTLE ROCK, Ark.  (AP)\u2014A  13-year-old boy walked\npolice headquarters Tuesday night and burst into tears.\n\"Where do you go when you run away from home?\" he asked.\nPolice notified his parents, who took him home.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Shoppers In a downtown department store\nstopped and gaped Tuesday as this procession entered: A middle-\naged woman with pink hair, followed by a younger woman with\npink hair, followed by a French poodle\u2014you. guessed it\u2014dyed pink,\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1?58\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-8:35\nThe exciting adventures\nof two little runaways 1\nscapade\nJapan\nir\\\nniraMA,\n.TECH NI KrtlYIrt e TECHNICOLORS,\nSTAWtwo\nIERESA WRIGHT-CAMERON MITCHELL\n\u2022Im: \"THE   BIG   SKY\"\n\u2014 STARTS  FRIDAY\nBig. Bouimcv. Beahjiufuil!\nOn The Bio Screen i\nM-G-Uw* AN ARTHUR FREED PRODUCTION a*\nFRED ASTA1RE \u2022 CYO CHARISSE\nSilk Stockings\n. Cinemascope mt METROCQIOR\n%W.\nGM6\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"IT'S ALWAYS FAIR\nWEATHER\"\n(Tech - Scope)\ndene Kelly, Dan Dalley,\nCyd Charisse\nGiant Hot Dogi\nFor Kids Today\nFree foot-long hot dogs will be\ngiven to children of all ages at\nthe Civic skating rink Thursday\nafternoon at four o'clock at a free\nskating party, states Fire Chief\nE. S. Owens. This is the last of a\nseries of free skating parties sponsored by the Nelson Fire Department and the Civic Centre Commission. Mayor T. S. Shorthouse\nis assisting with the celebration.\nPrevious skating parties have been\nwell-attended and it is expected\nthere will be many \"foot-longers\"\ndemolished-at this one.\nWampole's\n8-WAY COLP\nTREATMENT\nCreo-Terpin\n(The Original Green)\nOOUQH SYRUP and\nOl  BUFFERED TABLETS\nAM for 76a\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress ol Health\"\n438 Josephine St\nPHONE 1208\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday and Saturday\n\"THE BLACK TENT\"\nAnthony Steel, Donald Linden\nNEWS-SHORTS\nJ. J. Fouldsr\nPioneer, Dies\nWell known among the district's\nsourdoughs and colorful \u25a0 pioneer\nof the Kootenay, James Joseph\nFoulds died at Mount St. Francis\nwhere he has resided since 1955.\nHe would have been 93 on Feb. 6.\nBorn in Ontario in' 1665, Mr.\nFoulds came to Nelson around 1890.\nHe worked at various times as a\nminer at Kaslo, Sandon, Phoenix\nand Rossland. He and his brother\nGeorge were well known in rock\ndriiling contests In those days,\ncoming off winners over teams\nfrom points as far away as Butte,\nMontana.\nMr. Foulds also worked for a\ntime at a> sawmill at Gaiena Bay\nduring the time the Pilot Bay smelter was in operation. He worked\nat Kimberley before coming to\nNelson.\nHis brother George predeceased\nhim and he is survived by one\nniece, Mrs, I, Cordick ln East\nYork, Ont.\n\\\\P*X\u00bb\nDid You Know?\nTHAT Wl HAVE (IF IN DOUBT ASK)\nBird Cages\nPaint Brushes\nFishing Tackle\nFine China\nSponges\nGas Ranges\nFlashlights\nHay Knives\nZonolite\nLighter Flints\nPlastic Pipe\nGyproe\nCeiling Tiles\nV-Belts\nHand Tools\nBuilders Hardware\nPlastic Raincoats\nAnti-Freeze\nHigh Test Gas\nMarvelube Oil\nSand Paper\nCarpenters Pencils\nSteel Wool\nPocket Knives\nColeman Parts\nLetter Boxes\nOven Cleaner\nStove Pipes\nEaves Troughs\nTenTest\nCleaning Rags\nWindow Glass\nFoil Wrap\nMouse Traps\nSeparator Oil\nCutting Oil\nPadlocks\nCLOSED FOR STOCKTAKING\nTOMORROW, FRIDAY, JAN. 31\nOur entire establishment, both wholesale and retail,\nwill be CLOSED on the above day and we request\nthat you anticipate your requirements before that\nday so you will not be inconvenienced by nondelivery of your order. .\nWood; Vallance Hdwe. Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE -  RETAIL\nPhone 1530. t \u2014 , Nelson, B.C.\nCOAT OF ARMS\nFOR CITY SOON\nOFFICIAL B.C. CENTENNIAL FLAG from centennial\ncommittee headquarters in Victoria was presented Wednesday night to acting mayor Aid. George Mermet by\nV. C. Owen, chairman of the Nelson Diamond Jubilee.\nand Centenrjial Celebrations Committee. It will be turned\nover to city clerk C. W. R. Harper. Official flag-raising\nwill be April 27. Holding the flag are, left to right, Aldermen B. C. Affleck, C. E. Bradshaw, Edith Van Maarion,\nGeorge Eckmier, W. S. Ramsay and George Mermet,\nMr. Owen, E.' J. Leveque, committee secretary, and Mr.\nHarper.\u2014Daily news photo.\nIIIIIIIII1IIMI illllll Itlllll 111 II1MIII lllll I\nSNOWDROPS\nIN BLOOM\nMrs. E. Lindell, 624 Nelson\nAvenue,   Wednesday   verified '\nsomething that   Nelson   and\ndistrict people have been suspecting for quite a time.\nSnowdrops  are out.\nMrs. Lindell has been watching the snowdrops in her garden push upwards for several\ndays. Now they are practically\nin full bloom.\nin i \u25a0 if I i'i e i mi \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 11 nil i\nCity To Study\nPost Office Site\nNew aldermen will go over the\nformer post office shortly to\nacquaint themselves with its space.\nDecision was made Wednesday\nafter Aid. B. C. Affleck said he\nthought council should be moving\ninto the building and was foolish\nto put up with crowded city hall\nconditions if it did not have to.\nAld.\u00abW. S. Ramsay felt the building should be checked by an engineer and architect. The fact it\nwas abandoned by the federal government indicated, he said, the\nbuilding may not be what it appears on the surface. Heating\nmight be a problem, he added.\nA gas furnace might have to be\ninstalled and the building could\nbe added to, Aid. Affleck thought.\nActing mayor Aid. George Mermet said he would not want city\noffices to appear as shabby as they\nare now ln the post office building.\nTALENT SHOW\nACTS REACH 38\nActs of various natures, numbering up to 38 Wednesday afternoon,\nrehearsal for the Talent Show. The\nacts are classified as elementary,\nJunior High and adult-groups.\nJudges of this year's Show will\nbe Nelson Allen, replacing R. Stan-\ngroom, who is unable to attend,\nDonald Elder, Graham Turnbull,\nMiss Helen Luehinsky and Miss\nSheila McLean..\nThe Weather\nNELSON   33 40 .14\nToronto   30 35 .01\nWinnipeg  i _  13 19 .02\nCalgary   15 22 .09\nEgg Prices Off\nPrices of A large, medium and\nsmall eggs to producers dropped\ntwo cents a dozen Wednesday over\nprices announced last month, Kootenay Poultry Co-operative Association has announced. They will\ndiffer five to eight cents per dozen\nfrom prices charged at this time\nlast year.\n-New prices are 50 cents, 45 cents,\nand 35 cents. Those effective January 8, 1957, were 55 cents, 40\ncents and 43 cents.\nThird Series Salk Vaccine\nInoculations Start Monday\nThe third of ,the Salk vaccine\nseries of inoculations will be given\nto district citizens who' received\nthe previous two, starting Monday.\nSelkirk Health Unit staff stressed\nWednesday that immunity is not\ncomplete without benefit of the\nthird inoculation,\nPre-school age children, students\nof grades 11 and 12, the hospital\nstaff and any others who received\nthe first two vaccine shots will\nreceive complete immunization with the third dose. How long\nthe period of immunization lasts\nis still a matter of conjecture, but\nbooster shots are in the future.\nThere will be two nurses and seven\nvolunteer helpers of the Beta Sigma\nPhi sorority at the clinics.\n\"There has been a huge drop in\nthe instance of polio cases since\nthe use of vaccine\" stated a member of the Health Unit Wednesday.\nBut she stressed that immunity\ncannot be expected to last for the\nexpected period with an incomplete\nseries of inoculations.. The first\nyear Salk vaccine was used was\nin 1956, when the first two.doses\nwere given, and in 1957 the series\nwas completed with the third shot\nof that group.\nContrasting the incidence of paralytic polio in Canada since the use\nof Salk vaccine and before its introduction, figures from the Dominion Bureau of Statistics show\n13,850 cases in Canada in 1955,\n7911 cases in 1956 and 2159 cases\nin 1957.\nPercentage of total polio cases\nindicates the 1957 national total is\n20.1 per cent of the 1955 total; the\nparalytic cases for 1957 are 15.5\nper cent of the 1955 total.\nThere is a period of orie month\nbetween the first and second shots\nand seven to 12 months between\nthe second and third inoculations.\nThere are 3000 doses to be given\nin the Selkirk Health Unit district.\nOne vial of the vaccine contains\nsix doses and must be used immediately. This necessitates careful\nplanning to ensure the most efficient use of the amount of vaccine\nprovided.\nAll vaccine used in Canada is\nmanufactured in the Connaught\nMedical Research Laboratories in\nToronto and produced under government supervision.\nSET SCHEDULE\nFollowing is the schedule for\ninoculation of citizens of Nelson\nand residents of the District:\nIn Nelson City\u2014Nelson Senior\nHigh, 10:00 a.m. Monday, Feb. 3:\nCentral and Convent, 9:30 a.m.\nWednesday Feb. 5: Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital staff, 2:30-3:30\np.m. Thursday Feb. 6: South Nelson and Hume Schools, 9:30 a.m.\nMonday Feb. 10 (Grades i): Selkirk Health Unit for pre-schoolers,\nThursday and Friday, Feb. 27 and\n28 - A to D from 9:00-11:00, E to\nK from 1:30-3:30 (these on Thurs\nday); L to P from 9:00-11:00 and\nQ to. Z from 1:30-3:30 (these on\nFriday).\nFrom North Shore to Kaslo and\nProcter and Harrop-North Shore\nCommunity Hall, 10:00-11:00 Friday, Feb. 7: Willow Point Anglican\nChurch Hall, 1:30 - 2:30, Thursday,\nFeb. 20: Harrop school, 2:00-2:30\nThursday Feb. 27: Proctor Holiday\nInn, 1:30-2:00 Thursday Feb. 13:\nAinsworth school, 2:00-2:30 Tuesday Feb. 18: Riondel Community\nCentre, 1:30-3:00 Tuesday Feb. 25:\nBalfour 2:00-2:30 Thursday Feb. 6:\nKaslo City Hall 1:30-3:00 Tuesday\nFeb. 4.\nSalmo Valley-Ymir Community\nHall, 10:00-11:00 Wednesday Feb,\n19: Salmo Eelementary School\n9:30-10:30 Tuesday Feb. 11: Can,\nExploration school, 10:00 \u25a0 11:00\nWednesday Feb. 26: Remac Com\nmunity Hall 10:00-10:30 Tuesday\nFeb. 18.\nSlocan Valley-South Slocan, 9:30-\n10:30 Friday Feb. 14: Mt. Sentinel\nHigh   School,   1:30-2:00   Feb.   14:\nElectrical Men\nReduce Demands\nA letter from j. H. Whitfield,\npresident of Local 1003, International Brotherhood of Electrical\nWorkers, AFL, setting a 24 per\ncent increase as the \"final wage\nrate for the 1958 agreement\"\ncovering city electrical workers,\nwas referred to the negotiating\ncommittee when' city council met\nWednesday night. y\nThe increases are five to 26\ncents per hour less than the 65\ncent across-the-board increase previously asked by the union. A\nhydro plant floorman would receive $2.02 per hour in his first\nyear and $2.42 in his third year\ninstead pf the present $1.63 and\n$1.95. A substation operator would\nreceive $2.02 and $2.48 per hour in\nhis first and third years instead\nof $1.63 and $2, as presently. An\napprentice lineman would get $2.05\nand $2.23 per hour in his first and\nfourth years instead of the present\n$1.65 and $2.12, and linemen would\nreceive $2.81 compared to $2.27.\nCLOSED\nALL DAY\nFriday, Jan, 31st\nTAKING INVENTORY\nSherwin Williams\nHouse of Color\n565 Baker SI.\nPhone 1713\nCanon Silverwood\nAt Penticton Meet\nRev. Canon W., J. Silverwood\nhas left for Penticton to attend\na meeting of rural deans and archdeacons of the Diocese of Kootenay, called for a revision of Canons\nof the Diocese. The meeting will\nbe held today. Canon Silverwood\nis rural dean of West Kootenay.\n$100 Fine Levied,\nLicence Suspended\nHarold Chapman of Nelson was\nfined $100 and costs and his\ndrivers' licence suspended for six\nmonths Wednesday after he\npleaded, guilty before Police Magistrate R. S, Nelson to driving\nwithout due care and attention.\nA vehicle driven by Chapman\ncollided with the rear of one\nowned by W. J. Coleman of Nelson double-parked in the 200 block\nBaker Street Tuesday afternoon.\nFrank Casabai of Nelson was\nfined $10 and costs after pleading guilty to driving without a\ndrivers' licence. While backing\nhis car Tuesday on the 600 block\nSilica Street, police said he drove\nover a boulevard. No damage was\ncaused.\nF. C. MacKay of Nelson was\nfined $10 and costs after pleading\nguilty to speeding Tuesday on\nF;ont Street.\nChild Rings Alarm\nAccidentally tripping the alarm\non the fire alarm box al the corner of Fifth Street and Gordon\nRoad, a five-year-old child called\nthe Nelson Fire Department out\nat 3:38 p.m. Wednesday.\nCrescent Valley, 11:00-12:00 Friday\nFeb. 14: Thursday Feb. 13, Winlaw\n9:30-10:00, Vallican 10:30 - 10:45,\nPassmore 11:00-11:30, Slocan Park\n1:15-2:00,-on Wednesday Feb. 12\nSlocan City 11:00-12:00, Perry\nSiding 1:15-1:45, Appledale 2:30-\n3:00, Silverton Community Hall\n1:00-2:00 Tuesday Feb. 11: New\nDenver Public Health Office 2:30-\n4:00: Nakusp Public Health Office\n(A to L) Monday Feb. 3 2:00-4:00,\n(M to Z) Friday Feb. 7 2:00-4:00;\nBurton school 1:00-1:30, Thursday\nFeb. 13: Edgewood school 1:30-\n2:00, Wednesday Feb. 5: Needles\nHigh School, 1:30-2:00 Tuesday\nFeb. 4: Arrow Park school 1:00-\n2:00, Wednesday Feb. 12.\nUBC Fund\nCanvassers\nGive $3700\nIncomplete reports indicated\ncanvassers for the University of\nB.C. development fund in Nelson\nand district had contributed $3700\n\"in cash or pledges, Nelson committee chairman L. S. Gansner\nsaid Wednesday. When these returns are completed, he expected\nthe canvassers would have donated\nor pledged at least $4200, or one-\nfifth of the $21,000 objective.\nWhile it was a little.too early\nto say how the drive was progressing, Mr. Gansnef said he was\npleased with donations and pledges\nfrom canvassers.'\nThe campaign for money to pro\nvide more UBC residence accommodation started Monday with\nabout 700 persons, including gracf\nuates, business and professional\nmen and parents of children taking university entrance courses in\nhigh school, to be called on. It is\npart of a $7,500,000 B.C, drive. The\nprovincial government has promised a gift equal to Uiat made by\nthe people.\nTrail Society\nSeeks New Ways\nTo Raise Funds\nTRAIL\u2014The economic situation\nduring the past eight or nine\nmonths produced new demands for\nrelief and welfare which the Trail\nand District Welfare Society was\nable to assist.\nWhile this took some of the surplus funds, the society ended up\nwith some money in the bank.\nD. T. Wetmore, president, in\nmaking his annual report here\nWednesday night, said that the directors will have no more, if not\nslightly less, revenue than last year\nand would have to decide on one\nof three courses:\n1. Hold the total budget demands\npretty much at the same rate as\nlast year and hope charity demands\ndecrease.\n2. Reduce budget totals in anticipation of increased charity requirements.\n3. Hold the lotal budget demands\nand meet increased charity requirements out of reserves if }hat\nbecomes necessary.\nTotal disbursements for the year,\nto various organizations and charities amounted to over $78,000.\nTwo new organizations were listed for 1958\u2014the B.C. Heart Foundation and the Cerebral Palsy Society. The B.C. Tuberculosis Society withdrew from membership.\nConvention of Washington chests\nand welfare councils will be held\nin Trail in June. About 150 to 180\ndelegates are expected.\nElected to serve as directors for\nthree-year terms were E. G.\nFletcher, Mrs. H. P. Klngwell, R.\nD. Ramsden and C. R. Shier; for\ntwo-year terms, Ray Mulvihill, E.\nC. Phillips; one-year term, C. S.\nGuillaum.\nNelson .City is to emblazon its\nhistory on a heraldic coat of arms\nwhich will carry, the slogan \"Forge\nAhead\" and will depict prominent\nphases of the city's expansion.\nApproval of the project was\ngranted during Wednesday night's\ncouncil meeting, after Acting\nMayor* George Mermet and aldermen received a brief from Arthur\nFoster, chairman of Nelson Chamber of Commerce civic affairs committee.\nMr. Foster said that in order\nto obtain a chain of office for\nmayoral occasions ,df ceremony,\nas had originally been suggested\nearly ih 1957 by F. W. M. Drew,\nIt was first necessary to register a\ncoat of arms for the city.\nHe explained that in order to\nobtain.a coat of arms, a design\nmust first be submitted for the\napproval of the College of Heraldry in England.\nWhen approval has been received\nand a charge of approximately\n$450 oaid, the design is developed\nby the college, which returns it\nto the city in parchment form,\nROYAL PRESENTATION\nThe armorial bearingg should\nthen be presented to the' city by\nroyalty or royal representative\nand it has been suggested that it\nPrincess Margaret can be persuaded to visit Nelson during her\nforthcoming tour of B.C., - she\nshould be. invited to effect present\ntation.\nMr. Foster then displayed a suggested design for council's consideration which depicted Kootenay Lake, surrounding mountains,\na, mountain, lion rampant, holding\na maple leaf in one pad, which had\na shamrock on its shoulder, in\nhonor of Hon. Hugh Nelson, after\nwhom this city was named and\nwho was of Irish descent.\nThe sun, representing' British\nColumbia, backgrounds the lake\nand mountains and other desigrs\neach represent certain aspects of\ninterest to'the ctiy.\nThis design was created by Allan\nBeddoe, -of Cyrvllle, Ontario, Who\nis considered the highest authority\nof heraldry in Canada and who will\nhandle negotiations for Nelson with\nthe College,' of Heraldry at no\ncharge.\nAfter examining the design,\ncouncil decided . to approve the\nproject as proposed, but it wi1! ,\nreceive a slight delay, in order\nthat final designs may be discussed by council during a sp\"-\ncial meeting which will tako\nplace next Wednesday evehin::,\nto be presided over by Mayor\nShorthouse..\nUnder normal circumstances,\nfinalization of heraldic designs by\nthe College of Heraldry takes Up\nto 'six months. In this instance,\ndue to Princess, Margaret's proposed visit in June, Mr. Beddoe\nwill ask the college to hurry the\nmatter in order r that it may be\navailable for the\" royal visit.\nFor the present, council fe'l\nthat an official chain of office\nshould not be ordered, this increasing the cost of the project.\nHistorical design forms the chi?i\nfeature on a coat of arms. In a'l\nages and all quarters of th'\nworld- distinguishing symbols hav?\nbeen adopted'by tribes or nation?\nin order to depict prowess an'l\npride on their' armorial bearings.\nBy tradition, seyen hues hav?\nbeen used on a shield, consist^\n\u00bbf \"old-nr ye''\"-\", silve' or wh1'\nred, blue, black, green and\npurple.\nMany Volunteers For\nKin's Mothers March\nNelson Kinsmen Club appeal for\nmore Nelson mothers to march in\nthe drive for funds for the B.C.\nChild Care and Polio Fund Saturday night met quick response Wednesday.\nDr. A. Vogelsang, chairman, and\nGordon Wakeham, Marching\nMothers chairman, said about 25\ncame forward to swell the total\nof volunteers to 70. Another 30 or\n35 would reduce the size of the\narea each group would canvass.\nThe drive will be from 6 to 8 p.m.\nTransportation will \\be provided\nfor mothers requiring it, they said.\nThe club officials said that $4500\nhad been spent in this district during the. last four years., to assist\npolio victims. The program has\ngrown and service is available to\nany handicapped child in the province.\nIt is hoped to raise at least $1500\nin Nelson area, while B.C. quota\nis $275,000,\nAll day Saturday Kinsmen will\nbe stationed at a store building at\n469 Baker Street to receive con-\nRemanded For\nTheft Sentence \u2022\nAlec Kai.igan jr. of South Slocan\nwas remanded Wednesday f o r\nsentence pending the probption officer's report. He pleaded guilty\nbefore provincial court magistrate\nWilliam Evans to theft of over\n$50. , v\nPolice testified Kanigan signed\nfor a cheque belonging to his father at the Post Office and spent\nthe money.\ntributions from persons not expecting to be home during the\nevening canvass.\nThe Fund finances treatment an'l\nrehabilitation of polio patients air'\nhandicapped children and supports\nresearch into child and .neurolog'\ncal diseases, a mobile hearing\nclinic for hard-of-hearing youngsters, the B.C. Poison Registr'%\nspeech therapy classes and tl*-'\nlaunching of a child rehabilitation\ncentre.\n18 SOU ARES\nFORMED AT'\nDANCE SESSION\nA large turnout resulted 'in th\u00bb\nformation of 18 squares at th?\njunior square - dancing session\nheld in the Civic Centre gymnasiu\u2014\nunder -the sponsorship of the Civi\".\nRecreation Commission. It causH\nspeculation; that another clas*\nmay have to be started later ri\nin the season to accommoda'\"\nothers who may want to join.\nBob Dean, instructor and caller,\nhad his hands full when 192 enthusiasts from grades five to nir\\\nboys and girls, showed up to ta!\":\npart in the dancing. There we:-?\nendligh girls left over to form four\nextra squares.\nTo identify those who have been\nreceiving instruction at the classe:.\ntegs have been issued to be shown\nat the door at forthcoming sessions. Others cannot, be accepted,\nas it is felt that the formation n\nany more squares would hinder\nthe instruction.\n3 DAYS LEFT\nfor\nEXTRA PANTS FREE\nWith All Made-To-Measure Clothes\nGODFREYS'\n378 Baker St.\nI\nncomparable\nWATCHES\nExciting beauty...\nworld renowned\ndependability...\nthat's Longines-\nWittnduer. Terms\nto suit you.\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nSPECIAL\n2 Only\nPhilishavers\ny      Rag. 29.95\nFor $22.50\nCollinson's Jewellery\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nEstablished Since 1897\nPhone 120 Nelsori, B.C.\nA\n PRETTY EDITOR of \"Hill Topper\", monthly publication of Selkirk High School in\nKimberley, is Miss Jean Coulter, abqve. Jean and her co-workers are planning a\nspecial edition for the Kimberley Snow Fiesta in February. She is also an ardent skier,\nhaving been introduced to the sport last year.\u2014Charles IVormington photo.\nRAIN HITS BRITAIN\nLONDON (Reuters) - Heavy\nrain swept across the British Isles\nfrom the Atlantic Tuesday, but\nJanuary temperatures remained\nexceptionally mild. \u25a0\nIT'S ALL COUGH-FISHTIHS\nI\nMEDICATION\nUCKLEY'O\nMIXTURE 0\nKimberley Sportsmen\nElect Wallinger\nKIMBERLEY - At the Kimberley Rod and Gun Club annual\nmeeting, B. Wallinger was elected\nas new president, Gail Carpenter\nas vice-president and P. Haver-\nstock was re-elected as secretary.\nMan Frees Self\nRICHMOND, B.C. (CP) -\nFrank Tucker, 33, of Vancouver,\na bulldozer operator freed himself from the revolving fan baldes\nof his machine here Tuesday but\nROSSLAND   MAN\nDIES  IN TRAIL\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Arthur Eriksen,\n53, of Rossland, was found dead\nin a downtown hotel Monday,\nPolice said no. foul play is suspected.\nDeputy Coroner Dr. D. J. Crawford has ordered an inquest. ,\nlost a finger to them. He was\nworking alone at the time of the\naccident and walked to a gas station for help. Doctors removed\nthe index finger.\nFIRST TIME EVER!\nAt This Astounding Price\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\n1958 SlimBuL\nULTRA-VISION T.V.\nOnly 18 Inches From Front To Back\nSlim, sleek and sensational new short neck picture tube cuts inches\nfrom depth of cabinet.\nEXCITING   NEW\nPICTURE\nCLARITY\nGeneral Electric's new\nshort neck picture tub*\ndoes not use an ion trap\nwhich means focus over\nthe whole viewing area\nis improved. \u2022\nNow Only\n$07495\n274\nEASY TERMS\nDeluxe Ultra Vision\n\u2022 New Tetrode Tuner.\n\u2022 Dip Soldered Chassis.\n\u2022 23 Tube Performance.\n\u2022 Lustrous Wood Grain Cabinets.\nCOME  IN  FOR A  DEMONSTRATION  TODAY\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nLIMCL_*1\n174 Baker St.\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\nPhone 260\n-.-.ml\nGiant Ice Palace Takes Shape\nFor Kimberley's Snow Fiesta\n^m\nKIMBERLEY - The stage is\nrapidly being set here for the enactment of K i m b e r 1 e y's big\nCranbrook\nLand For\nPlayground\nBuys\nDump,\npageant of the year, the annual The final game and presentation\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Two property\npurchase offers were authorized by\nthe City Council this week, with\npurpose of one a new city playground, and of the other a new\ncity disposal ground to succeed the\npresent one northeast of city\nlimits.\nKirk Christmas Tree Company\nLtd. of Portland was offered $3000\nand some city tax concessions for\na block in the newly developing\nsouthern area of the city west of\nSeventh Avenue between Seventh\nand Eighth Streets. The company\nproposal was this price, with stipulation the city move a house now\nlocated there to the adjoining block\nwhich the company would retain\nand provide its water connection,\nand reduce assessment on this ad\njoining block.\nSecond offer was $1000 for 331\nacres on a plateau outside city\nlimits north of King Street owned\nby Mrs. Helen Meshwa, with stipulation of continuation of her\nChristmas tree cutting rights on\nthe tract. This would be the new\ndisposal grounds location.\nYOUTH DIRECTOR\nApproval in principle was given\nin resolution form by the Council\nto proposed city program under a\nfull-time recreation director for\nyouth activities. Visiting speaker\nat the meeting was Rev. 6. A.\nJohnston on behalf of the Cranbrook juvenile court committee\nwho proposed this measure to combat juvenile delinquency. AJso\nspeaking on this subject at the\nmeeting was Brock Ostrom, East\nKootenay. community programmes\nconsultant for the provincial government, who explained to Council\nthe function and purpose of such\nan appointment as outlined in the\nMunicipal Act. Council instructed\nits parks committee to investigate\ncity requirements of this type, and\nhow they could be met.\nThree appeals for removal from\nthe city business tax roll were allowed to applicants administering\ntheir business from extra-municipal locations.\nA city float will be entered by\nCranbrook in the parade at Kimberley which will be a feature of\nthe February Snow Fiesta there.\nSnow Fiesta,\nThe main \"prop\" of the show,\nthe great ice. palace, is in process\nof construction and is expected to\nbo finished soon. Dick Weighill and\nhis crews are doing a tremendous\nSwan this week by Mark Beduz,\nCentennial committee chairman.\n.An East and West Kootenay high\nschool basketball tournament will\nbe held during the Snow Fiesta,\namount of work,'and are welcoming suggestions for making it better than ever before.\nThe Fiesta will have a marked\nCentennial flavor. In this connection, the official Centennial flag\nwas presented -to-Mayor Clifford\nwill be made following a banquet\nin the United Church.\nClarence Sevrold of the University of Denver, Colorado, has entered the cross country and jumping ski events. He is considered\none of North America's strongest\ncross country contenders.\nWomen Appointed\nAs  Poundkeepers\nSALMO \u2014 Appointment of Mrs.\nNick Koochin of Salmo and Mrs.\nNora Kelly oj. Nelway as pound-\nkeepers for Salmo-Nelway pound\ndistrict was announced recently by\nHon. W. P. Steacey, B.C. Minister\nof Agriculture.\nPermit Higher Speed\n' VANCOUVER (CP) - City\ncouncil Tuesday approved a 35-\nmile-an-hour speed limit on three\nof the city's main bridges. The\nincreased limit will be effective\nnext Wednesday on Burrard,\nGranville and Lions Gate\nbridges. The speed limit was\nraised to 35 through Stanley\nPark. Previous limit Was 30\nmiles an hour.\nSell Goofballs\nTo Spike Drinks\nVANCOUVER- (CP) - Bootlegged \"goofbail\" sedatives are\nbeing used by local youths to\n(hake a potent drink, Coroner Glen\nMcDonald told the Vancouver\nSafety Council.\nThe pills, a compound called\nglutethimide, cannot be\" legally\nbought without prescription here,\n\"but you can still buy them across\nthe border over the counter.\" '\nMr. McDonald, said the youths\ncombine the pill? with beer and\nwarned that the brew was very\ndangerous. Three deaths were\ncaused by the \"goofballs\" last\nyear. \"Bootleggers are making a\ngood thing out of their sale.\"\nHe said his department was also\nconcerned with the big increase in\nuse of barbiturates.\n\"If you find some old pills in\nyour house, do yourself a favor\nand throw them out. You must\nanticipate where you have danger\nand even be pessimistic about that\ndanger.\"\nBurns Night\nCelebrated\nAt Procter\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30,1958 \u2014 3\nJ. S* Johnston Heads\nCranbrook Chamber\nSHAVERS  BENCH\nGROUP  LED  BY\nED WIRSCH\nTRAIL \u2014 The Shavers Bench\nImprovement Association elected\nEd Wirsch as president at its annual meeting, with Bill Kassian as\nsecond vice-president. Walter Baily\nwill continue as hall manager.\nA report on roads revealed a\ndangerous condition entering Rockland Street due to a high board\nfence obstructing the view to\nmotorists. Legal aspect of the\nsituation is to be investigated.\nWork on a retaining wall sought by\nresidents to overcome a hazardous\ncondition on one of the lanes is progressing favorably. Roads in general were reported to deteriorating rapidly. It was pointed out that\nthe city was having trouble in\npatching and maintaining the\nthoroughfares. A suggestion that\nthe subdivision be designated with\na more euphonic, appropriate and\npermanent title was turned down.\nOne resident submitted the title of.\nPremier Height's for consideration.\nU.S. PAYS WIDOWER\nSOMAGAHARA, Japan <AP)-\nA United States army claims officer today delivered 629,396 yen\n($1,748.32) to the husband and six\nchildren of the woman American\nsoldier William S. Girard shot to\ndeath. Lt.-Col. Joseph L. Haefeie\nknelt before a Shinto shrine dedicated to the late Mrs. Naka Sa-\nkai and knelt again in the mud to\nputflower.s on,her grave. Girard,\n22, was convicted of manslaughter by a Japanese court, given a\nthree -. year - suspended sentence\nantf discharged.\nPROCTER \u2014 A highly successful\nBurns'-night in Procter was highlighted by the ceremony of\u00bbpiping\nin the haggis.\nThe haggis, prepared by Mrs. D.\nSmart, was carried in by Robert\nForbes to the piping of Donald\nCameron. Davie Smart, master of\nceremonies and program arranger,\naddressed the haggis. Then followed a succession of toasts to the\nQueen, to the lassies, and others.\nThe event which originated as a\nthought for a small get-together\n.of the Harrop Social Credit group\ncaught on and the Procter group\njoined in. Some 150 guests were\nseated at the potluck supper specially featuring genuine haggis In\nthe Procter community hall. Members donated casseroles, supper\ndishes, salads, pies and cakes, and\nthe affair was so successful that it\nwill probably become an annual\nproject.\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson gave a\ntalk on Robert Burns.\nThe musical program on a Scottish theme got under way with the\nlilting tunes of a medley on' the\nviolin by Mrs. E. Boyce of Long-\nbeach, who ended her contribution with the audience joining her\naccompaniment in a singsong of\nLoch Lomond, Road to the Isles\nand others, after which Mr. Smart\nplayed a record entitled Robert\nBurns.\nA departure from the theme in\nthe form of comedy recitations was\npopular. Mrs. William' Henke,\ndressed as an immigrant farmer\ntold the story of'Setting the Old\nHen\" and \"Callander, 1936\" in\ndialect. \u2022\nMrs. Boyce played as Mrs. M.\nPaulhus danced the Highland\nFling. Mrs. H. R. Anderson was\naccompanist to her husband's\noffering of Burns' songs \"My .Love\nIs Like a Red, Red Rose\" and \"Ye\nBanks and Braes of Bonnie Doon,\"\nand to Mrs. Alec J. Garner's choice\nof \"Will Ye No Come Back Again\"\nand \"Comin' Thru the\" Rye.\" Piper\nCameron played a number of\nmarches including Pibroch Donald\nDhu and received a presentation\nfrom the master of ceremonies.\nHe then led the Grand March and\npiped for the performance of the\nCircassian Circle. The evening\nconcluded with dancing to the\ndonated music of Friesen's orchestra.\nMerchandise\nAs Low As\nTUDOR\nCRANBROOK - J. S. Johnston\nbecame new president of the\nChamber of Commerce at election\nof officers at the annual dinner\nmeeting here Tuesday.\nOther officers are R.^A. Reagh\nand Ernest Basso, vice-presidents,\nand advisory board past presidents\nGordon Dezall, Charles Draper,\nJohn Ellis, A. W. Hunter, Walter\nMillar and M. G. Klinkhamer.\nNamed directors were W. O. Atkinson, William Betts, Guhjo Benedetti, Archie Bryden, Robert. Cock-\nwell, Robert Eagle, H. C. King, G,\nJackson, Roy Linnell, Arthur God-\nderis, William Sochowski, Robert\nWillis and Gordon Willis.\nGuest speaker was D. S. O'Con-\nnell of Lethbridge, secretary of\nthe Associated Boards of Trade of\nSouthern Alberta, whose subject\nwas \"The Price of Freedom.\"\nRepresentatives of chambers at\nSpokane, Kalispell, Lethbridge,\nCalgary and the Windermere Valley were guests at the dinner which\nwas prepared and served by the\nPythian sisters.\nChief report of the evening was\nfrom the retail merchants section\nby its chairman, Robert Willis, on\nthe ups and downs of store hour\nadjustment during the year. This\nat present makes the statutory\nhalf-holiday Monday afternoon,\nwith most merchants voluntarily\nremaining closed Monday morning\nalso, and weekly evening shopping\nis now on Friday. A petition is now',\nbeing circulated for presentation\nto. the city council to move the\nevening shopping hours back to\nSaturday.\nRegular general dinner meetings\nwill continue on the third Thursday of each month.\nCranbrook Talks\nGo To Conciliation\nCRANBROOK - The City Council was notified by letter this week\nthat East Kootenay General Workers Union, bargaining on behalf of\ncity works department employees,\nhad rejected the city's counterproposal for contract renewal and\nwas applying to the Labor Relations Board for a conciliation officer. The contract renewal date is\nFebruary 1,\nOriginal demands by the Union\nfor the new agreement were 30\ncents increase, and a bonus 10\ncents for some categories of work,\nadditional paid statutory holiday,\nan approved medical care plan\nsuch as Medical Services Association and fringe benefits. The city\nhad agreed to an eight cent increase in counter-proposal, and\nhad reported it would investigate\nmerits and cost of the medical\nservices plan.\t\nFulton Replies\nOn Jail Closure\nTRAIL \u2014 A telegram' was received here Wednesday afternoon\nin reply to one sent to Justice Minister Davie Fulton by Peter Dewdney, Conservative candidate for\nKootenay West, concerning the\npending closure of the Nelson jail.\nMr. Dewdney's telegram of the\nprevious day had stated that the\nclosure was considered \"most ill\nadvised.\"\nMr. Fulton's reply stated:\n\"Re Nelson jail problem: Unfortunately as stated by you this\nentirely provincial matter and our\ndepartment has no jurisdiction to\ninterfere. I would be happy to be\nof any assistance that is within\nmy scope. Best regards.\"\nInquest To Be Held\nToday In Trail Death\nTRAIL \u2014 Coroner Dr. 3. S.\nDaly has announced that an inquest into the death of Ralph M.\nLounsbury of Trail will be held\n\u25a0today. Lounsbury was found dead\nin his car Sunday. Fruitvale police\nsaid they believed death was due\nto carbon monoxide poisoning.\nBlood Donor's Record\nNANAIMO (CP) - Robert N.\nTurner of Extension, five miles\nsouth of here' on Vancouver Island, is the first B.C. person to\ndonate 80 pints of blood to the\nCanadian Red Cross. Turner set\nthe record late last year.\nHistory of Scouting Given\nAt Crowded Salmo Banquet\nSALMO \u2014 More than 120 fathers,\nsons and guests sat down to a dinner in the gymnasium of the Elementary School when the Scouts\nand Cubs held their annual father-\nson banquet.\nThe mothers of the Scouts and\nCubs supplied an assortment of\npies and hot casseroles, and members of the auxiliary, under convenorship of their president, Mrs.\nM. Sauter, supplied the salads and\nbuns.\nDr. J. C. Carpenter, president of\nthe Scout Association, was master\nof ceremonies and J. L. Langley\nproposed the toast to the Queen.\nTom John gave the toast to fathers\nwhich was responded to by D.\nPowers. Kurt Forgaard gave a\ntoast to the mothers.\nThe president introduced as\nguests: District Commissioner G.\nA. Gordon, District Scoutmaster\nLangley, Ven. Archdeacon B. A.\nResker, assistant District Commissioner of the Trail-Rossland\nScout district; Fred Parsons and\nT. S. Dawson. He then introduced\nthe leaders of the Cubs and Scouts\nand thanked them for the conscientious way in which they had\nNATAL  LEGION\nNAMES OFFICERS\nNATAL \u2014 At a well attended\nmeeting of the Michel-Natal Legion\nBranch officers were elected.\nPast president is James Crocutt;\npresident, William Chalmers; vice-\npresident, John Billy; secretary,\nRobert Martin; treasurer, Roger\nPasieud, and sergeant-at-arms,\nKen MacFarlane, Michel. The\nexecutive committee elected includes Robert Marsh, John Gun\nnarson, Allen Flint, Tom Findley,\nGeorge Mannion and Herbie\nHughes.\nMeeting will be held the third\nSaturday of each month.\ncarried out their work in the past\nyear. He also introduced the\ngoverning committee and thanked\nthem for the way in which they\nhad co-operated in all work. F. E.\nPiper and Mr. J. Forgaard were\nadded to this committee.\nArchdeacon Resker, guest speaker of the evening, gave an interesting talk on tile growth of Scouting\nin the past 50 years. He then\nshowed slides taken at the World\nScout Jamboree which he attended\nin England last summer and told\nhow these gatherings help to unite\nScouts from all parts of the worid.\nI00F, Rebekah\nOfficers Installed\nKIMBERLEY - New officers of\nSullivan lodge, IOOF, Installed for\n1958 are Steve Waites jr. noble\ngrand, Ken Roe vice-grand, Ken\nDodd, H. Foster, L. Heusdens-, J,\nO. McDonald and Ernest Nesbitt,\nRebekah Victory Lodge officers\ninstalled at the same ceremony\nwere Mrs. E. K. Walker past\ngrand, Mrs. A. S. Hobbins noble\ngrand, Mrs. Sam Calles vice-\ngrand, Mrs. W. A. Thompson, Mrs.\nD- E. Livingstone and Mrs. W. W.\nDuncan.\nOfficiating at the joint installation were district deputy grand\nMurray Helliesen for the IOOF,\nand district deputy president Mrs.\nT. V. Mawson for Rebekahs, with\nSam DeLuca of Cranbrook and\nMrs. J. G. Williams as marshals.\nPast provincial grand master W.\nS. Johnston of Cranbrook was\namong the special guests.\nAlso attending and taking part\nwas J. W. Blezard, only surviving\ncharter member of Sullivan Lodge\nand 50 years an Odd Fellow.\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT ...\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDRUMHBLLER DitP SCAM\n:.:\u25a0:.:.;\u25a0:.:\u25a0;.:.:.:-:.;.;-;.:::-;-;-;!;r:-;-:>:::::.:::::T:.;\u25a0:\u25a0;\u25a0;\u25a0;\u25a0;.;>\u25a0;:;:\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\nPhone\nROLEX\nOyster Prince\n\"EXPLORER\"\n19 Jewel Rolex Rotor\n19 Jewel Rolex rotor eelf-\nwlnding, shock-resisting,\nnon-magnetic movement,;\nfitted to famous OYSTER\nease, the world's first and\nstill finest waterproof wrist-\nwatch*\nPriced From $100.00\nDOWN\nPER\nWEEK\nWhy Pay\nAnything\nDown\nIf Your\nCredit\nIs  '\nEstablished\nOLSON'S CREDIT JEWELLERS\n364 BAKER ST.      NELSON, B.C.      PHONE 1149\nPlease send me the following!\nNAME    \t\nADDRESS     _. _...\n.CITY  -\u201e PROV.\t\nfj C.O.D. fj CHARGE MY ACCOUNT\n\u25a1 NEW ACCOUNT rj CASH ENCLOSED\nNew accounts please state employment and\ntwo references.\nOLSON'S\nCredit\nJewellers\nPhone  1149\nNelson,   B.C.\n Maon latlg Npwa\nj Established April 22, 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper   \u2022\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NFJWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Strfeet, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized at Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press It exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to It or to The Associated Press or Reuters in thit paper,\nand alto the local news published therein.\n\u2022 '      ~~r       Thursday, January 30, 1958\nAn Era Closed by Death of Archdeacon\nAnother link with Nelson's happy\nyouth has been broken with the death\nof the Venerable Archdeacon Fred\nGraham.\nArchdeacon Graham came to Nelson In 1902, at a time when he .was\nyoung and enthusiastic. He grew up\nwith the city and never lost his youthful love and enthusiasm for the city.\nUp to the end he delighted in the fact\nthat he was an honorary life member\nof the Chamber of Commerce.\nHis early congregations were small\nbut exceedingly loyal to their church\nand to him. Under his direction the\npresent church, which replaces the\nprevious one destroyed by fire, wob.\nbuilt as was the original portion of\nthe1 Memorial Hall.\nTo many people, Archdeacon Graham will be chiefly remembered for\nhis happy facility with words. His sermons were a constant source of joy to\nhis congregation and on -such occasions as'he was due to speak at any\nfunction, there would be a large and\nappreciative audience to listen and\napplaud.\nThe Archdeacon was a part of Nelson. There was nothing good to which\nhe did not lend his approval and support. He belonged to a time when Nelson was small enough to be closely\nunited. His death markB the closing of\nthat era of which he was so long a\nsymbol. His name now becomes a part\nof Nelson'* history.\nSpruce Up\nFor Centennial\nWith plans for this district's observance\nof British Columbia's centennial. well advanced,'it is apparent there is one phase of\nthe celebration which must'receive the support of business firms and private citizens.\nIt is the matter of sprucing up our community's appearance, so wo may present an\nattractive front to centennial visitors.\nKelowna hat always been noted for its\ncleanliness\u2014the beautiful parks and playgrounds; the well-kept boulevards and gardens; the flowers; the attractive homes\u2014to\nmention a few. But it only takes a few to\nundermine the efforts of the majority of\ncommunity-minded citizens.\nIt is to be hoped that business firms and\nproperty owners will do everything possible\nto make their premises attractive in the\ncoming months. A few renovations, and a\n. little paint can work wonders for the most\nrundown establishment. Extra care in keeping home gardens and road allowances neat\nand tidy will transform any residential property.\n,. ' We are fortunate in .living in one of the\nmost beautiful parts of British Columbia. If\nwould be a shame if we permitted, through\ncarelessness or just plain laziness, the natural\nbeauty of our district to be set at a discount.\nThis is British Columbia's 100th birthday celebration, It will bring thousands of\nvisitors to and through our district; and we\nshould make a point ot looking our best .for\nthem:\u2014Kelowna Courier.\nTo Be Taken in Stride\nThe Christian Science Monitor\nquotes Joseph C. Harsch of Washington as saying that the British were the\nfirst ln perfecting the complicated\nZeta machine used in the effort to harness thermonuclear energy and that\nthe United States equivalent was\ncopied from it.\n\"Had Washington wanted to be\nreally generous towards its ally,\" says\nthe Monitor, \"it would have allowed\nthe British to announce these and\nother achievements first and then\nquietly announced that it had successfully copied Zeta.\"\nIn the sum total of advances in\nscience this is perhaps a small thing,\nbut not to the country which made it.\nFor weeks the British have been fuming about the U.S. policy in the matter,\nand now their newspapers chorus a\nresentment unparalleled at any time.\nThe Monitor accuses its government of being ungenerous in its attitude and it is probably right when it\nsays, \"Such a method of handling\nwould have produced a warm glow\nin a country which has had a long\nseries of bitter and tragic disappointments in the last decade.\"\nLeadership does not depend entirely on wealth or the prestige of\nmany inventions or of scientific\nachievements, but of the very simple\nmatter of the  esteem  and  affection\nwhich the leader can induce ln the\nminds of his followers. Carefully considered good leadership is the result\nof the leader's care and consideration\ngiven to his followers and a kind and\ngenerous appreciation of them and\ntheir qualities.\nThere seems to be little doubt that.\nAmerican leadership has failed of late.\nThere seems to be little doubt either\nthat American leadership is not to be\n\"influenced by its allies, otherwise .Mr.\nDulles would long ago have gone into\nthe limbo of discarded statesmen. It\nis a difficult business, leading a number of allies, but it cannot be done\nwithout some consideration of their\nfeelings.\nBut this evidence of declining\nleadership does not give us any satisfaction, but Is something which is of\nsupreme importance to us. The plain\nfact is that we cannot do without American leadership\u2014without it, in fact,\nwe may perish. The American attitude\ntowards its allies may change, for\nthere must be many Americans who\nagree with the Christian Science Monitor, but if it should not, the rest of\nthe allies must compensate for it. They\nmust make up for the lack of gener-.\nosity of the Americans by a greater\ntolerance. Bitter as these things may\nbe to the pride of the Btnaller nations,\nfor the sake of peace, they must take\nthem in their stride.\nSick Kin\u00a3 Coal\nShrinking markets for coal un.der the\nimpact of oil, natural gas and other competitive fuels, has forced the shutdown\u2014it may\nprove to be permanent\u2014of the Elk River\nColliery at Fernie, B.C.\nThis is a terrific blow to Fernie but one\nhastens to add that Fernie folk are accustomed to disasters\u2014fire, floods, the Coal\nCreek mine explosion, strikes, bank failure,\nclosing of the Fernie brewery, to mention\na few\u2014and one is confident they will again\nweather Ihe storm.\nHowever, it will be hard even for plucky\nFernie and we hope some way may yet be\nfound to keep the big mine, one of the\nnewest in the Crow's Nest Pass area, operating. An appeal Is going to Victoria seeking the good offices of the government to.\nthat end.\nThe Fernie coal field, operating more\nthan half a century under the famous Wilson\nmining family of British Columbia, has had\nits uns and downs, as noted. Strikes plagued\nthe delightful little city, cupped in a mountain settirfg, in the '20s and the loss of\nmarkets brought on slack time when the\nmen picked up their tools. The rnine's were\nclosed in. 1932 but were reopened in three\nmonths with a payroll of about 130 men.\nSince th^n th= number of pit workers rose\nto 300. The mines have been working short\ntime during the past year and coal production of the Crow's Nest Pass Coal Company\nLtd, dropned about 25 per cent last year,\nwe are told. At one time much of the Fernie\noutout was sold to the Great Northern Railway. That was in the heyday of coal\u2014the\nera when Coal was King. Now It le Sick\nKing Coal right down the line.\n-Lethbridge Herald.\nHonest Silence\nHomer Croy, author, says the Associated\nPress, hai just returned a novel to a friend,\nRay V. Denslow, from whom he had borrowed it when they were fellow students\nat the University of Missouri 50 years.-ago,\nNo note of explanation accompanied the\nbook.\nCrude of Mr. Croy? Before we accuse\nhim of churlishness let us consider what\nhe might have said:\n','1 found the book so absorbing I could\nnot put it down.\" (Mr. Croy is no illiterate:\nhis friend would know he could have read\nit a hundred times in 50 years.)\n\"Every time I saw you or passed your\nhouse I thought of that book but never had\nit with me.\" (Perhaps Mr. Croy and Mr.\nDenslow have always lived a thousand miles\napart as they do now.)\n\"It got buried under a pile of mail and\nmagazines  and  I just  came  across  it.\"\n(Plausible excuse for a writer; but these\npiles do get cleared out biennially, by one's\n' wife if not by oneself.)\n\"I enjoyed it so much I loaned It to a\nfriend and he- has just returned it.'' (No.\nWon't pass. There couldn't have been two\nsuch borrowings in onevhalf century.)\nThe only honest thing Mr. Croy could\nhave done he has done: return the book\nwith no comment, leaving his friend to\nforget his pique, if any, in wondering, as\nwe are, what on earth did happen.'\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nWrtmaam Draki\nNo Coddling\nOne thing is left perfectly clear by the\nRiverside affair that taw a policeman\nbeaten up by hoodlums, while a crowd of\n300 youths stood around and cheered. Either\nthe police maintain order, or the town drifts\ninto near-anarchy, at the hoodlums' whim.\nIf riot sticks and a free application of\nthem to hoodlums' heads are the answer\nto thet kind of threat, then the police should\nhave and use them. Wolf-oacks and their\nstrange fandom don't invite coddling.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nLook in the section ln which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor Friday, Jan. 31, 1958\nMARCH 21, to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Doing the right thing at the\nright time will pay big dividends.\nDon't be nervous,, or inwardly\nexcited because others are. Keep\ncalmly tuned to the demands of\nyour position and have faith in the\noutcome.\nAPRIL-21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nThis day may go contrary to your\nexpectations but, in the new direction, you may chance upon valuable information, important points\nto further the work on which you\nnow depend. \\\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (GeminD-\nIt will be wise to control emotions,\nquick temper, now. You will need\nall your good judgment and talents\nto reach the objectives you seek.\nBe satisfied with, reasonable gain,\nhowever.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nYour prospects are practically a\ncarbon copy of Taurus'. Take sufficient time when you start your\nprogram to weigh your capacity\nto handle how much \u2014 and in what\ntime. Don't overdo, fret or worry.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) -\nOften you brisk, \"do-something-\nabout-it\" folks can do better, by\nlopping off some of your tremendous enthusiasm and taking\" a calmer course \u2014 allowing time for\nreviewing and checking where to\ngo next.-\n'AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Similar to Gemini.\nFamiliar activities, discussions,\nstudy, research and the things for\nwhich you are naturally talented\nare highly favored now. Go along\nwith good ideas.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to. OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Pleasant and helpful\ninfluences linger from yesterday's\nfine venus and Sun positions. It\nmay not be an exciting day, but\nyou can make good headway if\ndoing your best.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Mars and Saturn\nsuggest that you not be aggressive\nor easily irritated now. Intelligent\npersuasion is more effective and\ncalmness gives one clearer judgment. Finances improve.\nNOVEMBER 53 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 A splendid Jupiter aspect now, so you are \"in the\npink.\" Be mindful of advantages\nand how to deal with them with\nyour God-given capability.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Financial traps-\nactions, sound investments favored\nbut, in other matters, you may\nhave to exert greater skill, more\npatience to put across your interests. Often the TRY Is sufficient.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\nPress Comment\nEFFECT ON SEAWEED\nAn American biologist advances the theory that man and all animals have evolved\nfrom brown seaweed, which in turn had developed from a st|U simpler life form, blue\nalgae.'\nWhat we do In the next 500 years CQU,ld\nmake the brown seaweed swell with pride,\nor on the other hand it could make the ancestral blue algae blush a deep red.\u2014Victoria\nTimes.\nIt's Been Said\nMarriage is a medicine which acts differently on good men and good women. She\ndoes not love him quite enough; cure\u2014marriage. He loves her a little too much; cure-\nmarriage.\u2014Charles Reade.\nWatch Your Language\nVULNERABLE (VUL-ner-a-b'I): Adjective\u2014Able to be wounded; susceptible or\nliable to injury; in contract, bridge, liable to\ndouble penalties. Origin: Latin\u2014Vulnus, a\nwound.\n\u2014!\u2014;  i 11 .\u25a0 i\nThey'll Do It Every Time       *\u00bb-......\u2014\u00ab.       By Jimmy Hatlo\n%\/....   ... .  v;^^^iri:^-^?i-\/rjr)rjit nc-rurryt pi\/fd u^n 4UV V% r-ir-ii\/  \u00bb Uto^\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBut at many at receive Him,\nto them gave he power. John\n1:12.\nGods kingdom is within us, and\nit is replete with both wisdom and\npower. Christ ha6 the key. -\nOuntdisL\nit. \u00bbonr> a awn wmvto.\nV&TCHIN3 THE BCVS\nCOM6RE6ATE WHEH\nWORD OP THE NEW\nSTENO SETS GROUND-\nTrWKM*nTOH4T7IRS\nIbdRtfEaCUlSE,\ntl\u00a3W0OLE4NS,U-\nI'm sorry women have quit\neryin'. A woman hat got to relieve\nherself some way;' and if she don't\ncry, she'll swear.\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Follow your conscience and don't neglect home\nduties or seemingly unimportant\ndetails. You may have to be\nspeedier in some matters but take\nit as a \"must\" and you won't\nregret it.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Planetary aspects are\nnot much to enthuse about but you\ncan make things hum with your\neagerness and adaptability, nevertheless. All things managed with\nyour usual cleverness and know-\nhow will respond generously. Be\nof good cheer.\nYOU BORN TODAY are studious, likely, to make unexpected\nchanges and \"spring\" surprises on\nfamily, friends, etc. You may not\nalways, be firm about keeping appointments, may neglect important tasks in -favor of pleasure,\nCorrect these harmful traits lest\nthey defeat the really fine qualities\nyou possess and should cultivate.\nWhen you stay with a project with\ndetermination, you usually make\na go of it. Birthdate: Franz Schubert, famed composer.\nKing Features\nHappenings\nin the House\nThe Week\nAt Victoria\nSunday Sports\nBill Up Soon\nVICTORIA (CP) - A private\nbill which would permit municipal eouncil to pass a bylaw\nauthorizing Sunday sports following a plebiscite will be introduced to the \u25a0 legislature this\nweek.\nThe bill, entitled the \"Lord's\nDay (British Columbia) Act\" will\nbe introduced by Gordon Dov\/d-\ning (CCF-Burnaby).\nIt provides that If 10 per cent\nof the electorate asks for a plebiscite for the holding of paid\ncommercial sports on Sundays\nthe following question should be\nsubmitted to electors:\n\"Are you in favor of a municipal bylaw authorizing the playing of public athletic games and\nsports on the Lord's Day, under\nthe Lord's Day (British Columbia)  Act?\nIf the vote was in favor of Sunday sports the council could then\npass a bylaw permitting them.\nHorse racing does not come\nunder the act.\nIt Is doubtful if the government\nwill accept the bill.\nNew Faces, Old\nPolicies\u2014Ellis\n, PENTICTON (CP) - Claude\nEllis, MP for Regina, told a CCF\nmeeting here Tuesday night that\nthe last election had not brought\nabout a change of government\nbut \"merely a change of administrative faces.\"\nCharging that Conservatives\nwere guiliv of the same contempt of Parliament as the Liberals Mr. Ellis said the present\ngovernment is closer to a coalition than anything else.\n\"They even offer the same palliatives, such as the \"do it now\"\ncampait-n, as Ihe Liberals.\nMr, Ellis said he thought the\npresent session would be One of\nthe most fruitful in Canada's history. After 22 years of arrdaance\nthe Liberals went down to defeat\nand the Conservative* now know\nthey must try to be in tune with\nthe people.\nCalling for recognition of Red\nChina, Mr. Ellis said Canada\ncould no longer continue tn shut\nthe door on a quarter of the\nworld's population.\n\"It is the most absurd economic nonsense we could* devise.\" He also criticized Can\nada's refusal to accept foreign\ncurrency in trade for her goods.\nBy L. T. NIMSICK\nMLA for Cranbrook\nDuring the past week we motored\nto Victoria and found the roads in\ngood condition for this time of the\nyear. The only incident on the trip\nhappened between Moyie and Yahk\nwhen we drowned the engine by\ngoing through a water puddle! The\ncar quit for a while, but with some\ncoaxing it soon resumed its usual\ngood nature and there was no more\nnonsense.\nOn arriving in Victoria I immediately got down to work with two\ndays of meetings preparing for the\nmain battle.\nThursday, the Legislative Assembly was opened in the same time-\nhonored fashion that has taken\nplace for the last 100 years. This\nyear we did not have a speaker\ndue to the resignation of Mr.\nThomas Irwin last spring. The\nlieutenant-governor marched into\nthe House with his official retinue\nand, on finding that no speaker\nwas present, marched out again.\nWe then elected a speaker following which the lieutenant-governor\nreturned to read the speech from\nthe throne.\nThis Speech is supposed to give\nthe reasons why the Assembly Has\nbeen summoned together, but this\nyear it was more in the nature of\na review of what has been done\nduring the past year. There was\nvery little indication of what legislation would be brought down at\nthis session. The Speech referred\nto some changes in the Municipal\nAct, Forestry, and the Public\nSchools Act. There was a promise\nthat the Government would give\nsome help to alleviate the unemployment situation nothing specific was stated.\nNo reference was made to any\nchange in the Workmen's Compensation Act which I hope will be\nopened this session.\nNo reference was made as to\nwhat will be done with the money\nsaved by the Federal contribution\nto Hospital Insurance which will\namount to many millions. I had\nhoped that the Government would\nhave given us. some idea as to\nwhether the service would be expanded to take care of our\nchronics, or some medical care,\nor if there will be a reduction ln\nthe sales tax.\nFriday we started out with a\nbang by debating the important\nquestion of unemployment, and\nthe serious question that is facing\nthe City of Fernie through the\n. threatened closing of the Elk River\nColliery. These questions were\nreferred to the Standing Committee\non Labor for study, and report.\nFollowing this debate the mover\nOf the Acceptance of the Throne\nSpeech, Mr. W. C. Speare, spoke.\nHe is a new member of the House,\nand therefore this was his Maiden\nSpeech. As is customary this\nspeech constitutes a review of the\nrecord of the Government, and\nheaps great praise on all the accomplishments, a procedure known\nas \"Apple Polishing.\"\nSince so much time was taken\nup with the first debate on unemployment, the Seconder to the\nacceptance of the Speech from the\nthrone, Mr. Gibson, had to adjourn\nthe debate until next Monday.\n,1 placed a resolution on the\nOrder Paper asking this Government to support the Federal Government in their efforts lo per\nsuade the United Stales Government not to place their proposed\ntariff on lead and zinc:\nWith the following quote I will\nSay \"Thirty\" for this week, friends.\n\"Nothing   is   politically   right,\nwhich is morally wrong.\"\nBy HON. W. D. BLACK,\nProvincial Secretary\nTo the skirl of bagpipes a new\nSession of the Legislature was\nopened by His Honor the Lieutenant-Governor, Frank McK. Ross,\nDespite a windy wet day a large\nnumber of people turned out to\nwitness the colorful event. This\nyear the Canadian \"Scottish Regiment, Victoria's favourite militia\nunit, made a most colorful sight\nin their scarlet tunics and tall\nblack busbies and swinging kilts,\nIn the House itself the traditional\nceremonies of choosing a new\nSpeaker, Mr. Hugh Shantz, MLA,\nNorth Okanagan, and the introduction of the three new MLA's ore-\nceded the reading of the Speech\nfrom the Throne by His Honour,\nthe Lieutenant-Governor. The\nSpeech from the Throne reviewed\nthe many accomplishments of,the\nGovernment during the past year.\nOf interest to the West Kootenay\nwas the mention of the fact that\nMr. Justice Lord is continuing his\ninvestigation of Doukhobor lands\nand, based on his recommendations\nin his interim report, the Government has had all former Doukho-\nbor-owned lands surveyed, assessed and offered for sale .to the\nDoukhobor people. >\nThe Speech from the Throne reported .that soil surveys , of the\nColumbia River Basin, undertaken for the International Joint\nCommission, have now been completed. The Government expects to\nreceive the Crippen-Wright engineering study concerning power\ndevelopment on the Columbia\nRiver during the coming year.\nThe Throne Speech outlined\nsome of the major pieces of legislation to be introduced this year.\nA revised Municipal Superannuation Act will allow for the payment of realistic and adequate\nsuperannuation allowances to municipal employees. Amendments to\nthe Public Services Medical Plan\nAct will improve the scheme under\nwhich 12,000 Government employees are provided with medical\ninsurance. Amendments to the\nnew Municipal Act will be brought\nin to clear up a few anatomies or\ndeficiencies that have become evi\ndent in the first year's operation\nof the new Act.\nOf interest to the City of Nelson\nand the Villages of Creston and\nSalmo is the promise to further\nassist cities and municipalities.\nThe opening of the new Haney\nCorrectional Institution will permit a reorganization' of the gaol\nservice of the province. Increased\nprovision will be made for vocation and apprenticeship training in\norder that more of the young\npeople of this province may be\ngiven training as skilled craftsmen.\nOf interest to all parents, teachers and school boards is the announcement that the \"Public\nSchools Act\" will be revised.\nAfter His Honor left the Legislative Chamber members of the\nExecutive Council tabled many of\nthe reports on their departments\nas required each year by the\nstatutes.\nThe Legislature was then adjourned and everyone moved over\nto the Empress Hotel across the\nstreet to a reception given by the\nGovernment for the public.\nAll in all it promises to be a\nvery busy Session with a great\ndeal of important legislation that\nhas a direct bearing on the lives\nol every one of my constituents in\nNelson-Creston area.\nQueen Mother's\nFeather Starts\nControversy\nVancouver (CP)\u2014The origin of\na slender black feather atop the\nQueen Mother's hat, which\nstarted a controversy among reporters covering her stopover In\nMontreal Tuesday, remained a\nmystery after her arrival-in Vancouver Tuesday night.\nHer Majesty wore a blue hat\nwith a black feather\u2014perhaps the\nsame one she wore in Montreal\u2014 ,\nwhen she stepped from her plane,\nfor a 24-hour stopover here. But'\nnobody was quite sure what kind\nof feather.\nA Montreal reporter described\nit as \"an egret\"\u2014product of the\nwhite heron, whose feathers are\nbanned in Canada.\nA few years ago Mrs. Frank\nRoss, wife of the lieutenant-governor of British Columbia, wore\nan egret-trimmed hat to a legislature opening and had the hat\nseized by customs. Mrs. Ross\nmet the Queen Mother on her arrival Tuesday night.\nA Vancouver reporter who\nphoned the lieutenant-governor's\nresidence after the Queen\nMother's arrival there to spend\nthe night was told that \"Mrs.\nRoss said it was -raining so hard\nshe didn't get a chance to see\nwhat kind of feather she (the\nQueen Mother) was wearing.\"\nShe said the royal entourage\nhad retired.\nWomen's hats may not be trimmed wilh feathers from any but\nedible birds or birds of prey. The\nwhite heron is neither. .\nBaby's Colds\nWhile Baby's Own Tablett are not i cold\nremedy, they can be most helpful in clearing\ntittle constipated bowels of the wastes that\noften cause fretfulness and feverishness during this period. Sweet-tasting, little, rablets,\nBaby's Own act gently . . . aa promptly to\nregulate baby't bowels, as thousands and\nthousands of mothers can testify. So why let\nconstipation add to your baby's discomfort\nduring colds, or, ar any time? Effective, too,\nfor quick relief .of upset rummies, feverish-\nness, restlessness, colic pains, and other minor troubles due to need of a corrective at\nSthing time. Clinically and time-tested for\ncacy and safety. Ask your docror about\nBaby's Own Tablets. Get a package today at\nyour druggist.\n\u2022 NEW) BABY'S OWN COUGH SYRUP\nmade espaciolly for babiet.Soothing,quickly\nuliaving...picaiant...won't ups\u00abi digntion\nHolland Expels\nThree Russians\nTHE HAGUE (Reuters) - The\nNetherlands said Wed. it has expelled three members of the Russian Embassy.\nThe foreign office did not say\nwhy, but newspapers report that\nthe diplomatic trio entertained\nDutch soldiers at parties in order\nto ferret out military information.\nThe three, who already have\ndeparted, were Col. L. I. Tcher-\nnov, military and air attache;\nLt.-Cmdr. V. S. Zenin, naval attache; and G. N. Soechatsjow, an\ninterpreter.\nThe newspaper De Telegraaf\nsays t h e Dutch government,\nwhich \"had had the Russians\nshadowed for months,\" discovered that they had \"regularly in- ,\nvited\" lower-ranking officers of\nthe Dutch armed forces to parties and meetings \"to collect data\nabout the Dutch  forces.\"\nThe Russians concentrated\ntheir attention on the Dutch naval\nbase of Den Helder, De Telegraaf says, adding that Russian\nespionage activities \"assumed\nsuch proportions that at one time\nthe Dutch government considered\nejecting the whole of the military\nstaff of the Russian Embassy\nfrom the country.\"\nMETEOR FOOLS SHIPS\nTHE HAGUE (Reuters) - A\nhuge ball of fire\u2014probably a meteor\u2014led to ships altering course\nin the North Sea during the night.\nIt was mistaken for distress rockets. The phenomenon was sighted\nover The Netherlands, north Germany and Denmark. The fireball\nwas so bright in southern Jutland\nthat truck drivers had to stop\ntheir vehicles because of the\nglare.\nKiddles\nJust Love\nBUCKLEY'S\nTHE CHILDREN'S OWN\nCOUGH SYRUP\nWITH VITAMIN C\n... because it tastes so good ... and you'll\nlike It, too, because tt works so fast to-^\nrelieve congestion, check coughs^\nand soothe tender little\nthroats. Eases coughs\nfast. Onl\/ \"\nTrust a Mother to help a Child\n>\u25a0>\nSATURDAY NIGHT 20,000 mothers will be canvassing\nfrom dc-or-to-door throughout British Columbia to raise\n$275,000 for B.C. CHILD CARE & POLIO FUND.\nBe glad nou can help a child back to health and happiness.\nWarm your heart wilh a generous gift.\nB.C. Child Care and Polio Fund sponsored by Nelson Kinsmen Club\n om\n0M&A, 'Up, LVIik\nMarian. Wlwdirv\nPrinted Pattern\nFOR HALF-SIZERS\nSpring's newest! Lower neck\nline is built up to flatter modestly, conceal all straps. Printed Pattern is proportioned for shorter,\nfuller figures. Make another version with collar.\nPrinted Pattern 9135: Half Sizes\n14_, 18_, 18 _, 20_, 22_, WA.\nSize 16 _ takes 4 yards 35-inch\nfabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please\nprint plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,   STYLE   NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W\nToronto, Ont.\nCLASS ADS GET  RESULTS!\nI the\n_iiiiiiiiM.iiiimiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiii.il\nPHONE 1844\nMiss Carol Buckley, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Norman Buckley of\n524 Second Street, has left for Holy\nName College in Spokane to continue her training in art and journalism. Miss Buckley has already\ncompleted part of her course and\"\nhas been on the staff of the Medical Associate Clinic while in Nelson. Other members of the staff\nhonored Miss Buckley at a supper\nparty and made a presentation to\nher before her departure.\n* *  \u2022\nOwing to an accident suffered\nrecently by their mother, Mrs.\nPercy Bean of Fernie,. Mrs. A.\nVanSacker, 624 Sixth Street, and\nMrs. A. E. Burke of the North\nShore have left for Fernie to be\nwith her.\n. \".*   *\nGoing East for a few weeks, Mrs.\nH.. Coleman, North Shore, will\nleave Saturday and will be accompanied by Mrs. L. R. Burton of the\nNorth Shore.\n* *   * i\nMr. and Mrs. C. Stone of Edmonton and their daughter Barbara have'aken up residence at\n410C Richards Street. Mr. Stone\nhas been transferred to Nelson as\nsalesman for the Robin Hood Flour\nCompany.\n* %\u25a0*,\"'\nMr. and Mrs. E. Brochu of the\nNorth Shore have returned from\nKamlooDS where they have spent\na few days.\n* *   *\nIn Vancouver for a week are Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Paxton of the North\nShore, who left for the Coast Sunday.\nWynndel Institute\nSponsors Card Party\nWYNNDEL - The Wynndel Women's Institute held a successful\ncard party in the Wynndel Memorial hall. There were several\nvisitors from Creston and district.\nBridge, whist and crib were enjoyed. Proceeds are being set aside\nfor a special Institute project.\nIRISH CRITIC\nAnna Brownell Jameson, Irish\nauthoress who died in 1860, was\nbest known as an art critic.\nJayl&iL...\nNew Goods Arriving Daily\nNew Designs in POLISHED COTTONS\nin borders and allover.\n\u25a0k DRIP DRY COTTONS.\nic PRINTED  WASHABLE SILKS AND  RAYONS\n* NEW PASTEL TWEEDS.\n624 Baker St.\nPhone 1485\nSIX MEMBERS of the Nelson Women's Institute recently received life membership for their long and faithful work for the organization, Mrs, C. B. White, of Willow\nPoint, district president, made the presentations while Mrs. J. McNabb, Institute pres-\n.- ident, looks on. Both stand at right. Recipients were, seated, Mrs. John Draper, Mrs.\nH. E. Thain and Mrs. H. B. Penny, and at back left, Mrs. J. P. Sutherland, Mrs. W.\nBennett and Mrs. B. C. Affleck.\u2014Daily News photo.\nFormer Canadian Woman Directs\nReligious Life of Bahai Sect\nHAIFA, Israel (CP) - Twenty\nyears ago the beautiful daughter\nof a Montreal architect came to\nHaifa on a pilgrimage. She remained to make her home in the Holy\nLand. .\nToday, the former Mary Maxwell is one of the nine disciples\ndirecting the religious life of the\n2,000,000 of the Bahai World Community, a religious sect.\nSoon after the Canadian girl\ncame here, she became the wife\nof Shoghi Effendi Rabbani, a young\nPersian (Iranian) intellectual who\nwas \"guardian\" or leader of the\nBahai religion founded by his\ngreat-grandfather, Mirza Hussein\nAll;\nPERSIAN ORIGIN\nFollowing her husband's death\nlast year, the widow\u2014now known\nas Madame Ruhiyyih Rabbani \u2014\nwas among the nine persons from\nfive countries elected by Bahai\nelders to guide the destinies of\n2,000,000 followers in 4500 spiritual\ncentres in many parts of the world.\nOther leaders, with the title\n\"hands of the cause,\" are from\nIran, the United States, Israel and\nWest Germany.\nThe Bahai faith was heralded in\nPersia in 1844 when Mirza Ali\nMohammed, born a Moslem, publicly claimed to be the bearer of\na divine message and mission.\nPredicting the arrival of a new\nprophet, he brought upon himself\nthe wrath of Moslem authorities\nand was executed by a Persian\nfiring squad at Tabriz, now described by Bahais as a \"second\ncalvary.\"\nSACRED SHRINE\nNineteen years later another\nPersian, Mirza Hussein Ali, known\nas Bahullah, proclaimed himself\nthe chosen of God. He Was banished\nby the Persians, imprisoned by the\nTurks but later allowed' to live in\na modest house at Acre, near here,\nwhere he died in 1892. His tomb in\nAcre is the most sacred shrine of\nthe Bahai sect.\nHis   grandson,   Shoghi   Effendi\nRabbani, was to become the husband of Mary Maxwell, Ruhiyyih\nRabbani, which in Persian means\n\"the lady of the soul.\"\nMary-Ruhiyyih lives in a fine old\nArab house beside <Mount Carmel,\nspending many hours of contemplation and study amid beautiful gardens and statues where pheasants\nand peacocks roam free.\nTravels with her husband gave\nopportunity for indulging her hobby\nof collecting Japanese and Chinese\ncarvings for her home.\nBUILT TEMPLE\nMary-Ruhiyyih was brought up\nin the Bahai religion, her father,\nW. S. Maxwell, and her mother\nhaving embraced the faith following a visit to Canada by the sage,\nAbdul Baha.\nThe Montreal architect built a\nBahai temple in Chicago, the first\nin the Western world, and also designed the impressive gold-domed\nmausoleum on Mount Carmel\nwhere rests the sarcophagus of the\nBab, known as \"the heralder of\none greater than he.\"\nMary - Ruhiyyih, studying the\npoetry and mysticism of the East\nto combine with her Western background, found no conflict between\nthe two cultures, saying they form\na harmonious unity:\n\"Ours is not an Oriental religion\nbut' a universal one.\"\nUNIVERSAL PEACE\nAsked about a kerchief worn\nover her hair, the only Oriental\nnote in her costume, she recalled\nthat when she married Shoghi\nEffendi, his mother and sister,\nnewly-arrived from Persia, were\nheavily veiled.\n\"I decided that in order not to\nbe conspicuous, I would wear a\nscarf. When they both died I was\nleft with the scarf and now I feel\nlost without it.\"\nWhen her husband died without\nheirs, Mary-Ruhiyyih decided to\ncontinue his work as much as possible.\nLove of humanity and work for\nuniversal peace are th? corner\nstones of the Bahai creed which\nenvisages a world super-state and\ncomplete reconciliation between\nlabor and capital.\nPlan Trip Round\nWorld In Ketch\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Six men and\nwomen will set sail at the end\nof this month on an 18-mont. ,\nround - the - world voyage conceived in the Alberta' oilfields.\nThe voyage is the brainchild of\nSvein Madsen, a 25-year-old'naturalized Canadian who emigrated\nto Canada and the oilfields from\nNorway.\nIn Alberta, Madsen, a keen\namateur yachtsman, extolled the\nvirtues of the sea. Before long he\nand his friends were making\nplans for a globe-circling\" voyage\nin a 47-foot ketch.\nNORDIC CRAFT\nJoining Madsen in the venture\nare his English-born wife, Jill;\n.Patrick Turner, a 30-year-old\nEnglishman who also worked in\nthe Alberta oilfields; Irene Bell,\na registered nurse from Calgary\nand John Courtney, from Birmingham, England. The sixth\nmember of the crew has not been\nchosen.\nMadsen. who will be the skipper, and Turner arrived from\nCanada, Dec. 31 to complete\nplans for the voyage. \u2022 Madsen\nlater went to Bergen, Norway\"; to\nprepare the ketch named Nord-\nsaga\u2014Spirit of the North.\nThe group plans to leave by\nJan. 31. They win sail from Bergen or England via the Mediterranean, Indian Ocean, Far East\nand the Pacific Ocean, ending at\nVancouver in about two years.\nSuch a familar scene! People getting together\nover cur_T6t\" delicious Nabob Coffee. There's\ngood reason for it, too, because more people\nenjoy Nabob's finer quality and flavor\nthan any other coffee in the west. Why don't\nyou get together with Nabob Coffee today?\nTRY NABOB INSTANT COFFEE TOO!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958 \u2014 S\nLegion Auxiliary's\nExecutive Takes Office\nInstallation of executive officers\nfor 1958, headed by Mrs. Irene Day\nas president, took place at the recent meeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary to Nelson branch of the Canadian Legion.\nIn the role of installing officer\nwas Mrs. Norman Brown, a, past-\npresident.\nMrs. A. O. Allen, during the\nreading of annual reports, stated\nApplesauce\nHandy To Keep\nPreserved\nBy ALICE DENHOFF\nCanned applesauce, that boon to\nthe cook, stands ready to come\ndown from the pantry shelf as a\nprime ingredient in many good\nrecipes.\nFor example, try Apple Ham\nMousse Salad.\nTo serve 6 to 8, add 1 cup diced\ncelery, 2 tablespoons minced onion, 1 cup canned applesauce, 2\ntablespoons horseradish and\nteaspopns prepared mustard to 2\ncups ground, cooked ham or 1 (12-\nounce) can luncheon meat, ground.\nSoften 1 envelope plain -gelatin\nin Vt cup cold water in top section\nof double boiler. Then place over\nboiling water to dissolve gelatin,\nAdd to meat mixture.\nBeat _ cup heavy cream until\nstiff. Fold into meat mixture. Pour\ninto mold. Chill until firm.\nServe with dressing made by\nmixing together % cup mayonnaise\nor salad dressing and 2 tablespoons\nprepared mustard.\nTo transform ready-to-heat rolls\ninto something special, combine 1\ncup canned applesauce, tablespoon\ngrated orange rind, 2 tablespoons\norange juice, Vt cup seedless.raisins, Vi cup butter and V4 cup brown\nsugar,\n. Heat in buttered pan, 7 by 12 by\n2-inches.\nPlace 12 ready-to-heat rolls upside down in sauce and press\nfirmly. Bake at 425 degrees for 15\nminutes.\nTurn rolls out of pan, spooning\nremaining sauce in pan over rolls.\nShould be served immediately.\nBOILED BEEF\nHere is an excellent way, to\nmake boiled beef really Inta-est-\ning. , *   ':\nTo serve 6, combine 1 cup diced,\ncanned apple slices, tablespoon\nprepared horseradish, teaspoon\nsugar and a few grains*, of salt.\nWhip _ cup heavy cream rather\nstiff. Fold into, apple mixture.\nCreston  Legion  LA\nTo Hold Installation\nCRESTON \u2014 Officers to be installed by the Legion Ladies'\nAuxiliary on February 11 are\npresident Mrs. M. .Werner, first\nvice-president Mrs. Amy Erickson,\nsecond vice-president Mrs. i M.\nSmith, secretary, NMrs. N. Vigne,\ntreasurer, Mrs. Lister, sergeant-\nat-arms, Mrs. . Remandez, and\nexecutive officers Mrs. H. Ander\nson, Mrs. K. Anderson, Mrs. F\nSmith and Mrs. M. Slanden.\nA joint installation and social\nwill be held with the branch.\nthat 1957 had been a year of splendid work by all committees. There\nwere 60 members at the end of\nthe year.\nDuring 1957, a total of 1500 visits\nwere made to the hospital, where\n1334 treats vJere distributed, Miss\nEvelyn Forbes told the meeting.\nVarious committees were ap\npointed for this year.\nTwo members of the Kinsmen\nClub, Gordon Wakeham and Dr.\nA. W. L. Vogelsang, attended the\nmeeting, the former being chairman of the Mothers' March. Dr.\nVogelsang spoke on various projects undertaken through the Kinsmen polio fund.\nAn application for membership\nfrom Mrs. Tedesco. was accepted.\nTea was served by Mrs. B. Gray,\nMrs. Allen, Mrs. Day, Mrs. Brown\nand Mrs. Kerr.\n(By, Ztawux. OJAeekA.\nCLEARANCE\nSALE\nof fine furniture\nCONTINUES\nALL THIS WEEK\n.It pays to shop at\nA small medallion (just 4_\ninches).\u2014 ah easy-to-crochet design. These medallions make\nlovely large or small accessories\nfor your home or for gifts.\nPattern -596: crochet directions\nfor 4_-inch medallion in No. 50\ncotton. Do in spare minutes.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to-Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npattrens for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed -in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book, plus dozens of\nother new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery^iron\nons, novelties. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book NOW \u2014\nwith gift pattern printed in Itl\nDEATH RATE\nFROM PNEUMONIA\nSTILL HIGH\nBy DR. H. N. BUNDESEN\nThis is pneumonia and influenza\nweather. There are three times as\nmany deaths from these two diseases during January and February than during a summer month\nlike August.\nUnfortunately, many persons\nthese days mistakenly believe that\nwe don't have to worry about the\nflu or pneumonia any mote. With\nour modern drugs, they feel, these\ndiseases no longer are dangerous.\nThis just isn't true. The pneumonia-influenza team is'the sixth\nleading cause of death in America. It killed about 45,000 persons\nlast year. That's more than the\ntotal number of persons killed in\nmotor vehicle accidents.\nNow don't misunderstand. By\nusing various anti-pneumonia sera,\nthen the sulfonamides, and, more\nrecently, the broad-spectrum antibiotics, we have made great\nstrides in combating-the pneumonia-influenza death rate. But neither disease is licked yet \u2014 far\nfrom it!\nThe very young were most susceptible to the ravages of either\ndisease.\nStatistics show that men are\nmore ^likely to die from these two\ndiseases than women. In the age\nbracket of 45-64, twice as many\nmen as women die of the flue or\npneumonia.\nTraditionally, mortality rates\nare high among persons engage-\nin specific occupations such as\nmining and welding, since these\njobs are often fatiguing and require exposure to bad weather\nand abrupt ohanges in temperature.\nYou cant qo\nmm\n,,, IF you feel\nALL-IN\nThen days moil people work under\npressure, worry more, sleep leu. This\nsfoein on body end brain makes physical\nfitness easier to loio\u2014harder to regain.\nToday's tense living, lowered reaistance..\noverwork, worry\u2014any ol these may affect\nnormal kidney action. When kidneys gel\nout of order, excess adds and wastes\nremain in tha system. Then baekacrw,\ndisturbed rest, that \"tired-out\" heavy-\nbeaded feeling often follow. That's th*\ntime to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's\nstimulate Ihe kidneys to normal action.\nThen you feel better\u2014sleep better\u2014work\nbctler. Ask for Dodd's Kidney Pills al\nany drug counter. j|\nDRESSES\nCocktail, afternoon and daytime dresses\n\u2022 at a terrific saving. Jersey, wool, velvet\nand lace.\n3 Only Size 8-10-12\nHATS\nTailored and dressy hats in melusine and\nfur felt.\nPRICE\nBROKEN LINES IN\nCar Coats, Sweaters, Blouses, Lingerie\nGREATLY REDUCED.\nAll Sales Final\nNo Exchanges'\nor Refunds\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY N\u00a3WS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958\nLad Withdraws Offer\nTo Man Next Sputnik\nMICKLEOVER, England (AP)\n\u2014 Having thought the matter\nover at some length, 13-year-old\nLloyd Lee has abandoned his\ndream of becoming the world's\nfirst Sputnik pilot. What business\nhas a chap got in outer space\nwhen he swoons at sea level?\nIt is. hoped the Russians can\ntake a joke. In any case the Soviet embassy in London may as\nwell ignore Lloyd's letter of Jan.\n21 offering to man (or boy) a\nSputnik for therh. He is no longer\navailable, and he wasn't too\navailable to begin with.\nLloyd is a student at the\nQueen Elizabeth Grammar\nSchool, where recently a rumor\nwent the rounds that the Soviet\nUnion stands ready to fork out\n$140,000 a head for Sputnik skippers.\nLloyd,   an   imaginative   chap,\nfired off a letter of acceptance\nto the embassy in London.\nREPORT  TO  SIBERIA\nTwo days ago he received a\nletter headed \"Russian Embassy\"\n\u2014and typed in red, yet. It advised him' that he had been\nchosen as a prospective Sputnik\njockey and added:\n\"You will be required to do\nsome \u2022 training in Siberia. Our\nagents will be contacting you\nwithin the next few days to take\nyou away for training.\"\nAt this point it became obvious\nthat Lloyd was far short of starting condition for a space flight\n\u2014he fainted.\n\"I was frightened out of my\nwits,\" his mother said later. She\nsummoned his father home from\nwork to guard Lloyd from the\nRed press gangs, locked all the\ndoors \u25a0 and windows, and telephoned the police.\nA detective assigned to Ihe\ncase reported after an inquiry\nthat notepaper of the kind used\nfor the letter to Lloyd had been\nfound in a certain .upper-class\ndesk at the Queen Elizabeth\nschool. More conclusive still, certain upper-classmen confessed\nwriting the letter.\nMrs. Lee, greatly relieved, told\na reporter:\n\"Lloyd no longer wishes to be\na spaceman. He now wants to\njoin the merchant navy.\"\nThe Soviet embassy so far has\nhad no comment.\nFears Foreign\nCompetition\nDULUTH, Minn. <AP>-Great\nLakes shipping interests face the\nthreat that foreign vessels will\nreap greater rewards than American and Canadian ships when\nthe St. Lawrence seaway is completed, Capt. J. B. Oliver said\nTuesday.\nOliver, tanker captain from\nToledo, Ohio, said that largely\nthrough lower labor costs foreign\nvessels could haul grain and\nother cargo abroad from Great\nLakes ports much more cheaply\nthan could North American ships.\nOliver is second vice-president\nof the International Shipmasters\nAssociation, holding its' annual\nmeeting here. The association\nhas 13 lodges in the U.S. and\nCanada.\nMolester Outwitted\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A molester was outwitted by one of his\nvictims Tuesday night when she\nasked him to pick up- her purse\nshe had dropped. As the man,\nwho had dragged her behind a\nhedge, turned to get the bag the\nwoman escaped. A second\nwoman was attacked in another\npart of Ihe city but also broke\naway.\nBercovitch\nLeaves Jail\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Louis Ber-\ncovitoh, 49, has been freed on a\nticket-of-leave after- serving 11\nyears, six months and two days\nof a life penitentiary sentence for\nthe 1946 slaying of Harry Davis,\nMontreal gambling kingpin.\nHe spent his first day\u2014Tuesday\u2014outside the walls of nearby\nSt. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary\nrelaxing at home and strolling\nthrough the streets', of his neighborhood.\n\"Mrs^ Bercovitch and I went\nshopping in the department\nstores,\" he said, \"and I was\namazed at the prices as compared with those of the old\ndays.\"\nBercovitch, originally charged\nwith murder and convicted of\nmanslaughter, made a spectacular surrender in 1946 to two\nmembprs or the old Herald reporting staff. A few hours earlier\nDavis had been shot in his Stanley Street gambling house.\nBercovitch was reported to\nhave made a \"full confession\" of\nthe slaying to the newspaper\nmen. He said later at the trial:\n\"It was either him or me.\"\nBercovitch must report regularly to a police station and a\nparole officer under terms of his\nparole.\nUBC Fund Over\nHalf-Way Mark\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The University of British Columbia Development Fund has reached a\ntotal of $4,1165,525.87, 66.2. per cent\nof the $7,500,000 objective, it was\nannounced Wednesday.\nIncluded in the total were contributions of .$55,000 from Western Canada Breweries Limited\nand $50,000 from Ocean Cement\nLimited. Among fund raising divisions, B.C. Personal Gifts, under the leadership. of Walter C.\nKoerner, continues to hold the\nlead with 68.4 per cent of its\nquota, a total pf $2,013,312, so far\ncollected.\n\"We still must raise more than\n$2,500,000 which will require\nmany more contributions both\nlarge and small. Victory will depend upon a vast flow of small\nand medium gifts from cities,\ntowns and villages throughqut the\nprovince,\" said, deputy chairman\nHoward Walters.\nOpen Visiting\nHours Liked\nKELOWNA (CP)-\"Open\" visiting hours instituted at Kelowna\nGeneral Hospital recently, have\nproved \"an unqualified success,\"\nhospital officials say.\nSuccess of the experiment in\npermitting friends and relatives\nto see \"patients at any time,\nlikely will result in permanent\nadoption of the. scheme.\nFear that visitors would abuse\nthe privilege proved ground ess\nand visitors \"have left whatever\nrequested to by the hospital\nstaff,\" a spokesman said.   \u25a0 -.\nCCC Suggests Ways To Help Trade ..\nAdvises Ottawa To Relax\nCredit, Reduce Taxes\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Canadian\nChamber of Commerce today\nurged the federal government to\nrelax credit restrictions and reduce taxes to \"improve husiness\nand investment psychology.\"\nThe chamber's executive council, in a brief presented to Ihe\nfinance and national' revenue\nminister, said the 1958 outlook is\nnot so bright as that a year ago.\nAlthough a downward adjustment of the economy after three\nyears of boom times was not unusual, its extent and duration\nwere uncertain.\nIt asked for appropriate tax reductions and removal of \"anomalies\" in excise taxes.\nThe brief, presented by a delegation headed by council chairman H. Roy Crabtree, said Canada's long-term outlook is good\nand businessmen have faith in\nthe future.\nBut it asked for action to improve short-term prospects,\nThe 'council said it welcomed\nreductions of income tax rates in\nthe lower and middle income\nbrackets >nd urged for. a program of orderly reduction of\nrates over a period of years.\nCORPORATION TAX\nThere should also be some reduction in rates and an increase\nin the present $20,000 limit on\nwhich lower rates of corporation\nincome tax prevails.\nFinance Minister Fleming recently has proposed raising of the\nlimit to $25,000.\nThe council said such reductions would improve the liquidity\nof small companies, and encourage capital investment besides\nhelping companies that have to\ncompete in export markets.\nCertain excise taxes were le\nvied under circumstances that no\nlonger apply to present economic\nconditions and these should be\nadjusted.\nIt recommended a royal commission to study all non-defence\noutlays and the relative importance of government spending to\nthe national  economy.\nBasic defence policies should\nbe re-examined in the light of\nadvancing military technology,\nbut this should be done in cooperation with the United States\nand NATO governments.\nThe council said the government should review customs\npractices, especially the dumping\nof foreign products on the Canadian market.\nREVIEW COMBINES LAWS\nIt should also review the present combines control laws, continue efforts to improve federal-\nprovincial tax co-operation, and\nlimit new federal spending to^\nnecessary construction projects.\nIt asked the government to arrange with provincial governments for the filing of only one\ncorporation or personal income\ntax return and the collection of\none tax.\nEstate tax exemption limits\nshould be at least $50,000 and\nthere should be some attempt to\neliminate the burden of an inheritor paying estate tax and income tax on his portion of it.\nThe council called on businessmen to look upon 1958 as a year\nof challenge.\n\"They should use their best\nmanagerial abilities in co-operation with labor to increase productivity and efficiency generally, to stimulate sales and put\ntheir best efforts into quality and\nservice. , . ,\"\nSusoect Arsonists\n\u25a0\nBehind Hull Fires\nHULL, Que. (CP) - The investigation authorities today indicated that an arsonist played a\npart in the burning of three brick\nbuildings close together in downtown Hull Tuesday night.\nWhile firemen fought a fire and\nexplosion in one building housing\na tavern and apartments, a second blaze broke out across the\nstreet in a stairway leading' to\nthe roof of the building. This was\nquickly followed by another outbreak in a second-floor office in\na building just around the corner.\nFire officials said they suspect\narson in at least the second fire.\nThe roof of that building had\nbeen rain - soaked for several\ndays and Tuesday night was covered with a thick blanket of snow\nvirtually ruling out any possibility that flying embers touched it\noff.\nPolice took into custody two\nmen and a juvenile but all were\nlater released. Police suspected\ntile juvenile of a connection with\nother arson cases in the Hull-Ottawa area. The men were taken\ninto custody for interfering with\nfiremen.\nOTHER FIRES\nFire chief Joseph Giroux and\nhis deputy chief EmiletjBond said\ntoday they are investigating the\npossibility the blazes are linked\nwith three others in the same\ngeneral area a week ago. They\nalso are thought to have been deliberately started.\nTuesday night's fire and explosion left 50 persons homeless\nand injured seven, none seriously.\nAbout 24 dwelling units \u2014\nmbstly bachelor-type apartments\n\u2014were destroyed, as well as two\nmen's clothing stores, a tavern,\na restaurant and a radio-television repair shop.\nAll Hull's available equipment\nwas in action and firemen were\ncalled in from neighboring Ottawa wilh additional equipment.\nHundreds of spectators were attracted to the scene by smoke\nvisible for miles. '\nSurrounding business establishments suffered smoke and water\ndamage.\nIn all, five firemen and two\ncivilians were injured. All were\ntreated in hospital but only those\ninjured by the explosion were\nadmitted.\nA week ago, five fires were\ndiscovered within minutes of ona\nanother in the same vicinity of\nEddy Street. Most serious\u2014with\nabout $6,000 damage\u2014was in tha\nsecond building to take fire Tuesday night. Assistant Fire Chief\nEmile Bond said then at least\ntwo of the fires were deliberately\nset.\nAmerican Mothers\nLeave Hong Kong\nHONG KONG (AP) - Three\nAmerican mothers who spent\nthree weeks in Red China With\ntheir prisoner sons left for tha\nUnited States Wednesday.\nThe mothers are Mrs. Jessie\nFecteau of Lynnt Mass.-, a former\nNewfoundlander; Mrs. Mary\nDowney of New Britain, Conn.,\nand Mrs. Ruth Redmond of Yonk-\ners, N.Y.\nRed China's Premiar Chou En-\nlai turned down a plea to release\ntheir sons, but a spokesman held\nout hope for clemency if the\nprisoners \"behave well.\"\niM\n?\n..sZL-^&xL\n)r0m*\n\\0\\ lll\u00bb\nLean Overwaitea Quality\nHAMBURGER\nFLAVOR\nWW\nBACON\nGainer's Quality.\nBy the piece\t\nib. 49'\nGrade \"A\" Red\nCubed Steaks\nik59\nGrade \"A\" Red\nStanding Rib Roasts  lb63c\n'Choice Quality\nBoneless Veal Roasts \">59\n[Our Own Recipe\niTasty Veal Patties     ^43\nExtra Mild, Fresh and Tasty\nOVERWAITEA LTD\nWatch\nFor Our\nBIG\nSALE\nFLYER\nDelivered To Your\nHome\nTO-DAY\nfor the\nCHEESE\nFrom\nCreston.\nBiggest\nVALUES\n\u00bb53|| of the\nYear\nWALNUTS    Fresh .toch.\ns oi. 35$       i6 oi. 69i\nPEAS\nWa Reserve the Right To L'mit Quantities\n1915-1958\n43 Years Serving\nBritish Columbia\n m\nRoyal Commission Economist Says\nLittle Change Expected\nIn Placing Industries\n. OTTAWA (OP)\u2014Major decentralization of secondary manufacturing industry in Canada is unlikely by 1980, according--to a\nstudy- prepared for the royal\ncommission, on Canada's- economic prospects.\nInstead, the study of two economists suggests that any change\nin location will be in genera) towards more concentration in the\ncentral part pf Canada.\nThe 10,000-word report made\npublic Wednesday, was prepared\nfor the Gordon royal commission in\nits size-up of Canada's economic\nfuture.    \u201e\n. It was written by D. H. Fuller-\nton a Toronto economist at the\ntime the study was made in. 1957\nand no'w treasurer of the Canada\nCouncil, and- H. A. Hampson,\nthen with the federal finance department and now wilh a Toronto\ninvestment firm.\nThey conclude that between\nnow and 1980 \"little change will\noccur in the location of manufacturing industry and that any\nchange which does take place\nwill be towards a greater degree\nof concentration, rather than the\nreverse.\"\nCLOSE TO MARKETS\nTheir basic reason for the conclusion is that secondary industries will continue to be located\nin relation to their markets, and\ntherefore as close as possible to\nthickly - populated central Canada.\nAlso, as the need for skilled\nlabor and advisory services\ngrows, so will the attractiveness\nof large metropolitan areas for\nthe manufacturer.\nA third factor cited was that\nCanadian secondary industry would continue; to be linked\nwith industry in the United\nStates and many Canadian manufacturers would continue to locate in Ontario and Quebec because of their nearness to the\nprincipal industrial centres of\nthe U.S.\nHowever, the economists found\nsome scattered exceptions to the\ngeneral rule in their assessment.\nTechnological changes might\nmake possible relatively small-\nscale steel industries in British\nColumbia and possibly on the\nPrairies.\nNew   chemical   plants   might\nRuss Boy Said\nMusical Oenins\nMOSCOW (AP) - Alyosha\nNasedkin,, 15, was acclaimed Wednesday by his teacher as amusical\ngenius.\nThe teacher, Anna Danilevna\nArtobolevskaya, said he is the\ngreatest Russia has produced in\nher lifetime and 'that she has\ntrained most of the Soviet\nUnion's best musicians.\nShe said Nasedkin began playing the piano at five and turned\nout his first opera at nine. He\nnow has written two operas and\na symphony ballet.\nAn article in Komsomol Pravda\ngave no details of Alyosha's\nbackground, where he camo from\nor who are his parents.-He has\nappeared at concerts but the\nteacher said she is restricting further appearances now.\n\"It Is too early for concerts,\"\nshe said. \"His future is all\nahead.\"\ntend   to   be   more   widely   dispersed,\nSome secondary industries in\nB.C.', supplying local markets\nand partly protected from Eastern competition by distance and\ntransportation costs, could be expected, to grow in the Vancouver\narea. '. ,'\nPRAIRIE VIEW DIMMER\n\"It is difficult,\" the study\nadded, \"to be optimistic about\nthe prospect for secondary indus;\ntry in .the Prairies and the Maritimes, in view of the expected\nslower rate of population growth\nin those regions and their comparative proximity to Ontario\nand Quebec manufacturers.\n\"Exceptions to this trend, of\ncourse, will be regional manufacturing specialties and those secondary indistries dependent upon\nand located close to the supply of\na natural resource; for example,\nEdmonton will gain from the expansion of secondary industries\nlinked to oil and gas.\"\nOf the general prospects for\nsecondary manufacturing, t h e\neconomists concluded that its dependence on the domestic market will continue to increase.\nAt the same time the absolute\ngrowth of the Canadian market\nwould enable secondary industry,\nto make small improvements in\nits cost and productivitv position\nas compared with the U.S.\nIn general, they believed that\nby 1930 the output of Canadian\nsecondary manufacturing indus-\ntty would have grown' by 2\ntimes from its 1955 level, compared to an estimated growth of\n184 per cent in the gross national\nproduct\u2014the value of all goods\nand services turned out in Can-\nAl Deas Island\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An ID,-\n500 ton section of concreta was\nsunk into place Tuesday at the\nsite of the Deas Island tunnel.\n10 miles south of here in the\nsouth- arm of the Fraser  river.\nThe lowering of the giant section, 350 feet long, 78 feet wide\nand 23 feet deep, marked completion of one-third of the tunnel\nshell on Ihe bed of the river. The\ntask took more than eleven hours\nseven huge anchors being uied\nto guide the section into position.\nThe tunnel is being built to provide Vancouver wilh a new arterial highway to the south and\na shorter route to the Uniled\nStates border.\nUBC Offers Short\nFisheries Course\nVANCOUVER (CP) - If you\nwant to learn about fishing, go\nto the University of British Columbia.\n.. UBC announced Wednesday it:\nwill offer a two-week course on\nfisheries starting March 7. Topics will include design and care\nof boats, operation and care of\nengines, navigation, safety at\nsea, fish detection^ apparatus,\nprincinles of conservation, oceanography. International law relating to fisheries and the business\naspects of commercial fishing.\nIt is being sponsored bv the\nextension department under a\ngrant from the federal department of fisheries.\nSweeter\nFresher\nFlavor!\nWWMIH\nWESTERN CANADA'S\nFAVORITE EVAPORATED MILK\nget more with...\nMALKIMS\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nWinnipeg \u2014 Hon. W. Morton, 73,\nminister wifhout portfolio in the\nLiberal -Progressive government\nof Manitoba,    \u25a0\nWhitehorse, Y.T. \u2014 Mr. Justice\nJ. E. Gibben, 62, Yukon territorial\ncourt judge, of a heart attack.\n\u2014   ^ ,.\nCommon Market\nEmerging From\nDream Stage\nBy JULIUS GOLDEN\nRIO de JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)\n\u2014Latin America's proposed common market may include all\ncomers instead of a chosen few\nas originally planned.\nMany economists today feel\nthat as broad a market as possible would bring together the\nsemi-industrialijed Latin American countries, such as Brazil\nand Mexico, and raw material\nnations, such as Paraguay and\nBolivia. .Originally the creation\nof only various small, regional\nmarkets was envisioned.   \u25a0\nA group of experts from Brazil,\nArgentina, Colombia, Chile, Mex-.\nico and Ecuador will meet in Santiago, Chile, early in 'February\nto discuss ways and means of creating a common market.\nCHANGING DREAM\n\"It must be understood,\" said\na Brazilian economist, \"that we\nare not jumping from one idea to\nthe next haphazardly. We are\nstudying all possibilities in coming to grips with the over-al! problem of how to create a Latin\nAmerican common market.\n\"We are working on something\nthat is new. A common market\nfor Latin America is just emerging from the dream stage. It is\nonly natural that the climate of\nopinion changes from time to\ntime as new ideas emerge.\"\nThe object of Ihe common market will be to increase trade\namong Latin American 'countries\nand offer industries requiring\nlarge capital investments a wider\nmarket for their products. Such\na common market in its final\nform -would enable co-operating\ncountries to exchange goods tariff-free, thus eliminating present\nstiff trade barriers.\nLarge - scale trade expansion\nand increased foreign- investments in industry would result,\nproponents . c1 aim. A product\nmanufactured in Brazil, for example, would be able to hurdle\nborders to other market countries as if thes'e borders did not\nexist.\nCOMMON TARIFF\nThe common market countries\nwould apply a common protective tariff to products imoorted\nfrom, the United States, Europe\nand other areas outside the market.\nOriginal plans for the creation\nof a Latin American common\nmarket, as presented at, the\nmeeting of the United Nations\neconomic commission for Latin\nAmerica in La Paz, Bolivia, last\nMay, and at the Buenos Aires\neconomic -conference last August,\ncalled for the creation of small\nregional markets. These small\nmarkets would eventually merge\ninto a single large market.\nThe proposal to establish a\nbroad market at the outset was\nnot considered too seriously at\nfirst. Peru proposed this and\nthreatened to make a major issue\nOf it at the Buenos Aires conference. Although it was then considered impractical, recently the\nproposal has won more and more\nadherents in Latin America.\nIt is still anybody's guess\nwhen the Latin American common market will be a reality. It\nwill be about two years before\nthe experts can come forward\nwith a complete preliminary report. Then it will be up to the\nvarious governments to act.\nPhotographing\nQueen Mother\nNicest Job\n.VANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver . Sun. photographer Bill\nDennett thinks photographing the\nQueen Mother is about the nicest\nthing that ever happened to him.\n\" Dennett was one of three photographers allowed into the\ngrounds ot the lieutenant-governor's residence here when Queen\nMother Elizabeth arrived Tuesday night.\nHe wrote Wednesday:\n\"When she drove up to the\nfront door, we could only get pictures pf the lop of her hat because there were so many policemen around, The Queen Mother\nwent inside.\n\"I grabbed a shot and thought\n'well, thaj's that'.\n\"Then,\" suddenly, the Queen\nMother came, back out the door\nto pose for us. I stood there with\nmy mouth open for a second.\nThen I was busier than a\none-armed paperhanger changing\nfilm and flashbulbs.\n\"She'.tugged'at the lieutenant,\ngovernor's sleeve and said 'come\nand have your picture taken with\nme'.\n\"He said 'No, they don't want\nme, they want you'.\n\"Her; smile is really radiant.\nIt's reSlly something.\n\"She wa;, only about eight feet\naway. \u25a0-.\n\"After I took\" the pictures I\nsaid, 'thank you very much Your\nHighness'.\n\"I should have said 'Your Majesty', but she didn't mind.\n\"She nodded, then smiled, and\nwent inside again,\"\nlaces Mix Well\nn UBC Youth\nTraining School\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Three\nHungarian \"freedom fighters\"\nand.a girl from Formosa provide\na cosmopolitan touch to the youth\ntraining school of the University\nof British Columbia this term.\nThe unique school gives practical training in industry to persons between the ages of 16 and\n30, whose education was stopped\nbefore they reached university.\n\u25a0 Shu-Cheng Tao, the, girl from\nFormosa, is studying home-making under the Colombo Plan.\nThe Hungarians 'moved here\nfrom Kelowna, where they were\nreceived after Iheir flight from\nHungary following the revolt in\n1956.\nImre Rokus, Jeno Tihanyi and\nJanos Toth, former elementary\nschool teachers, are farm\nworkers and casual laborers.\nThey*'are \"happy\" with Canada,\nand now, are taking an agriculture course, hoping for ah orchard of their own some day.\nMarried students are not uncommon at the UBC's special\ncourse, and this year they indue Mr. and Mrs. Peter B,\nRead. In their late 20s, the Reads\ncame from England about two\nyedrs ago. Mr. Read'is a timber,\ncruiser, but is studying horticulture, as they also plan for \"a\nplace of our .own.\"\nKnow Your Heart..'\u2022.\nDoes Everyone Get\nHardening of Arteries?\n?y HUGH STANSFIELD, M.D.\n(Department ol Medicine University of British Columbia, Honorary\nSecretary, National Heart Foundation of Canada.)\n.The answer tothis question must\nprobably be \"Yes\" \u2014 But, that\n\"but\" is veVy important and is\nprobably responsible for many\nrecent changes in medical thinking. Doctors have long known that\nal! people, as they grow older,\nhave a loss of elasticity or harden-,\ning of their arteries. The first\nsigns of these changes have evep\nbeen seen in the arteries of people\nin .their late teens. Probably for\nthis reason It was long felt that\nhardening of the arteries wSs\nsimply a part of the process of\ngrowing' older and as inevitable, as\ndeath and taxes. This rather\nfatalistic view has tended' to discourage investigation of hardening\nof the arteries, or. attempts, to\nprevent it.\nHardening, of tha- arteries is\nknown to lead to such complications as high blood, pressure, coronary tMornbosis, strokes, and\nsometimes kidney failure. The fact\nthat some of these serious illnesses\noccur in relatively young people\nand that other persons live to.a\nripe old age without suffering any\not them was explained, or excused, by the statement that some\npeople age more rapidly than\nothers. i\nIn recent yeare, medical research in various parts of the\nworld has-shown that hardening of\nthe arteries is a term probably being used to cover two or more\nquite different conditions,\nThere is again the gradual loss\nof elasticity of the arteries as they\ngrow older. There is another condition which the doctors call\natherosclerosis which should be\nconsidered as a disease rather than\nas an inevitable part oi growing\nold.\nIt is the disease atherosclerosis\nwhich is primarily responsible fOr\nthe coronary thrombosis,v t h e\nstrokes and some of the high blood\npressure, ft is the' disease atherosclerosis which is primarily responsible for making diseases of\nIhe heart and blood vessels account for 40% of the deaths between the age of 35 and 54 and\nover 60% of the deaths* in i\ngroups above 55.\nWe do not know the cause of\nthis disease.-We do know that it\nis related to' such things as diet\nand the way in which the body\nhandles'the fatty foods which are\nincluded in the diet. It is also\nknown that In a society such as\nours, where rich food is relatively\nplentiful and obesity is not uncommon, the disease is far.more prevalent and causes, far more illness\nand loss of life than it does in\nmore primitive societies where\nman must work much harder for\nthe bare essentials of life.\nIt seems probable, that the Intensive research being carried, on\nat the'present' time all over the\nworld, Including many centres in\nCanada, into the causes and\npossible prevention of atherosclerosis will soon produce positive results. This could well reduce\nthe incalculable loss to the country\nat,large, and to industry, caused\nby premature coronary thrombosis and strokes in relatively\nyoung people. If this can be\nachieved, the savings in- money\nalone will be thousands of times\nthe amount spent in research to\nbring it about. Your Heart Founda\ntion is trying to give every support\nto the men who .are carrying on\nthis battle to protect all of us.\n(this is. the fourth in a series\nof articles being published .op behalf of the Canadian Heart Fund.\nContributions may be made at\nlocal banks.)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958 \u2014 7\nA-Arlillery\nFor UN\nKorean Army\nSEOUL, Korea (Reuters)\u2014\nUnited Nations forces in South\nKorea now are equipped with\natomic, artillery, a UN command\nspokesman announced Wednesday;\nSpeaking at a press' conference,\nthe spokesman refused to say\nhowjmany of the big guns have\nbeen'.rought in or.when they arrived. He also declined to say\nwhether the cannons, capable of\nfiring both, .atomic and conventional shells! were accompanied\nby atomic-warhead shells.\nAccording to South Korean military intelligence, North Korean\ncommunists have six atomic cannons of unknown size.\nThe arrival of the guns is re-\n| garded by observers as the most\nimportant step taken since the\nUN command announced seven\nmonths ago that it no longer considered itself bound by the section' of the 1953 Korean truce\nagreement banning introduction\nof new weapons into the country.\nThis decision was made on the\nground that the Communist had\nsecretly brought great quantities\nof modern weapons into North\nKorea.\nThe. U.S. - commander in South\nKorea, Gen. George H. Decker*\nhas said that South Korean troops\nwill be given the same weapons\nCHRYSLER MAY\nTEAM UP WITH\nSTANDARD CARS\nLONDON (Reuters) - British\nnewspapers say Chrysler C o r-\nporation of Detroit may team up\nwith the British Standards Automobile Company on a new-model\ncar.\nStandards confirmed Tuesday\nthat they have leased a government factory near Coventry for\n\"a new project\" expected to begin . within a year.\n\"We cannot divulge at this\nstage anything about- the new\nproject except that it involves a\nnew model,\" a spokesman said.\n\"It is something which will be'of\ngreat interest to motorists all\nover the world.\"\nChrysler has become Interested\nin Standards sinpe its proposed\nmerger with Massey - Harris-\nFerguson, the Canadian tractor\nfirm, fell through, newspapers\nsay. i \u2022\nThe Daily Mail adds: \"It is\nreported Chrysler chiefs have\nhad talks in Toronto with the\nCanadian firm who' own about\none-fifth of Standards' capital.\nChrysler representatives have\nder reciprocal arrangements operating between motor firms.\"\nThe Daily Sketch says Standards may be intending to produce\na \"new small car designed by\nChrysler.\"\nas American forces in the country, but the UN spokesman would\nnot confirm that the atomic\ncannons could be used by Korean\ntroops.\nMALKIN'S >\u00ab4-^%m\nTeachers' Scale\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 Teachers\n-\u25a0\"id trustee' of Kelowna School\nDistrict 23 d.\" not see eye to eye\non salar\" scples.\n1 Accordin\" to the hoprd of frus\nlees, an offar. of an increase of\nfour per c\u00bbv>t in salaries h.1 h\u00bb\u00bbn\nv.\u00a3dp' ^r\\ n>\u00bb teachers. effoerlva\nJan. 1. hut. the t\u00bbnchers f'\u00bb asWn\nfor i>n increase that would amount\nto *\"* ner.cvnt.\nTV\", board's nrnnnsprf now scale\nwau'd start at V*m for a h\".\"'\"'\nnlnff   tearn\u00abr   \/\u00bb\"n\"   rrnrh   a   nvavi-\nmum of *\"100 for the fully quali-'\nfin.   tnn nhnr,\ny>nvn,p jrp tvvinr- .T\nThis wouH mean ?n actional\nS2J .000 on the schnnl biidT-'.\nAccord^* to the board, the\nKelowna Teachers AssoriaMnn re-\n\u25a0nuestan' increacas that wnn'd cost\nan additional si'inno. workine nut\nat an av\u00bbra<!e of *'000 mere for thn\n11\" teachers in the school district.\nThe' teanhnr. nrooos\u00abd scale\nwould be fani for *he h\u00b0oinni\"\u00ab\nte\u00bb*her to *7\u00b000 fnr the fully auali-\nfie^ teachers* mavimtim.\nIf the teaches' rpnu<.ts worn\nGranted, it we'd mean a fyy-m'll\nincrease in the tax structure,\nacrord'ne; to the tritstnns. increases\nin teaching salaries are not shared\nby th? government, tbe board\npointed out, hut have to be'paid\nentirely by the local taxpayer\nMen's Hals Cost\n$300 in Peiping\nPEIPING (Reuters) - In at\nleast two stores on Peiping's main\nshopping throughtare,' there 'are\nhats for sale costing the equivalent of about $300\u2014and these are\nhats for men. i\nThe fur creations, presumably\nthe latest thing for male winter\nwear in Ihe Chinese capital, are\nmade of rare sea otter. Each hat\nis kept, appropriately enough, in\na separate glass display case of\nthe sort usually reserved for\nstuffed, animals or fish.\nThe $300 hats are placed on the\ncounter of the big government department store in Peiping alongside other mundane models of\nIhe same variety\u2014the sort usually associated with the cartoonist's idea of a Russian headpiece.\nThese sort of hats, priced at\nabout $3-, are\" popular in northern\nChina during the long, bitter winter.\nThe reaction of most Chinese\nto the $300 hats, and there is always a large crowd around the\ncounter, is that \"It must be a\njoke,\" ah understandable remark\nwhen it is known that it would\ntake an average worker some 14\nmonths to pay to buy such a hat.\nU.K. Withdraw\nMore Troops\n, LONDON (Reuters)\u2014Britain's\ncontinental partners agreed Wednesday to withdrawal of a further\n8,500 British troops from the\ncontinent.\nThis is in addition to their authorization last March for the\nwithdrawal of 13,500 Britons.\nThe agreement came at a\nmeeting of the seven-power Western European Union. Its members are Britain, France, West\nGermany, Italy, Belgium, Hoi-\nI land and Luxembourg.\nBBC Good Shows'\nDays Numbered\nBy ED  SIMON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) - In an announcement imperiling the jobs\nof half the BBC's sound effects\nstaff, Spike Milligan has expressed his intention to stop turning\nout goon shows.\nAs \u25a0 of next March, the tall,\nblonde leprechaun with the perpetual expression of mild aston-I\nishment plans to give up his\nweekly concoctions of semi - or -\nganized chaos which have convulsed British radio for the last\nseven years. He wants to experiment ip other mediums.\nThe noisy, wacky, scintillating\natmosphere of a goon show is\npeculiarly spited to radio. Half\nthe fun comes from .Milligan's\nskilful use of the gamut of\ncrashes, b'angs, clunks and galloping horses' hooves in .the\nsound man's repertoirei\nThe other half is supplied by a\nmotcly collection of other-worldly\npersonalities, as real to faithful\nlisteners as Prime Minister Macmillan or the Albert Memorial,\nwho are portrayed in a kind of\nthreefold version of the CBC's\nRawhide show by Milligan, character actor Peter Sellers and\nHarry Secombe, a part-time concert tenor.\nThe story line of the Monday\nnight show concerns serious,\ndown-to-earth matters like selling\na fire insurance policy on the,\nEnglish Channel Or building a canal through Central Africa to divert traffic from Piccadilly Circus. But none of the goons is\nabove inserting a spontaneous bit\nof insanity while the show Is on\nthe air.     \"\"\nRoyalty, schoolboys, intellectuals and office workers lap It up.\nStudio audiences need no announcer's plea to supply the appropriate Sffstage guffaws as one\npreposterous situation follows another.\nMilligan performs with a dazzling change of pace, intermingling topical satire, sheer nonsense,\npuns and razor-sharp, gag-ridden\ndialogue with flawless timing. The\nshow defies an elomentary rule\nof radio comedy in forcing the listener to pay close attention if he\ndoesn't want to miss half the fun.\nNACL Announces\nNew Appointments\nTORONTO (CP)-North American Cyanamid Limited Tuesday\nannounced appointment of Dr.\nL. P. Moore as president, succeeding F. S. Washburn.\nDr. Moore will be in charge of\nCyanSmid's Canadian activities,\nwhile Mr, Ashburn will assume\ngeneral managership of the phosphates and nitrogen division of\nAmerican Cyanamid Company,\nthe United States 'parent firm.\nwe're smart...\nwe're having It\ndone In the winter\nWise householders, like wise businessmen, know It pays\nto get those jobs of renovation, decoration, repair and\nmaintenance done during the winter slowdown in tha\nbuilding industry.\nSmall jobs can get better attention and can be more\neconomical.\nHome Improvements Can be Financed\nby Home Improvement Loans under the National Housing Act, available through your bank.\nWhy wait for Spring? Do It now\nFor advice and assistance, call your Local Employment Office.\ni\" w.,\nIssued by authority of\nThe Minister of Labour, Canada\n 8 \u2014 NE1.50M !\u00bb. !' Y NEWS. THURSDAY. MM. 39. 195ft\nWe Can't Afford to Give Any ONE o Brand New Car. But We Can Give\nEVERYONE Rock Bottom Prices - COMPARE\n\u25a0   WE WILL NOT BE UNDER SOLD   \u25a0\nQuality\nSirloin, T-Bone or Club\nSTEAKS\nROUND STEAK\nCHUCK ROAST\nROUND BONE ROAST\nSTANDING RIB ROAST\nGROUND BEEF\nor Roast. Serve With Mushrooms\nor Steak. For Healthy Young Appetites\nServe Old Fashioned Pot Roasts\nthe Aristocrat of Fine. Beef Roasts\nTom-Boy's Famous Fresh Lean Minced Beef\nlb. 69c\nlb. 59c\nlb. 39c\nlb. 29c\nlb. 55c\n3 lbs. $1.00\nSwift's Premium\nFRYING CHICKEN\nTender grown.\nCut up en troys.\nib. 5 3\nFarm Fresh\nGRADE A FOWL\nPlump and\ntender.\t\nib. 3 9'\nSliced,\nRindlcss.\nCampf ire\nSIDE BACON\n- ib.59'\nPiece.\nNo. 1 Fancy\nBOLOGNA\n\u2014- ib.29'\nWhole or\nshank half\nFresh\nPORK PICNICS\n_________ ib. 3 3\n1st and 2nd Cut\nRUMP ROASTS\nTender,\nflavorful.\nlb. 5 5\nFROZEN PEAS Froz\u00b0choke-n \u00b0z- cm*\u00b0n     \u2022     10\u20ac\nFROZEN STRAWBERRIES -*.\u00bb\u00ab-_, 3for*100\nFRESH EGGS GmdeALa,9e'in car,ons \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022>\u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 doz. 45c\nCHECK OUR DOLLAR DAY FLYER FOR OUTSTANDING VALUES\nMeCermielc\/s\nSODA\nBISCUITS\nfull pound package\n29<\nMcCormick's\nMarshmallows\ncolored or plain. 16 oz. pkg.\nc\n33\nBetter Buy\nMargarine\ntwo pound block\n59'\nCanadian\nMild Cheese\nbulk pound\n49'\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nPRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY\n Welcome to another program an Channel FOOD, presented by our top\nauthority of high quality foods at low - frequency prices - the one, the\nonly, LIBERTY- your host of Eating-Treating!\nWINNERS OF TIMEX WATCHES\nMrs. J. Paul, 915 Stanley St., Nelson.\nMrs. G. Halifax, Fruitvale.\nSTANDING\nRIB ROAST\nFOWL for boiling,'local products; lb o9f\nWHITE    FISH Manitoba;  lb 35C\\\nPICKEREL Saskatchewan; lb. .: 35$\nKIPPERS   Maritime; lb  38$\nCHEESE Alberta mild;   lb     55$\nROAST BEEF\nChuck, Cal. Pak;\nRed label; lb.\n35$\nLiberty's dominion wide buying power brings Canadian products to you for your enjoyment at our\nusual low low prices.\n*_$ RgE, io% raxX^-t^g-Wii'\nFRESH EGGS\nGrade \"A\" Large.\nLocal fresh. v__\n2 doz 89<\nffif.R_ffi.im -Btliffle-lAtEJ1\ndiurdk jDjnaio-JlamcL\nCANNED FOODS\nSALE\nStewed Tomatoes 4 tins 75c\nHUNT'S. 15 OZ.\nTomato Juice    3 tins 99c\nHUNT'S FANCY. 48 OZ.\nTomato Ketchup 3 bot. 69c\nHUNT'S. 13 OZ.\nChili Sauce ... 2 for 49c\nHUNT'S. 10 OZ.\nFruit Cocktail... 3 for 69c\nHUNT'S. 15 OZ!\nFruit Cocktail... 2 for 79c\nHUNT'S. 28 OZ.\nPeaches 2 for 69c\nHUNT'S. 28 OZ.\"\nApricots..... 3 for 99c\nHUNT'S; FOR THE BEST. 28 OZ.\nOrange Juice     3 tins 99c\nMemphis Belle, Florida. 48 oz. tin\nGAINERS\nRED\nLABEL; LB.\nfrozen fresh\ngroceries\nChicken, Turkey or\nBeef Pies\nLibby's. 3   pkgs.   99$\nFrench Fries\nFrpservale. O pkgs-  77$\nFish Sticks\nAll Brands 3  pk. 99$\nChip Steaks\n90 seconds to cook. 3 pkg. 77 r\ndairy dept\nCHOCO\nFry's; 8 free Cadbury bars in 2 lb. size, plus a chance to win a\nbike. Mixes instantly with that Cadbury chpcolate bar flavor . ...\nIt's de-e-e-licious\u2014ideal for the TV kids.\n2 lb. tin q-19\nCOCOA\nFry's; lb. tin\nRICE\nRound grain; 5 lb, family package\nSPAGHETTI\nCattetti's; 5 lb. family pkg\t\nWHOLE CHICKEN\nBonus; 3 lb. 4 oz. tin ,\t\nDEVILLLED HAM\nUnderwood; tin ...r\t\n1 69*\nW\n 69*\n'1.49\n19*\n19*\n59*\nVALENTINE CANDIES 3Q<\nJelly beans, Nabob; lb. pkg  \u2022* ~\nTreat the neighbors when they came over for a TV party.\nGUM DROPS AQ*\nNabob; valentines; lb. pkg.   T%W \u25a0'\nCHOCOLATE HEARTS J     9*\nMoir's; 5c  _ \"for   *,\nCUT OUT BOOKS 1C*\nValentine; up from ' M\nWhen it comes to the \"FRESHEST PRODUCE you'll not\ngoodness as only Liberty's know how of careful buying\nThese will help fill the TV spread\nfor the hungry guest.\nSkimilk Cheese\n2 ^ft_:____.. 79*\nCheer Whiz\nKrafts', aft*\n8 oz  *\u2014,37\nCookie Mixes\nPillsbury, ready made, 3 kinds.\nSlice and At\\t\nbake : __. .*T7\nMargarine\nJ  Bums' Delmar, QQ*\nbakery treats\npea SOUP\nHabitant, French Canadian; 28 oz. tin\nBLEACH\nClorox; '64\" oz.\"  _]\t\nFresh Sliced\nBread\u2014Dutch Maid\nBrown or white. Serve 'em\nsandwiches at TV time.\n2 for 29c\nFrench Bread\nFresh, c'rusty, Garden\n2 for 39c\nLayer Iced Cake\nGarden, chocolate or white; large\n49c\nIf the kids eat the cake while sitting\non  the rug \u2014 they'll pick up the\npieces too \u2014 it's that good!\nonly see \u2014 but taste \u2014 the extra\nand quality control offers you more.\nAPPLES\nU.S. Fancy Delicious.\nLarge size Junior Box\nPOTATOES\n100 LB.\nSACK __\n$1.99\n$333\nFINEST LETHBRIDGE, NO. 2, GOOD COOKERS\nBRUSSELS SPROUTS        1Q<\nGreen, compact heads, no waste; 12 oz.     \u25a0 ?\nFRESH SPINACH    ?\nJust picked, green large bunches*\"\nBANANAS 2\nScona, perfect texture, flavorful\u2122\nfor\nfor\n39*\n39*\nVEGETABLE SALADS\nFresh daily, 12 oz. pkg. serves 4*\t\nTOMATOES\nRed, firm, fully guaranted, in cello; lb.\nGREEN ONIONS\nLarge bunches  _\t\n19'\nN-LSONDAILY NEWS, THURSDAY\n, JAN, 30, 1958 _?_' lO\nDon't Miss Liberty's\nGtf\nft\n9' SALE\nThis is a personal invitation to visit us and\nsample the delicious Palm Butter-Pecan Old\nFashioned lee Cream Friday and Saturday.\nWe are sure you'll enjoy this treat from Palm\n\u2014Made in Nelson.\nOld Fashioned\nButtered-Pecan\nICE CREAM\npt. box 39?;\nTOPS\nFOR XOUR PtT    BITTER CEI\ndr.ballard's\nDOC E.CAT FOODS\nTOPS\nDog or Cat Food\n10 t'\"S 9 9c\nWin a Beautiful Stainless Steel Fry Pan\nGuess How Long the String Is.\nCream of the West Flour\n.,' For I better baking results.\n25 iaV^ $1.79\nPlus 1 Guess.\n50 ife $3.39\nPlus 2 Guesses.\n100 *_f_ $6.49\nPlus 4 Guesses\nHelp the Fairview Catholic Ladies\nget their set of dishes.\nMonarch Fruit\n' COBBLERS\nBlaeberries, Peach, Cherry, Pineapple\n3for99e\nMonarch\nSPONGE PUDDINGS\nCaramel, Chocolate, Raisin, Lemon\nReg. 28c pkg. Sale\n2pk.39c\nMonarch\nTEA-BISK\n2V_ lb. pk. 49c\n\u2022   JAM SPECIALS   *\nPure Jam, 24 e_. Jars\u2014MALKIN'S BEST\nOrange Marmalade: Seville, Jar.. 39*\nStrawberry Jam: Jar  .  ..... 59<\nAPRICOTS ... Jar 55<     LOGANBERRY Jar 59<\nB. CURRANT . Jar 69<     PEACH Jar 55*.\nCHERRY Jar 59<     PLUM Jar 39*\nLIBERTY DOWNSTAIRS STORE\nBig $1.49 Sale\nGirls' Pajamas\nPolo style, soft and warm.\nsizes'4-8 yrs. *| AQ\nReg. $1.65; each .M'***\nBoys' Sportshirts\nFlannel and cotton. Sizes\n_f,16 years. *i aq\nReg. 1.98; each\nKiddies' Ski Pants\nWool  melton.   Sizes  3-6x.\n__ch$!:98' $1.49\nKiddies' Pleated Skirts\nGabardines and flannels,\nasstd. Sizes 3-6. *| AQ\nReg. 1.98. Ea.    ^I.H'T\nCHAIR CUSHIONS\nPlastic, washable. Regular\neach 2 for $1.49\nLADIES' HANDBAGS\nAnd purses. Regular up to\n&__ $1.49\nKIDDIES' OVERALLS\nor pants. Corduroy. Sizes\n$1.49\n2 - 6.\n$1.49\nReg. $1.98. Ea.\nBOYS'\nCOMBINATIONS\nFleeced. Sizes 8-16 years.\n\u00a7_?_*!_. ,.. $1.49\nBOYS' DRESS SHIRTS\nWhite. Sizes 11-14_. Reg.\nEach   $1.49\nSTRAPLESS BRAS\nBroken sizes.     *i AQ\nReg. $1.98. Ea.     .> ..*-T\nEXTRA SPECIAL KIDDIES SLEEPERS\nSizes 3 \u2014 4 years. Warm fleece lined, button back. Reg. $1.98\nAnd your choice of a 20c Coloring Book FREE! ....,\t\nMISSES'\nSKATING TOQUES\nAssorted colors, all wool.\nReg. $2.25.\nEach \t\nSTERLING WOOL\n4-ply, 1 oz. ball, all colors.\n_3-\"_5\u00ab_-$1.49\nSTERLING SILVER\nTEASPOON\nW.A. Rogers special.\n6   for$1.49\nPASTRY FRAME\nFoley,  pastry  cloth  with\nrolling pin cover. Regular\nS\u00a3  $1.49\nII 49\nLIBERTY\nNELSON .... FRUITVALE\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities Prices Effective Thurs., Jon. 30 to Tues., Feb. 4\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958\nlittle Rock Problems Settle\nDown Info Quiet Acceptance\nBy ADREN COOPER\nLITTLE ROCK (AP) - Now\nthat the first flames of student\nresentment have subsidicd,. the\nday-to-day lives of the integrated\n. Little Rock nine have settled into\na pattern.\nIt is classes under guard each\nschool day for the nine Negro\nyoungsters whose enrolment at\npreviously all-white Central High\ntouched off violence, federal intervention and constitutional controversy.\n.Their relations with more than\n1,900 white classmates after three\nmonths of school range from\nopen hostility to furtive friendliness. There is no socializing.\nThey experience threats, social\npressure and, most of all, the\nloneliness of being in a' crowd\nyet not of it. But none of them\nhas given any indication of withdrawing.\nTwenty \u2022 seven white students\nhave dropped out, transferred or\nbeen expelled since the Negroes\nstarted classes under the eyes of\nfederal troops last September.\nOne school source estimates\n\"there are fewer than 50 students\nactively hostile to the Negroes.\"\nBut there might be more were it\nnot for the presence of national\nguardsmen in the school corridors.\nSTUDIOUS AND EAGER\nThere were a number of \"in\ncompletes\" on the Negro students' report cards for the first\nsix weeks of school but most of\nthe work has been made up. One\nboy flunked a subject.\n\"The Negro children seem very\nstudious and they are eager to\nmake up the work they have missed\" a teacher said. \"Like.any\nstudents who come in late, they\ndon't take much part in answering questions in class.\"\nThe youngsters and their parents are reluctant to talk for publication. The National. Association\nfor the Advancement of- Colored\nPeople has thrown a projective\ncurtain around them.\nMost of the Negro youngsters\nsay they want to attend Ce.tral\nbecause it is closer to their\nhomes than Horace Mann, Little\nRock's Negro high school.\nAll of the nine negroes are\nabove average in intelligence.\nThey are the survivors of 60 Negroes who applied to enrol in Central. They all come from homes\nthat seem to be - financially a\nnotch or two above the average\nArkansas Negro .family. And\ntheir parents are well above the\naverage in education.\nCHANGED ROLE\nEmma Abbott, the American\nopera singer who died in 1891,\nstarted as a church singer in New\nYork.\nJEWS ACCUSE RUSS\nOF PERSECUTION\nROME (Reuters)-Wprld leaders of Jewry have called for the\n\"redress of-wrongs\" suffered by\nJews in the Soviet Union.\nThe appeal came in a statement Tuesday at the end of a\ntwo-day conference under the\nchairmanship of Dr. Nahum\nGoldmann, president of the World\nJewish Congress.\nThe statement said Jews in\nRussia \"are denied the'facilities\nessential to the effective exercise of the rights of cultural and\ncommunal expression and of perpetuating their faith and developing their culture by the education of their children and\nyouth.\"\nThere ,are an estimated ,3,000,-\n000 Jews in the Soviet Union.\nMany of them are in the Jewish\nautonomous region of Birobidjan\nin eastern Russia.\nThe statement said Russian\nJews suffer from, discrimination\nin comparison with other peoples\nand religious groups in the Soviet Union. In addition, they are\ndenied the right of emigrating to\nIsrael, it said.\nA similar situation, the statement said, exists in Soviet bloc\ncountries   of   Eastern   Europe.\n\"In some of these countries,\nnotably Romania, this has resulted in the human tragedy of\nthousands of broken families,\" it\nsaid.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Moscow\ntelevision audiences Tuesday saw\nan hour-long British film, Meeting\nin Britain, which showed them\nBritish homes and the life of the\npeople, Moscow radio reported.\nThe film was arranged as an exchange feature with the British\ncommercial television network.\nSmiths of Smisby Ready\nTo Defend Historic Site\nSMISBY, England (CP) - The\nmight smiths of Smisyb are preparing to enter the lists in defence of the memory of the gallant knights who jousted in the\ndays of Ivanhoe.\nTo this village in Derbyshire,\nwhich Sir Walter Scott js said to\nhave made the setting for the\ntournament in his schoolboy classic, Ivanhoe, have come prospecting teams from the National Coal\nBoard seeking deposits of coal believed to lie beneat|i the very\nfields on which, legend says, the\ndisinherited knight scored stirring\nmedieval victories with lance and\nsword.\nThe NCB teams are making\nborings in the area to determine\nwhether the coal deposits are extensive enough to make open-cast\nmining profitable. If coal is found\nin quantity, the board envisages\nturning Smisby's famous tournament field into a deep pit that by\nno stretch of the imagination\ncould recall the shining armor\nand bright pavilions created by\nScott's romantic pen.\nResults of the survey are not\nexpected to be'announced for several months. In addition, the NCB\nreports that less than 10 per cent\nof ground surveyed for open-cast\nwork normally proves worth excavating. But Smisby's 340 residents are busy preparing a counter-attack\u2014\"just in case.\"\nThe parish council has declared\nits opposition to any move to\n\"desecrate\"   Scott's ' \"extensive\nmeadow\" and support is being\nsought from neighboring towns\nand villages, where the word\nIvanhoe is frequently found in the\nnamesi of business firms and\ncommunity clubs and centres.\nMAY HOLD .INQUIRY \"\n... If the NCB lays claim to the\nland, a public inquiry will be de:\nmahded. Here the NCB can be expected to voice its claim that it\ngets 140 times -as much value out\nof ground mined for open-cast as\na farmer if he grew crops on it.\nIt will also undoubtedly point\nto the economic benefit to the\ncountry as a whole of open-cast,\nmines, which last year produced\nsome 12,000,000 tons of coa! \u2014\nabout five per cent of the total\nUnited Kingdom coal output.\nAn inquiry might even produce\na little unchivalrous conduct.\nThe Manchester Guardian reports \"there are those who suggest that there is more tradition\nthan fact in the tournament field\nstory and that the topography of\nthe meadow does not conform\nwith Scott's description.\"\nThis, in Smisby at least, is a\nminority view. Smisby, once\nknown as \"Smithsby\" and the\nhome of smiths renowned for the\nmanufacture of knightly armor\nand accoutrements, regards itself as the keeper of the flame of\nhistorical fiction. It is a flame the\nNCB may ' have trouble extinguishing.\nBEAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY.\nPearson, Diefenbaker\nNames in 1958 Election\nMonarch TEA-BISK Meat RoE\nECONOMICAL, TASTY, AND SO EASY TO MAKE\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\nI\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\n\\\n...   _li_ed    ,eI  .     \\\/k cup,dl  pli\n__,t_    Taa.\n_ unbeaten \u25a0\u00bb-\u25a0\nVt tea\u00bbP\u00ab<>B B,pp^\n\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u25a0*. \t\nI\n\\\nI\nI\nV\n\\\n\\\nI\nI\nI\n\\\nV\nThe beauty of this TEA-BISK Meat Roll is that\nit looks and tastes like a real party dish, yet it\nactually stretches your food budget. There's\nplenty of it to satisfy the family's demands for\nmore, and it costs mere pennies a serving. Do\nsave the recipe. It's one of the best in a\nlongtime.\nDaily Tests show Monarch Mixes\n. are Canada's Finest\nMonarch Test Kitchens are continuously\ntesting Monarch Mixes for you against all\nothers. Not one Monarch Mix is passed till\nwe're sure it is the finest mix you can buy,\npositively Canada's Finest.\nCanada's Finest\u2014\nonarch\nmixes\nCake Mixes \u2022 Sponge Puddings \u2022 Ice Box Pies \u2022 Tea-Bisk \u2022 Pie Crust Mix\n\u201e Date Square \u2022 Fruit Cobbler\nBy ALAN DONNELLY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - A Prairie lawyer's leadership of the Progressive\nConservative party changed the\nwhole complexion of federal politics in 1957. An internationally\nknown diplomat now hopes to\nswing things back to the Liberals\nin 1958.\nThe election upset of last June\nput Saskatchewan's- John Diefen\nbaker, 62, into the prime minister's office. The diplomat, 60-year-\nold Lester B. Pearson, is hoping\nthat an election in 1958 may do the\nsame for him.\nCanada's voters ended 22 years\nof Liberal government when they\nturned to Mr. Diefenbaker's Conservatives. But they did not gwe\nhim an outright parliamentary majority and another election is virtually certain in 1958.\nNEW LIBERAL CHIEF\nWhen the vote comes, the Liberals will have a new leader, just\nas the.Conservatives had last election. Indications point to Mr. Pearson having the inside track when\nthe party meets Jan 14-16 to\nchoose a successor to former prime\nminister Louis St. Laurent. Paul\nMartin, former health minister, is\nalso in the running. Others, including former finance minister\nWalter Harris, may also be nominated.   -\nMr, Pearson's position undoubtedly was enhanced by the award\nof the Nobel Prize for 1957, for his\npast work as external affairs minister. Whatever the outcome of the\nleadership contest and the next\nelection, 1957 and 1958 will go into\nthe records as a period of the\ngreat political stirrings; and changes since the 1920 decade of minority government in Canada. At that\ntime, too, there were two general\nelections in successive years, 1925\nand 1926.    (\nThe present two-year period\nmay be one of record activity for\nparliament Itself. The 1957 pattern\nof sessions before and after the\nelection likely will be repeated\nagain in 195 . unless the combined\nCommons opposition defeated the\ngovernment before a new session\ngets under way in the new year.\nMAIN BATTLEGROUND\nIn the next election, the main\nbattleground for control of parlia-\nmen twill be in Ontario and Quebec, which return 160 of the 265\nCommons members.\n' The Conservatives hope to expand their present 113 Commons\nseats into an outright majority\nThus much of their efforts will\nbe directed to Quebec's 75 constituencies, of which they now hold\nonly nine. The Liberals' biggest job\n'will be to hold their Quebec strenth\n\u201464 of the present 106 Liberal MPs\nare from that province\u2014and to recoup their election losses ih Ontario where they now hold 21 seats\nto Conservatives\" 61.\nConservatives supplanted Liberals in 1957 as the dominant <arty\nin the Atlantic provinces anu the\nnext contest in that area will again\nbe a two-way batle.\nWESTERN SEATS\nThe four Western provinces\nhowever, may settle   the   major\npolitical question: Will any party\nemerge from the next election\nwith an outright Commons majority?\nThe CCF and Social Credit parties have their strongholds in the\nWest. Hopes of the two oldline\npartiesof gaining an outright election majority could be balked if\nthe two yodnger parties maintain\nor increase their present strength\n, The CCF marked its 25th anni\nversary year by electing 25 MPs\nincluding three in Northern Ontario, to come within three of the\nparty's irecord Commons member\nship with 19 elected in Alberta and\nBritish Columbia.   '\nConservatives hold 21 of the 70\nconstituencies in the four Western provinces. The last election\ndropped Liberal representation in\nthe area to eight from 25.\nNEW LOOK\nThe cast of main characters ; in\nthe next campaign will be far different from that of the 1957 battle.\nBiggesf change, of course, will\nbe the absence of Mr. St. Laurent,\nvictor in 1949 and 1953 elections,\nwho at the age of 75 announced last\nSeptember he was stepping down\nfor health reasons.\nMissing too will be most, if not\nall, of the nine Liberal cabinet\nministers defeated June 10. The\nmost notable absentee will be the\nveteran C. D. Howe.-\nThe Conservative campaign, as\nit was last spring, .will be built\naround the personality and whirl-\nUSE FA_..iC SCRAPS\nRelax on long evenings while\nyou make a cozy quilt that you\nwill treasure always,\nEmpty your scrap-basket for\nthis colorful 5-patch quilt. Pattern\n699: chart, pattern of patches, directions, yardage for single,\ndouble-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 bongs.-, two complete pattern, are printed right in our 1957\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Book.\nDozens ol other designs you'll want\nti order\u2014easy fascinating handwork for yourself your home, gifts\nbazaar items. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book today!\nURGES INDIANS TO\nSAVE TRADITIONS\nVICTORIA (CP)-Chlef .Mungo\nMartin, famous totem pole, carver, says the white man's way of\nlife is no good and that the Indians \u25a0 should preserve their ancient traditions.\nThe chief's comment followed\na statement by Rev. Grant\nSmith, California Indian preacher\nwho urged North American Indians to stop living on government reservations an_' to adopt\nwhite man's ways.\nMr. Smith said the only way Indians can hope to progress socially was to drop their -traditions and ancient beliefs.'\n\"White man's ways no good,\"\nsaid Chief Mungo as he. chiselled\nat a totem.\n\"White man some day to burn\nhimself up with, atom bomb.. Is\nthat better .way of life than Indian?\"\nIndians did not believe in accumulation of goods and wealth,\nhe said. They believed in sharing their goods with one another.\n\"White man always preaching\nthis, but never does it.\" ....\nHe said Indians lived for this\nday and belieyed in letting Jo-\nmorrow look after itself. The\nwhite man, on the other hand,\nwas always worrying about the\nfuture and never fully enjoyed\nhimself.\nwind campaigning of Mr. Diefenbaker. His lieutenants' will be\nmen who have come to new prominence in cabinet ranks, such a.'\nFinance Minister Donald Fleming\nand Transport Minister George\nHees of Ontario, Quebec's Solicitor\nGeneral Leon Balcer, and Westerners like Trade Minister' Gordor\nChurchill, Agriculture M i n i s t e i\nDouglas Harkness and Justice\nMinister Davie Fulton.\nThe Liberals will enter the battle\nwith a new platform hammereei\nout at the January convention and\nplenty of campaigning talent in .\neluding Mr. Pearson, Mr. Martin\nMr. Harris, Quebec's Jean Lesagi\nand Lionel Chevrier, B.C.'s Jame;\nSinclair, J. W. Pickergill of New\nfoundland, and possibly once agai;\nthe 74-year-old veteran of Prairie\npolitics, James G. Gardiner.\nAt the last election when poor\nhealth limited the activities of M\nJ. Coldwell, CCF leader, Stanlev\nKnowles of Winnipeg carriee\nmuch of the load. Recently chosei\nthe party's deputy leader, Mr\nKnowles can be expected to be\neven more active.\nThe front-line forces of the So\ncial Credit party under Solon Low\nare expected to be largely un\ncnanged.\n0A&AA, lift LViik\nTrtcuucuL Wltvdin.\nPrinted Pattern\nCaeU   One\nTo Help Pensioners\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Ciyic and\nwelfare officials will study the\nfeasibility ot helping needy pensioners pay their taxes. Alderman Halford Wilson proposed the\nscheme although no plan has\nbeen reached as yet.\nPLANE LANDS SAFELY\nSEATTLE (AP)-A Northwest-\nOrient Airlines DC-7G carrying\n27 passengers and a crew of five\nmade an emergency landing at\nSeattlc-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday night after an engine caught [ire on takeoff. Fire\ncrews quickly doused the flames\nas passengers slid to safety down\na canvas chute.\n*ONB SIZE MEOIUM        9361\nSEW EASY\nIt's seweasy, so thirfty \u2014 one\nyard 35-inch fabric is all you need\nfor each of theie pretty serving\nstyles. Paper pattern is one piece\n\u2014pin to fabric, cut out complel-.\napron at one time!\nPrinted Pattern 9361 include:\nthree styles: Miss.es' Mediun\"\nSize only. Each apron: 1 yard 35\ninch, Jiffy-cut in one piecel\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) il\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted.\nfor this pattern. Please prin:\nplainly' SIZE, NAME, ADDRES5',\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend  your  order  to  MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W. -\nToronto, Ont.\nWAFFLE res\nSYRUP\nDelicious old-fashioned\nflavorat a specialsaving! I\nHUfaY-LIMITED 0FFHT\nNABOB'*\n c9LH\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiinmiiiiiiiiiiiiittimiiiiiii\nSPORTS\nIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillHIIIIIIIIMIIi\nCasey Has No Comment\nOn Mickey's Demands\nNEW YORK (CP) - Outfielder\nMickey Mantle, who drew $65,000\nlast season and was named the\nAmerican League's most valuable\nplayer for the second successive\ntime, dropped a $75,000 demand at\nthe New York Yankees office Tuesday and departed, unsigned, for\nFlorida.\nA few hours later while talking\nto reporters, manager Casey Stengel studiously avoided any direct\nreference to his star slugger's contract status but, in a review of\nYankee shortcomings, said:\n\"Mantle should work out in\ncentre field. He's missing balls\nhit back over his head. Needs\nsome practice on that. He doesn't\n\" seem to know which way to, turn.\nTurns both ways and some of those\nballs get over him. I'm gonna have\nsomebody hitting balls over his\nhead down in camp, until he learns\nto do it right.\"\nYANKS WEAK\nWhile he was at it, Casey rapped\nthe entire Yankee squad as weak\n\u25a0in fundamentals.\n\"We aren't executing the plays\nthe way we should,\" he said, spelling out such flaws as failure to\nback up bases, failure to hold\nrunners close to the bases on bunt\nsituations, and weaknesses in executing cutoffs on throws from the\noutfield. .\nTo those surprised when he\nnamed Don Larsen his No. 2 starting pitcher behind Whitey Ford\nand Bob Turley, the colorful manager said:\n\"You'll call him 'Stengel's pet.'\nAll right, I don't care what you\nsay. Nobody's gonna get him in\na trade. Nobody. He can be great\n\u2014and he's gonna be great for me,\nnobody else.\"\nAnd the loss of the World Series\nto Milwaukee?\n\"We messed up a lot of things.\nEverybody's gotta wake up, including me \u2014 and everybody better wake up right at the start of\nspring training and stay awake.\"\nVirgil Akins Ranked\nTop Welter Contender\nNEW YORK (AP) -Virgil\nAkins Wednesday was boosted to\nthe top position in the latest Ring\nMagazine ratings of the champion-\nless welterweight division.\nThe St. Louis veteran was pro-\nBanner Year\nFor. American\nGrid League\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - The\nNational Football League set a\npaid attendance record for the\nsixth consecutive year by drawing\n2,836,318 fans in 1957, Commissioner\nBert Bell said Wednesday.\nBell told league owners, gathered for their ktinual meeting, attendance figures for last season\nwere up 285,055 or 11.17 per cent\nover 1956.\nAsked whether any of the 12\nteams were in the red last year,\nhe said:\n\"I don't know. These figures are\nnot available to me yet. I would\nsay that if there are any, they are\nfew.\"\nSMOKES\nFOR CANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving with the\nUnited Nation! Emergency\nForce in Ihe Middle East\n*1\u00a3\u00b0 sends 400\nEXPORT\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included\nMall order and remittance toi\nOVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC.\nP.O. Bex 490, Place d'Armes,\nMontrcol, Qui.\nThis offer Is tubhut to any thongs\nIn Government Regulations.\nmoted from second to first for his\nsecond straight knockout conquest\nof former welterweight champion\nTony DeMarco of Boston. He\nmoved up from second in a change\nof positions with Isaac Logart, the\nsleek Cuban contender.\nDeMarco was dropped from third\nto fifth. Vince Martinez of Paterson, N.J., advanced from fifth to\nthird while Charley (Tombstone)\nSmith of Los Angeles vaulted from\nseventh to fourth.\nSpider Webb, Chicago middleweight contender, leaped from\nsixth to third on his sensational\nknockout of Rory Calhoun, of\nWhite Plains, N.Y. Calhoun dropped from third to sixth.\nIn the one shuffle in the heavyweight list, Ingemar Johansson,\nS w e d e n's undefeated European\nchampion, was ranked tenth. He\ndisplaced Tommy (Hurricane)\nJackson of New York. Eddie Ma-\nchen - of Redding, Calif., was\nranked No. 1 contender for Floyd\nPatterson's title.\nThe only Canadian mentioned in\nthe ratings is Yvon Durelle of Baie\nSte. Anne, N.S., ranked the No. 3\ncontender for light - heavyweight\nchampion Archie Moore's title.\nDurelle is rated behind Harold\nJohnson of Philadelphia and -Trinidad's Yolande Pompey.\nSoccer Turnout\nTo Be Continued\nNelson Tourist Bureau might\npublicize Nelson's January soccer\npractices on the Civic Centre\ngrounds. Hardy sportsmen turned\nout Saturday morning and, hampered only by a strip of snow down\nthe middle of the field, had a\nrousing soccer practice. They\nhope to do the same-every Saturday morning.\nUnder the direction of J. R.-\nJohnson, men who turned out\nformed two teams and hope to develop the group into a large\nenough one for local competition.\nThere were German, Hungarian,\nCanadian and Scotch soccer players among the enthusiasts.\nAustralia Forces\nTest Match Tie .\nDURBAN, South Africa (Reuters) \u2014 Australia's cricket squad\nWednesday came from behind a\nbig deficit to force a tie on the\nlast day of its third test match\nwith South Africa.\nThe series now stands at one\nwin for Australia and two ties,\nwilh two matches to play.\nFor 60,000 spectators who attended the five-day match, it was\na frustrating contest with a run-\nscoring average of only 27 an\nhour.\nFREE DELIVERY\nCool (Botikd Bs&M\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\nPate At* Cream Stoul\nEMPTY  BOTTLES COLLECTED ON DELIVERY  ONLY\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbio\nHawks Take Leafs\/ Bruins\nTie Rangers to Move Up\nMKjjMHKi\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe National Hockey League\nrace tightened Wednesday night\nwhen Chicago Black Hawks defeated Toronto Maple Leafs 4-1\nand Boston Bruins tied New York\nRangers 1-1.\nThe Chicago win on Toronto ice\nmoved Hawks to within (Wo points\nof the fifth-place Leafs who have\nplayed one more game than the\nHawks. The game in New York\nmoved the Bruins into a third-place\ndeadlock with idle Detroit. The\nlast-place Hawks are seven points\nbehind second-place Rangers.\nChicago scored three goals Within two minutes and two of those\ncame while they were a man short.\nTAKE LEAD\nGlen Skov, Eric Nesterenko, Elmer Vasko and Ed Kachur were\nthe Hawk goal scorers while Brian\nCullen  counted  Leafs'  only  goal\nTrail, Nelson\nSplit Pair;\nJuves Win\nTrail Pee Wees edged out Nelson\nBlackhawks 7-5, Nelson Ranger\nbantams beat Trail 7-1 and Nelson\nJuveniles nosed out Sanitones, of\nthe Commercial League 4-3 at the\nCivic Arena Tuesday evening in a\nspecial Minor Hockey Night. It\nwas a' feature of Canada's Minor\nHockey Week.\nIn (lie opening game the small\ncrowd was treated to some fine\nhockey in the Pee Wee division, a\ngame in which Trail took a 3-1\nlead in the first period. Nelson\nmoved ahead 4-3 at the close of\nthe second only to have the visitors\ncome back strong with a four-goal\noutburst to the locals lone goal.\nFor the visitors, Trail's Chobor-\nouk pulled the hat trick and also\npicked up an assist. Turner potted\ntwo goals, Armstrong and Wilson\none each. Heibert picked up two\nassists, Turner and Fillmore one\neach. The Nelson squad was paced\nby Johnny Cherenko with four big\ngoals and an assist. Ray Leeming\nnetted the other marker and earned one assist while Catenacci picked up four assists for a good\nnight's work. In penalties referee\nJim Low dished out one to each\nteam.\nIn the bantam game Nelson\nRangers showed too much power\nfor the Trail club. They piled up\na 3-1 lead in the first period and\nnever looked back. Shelly Atwell\nand Ken Dewar were big guns for\nthe locals, each getting a hat trick.\nGord Odegard notching the other\ngoal. Assists went to Atwell, Odegard, LeRoy, Chapman, McElroy,\nPeters and Kuhn. The lone Trail\ngoal was scored by Darcangello\nwith Bunn assisting. Trail drew the\nonly penalty of the game meted\nout by rets Ron Brown and Dune\nJamieson.\nNelson Juveniles won their first\ngame over a team from the Commercial League when they edged\nthe Sanitones in the third game.\nAfter a scoreless first period,\nSanitones took a 3-2 lead, but in\nthe final frame the Juves,came\nthrough with goals for the victory.\nTom Hufty, with a brace, led the\nJuves while Trozzo and Monteleone snared a goal each. Atwell,\nJeffs and Skapple earned an assist each. Sanitone goals were all\nof the unassisted variety with\nSmith, Mabe'r and Jacques doing\nthe scoring. The Juves drew four\nof the six penaltins hantal down\nby referees Ron Brown and Bill\nLipsack.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nin Wednesday's fourth-round re-\npiays in English Soccer Association\nCup competition:\nDarlington 4 Chelsea 1\nCharlton.0 Fulham 2\nNotts F 1 West Brom 5\nBolton 3 York City 0.\nCampanella\nShows Improvement\nGLEN COVE, N. Y. (AP) -\nDodger catcher Roy Campanella,\nin hospital with a broken neck\nthat will probably spell finis to\nhis baseball career, showed\nmarked improvement Wednesday.\nBut his 215 - pound frame was\nstill paralyzed.\nThe Dodgers, recently moved\nfrom Brooklyn to Los Angeles,\nsaid in a bulletin:\n\"Roy is considerably better\nHe has sensation in both arms\nand the upper chest but the paralysis is unchanged and he still\nis on the critical list.\" '\nTribe Buys Vernon\nBOSTON <API-Boston'Red Sox\nWednesday sold veteran first baseman Mickey Vernon to Cleveland\nIndians on waivers.\nSox spokesmen said \"it's strictly\na waiver deal.\"\nVernon, who will be 40 April 22,\nhas been with-the Sox two seasons,\ncoming here from Washington,\nwhere he spent most of his major\nleague career.\nLew Still Unbeaten\nMELBOURNE (AP)-Lew Hoad\nof Australia remained the only unbeaten player in the $50,000 Australian round - robin professional\ntennis tournament Wednesday by\ndefeating Pancho Gonzales 7-5, 5-7,\n6-4.\nHoad plays Frank Sedgman, another Australian, tonight. A Hoad\nvictory would wrap it up for the\nformer amateur champion.\nwhich gave them a 1-0 lead early\nin the second period.\nJerry Toppazzini's 16th goal of\nthe season at 8:55 of the third\nperiod'enabled Boston to gain the\ntie.\nThe Rangers, now holding a two-\npoint edge over Boston and Detroit, picked up their goal from\nthe stick of Larry Popein after 42\nminutes of scoreless play.\n ~\u2014j\t\nSki Slants\nBy  SITZMARK\nAnother weekend of excellent\nskiing was enjoyed by a good\ncrowd of skiers, ft is amazing how\ngood the snow has been on our hill\nwhen you consider most of the\nwinter has been very mild. Of\ncourse we could use more of the\nwhite stuff.\nThe small T-bar lift we constructed last season worked overtime and without a shutdown on\nSaturday, Sunday and Monday.\nMind you, after the breakdown of\na week ago it took several of our\nmembers, three or four nights of\nwork to put it in running order. If\nwe skiers are all careful not to\nget off the bars where we\nshouldn't and do not swing them,\nwe possibly won't have ony more\ntrouble. So remember, do not get\noff the lift in between the towers.\nThe Sunday work party again\nclimbed to the top of the clearing\nto work on tower 11 and the upper\nbullwheel. When they came down\nin the late afternoon the cable had\nbeen strung around.the bullwheel\nover shivs on towers 11, 10 and\n9. All that remains to do up there\nnow is to line up the shivs and\ntighten them on all the towers. We\ncertainly owe many thanks to\nthese fellows for giving up their\nSundays to complete this work.\nA trip to the top of the hill was\narranged for the Mayor and Council members. They were amazed\nat what has been accomplBfied on\nthe Centennial project.\nThe machinery for the lower\ndrive unit is now being assembled\nand we hope it won't take too long\nuntil it can be taken out to She\nbottom shed and set up to drive the\nlift.\nTonight there will he a meeting\nof the Ski Club at the Institute\nRooms. Try and be there.\nWe hope this .mild- weather\ndoesn't wash all our enow off the\nhill and it shouldn't before the\nweekend. So you can expect the\nlift to be operating as -usual Saturday, Sunday and Monday.\nSki classes will again be held at\n10 a.m., 1 p.m., and 3 p.m. on\nSunday. Please be on time for\nyour classes.\nBethea Gets Nod\nCHICAGO (AP)-Wayne Bethea\nof New York out-clubbed 214-pound\nYoung Jack Johnson Wednesday\nnight to take a unanimous 10-round\ndecision in their heavyweight bout\nat the Chicago Stadium.\nFor a pair of heavyweights who\nwere heralded as knockout artists,\nneither displayed enough punch\neven to come close to decking each\nother in the nationally televised\nfight.\nPacker Centre\nPaces Scorers\nPENTICTON (CP) - Jim-Middleton of Kelowna Packers picked\nup three assists last week to maintain his nine-point lead in the\nOkanagan Senior Hockey League\nscoring race. The Kelowna veteran\nnow has collected 81 points on 30\ngoals and 51 assists.\nLinemate Joe Kaiser also garnered three assits to raise his total to 72 points. He has scored 26\ngoals and 46 assists.        '\nKamloops right winger Billy\nHryciuk added a pair of goals to\nhis total to stay in fourth place\nwith 69 points.'He has notched 30\ngoals and 39 assists.\nWalt Peacosh of the Penticton\nVs, the league's top goal scorer\nwith 41, jumped from fifth to fourth\nspot with ^68 points.\nDave Gatherum of Kelowna continues to show the way in the goal-\ntending department with an average of 3.64 goals per game.\nThe top ten:\nGP   G  A Pts\nMiddleton, Kel   45  30  51   81\nKaiser, Kel.    44  26  46  72\nHryciuk, Kam ,.  45  30   39. 69\nPeacosh, Pen    43  41   27  68\nAgar, Ver   43   17  49  66\nRoche, Kel    45   30   33   63\nMilliard, Kam   44  18  38  56\nMoro, Ver    43  29   26  55\nKing, Ver   45  30  24   54\nHarper, Pen    41  31   18   49\nGoalie standings:\nGP   GA   AVG\nGatherum, Kel   42  153     3.64\nShirley, Kam   42   182     4.34\nGordon, Ver.    43  200     4.65\nWood, Pen. .. .'.  44  216     4.91\nGhastly Mistake'\nMiss Garvey\nSays\nLONDON (AP) - Britain's top\nwoman golfer said Wednesday\nnight her announced withdrawal\nfrom the Curtis Cup team which\nwill meet the United States \\ in\nAugust was \"a ghastly mistake.\"\nPhilomena Garvey, 30, British\nand Irish women's champion, put\nin an anguished telephone call to\nthe Ladies' Golf Union to say she\n\"very much hoped\" to play.\n\"Miss Garvey apparently put\nher. reply to our invitation in the\nwrong envelope and sent us a letter declining an invitation to a\nwedding,\" said an LGU official.\nThe wedding's loss is Britain's\ngain. Philomena has played in the\nlast five Curtis Cup matches and\nhas been Irish champion eight\ntimes. The matches will be played\nat Boston.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWestern Hockey League\nVancouver 27 13 2 148  99 56\nN. Westminster  25 20 1 142 141 51\nSeattle 21 22 3 145 151 45\nVictoria     .       11 32 1 126 170 23\nPrairie  Division\nWinnipeg 26 18 1 -150.123 53\nEdmonton 25 17 3 170 133 53\nSask.-St. Paul     19 25 0 131 181 38\nCalgary 17 24 3 126 140 37\nBig Contract for Musial\nST. LOUIS (AP) - A beaming\nStan (The Man) Musial stroked\nhis pen across the richest baseball\ncontract in National League history Wednesday and commented:\nI would have settled for less.\"\nUnder the new pact, St. Louis\nCardinals will shell out about\n$100,000 for their 37-year-old left-\nhanded slugger.\nFor the last six seasons Mus-\nials salary was $80,000 yearly.\nMusial said the $20,000 boost was\n\"the contract the Cardinals wanted me to have.\"\nOnly Ted Williams of Boston\nRed Sox will likely receive more\nmoney this season \u2014 an estimated\n$125,000 when he comes to terms.\nMusial,  winner  of his seventh\nNational League batting crown\nlast year with a .351 mark, predicted he will have \"one or two\nmore seasons at top speed.\nMusial, entering his 17th season\nwith the Cards, said he is in better physical shape now than in the\nlast few seasons.\nNHL STANDINGS\nBy The Canadian Press\nP W L T F -A Pts\nMontreal .... 47 31 11   5 174 102 67\nNew York ., 49 19 2l  9 128 141. 47.\nDetroit    47 19 21   7 106 135 45\nBoston  48 17 20 11 129 130 45\nToronto  48 16 22 10 133 136 42\nChicago  47 17 24  6 101 127 40\nWaiting for You in Europe This Year... ,\nWiEASURf        -i:\nununited;\nEverywhere you go in Europe\nyou'll find a general desire by\nhost countries to help you\nenjoy yourself... to give ydu\nmaximum value foryour tourist dollar. More tourist dividends. More fun. Plenty of\ngasoline and heating fuel for\nall your needs.\nSo make this your year to\nvisit Europe. And remember\nby ship you get an extra seagoing vacation\u2014complete\nwith superb food, service, and\nyour choice of recreation at\nno extra cost.\nNow's the time to reserve\nyour ship, sailing date, and\naccommodation for spring,\nsummer or fall. Enjoy your\ntrip ...goby ship!\nFor Information and Reservations\n\"SEE THE VIPONDS\"\nGLOBE AGENCIES\n1146 Cedar Avenue Trail Phone 2345\n\"The Only Complete Travel Agency in.the Kootenays\"\nI NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958\u201411\nW. Carmen Hancock was elected\npresident of -Nelson Little League\nbaseball at a meeting Wednesday\nnight.\nMurray Parker was elected vice-\npresident; Don Hunter secretary-\ntreasurer, and E. McLachlan, R,\nPhillips, J. R. Johnson, J. Florio\nand Slim Porter, directors.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nFollowing are results of matches\nal Nelson Curling Club Wednesday\nnight:\nH. Farenholtz 10, W; Triggs 7s\nW. Tozer 0, W. Tickner 1 (default).\nN. Lutkiwich 7, A. Reid 9;\nA. Hamson 10, R. Palmer 8;\nD. Cathcart 9, L. Peerless 8.\n40 Rinks Expected\nIn Invermere 'Spiel\nINVERMERE \u2014 The annual\nbonspiel of the Invermere District\nCurling Club will be an event of the\nweekend, starting Friday and running through Sunday. Four compe-\ntions are scheduled with four sheets\nof ice. Nearly 40 rinks are anticipated with one from Calgary. The\nspeil is open to all clubs. Deadline\nfor entry is Wednesday.\nBoom-Boom's Condition\nReported Satisfactory\nMONTREAL (CP) -Bernie\n(Boom Boom) Geoffrion was reported in satisfactory conditipn\nWednesday night while coach Toe\nBlake expressed mystification as\nto the cause of a bowel rupture\nthat necessitated a major operation upon the hockey star.\n\"I am convinced that any minor\nknock or bump wasn't the cause,\"\nLeading AHL\nScorer Fined\nNEW YORK (AP) - Richard F.\nCanning, president of the American Hockey League, said Wednfl\nday centre Willie Marshall of\nHershey Bears, the league's leading scorer, has been fjned $150,\nMarshall protested a decision of\nreferee Frank Udvari in a game\nagainst Cleveland Jan. 15 and received a 10-minute misconduct\npenalty. When he continued to argue, Udvari assessed Marshall\nwith a game-misconduct penalty\nand an automatic $75 fine.\nDespite being ejected, Marshall\nrefused to leave the ice. For this\noutburst Canning fined Marshall\nan additional $75 to go with the\nautomatic fine.\nMarshall has scored 69 points on\n28 goals and 41 assists.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nMiami Beach, Fla. - Wilf\nGreaves, 160V., Edmonton, outpointed Jimmy Peters, 159\"_,\nWashington, D.C., 10.\nSalt Lake City \u2014 Jay Fullmer,\n142, West Jordan, Utah, outpointed\nGlen Burgess, 14314, Meridian,\nIdaho, 10.\nLondon \u2014 Peter Waterman, 146,\nEngland, stopped Emilio Marconi,\n145, Italy, 14. (Waterman won the\nEuropean welterweight title)?\nDave Charnley, 136V4, England,\noutpointed Don Jordan, 136%, Los\nAngeles, 10.\nsaid Blake. \"It seems to me there\nmay have been some internal\nweakness.\n\"Bernie has complained lately\nabout his stomach and said he had\npains.\"\nThe 27-year-old rightwinger of\nMbntreal Canadiens collapsed during practice Tuesday after what\nwas termed a mild skirmish for\nthe puck with teammate Andre\nPronovost.\nClub physician Dr. Lawrence\nHampson said Geoffrion was doing\nwell and should be able to leave\nthe hospital in two weeks.\nNeither the doctor nor club officials would speculate on when\nGeoffrion could return to hockey.\nThere was general unofficial be- '\nlief that the Boomer is out for\nthe season.\nPronovost, young rookie winger,\nwas greatly concerned over the\ninjury and expressed puzzlement\nas to what happened,\n\"I oan't recall having hit him\nor even touched him,\" said Pronovost. \"I will be interested ih knowing Bernie's version of it all.\"\nCoach Blake said the two players\nhad been after the puck and when\nPronovost got it \"the Boomer sort\nof pushed him.\"\nThe High Cost\nOf Hurt Feelings\nDo you.He awake nights and\n\"keep remembering\" old humiliations? Are you burned up\"\nover something someone did\nto you? Stop and think what\nmight be accomplished if the\ntime and energy spent in\nnursing your hurt feelings were\nput to profitable usel\nFebruary Reader's Digest\nshows you how old grievances\ncan harm you, gives helpful\nadvice on how to overcome\nthem. Get your February\nReader's Digest today: 33\narticles of lasting interest,\ncondensed to save ypur time.\nBe Smart - Shop Now for a New Suit and\nLook Smart for Easter!!\nTha Bay brings yon (his soroi-onmiol opportunity to buy your new Spring suit\n. . , or suits if you wont several . . . ot a price that moons exceptional\nvolue to you. Wise mm will do ttioir Spring suit shopping now at tha Bay\nond be sure of New season Smartness far Eostet.\nMade-to-Measure\nSUITS\nExtra Trousers\n(With Suit)\nVest  .\t\n15.50\nSepqrate Odd Slacks\n491\nSizes Over\nSize 44\nSlightly\nHigher\nAll Fittings\nGuaranteed\nPay in 3 .Monthly Amounts\nFebruary\nMarch  |    April\n17.33\n17.33   17.33\nK you're in trie market for a\nnew tuit to wear ot Easter ond\non through Spring, come in and\nlook over the new patterns . . ,\nexamine the quality fabrics \u2014-\nfeel them \u2014 tee how they mould\nand drope as only 100% wool\nfabrics can - worsteds - twists -\ngabardines - serges - flannel\nworsteds in the lighter tones that\nare right for Spring.\nMoke your choice from the wide\nselection on display ond then let\nus measure you correctly for tha\nbest fitting suit you've hod . . \u2022\na suit you'll feel ot home in, on*\nyou'll wear with pride and pleasure. Expert cut, fit and finish by\ntailors Who know from years of\nexperience how to make a suit\nto perfection. AH this for such a\nlow price during the Bays' semiannual suit sale . . . note the\ndates and shop eorly.\nTfrtikf*$($*% (ttfttqiftttQ.\nINCORPORATED   _\u2022\u2022? MAY 1670.\n 13\u2014NELSON DAILY NEW., THURSDAY, JAN\u00ab30, 1958\nSAFEWAY\nStock U p and Save\nTHIS IS THE STORE MANAGER'S WEEK AT SAFEWAY. To better acquaint our many customers with\nyour store managers, we are introducing to you the Store Managers in Nelson. Knowing your needs as\nthey do, they have endeavored to select items which will give you the best possible value for your food\nbudget dollar. They cordially invite you to come in and meet them personally and suggest you take full\nadvantage of the savings that will be offered in all sections of the store.\nPRICES EFFECTIVE JAN. 30 to FEB. 4\nMR. WILF MAYNARD\nFairview Store\nLucerne Milk\n26\nSunrype;   Clear\n48 ax. Tin\t\nHomogenized,\nRich Creamy.\n3.8% Butterfat\nQuart Carton ...\nSweet Mixed Pickles\nAPPLE JUICE\nChoice CREAM CORN\nPINEAPPLE\nTaste Tells\nIS ex. Tin ...\nPorata   Tid   Bits\nNalley's Crisp\n26 oz. Jar\t\n* CANNED TOMATOES\nDollord   .\n28 oz. Tin\t\n3 f- 89c\n6 ^ 77c\n2153c\n4 for 89c\nSOUP MIX\nLipton's; Chicken Noodle or\nTomato Vegetable; Package\n4* 49*\nAPRICOTS\nBerryland\n15 oz. Tin\n5-95.\nPEACHES\nHighway\n15 oz. Tin\n5-95.\nCHOICE PEAS\nTaste Tells\nIS oz. Tin\n6-89.\nSWIFTS PREM   \u25a0:\u25a0*$&.\nVELVEETA CHEESE __&_,*..\u25a0___         65$\nGRAPEFRUIT SEGMENTS maw,r, \u201e M. Tifl 2for39|f\nCHOICE TOMATOES \u201e_.., \u201e __ \u00ab, 5ht95$\nMAYONNAISE pledmoBti \u201e M. Jar        49$\nDEVILLED HAM VBittmMi., 0I. \u201e, ....,.,,,  2 lor'39|\nPuritans 15 oz. Tin   28$\nLuncheon Meat\n12 oz. Round Tin\n2-75.\nSockeye Salmon\nRoyal Line\n7} oz. Tin\n2.0.55$\nINSTANT OVALTINE ,\u201e__ \u201e c_\u00ab__i_te, ,u <*. ^     65$\nBROMO SELTZER \u201e**_,_ _\u00ab. _____  49$\nHALO  SHAMPOO  , GlM( Bottle, Band,,.  _      89$\nMUM CREAM DEODORANT MedlUM Jar 43$\nTOOTHPASTE   Colgate.; With Gardols Family Tube    \"5$\nVICK'S VAPO-RUB .\u201e ^ _._., JaI 49$\nTURKEYS\nAll Safeway Turkeys are Government Inspected for\nyour protection. Fully Drawn. Clean inside and out.\n16to20lb. GradeAlb.55\nGround Beef     Chuck Roast       Short Ribs\nLean\nGrade A Lb.\n25^  Grade A Lb.\n35*  Grade A Lb.\n25*\nCottage Rolls\nLeon; Half or Whole .\nlb.\nSwifts\nBreakfast, Premium\nSausages ., ^L ^C\nim Quality  'D.  ^^f  ^0\nib. 5 3c\nFrying Chicken\nYoung Tender Cup Up; Cello Trays\t\nTomato Juice\nGooseberry Jam\nOrangecot Nectar\nRed Prune Plums\nLlbby's Fancy Gentle Press\n48 oz. Tin .\t\nEmpress Pure\n24 Fluid oz. Tin\nSun-Rype\n46 oz. Tin\n2 for 69<\n\u2014\u2014 49<\n\u2014 43<\nTown House Choice\n15 oz. Tin ,__\n4 for 49<\nENTER SKYLARK BREAD'S \"WAIKIKI HOLIDAY\" CONTEST TODAY AT SAFEWAY\nDELUXE TRIPS TO\nHAWAII FOR TWO!\nUNITED AIR LINES DC-7\n&2a_^t..\ntNttV tlANKS At SKYURK\nHEAD SECTION At SAFEWAY\nSkylard Bread Raisin Bread\nWhite or Brown\n16 oz. Loaf\n2 for 37*   Sky,ark\n6 oz. Loof\n22*\nLIQUID JOY\nDetergent\n, 24 oz. Tin\n89*\nOXYDOL\nContains It's Own Bleach\nGiant Package With Free Curads .\n89*\nGIANT TIDE\nSpecial Value\nEach    \t\n69*\nPINK CAMAY\nRegular\nBar \t\n3  for 33*\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958\u201411\n.. Values\nPINEAPPLE JUICE\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nPORK & BEANS\nTOMATO JUICE\nDole; Fancy Quality\n48 oz. Tin\t\nTownhouie Natural\n48 ox. Tin\t\nTaste Tells. In Tomato Sauce\n15 ox. Tin\t\nTownhouie\nFancy Quality; 48 oz. Tin\n2f\u00ab59c\n2 '<\" 65c\n4<\u00b0-49c\n2'\u00ab65c\nMR. CHARLIE BANNER\nBaker St. Store\nMED VEGETABLES\nfor\n2\nBel-air Frozen;   12 o_  pkg.   -\u00bb\niUT   CORN    Bel-air Premium Quality Froien; 11 oz. pkg.   \u2022*\u25a0 for\nRENCH   FRIES    Bel-air Prem. Quality Frozen; 9 oz. pkg.   -> for\nOMATO KETCHUP ____,, \u201e M. \u00bb*_, __\nONELESS   CHICKEN   Boulter's Solid; 7 oz. Jar \t\n:hiu con carne TaBle T._.i\u00ab\u00ab. __,\t\nABY CEREAL   Gerber's Assorted; 8 oz. pkg  2\n.ORN FLAKES    Quaker; Special Offer; 18 oz. pkg -   2\ntORN OIL   gt, Lawrence; 16 oz. Jar   \t\n'.ORN SYRUP   Beehive;'    2 _\u201e. T1\u00bb\n:ORN STARCH   Durham; 1 Lb. pkg  '.. 20c\"      Bel-air Prem\nfor\nfor\n:ORN MEAL\nPurity;\nLb. pkg\nS Sockeye Salmon\n -47*\nB.C. Crabmeat\n45_     Gold Seal Fancy __* _) j\n\"     6 ox. Tin* . _*-* OjC\n49<       *\n\u00bb! GREEN PEAS\n4 * 65<\n39_     Gold Seal Fancy\n\". 't     7i ox. Tin\n29*\n29*\niium Quality Frozen\n12 ox. Package \t\nStrawberries\n2<\u00bb69<\nBel-air Premium Quality Froxen\n15 ox. Package\t\nSweetmilk-Powdered Milk\n3 lb. carton $1.19\nICE CREAM\nParty Pride\nAsit. Flavor\n\u25a0^i Gal\n89(\nHONEY\n  2Lb- Cart\u00b0n 59c!\nAlta\nCreamed\nWin a Beautiful\n58\nChevrolet Biscayne Sedan\nEnter Safeway's Big Chevrolet Contest\n4 BIG CONTESTS\nA '58 Chevrolet Sedan To Be Awarded\nAs the Prize Each Contest\nFIRST CONTEST CLOSES ... FEBRUARY 8th.\nEnter Each Contest . . .\nEnter As Often As You Wish\nIntry blanks, rules and details avaitabe at SAFEWAY. Final Contest closes ..\nMARCH 22nd, 1958\nCanada lif;SAFEWAY\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nNo. 1 Golden Ripe\nBananas\nServe sliced with cream\n,,. Ideal for the lunchbox ..\n2*39*\nSize\n80s\nFlorida  Indian River\nGRAPEFRUIT\n-  5 ^r 69C\nEmperor\nGRAPES\nLarga\nl-uscious\nBunches\n2 ibs 39c\nRed\nDelicious Apples\n\u25a0-' lie\"\nPotatoes      8 7\nGrand Forks Blue Ribbon Gems; 20 Lb ^B_^    MV\n_\nCauliflower   0.5'\nSnowhite Heads; Lb.   __B      I ^__^\nAvocadoes     IS'\nFor Salads; Eaeh s ,    I       9\n 14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nB______P^_____\u00a3_M__I\n\"v^8Pp\u00ab* ______S3\n\u2022\\__T>________r^\nW^_3^_R9W?!;*3|\n^\np^-_$\n^w_7:\n,__\\^______f\u00bb'^i'^\nli1_i__\/__\n\/'N____B\n__*\nW70LFY SEEMS TO KNOW    I ift\nWKER DIVMG...TAKESBUZ \\j\\1\nON A COOK'S'TOUR OF THE   Ug,\nUNDERWATER SIGHTS.\n-> \/               _\n,(.-\u2022\u25a0\n*\u00ab~ \u201e______________\u25a0\n*UZ GETS THREE EASY SHOTS\nVAT FISHES... AND MISSES.\nBUT YOUR FORWS SUPERB.'\n\u201e  YOU'VE GOT THE MAKINGS\n<lUl_KEOn OF A CHAMPION.'  COME,\nIW A BIT\nRUSTY.\n^\n\/ WELL, LET\nI  M6 PUT IT\n\/r*>_, THM\nv\/r <Al WAY...\n9       _V*^                                   \/\nVrv\\\n3__o\\\n17 Boards Deny Teachers' Rights\nTo Negotiate Wage Increases\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia Teachers' ^Federation\nsaid Wednesday 17 school boards\nhave arbitrarily denied teachers\nthe right to negotiate for wage increases.\nC. D. Ovans, federation secretary, said teachers are being\ntold to go to arbitration if they\ndon't like the salaries offered\nthem. ,\nHe said the school boards are\ninterpreting _Jie Public Schools\nAct in their own way, dictating\nsalary levels without negotiations.\n\"There is an acute and growing dissatisfaction within the\nteaching profession over prevailing salary levels and teachers\u2014\nfrom the standpoint of professional pride alone\u2014cannot be expected to submit much longer to\nthe machinations and unfair attitude of the trustees,\" Mr. Ovans\nsaid.\nMr. Ovans hinted the federation might blacklist the 17 areas\ninvolved.\n\"It is the policy of the federation that no teacher will accept a\nposition in any district where\nthere is no salary agreement between teachers and trustees.\"\nThe section in question states\n\"trustees shall have the power\nto prepare and adopt a salary\nschedule\" for teachers.\nMr. Ovans claimed this section\nwas merely an empowering one\nto enable trustees to spend public\nmoney  to pay  teachers'  wages.\n\"Unfortunately,\" he added,\n\"there was no reference in the\nact to negotiation of saiaries, an\noversight which common sense\nand good faith had remedied in\nthe past.\"\nAreas which have refused to'\nnegotiate with teachers are Penticton, Keremeos, Armstrong,\nEnderby, Vernon, Kelowna,\nKamloops, Barriere, Lillooet, Se-\nchelt, Burns Lake, Victoria,\nSaanieh, Sooke, Lake Cowichan,\nLadysmith  and  Alert  Bay.\nIn West Vancouver, Richmond\nand Surrey negotiations have\nbeen held but have broken down.\nTo settle the issue the school\nboards have taken the dispute to\narbitration as provided for in the\nschool act. .\nThe federation has indicated\nteachers now are 'dissatisfied\nwith arbitration procedures be-\ncause, they tend to perpetrate old\nwage' trends and frustrate their\ncause to win professional salaries.\nWest Vancouver, Richmond\nand Surrey teachers are threatening to boycott these arbitration\nproceedings.\nAwaiting the outcome of these\nbattles are teachers in Vancouver\nand Burnaby. ,\nVancouver's ' 2,150 secondary\nand   elementary   teachers   have\nL. R. Smith, Known\nHere, to New CPR Post\nVANCOUVER - Leslie R. Smith\nnative of Penticton, B.C., has been\nappointed general superintendent\nof British Columbia district, if was\nannounced Tuesday by J. N. Fraine\nvice-president, Pacific region. He\nsucceeds J. C. Jones, who retires\nJanuary 31 after 46 years' service.\nSmith, who started on the Revel-\nSleep Machine\nLengthens Life\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Moscow\nradio said Wednesday that Soviet\nscientists are developing an electric sleep machine which will reduce the amount of sleep a person\nneeds to two hours daily.\n\"That means we'll be living\nnearly three times as long as we\ndo now,\" the radio said.\nIt gave this description of the\nmachine:\n\"It gives off ultra-short waves\nwhich in frequency correspond to\nIhe operations of the molecuiesiof\nfatigue toxins which develop in the\nhuman body during w. king hours.\n\"Because the frequencies corre<\nspond, the machine destroys the\nfatigue toxins.\"\nMud Accepted\nAs Evidence\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A conviction based on similarity of mud was\nupheld Tuesday by the British Columbia Court of Appeal.\nWilliam Alexander Ramsey, 27,\nwas found guilty at Prince George\nlast July of breaking into the Cariboo Meat Packing Company at\nPrince George the previous November and was sentenced by\nJudge A. H. J.\"'Swencisky to five\nyears.\nAn RCMP expert testified at his\ntrial that mud found on Ramsey's\nshoes was the same as that outside the meat packing office.\nTwo others accused with Ramsey\nwere acquitted, but his appeal from\nconviction and sentence was dis-\nmissed.\nBecause of the delay in getting\nhis appeal before the court, the\njudges agreed that Ramsey's five-\nyear term will run from the date of\nhis conviction.\naccepted arbitration \"under protest.\"\nBurnaby's 600 teachers have\nagreed with the local school\nboard to accept the Vancouver\nsettlement.\nVancouver lawyer Hugo Ray\nhas been appointed by the, city's\nschool board to represent it on\nthe arbitration boards.\nOwen Mason, research director\nfor the Vancouver District Labor\nCouncil will represent secondary\nteachers while elementary teachers have still to pick their nominee.\nThe boards are expected to\nstart hearings sometime next\nweek after a chairman has been\nselected.\nstoke division 21 years ago as an\noperator has gained practical railway experience in Lethbridge, Nelson, Cranbrook, Penticton, Montreal, Calgary and Medicine Hat\nuntii his appointment as general\nsuperintendent of the Saskatchewan district at Moose Jaw in 1955.\nHe has been schooled in business\nadministration at the University of\nWestern Ontario.\nMr. Jones, a native of Windsor,\nOnt., was educated at Brandon,\nMan., and has served in many capacities in Moose Jaw, Regina,\nCutknife, Wilkie, Humboldt and\nRegina, Wynyard, Prince Albert,\nEdmonton and Calgary in his long\nservice.\nHe served overseas with the 48th\nInfantry Battalion in 1915 at Moose\nJaw, Sask., with the rani: of\nlieutenant. He went overseas in tha\nspring of 1917 and saw service oa\nthe western front in France and\nBelgium and was discharged ia\n1919 with the rank of captain and\nwas awarded the military crosi\nfor service at Valenciennes,\nFrance. ..   .\nYarrows To Lay Off\nAnother 200 Men\nVICTORIA (CP) - Yarrow's\nLtd. Shipyards, long a mainstay\nof employment in the area,\nreached its lowest postwar ebb\nTuesday with announcement 200\nmore men would be laid off by\nthe end of Ihis week.\nThe latest cut reduces the total\nnumber, of workers to a scant\n140\u2014from a postwar peak of 1,150\nlast August.\nUnions were told Tuesday the\nlatest layoffs would take place\nWednesday, Thursday and Friday.\nMembers of all 12 unions holding contracts with the company\nare affected by the latest reduction in the working crews.\nCompany General Manager\nJohn Wallace said completion of\nall government contracts left the\ncompany with little work on hand\nand left it with no choice but to\nlet the 200 go.\nFarmers Revive\nBarter System\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP)-\nThe old practice of bartering has\nbeen revived by Prairie grain\ngrowers who have millions of\nbushels of grain but no market\nfor it.\nPrairie farmers may sell their\nwheat, oats and barley only\nthrough the Canadian Wheat\nBoard, but there's nothing to stop\nthem bartering a field of grain\nfor a new tractor, or a few bushels for a wrist watch or some\ngroceries.    .\nIn southern Alberta, an effi-\ncent system has evolved between\nfarmers and merchants, and an\nestimated 2,000,000 bushels of\ngrain changed hands in 1957.\nThe merchant accepts the grain\nfor his goods and then sells it\nto operators of feed lots who are\n, fattening cattle for market. There\nis usually considerable dickering\nbefore the merchant and farmer\nagree on a price.\nIn value of goods, the farmer\noften receives more than he\nwould from the wheat board. At\nan elevator, a farmer might be\noffered 43 cents a bushel for No.\n1 feed oats, but if he took the\ngrain to the right merchant he\ncould get from 50 to 60 cents a\nbushel after a bit of \"wheatling,\"\nas the practice has become\nknown.\nMerchants say the system is\nbetter than giving credit to the\nfarmer because of the uncertainty when grain will be sold.\n\"Wheatling,\" they say, gives everyone more cash.\nThe trade flourishes in southern\nAlberta because of the thriving\ncommercial beef cattle feeding\nindustry. Feed-lot operators provide a ready market for wheat\nand barley, providing it is a few\ncents below the going price.\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n9:00 Good Morning\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n9:45 Guiding Light \u2022\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n10:15 Love of Life\n10:30 As the World Turns *\n11:00 Beat The Clock *\n11:30 Houseparty *\n12-00 The Big Payoff *\n12:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n1:00 Brighter Day \u00bb\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edge of Night *\n2:00 Garry Moore *\n2:30 Godfrey Time *\n3:00 Dotto *\n4:00 Early Show\n6:00 The News\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 Sgt. Preston *\n7:00 1 Search For Adventure\n7.30 Kingdom of the Sea\n8:00 Richard Diamond *\n8:30 Climax *\n9:30 Playhouse 90 *\n11:00 The News\n11:05 Late Show\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 0 Tunes\n9:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n9:30 It Could Be You *\n10:00 Arlene Francis Show *\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 Dear Phoebe *\n2:30 Truth or Consequences *\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n\"Piccidally John\"\n5:00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"West Point of the Air\"\n6:30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n6:45 NBC News *\n7:0Q.:Honeymooners\n7:30 State Trooper\n8:00 You Bet Your Life *\n8:30 Dragnet *\n9:00 Jack London Stories\n9:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford *\n10:00 Rosemary Clooney (C) *\n10:30 Late Movie \"Rendezvous\"\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n2:30 Liberace\n3:00 American Bandstand *\n3:30 Do You Trust Your Wife \u2022\n4:00 American Bandstand *\n4:30 Popeye\n5:00 Woody Woodpecker *\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Ciub *\n6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 News Beat\n7:00 Pride of the Family\n7:30 Circus Boy *\n8:00 Zorro * x\n8:30 Real McCoys *\n9:00 Pat Boone Show *\n9:30 Duffy. Tavern\n10:00 Navy Log *\n10:30 Channel 2 Theatre\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC  8TAN0ARD  TIME)\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1958\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:30\u2014AH the Weather\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00-^News\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\u2014The 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 Matinea\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boates\n4:45\u2014The Beacon Mystery\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014At Parliament Today\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014UBC Digest\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Music \u2022'\u2022'\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Halifax Theatre\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber; MusHt\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC  8TANDARD  TIME)\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 31,   1958\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^-Sports  News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Musical Program\nt0:00\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\u2014On the Scene\n5:30\u2014Sports Desk\n5:40\u2014Byline\n5:45\u2014Folk Songs\n6:00\u2014Points West\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude    -\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter .\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7: do\u2014National News\n' 7:30\u2014Tapestry in Music\n8:00\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014The Nation's Businesl\n8:4S\u2014Piano Music\n9:00\u2014Songs of My People\n9:30\u2014Petit Ensemble\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Reith Lectures\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert '\n11:57-CBC News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1.A\nplagiarism\nS. Recreation\narea\n9. River (Fr.)\n10. Use\n12. Make\namends for\n13. Cleanse ot\nsoap\n14. Printing\nfluids\n15. Concealed\n10. Masurium\n(sym.)\n17. Measure\n(Chin.)\n18. Call for\nhelp   .\n19. Teaming\n20. The soul\n23. Seta down\n24. Tube for\n,   sUk\n25. Disfigure\n26. Furnished\nwith shoes\n28. Small bell\nsound\n31. Play on\nwords\n32. Swine\n33. Water god\n34. Type\nmeasure\nSS.Aboat\npropeller\n36. Affixes\n38. Valuable\nhard wood\n40. Metal-\nshaping\nblock\n41. Simpleton\n42. Covers\ncompactly\n43. Departs\n44. Affirmative 18. Slight\nvotes taste\nDOWN 19. City\n1. Strong. (Pa)\nscented herb 21. Sacred\n2. Bird picture\n3. Taverns 22. Pole\n4. Quilting or 23, Girl's\nspelling\ni _Hli_\n_____ 'J__ni\u00bb\n_____ _____\n___ SfflSUH-\n_H'J_niiH BE\n_____   B!l____\n_hh nun\n5      __;_____\u25a0\nu__R__      D_D\n8. NATO\n' conference\ncity\n6. Greedy\nT. Flowed    \u25a0\n8. Destiny\n9. Extents of\ncanvas\n11. Reclines\n16. Torrid\nnickname\n26. A\nmarble\n26. Celerity\n27. Fraud\n28. High,\ncraggy hill\n29. Shelves\n30. Relieve*\n32. Actress\nHelen \u2014\nYMterdsy'i Answer\n35. At onetime '\n36. Absent\n37. Mr.\nGarro.\nway\n39. Biblical\nname\n40. Resort\nM\nP\ni\n__\n\u00a7\n3T\n__\nm\nIT\nl-\u00bb\nDAILY CRYFTOQUOTE \u2014Here's how to work.Hi |\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A I* use.\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, spot*\ntrophes, the length and formation ot the words are all hints.\nBach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nDTS    HID    AISC    OUUFD,    THO    I\nFT_\nTD ORL KISVFL BRTNR KTOD ORtA\nI F F \u2014 R .F A L D .\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: I SHALL BUT LOVE THE- BET* 1\nTER AFTER DEATH \u2014 BROWNING.\n\u00ab\u2022*-___! _\u00bb Has r___\u00ab lim-este\n \u2022Sfc\\\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story \u2022\u2014\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN\nPHONE  1844\nUNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nJACKMAN - To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Jackman of Ymir, at Koo-\ntenaj! Lake General Hospital, January 28, a son.\nSCHMITZ - To Mr.' and Mrs.\nArnold Schmitz, 2044 Falls Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, January 29, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nSALESMAN WANTED - SHOULD\nhave automotive or heavy equip-\n' ;ment sales experience. Car essential. Good income for a Hard\n\/worker. All replies confidential\nState experience, etc., to- B'ix\nu9457. Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nconcrete\"_pecialists, base-\nments under houses, leaking\nbasements, crack filling. All\nkinds of cement work. Phone now\n1752-L-3. H. Zylstra and Sons\n'FOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Adto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd., or phone\n186-X..\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT\nting, appliances, oil1 burners serviced. Norm Bowcock, Bonded\nLicenced Gas filter, ph. 385.\nTIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICE.\nFor cleaning, repairs, odd jobs,\nladder work, etc., phone 1229-X-l.\nWILL BABY SIT FROM 9 IN THE\nmorning, until 3 in the afternoon\nin your own home. Phone 606-L-5.\nFOR HIRE, TANDEM TRUCKS.\nDay, week or contract. Appiv\nBox 3781 or ph. 1757-R.\nEXPERIENCED OFFICE WORK-\ner 'desires position. Can type.\nPhone 559-X-l.\nDAY CARE FOR CHILDREN IN\nmy own home. Phone 803-X.\nTRIMMER- MAN OR GRADER\nwants a job. Box 2474.\nFOR   ALL   YOUR   PRUNING\nPhone 1989-X.\nRENTALS\nYOUNG MARRIED SCHOOL\nteacher, no family, desires to\nrent modern 5-room bungalow,\npossibly with option to purchase.\nBox 9062 Daily News.\n4 RM. APT. CLOSE IN, PRIVATE\n;   entrance' ground floor,  electric\nrange, oil heat. Available March\n1. Apply Box 2482, Daily News.\nUNFURNISHED 5-RM. DUPLEX\nheated, hot water, gas stove,\nprivate entrance. Reasonable,\nadults only. Phone 335-X.\nWE HAVE A NICE. BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars,\nphone 77.\nCLEAN 4' RM. APT. FOR IMME-\ndiate occupancy. Fridge, stove,\nfireplace, heat supplied. Phone\n542-R.\nNEW HOUSE FOR RENT, 1 BED-\nroom, gas furnace, lovely ,n-\nterior. Phone Bennie's Grocery,\n1236.\nBAKER ST. 2 HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms, unfurn., piped for gas.\nApply box 2209 Daily News.\nFEB; 1-COMFORTABLE SLEEP-\nroom, meals optional, conveniently located. Phone 1688-R\nFOR RENT -, WARM BED'\nrooms, very reasonable. Phone\n803-X.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM.\nGas cooking and heat. Ph. 491-X\nor call 140 Baker Street.\nMAIN  FLOOR  HOUSEKEEPING\nrm., fridge, stove, heated, priv\n\u2022i ent. and parking  171 Baker St\nBIG HSKP. RM. WITH FRIDGE,\nfor gentleman. Apt. B, 576 Baker\nStreet, phone 321-R. \u2022\n3 RM. HEATED SELF CONTAIN\ned apartment, Fairview. Phone\n-   1281-L.\nDOUBLE   AND SINGLE  UNITS\nNorth Shore Motel   Ph   1684\n5 ROOM UNFURNISHED APART\nment. Phone 476-X-l.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. Phone 1564-X.\nFURNISHED 3 RM. SUITE. CALL\n697-X after 3 p.m.\n4 BEDROOM  FAMILY HOME\nPhone 285-R.\n2 BR. HOUSE FOR RENT. PHONE\n77, Salmo,\n2 RM. SUITE. FOR RENT 614\nVictoria.\t\nROOM FOR RENT - PHONE\n547-L.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - BOY'S WRIST WATCH\nFriday. Phone 711-X-2.\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\ns\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n1958\nCHEVROLETS\nand\nOLDSMOBILE.\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nG.M.\nParts and Accessories\n' Goodyear Tires\nComplete Body,\nFender and Paint. Shop\nFACTORY TRAINED.\nMECHANICS\nUSED CARS\n1956 Plymouth V-8\n1956 Ford Fairlane\n1957 Chevrolet Sed.\n1955 Chevrolet Sed.\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1954 Pontiac Coach\n1952 Austin A-40\nJanuary\n. SPECIAL!\n1938 Chev. Coupe\n'    Ready To Go\n$95.00.\nUsed Trucks\n1957 Chev.   .4-Ton\nChassis and Cab.\n1956 Chev. Pick Up\n1955 GMC Pick Up\n1955 Dodge Pick Up\n1952 Chev. Pick Up\nAll Other Makes - ''\n- and Models in Stock\nat       (\nBUERGE\nMOTORS\nLTD.\nPhone 35 - 36\n323 Vernon St.,\n:   Nelson, -B.C.\nWE ARE WRECKING THE FOL-\nlowing cars and trucks this\nweek: 1952 3 ton Chev tinker,\nalmost new tires, has factory\ntanks and barrel rack, complete\nwith hose, reel, meter, etc., front\nend damaged by (ire, could be\nrepaired. 1 '51 Dodge 2-dr.; 2\n'50 Chev 4 dr.; 1 '49 Chev 2 dr.;\n1 '53 Dodge 4 dr.; 1 '51 Ford 4\ndr. (radio); 1 '55-Chev 4 dr.;\n1 '54 Vauxhall 4 dr.; 1 '55 Chev\nsedan del. Western Auto Wrecking Ltd., Granite Rd\u201e ph. 189-R-4,\nNelson, B.C. \t\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nAUCTION OF TIMBER SALE\n.   .     X-77535\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 10:30 a.m.\n(Local Time) on Moriday, February 17th, 1958, in the office of\nthe Forest Ranger, Neison, B.C.,\nthe Licence X-77535, to cut 5200\ncedar fence posts and 100 cords\nof cordwood, on jn area situated\nnear Champion Lake, Kootenay\nDistrict. \"\nThree (3) years will be allowed\nfor, removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to\nbe opened at the hour of auction\nand treated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the District\nForester, Nelson, B.C.; or the\nForest Ranger, Nelson, B.C.\nTENDERS will be accepted up\nto 5:00 p.m., February 7th, 1958,\n.for the- servicing of all typewriters and adding machines in\nSchool District No. 7 (Nelson)\nfor the year 1958. Location and\nnumbers of machines in each\nSchool may be obtained from the\nSecretary's office.\nForward tenders to:\nS,ecretary-Treasurer,\nSchool District No. 7 (Nelson),\n554 Stanley-Street, Nelson, B.C.\nMACHINERY\n1955 IHC TD9 CRAWLER\nHydraulic Angledozer\nLogging Winch.\nOperator's Guard.\n1955 IHC TD14A CRAWLER\nDirect-Lift Hydraulic Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nOperator's Guard.\n2 ONLY CATERPILLAR D4\n-.  .CRAWLER -\nHydraulic Angledozer.  .\n\u25a0 - Operator's Guard.       . \u25a0'\n1 0N_YG.M.'6-71\nPOWER-UNIT\nExtended S(iaft..\nOutboard .Bearing.\n1952 IHC TD1.4A CRAWLER\nBucyrus-Erie Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\n10NLY IHC TD9 CRAWLER\n_ucyrus-Erie  Front End  Loader.\nRubber Track Pads.\nT.\n& Equipment Co. Ltd\n702 Front St.     .\nPhones 1810 - 100.\n_Kc*lantt lathi Ntm\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844 -\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday  10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nIn advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month           $ 1.25\nThree months     $ 3.50\nSix months     __   $ 6 50\nOne year $1200\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month       $ 1.75\nThree months      $ 5 00\nSix  months   $ 950\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\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry\nSPECIALIZING IN _'N G L I S H.\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\"\ntractionizing. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins. '49 to '51 Hillmans.\n'50 to '51 Morris Minor, '47 Stude-\nbaker, '47 Pontiac. For sale, '53\nAustin. Cottonwood Wreckage\nService, ph. 1363-L-2, Box 382,\n24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\t\nSACRIFICE FOR QUICK SALE-\n1953 American Pontiac Chieftain\ndeluxe Pijsh button radio, turn\nsignals, air conditioning, new\ntires, completely winterized, low\nmileage. Appraised at $1400. Any\nreasonable offer accepted. Contact Mr. Hanson, ph. 1300 or\n2131.\n1949 PONTIAC GUARANTEED\nlike new, completely equipped\nReasonable- for cash. P b o n e\nFrank, 1282-L or 1648.\nGo Back to the Woods\nWithout a\nD44 or Super 4,4\n\u25a0 Chain Saw\nThe Most Reliable Saw'\nSee\nH. -\"Fritz\" Farenholtz\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING &  EQUIPMENT\nCO.    LTD.\nPHONE 1402\nPERSONAL\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nNORTH SHORE. - 3 BR. BUNGA-\n' low, kitchen, living and dining\nrooms, fireplace, oil heat, two\nacres. Ideal location, _ mile\nwest of bridge approach. Apply\nBox 2446, Daily News.\nAT YMIR - COMFORTABLE 2-\nBR. bungalow. Small down payment. 1123 Front St., Nelson, after 6 or weekends.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar:\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 parking across the street\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM. AVAILABLE\nfor young business man. Phone\n284-R.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen  Phone 1179*.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSERVICE STATION TO LEASE,\nexperienced applicants will be\ngiven' preference. State qualifications, i.e. age, mechanical\nexp., etc. Box 440, Nelson, B.C.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 3600 E Has-\ntings St., Vancouver, B.C., Gbfcn\nburn 1500\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nD_rtL_KS .IN ALL I'YPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and 'shapes\nAtlas Iron _ Metals Ltd.; 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. BC, Ph\nPAcific \u2022 6357\nSKI OUTFIT - 7' SKIS, CABLE\nharness, boots size 10, aluminum\npoles. Outfit used twice. Phone\n. 1967-Y between 5:15 and 7 even\nings. $70 value\u2014asking $35.\n180 GALLON STEEL TANK\nsuitable for rural water supply,\n$35. Apply Administrator, K.L.G.\nHospital, Nelson, B.C.\nWASHED. FEED POTATOES, Excellent for cattle or hogs, $5 per\nton, The .Co-op. Fruit Growers\nAss'n, Wynndel, B.C.\nFOR SALE - BALE ALFALFA.\nFirst and second cutting. Apply\nJoe Pog'any Sr\u201e Lister, B.C.\nWHITE ENAMEL STOVE AND\nwater tank and circulating heater. 216 Morgan or phone 499-L.\nCOAL AND WOOD FURNACE, S\nkitchen stoves. Very reasonable\nPhone 964-R, 116 Vernon.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St\nAlgeria Votes\nLaw Passed\nPARIS (AP)\u2014A new Frenoh>\nelection 'law for rebellious Algeria won final legislative approval Tuesday from the National Assembly, 292 to 249,. but a\nbill to., provide limited home rule\nwas held up by. a dispute with\nthe, upper .house.\\\nPremier Felix Gaillard pushed\nboth the controversial measures\nthrough, the assembly on first\nreading Nov. 29 by demanding\nvotes of confidence. Although designed1 to reia. French rule in\nAlgeria,* they Preserve control\nfrom'Paris of the North African\narea's. defShce!, foreign affairs\nand finances.\nBoth plans have already been\nrejected by Algerian rebels who\nhave been fighting for independence for more than three years.\nThe French have said they cannot hold elections until peace is\nrestored to Algeria.\nThe election law equalizes the\nvotes of French and Arab residents of Algeria. In the past, although the Arabs outnumber the\nFrench 10 to 1, the .voting system was rigged to !fgive the\nFrench control. . j ,\nTo keep Algeria's French, settlers from being swamped by the\nArabs, the home rule bill would\ndivide the territory into six or\nseven regional administrations\nwith the boundaries drawn along\nracial lines. It also promises a\nfederal regime for the future.\nSinclair Seeks\nMissing Title\nOTTAWA (CP.) - James Sinclair (L\u2014Coast-Capilano) raised\na sudden squall in the Commons\nWednesday When he claimed the\nfront pages of a report tabled\nby Prime Minister Diefenbaker\nJan. 20 are missing.\nMr. Diefenbaker said that as\nfar as he is concerned there were\nno missing pages in what he .has\n\/called the \"hidden report.\"\nThe prime minister said Jan. 20\nthe report was' prepared last\nMarch for the i former Liberal\ngovernment. He said then it\nshowed that the previous administration was warned that Canada\nwas heading for an \"economic\nslide.\" In debate that day he accused the Liberals of not acting\non the report.\nMr. Sinclair said the\nprime minister referred to the\ntitle of the report but that the\ntitle appears nowhere in'.the report, which was tabled by Mr.\nDiefenbaker.\n> Mr. Diefenbaker said Mr. Sinclair was asking a \"trick question.\" The title of the rep'ort was\navailable and apparent.\n,Mr. Sinclair, former fisheries\nminister, said this reply was in\n\u25a0direct contradiction to the report.\nThe title did not occur In the\nreport.\nMr. Diefenbaker said this was\n'a.n \"exaggerated statement\" and\nthat it was no time for a debate\non the-matter.'\n\u2022 Mr. Sinclair said the prime\nminister'. tabled a confidential\ndocument. The Commons therefore was entitled td information\nrequested by Douglas Fisher\n(CCF '-- Port- Arthur) as to\nwhether the RCMP has any files\non present members of the Commons. Mr. Fisher was refused\nthe information because such disclosures were \"contrary to the\npublic interest.\"\nJustice Minister Fulton said\nMr. Sinclair was deliberately trying to confuse the issue. These\nwere two entirely \u25a0 different subjects.\nMr. Diefenbaker sajd the report was tabled at the request of\nthe opposition.\n. Stanley Knowles (CCF - Winnipeg North Centre) said the report was' tabled because of a\nstanding Commons rule.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30,1958\u201415\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News dees not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof on error in the following Hits.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\n       .08\nAlgom Uranium    14.75\nAmal Larder ....: .:     .13\nAnacon Lead  66\nAnglo Rouen  34\nAtlin Rutf        -24\nAumacho   \u2014 15\nAtrnor , -     2.12\nBarnat .-     .32\nBase Metals ..-, -.     .27\nBibis Yukon  _     .07\nBoymar   \u2014 - '  -1'\nDIVIDENDS\n(By The Canadian Press)\nCombined  Enterprises  Ltd.\ncents, March 1, 'record Feb. 5.\nHudson Bay Mining and Smelting Co. Ltd. 75 cents March 10,\nrecord Feb. 7,\nRobinson, Little and Co. Ltd.\nClass4 A \u201e5 cents March 1, record\nFeb. 15.\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \u2022....'.\u201e.'\u201e\nBralorne \t\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold,.    \t\nFarwest Tungsten\nGiant Mascot\n..1   4.8\n.13\n1.80\n.03\n,58\n.10-\n.09\nGranduc     1.14\nGrandview  :. 05\nHighland Bell  \u2022. -1.18\nPac Eastern Gold 20.\nPioneer Gold    1.27\nPremier.Border      .08_\nQuatsino  20V4\nSheep Creek      33 \u2022\nSilback ' Premier 05\nSilver Ridge     '::      .03\nSilver Standard ,' 14\nSunshine Lardeau :      \u201e0_\nTrojan  14_\nOILS\nAitex .1 .' i6\nA P Consolidated .'...     .35\nCalgary and Edmonton ....  19,00\nCharter .....-...:     1.95\nHome     16.00\nNew Gas Ex     1.25\nOkalta Com     1.36\nPacific Pete    19.25\nPeace River Gas 38\nRoyalite .14.00\nRoyal Can  l 22\nSparmac      .15\nUnited '...-   2.32\n- .17.\n1.34\nVanalta   \t\nVantor .   .      \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers    ....\/.  1.55\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.25\nBC Forests i 10.50\nB C Power  38.00\n,B C Telephone        _  40.50\nCrown Zeller. (Can)   15.00\nInland Nat Gas   7.26\nLucky Lager          4.15-\nMacM & Bloedel B ;.. 24.75\nMid Western ;.. 1.50\nPowell River   31.50\nTrans .Mtn            J  55.25\nWestminster Paper   22.50\nBroulan\nBrunhurst \t\nBrunswick\t\nBuffalo Ank \t\nBuff Red -Lake .\nCampbell C\nCampbell R. L.\nChimo\t\nCoin Lake \t\nConiaurum\n.60\n.06\n2.55\n.95\n.07\n5.00\n6.35\n- .50\n' .16\n.30\nCons Denison    11-50\nCons. Discovery      2;70\nCons Halliwell  32\nCons Howe           1.80\nCons Mining & Smelting ..  18.25\nCon Sanorm 07\nCon Sub  TO\nConwest   _ -    2.53\nD'Aragon  15\nDonalda          \u2022!*\nEast Amphi        -09\nEaSt Malartic      1-41\nEast Sullivan       1.84\nElder Gold  ....      \u00ab\nFalconbridge   _ \u2014  22.50\nFaraday  -     1-54 ,\nFrobisher  .___-    Ml\nGeco  ..\u201e.'.'.:     3.35\nGeo. Scientific Pros 35\nGiant Yel.  \u2014.    4.85\nGlen Uranium       .U_\nGoldale  - _ 18\nGold Eagle      .05%\nGifnnar Gold   15.25\nHarminerals  ,.     .11\nHeadway   -.-. \u2122 :\nHollinger \u25a0 _  22.00-\nHudson Bay,..-.    43.50\nInspiration  65\nInt. Nickel i -   72.50\nJoliet Que __ '. -     .25 ,\nJonsmlth       .10\nR J- Jowsey      '.45\nKenville    _..      .06 _\nKerr Addison ...  16 62%\nLabr'addr        16.25\nl.i\n.79\nWright Hargreaves \t\nYeliowknife Bear\t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc ...\t\nBailey Selburn '..\nBata Petroleum\t\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCdn Atlantic  \u201e     4.75\nCanadian Collieries      4.45\nCanadian Devonian      5.80\nCentral Explorers      1.97\n.24\n.09\n19.75\nHome A\nLiberal Pete \t\nLong Island Pete\nMidcon\nNew Continental ...v.\t\nNew Gas Expl \t\nOkalta - :\t\nPacific Pete ., \t\nPetrol   ;  :\t\nProv Gas \u25a0; ',\t\nRoyalite  _____\t\nSpooner  I\t\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad ..% \u201e ____\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck ....\nWestern Pacific .\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAigoma Steel\t\nAluminum; -..\t\nArgus 2nd pfd. .\nAtlas St :...\nB.A. Oil\t\nBeatty Bros\t\nBell Telephone .\nBrazilian .\nLake Lingman 11_\nLakeshore       4.60\nLexindin , - 05V4\nLittle Long Lac     1.95\nLprado. - .-     -60\nLouvic't    ~ 14\nMacassa 'J. \u2014.  2.51\nMadsen R. L.     2.10\nMalartic G. F.     1.12\nMaritime Mining  53\nMart McNeely 11\nMcLeod\nMilliken ......\t\nMining Corp\t\nMogul\t\nMulti Mins \t\nNew Alger ,\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Fortune \t\nNew Highridge .,..\nNew Harricana ....\nNew Jason \t\nNisto  .,.'.'.',    .....\nNoranda New \t\nNorgqld\n.45\n.09\n.06\n.54\n.14\n.17%\n.17\n,09\n'.08\n87.00\nWestern Plywoods\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk ...\nTrans Can Com ..\nTrans Mtn Unit....\nWestcoast Com ..\nWestcoast Trans ..\nRANKS\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 i\nTrans Can \"C\" ...\nBid\n13,60\n25.00\n55.25\n26.75\n89.00\n41.00\n41.50\n44.00\n58.50\n7.87\n6.40'\n3.22\n9.17\n\u25a04.38\n4.80\n11.00\nAsk\n27.00\n90.00\n42.00\n42.50'\n45.00\n59.50\n8.63\n7.03\n3.52\n9.92\n4.81\n5.20\nOIL - HEATER -~2\ncheap. Phone 385.\nYRS.   OLD,\nENGLISH  PRAM,\nPhone 285-R.\n$5;   CRIB  $3.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nALCOHOLICS    ANONYMOUS   -\nFridays, ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EF-\nfective. 3 weeks supply $2.50, 9\nweeks $6.00 at Fleury's Phar-\nmacy and all druggists\n'56  TWO  DOOR FORD  SEDAN,\n14,000 mi., $1950. Phone 890-Y.\n'52   VANGUARD;   1951   POWER\nGlide. Phone 1841.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nTWO 106-LB. PROPANE GAS*\ncylinders with pressure gauge,\nregulator and pipe. Phone 89, ask\nfor Beggs.\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING _T THE\nMarvelle Beauty School la Trail\nFor information write to 1319\nBay Ave, or phone 2822.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nWANTED-YOUNG BULL ABOUT\n1 yr. Ayrshire preferred. State\nprice. P. M. Bloodoff, Passmore,\nB.C.\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   W1DDOWSON _ CO.\nAssayers. 30) Josephine St.. Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.    ROSSLAND. B.C\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2732. Office Mgr. Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-8th St., Nelson. Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W BAERG. B.C.\nLand Surveyor -\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances, Free Estimates.\nPhone 774, 523 Cedar St., Nelson.\nINSURANCE\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP)-A late rally\nby rails raced a sluggish stock\nmarket to a substantial- rise Wednesday.\nAn estimated $1,500,000,000 was\nadded to the quoted vaiue of\nstocks listed on the New York\nStock Exchange, based on. the\nrise in the Associated Press'average.    '\nVolume was 2,230,000 shares\ncompared with 2,030,000 Tuesday.\nNew York- Central, up ?, was\nthe rhost active rail stock. Western Pacific rose 2%, Rio Grande\n1%, Northern Pacific 1%, South-\nem Pacific l and Chesapeake\nand Ohio. 1.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose $1.20' to $163.00\nwith industrials up $1.50, rails up\n$2.60- and utilities unchanged.\nAmong Canadian issues on the\nNew   York   exchange,   lnterna-\nTRAILERS\nr:'.\u201e,\t\nWANTED - 4 FRESH COWS,\nor due to freshen. Write full particulars in first letter. Box 8513.\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE'CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\nB FJfNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop  Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor  rewind\nu\\g  Phone 593.      324 Vernon St.\nKOOT'NEE\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar.  Phone 2701\nQranbrook,  Phone JU-6-2270\nFor the Best in Mobile Homes\nSee These;V-\n* PATHFINDER ,    * REX\n* MERRIMAN      * A.B.C\n\u2022k MARATHON\nAlso a Good Selection of\nUsed Cars.\nNormetals     2.60\nNorpaX 30\nNorth Can       1,15\nNorth Rankin _  '   .60\nOpemiska      6.15\nPickle Crow      1.15\nPlacer Devel    9.50\nPreston E. D \u00bb....\u201e     5.50\nQuebec Lithium     5.85\nQuebec Metallurgical      1.40\nQuemont '.     7.75\nRadiore  45\nRayrock      1.00\nSherritt Gordon _.    4.35\nSilver Miller '....,       ,34\nSteep Rock     9.15\nSullivan Con ....: .'.   1.90\nSylv'anite  .     J.23\nTeck Hughes  \u201e    1.63\nTemagami-     1.25\nThomp'Lund ....,\u201e 84\nTombill      33\nUnited Keno     3.80\nVentures  :   23.25\nVicour 3 05%\nViolamac  . 1.35\nWaite Amulet  ' 6.00\nWiltsey G.oglin       .19%\ntional Nickel gained 1. Also up\nwere Aluminium, Ltd., _;\nGranby Mining and Walker-Goo-\nderham, Vt each; and Canadian.\nPacific Ya. Losers included Distillers - Seagrams, Dome Mines\nand Hudson Bay Mining, each\noff Vt. _'\u2022\u25a0,-'\u00ab\nCanadian Marconi,. Eureka\nMines and Preston East Dome\neach gained Vs in a quiet Cana.\ndian section of the American exchange.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock market Wednesday'recorded a moderate advance amid faster \u25a0 than\nusual trading, Industrials led the\nindexrwinners with a P.i-point\ngain.\nWestern oils and golds held\nearly gains but base metals slipped in last \u2022 mipute. trading and\ntheir index was' off slightly.\nSpeculative buying and selling\namong penny mines made its first\nreal appearance of the week. The\nlive mqst-active mines, all selling\nat less than 30 cents with the\nexception pf Headway, accounted\nfor nearly one-third the market's\nentire sales.\nHeadway traded 146,900 shares\nand added nine cents to 70. cents.\nMost-active issue was New Mylamaque, up 3 cents to 27% cents.\nIndustrial s gains outnumbered\nlosses by two-td-dne but the declines moved in a wider range.\nWestern oils and most medium-\npriced mhiea moved up in a 20-\ncent range while senior issues in\nboth sections- climbed fraction\nally.\nIndex  charges:   Industrials  up\n1.68 to 410.10; golds\n76.55; base metals off\n63; western oils up .21\nup  .15 to\n.07 tp 148.-\nto 133.65.\nB.C Eleqtric 4s ...\nB.C.- Electric 4%s .\nB.C, Forest\t\nB.C Packers B\t\nB.O Power A\t\nBurns A.\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners ..__\nCanadian Celanes* ...___\nCan. Cement  , \u201e..\nCan Chem Co .;.. ____\nCanadian Dredge __\nCan Oil  ...'  '\nCanadian Pacific Rly __\nCockshutt  .\nCons Gas ....i  ,_\u2014\nDist, Seagram  ____,\nDom. Foundries  ___.\nDom. Steel Ord ___,\nDom. Stores ...: .'.,...__\nDom. Tar & Chemical .__\nDom. Textiles ___\nFamous Players ___,\nFord A\nGatineau\t\nGatineau 8% pfd\t\nGen. Steel Wares _\nGoodyear _,\nGypsum Lime _\nImperial Oil\t\nImp.- Tobacco \u201e.\t\nInt., Pete _,__\nLaura Secord ...._\nLoblaw A ;\t\nLoblaw B  ..^\nMassey Harris\"\".'.\"....,\nMcColl Frontenae.\nMont. Loco\t\nMoore Corp.  _.\nNat. Steel Car .._....\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River..\t\nPower Corp. \t\nSHawinigan  \t\nSicks Brew.\t\nSimpsons A .\nSteel of, Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can .\nUnited Steel\t\nWestern Grocers A .\n16.00\n1.27\n.11\n.77\n.35\n1.26\n1.35\n19.37_\n.57\n2.68\n14.12_\n.25\n.89\n4.90\n2.34\n25%\n2S'_\n28%\n47\nIT\n'\u25a0 85H\n8.70\n40H\n6%\n76_\n90%\n10%\nII\n88%\n10%\n'27%\n13%\n14%\n26%\nS\n', 16\ni 27%\n24%\n8%\n82%\n25%\n24%\n18%\n63\n10%\n7%\n14%\n73%\n30%\n102%\n78\n140\n28\n39%\n13%\n85%\n20\n22%\n22%\n6%\n50%\nIB\n64%\n22\nHI\n31%\n86%\n24%\n22%\n17%\n47%\n72%\n13%\nTHE\nBEST DEAL\nIs Still A\nPontiac, Buick or Vauxhall\nor o reconditioned Goodwill\nUSED CAR from\nFrom\nNELSON MOTOR\nPRODUCTS LTD.\nNelson, B.C.        Ph. 658-9\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices on\nihe Montreal and Canadian stock\nexchanges moved upwards Wednesday in selective trading. Turnover was light in the industrials\nand moderate in the mines and\noils.\nConsumers Gas climbed 1% to\n32% in a strong utility group.\nConsolidated Paper improved %\ntn 31% among higher newsprints.\nTrans-Canada Vt in a firm pipeline group.\"\nRefining oil, base metal, construction and m i s c e 11 a neous\nstocks were mixed. Imperial Oil\ngained Vt at 39%. Hudson Bay\ndropped a point to 43 and International Nickel rose a point to\n72%.\nIn the mines and oils, attention\ntocused on the speculative mines.\nThey were generally stronger in\na .four-cent' range.\nIndustrial volume, was 44,500\nshares: mines and oils 407,400.\nPEEBLEi\n1957 Plymouth\nStation Wagon\n3215   miles.\nNEW  CAR_GUARANTEE\nP___.L_-\n24-Hour Towing\nService\nDay Ph. 121       Night Ph. 1413-X\nA-\nComplete Line of\nExpert Service\nTUNE-UPS\nENGINE OVERHAULS\nAUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION\nOVERHAULS\n_ -P118:\nEXPERT BODY, FENDER\nAND PAINT WORK\nFor a  Complete Estimate Of\nBody Damages and Paint Come to\nlotor\nLTD\n231  Boker\nNelson, BC\nSt.\nPh\n121-2\n\u25a0\n 16\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1958\n\"little Things\nMean a Lot\"\nand\nOne. Little Vitamin Capsule Can Mean\na Lot to YOU in Your Daily Battle\nAgainst tht? Perils of Low Vitamin\nand mineral diets.\nA complete line of VITAMINS are kept in\nthe VITAMIN DEPARTMENT at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on.\nrequest. Minimum two Uses. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nMadeline's Coffee Shop will be\nopen today.\nButterfield's January half \u2022 price\nclearance continues to Jan. 31st.\nPartner whist, Eagles Hall tonight, 8 p.m. Everybody welcome.\nFOR ELECTROLUX SALES\nand service, phone 1108.\nFisherman's Headquarters\nMLLICUM INN-BALFOUR. B.C.\nNelson Pennants and Crests.\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nGuaranteed singing canaries and\nbudgies. Just arrived.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our heartfelt\nthanks to our many friends and\nneighbors for their kind expressions of sympathy, cards and flowers extended to us in the loss of\nour beloved wife and mother. Special thanks to the Pythian Sister\u00bb,\nRev. Canon Silverwood, Dr. Morrison and Mr. Christie of the\nThompson Funeral Home.\nJohnny Swanson and Ricky.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nROGERSON     ,\nFuneral service for the late Margaret Rankin Rogerson of Vancouver, formerly of Fruitvale and\nArrow Park, will be held Friday,\nJanuary 31, 1958, at 3:30 from\nClark's Funeral Chapel. Rev. L. C.\nHooper of St. Paul's United Church,\nFruitvale, will officiate. Interment\nin family section, Fruitvale Memorial Cemetery.\nFlannelette sheets, Size 70x90.\nReg. $5.95 for $5.25.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nNELSON GIRL GUIDE AND\nBROWNIE TEA, Sat., Feb. 1st.\nHume Silver Room.\nMaple Leaf 3-ply unshrinkable\nknitting yarn special, 22c a ball.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nCONCERT SERIES\nStecher and Horowitz, duo piano.\nCapitol Theatre, Feb. 3, 8:15 p.m.\nGlass Tops for Furniture, cut to\nany shape. Edges polished.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156    101 Hall St.    Nelson\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nTuberous Begonia and Gloxinia\nbulbs now in stock.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n495 BAKER ST.\nSki Wax, Ski Poles and Ski\nBindings for your Sunday sport.\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nGRAHAM\nMasonic Memorial Service for\nthe late Ven. Archdeacon Frederick Helier Graham will be held\nSaturday, February 1, 1958, at 9:45\na.m., from Masonic Temple, Trail,\nconducted by officers and members of Emulation Lodge No. 125\nAF _ AM.\nFuneral services will follow at 11\no'clock from St'. Andrew's Anglican Church. Rt. Rev. P. R. Beattie,\nBishop of Kootenay, will officiate,\nassisted by Venerable B. A'. Res-'\nker, Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood\nand Rev. E. H. Patterson.\nRemains will lie in state at St.\nSaviour's Pro-Cathedral, Nelson,\nfrom 1:30 to 3 p.m. Service will be\nconducted by Rt. Rev. P. R. Beat-\ntie, Bishop of Kootenay, assisted\nby the Rev. Canon G. W. Lang\nof Nelson and Venerable B. A\nResker of Castlegar. Interment\nwill be in the family section, Nelson Memorial Park.\n(No flowers, by special request.)\nIn lieu of flowers, donations to\nMemorial Fund of St. Saviour'*\nPro-Cathedral, and St. Andrew'\nAnglican. Memorial Fund, to be\nsent to director Rev. E. H, Patterson or Mr. H. T. Ommanney,\n120 Oxford Road, Trail. Cork's\nFuneral Home in charge.\n(Continued in Next Column)\n6500 Hymns\nWritten\nCharles Wesley\nBy TOM HENSHAW\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\n\"Near Ripley, my .horse, threw\nme and fell on me,\" an itinerant\nminister named Charles Wesley\nwrote in his journal.\n\"My companion thought I had\nbroken my neck, but only my leg\nwas bruised, my hand sprained\nand my head stunned which prevented me from making hymns\nuntil the next day.\"\n\"As it turned out, the day lost\nto hymn - making wasn't very\ncostly since Charles Wesley\neventually composed the lyrics to\nsome 6,500 hymns. He was the\nmost prolific hymn writer of all\ntime.\nBIRTHDAY MARKED.\nMaji'y churches, particularly\nthose of -Methodist derivation, are\ncelebrating the 250th anniversary\nof the master hymn writer's birth\nin Epworth, England.\nAlthough it may look that way\nat times, Charles Wesley did not\ninvent hymn-singing. It's older\nthan the Christian church itself.\nSt. Paul exhorted the Ephesians:\n\"(S peak)   to  yourselves  in\npsalms and hymns' and spiritual,\nsongs, singing and making melody in your heart-to the Lord.\"\nBut Charles Wesley, and the'\nProtestant hymn-makers who followed in his footsteps, added\nsomething t\u00bb the ancient hymns\nof praise\u2014their contribution was\nintense personal experience.\nFIRST HYMN\nWesley was converted\u2014that is,\nhe underwent a deep fee ing of\nforgiveness for his sins\u2014on Whitsunday, 1738. The next day he\nwrote his first hymn Oh, For a\nThousand Tongues to Sing. He\ndictated his last on his deathbed.\nIn the 50 years\u00bb between conversion and death, he averaged\n150 hymns, a year, many of them\ncomposed in the most unlikely\nplaces since his wandering ministry took him all over England.\nHis best known works are\nJesus, Lover of My. Soul, written\nin 1740 and still a standard in\nmost hymnbooks, and the favorite Christmas carol. Hark the'\n-Herald Angels sing.\nThroughout' his lifetime and\nafterward, Charles Wesley was\novershadowed by his elder\nbrother, John. Actually,, they\nwere an evangelic team; John\nthe thinker, Charles the eloquent\nman of song.\n, SHOW GOES ON ?\nCINCINNATI (AP)-George J.\nCarey, 63, chief percussionist\nwith the Cincinnati symphony orchestra, collapsed, and died Tuesday during a performance 6f the\norchestra. The orchestra continued its performance as assistant\npercussionist Glenn Robinson\nquickly took over Carey's part.\nCarey joined the orchestra in the\n1926-27 season and was nationally\nknown as \"a xylophonist.\nNews ol Ihe Day\n'Continued)\nMothers still needed for Kinsmen\nMothers' March Saturday. Please\nphone 247-Y or 1662-Y.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere\nthanks to the sisters and staff of\nMount St. Francis Infirmary for\ntheir kindness to our. beloved mother.during her illness and to our\nmany friends for their cards,\nflowers and expressions of sympathy extended to us in our bereavement. Also thanks to Rev.\nCarl Hennig.\nThe Wallach family.\nIntroduce Yourself to . . .\nLANOLIN PLUS\nCreme Rinse 2 for 1 Offer\nar $2.50 - Special $1.25\nLANOLIN PLUS\nHard Water Shampoo and\nTRIPLE PURPOSE Hair Spray Set\n$\u00abV75\n2\nLanolin Plus Liquid With\nMoney Back Guarantee\nTrial Size Included With Regular Size for Your\nI - V \u25a0 .  '    \u25a0\nFREE TRIAL b\u00ab_ *, o\u201eiy $150\nFLEURYS PHARMACY\nComer of Baker.and Ward Streets\nPHONE 25 NELSON, B.C.\nCELEBRATING hi. 86th birthday at Nelson hostel for the aged last week was\nErnest George Maitland, Kootenay pioneer, shown holding cake presented by Kokanee\nChapter, IODE. At left is James Desmond and at right Oscar Johnson. Mr. Maitland\nwas a miner and prospector, coming to B. C. in 1892.\u2014Daily News photo.\nMonorail Would\nSolve Rio's\nStreet Problem\nRIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil\n(API\u2014With the pleading cries of\nnearly 3,000,000 residents ringing\nin their ears, Rio de Janeiro city\nfathers are seeking a way to ease\nthe evening rush-hour jam\u2014one\nof the worst in the world. '\n\u25a0 The city is investigating the\npossibilities of building.a French-\ndesigned subway or a futuristic\nmonorail system;- But unless\nsome, way- can be found to\nfinance either project, all plans\nmay come to naught. And the\ntraffic jam grows worse.\nA subway system ..' would be\ncostly because tupnels would\nhave to be drilled through solid\nrock. A monorail system over\nRio's small mountains has won\nproponents^ in the city administration  because  it  is  relatively\nUrges Boycott of Schools\nWhere Crime Is Prevalent\nMONORAIL TESTED\nThe Alweg monorail train was\ndeveloped by Swedish millionaire\nAxel Wenner - Gren after -five\nyears research at a cost of $5,-\n000.000. It has been successfully\ntested at Cologne, Germany, and\nsped over a lVi-mile track at 50\nmiles an hour.\nRio's tremendous problem is\ncaused by two factors, geography\nand inadequate transportation facilities. This beautiful city is\nstrung out along the South Atlantic causing the traffic to.wind\nlike a snake along sparse major\narteries. All city traffic that nightly pours into the heavily populated residential suburb of Copaca-\nbottleneck tunnels.\n, Normally, it is a 20-minute\ndrive from the city to Copaca-\nbana. But during the rush hour,\nwhen hundreds' of thousands of\nwhite collar workers, businessmen and others head for home,\nthe trip takes about an hour.\nThe commuters, sweltering in\nthe tropical heat, must first\nqueue up on Avenida Rio, Rio's\nmain thoroughfare for as long as\nan hour waiting to board already\nbulging buses. Starting at 5 p.m.,\nthe jam la's.is more than three\nSHARE TAXIS\nMany commuters share taxis,\npaying 30 cruzeiros 35 cents) for.\na cramped ride rather than wait\nfor a five-cruzeiro (six-cent) bus\nride. Even these shared taxis\nare hard to find but they are better ;than the bus rides, where\npassengers are jammed, and Rio\nbus drivers win no medals for\ncareful driving\/ Accidents are\ncommon.\nThere is modified mutual sympathy among commuters. Very\nfew men will rise and offer seats\nto women, but passengers lucky\nenough to have seats invariably\noffer to hold packages in their\nlaps for the unfortunate standess.\nU.S. Steel Reports\nRecord Earnings\nNEW YORK (AP) - United\nStates Steel Corp. Tuesday reported .record sales and earnings\nfor 1957 end chairman Roger\nBlough said the. current decline\nin steel orders may be levelling\nout. '.    \u2022 \u25a0' \u2022       \u25a0\nNet income for . the biggest\nsteel maker in the U.S. totalled\n$419,073,722 \u2014 equal to $7.33 a\nshare in 1957.' This compared\nwith $347,865,120 or $6.01 a share\nin 1956. The previous record-year\nwas 1955, when U.S. Steel earned\n$370,197,625 or $6.46 a share.\nThe corporation had record\nsales of $4,413,824,226. This compared with Uie previous high of\n$4,228,877,241 in 1956.\nBlough said U.S. Steel now is\noperating at about\u00bb 56 per cent\nof capacity but-adBed that there\nhas been about seven months of\n\"rather heavy i' inventory reduction\" and \"I would expect you'd\n.start to round out this bottom\nvery soon.\"\nLIBERTYVILLE, 111. (AP)\u2014An\naerial target broke loose from its\nair force tow plane.Tuesday and\ncrashed through Uie roof of a\nframe dwelling east' of the Lib-\nertyville business area. Damage\nwas confined to a large hole in\nthe roof and broken plaster, and\nno one was hurt.\nBy BARRY SCHWEID\n. NEW YORK (AP)-The foreman of a special grand jury investigating crime in Brooklyn\npublic schools has suggested that\nparents have their children boycott schools where crime is prevalent.\nForeman A. George Golden\nmade the suggestion at a jury\nsession Tuesday.\nAt the time, the grand jury had\nnot yet learned that George Gold-\nfarb, 55, principal of, violence-\ntormented John Marshall Junior\nHigh School in Brooklyn, had\nplunged to his death from the\nroof of his apartment building.\nThe district attorney's office.pro-\nnounced him a suicide.\nCounty Judge Samuel S. Leib-\nowitz promised to study Golden's\nproposal, which was made in the\nform of a question:\n\"Is there anything in the law\nthat'could prevent thousands of\nmothers and fathers from having their . young children boycott\nthe schools until something is\ndone?\"\nLeibowitz said he will  confer\nwith district attorney Edward S.\nSilver  and .report back  to  the\ngrand jury.\nUNDER PRESSURE?\nWhen notified of Goldfarb's\ndeath, Golden said the jurors will\ncall in board of education officials to find out whether the\nprincipal had been under pressure or had been threatened with\ndisciplinary action for telling the\njurors last Thursday that he\nwould like to have a policeman\nstationed inside his school.\nThe grand jury and Leibowitz\nfavor stationing a policeman in\nevery school in New York City\nbut the suggestion has been\nturned down.\n. Last week a 13-year-old white\ngirl at John Marshall reported\nshe had been raped in Uie school\nbasement by an unidentified Negro boy.\nThe rape resulted in Goldfarb's\nappearance before the grand\njury. He was due to appear again\nTuesday.\nLast Thursday two other inci-\nBerlin Rebuilds\nThe Reichstag\nBERLIN (Reuters)\u2014Work on\nrebuilding the Reichstag, Germany's parliament from 1894 until it was wrecked by fire in 1933,\nis to begin this year. But no one\nknows whether it ever again will\nbe the seat of a German parliament.\nR may become instead a museum, a library, or a courthouse.\nThe smoke-stained shell of the\nbuilding stands today at the border of East and West Berlin. The\nbuilding itself is in the British\nsector, but the pavement on its\neastern side is in Communist\nEast Berlin.\nThe Reichstag was gutted Feb.\n27, 1933, within one month of Hitler's coming to power. The Nazis\nblamed Communists for the fire.\nBut many people believed that\nthe Nazis themselves set the fire\nto provide an'argument for banning all anti' - Nazi political\ngroups.\nThe building was left as it was.\nIn 1945, bombs further damaged\nthe Did Reichstag building; and\nthen for years after the war racketeers and smugglers used its cellars as hideouts.\nRelax In\ndents involving violence were reported at his school. . .\nPatrolman Thomas Fleming,\non duty outside the school, was\npunched by one of six youths.he\nordered not to loiter around the\nbuilding. And the school's recreation director w.as assaulted by\na youth ih the basement of the\nschool.\nTEACHER ATTACKED\n\u2022The grand jury also heard testimony that teert-aged hoodlums\nforced an assistant principal to\nquit one Brooklyn school under\nfear of harm, while, another\nyouth gang took control of a\nBrooklyn elementary school and\nattacked a woman teacher.\nLater, Dr. Joseph C. Noethen,\nan assistant superintendent of\nschoops, said reports of a youth\ngang taking over a school were\n\"not true,\" adding:\n\"Some high school students got\ninto the building and the police\nejected them..No teacher\u25a0 was\ntouched or assaulted arid no damage was done.\"   '\nTwo teen-age white girls .were\nstabbed in the back ..Tuesday as\nthey were changing trains on\ntheir way home from a Brooklyn\nhigh school. Both were taken to\na hospital'.with superficial'\nwounds, and were later releafsed.\nPolice held five Negro boys, 15\nto 17, and sought three others for\nthe attack.\nReply Means W\nVICTORIA (CP) - Opposition\nLeader Robert Strachan asked\nPremier Bennett Tuesday if he\nwould \"consider!' permitting .an\noral question period in the legislature every day as is the case\nin the House of Commons.\nAttorney-Gfeneral-Robert. Bonner answered the question. He\nsaid there was.a. ruling by the\nSpeaker oh the .records from the\nspring, session 6f 1953.,\n\"In other words,\" said Mr.\nStradhan, \"ho.\". V       . .\nThe  Famous  English\nComfort-in-Action\nTrousers.\nYou will enjoy a sense\nof. freedom   in   Daks.\nIn a variety of shades\nof English Worsteds.,\n$27.50\n\u00a3MORY'S\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nMay Open Intry\nTrial This Year\nBUDAPEST (Reuters) - Former premier Imre Nagy, overthrown by Soviet irttervention\nduring the 1956 revolt, probably\nwill be brought to trial this year,\nauthoritative Hungarian sources\nsaid Wednesday.\nThe sources said proceedings\nagainst Nagy, Gen...Pal Maleter\n\u2014defence minister in the shortlived October government~-and\nother members of the Nagy\ngroup are still in the hands of\nthe interior ministry.\nRecently the foreign ministry's\nchief spokesman said Nagy still\nwas in Romania, where he was\ntaken Nov. 23, 1936. Nagy and his\nparty took refuge in the Yugoslav legation Nov. 4, when Soviet\ntanks entered. Budapest to .uell\nthe uprising. They finally were\ngiven safe conducts to go to their\nhomes but as they left the legation they were seized by Soviet\ntroops.\nCBC-TV Reports\nOTTAWA (CP)-Canada's radio and television broadcasting\nindustry had a net income of\n$6,913,000 in 1956, according to\nthe first report on the industry\nreleased Wednesday by the bureau\nof statistics. ,\nNet income from radio was\n$7,234,000 while there was a deficit on TV operations of $321,000.\nThe figures include both privately-downed and CBC stations.\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\"        LIMITED        **\nPHONE 815\n-   MASTER PUJMBER\nPoem Saves\nLost Pilot\nLONDON (Reuters)-A British\nhelicopter pilot, lost in bad\nweather over Germany, used his\nchildhood memory of the poem\nThe Pied Piper of Hamelin as a\nnavigation aid, it was disclosed \u25a0\nWednesday.\nTest, pilot Donald Farquharson\nwas flying between Dusseldorf\nand Hannover and was far south\nof his original course to avoid\nbad weather. Suddenly he found\nhimself over a town he could not\nidentify, but woundered whether\nit could be Hamelin. He thought\nof Robert Browning's poem that\nsaid:       .\n\"Hamelin town's in Brunswick,\n\"By famous Hannover city,\n\"The River Weser, deep and\nwide,\n\"Washes it walls on the southern side.\"\nHe saw that Browning's description exactly fitted the town\nbelow him. A glance at the map\ngave him his relative position and\nhe made his way to Hannover\nsafely.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone 3*7\nRexall Polymufiion\nPalatable   -   Pleasant\nMulti-Vitamin   Liquid   lor*\nInfants and Young-Children\n8   01. $3.25\n16 oz. $4.98\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall  Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nBox\nPhone 34\nSTAR SPECIALS at the Star\nRUMP\nROASTS\nMABOB\n28 oz. Tin\nCOFFEE\nChase and\nSanborn\n2 LBS.\n$1.85\nTomatoes\nvOm   Creamed, York Fancy\nMargarine Margene\nSUN-RYPE; Clear\nApple Juice 4*4-\nFRASERVALE; Frozen\nCauliflower i_p_;Pk\nFRASERVALE; Frozen\nFish and Chips *4\n3 for 89*\n2 for  31*\nlbs. for 99*\n2 for 63*\n\u2022___\nGrapefruit\nFlorida\nWhites\n3 for 29*\nCooking   Apples\nSpy's '   3 lbs. 25*\nBox $2.99\nGrade A Red\nlb. 65c\nPork Riblets\t\nVeal Patties __.__\nStew and Kidney\nBaCOn   Breakfast; Lb\t\n2 Lb.\nLb.\nVeal Pork and Beef\nMinced For Meat Loaf     w Lbs.\nStanding\nRib Roasts\nGrade A Red\n49*\n49*\n49*\n59*\n95*\nlb. 59c\nSTAR GROCERY\nPhone 10-11\nJ. Koenig^ Manager\nNelson, B.C.\n488 Boker 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_01_30","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\/1.0430940","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1958-01-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1958-01-30 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":""}]}